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Searching Lectures from the Golden Blade, 1962
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Query was: sense

Here are the matching lines in their respective documents. Select one of the highlighted words in the matching lines below to jump to that point in the document.

  • Title: Golden Blade, 1962: Lecture 1: Natural Science and Its Boundaries
    Matching lines:
    • It was of consciousness enhanced in this sense, through
    • real sense.
    • of teeth it is liberated, becomes free in a certain sense. We
    • In the ordinary way we speak of five senses only, to which
    • one or two inner senses are added by modern psychology.
    • External science presents no complete system of the senses. I
    • is implicit in the sense of hearing, or in the organisation
    • Just as we have a sense of hearing, we have a sense of
    • speech — a sense for the sounds of speech.
    • By this is meant the sense which enables us
    • as the auditory sense enables us to perceive tones as such. And
    • be known that this sense for the sounds of speech is entirely
    • analogous to the other, that it can rightly be called a sense
    • organism than several of the other, more localised senses, but
    • for all that it is a definitely circumscribed sense.
    • We also have a sense, extending over nearly the whole of our
    • We are also equipped with a sense that extends over the
    • whole of our body: we can call it the sense for the
    • Above and beyond the ordinary human senses, therefore, we
    • have to distinguish three others: the sense for the sounds of
    • Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
  • Title: Golden Blade, 1962: Lecture 2: Paths to the Spirit in East and West
    Matching lines:
    • we might call a state of Inspiration, in the sense in which I
    • sense the book is only a kind of musical score, to be read with
    • thoughts which are independent of his sense-life and in which
    • traces, however diluted, of sense-perception. A
    • beyond the veil of sense for metaphysical explanations in terms
    • merely physical sense. Through our sensory impressions we are
    • the sense-world spiritual powers enter into our being and work
    • described the three inner senses through which he becomes aware
    • him. We have a sense of balance, which tells us of the space we
    • function. We have a sense of movement, which tells us, even in
    • may touch in passing. We have a “sense of life,”
    • three inner senses work in conjunction with the
    • will. We are guided by our sense of balance: and a being that,
    • world. This is possible only because of our sense of balance.
    • Similarly, our sense of movement and our sense of life
    • three senses of smell, taste and touch.
    • process of orientation made possible by the senses of smell, of
    • so doing, draws into him the qualitative senses of smell, taste
    • without. These two trinities of sense interpenetrate each
    • this way. They speak of an inner sense of taste, experienced in
    • Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.



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