Millerman School

Inner Architectures

The world's contemplative traditions mapped across their deepest dimensions. Toggle traditions to compare. Click any dimension to explore.

Kabbalah
Christian Mysticism
Sufism
Advaita Vedanta
Zen Buddhism
Neoplatonism
Hesychasm
Ten Dimensions of Contemplative Thought

Your Mystical Profile

Six questions about your deepest spiritual intuitions — revealing which tradition resonates most with how you actually think

1. When you think about the divine or the ultimate, it feels most like:

An infinite Ein Sof — the Infinite that overflows into finite worlds through hidden vessels
The One — beyond all categories, unknowable directly, but the source of all being
Pure Consciousness — not a being but Being itself, the ground from which I am not separate
The Beloved — infinitely personal, infinitely beyond, sought through love and annihilation
Nothing special — already here, not to be sought but to be recognized
A person who loves — transcendent and present, both beyond reach and intimately near

2. The purpose of spiritual practice is primarily to:

Repair and restore — the world is broken, and human action can mend it
Be transformed — to become by grace what God is by nature
Dissolve — to lose the illusion of a separate self in the ocean of the divine
Recognize — to see through the illusion of separation that was never real
Return — to the ordinary, which is also the sacred, which was never absent
Ascend — to rise through contemplation from matter through soul to Intellect to the One

3. The material world is:

The lowest but still sacred — divine sparks are hidden within all things, awaiting release
Good but fallen — creation reflects the Creator but has been wounded and needs restoration
A veil and a mirror — it conceals the divine but, rightly seen, reflects it everywhere
Appearance — real as appearance, but not ultimately real as the sole truth
Just this — no more or less sacred than anything else. The ordinary is the extraordinary.
The lowest emanation — real but distant from the source, the most attenuated expression of the One

4. What happens to the individual self in the deepest mystical state?

Transformed and preserved — the self is not dissolved but glorified, brought into union while remaining itself
Annihilated — fana, the extinction of the individual in the divine ocean
Revealed as never having existed separately — there was only Brahman
Seen through — the self was always empty of inherent existence, and that emptiness is liberation
Elevated and returned — the soul ascends through the Sephirot and returns transformed to the world
Absorbed and then returns — the soul returns to the One and then descends again to animate the world

5. The role of language and text in the spiritual life:

Central and inexhaustible — the Torah is the name of God, and every letter contains infinite worlds
Revelatory and insufficient — Scripture points beyond itself; the Word became flesh
Metaphorical and essential — poetry and music can carry what doctrine cannot
Useful but ultimately to be transcended — the finger pointing at the moon is not the moon
A finger pointing at the moon — and even the finger must eventually be dropped
Necessary scaffolding — dialectic and contemplation lead toward what cannot be said

6. Suffering and spiritual darkness (the "dark night"):

A necessary passage — John of the Cross: the dark night purifies and opens to divine union
The condition of longing — the Beloved's apparent absence is the intensification of love
The concealment of divine light — the Sitra Achra, the other side, is part of the divine plan
Dukkha rooted in ignorance — suffering arises from the illusion of separation
Neither sought nor avoided — the tradition is suspicious of dramatizing the path
Purification through prayer — the heart must be cleansed through hesychia before divine light
Your Contemplative Tradition
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