
Frithjof Schuon Archive

Briefe
Titel | Zusammenfassung | Publication Data | Dated |
---|---|---|---|
Extract from a letter from Frithjof Schuon | Regarding the question of transubstantiation, which I address briefly in Logic and Transcendence, the Oriental character of the words in question can be seen in their use of ellipsis: Christ did not say, “I am like a vine, like a door”, but he said, “I am the vine, the door”; likewise he did not say, “This conveys divine power in the same way my body conveys divine power”, but he said, “This is my body”. | Logic & Transc. p.237 | 02/01/1976 |
Extract from a letter from Frithjof Schuon | One should not reproach a science for not being what it does not want to be or for not providing what it does not want to provide. In this respect one should not criticize modern chemistry insofar as it studies the phenomena it intends to study, for on its limited plane it remains within adequation and is not exceeding its strengths; nor can one blame it for remaining within the strictly human perspective in relation to matter, for it need not go beyond this point, and indeed no physical science needs to do so. | Logic & Transc. p.235 | 06/22/1964 |
Featured Books
Comprendre l’islam (Taschenbuch)
Die muslimische Welt ist nah und unbekannt zugleich. Sie beansprucht heute eine größere Rolle im Spiel der menschlichen Kräfte und fällt vor allem durch die kontingentesten Bilder von sich selbst auf, nämlich durch die Gewalt islamistischer Gruppen oder die Abwesenheit von Demokratie in muslimischen Ländern.
Featured Poems
Adastra and Stella Maris: Poems by Frithjof Schuon-Soul Picture
This you must understand: I wish to feel Ânanda
Adastra and Stella Maris: Poems by Frithjof Schuon-Ad Astra
Ad astra — to the stars — is the Path;
Adastra and Stella Maris: Poems by Frithjof Schuon-Bodhisattva
The Bodhisattva’s graces, it is said,
Featured Articles
Introduction to various poetry volumes by Schuon
“Standing Unshakably in the True” – A Commentary on the Teachings of Frithjof Schuon
Frithjof Schuon’s work can be viewed as explorations of and elaborations upon four essential realities: the „a doctrine of Truth or Reality, and a method of Integration or Realization through Prayer leading to inner beauty or Virtue, or outer goodness or Beauty.“ Illustrations of Schuon’s thoughts on these is taken primarily from his didactic poems, adding the element of beauty of expression to the clarity of metaphyical exposition for which he was known.