Results 721 to 740 of 1286 for stemmed:point
[...] But in this appendix, at least, I discovered that it wasn’t always possible to achieve both of those goals just as I wanted to — not in connection with each point mentioned. [...]
[...] With my direction, this framework uses Ruburt’s personal associations to direct his impressions toward the correct point. [...]
[...] She called the chapter “Personal Evaluations — Who or What is Seth?” In it she made a number of excellent points concerning her relationship with Seth and Seth Two; for example: “If physical life evolves [in ordinary terms], why not consciousness itself?” The questions we had at the time can be found throughout the chapter. [...]
[...] To Jane, Seth is a ‘personagram” — an actual personality formed in the psyche at the intersection point of the focus personality with another aspect.
[...] Probabilities at each point intersect with your time, and those probabilities are psychologically directed so that, in your terms once again, he is at an excellent intersection point, where the prognosis is excellent. [...]
[...] I want to know that self’s attitude toward the fact that Jane is now helpless as far as her physical survival is concerned—she can no longer take care of herself without my help, and this obviously implies that if her condition continues to worsen to the point of death, her sinful self will die also. [...]
[...] There are certain points where such events are closer to you than others, in which mental associations at any given time may put you in correspondence20 with other events of a similar nature in some future or past incarnation, however. [...]
Earlier I mentioned several times that we must reach a point at which you are able to see around the corner of seemingly contradictory material,21 and this is one of those occasions. [...]
[...] My intellect just could not get beyond certain points, and I knew it.
As the days passed, I was nervously aware of her, wandering through the hallways, and made it a point to look in on her now and then. [...]
[...] And yet, inside our small, lighted living room, we both felt we were making important inroads, gaining invaluable insights and finding a point of sanity amid a chaotic world.
[...] So are the wires that we constructed to make our point about the fifth dimension, but for all practical purposes, we must behave as if the wires were there …
[...] This particular book is a case in point: even before it existed in its present form, I was kept informed of publisher’s decisions toward it. [...]
[...] I looked to my own dream records for some answers, but Seth discussed this point in Session 197 for October 11, 1965:
The size of the brain has little to do with this beyond a certain point. [...]
[...] With this, she sat right up and pointed at me. This reminded me of the way that Seth points at people sometimes. [...]
[...] Of course I didn’t. From now on, I will hereby install a pen point in the end of my nose and sleep with my head on a writing table.
At this point the pulsations of the white light inside my head quickened and grew very powerful. [...]
(Up until this point I had made a verbatim record as usual, and had thought the little session in Dr. Instream’s office ended. [...]
(A case in point, Dr. Instream continued, was our meeting with the young psychologist on Saturday evening. [...]
[...] Dr. Instream used these examples to point out how important the correct methodology was in trying to obtain proofs in psychic investigations.
[...] In this book I hope to show the constant interactions that occur between all units of consciousness, the communication that leaps beyond the barriers of species; and in some of these discussions, we will use Willy as a case in point.
(Pause.) Now: While you believe that consciousness somehow emerges from dead matter, you will never understand yourselves, and you will always be looking for the point at which life took on form. [...]
[...] However, I told Jane, in his own way Seth had incorporated mathematical ideas in his material: I saw correlations between his probable realities, his intervals, and the concept of an infinite number of points on a line—and that some mathematical definitions of infinity are considered to be more basic, or of a greater order, than others. [...] I do think that Seth’s material on the “origin” of our universe can be termed an “ideal point,” embracing our mathematical systems, and that his concept of All That Is has no “limits” in mathematical terms. [...]
[...] The cellular structure at that point responds to light, and activates latent abilities in the cellular structure of the mother’s body. [...]
(At last break I asked Jane if Seth could discuss two points: Who would be waiting for Father at his death?; and the situation surrounding a letter Jane recently received from a professor at Cornell, who works in remote sensing and asked Jane to deliver an ESP presentation to his graduate class.)