FACTOID # 147: Train spotters should go to Australia, which has more railway per capita than anywhere else on the globe.
 
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Encyclopedia > Physical universe

In religion the term "physical universe" or "material universe" is used to distinguish the physical matter of the universe from its spiritual essence. Matter is commonly referred to as the substance of which physical objects are composed. ... The deepest visible-light image of the cosmos. ... See: Spirituality Spiritual music Spiritual dance The Age of Spiritual Machines Spiritual possession The Four Spiritual Laws Wholism External links Spiritual service This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...


In Slavic paganism the physical universe is referred to as Yav. Gnosticism holds that the physical universe was created by a Demiurge. In Vedic religions Maya is believed to be the illusion of a physical universe. Slavic mythology and Slavic religion evolved over more than 3,000 years. ... Yav (Jav), Prav and Nav are three worlds in old Slavic religion. ... Gnosticism is a blanket term for various mostly mystical religions and sects most prominent in the first few centuries A.D. // General characteristics The word gnosticism comes from the Greek word for knowledge, gnosis (γνῶσις), referring to the idea that there is special esoteric knowledge, a key to transcendent understanding, that... The term Demiurge (or Yaldabaoth, Yao and several other variants, such as Ptahil used in Mandaeanism) refers in some belief systems to a deity responsible for the creation of the physical universe and the physical aspect of humanity. ... The term vedic religions collectively refers to Hinduism, since it is the only existent religion that is based on the Vedas. ... Maya in Hinduism In Vedic philosophy, maya is the illusion of a limited, purely physical and mental reality in which our everyday consciousness has become entangled, a veiling of the true, unitary Self, also known as Brahman. ...


Physicalism, a type of monism, believes in a physical universe but not a spiritual one. See also the old text of this article Physicalism/Larrys text. ... Monism is the metaphysical view that all is of one essential essence, substance or energy. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Faces, Chapter 3 Introduction (905 words)
What if the physical universe were the whole of existence, the sum-total of what there is? That is the guiding assumption of this chapter, made for the sake of argument, in order to grant physicalists one of their most unsettling theses.
The physical universe, whether manifest or true, seems most unlikely to have the personal attributes of divinity, however admirably it may exhibit such abstractions as eternity, immutability, self-existence and so on.
Physicalism claims that there is but one set of bare bones behind and supporting all the faces, and that physics has no peer in telling us about the bones.
Chapter 4: The Physical Setting (6743 words)
Given a universe that is made up of distances too vast to reach and of particles too small to see and too numerous to count, it is a tribute to human intelligence that we have made as much progress as we have in accounting for how things fit together.
The chapter focuses on two principal subjects: the structure of the universe and the major processes that have shaped the planet earth, and the concepts with which science describes the physical world in general—organized for convenience under the headings of matter, energy, motion, and forces.
This thin envelope of gases evolved as a result of changing physical conditions on the earth's surface and the evolution of plant life, and it is an integral part of the global ecosystem.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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