Tuesday 29 December 2020

Patanjali's Yoga Sutras -Book 4 - Rama Prasad

Continuing a basic summary of the four books of  Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, by Rama Prasad, with some suggestive observations of an esoteric nature, from the introduction to his translation: Patanjalis Yoga Sutras with the Commentary of Vyasa and the Gloss of Vachaspati Misra (1912). See   Part 1

The Fourth Chapter deals with Kaivalya or final emancipation-the realisation by Man that he is separated from Mind_Matter. The psychic powers or Siddhis are either innate, or produced through the means of medicinal drugs, or suggestion of Mantra, or asceticism or contemplation. Some are born psychics, as Kapila, Swedenborg, &c. Temporary psychic powers may be acquired through anaesthetics, such as chloroform, hashish, &c. Psychic faculties may be developed by the recitation of certain Mantras, or the suggestion of sound. Some persons have acquired psychic powers through austerities. The fifth or contemplation is the method of this Yoga system. 

The born psychics are those who had practised Yoga in their past lives. They are like eggs in which the bird has already fully formed break the shell and the bird comes out. But ordinary men are eggs that require hatching for lives to develop the bird. The born psychics are like a field by the side of a reservoir of water on a higher level. It only requires the opening of the sluice to flood the field with water. It only requires some exciting cause to make a born psychic a developed Yoga. Ordinary men are, however, like fields, which are away from any source of water, and which require to be irrigated by bringing water from a distance, with great exertion, in this life. A Yogi having attained the power of Samadhi, sets about destroying his past Karmas. All Karma may be divided into three classes :-(l) The acts done in the past whose consequences the man must suffer in the present life : the Karmas to expiate which he has taken the present birth or incarnation. They are the ripe Karmas (Prarabdha). (2) The Karmas done in the past, but which are not ripe, and will have to be expiated in some future life. They are the stored Karmas or unripe (Samchita). (3) The Karmas which a man creates in his present life, and which have to be expiated in a future or the present life. This last kind of act- the fresh Karmas, are stopped. By devotion to the Lord and doing everything in a spirit of service, no fresh karmas are generated. The incurring of debt is stopped.

The man, however, has to pay off past debts -the ripe and unripe KarmasThe ripe Karmas will produce their effects in the present life. The Yogi does not trouble himself about this. But the unripe or stored Karmas require a future birth, It is here that the Yoga is of the greatest practicaimportance. The Yogi is not bound to wait for future lives in order to get an opportunity to pay off the debt of Sanchita Karmas. He simultaneously creates all the bodies that those Sanchita Karmas require -through those bodies expiates all his Karmas simultaneously. Every one of such body has a Chitta or mentality of his own. This is the Nirmana-Chitta or the Artificial mind-like the Pseudo-Personalities of hypnotic trance. These artificial minds arise simultaneously like so many sparks from the Ahamkaric matter of the Yogi's Self, and they ensoul the artificial bodies created for them. These artificial bodies with artificial minds in them mdk through the earth in hundreds they are distinguished from ordinary men by the fact that they are perfectly methodical in all their acts, and automatic in their lives. All these artificial are controlled by the consciousness of the Yogi. 

One conscionsness controlling hundred automatons. Every one of these automatons has a particular destiny, a particular portion of the Sanchita Karma to exhaust. As soon as that destiny is fulfilled, the Yogi withdraws his ray from it, and the "man" dies a sudden death-a heart failure generally. Now what is the difference between the ordinary mind and the Yoga-created mind-the natural Chitta and the artificial Chitta. The natural mind by experience gains a habit, the impressions are stored in it and they, as Vasanas, become the seeds of desires and activities. The artifical mind is incapable of storing up impressions in it. It has no Vasanas and consequently it disintegrates as soon as the body falls down.

The actions performed by the Yogi, through his ordinary or the extraordinary bodies-through the body with which he was born, or through the bodies which he gives birth to by Yoga power-are no actions in the ethical sense of the word. They are not Karmas-neither good nor bad. They are the paying up of the past debts, and not incurring of fresh liabilities. With ordinary men the actions are good or bad, or a mixture of both-white or black or gray, all such actions produce their effect --particular kind of birth, particular length of life period, particular kinds of life experiences-or produce their effect as tendencies to certain kinds of actions, Both kinds of effects constitute the fate or the destiny of man.

Tendency is memory. The essence of memory is converted into tendency. The tendencies with which a man is born are the extracts of all the memories of a particular kind. The events of the past life are not remembered, but from the tendencies of the present life one can easily infer what those events must have been to give rise to these tendencies. The surgical operation may be forgotten, because performed under chloroform, or in infancy, but from the nature of the cicatrix one can infer what must have been the nature of the operation. Therefore, the Smriti (memory) and Samskara (tendency or habit) are really one (Ekaruptava)- IV. 9.  Acts produce habits, habits lead to acts-the circle of Vasana is eternal, and beginningless. Is it possible to break this chain of habits and acts, acts and habits? Jnana is the only means. Through Jnana alone is possible to destroy this inexorable chain of causation. 

