Similarly, his cosmology can be " read " against ancient and esoteric sources, respectively Neoplatonic and in such sources as Robert Fludd's treatment of macrocosmic musical structures.
12.
Hence, also, the frequent suggestion that the seat of the soul after death ( macrocosmic underworld ) is in the belly of an animal ( fish, dragon ).
13.
Terry Winters bases his semi-abstract paintings on natural forms and structures and over the years has moved from botanical subjects to linear networks that are simultaneously micro-and macrocosmic.
14.
The exhibition's macrocosmic moment is a stupendous trompe-l'oeil re-creation of a sacred banyan tree, similar to those found in nearly every Indian village.
15.
Like the Planck scale, the Stoney scale functions as a symmetrical link between microcosmic and macrocosmic processes in general and yet it appears uniquely oriented towards the unification of electromagnetism and gravity.
16.
Anne Wilson's artwork explores personal and public practices of ritual and social systems, ideas of de-construction and re-construction in both macrocosmic worlds of public and private architecture, as well as themes of time and loss.
17.
Particular attention is paid to ` tantric?and Islamic elements in the beliefs and rites pertaining to microcosmic and macrocosmic correspondences and the sexual duality of the cosmic principle, as also to the esoteric code language in the songs pertaining to such matters.
18.
Then Ren?Gu�non goes " as deeply as possible into the geometrical symbolism which applies equally both to the degrees of universal Existence and to the states of each being, that is, both from the'macrocosmic'and the'microcosmic'standpoint ".
19.
During 1955, he contributed " SOS Galaxie " [ SOS Galaxy ] to the imprint " S�rie 2000 " and then wrote " Monsieur Cosmos " ( 1956 ) which dealt with the theme of the macrocosmic man, creator of universes.
20.
Other medical works include " Mulctra, sive De duplici calore corporum naturalium " ( 1634 ) and " Pyronarcha, sive De fulminum natura deque febrium origine " ( 1636 ), in which he held that a headache is the macrocosmic phenomenon of lightning.