The Magician's Workbook Quotes
The Magician's Workbook: Practicing the Rituals of the Western Tradition
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The Magician's Workbook Quotes
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“The yogi
tends to work inwardly, focusing on the body, whereas the magus directs the will
outwardly upon the objects of the greater world. This apparent distinction is misleading,
since inner world and outer world have no dividing boundary, but are an
indivisible universe perceived by a single human mind. The ultimate goal is similar
in both practices-to master the personal universe and yoke it to the higher aspirations.”
― The Magician's Workbook: Practicing the Rituals of the Western Tradition
tends to work inwardly, focusing on the body, whereas the magus directs the will
outwardly upon the objects of the greater world. This apparent distinction is misleading,
since inner world and outer world have no dividing boundary, but are an
indivisible universe perceived by a single human mind. The ultimate goal is similar
in both practices-to master the personal universe and yoke it to the higher aspirations.”
― The Magician's Workbook: Practicing the Rituals of the Western Tradition
“A
human being who has mastered the self cannot be dominated by any other person;
to the contrary, there is a strong tendency for others to seek to emulate and follow
such a master, because they intuitively recognize the value of self-control.”
― The Magician's Workbook: Practicing the Rituals of the Western Tradition
human being who has mastered the self cannot be dominated by any other person;
to the contrary, there is a strong tendency for others to seek to emulate and follow
such a master, because they intuitively recognize the value of self-control.”
― The Magician's Workbook: Practicing the Rituals of the Western Tradition