Now what is this Jnana or wisdom? It is the realisation of the distinction between the Purusa or Spirit, and Prakriti or mind-matter-energy. Purusa is pure consciousness or rather Chitsakti--power of consciousness. By his proximity to Prakriti (mind-energy-matter) it induces in the latter his quality. This induction takes place in the purest part of Prakriti in the Buddhic-essence (the mental portion of Prakriti) : Just as soft iron becomes magnetised by its proximity to iron. Thus Chit-sakti or consciousness is two-fold,-the pure consciousness of  the spirit or spiritual consciousness and the consciousness of the Buddhi-sattva or mental consciousness. The pure Buddhisattva (devoid of Rajas and Tamas) reflects the spirit and appears likes spirit and is mistaken for it. The Jnana consists in the discrimination of this difference realising that the Chitta is the instrument and not the Self. In the state of Samadhi, when this highest knowledge is realised, then arises the positive activity of the Spirit. Up to this time the effort was in a sense negative only- separating the Spirit from mind-energy-matter. When this separation is realised, then the Spirit manifests its own attributes fully. 

This manifestation of the attributes (dharma) of the Spirit on its own plane above the planes of Prakriti (mind-energy-matter) is the highest form of Samadhi. It is positive Samadhi and is called Dharma-Megha Samadhi. Dharma means highest activity, above the sphere of causation, where the actions are neither white, black nor grey, an activity that leads to the highest end of Man- an activity which is the highest end of Man. It is called Megha or cloud, because this state of Samadhi rains such Dharma -is full of Dharma and Dharma alone. It is the cloud which showers all blessings on the lower planes-while the Man himself basks in the Light of to Eternal Sun. Every Mukta Yogi is a Dharma-Megha-the Cloud  of Holiness-the showerer of good and nothing but good on all creation. A man who has become a Dharma-Megha- a Cloud of Holiness, is above all afflictions and Karmas, his mind is free from all taints, and there is nothing that is beyond the scope of his knowledge. Being the Cloud of Dharma all attributes are known to him. Then the man is in his Svarupa -this is Kaivalya, this is Self-realisation-the state of true Freedom, though full of highest activity. Such a Man, the Dharma-Megha, the Cloud of Holiness, is a blessing to the thirsting humanity-nay a blessing to the whole creation. 

Dated, 24th February 1910. 

Book 1 

 

Monday 28 December 2020

Mohini Chatterji on Karma – Sowing and Reaping 3

From May to September 1886, an intriguing short story by Mohini Chatterji ran in the Theosophist, entitled Sowing and Reaping. It is a fascinating story about karma and reincarnation in the east and the west, and contains certain recondite passages involving the teachings of a spiritual guide to a student, sometimes of an esoteric nature, some extracts which will be featured in a short series of posts.

Dally not with the enchantress Error and her tire-women, the Passions, who, with loosened girdles and disordered garments, watch the narrow path of Truth, which they cannot cross. The seed was sown in the past, and now the harvest time has come; the hand that scattered the seed must also reap the harvest. The sap that gives bloom to the soul requires for its life both perfect knowledge and perfect love. A sin against love is a sin against knowledge. Listen thou who wert so wise in thy own conceit, a soul plunged in sin and sorrow, though ignorance may call it another and not thyself, is truly and really but a fragment of thee; in ignorance thou holdest fast to the other fragment and callest the whole, thyself. There is no self but one, though a myriad forms reflect its rays. Shun evil but not the evil-doer. Love imperfection for the sake of the perfection that struggles for life through it. Seek to conquer ignorance by knowledge and not by ignorance, with its numberless forms of unlove and ungood. Every denial of sympathy forces the soul to experience that manifestation of life to which sympathy is denied. Sympathy is the super-added life of the soul, it is the vicarious fulfilment of the law. Remember the narrative in the Book of Karma and read the legend inscribed on thy heart by the finger of the stern goddess. It is only by obedience that karma is conquered.

“Know thy soul to be thyself, and from that serene height contemplate the workings of what in thee belongs to the earth, until the earth takes back her own. Be but the witness thyself, and let thy nature fight. Let not karma master you, but be above it. Lose not thyself in action; live in the inner peace. May passion and attachment never grow in thee ! In the midst of trials and Suffering forget not that ignorance alone is pain, and knowledge is the supreme bliss. The hour has come. Go forth to thy work. May the blessings of all the holy men rest upon thy head, my son !” (Ch. 5, The Theosophist, Vol. 7, 645-646)

