Averick wrote:
The world needs mysticism. Without it, there would be no free thinking.
Without free thinking, there would be no innovation.
Dussel wrote:
The world need mysticism as well as a fish a bicycle. Free thinkers were all sceptics or rationalist (and a few Stoics and Epicureans). The most revolutionary thinker in western philosophy Democritus, Socrates, Kant, Hume, Locke, Descartes, etc. were by no means "mystics"
Socrates was a mystic. He believed in reincarnation. Perhaps you couldn't find his writings, for he never wrote anything down. Plato had to resume where he left off. I shall as well mention Descartes had a dichotomy supporting his mind/body theories. If you want more....
Averick wrote:
The talmud supports multi-dimensionality, to say otherwise is folly.
Dussel wrote:
... wonder why Riemann worked on this issue and not Rabbi published something about this issue before.
Not sure if I fully understand that statement, so I'll leave you with this.
The talmud is to the kabbalah as science is to the imagination.
Esotericism is essential to the foundations of man. There are gaps with every theory within science, for science is the deduction of control experiments within statistics. Statistically, everything perceived in a laboratory is verily ever 100%.