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  2. Kabbalah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabbalah

    The Kabbalah of Information is described in the 2018 book From Infinity to Man: The Fundamental Ideas of Kabbalah Within the Framework of Information Theory and Quantum Physics written by Ukrainian-born professor and businessman Eduard Shyfrin. The main tenet of the teaching is "In the beginning He created information", rephrasing the famous ...

  3. List of theosophical glossaries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_theosophical...

    This is a list of theosophical glossaries. Some important theosophical glossaries are the Theosophical Glossary by Helena Blavatsky, first published in 1892; the Encyclopedic Theosophical Glossary by Gottfried de Purucker; and the Collation of Theosophical Glossaries.

  4. List of Jewish Kabbalists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Jewish_Kabbalists

    This article lists figures in Kabbalah according to historical chronology and schools of thought. In popular reference, Kabbalah has been used to refer to the whole history of Jewish mysticism, but more accurately, and as used in academic Jewish studies, Kabbalah refers to the doctrines, practices and esoteric exegetical method in Torah, that emerged in 12th-13th century Southern France and ...

  5. Seder hishtalshelus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seder_hishtalshelus

    Kabbalah is concerned with defining the esoteric nature, particularly the partzufim or divine manifestations or personas, as well as the functional role of each level between the infinite and the finite. Each spiritual realm embodies a creative stage God uses to go from his self to the creation of the physical world, the material Universe being ...

  6. History of Jewish mysticism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Jewish_mysticism

    This was the classic time when various different interpretations of an esoteric meaning to Torah were articulated among Jewish thinkers. [16] Abulafia interpreted Theosophical Kabbalah's Sephirot Divine attributes, not as supernal hypostases which he opposed, but in psychological terms.

  7. Jewish mysticism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_mysticism

    Abraham Abulafia's Ecstatic-Prophetic Kabbalah, his Maimonidean alternative competitor to Theosophical Kabbalah, embodies the non-Zoharic ecstatic stream in Spanish Kabbalism. Re-imagining Judaism's prophetic techniques, it remained marginal to mainstream Kabbalah, but established a following in east Mediterranean:

  8. Theosophy (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theosophy_(disambiguation)

    Theosophical Kabbalah, the stream of Kabbalah that seeks to understand and describe the divine realm Theosophy , a lost work by Aristocritus Theosophy of Tübingen , a manuscript of an epitome of the last four books of an earlier, lost Byzantine work of eleven books called Theosophy or On True Belief

  9. Tree of life (Kabbalah) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_of_life_(Kabbalah)

    Kabbalah's beginnings date to the Middle Ages, originating in the Bahir [4] and the Zohar. [5] Although the earliest extant Hebrew kabbalistic manuscripts dating to the late 13th century contain diagrams, including one labelled "Tree of Wisdom," the now-iconic tree of life emerged during the fourteenth century.