All mankind formed the object of the divine love in Jesus, and the love of his individual soul was given to all who did the will of his Father. The ideal of marriage in Manu contains the ideal of soul-love. The soul, as manifested in physical life, is a pilgrim following the path of the law. The life of the soul is in the law, and its love is attachment to the law. One embodied soul can love another only to the extent that it finds the law embodied in the other. For this reason Manu looks upon the following of the law as the first requisite in a marriage, and the perpetuation of the race occupies but a very unimportant position in his eyes. The Sanskrit word for wife, Sahadharmini, as you know, really means (a female com­panion on the path of the law. Such a marriage or union, it is obvious, does not die with the body, but re-appears whenever the soul re-appears in incarnation and exists in heaven between incar­nations. Many instances are to be found in which the Hindu sage entered into the married state without the least desire for offspring. You know the celebrated case of Yagnavalka, the sage legislator, and his two wives. These soul marriages were most frequently no marriage at all, as we understand it. (Ch. 8, The Theosophist, Vol. 7, 715)

They say the blood of the heart wash­es the wings of the soul, and makes them grow strong enough to soar to the empyrean of heaven in some future birth.

The sages say no one can read and compre­hend the Book of Karma, unless he is free from Karma himself— unless each individual thought, act and aspiration vibrate in unison with the All and not self. (Ch. 9, The Theosophist, Vol. 7, 779)

The growth of the soul must be like the growth of the flower. It must bend before it can bloom.  (Ch. 9, 784)

Sowing and Reaping 1

Thursday 17 December 2020

Astrology: Winter Solstice - Monday, December 21, 2020

Jupiter & Saturn in the sky, Wisconsin, Dec. 14, 2020

A New Hope

With an eclipse on December 14th, Saturn entering Aquarius on the 17th, Jupiter entering Aquarius on the 19th, we arrive at the Winter Solstice,  which coincides with the great conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn: a remarkable confluence of events to conclude a remarkable year. This powerful chart also has three other tight aspects: Sun conjunct Mercury, Moon sextile Pluto, and Mars square Pluto.

Because  Mars was retrograde from  Sept. 9 to Nov. 13, a second round of squares with the three outer planets in Capricorn occurred. Some of the events that occurred close to exact aspect dates were:

Mars square Saturn (Sept. 29)

Protests in Louisville, Kentucky and other cities erupt after Breonna Taylor case decision, China announces repressive policies towards Uyghurs in Xinjiang, chaotic first US presidential debate, violent clashes between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Coronavirus deaths reached one million worldwide, reports of resurgeance in Covid cases, severe wildfires in California, Yemen's warring parties have agreed to prisoner swap.

Mars square Pluto. (Oct. 9)

A  nationwide increase in vigilante and militia activity in the US, China imposes a repressive national security law in  Hong Kong, the UK, France and Germany impose sanctions on Russia after the poisoning of Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny, Turkey launched its military offensive into northeastern Syria, a German gunman's attack on Synagogue kills two, a bus heading to a Buddhist temple collided with a train in central Thailand, killing at least 20 people,  Hurricane Delta dumped more than 15 inches of rain in the US, the United Nations' World Food Program wins the 2020 Nobel Peace Prize.

Mars square Jupiter (Oct. 19)

Protesters rioted Chile's capital, Santiago, ahead of a referendum on scrapping a dictatorship-era constitution, Muslim extremist decapitation of a high school teacher in  France, violent demonstrations in  Lagos, Nigeria, protesting against police brutality, Iran-backed militias attack north of Baghdad left eight dead and four missing. Coronavirus cases reaches new high,a wildfire spread rapidly in Boulder County, Colorado, prompting the evacuations of at least 3,000 people, NASA's Osiris-Rex spacecraft briefly landed on  asteroid Bennu.

Jupiter conjunct Pluto (November 12)

The final of three Jupiter-Pluto conjunctions occured on November 12, some significant events at that time:

The Trump administration refuses to begin the formal transition process and cooperate with Joe Biden's incoming team, supporters of President Trump clashed with counterprotesters in DC, leading to 20 arrests, insurgents loosely aligned with ISIS attacks in  Mozambique, thousands of Ethiopians are fleeing into neighboring Sudan to escape escalating conflict, at least 74 migrants died in a shipwreck yesterday off the coast of Libya, protests in Belarus against longtime leader Alexander Lukashenko over alledged rigged elections, the US sees  single highest daily Covid count since the pandemic began, Tropical Storm Eta devastating in Nicaragua, Honduras and Guatemala, where dozens have been killed, Azerbaijan and Armenia reach peace accord.

Saturn entered Aquarius on December 17th (until March 7, 2023).

‘’ Saturn is dignified and functioning well… it’s time for a test, slimming down, critical look at, or simplification of:

  • our social lives,
  • ideals and principles,
  • associations and group involvement,
  • contributions and community.’’ (Café Astrology)

Jupiter entered Aquarius on December 19 (to May 13, 2021, and July 28 to December 28, 2021)

‘’Now in Aquarius, Jupiter expands our awareness of our place in the community and the needs of all. Jupiter in Aquarius encourages fairness, impartiality, individuality, and humanitarianism. We reap rewards through being more inclusive and just. We’re opening our minds to progress.’’ (Café Astrology)

Mars (in Aries) square Pluto (in Capricorn) (exact on Dec. 23)

This aspect brings control issues, being hard to please, a tendency to bully and confront, power struggles, suppressed matters emerge, passions run high. It is good to remain flexible and to develop compromise strategies.

