Saturday, 7 January 2023

Top 12 posts of 2022

The readers have spoken, thank you for your interest and support. The tracking is primitive, so not an exact report of the most popular posts, more a reflection of the strange alchemy produced by occasional promotional efforts, fortuitous timing, attempts at trend spotting, inscrutable public preferences, and accidental convergences...

Much time was spent researching politics on the Blavatsky News 2.0 blog, so there was a fairly simple focus on the Bhagavad Gita and the Yoga Sutras this year,  although I like to think that the embryology, universal brother and sisterhood, and Atlantis posts were relevant to current events and issues in society, with the more frequent astrology posts reflecting this concern as well. Our plans for the upcoming year are to do three posts a month and one monthly Blavatsky News post, since there's always plenty of interesting things going on with Blavatsky news. We will try to expand the scope of our topics this year and possibly present some larger studies and longer works.

1- Atlantis, Theosophy (and Ignatius Donnelly)
Thursday, 17 November 2022
 
2- Leo Tolstoy on Universal Brother/Sisterhood (The Kingdom of God is Within You)   
Sunday, 6 March 2022
 

3- The Bhagavad Gita - a Theosophical Bibliography 

Wednesday, 20 April 2022

https://theosophyproject.blogspot.com/2022/04/the-bhagavad-gita-theosophical.html

 
4- The spiritual, mystical and esoteric symbolism of the Cross and the Crucifixion - Anna Kingsford 
Saturday, 16 April 2022
 
5- Judge yourself, not others, according to 9 spiritual traditions
Saturday, 23 July 2022
 
6- Pope Francis on Universal Brother/Sisterhood (Fratelli tutti) 
Thursday, 3 February 2022
 
7- Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras - A Theosophical Bibliography  
Sunday, 20 February 2022
 
8- Thích Nhất Hạnh on Universal Brother/Sisterhood 
Thursday, 27 January 2022
 
9- Blavatsky on the History of Early Christianity and Gnosticism 
Tuesday, 7 June 2022
 
10- Patanjali's Yoga Sutras Summary: Book 1: On Samādhi 
Thursday, 5 May 2022
 
11- Bhagavad Gita Summary - Book 7 - Jnana–Vijnana (The Yoga of Knowledge and Judgment)   
Sunday, 27 February 2022
 
12- Blavatsky on Human Embryology 
Thursday, 8 September 2022

Sunday, 1 January 2023

Astrology: The Year in Review 2022, Part 1

2020 saw the start of three major cycles with Saturn-Pluto, Jupiter-Pluto, and the Jupiter-Saturn shift into 200 years of air transits.  The new Jupiter-Saturn cycle and a waning Pluto in Capricorn phase coupled with a waning Saturn-Pluto square gave us a rather tumultuous year, with Russia's dramatic invasion of Ukraine, which captivated media attention for much of the year and other striking events on the world stage.
 
Winter (December 21 -  March 20)
 
Jupiter sextile Uranus, February 17, 2022 
 

With a full moon on February 16th (with a  Venus-Mars conjunction in Capricorn), a Jupiter-Uranus exact sextile on the 17th, Sun entering Pisces on the 18th and the US having a Pluto return on the 20th  there was quite a shift in direction in the space of a few days.

In a previous post I wrote:’’Judging from the previous ones, the third and final Saturn-Uranus square (December 24, 2021) could bring some heavy difficulties, but it is also an opportunity to come to terms with the previous conflicts. It can be considered as a final reality check before this aspect gradually fades, embarking on a new, optimistic, constructive phase that the Jupiter-Saturn cycle brings.’’

The difficulties did arrive, with a highly contagious Omicron Covid wave beginning during the holiday season, and with mounting frustrations, a remarkable Canadian trucker vaccine mandate protest occurring by the end of January. This occurred as the Saturn-Uranus square was waning, moving past the five degree orb where I consider it to have strong effect. Therefore I do posit that it is a waning burst of frustration before a new phase begins. Moreover, with the flu pandemic of 1918, it seems the public tolerance and the government resources hit a limit after two years of combating the virus, so perhaps hitting a two-year threshold can explain the outburst, which is consistent with the volatile aspects of a square involving Uranus.

