Cabbalic
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English
[edit]Adjective
[edit]Cabbalic (not comparable)
- Alternative form of Kabbalic
- 1931, Henry More, Geoffrey Bullough, Philosophical Poems of Henry More Comprising Psychozoia and Minor Poems:
- More affected by Cabbalic and Hermetic studies than Mede, he too uses allegory in his exposition of the Scriptures, and in teaching constantly quotes the prophetic books.
- 1970, Arthur de Gobineau: an intellectual portrait, page 187:
- The analysis is far from original, as Gobineau himself recognized, this manner of thinking being a common aspect of the Jewish Cabbalic tradition, Christian gnosticism, and Islamic Sufism.
- 1998, Lisa Ann Montanarelli, Time in Person, page 256:
- Although Mordecai's body is too weak to travel eastward, Mordecai believes, according to his interpretation of Cabbalic doctrine, that his soul will unite with the soul of a younger, stronger man, who will undertake the pilgrimage.