Because of the retrograde, Mars will begins its third square aspect to Pluto, Saturn, and Jupiter, the other exact dates are:

Mars  (in Taurus)  square Saturn  (in Aquarius)  Jan. 13, 2021

Mars  square Jupiter  Jan. 23, 2021 (for more on Mars see here)

Moon (in Pisces) sextile Pluto

This aspect brings deep feelings and emotions and the need for deeper connections. Hidden feelings in a relationships may emerge. There is a desire for domestic change such as cleaning and repairing. There may be compulsive and one-track obsessions that need to be examined. There is also a interest for the mysterious in all forms, from the natural to the supernatural. This dreamy aspect should soften the harsher energies of the Mars- Pluto square.

Mercury conjunct Sun (in Capricorn) (exact on Dec. 19)

This aspect brings a sharpness of mind and communicative energy in debating and corresponding. Good for new business ventures and planning for the future. A desire to travel. Tendency for self-centeredness which may lead to impulsive speaking and poor listening.

Jupiter’s conjunction to Saturn (in Aquarius)

A basic description of this aspect:

1-Confronting inhibitions, self-restrictions and outer restrictions. Breaking out and trying new things or changing within existing limits.

2- Restlessness, the need to break away and seek freedom from restrictive structures. Change of job, residence, and end of a relationship.

3- Building new structures, expanding existing orders, carefully and cautiously.

4- If there are tensions, then changes will be more abrupt. If things were stable, the changes will be more gradual.

 ‘’While we can be working hard, we’re not working against the grain–for the most part, there’s support or our realistic confidence supports us. We’re inclined to focus these rebuilding and reforming energies and visions on our humanitarian impulses, contributions to society, social life, technological development, causes, and friendships. In some ways, this can be considered a reset button–a chance to build anew.’’ (Café Astrology)

This pivotal year has lived up to it’s promise in quite a striking manner, with the culmination of three major planetary cycles: Saturn-Pluto (38 years), Jupiter-Pluto (13 years) and Jupiter-Saturn (20 years), which are quite interconnected as multiples of the cycles make for a closely coinciding period of 38, 39 (13 x 3) and 40 (20  x 2) years. This chart marks the ending of the first twenty-year cycle of the new millennium – a time to reflect on what has been happening since the new millennium, what has been accomplished, achieved, where are we at. Computer and internet technology has deeply changed our way of living, giving us rapid access to massive sources of information; the information age has made a quantum leap. It is also a time to look forward to the next 20 years, what needs to be done, where are we going, what new doors can be opened, with the optimism, energy and enthusiasm a new cycle brings.

According to Gray Crawford, on 2020:

''Since Jupiter and Pluto are uniting in Capricorn, they will be under rulership of the slow and steady Saturn, bringing tests that temper the potential excess and inflation of Jupiter. Jupiter, Pluto, and Saturn transiting through Capricorn will bring lessons of maturity and responsibility cultivated through acceptance of natural cycles of change. The combination of Jupiter and Pluto can incite extreme ambition for personal power, yet their transit through Capricorn along with Saturn means that we will need to adjust aspirations to contend with the limitations we face in regard to material resources and available time and space. The difficulties or crises we endure will bring revisioning of what needs to be nurtured and developed—and what needs to be shed and let go.''

And nature, in her way, has been kind, in order to help us better introspect on what is essential, and determine what has to be let go, she has given us a pandemic,  showing us how inter-connected and inter-dependent we really are. The pandemic has often pushed us to let go a lot of things and makes us appreciate the essentials of life and appreciate how health, human relations, and careers are not be taken for granted. This past year, marked by Capricorn, has been a strong message of law, justice, social order, lessons in hard work, discipline, organization; but also about power in society with the abuses and inequalities thereof.  Hence the police forces, the officers of the law and order, were an area that problems of abuse and corruption came to a head; and the targets of this oppression, the under-privileged and ethnic minorities, further brought to light the problems of social inequality. The strong conflicts served to bring to light the social imbalances and injustices. The pandemic stressed our need to cooperate and work together but how can we cooperate when there are increasing social inequalities and imbalances along with massive war-induced refugee problems?

