mind
01KJR8RWRC9FE9VEHA0F0B6SQ9Properties
- _kg_layer
- 0
- capacity
- knowledge
- characteristic
- resisted, diseased
- description
- The faculty of thought and knowledge, a spiritual component created by God, which possesses knowledge but is distinct from God's unchangeable knowledge.
- function
- commands body, commands itself
- origin
- created by God
Relationships
- commandsBody
- description
- The text highlights the immediate and instant obedience of the physical body to the mind's directives.
- source
- Sourcetext_chunk
- source_text
- The mind commands the body, and it obeys instantly
- commandsMind
- description
- The mind attempts to exert control over its own will, but paradoxically faces internal resistance from itself.
- source
- Sourcetext_chunk
- source_text
- The mind commands the mind, its own self, to will, and yet it doth not.
- is resisted byMind
- description
- The narrator observes that when the mind attempts to command itself, it encounters resistance, leading to a state of 'monstrousness.'
- source
- Sourcetext_chunk
- source_text
- the mind commands itself, and is resisted.
- extracted_fromSource
- extracted_at
- 2026-03-02T21:55:25.553Z
- source
- Sourcetext_chunk
- referenced_byGod
- context
- creates
- source
- Sourcetext_chunk
- source_text
- unchangeably eternal, that is, the eternal Creator of minds
- extracted_fromSource
- extracted_at
- 2026-03-02T21:55:42.766Z
- source
- Sourcetext_chunk
- same_as01KJR8RNS3JYHSPY4QP9EB1A7M
- confidence
- 0.95
- detected_at
- 2026-03-02T21:56:50.050Z
- detected_by
- kg-dedupe-resolver
- reasoning
- Both entities are labeled 'mind' and described as a cognitive faculty responsible for thought and knowledge. The source highlights the mind's ability to command itself but also be resisted by itself, indicating internal conflict. The candidate describes the mind as being 'too strait to contain itself' in its understanding, which strongly aligns with the source's concept of the mind's self-limitation and internal paradox. The properties and relationships consistently describe the same philosophical concept of 'mind'.