GNOSIS


'Gnosis' (from the Greek word for knowledge, γνώσις) is used in English to specify the spiritual knowledge of a saint or enlightened human being. It is described as the direct experiential knowledge of the supernatural or divine. This is not enlightenment understood in its general sense of insight or learning (which in Greek is διαφωτισθούν)[1]
but enlightenment that validated the existence of the supernatural. The Oxford English Dictionary defines it as, 'A knowledge of spiritual mysteries.' From the word gnosis is derived Gnostic and Gnosticism the latter a modern construct referring to one of various eastern schools which claimed to have supernatural knowledge flourishing during the early Christian era. The term being Koine Greek has, nonetheless, a much broader application than being exclusive to any sectarian group. The term is used by Byzantine and Hellenic cultures as a word to mean a special knowledge or insight of the supernatural. In some sense mature understanding or knowledge. It is the knowledge that comes from experience rather than from rational or reasoned thinking as in intuitive knowledge (see gnosiology).

Contents
Etymology
Gnosis
Influences on contemporary culture
Etymological and Intercultural associations
See also
References

Etymology


Gnosis is a Greek word, originally used in specifically Platonic philosophical contexts. Plato, for example, uses the terms gnostikoi’ and gnostike episteme in the text called Politikos in Greek and Politicus in Latin (258e-267a) the modern name being the Statesman. The word means the knowledge to influence and control. Gnostike episteme also was used to indicate one's aptitude. The terms do not appear to indicate any esoteric or hidden meaning within the works of Plato but instead expressed a sort of higher intelligence and ability akin to talent.[2] The term is used throughout Greek philosophy as a technical term of experience knowledge (see gnosiology) in contrast to theoretical knowledge which is akin to epistemology. The term is also related to the study of knowledge retainment or memory (also see cognition).

Gnosis


Among the sectarian gnostics, ''gnosis'' was first and foremost a matter of self acquaintance which was the goal of enlightenment. Also stated as direct knowledge of God through awareness of the divine spark within.[3] Later, Valentinius ( Valentinus), taught that gnosis was the privileged "knowledge of the heart" or "insight" about the spiritual nature of the cosmos, that brought about salvation to the ''pneumatics'' - people who ''believed'' they could achieve this insight. Gnosis was distinct from the secret teachings they only revealed to initiates once they had reached a certain level of progression. Rather, these teachings were paths to obtain gnosis. Gnostic ideas of salvation were similar to Buddhist conceptions of enlightenment, hence gnosis was not expressible by words. (See e.g. ineffability, a quality of realization common to many, if not most, esoteric traditions; see also Jung on the difference between sign and symbol.)
The Neoplatonic philosophers including, Plotinus rejected followers of gnosticism as being un-Hellenistic and anti- Plato due to their vilification of Plato's demiurge, see Neoplatonism and Gnosticism and the First International Conference on Neoplatonism and Gnosticism.
Among heresiologists, ''gnosis'' denotes different Jewish, Christian or Pagan belief systems of esoteric nature such as, first and foremost, Gnosticism and other dualist systems from the 1st and 2nd centuries A.D., but also Rosicrucianism, Kabbalah, etc.
Sectarian groups that denoted that the creator of the cosmos as demiurge was not the true God but a fallen and even sometimes evil being. That the creator god of the Jewish old testament and Hellenistic pagan philosophy was evil as was the cosmos that the creator had fashioned (see the Sethian and Ophite gnostic sects).
In early Christianity gnosis also carried over from Hellenic philosophy into Greek Orthodoxy via St Clement of Alexandria, Hippolytus of Rome, Hegesippus, and Origen. Gnosis meaning intuitive knowledge, knowledge or memory of an experience of God. In relation to theosis (deification) and theoria (vision of God)[4].
The term Gnosis is related to the Sanskrit jnana (as in Jnana Yoga) and to the Hebrew daath, which is the hidden sphere in the Kabbalah, or that knowledge which was only given to the initiated.
In the teachings of Sri Aurobindo, the Gnostic being refers to the future supramental state of divinised humanity, living a spirit-filled existence[5]. He speaks of a Gnostic Community, a collective Gnostic life that will establishe a gnostic Supernature [6]. Author Patrizia Norelli-Bachelet discusses the Gnostic being and the 'rise and establishment of a Gnostic society' in terms of the Supramental Yoga of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother of Pondicherry. [1]

Influences on contemporary culture



★ Millions of non-English speakers associate Gnosis with the movement started by Samael Aun Weor.[2] This tradition is now becoming known in English, largely through the efforts of publishers such as Thelema Press.