In the next year, it should be easier for productive action on the greater awareness of social inequalities to take place (although marked by a Uranus-Saturn square which can be quite challenging). We are again faced with the challenge of Jupiter and Saturn in the same sign. Saturn, although still being powerful, is not quite as powerful as in Capricorn, so there can be a more balanced interplay between the Saturn and Jupiter energies. Moreover, the eclipses of 2021 will be in the signs of Gemini and Sagittarius. This axis represents knowledge and consciousness, the power of ideas, how they spread, and to whom they belong; both signs are related to education and travel.  This axis should be quite complementary to Jupiter (ruler of Sagittarius) in Aquarius (an air sign, like Gemini).

Moreover, this new Jupiter-Saturn cycle marks a definitive shift from earth signs to air signs, which will last until 2159. The previous Jupiter-Saturn cycles were in earth signs since 1802. Once can interpret this as the age of oil and carbon fuels, whereas the next cycle in air signs can mark a new era of alternate energies, along with satellite and computer technologies that have developed over the last 40 years. In the following years, four outer planets will be changing signs over a four-year period, 2023-2026, and so by 2026, we should be witnessing an interesting paradigm shift.

References:

https://cafeastrology.com/astrology-of-2020.html

Gray Crawford 2020 Jupiter-Pluto Conjunction: Birthing Ambition and Compassion from the Core https://www.astrology.com/article/2020-jupiter-pluto-conjunction-meaning

Robert Hand, Planets in Transit. Atgen, PA,, Whitford Press. 2001.

Monday 7 December 2020

Theosophy Basics: What is a Theosophical Society?


As the Theosophical Society expanded throughout the world in the 1880s, it had to adapt and adjust to deal with the challenge of international relations in a colonialist geo-political reality; theses experiences were reflected in changes and additions in the charter and the organizational structure of the society. The liberal extracts from Blavatsky's writings below reflect some of the debates and discussions that evolved from the original charter of the Theosophical Society concerning its organization, values and objectives.

1- General Goals

In general, the theosophical perspective has a basic set of goals that is implicit in all its activites. For example keeping spiritual values alive through a critical study of various traditions and beliefs: ‘’Our duty is to keep alive in man his spiritual intuitions. To oppose and counteract — after due investigation and proof of its irrational nature — bigotry in every form, religious, scientific, or social, and cant above all, whether as religious sectarianism or as belief in miracles or anything supernatural‘’  (Key, 48).

Encouraging intellectual, moral and spiritual self-improvement is another prime concern: ‘’Our duty is to encourage and assist individual fellows in self-improvement, intellectual, moral, and spiritual; not to blame or condemn those who fail‘’ (Key 49).

Promoting the cultivation of unbiased and clear judgement, in order to avoid dogmatic sectarianism is another central interest: ‘’I spoke rather of the great need which our successors in the guidance of the Society will have of unbiassed and clear judgment. Every such attempt as the Theosophical Society has hitherto ended in failure, because, sooner or later, it has degenerated into a sect, set up hard-and-fast dogmas of its own, and so lost by imperceptible degrees that vitality which living truth alone can impart ‘’ (Key, 305).

The theosophical project holds an idealistic and optimistic vision of world peace and spiritual renewal: ‘’ It may well be that the beautiful utopia, the philanthropic dream, that sees as if in a vision the triple wish of The Theosophical Society come true, is still far off: entire and complete freedom of human conscience granted to all, brotherhood established between the rich and the poor, and equality between the aristocrat and the plebeian recognized in theory as well as in practice ‘’ (CW11, 283; CW12, 307; CW12, 296).

2- Three Objects

The three objects of the Theosophical Society were established in the original charter in 1875. Even though Blavatsky’s early 1877 work Isis Unveiled broadly covers many different religious and scientific traditions, both ancient and modern, at the time there was a clear side-goal of promoting and reviving eastern philosophies which were suffering under colonialist rule, although they were being seriously studied through Max Muller’s extensive Sacred Books of the East translation project: ‘’ (1.) To form the nucleus of a Universal Brotherhood of Humanity without distinction of race, colour, or creed. (2.) To promote the study of Aryan and other Scriptures, of the World's religion and sciences, and to vindicate the importance of old Asiatic literature, namely, of the Brahmanical, Buddhist, and Zoroastrian philosophies. (3.) To investigate the hidden mysteries of Nature under every aspect possible, and the psychic and spiritual powers latent in man especially‘’ (Key, 39).

Membership requirements were quite basic, adherence to one of the three principles was sufficient: ‘’No member is obliged to feel in full sympathy with all three objects; suffice that he should be in sympathy with one of the three, and be willing not to oppose the two others, to render him eligible to membership in the T. S.‘’ ( CW11, 335; Key, 19).

2a- Universal Brotherhood / Sisterhood

The first object is considered to be the most important (the other two being complementary to the first). It is quite an idealistic outlook, with the object of encouraging tolerance and kindness as a means of promoting world peace and fairness for all in a cosmopolitan spirit of philanthropy, acknowledging the spiritual nature of all: ‘’A true theosophist must be a cosmopolitan in his heart. He must embrace mankind, the whole of humanity in his philanthropic feelings. It is higher and far nobler to be one of those who love their fellow men, without distinction of race, creed, caste or colour, than to be merely a good patriot, or still less, a partisan (CW 10, 74-75; CW 10, 199-200).

