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サマリー
あらすじ・解説
What was Thomas Jefferson's role as a carrier of the hermetic tradition and hermetic wisdom in early America? The transmission of hermetic wisdom from Benjamin Franklin to Thomas Jefferson is an often overlooked aspect of American history – here it is illuminated. Through an exploration of Jefferson's life, influence, wisdom, and philosophical mind, Roger Weir seeks to provide insights that are commonly unknown or overlooked.
This is the third in a series of 13 presentations that explores Hermetic American history by focusing on a diverse group of hermetic figures spanning architecture, poetry, drama, religion, esoteric philosophy, and occultism. These presentations were delivered by Roger Weir in the spring of 1982 in Los Angeles, California.
Episode transcript - https://sharedpresencefoundation.org/transcripts/116
Discover more content related to this series
https://sharedpresencefoundation.org/presentations/hermetic-america-1982
Discover more presentations by Roger Weir
https://sharedpresencefoundation.org/presentations
Learn more about the Shared Presence Foundation
https://sharedpresencefoundation.org
Check out our YouTube channel
Image credit: Detail from “Scene from James Fenimore Cooper’s ’The Last of the Mohicans’” by Thomas Cole (1827).
This is the third in a series of 13 presentations that explores Hermetic American history by focusing on a diverse group of hermetic figures spanning architecture, poetry, drama, religion, esoteric philosophy, and occultism. These presentations were delivered by Roger Weir in the spring of 1982 in Los Angeles, California.
Episode transcript - https://sharedpresencefoundation.org/transcripts/116
Discover more content related to this series
https://sharedpresencefoundation.org/presentations/hermetic-america-1982
Discover more presentations by Roger Weir
https://sharedpresencefoundation.org/presentations
Learn more about the Shared Presence Foundation
https://sharedpresencefoundation.org
Check out our YouTube channel
Image credit: Detail from “Scene from James Fenimore Cooper’s ’The Last of the Mohicans’” by Thomas Cole (1827).