European & Western Folkish
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Duality; centripetal/centrifugal, masculine/feminine, is a basic part of the structure of celtic chakras. Holding withing each the two poles, north and south, the king and Queen, spirit Queen and personality King, two sides of the same coin, past and future coliding to bring present, woman and man coliding in an infinite dance to create life on collision". On Fate. |
Deck Reviews and Study
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Related Etymology and History
Socrates (Right)
Birth: c. 470 BC Deme Alopece, Athens Death: 399 BC (aged approximately 71) Athens etymology (n.) Late 14c., ethimolegia "facts of the origin and development of a word," from Old French etimologie, ethimologie (14c., Modern French étymologie), from Latin etymologia, from Greek etymologia "analysis of a word to find its true origin," properly "study of the true sense (of a word)," with -logia "study of, a speaking of" (see -logy) + etymon "true sense, original meaning," neuter of etymos "true, real, actual," related to eteos "true," which perhaps is cognate with Sanskrit satyah, Gothic sunjis, Old English soð "true," from a PIE *set- "be stable." Latinized by Cicero as veriloquium. In classical times, with reference to meanings; later, to histories. Classical etymologists, Christian and pagan, based their explanations on allegory and guesswork, lacking historical records as well as the scientific method to analyze them, and the discipline fell into disrepute that lasted a millennium. Flaubert ["Dictionary of Received Ideas"] wrote that the general view was that etymology was "the easiest thing in the world with the help of Latin and a little ingenuity." As a modern branch of linguistic science treating of the origin and evolution of words, from 1640s. As "an account of the particular history of a word" from mid-15c. Related: Etymological; etymologically. As practised by Socrates in the Cratylus, etymology involves a claim about the underlying semantic content of the name, what it really means or indicates. This content is taken to have been put there by the ancient namegivers: giving an etymology is thus a matter of unwrapping or decoding a name to find the message the namegivers have placed inside. [Rachel Barney, "Socrates Agonistes: The Case of the Cratylus Etymologies," in "Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy," vol. xvi, 1998] Tarot (n.) 1590s, from French tarot (16c.), from Old Italian tarocchi (singular tarocco), a word of unknown origin, perhaps from Arabic taraha "he rejected, put aside." Originally an everyday game deck in much of Europe (though not in Britain), their occult and fortune-telling use seems to date from late 18c. and became popular in England 20c. Tarot games seem to have originated among aristocrats in northern Italy in early 15c. By early 16c. tarocchi had emerged in Italian as the name of the special cards, and by extension the whole pack; whence the French word, German Tarock, etc. The tarots are thus, strictly speaking, the 22 figured cards added to the 56-card suits pack. Now this is popular conjecture, however the system does actually seem to have roots tracing back to a time when Egypt was first part of the European diospora for lack of better wording, be they be the structure of ideas or the divination pictures themselves. To add weight to this argument is the weight of the Quabbalah actually originating from Germanic peoples before being both appropriated and distorted. This also is another repeat of the situation of the original chakra system based and coming from the Europeans or Aryan before the chakras commonly known today were created in India. That being said the Indian version was 'adapted' to better suit their own ethnicos, unlike the plagerism of the worlds tree being plagerised into the Quabbalah. I wouldnt mind the latter as much if the appropriated version was coined adapted from to better suit the peoples that claim incorrectly to have created the system. The Torah/Tarot is also associeted with an Aryan deity of thought the Ibis of which the word or Ogham was inspired by and the Celtic Ogham alphabet is family to the Nordic Runr origins scribed on ancient stones, just as the emerald tablets of Thoth are inscribed/etched and the Ogham throughout the respective lands of origin. Cabbala (n.) "Jewish mystic philosophy," 1520s, also quabbalah, etc., from Medieval Latin cabbala, from Mishnaic Hebrew qabbalah "reception, received lore, tradition," especially "tradition of mystical interpretation of the Old Testament," from qibbel "to receive, admit, accept." Compare Arabic qabala "he received, accepted." Hence "any secret or esoteric science." Related: Cabbalist. It is in perspective in which the the etymology seems to ring true of the word use in Arabic qabala in reference to any secret or esoteric science being recieved. Much of Arabic mystisism pre Islam has seemed to be lost to time to the people of which Islam targetted as a Cultish take over. Much of Aryan folkish ways of any regions the subseqent people forced into Islam etc took over, also took and rewrote' the works or practices of the time in much the same way christian monks did coming into Europe. Threads of last past of the Aryan race can be found across the times and places with the above, but big caution and carefullness must be practiced in the doing so. In the rewriting of things to further seperate the ethos from its own origins/empowerment self automity also install booby traps within the rewritten works. Case in point the modern western astrology today with 12 solar signs actually rewritten from a much older ethni Egyptiuan or European/Aryan Astroligical system of divination. Egypt just as the land of the Helens (Later now called Turkey) were never Islamic in ethnic origin. Mansions of the Moon is yet another mystic astrological tool rewritten by Islam, but with older Aryan/Indo-European and or Gaelic Roots. |
Proto-Indo-European (n.)