Universal Brotherhood is based on the notions of a common origin and nature of Humanity (Key, 41), the fundamental spiritual identity of humanity (Key, 43), the idea of the fundamental unity of humanity (Key, 43-46), the basic inter-connectedness of humanity, like the parts of a plant, if one part is hurt, it affects the whole (Key, 46-47).

2b- Comparative Studies

To develop the theosophical perennialist universalist perspective, the second object aims to foster comparative studies in order to promote free-thinking and non-sectarian, non-dogmatic views: ‘’For it is only by studying the various great religions and philosophies of humanity, by comparing them dispassionately and with an unbiased mind, that men can hope to arrive at the truth. It is especially by finding out and noting their various points of agreement that we may achieve this result‘’(Key, 59); ‘’Hence, as an impersonal Society, we must welcome Truth wherever it may be found, without partiality for any one belief as against another‘’ (CW11, 127).

Necessarily this implies a certain method and organization in research: ‘’For, let it be well understood, theosophy has this in common with ordinary science, that it examines the reverse side of every apparent truth. It tests and analyses every fact put forward by physical science, looking only for the essence and the ultimate and occult constitution in every cosmical or physical manifestation, whether in the domain of ethics, intellect, or matter‘’  (CW11, 253),

2c- Human Potential

The third object is meant to include all questions of spiritual development and esoteric philosophy; with a distinct interest in investigating the question of spiritualism and paranormal phenomena and the question of psychic powers such as clairvoyance telepathy, telekinesis, psychometry, magnetism and hypnotism: ‘’Observe the third declaration, that only a portion of our fellows occupy themselves with the study of the occult properties of matter and the psychical powers of man. The society as a whole, then, is not concerned in this branch of research. And naturally; for out of every ten thousand people one may meet, the chances are that but a very small minority have the time, taste, or ability to take up such delicate and baffling studies.‘’ (CW12, 304); ‘’Now as to the third object on our list. Properly speaking, the term “psychical research” should include the whole of the great movement known as modern spiritualism.‘’ (CW12, 308)

3- Altruism

Despite the general human tendency towards selfishness, the theosophical approach gives major importance to the unselfish altruistic values: ‘’ Nothing of that which is conducive to help man, collectively or individually, to live—not « happily »—but less unhappily in this world, ought to be indifferent to the Theosophist-Occultist. It is no concern of his whether his help benefits a man in his worldly or spiritual progress; his first duty is to be ever ready to help if he can, without stopping to philosophize‘’ (CW11, 465; CW11, 164; CW11, 274; Key, 53; Key, 241).

An extract from a letter from one of Blavatsky’s teachers has become a classic formulation of this idea: He who does not practice altruism; he who is not prepared to share his last morsel with a weaker or a poorer than himself; he who neglects to help his brother man, of whatever race, nation, or creed, whenever and wherever he meets suffering, and who turns a deaf ear to the cry of human misery; he who hears an innocent person slandered, whether a brother Theosophist or not, and  does not undertake his defense as he would undertake his own—is no Theosophist‘’  (CW10, 69).

4- Freedom

The universalist perspective entails that freedom of thought is an important value: ‘’ Membership in the Theosophical Society does not expose the "Fellows" to any interference with their religious, irreligious, political, philosophical or scientific views. The Society is not a sectarian nor is it a religious body, but simply a nucleus of men devoted to the search after truth, whencesoever it may come‘’ (CW11, 334; Key, 19; CW11, 432).

A cosmopolitan sense of equality and respect of fundamental human rights for all is part of this perspective: ‘’no Fellow in the Society, whether exoteric or esoteric, has a right to force his personal opinions upon another Fellow. "It is not lawful for any officer of the Parent Society to express in public, by word or act, any hostility to, or preference for, any one section, religious or philosophical, more than another. All have an equal right to have the essential features of their religious belief laid before the tribunal of an impartial world. And no officer of the Society, in his capacity as an officer, has the right to preach his own sectarian views and beliefs to members assembled, except when the meeting consists of his co-religionists‘’ (CW11, 128; Key, 230; Key, 50).

In general, self-reliance, as well as independent and original thinking is encouraged, in a spirit of inclusiveness. The position is one of neutrality, objectivity and open-mindedness:‘’Be what he may, once that a student abandons the old and trodden highway of routine, and enters upon the solitary path of independent thought--Godward--he is a Theosophist; an original thinker, a seeker after the eternal truth with "an inspiration of his own" to solve the universal problems‘’ (CW2, 102; CW11, 124).

5- Tolerance

Tolerance and charity are the key principles in relations among one’s fellow human beings: ‘’Pity and forbearance, charity and long-suffering, ought to be always there to prompt us to excuse our sinning brethren, and to pass the gentlest sentence possible upon those who err. A Theosophist ought never to forget what is due to the shortcomings and infirmities of human nature‘’  (Key, 251).

