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Walter Terence Stace

All Quotes by Walter Terence Stace

“And we think that this ultimate blessedness differs only in degree from the happy and joyful experiences of our lives. Whereas the truth is that it differs in kind. The joys, not only of the earth, but of any conceivable heaven - which we can conceive only as some happy and fortunate prolongation of our lives in time - are not of the same order as that ultimate blessedness.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“Either God is a Mystery or He is nothing at all.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“But it is not an exaggeration to say that mystical experience is everywhere unitary in the same sense that everywhere aesthetic experience is unitary. British, American, German, Indian, Chinese, Japanese art are of course very different from one another. Yet they have one root in their basic experience of beauty.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“It is a commonplace that eternity is not an endless prolongation of time, has nothing to do with time. Eternity is a characteristic of the mystical experience. The word eternity doubtless meant originally endlessness of time, which must count, therefore, as its literal meaning. But in its religious and metaphysical use it is a metaphor for the characteristic of the experience. For in that experience time drops away and is no more seen.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“The same character of revelation, which we find in poetry, attaches to mystical illumination, although here the revelation is always the divine.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“The true religious doctrine is that the world is to be both denied and not to be denied.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“The pure religious consciousness lies in a region which is forever beyond all proof or disproof.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“If God does not lie at the end of any telescope, neither does he lie at the end of any syllogism. I can never starting from the natural order prove the divine order. The proof of the divine order must lie, somehow, within itself. It must be its own witness. For it, like the natural order, is complete within itself, self-contained.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“The great error of traditional proofs of the existence of god is that they try to take a symbolic truth for a literal truth, a truth of fact, and then try to prove that it is a fact.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“It must now be added that these attempts at proof not only fail of their purpose, and so do no good to religion, but that they positively degrade it.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“There is no such thing as natural theology. God is either known by revelation - that is to say, by intuition - or not at all.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“The word "mysticism" is popularly used in a variety of loose and inaccurate ways. Sometimes anything is called "mystical" which is misty, foggy, vague, or sloppy. It is absurd that "mysticism" should be associated with what is "misty" because of the similar sound of the words. And there is nothing misty, foggy, vague, or sloppy about mysticism.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“The incommensurability of the mystical with the sensory-intellectual consciousness is also the ultimate reason why we have to exclude visions and voices, telepathy, precognition, and clairvoyance from the category of the mystical.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“The most important, the central characteristic in which all fully developed mystical experiences agree, and which in the last analysis is definitive of them and serves to mark them off from all other kinds of experiences, is that they involve the apprehension of an ultimate nonsensuous unity in all things, a oneness or a One to which neither the sense nor the reason can penetrate.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“Mystics more often than not avoid direct reference to themselves.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“It is certainly the case that there can exist an atheistic mysticism, a mystical experience naked and not clothed in any religious garb.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“Thus we see that mysticism naturally, though not necessarily, becomes intimately associated with whatever is the religion of the culture in which it appears.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“And in the end it is because of mysticism that it is possible to say that “no man is an island” and that on the contrary every man is “a part of the main.””
— Walter Terence Stace
“Religion can probably out live any scientific discoveries which could be made. It can accommodate itself to them. The root cause of the decay of faith has not been any particular discovery of science, but rather the general spirit of science and certain basic assumptions upon which modern science, from the seventeenth century onwards, has proceeded.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“It is not likely that science, which is basically the cause of our spiritual troubles, is likely also to produce the cure for them. Also it lies in the nature of science that, though it can teach us the best means for achieving our ends, it can never tell us what ends to pursue.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“It has been said that man lives by truth, and that the truth will make us free. Nearly the opposite seems to me to be the case. Mankind has managed to live only by means of lies, and the truth may very well destroy us.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“All religious thought and speech are through and through symbolic. And this fundamental insight is perhaps as old as religion itself.”
— Walter Terence Stace
“How is it possible for both naturalism and religion - atheism and theism, if you prefer it - to be but two sides of one truth, is the same as the problem how God can be both being and non-being, as one of the most ancient religious and mystical insights proclaims he is, or how he can be both the Eternal Yes and the Eternal Nay, as Böhme affirmed.”
— Walter Terence Stace