Because the Cosmic Equation, as the fundamental law of the Universe, guides Panosophers in their quest for Wholeness, Panosophy is both transpersonal and inpersonal, both transcendent and immanent. In other words, to understand what it means to be a human being, in contrast to machines with so-called artificial intelligence, it is essential to both transcend and immanse the person, as an apparently separate being, hiding behind a mask.
Both transpersonal and inpersonal perspectives are needed to map the Cosmic Psyche, containing all concepts and mathematical objects before they are expressed externally in material form. It is in this integral, holistic manner that persons can move from the second to the third tier in the spectrum of consciousness, ultimately viewing the Totality of Existence from a Holoramic perspective.
To avoid one-sidedness, it has been necessary to coin inpersonal for this entry in the Glossary to describe how Panosophers, grounded in the utmost depths of being, experience and visualize the way that the entire world of form emanates from the Divine Origin of the Universe through a process of emergence in the vertical dimension of time, in the Eternal Now.
Transpersonal, 1968, in ‘transpersonal psychology’, founded by Abraham Maslow and Stanislav Grof, from humanistic psychology, with William James and Carl Gustav Jung having earlier similar insights, from trans- ‘across, beyond’, perhaps originally present participle of a verb *trare- ‘to cross’, from PIE base *tra-, variant of *terə-², and persoun ‘individual, human being; role, character’, probably before 1200, from Old French persone ‘human being, anyone, person’, and directly from Latin persōna ‘human being, person, personage; part in a drama, assumed character’, originally ‘mask, false face’, such as those worn by actors in later Roman theatre, probably from Etruscan phersu ‘mask’.
Inpersonal, 2023, in this Glossary entry, from Middle English in, from merger of Old English in (preposition) ‘in, into, upon, on, at, among; about, during’ and inne (adverb) ‘within, inside’, from Proto-Germanic *in, from PIE base *en ‘in’ and person, as above.