For the ancient Egyptian, the fabric of everyday life was sacred: the presence of the gods was keenly felt, time was interpenetrated by the transtemporal world of myth, and causation was essentially magical. In this groundbreaking new guide to the esoteric qualities hidden in the surfaces of ancient Egyptian life, Jeremy Naydler recreates the spiritual life of. another time and place. 'Temple of the Cosmos' is a profound exploration of an ancient consciousness more in tune with the rhythms of the earth, more open to the internal dimensions of time and space, less cut off from the sources of life. The author argues that the true source of Western civilization lies just beyond the horizon of Greek rationality and Judeo-Christian monotheism in the blazing light of Egyptian culture, and that we still have a good deal to learn from this ancient civilization. Building on the insights of scholars, and looking anew at the Books of the Dead, Naydler reinterprets the compelling imagery of the soul's journey through the Underworld as a description of spiritual initiation and awakening.
Jeremy Naydler is a philosopher and cultural historian. He is a freelance lecturer at a variety of colleges and educational institutions, including the universities of Oxford, Reading, and Southampton, England.
Author(s): Jeremy Naydler
Publisher: Inner Traditions
Year: 1996
Language: English
Commentary: e-ink optimized
Pages: 310
City: Rochester
Tags: egypt;religion;templeofcosmosan0000nayd
Cover
Half title
Imprint
Contents
Preface
1 A Metaphysical Landscape
2 Interpenetrating Worlds
3 Myths of Cosmogenesis
4 The Marking of Time
5 The Marriage of Myth and History
6 The Theology of Magic
7 The Practice of Magic
8 The Soul Incarnate
9 The Soul Discarnate
10 Orientating in the Underworld
11 The Travails of the Underworld
12 The End of the Underworld Journey
Epilogue
Notes
Illustration Credits
Index