![]() Shakta (शाक्त, śākta) or Shaktism (śāktism) represents a tradition of Hinduism where the Goddess (Devi) is revered and worshipped. In the same way he worships the Transmission ( krama)-each part of it in its sacred site within the maṇḍala. Inwardly his sentient, vital, sensory and biological energies are regenerated as the inner mantric energy of the goddess moves along with his consciousness through them. In the outer world he is on pilgrimage, imitating his divine model and accompanied by her. The worshipper moves through these three dimensions simultaneously, just as the Goddess does. The third is the maṇḍala that is the focus of the world of ritual that links the two. Microcosm refers to one of the three representations of the one sacred reality.- Thus we have a three-tiered representation of the one sacred reality in which all the divine and mortal beings reside and interact. It's unfortunate because Vermont can be treated as American society in microcosm in certain aspects.Microcosm in Shaktism glossary Source: Google Books: Manthanabhairavatantram ![]() Jeremy Leggett: The Singular Genius of a Simple Solar Lantern These two developments, I submit, signpost in microcosm a road to a future that is survivable, sane, and sustainable. The Finnish pavilion at Shanghai World Expo 2010 portrays our country in microcosm, presenting both Finland and its society to the world.Īmazing Pavilion Exhibition At Expo 2010 in Shanghai Want the messiness of human life and understanding in microcosm? ![]() The states themselves are free trade zones in microcosm, and the less prosperous communities in states often catch up relative to the more prosperous ones.Įxtreme Free Trade, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty ![]() “World Without End” by Ken Follett (Dutton, 2007) « The BookBanter Blog Poem of the week: What mystery pervades a well! by Emily Dickinson Ray Suarez: Reporter's Notebook: A Clinic's Strains in MozambiqueĪnd it's the cosmos in microcosm, of course – another advantage. It was, in microcosm, an illustration of the success, and burden of the success of managing AIDS as a chronic disease in sub-Saharan Africa. The fourteenth century had a lot going on throughout Europe, and what makes World Without End an incredible novel is that Follett uses the monumental and catastrophic events in microcosm focused through a couple of small towns in England. noun A relatively small object or system considered as representative of a larger system of which it is part, exhibiting many features of the complete system.įrom WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University.Hence (so called by Paracelsus), a man, as a supposed epitome of the exterior universe or great world. noun A little world a miniature universe. ![]()
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