Plot: Avalokiteśvara back to pick Yimin
spells:
觀世音菩薩說應現與願陀羅尼《 白衣大士神咒 》
Namo buddhaya. Namo dharmaya. Namah samghaya. Nama Aryavalokitesvaraya bodhisattvaya mahasattvaya maha-karunikaya. Tadyatha, kara-vata kara-vata, gah-vata ga-vata ga-vata svaha. 南無大慈大悲救苦救難廣大靈感觀世音菩薩(三稱三拜) 南無佛 南無法 南無僧 南無救苦救難觀世音菩薩 怛只哆 唵 伽囉伐哆 伽囉伐哆 伽訶伐哆 囉伽伐哆 囉伽伐哆 娑婆訶 天羅神 地羅神 人離難 難離身 一切災殃化為塵 南無摩訶般若波羅蜜
One who believes that there can be no proof of the existence of God but does not deny the possibility that God exists. I don't pretend to know what many ignorant men are sure of, too.
Induction
The term agnostic was fittingly coined by the 19th-century British scientist Thomas H. Huxley, who believed that only material phenomena were objects of exact knowledge. He made up the word from the prefix a-, meaning “without, not,” as in amoral, and the noun Gnostic. Gnostic is related to the Greek word gn?, “knowledge,” which was used by early Christian writers to mean “higher, esoteric knowledge of spiritual things”; hence, Gnostic referred to those with such knowledge. In coining the term agnostic, Huxley was considering as “Gnostics” a group of his fellow intellectuals—“ists,” as he called them— who had eagerly embraced various doctrines or theories that explained the world to their satisfaction. Because he was a “man without a rag of a label to cover himself with,” Huxley coined the term agnostic for himself, its first published use being in 1870.
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