1 result for (book:ur2 AND session:742 AND stemmed:apart)

UR2 Section 6: Session 742 April 16, 1975 2/74 (3%) Atlantis civilizations selfhood legend ruins
– The "Unknown" Reality: Volume Two
– © 2012 Laurel Davies-Butts
– Section 6: Reincarnation and Counterparts: The “Past” Seen Through the Mosaics of Consciousness
– Session 742: The End of the World and Probabilities. Atlantis. A New Era for Man
– Session 742 April 16, 1975 9:29 P.M. Wednesday

[... 49 paragraphs ...]

2. Our “new” hill house is really 21 years old. It seems new to Jane and me, though — and to Seth too, we notice. Calling it new is a pretty convenient way for us to distinguish it from the much older apartment house we vacated last month. Actually, however, we’re using the word “new” to indicate our present physical and psychological states. In that sense, if the house we’ve just moved into was physically older than the one we left behind, I suppose we’d still call it new.

[... 13 paragraphs ...]

“Those species did not vie for domination of the earth, but simply shared the same general environment with the more sophisticated groupings beyond their own perimeters. There were many highly technical human cultures, but in your terms not on a global scale. The legend of Atlantis is actually based upon several such civilizations. No particular civilization is the basis, however. Apart from that, the legend as picked up, so to speak, by Plato (see Appendix 14) was a precognition of the future probability, an image of an inner civilization of the mind actually projected outward into the future, where it would be used as a blueprint, dash — the lost grandeur, as, in other terms, Eden became the lost garden of paradise.

[... 9 paragraphs ...]

Similar sessions

UR2 Appendix 14: (For Session 708) Atlantis Critias Plato Solon b.c
SS Appendix: Session 558, November 5, 1970 Baal Ron Speaker Bael b.c
SS Part Two: Chapter 15: Session 565, February 1, 1971 Lumanians nonviolence bleed coexist absurd
UR1 Section 3: Session 702 June 10, 1974 spin electrons technology biofeedback science