This principle of tolerance is of course extended to the field of religion, which includes denouncing fanaticism: ‘’These views are his own personal property and have nought to do with the Society. Because Theosophy can be practiced by Christian or Heathen, Jew or Gentile, by Agnostic or Materialist, or even an Atheist, provided that none of these is a bigoted fanatic, who refuses to recognize as his brother any man or woman outside his own special creed or belief ‘’  (CW10, 164)

Freedom, tolerance and equality are considered mutually complementary values: ‘’ We have now, we think, made clear why our members, as individuals, are free to stay outside or inside any creed they please, provided they do not pretend that none but themselves shall enjoy the privilege of conscience, and try to force their opinions upon the others‘’ (CW2, 104).

This spirit of tolerance includes both scientific and religious beliefs: ‘’ In conclusion, we may state that, broader and far more universal in its views than any existing mere scientific Society, it has plus science its belief in every possibility, and determined will to penetrate into those unknown spiritual regions which exact science pretends that its votaries have no business to explore. And, it has one quality more than any religion in that it makes no difference between Gentile, Jew, or Christian. It is in this spirit that the Society has been established upon the footing of a Universal Brotherhood‘’ (CW2, 105).

Tuesday 1 December 2020

Theosophy Basics: What is Theosophy?

   

In her writings, Blavatsky was concerned with explaining the notion of Theosophy based in a perspective of the Western esoteric tradition, trying to widen the universalist perspective by including spiritual traditions from the East and elsewhere. She was also concerned with forming a bridge between science and religion. Between 1879 and 1889, she would develop these ideas; the text below offers a general summary, liberally culled from various writings.

     1- Etymology

Blavatsky explains the meaning of the word Theosophy as ‘Divine Wisdom’ or ‘Wisdom of the Gods’, from the roots theos (god, divine) and sophia (wisdom) (CW9,123; CW9, 434)

Moreover, the word is first encountered with the neo-Platonist Porphyry (A.D. 234–c. 305.) who connects theosophy with the gymnosophists of India («Περí Αποχής Εμψύχων» 17, π 237, β. 4) , thus corroborating Blavatsky's connection of Theosophy with Neoplatonism and the eastern Gupta Vidya (The Key to Theosophy. pp. 1-7).

2-      History / Primordiality

Throughout history, there has been evidence of a wisdom-religion, a tradition defined by the search for and study of wisdom and knowledge:  ‘’Theosophy is, then, the archaic Wisdom-Religion, the esoteric doctrine once known in every ancient country having claims to civilization. This "Wisdom" all the old writings show us as an emanation of the divine Principle’’ (CW2, 89).

3-      Esoteric Philosophy

A fundamental key for understanding the theosophical perspective is the distinction between exoteric religion and esoteric traditions. The exoteric, popular, public religions contain deeper meanings that can be learned by studying the esoteric philosophies: ‘’The Theosophists have seen very clearly that, in religions, there have always been two teachings; the one very simple in appearance and full of images or fables which are put forward as realities; this is the public teaching, called  exoteric. The other, esoteric or inner, reserved for the more educated and discreet adepts, the initiates of the second degree’’(CW10, 70; CW11, 255-56).

4-      Wisdom Religion / Tradition

This Wisdom-Religion concept posits the notion of a primordial tradition, similar to the story of the Tower of Babel. All major spiritual traditions spring from a common original source, (primeval divine instructors) : ‘’This name, WISDOM, or, as we say sometimes, the "Wisdom Religion" or Theosophy, is as old as the human mind’’ (CW2, 89; CW10, 166).

This Wisdom-Religion / tradition denotes an eminently holistic world view: ‘’Thus, unity of everything in the universe implies and justifies our belief in the existence of a knowledge at once scientific, philosophical and religious, showing the necessity and actuality of the connection of man and all things in the universe with each other’’ (CW10, 167).

5-      Perennialism

Therefore Theosophy makes no claim for innovation, it relies on an eclectic study of spiritual traditions: ‘’ The Society has no wisdom of its own to support or teach. It is simply the storehouse of all the truths uttered by the great seers, initiates, and prophets of historic and even pre-historic ages; ‘’ (Key 57).

In short, Theosophy can be defined as the essence of all religion ‘’ it is the essence of all religion and of absolute truth, a drop of which only underlies every creed‘’ (Key, 58).

Because they all sprang from a common source and are all inter-connected, they all have fundamental points in common: ‘’It is from this WISDOM-RELIGION that all the various individual "Religions" (erroneously so called) have sprung, forming in their turn offshoots and branches, and also all the minor creeds, based upon and always originated through some personal experience in psychology‘’ (CW10, 167).