The hypothetical reconstructed ancestral language of the Indo-European family, by 1905. The time scale of the "language" itself is much debated, but a recent date proposed for it is about 5,500 years ago. Indo-Germanic (adj.) 1835, from German; see Indo-European. Indo-European 1814, coined by English polymath Thomas Young (1773-1829) and first used in an article in the "Quarterly Review," from Indo- + European. "Common to India and Europe," specifically in reference to the group of related languages and to the race or races characterized by their use. William Dwight Whitney ("The Life and Growth of Language," 1875) credits its widespread use to Franz Bopp. The alternative Indo-Germanic (1835) was coined in German in 1823 (indogermanisch), based on the two peoples then thought to be at the extremes of the geographic area covered by the languages, but this was before Celtic was realized also to be an Indo-European language. After this was proved, many German scholars switched to Indo-European as more accurate, but Indo-Germanic continued in use (popularized by the titles of major works) and the predominance of German scholarship in this field made it the popular term in England, too, through the 19c. See also Aryan and Japhetic. Indo-Aryan (1850) seems to have been used only of the Aryans of India. Indo-European also was used in reference to trade between Europe and India or European colonial enterprises in India (1813). European c. 1600 (adj.); 1630s (n.), from French Européen, from Latin Europaeus, from Greek Europaios "European," from Europe (see Europe). Divination (n.) Late 14c., divinacioun, "act of foretelling by supernatural or magical means the future, or discovering what is hidden or obscure," from Old French divination (13c.), from Latin divinationem (nominative divinatio) "the power of foreseeing, prediction," noun of action from past-participle stem of divinare, literally "to be inspired by a god," from divinus "of a gott," from divus "a gott," related to deus "god, deity" (from PIE root *dyeu- "to shine," in derivatives "sky, heaven, gott"). Related: Divinatory. Divination hath been anciently and fitly divided into artificial and natural; whereof artificial is when the mind maketh a prediction by argument, concluding upon signs and tokens: natural is when the mind hath a presention by an internal power, without the inducement of a sign. [Francis Bacon, "The Advancement of Learning," 1605] Oracle (n.) Late 14c., "a message from a god expressed by divine inspiration through a priest or priestess," in answer to a human inquiry, usually respecting some future event, from Old French oracle "temple, house of prayer; oracle" (12c.) and directly from Latin oraculum, oraclum "divine announcement, oracle; place where oracles are given," from ōrare "to pray to, plead to, beseech" (see orator), with material instrumental suffix -culo-. In antiquity, "the agency or medium of a gott," also "the place where such divine utterances were given." This last sense is attested in English from early 15c. Extended sense of "uncommonly wise person" is from 1590s. My personal thought or interjections on Etymology are in Bold Italics wherein appropriate.
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