1 result for (book:tes1 AND session:20 AND stemmed:object)
[... 47 paragraphs ...]
As far as publishing this material is concerned, I have no objections. I didn’t give it to you, and I’m not giving it to you, simply for your own edification. Because of its source you will probably be called crackpots, but I imagine you know this by now.
[... 4 paragraphs ...]
Imagine a man standing on a corner, looking down the street at a tree a block away. He need not walk that distance in order to know what is there since he can see everything between himself and the tree, at least as far as large objects are concerned. His sense of sight allows him this freedom.
[... 3 paragraphs ...]
Now with that out of the way, we can consider the inner senses as paths leading to an inner reality. However, here we are not concerned with space or time. If you were, or if man A was blind, he would not see the tree in question. If he were deaf he would not hear the car. Let us pretend this state of events, and let us compare the physical objects between our man and his tree to points somewhat corresponding to them in the inner world. It would be as if instead of seeing the various houses or whatever, our man instead felt them. If you remember, I mentioned earlier that your outer sense of touch was extremely immediate, in a way that sight was not, and I also gave you immediacy as one of the qualities of the inner senses.
Now our man would not vaguely sense these objects, he would feel them. He would be sensitive to them, in other words, while not touching them with anything like physical hands, as for example you feel heat or cold without necessarily touching ice or fire.
[... 16 paragraphs ...]