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Chapter grey = Comment text
1 III | with stability, with "firm reality," should never look for
2 IX | contains the same denial of the reality of Self and suggests the
3 IX | reëmbodiment. There is one Reality; but there is no permanent
4 IX | material. The fathomless Reality does not pass. "All forms,"
5 IX | and divine, the Absolute Reality: not a soul, not a personality,
6 IX | the Buddhist denial of the reality of the apparitional world
7 IX | world is not a denial of the reality of phenomena as phenomena,
8 IX | what we perceive is never reality in itself, and that even
9 IX | subjective.~ The test of reality is persistence; and the
10 IX | permanent is the Unknowable Reality hidden under all these changing
11 IX | is but a delusion hiding reality, - that all distinctions
12 IX | but the Non-Self - the one reality underlying all phenomena -
13 IX | feels? - the phantom or the reality?~ All phenomena of Self-consciousness
14 IX | opacities which darkened the reality of Mind within the mirage
15 IX(1)| scholar speaks of Nehan as the reality, - of heaven, either as
16 IX | pluristic monism, a sole reality composed of groups of consciousness,
17 IX | to imagine the ultimate reality as composed of units of
18 IX | potentiality.1 The central reality of every living creature
19 IX | single and infinite Unknown Reality.~p. 260}~ There are wonderful
20 IX | relation to the changeless Reality abiding beyond all change.~{
21 IX | conceptions of the immeasurable Reality, and denying the existence
22 IX | and upside-down. The only reality is One; - all that we have
23 X(2) | Mind. . . . From this only reality came the heavens, the four
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