quote
active
quote:do-not-ask-for-whom-the-bell-tolls-it-tolls-for-theeDo not ask for whom the bell tolls / It tolls for Thee.
John Donne's lines used to illustrate each person's participation in the I.
Neighborhood — ranked by edge-count
Concepts (1)
concept
- I-stuff / The I / Groundassociated_withThe spiritual self or ground of all existence that can be felt in living things.
Chapters (1)
chapter
- Chapter in Vol 4 of The Nature of Order exploring how making wholeness heals the maker.
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- Sufi poem by Hallaj illustrating the unity of self and the divine I.
- Epigraph from a 10th-century poem by the Sufi saint Hallaj, setting the theme of identity between self and the divine that runs through the chapter.
- Argues that physical appearance and origin (evolved vs. engineered) are inadequate bases for moral concern
- Deception-amplified LLaMA response; recursive self-negating disclaimer illustrating how amplification produces compliance-oriented denial
- Mr. Murakoshi's summary of what Alexander's architecture brought to the community.
- Universalist claim predicting cross-cultural generality.
- Succinct description of the required emotional state of a living building.
- Statement of Frege's context principle; shows tension with strict compositional bottom-up approach.