Theosophy is concerned, however, with adapting this ancient wisdom with current knowledge and adapting eastern philosophy for western societies: ‘’ In one word, our whole aim and desire are to help, in at least some degree, toward arriving at correct scientific views upon the nature of man, which carry with them the means of reconstructing for the present generation the deductive metaphysical or transcendental philosophy which alone is the firm, unshakable foundation of every religious philosophy‘’ (CW12, 308; CW9, 243; CW11, 251).

6-      Universalism

Certain aspects of scientific method and critical thinking are also part of the universalist project: ‘’ But once get a man to see that none of them has the whole truth, but that they are mutually complementary, that the complete truth can be found only in the combined views of all, after that which is false in each of them has been sifted out — then true brotherhood in religion will be established’’ (Key, 46).

Moreover, the recognition of a universal belief in the after-life is an important part of the perspective: ‘’Surely this must be considered a gain by the friends of spirituality as opposed to materialism,--those, at any rate, who think that morals, peace, and prosperity will be promoted by the universal belief in a life after death (whether eternal or broken up by a series of reincarnations on the same earth), and in man's possession of a higher, undying SELF, latent spiritual powers, and consciousness.’’ (CW12, 296).

Being a universalist approach, it is necessary to be an open, inclusive, tolerant, non-dogmatic perspective ‘’It is truly Universal in spirit and constitution. It recognises and fosters no exclusiveness, no preconceptions. In the T. S. alone do men meet in the common search for truth, on a platform from which all dogmatism, all sectarianism, all mutual party hatred and condemnation are excluded; for, accepting every grain of truth wherever it is found, it waits in patience till the chaff that accompanies it falls off by itself ‘’(CW11, 339).

     7-      Monism 

Moreover, this universalism is supported by a perspective of metaphysical monism: ‘’ Theosophy is monistic through and through. It seeks the one Truth in all religions, in all science, in all experience, as in every system of thought. What aim can be nobler, more universal, more all-embracing? ‘’(CW11, 339; Key, 41; Key, 63- 65)

Blavatsky sees the common essence of all metaphysical perspectives: ‘’In the final analysis, the greatest of materialists, as well as the most transcendental of philosophers, admits the omnipresence of an impalpable Proteus, omnipotent in its ubiquity throughout all kingdoms of nature, including man--a Proteus indivisible in its essence, without form and yet manifesting itself in all forms, which is here, there, everywhere and nowhere, which is the All and the Nothing, which is all things and always One, Universal Essence which binds, limits and contains everything, and which everything contains‘’ (CW11, 127).

All is one, the duality between spirit and matter is considered to be illusory: ‘’The Monism of Theosophy is truly philosophical. We conceive of the universe as one in essence and origin. And though we speak of Spirit and Matter as its two poles, yet we state emphatically that they can only be considered as distinct from the standpoint of human, mayavic (i.e., illusionary) consciousness‘’ (CW11, 336)

Divinity is considered both transcendent and imminent: ‘’Our DEITY is neither in a paradise, nor in a particular tree, building, or mountain: it is everywhere, in every atom of the visible as of the invisible Cosmos, in, over, and around every invisible atom and divisible molecule; for IT is the mysterious power of evolution and involution, the omnipresent, omnipotent, and even omniscient creative potentiality‘’ (Key, 64-5 ; CW11, 432).

These aforementioned universalist concepts of Theosophy, constitue a general basis free from dogma and sectarian creeds : ‘’This is obviously true in the case of the doctrine of the underlying unity of all religions and the existence, as claimed by Theosophists, of a common source called the Wisdom-religion of the secret teaching, from which, according to the same claims, all existing forms of religion are directly or indirectly derived. Admitting this, we are pressed to explain, how can the T.S. as a body be said to have no special views or doctrines to inculcate, no creed and no dogmas, when these are "the back-bone of the Society, its very heart and soul"? (CW11, 432).

8-      Religion

Blavatsky describes an open, universalist, humanistic concept of religion: ‘’the assertion that "Theosophy is not a Religion," by no means excludes the fact that "Theosophy is Religion" itself. A Religion in the true and only correct sense, is a bond uniting men together--not a particular set of dogmas and beliefs. Now Religion, per se, in its widest meaning is that which binds not only all MEN, but also all BEINGS and all things in the entire Universe into one grand whole. This is our theosophical definition of religion‘’( CW10, 161; CW10, 162).

Theosophy can thus be better described as a religious philosophy: ‘’Thus it becomes evident that Theosophy cannot be a "religion," still less "a sect," but it is indeed the quintessence of the highest philosophy in all and every one of its aspects‘’ (CW11, 436).

9- Science & Religion

Blavatsky does not totally reject modern scientific research methods; she is seeking a harmony between science and religion: ‘’Yet, de facto, Theosophy claims to be both "RELIGION" and "SCIENCE," for theosophy is the essence of both‘’ (CW10, 171; CW2, 103;  CW10, 172;  CW11, 435)