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  • "How people treat you is their karma; how you react is yours." Very Nice. It really spoke to me! Thank you!
  • Om Namah Shivaya dear Katalin!
    Thank you vor your many invitations,you are really active.
    The sentence on the top of your side is good inspiration...i often think about it.
    Om Shanti
    Gita
  • Hello Katalin, Hypatia of Alexandra and her history resonates with much of the change I am experiencing through the feminine/divine and the need for acceptance of womens power and depth of wisdom in this world of subterfuge. The essence of change that is happening at the present time is for women to accept themselves as beautiful , powerful , wise women who are leaders in this global unity that needs flow beyond the stagnation of the climate and its history. We must be "present" in our assumptions that all that is needed is that we all meet in the blessings of the love that is universal and abundant. Mother Earth is asking to heal and be listened to , compassion and wisdom will heal this earth all we need to do is listen ............Namaste.......X
  • Hypatia of Alexandria
    (355 or 370 - 415/416 A.D.)

    "She was a fine philosopher -- for a woman" when hearing about ancient female prodigies. The were "respectable" women, were nearly non-existent.
    This woman, however, defies all such qualifiers.

    Hypatia was, simply, the last great Alexandrian mathematician and philosopher. By writing a commentary on The Conics of Apollonius of Perga which divided cones into sections by a plane, Hypatia made geometry intelligible to her students and ultimately transmissible. Since men thronged to hear her ideas on philosophy, she taught Neo-Platonic ideas to pagans and Christians alike, including Synesius of Cyrene, who helped refine the doctrine of the Trinity.
    Hypatia's fame eclipsed her father, Theon, who taught mathematics at the Greek Science / Students museum, and is known as the source for our text of Euclid's Elements. Theon taught his daughter and may have sent her to Italy and Athens for advanced instruction. Unfortunately, little of his daughter's writing survives. Since unlike her father, she didn't have a teaching position, we don't know where or when she taught.

    There may have been another eclipsed man in her life, a philosopher, too, and her husband, Isidorus; yet Hypatia is known for her chastity, virtue, and beauty as much as for her ideas in an era of Belfast-style conflict between pagans and Christians. These were formative years for Christian theology, but it still serves as a humbling reminder that it was the non-Christian, Platonic, rationalist Hypatia who convinced a would be paramour to maintain his celibacy in one of two much repeated anecdotes:
    She was so beautiful and shapely that one of her students fell in love with her and was unable to control himself and openly showed her a sign of his infatuation. Uninformed reports had Hypatia curing him of his affliction with the help of music. The truth is that the story about music is corrupt. Actually, she gathered rags that had been stained during her period and showed them to him as a sign of her unclean descent and said, "This is what you love, young man, and it isn't beautiful!" He was so affected by shame and amazement at the ugly sight that he experienced a change of heart and went away a better man.

    Unfortunately, her popularity and career were cut short, either when she was in her mid-sixties or mid-forties. Until the election of Cyril, bishop of Alexandria, in 412, Hypatia had enjoyed the support of community leaders. Well, she [Hypatia] was speaking in the square to many people, speaking about the present God and they were listening to her in silence, in a stupor, both followers and adversaries. the envious bishop, having seen the hordes waiting to greet her, ordered her death. Christian monks, at any rate, appear to have been responsible for a particularly vicious attack.
    A fanatic horde interrupted, hurried away by a fierce and bigoted zeal, whose ringleader was a reader named Peter, waylaid her returning home, and dragging her from her carriage, , hands came down upon her, , they took her and pushed her into the church of Christ called Caesareum, where they tore her clothes and completely stripped her alluring body, tore her flesh to shreds , finished her and then murdered her with tiles , there she died on the floor of the temple.. After tearing her body in pieces, they took her mangled limbs to a place called Cinaron, and there burnt them..
    She was the last significant mathematician until the late Middle Ages. Her death marked the end of the freedom of inquiry. Hypatia stood as the leader of pagans against an oppressive Christian tyranny. She was a mathematical, astronomical, and philosophical scholar because she trained in Athens. Described as "the spirit of Plato and the body of Aphrodite," Hypatia was turned into a martyr immortalized. Delete Comment
  • om om om
    dear Katalin, thank you very much for the beautiful waterfall!!!!

    Love and light
    Vani Devi
  • You are welcome. Thank you for your kind greeting.
  • Katalin, you are quite welcome.
    Pattimari
  • Thank you Katalin for your nice welcome.
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