Page 532

Alexandr Korol
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Page 532

Post by Alexandr Korol »

even the will of the gods. “In different cultures this idea is expressed in different ways, but the common understanding is of fate as something that cannot be changed or avoided. That is, something inevitable, controlled by something external.” In ancient Greek mythology — these are the Moirai. Of course, they are for some reason depicted very gloomily, therefore such images I would certainly not take note of or use, and there is no need. This is not what is a symbol of attracting luck, this is already a little different, this is simply fate, which must now be touched upon. “Fate is the thread that is spun by three sisters: Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos. They come to measure and cut the thread of life — and thereby control the fate of each person. Ananke — the goddess of necessity and inevitability. She personifies the very nature of inexorable Doom. Tyche — the goddess of luck and chance, who also can influence fate.” That is better to think about Tyche. Well, why did the system want me to think again about fate? Well, perhaps there will be some further decoding. Or perhaps I have already decoded everything back when I conversed with the Mystic-Old-Man.

Also from something curious, since we are studying the world of the sky, I had earlier already found different articles on the internet, deciphered, analyzed, how in Christianity the word sky is mentioned at all, what heavens are. And here is also something interesting in Hinduism: “Svarga (Sanskrit Svarga = ‘going to the sky,’ ‘heavenly’; ‘sky’) or Svar-loka (Sanskrit Svar-loka — ‘sky of light,’ ‘sky of the Sun’), — in later Indian mythology the sky of Indra, the dwelling place of demigods and blessed mortals. One of the seven heavenly worlds — lokas, the kingdom of Indra (Indra-loka). Indian mythological cosmography places Svarga on Mount Meru. The world of Svarga, along with Bhur-loka and Bhuvar-loka, unlike the higher level, Brahma-loka, is subject to periodic destruction at the end of each kalpa.

In the mythology of Vedic religion, of Brahmanism, the world of Svar-loka has the following designations:

Svarga (IAST: Svarga — sky),
Trinaka (IAST: Trinaka — [world] of the third god),
Triwishtapa (IAST: Triwishtapa — the third kingdom),