翻訳と辞書
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・ Mental literacy
・ Mental Maintenance
・ Mental management
・ Mental Manja
・ Mental mapping
・ Mental Measurements Yearbook
・ Mental model
・ Mental model theory of reasoning
・ Mental Models
・ Mental nerve
・ Mental Notes
・ Mental Notes (Bad Manners album)
・ Mental Notes (Split Enz album)
・ Mental operations
・ Mental Overdrive
Mental plane
・ Mental poker
・ Mental prayer
・ Mental process
・ Mental projection
・ Mental property
・ Mental protuberance
・ Mental Radio
・ Mental radio
・ Mental Ray
・ Mental Releases
・ Mental representation
・ Mental Research Institute
・ Mental reservation
・ Mental Reservation (album)


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Mental plane : ウィキペディア英語版
Mental plane

The mental plane, or world of thought, in Hermeticism, Theosophical, Rosicrucian, Aurobindonian, and New Age thought refers to the macrocosmic or universal plane or reality that is made up purely of thought or mindstuff. In contrast to Western secular modernist and post-modern thought, in occult and esoteric cosmology, thoughts and consciousness are not just a byproduct of brain functioning, but have their own objective and universal reality quite independent of the physical. This reality itself constitutes only one gradation in a whole series of planes of existence (the total number of planes varies, although seven is a common number in Theosophical formulations). In most such cosmologies and explanations of reality, the Mental Plane is located between, and hence is intermediate between, the astral plane below and the higher spiritual realms of existence above.
== Predecessors of the concept ==

In India in the seventh century b.c.e., the Taittiriya Upanishad referred to five levels of self, of which the middle one is the "self made of mind" (''manas'') Although the text is describing the nature of the individual rather than the cosmos as a whole, it established the concept of mind as only one of a series of ontological layers of being. The Taittiriyan concept of the five selves would represent an important element of Vedantic ontology, for example the five koshas of Advaita Vedanta.
Meanwhile in Greece, and coming from a philosophical-mystical rather than a yogic perspective, Plato spoke of archetypal forms or ideas as the original spiritual prototypes behind the physical world. These ideas were not equivalent to mind or thought as such. But they did eventually help inspire Middle Platonic (including Philo's) and Neoplatonic metaphysics in which the ideas exist in the mind of God or the Demiurge, or (according to Plotinus and hence Neoplatonism) the Divine Mind or ''Nous''. In the metaphysics of Proclus, the Nous is only one level of hypostasis, with higher ones like Life, Being, and Unity above it.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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