quote
active
quote:my-son-if-you-would-devote-yourself-to-combining-holy-names-still-greater-things-would-happen-to-you-and-now-my-son-admit-that-you-are-unable-to-bear-not-combiningMy son, if you would devote yourself to combining Holy Names, still greater things would happen to you.… And now, my son, admit that you are unable to bear not combining.
Opening quote from Abraham ben Samuel Abulafia, used to frame the combinatorial nature of creating novel life.
Source paper
extracted_from(2023) · Clawson, Wesley P. · Levin, Michael
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.
- If we do one thing at a time, and if what we do is wholesome and sound, then whatever comes next will work.hypothesis0.755A predictive statement encapsulating the confidence of living process.
- Steinbeck's Casy from Grapes of Wrath; Alexander uses to exemplify non-technical, sacred relationship to land that morphogenesis should recover.
- Description of the ongoing practical application of the gift-to-God question in making.
- The formula for profound life, as seen in the Temple of Hera.
- Final point suggesting that deep liking connects us with universal reality.
- Core principle of wabi-to-sabi in building.
- A more detailed version of the practical‑mechanism claim, positioning mysticism as a cognitive tool.
- Question about organizing craftsmen in a large project to achieve collective living structure.