★ ''Gnosis'' is the name of magazine [3] published between 1985 and 1999 in California as a "Journal of the Western Inner Traditions" covering traditions of spirituality and mysticism. It was a project of the Lumen Foundation.

★ Among certain modern occult movements, esp. chaos magic, ''gnosis'' refers to an altered state of awareness in which the will is "magickally" effective.

★ Modern disciples of Aleister Crowley and his Doctrine of Thelema have also formed a number of Gnostic Religious Organizations. http://user.cyberlink.ch/~koenig/church.htm

★ ''The Gnosis'' is the name of ancient sorcery from the North in R. Scott Bakker's Prince of Nothing fantasy epic.

★ One of the ships in Alastair Reynolds' novel ''Absolution Gap'' is called the ''Gnostic Ascension''.

★ The World of Darkness roleplaying game by White Wolf Game Studio used the term gnosis to measure of how attuned to the spiritual world a character, usually a Werewolf, was (and as the primary mechanic for enabling magical effects). In the revamped World of Darkness books the term is used in the roleplaying game, again as an overarching mechanic for measuring the magical power of a character, in this case primarily for mages and similar characters.

★ Punk rock band Bad Religion have a song titled "Billy Gnosis."

The Gnosis are mysterious alien attackers in the Xenosaga games for the Sony Playstation 2. The Gnosis have the ability to turn humans into salt by touching them.

★ In the game '' for the Nintendo GameCube, Gnosis is the boss at the end of the "Passageway of Souls." Baten Kaitos was created by the same company as Xenosaga, and it is likely a reference to it. Like in Xenosaga, Gnosis is a creature that exists between dimensions.

★ Though not featured, Gnosis is a hovership from Enter The Matrix and The Matrix series.

★ In the cult hit musical Hedwig and the Angry Inch, Hedwig's protege/lover/rival takes the stage name "Tommy Gnosis".

★ The innovative KeyKOS operating system was initially dubbed GNOSIS.

★ GNOSIS are a London based trip rock band [4]

★ In the anime Fafner of the Azure, there is a mass production model Fafner called Gnosis model.

Etymological and Intercultural associations


Gnosis has been associated and often cited as synonymous with terms from numerous cultures and religions:
The word is cognate (from Proto-Indo-European) with the Sanskrit word ''gnana'' (pronounced ''nyana'' - also spelled ''jnana'') that has an equivalent meaning in Buddhist and Hindu spiritual treatises. In Theravada Buddhism the word for gnosis is añña (lit. 'highest knowledge')[7]. The knowledge to which gnosis refers is that of the unconditioned ground (and source) of phenomenal reality, variously called Brahman (The Upanisads); the Dharmakaya (Mahayana Buddhism); the Tao (Tao Te Ching) and God (Theistic religion). One who having followed a spiritual path in order to return to the origin and arrived at this transcendental knowledge is called a gnostic (''Gnani'' or ''Jnani'' in Sanskrit and Hindi).

Enlightenment - Buddhism

Moksha - Hinduism

★ Kingdom of God - Christianity

★ Body electric - Walt Whitman

★ Rapture - Plato (in the sense of ecstasy, not the Christian Rapture)

Irfan, Marifah - Islam, especially Sufism

★ Inner Light and Sound Sant Mat

See also



Plato

Socrates

Epistemology

Aristotle

Plotinus

Numenius of Apamea

Proclus

Iamblichus

Amelius

Enneads

Statesman (dialogue)

Neoplatonism and Gnosticism

New Thought Movement

First International Conference on Neoplatonism and Gnosticism

Gnosticism

History of Gnosticism

Samael Aun Weor

Irenaeus

References


1.
2. Cooper, John M. & Hutchinson, D. S. (Eds.) (1997). Plato: Complete Works, Hackett Publishing Co., Inc. ISBN 0-87220-349-2.
3. Anderson, Robert A., (2006). Church of God? or the Temples of Satan - A Reference Book of Spiritual Understanding & Gnosis, TGS Publishers, ISBN 0-9786249-6-3.
4. The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church, SVS Press, 1997. (ISBN 0-913836-31-1) James Clarke & Co Ltd, 2002. (ISBN 0-227-67919-9)pg 218
5. Sri Aurobindo, ''The Life Divine'', bk II, ch.27
6. Sri Aurobindo, ''The Life Divine'', p.967, 1030-1, 1064-5, Sri Aurobindo Ashra Trust, 10th ed., 1977
7. Nyanatiloka, Buddhist Dictionary, 4th Ed. Buddhist Publication Society,ISBN-955-24-0019-8

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