| The third excerpt represents the element of Water. It speaks of pure spiritual influences and feelings of love, and is drawn from The Koran: the resurrection day?
But when the sight shall be dazed, and the moon be eclipsed, and the
sun and the moon be together, and man shall say upon that day,
'Where is a place to flee to?'-nay, no refuge! and to thy Lord that
day is the sure settlement: He will inform man on that day of what
He has sent forward or delayed!
Nay, man is an evidence against himself, and even if he thrusts
forward his excuses-.
Do not move thy tongue thereby to hasten it. It is for us to collect
it and to read it; and when we read it then follow its reading. And
again it is for us to explain it.
 The Koran |
The fourth excerpt represents the element of Earth. It speaks of physical influences and the impact of the unseen on the visible world, and is drawn from Parmenides by Plato: the other dialogues.
I. In both divisions of the dialogue the principal speaker is the same,
and the method pursued by him is also the same, being a criticism on
received opinions: first, on the doctrine of Ideas; secondly, of Being.
From the Platonic Ideas we naturally proceed to the Eleatic One or Being
which is the foundation of them. They are the same philosophy in two
forms, and the simpler form is the truer and deeper. For the Platonic
Ideas are mere numerical differences, and the moment we attempt to
distinguish between them, their transcendental character is lost; ideas of
justice, temperance, and good, are really distinguishable only with
reference to their application in the world. If we once ask how they are
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