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Spiritual world   /spˈɪrɪtʃəwəl wərld/   Listen
Spiritual world

noun
1.
A belief that there is a realm controlled by a divine spirit.  Synonyms: spiritual domain, unseen.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Spiritual world" Quotes from Famous Books



... natural science. He need only do as science does, but he must not allow himself to be misled by what individual representatives of natural science would dictate to him. He must investigate in the spiritual as they do in the physical domain, but he need not adopt the opinions they entertain about the spiritual world, confused as they are by their exclusive contemplation ...
— Christianity As A Mystical Fact - And The Mysteries of Antiquity • Rudolf Steiner

... displayed the slightest wish to damage a hair of the postman's head. He moved about, in fact, like a benign influence, distributing favours and doing good wherever he went. May it not be said truly that in the spiritual world we have a good many news-bearers of a similar stamp? Are not the loving, the gentle, the self-sacrificing such?—in a word, the Christ-like, who, if they do not carry letters about, are themselves living epistles "known ...
— Post Haste • R.M. Ballantyne

... legendary as well as sacred history is almost made up of instances of the interpenetration of the two worlds; the response of those in the spiritual world to the needs of those in the natural world. Pope Paschal recorded that he fell asleep in his chair at St. Peter's (somewhere about 8.20 A.M.) with a prayer on his lips that he might find the burial place of St. Cecilia, and in his dream she appeared to him and ...
— Italy, the Magic Land • Lilian Whiting

... return to college studies). The number seven soon came to be used also conventionally as an indefinite or round number, indicating abundance, completeness, perfection.[1] Cicero calls seven the knot and cement of all things, as being that by which the natural and spiritual world are comprehended ...
— The Menorah Journal, Volume 1, 1915 • Various

... the portrayal of an object by means of language. The object described may belong either to the material or the spiritual world. It may be a single flower, a landscape, or a stellar system. The purpose of description is to enable the reader to reproduce the scene, object, or experience in his own imagination. In general there are two kinds of description,—the objective and the subjective; but the laws of ...
— Elementary Guide to Literary Criticism • F. V. N. Painter


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