‘’This aspect has played out globally with public health mandates in response to COVID-19, especially vaccines and vaccine “passports.” Saturn sees vaccination and documentation as the evidence-backed, rational, pragmatic, and proven approach to dealing with a global pandemic. Uranus sees it as an authoritarian overreach that imposes on its freedoms.’’ (Astrology with Andy)

With these truck occupations, one notices an odd juxtaposition of friendly winter fair atmosphere with expressions of good will, on one hand, and aggressive, extreme right-wing ideologies on the other. Moreover, the rather grandiloquent, yet fuzzy statements by the protesters seems consistent with a Jupiter in Pisces influence. The creative use of technology seems to be aided by both Jupiter in Pisces and Uranus in Taurus. The exact Jupiter sextile Uranus may give the protesters a boost of enthusiasm and new ideas, although it might likely give a greater boost to the law-enforcement strategies, due to the inherently conservative, rigid stance of the protest under a waning Saturn-Uranus aspect that fuelled it. At the time, I noted, concerning the Jupter-Uranus sextile of February 17: 'It's possible that this new aspect could also see a significant shift in the Russia-Ukraine conflict, which has been festering since the end of December.'

Jupiter in Pisces

Spring (March 21 - June 20)

US Pluto Return, February 20

The US Pluto return on February 20, coincided quite closely with the Russian invasion, so there would seem to be a connection. As noted, one could see a parallel with the Afghanistan occupation which marked the previous Jupiter-Saturn cycle.

see my analysis of the Russian Invasion of Ukraine

Aquarius and Pisces Stellia, March 2

The two powerful stellia in the Spring Equinox chart indicate a strong humanistic, compassionate, social, global solidarity against the invasion. The chart around the new moon on March 2 captures one of the strongest moments of the stellia, with a conjunction of five planets in Aquarius and four planets in Pisces, and actually all nine planets could be considered in conjunction with each other. This moment coincided with a record United Nations vote supporting a resolution against Russian aggression in Ukraine and also a strong vote to end plastic pollution.

Looking back at some aspects near the Spring Equinox, we have the Mars square Uranus exact on March 22, a very volatile aspect, and one could point to the plane crash in China that occurred the day before 

As an example of the  positive Piscean (Mars, Venus, Saturn in Aquarius) and Aquarian (Jupiter, Neptune in Pisces) energies, on April 2nd, Pope Francis gave an apology to Canadian Indigenous people for the Catholic Churche’s role in the forced assimilation and abuse of the residential school program 

Jupiter-Neptune conjunction
, April 12

It seems that the powerful May 16 eclipse had quite an impact, with several high-profile elections coinciding with that period:  Russia lost an important ally as Pakistan president Imran Khan was voted out (April 9). Hong Kong Pro-Beijing candidate John Lee was elected as democratic structures were radically curtailed (May 8). Emmanuel Macron’s party was re-elected in France (May 10). A financially struggling Sri Lanka elected a new government (May 17). The Philippines made a decidedly conservative new government choice (May 17).  Columbia is in a tight two-way race (June 19) (Gustavo Petro won, Colombia will have a leftist president for the first time.)

Moreover, Sweden and Norway have made steps to join NATO (May 26). Additionally, an epidemic of mass shootings reached a crisis-point in the US, for example, Buffalo, (May 14), Uvalde, Texas (May 24).

Summer (June 21 - September 20)

The Summer quarter had two very volatile aspects, with Mars in Aries square Pluto in Capricorn  going exact on July 1st and Mars square Saturn, exact on August 7. Below are some events occurring around the time of the Mars-Pluto square:

-
UK prime Minister Boris Johnson resigns
- Japan's former PM Shinzo Abe 'has died' after being shot twice by navy veteran during campaign speech. 
- G7 summit in Elmau, Germany: The G7 leaders want to fight the climate crisis, hunger and war. 
- Allied leaders agreed on a fundamental shift in NATO’s deterrence and defence, with strengthened forward defences, enhanced battlegroups in the eastern part of the Alliance, and an increase in the number of high readiness forces to well over 300,000
- Ecuador’s government says it will restart talks with Indigenous leaders spearheading protests against the soaring cost of living in the country, even as it issued a new state of emergency.
- Thousands return to Sudan streets demanding end of military rule a day after nine people were killed in demonstrations against the country’s ruling generals.
- Libya protesters storm parliament building in Tobruk. Protesters were demonstrating against deteriorating living conditions and political deadlock
- North Macedonia: 47 police officers injured in protests against deteriorating living conditions and political deadlock.
- Zelenskyy says Russia bombed a shopping mall because seeing Ukrainians try to live a normal life made it ‘angry’.
Amid that rather tumultuous period,
the UNGA adopted the resolution on 28 July 2022, recognizing the right to a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment as a human right. The UNGA calls upon States, international organizations, businesses, and other stakeholders to “scale up efforts” to ensure a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment for all (There was a Mars conjunct Uranus in Taurus sextile to Venus in Cancer, and a Sun conjunct Moon in Leo sextile to Jupiter in Aries that day, quite nice).


Autumn
(September 21 - December 20)
 The Saturn-Uranus square moved back into a close orb.  In Iran there were mass protests by women sparked by the death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman arrested by morality police. In Haiti, political instability has seen the increase of violent gang control. In Peru, protests erupted after the impeachment of Pedro Castillo after he tried to dissolve Congress. In Tibet, there have been protests against China's strict Covid lockdown measures. 
 
In Ukraine, local forces have made progress in repelling Russian occupiers, at a moment near the Oct 25 Solar Eclipse and also the November 7 Lunar Eclipse. Some unexplained incidents occurred, such as a bridge in Crimea being sabotaged, and in Russia, Darya Dugina, daughter of Russian traditionalist, Aleksandr Dugin, was assassinated. 
 
The Year Ahead...
 
The difficult Saturn-Uranus square will have faded by the end of January 2023On March 7, Saturn enters Pisces. On March 24th, Pluto enters Aquarius, so the Spring equinox could see significant developments in the Russia-Ukraine conflict, and this period of passage itself could be quite tempestuous. Overall, it can be considered to be the beginning of the more optimistic aspects of the Jovian decade of the Jupiter-Saturn cycle.

Friday, 23 December 2022

The Web of Life (H.P. Blavatsky, Walt Whitman, Mundaka Upanishad)

The seven sons were not yet born from the web of light. Darkness alone was father-mother, Svabhavat; and Svabhavat was in darkness.

These two are the Germ, and the Germ is one. The Universe was still concealed in the Divine thought and the Divine bosom. . . . (H.P. Blavatsky, The Stanzas of Dzyan, 2 5-6, The Secret Doctrine)

Light is cold flame, and flame is fire, and fire produces heat, which yields water: the water of life in the great mother.

Father-Mother spin a web whose upper end is fastened to spirit — the light of the one darkness — and the lower one to its shadowy end, matter; and this web is the universe spun out of the two substances made in one, which is Svabhavat.

It expands when the breath of fire is upon it; it contracts when the breath of the mother touches it. Then the sons dissociate and scatter, to return into their mother’s bosom at the end of the great day, and re-become one with her; when it is cooling it becomes radiant, and the sons expand and contract through their own selves and hearts; they embrace infinitude.

Then Svabhavat sends Fohat to harden the atoms. Each is a part of the web. Reflecting the “Self-Existent Lord” like a mirror, each becomes in turn a world.  (Stanzas 3, 9-12)

 
As a spider ejects and retracts (the threads),
As the plants shoot forth on the earth,
As the hairs on the head and body of the living man,
So from the Imperishable, all that is here.
As the sparks from the well-kindled fire,
In nature akin to it, spring forth in their thousands;
So, my dear sir, from the Imperishable
Living beings of many kinds go forth,
And again return into him.
(Mundaka Upanishad, 1.1.7)
 
A noiseless patient spider,
I mark’d where on a little promontory it stood isolated,
Mark’d how to explore the vacant vast surrounding,
It launch’d forth filament, filament, filament, out of itself,
Ever unreeling them, ever tirelessly speeding them.
And you O my soul where you stand,
Surrounded, detached, in measureless oceans of space,
Ceaselessly musing, venturing, throwing, seeking the spheres to connect them,
Till the bridge you will need be form’d, till the ductile anchor hold,
Till the gossamer thread you fling catch somewhere, O my soul.
(Walt Whitman)
 
