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The manasic (mental) [[plane]] (or [[dimension]] or [[polytope]], separately, or enclosing and interpenetrating grosser planes, respectively) in [[Theosophy]] is the higher and subtler part/sublanes of the mental plane, in which manas<ref>Helena Petrona Blavatsky (1893 - 1897), ''The Secret Doctrine'', London Theosophical Pub. House, 1893-97, ISBN 0-900-588-74-8</ref> (a Sanskrit word, which the Etruscan [[Minerva|MENRVA]] is related to) exists. Theosophists call manas the higher mental body, or a mental [[aura]] around and interpenetrating the [[causal body]] around and interpentrating the [[mental body]].
The manasic (mental) [[plane]] (or [[dimension]] or [[n-dimensional space|n-space]], separately, or enclosing and interpenetrating grosser planes, respectively) in [[Theosophy]] is the higher and subtler part/sublanes of the mental plane, in which manas<ref>Helena Petrona Blavatsky (1893 - 1897), ''The Secret Doctrine'', London Theosophical Pub. House, 1893-97, ISBN 0-900-588-74-8</ref> (a Sanskrit word, which the Etruscan [[Minerva|MENRVA]] is related to) exists. Theosophists call manas the higher mental body, or a mental [[aura]] around and interpenetrating the [[causal body]] around and interpentrating the [[mental body]].


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 02:33, 11 February 2008

The manasic (mental) plane (or dimension or n-space, separately, or enclosing and interpenetrating grosser planes, respectively) in Theosophy is the higher and subtler part/sublanes of the mental plane, in which manas[1] (a Sanskrit word, which the Etruscan MENRVA is related to) exists. Theosophists call manas the higher mental body, or a mental aura around and interpenetrating the causal body around and interpentrating the mental body.

References

  1. ^ Helena Petrona Blavatsky (1893 - 1897), The Secret Doctrine, London Theosophical Pub. House, 1893-97, ISBN 0-900-588-74-8

Sources:

  • Helena Petrona Blavatsky (1893 - 1897), The Secret Doctrine, London Theosophical Pub. House, 1893-97, ISBN 0-900-588-74-8