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Introceptualism the Philosophy of Consciousness Without an Object Volume II

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Truth is a complex of two one is the form and one is the substance. In the empirical realm the form is logic and the substance comes from experience of the senses. I submit that the same holds true on the metaphysical level - that there is a substantive Truth attained only by the function of Realization, and that there is a logical form in which it is dressed; and that the logical form without the Realization becomes, with respect to metaphysical material, only speculation; but in combination with the introceptual content, it becomes a transcriptive presentation of a Transcendent Reality.

292 pages, Paperback

Published January 1, 1970

About the author

Franklin Merrell-Wolff

12 books19 followers
Franklin Merrell-Wolff was an American mystic and esoteric philosopher. After formal education in philosophy and mathematics at Stanford and Harvard, Wolff devoted himself to the goal of transcending the normal limits of human consciousness. After exploring various mystical teachings and paths, he dedicated himself to the path of jnana yoga and the writings of Shankara, the expounder of the Advaita Vedanta school of Hindu philosophy.

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