He said that after the acquisition of
He also spoke about religions, saying that the people of the past leaned entirely on the major religions that had been formed over the centuries. But what is more important than the individual religions is the religious feeling, innate to humans due to some turning points in their biological and spiritual development, this “thirst of soul” that makes us consider life impossible without the existence of “higher powers” or “the divine element”.
Formerly, people exclusively admired the scientific theories, laws or discoveries of
Based on Lain, the same goes for social life. People in the past gave importance to its rules, codes of conduct and its limits. Nowadays, we know that what counts the most is the innate consciousness that exists within each person, which wants justice and morality to reign and gets upset in the sight of unrighteousness.
All these forms of internal necessity are nothing other than that “thirst of soul and spirit” for the
On artistic creation, I remember him saying that, in the past, by the end of the
“Like the genius composer, the great philosopher or the inspired poet, the worthy scientist or the noble founder of a religion, like the leader who sacrificed his life for the sake of his people, choosing his biological self-destruction to save the rest, so does the great artist take on the characteristics of a small god who has the power to give us timid and fleeting glimpses of what really exists: the
Today, in the morning, he repeated that “before the arrival of those great, visionary Aidersian spirits”, half of the people agreed that life was unique and unrepeatable and that we were lucky to even experience it once. The other half argued that coming into this life is another experience of biological existence that dedicates itself to the spirit. That type of experience made its appearance on this planet too. Life will be short time-wise—a few decades only—but will be endowed with the full potential for moral and spiritual supply and “broad knowledge”, since man will watch the evolution of life and culture unfold on this planet only in a few years, a process that formerly took a whole millennium.
But now they know: the wonderful experiences of life are not an inner issue; they have their external source. The old generations were lured into a hasty and superficial psychophysiological interpretation—a shallow interpretation for that matter. The biological existence on Earth is said to be a “pathway full of pain and glory with an exquisite secret meaning” for the spiritual entity of evolved human beings.
Eventually, he concluded, humans grow to love their body—something that would be incredible if said to them from the beginning—the mortal coil, because it is a fragment of their ego and they have been closely associated with it. They mature with it, they hurt, feel love and pain, enthusiasm and noble passions with it, they go through thousands of inevitable organic adventures, dangers, pain and diseases with it and, at last, they are separated from it amongst tears because it has been part of who they are…
24-III couldn’t follow today’s entire lecture. From what I could understand, he was saying that, just like in Tinersen’s parable of the tropical land’s apple, the “great secret of the world and life”, which drew the attention of the curious soul of the Kiils, the creatures living in the apple, was the third dimension, namely something that existed, but was inconceivable to their mental antennas. Likewise, the distance that exists between our world and the