The Holy Book of the Great Invisible Spirit, commonly known as the Coptic Gospel of the Egyptians, is a Sethian Gnostic text (Codices III and IV of the Nag Hammadi library). It describes the creation of the divine realm, the birth of Seth, and the salvation of his "incorruptible race" from the ignorance of the material world.
The Monad , from Greek for "the One," is a fundamental concept in philosophy and mysticism, representing the ultimate, indivisible source of all reality, a Supreme Being, or the totality of existence, appearing in Pythagorean, Platonic, Neoplatonic, Gnostic, and Leibnizian thought as the source of number, divine unity, or spiritual substance from which all reality emanates, often symbolized by a circled dot. It signifies the singular, fundamental unit of being, whether as God, pure potential, or the smallest spiritual particle, differing from physical "atoms" by being incorporeal and vital.
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