Sunday, 31 December 2017

Superstition



Superstition: Culture Specific


Root of Superstition 


Breaking Superstition 





TZIMTZUM



Tsimtsum literally means “reduction.” For a Kabbalist, a tsimtsum is a reduction of the divine energy that creates worlds—something like the transformers that reduce the voltage of the electric current leaving the turbine generators, until it’s weak enough for a standard light bulb to handle. So too, the divine energy needs to be stepped down so that the created worlds can handle it.

Tsimtsum is also like turning down the amplification on quality stereo speakers: If they are good speakers, none of the signal is lost, just that much of it becomes inaudible to our ears. So too, the more tsimtsum applied, the less the resulting world will be aware of the divine energy which is creating and sustaining it

Tsimtsum, then, is the way G‑d makes space for us to have our own world. He hides His light from us, so that we can make our own choices. But He remains immanently present within that hiddenness. In a way, He is yet more present in His absence than in His presence.





Tsimtzum in Movies







Presence Of Absence


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Mythology





The word mythología [μυθολογία] appears in Plato, but was used as a general term for "fiction" or "story-telling" of any kind.

Mythology:  mỹthos [μῦθος, "narrative, fiction"] and -logía [-λογία, discourse, able to speak about.
The Greek loanword mythos and Latinate mythus both appeared in English before the first example of myth in 1830.

 From its earliest use in reference to a collection of traditional stories or beliefs.

Until the seventeenth or eighteenth-century, mythology was similarly used to mean a moral fable or a parable.

                             Mythology implies the story that hides the philosophical truth. 


                                            


Mythology
                                                                        
Myths are stories that are used as vehicles to draw the viewers in