I don't think there are any strict, established or proscriptive distinctions between the two — StreetlightX
historically, gnosis referred to esoteric knowledge, knowledge 'hidden' from plain view, usually divine or relvelatory knowledge (knowledge of God, or else of the divine nature of things), so in this sense gnoseology can be understood to be a more constricted or narrower form of knowledge, a knowledge not of 'things in general', but of very specific things. — StreetlightX
But why we use one in sometimes and other in another time? — Pacem
Here we have an indistinct subject; i can not find a clear paraphrase on difference between these two concepts (To be honest, i didn't be satisfied existing expositions). Furthermore, as far as can be seen, there are no academic work on it, or i didn't see at least. How can we define the border between one another? What is your consideration? — Pacem
I had never heard or seen the word "gnoseology" before your post — T Clark
But be careful, Cusa don't put forward a mystical or irrational context, he has an understanding of stratified reason, but quite different from Aristotelian sense; there is no cosmological reference. — Pacem
I’ve always understood gnosis to be something whose experiential evidence — javra
albeit in what at times were somewhat esoteric ways (as a well-known example: neither is there a self nor not a self). — javra
Actually, Cusa's knowledge (or gnosis) is basen on an experiental ground too. He describe it as a "divine gift" of profound experience during his journey back from Constantinople in the winter of 1437. Maybe we can compare it with the "activity of theoria" in original sense contained in Aristotle's Metaphysics (recourse Hadot's works). — Pacem
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