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Pleroma is a Greek term meaning "fullness," "abundance," or "that which fills," frequently used in theological and philosophical contexts to denote total completeness. It refers to the fullness of God, the divine attributes of Christ, or in Gnosticism, the totality of the divine realm.

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Ge is a Greek term meaning “earth,” “ground,” or “land,” frequently used in linguistic, scientific, and philosophical contexts to denote the physical world in its most elemental form. It refers to the terrestrial realm, the natural foundation of life, or in contrast to higher or abstract domains, the immediate and material plane of existence, grounded in nature and direct experience.

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Kenoma is a Greek term meaning “emptiness,” “void,” or “that which is lacking,” frequently used in theological and philosophical contexts to denote absence or incompleteness. It refers to the deficient material realm, or in Gnosticism, the domain outside the divine fullness, characterized by separation, illusion, and imperfection.