Panentheism/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Panentheism, or pages that link to Panentheism or to this page or whose text contains "Panentheism".
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- Bhagavad Gita [r]: A Vaisnava treatise composed around the time of Christ, or perhaps a century or so before, and incorporated into the text of the epic poem Mahabharata. [e]
- Deism [r]: A religious philosophy which holds that religious beliefs must be founded on human reason and observed features of the natural world, and that these sources reveal the existence of a God or supreme being. [e]
- Fundamentalism [r]: Form of religion that holds to scriptural inerrantism or similarly strict literalism. [e]
- God [r]: Supreme, supernatural entity, often credited with omnipotence, omniscience and rulership of the universe. [e]
- Manichaeism [r]: Religious movement popular in Persia and the Middle East circa. third century CE, combining Zoroastrian and Christian beliefs. Beliefs are broadly dualistic, seeing the world as being a battle between good and evil. [e]
- Monotheism [r]: Belief in only one God. [e]
- Pantheism [r]: A religious and philosophical doctrine that everything is of an all-encompassing immanent abstract God; or that the universe, or nature, and God are equivalent. [e]
- Polytheism [r]: Belief in many gods. [e]
- The Enlightenment [r]: An 18th-century movement in Western philosophy and intellectual life generally, that emphasized the power or reason and science to understand and reform the world. [e]
- Pantheism [r]: A religious and philosophical doctrine that everything is of an all-encompassing immanent abstract God; or that the universe, or nature, and God are equivalent. [e]
- Molten salt reactor [r]: A nuclear reactor using molten salt as the fuel or coolant [e]
- Calcidius [r]: (4th century) Little known Christian who translated the first part (to 53c) of Plato's Timaeus from Greek into Latin around the year 321 and provided with it an extensive commentary. [e]
- Philosophy [r]: The study of the meaning and justification of beliefs about the most general, or universal, aspects of things. [e]