But they believed in destiny or Karma, which from birth to death every man is weaving thread by thread around himself, as a spider does his cobweb; and this destiny is guided by that presence termed by some the guardian angel, or our more intimate astral inner man, who is but too often the evil genius of the man of flesh or the personality. Both these lead on Man, but one of them must prevail; and from the very beginning of the invisible affray the stern and implacable law of compensation and retribution steps in and takes its course, following faithfully the fluctuating of the conflict. When the last strand is woven, and man is seemingly enwrapped in the network of his own doing, then he finds himself completely under the empire of this self-made destiny. It then either fixes him like the inert shell against the immovable rock, or like a feather carries him away in a whirlwind raised by his own actions. 
(H.P. Blavatsky, Isis Unveiled, Vol. II, 593)
 
Macrocosm & Microcosm Correspondence? As above, so below?' Some observations from recent scientific studies:
 
'Then Svabhavat sends Fohat to harden the atoms. Each is a part of the web'. (Blavatsky, Stanzas of Dzyan 3, 12) (Fohat is cosmic electricity)
New research suggests that spider webs can lure their prey using, literally, electric attraction (Megan Garber, 2013) https://www.theatlantic.com/.../confirmed-spiders.../277544/

The study, published Thursday in the journal Current Biology, found that when spiders are in a chamber with no wind, but a small electric field, they are likely to prep for take-off, or even fly. Plus, the sensory hairs covering the spiders’ bodies move when the electric field is turned on — much like your own hair stands up due to static electricity. This “spidey sense” could be how the creatures know it’s time to fly. (Amanda Grennel, 2018)
 
golden orbweaver spider has 7 kinds of silk glands & each 1 creates its own liquid protein & solidified & combined in numerous ways, released as silk from 6 spinnerets (Krista Carothers, 14 of the Most Elaborate Spider Webs Ever Found in Nature, 2018/2022) https://www.rd.com/list/elaborate-spider-webs/
 

Thursday, 15 December 2022

Astrology: Winter Solstice, Wednesday December 21, 2022

Impulse and Action
 
For the Autumn equinox, it was forecasted: 
 
There can be tension experienced as our needs for freedom and spontaneity seem to clash with a need for structure and stability.  There may be an overly optimistic tendency to avoid problems, warning signs, along with some impatience. Unconscious fears, obsessive tendencies, paranoid suspicions can reach a crisis point of outbursts and meltdowns. On the positive side, there is a sharp, smart, communicative, sociable energy. There is also a strong potential for empowerment, resolve, insightful discoveries, and deep transformation.  
 
There were several political events that could be said to fit aspects of the forecast. In Iran there were mass protests by women sparked by the death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman arrested by morality police. In Haiti, political instability has seen the increase of violent gang control. In Peru, protests erupted after the impeachment of Pedro Castillo after he tried to dissolve Congress. In Tibet, there have been protests against China's strict Covid lockdown measures. In Ukraine, local forces have made progress in repelling Russian occupiers, at a moment near the Oct 25 Solar Eclipse and also the November 7 Lunar Eclipse. Some unexplained incidents occurred, such as a bridge in Crimea being sabotaged, and in Russia, Darya Dugina, daughter of Russian traditionalist, Aleksandr Dugin, was assassinated. 

The Winter solstice chart is less intense that the fall one, but has a few rambunctious aspects and a few more flamboyant ones.

Venus trine Uranus  
Creative inspiration can be had now. Offbeat, pleasant attitudes are appreciated, noticed, and even adored. People are more willing to socialize. This is a good time for financial undertakings involving electronics, technology, the internet, metaphysics, and the arts, as well as group activities.
Mercury sextile Neptune Intuition runs high. Sensitive artistically,  imagination is stirred, and an increased appreciation for subtleties. Inspired and able to inspire others with words; thinking is fanciful; a good time for artistic or literary projects.   

Moon opposition Mars

 Acting on impulse; temperamental and touchy; ruled by passions now; domestic squabbles. Overly hasty or rash actions taken now could rebound on you.  Healthy risk-taking could simply help to break the routine and get out of a rut.

Sun square Jupiter  
A tendency to wastefulness, as well as faulty decision-making due to over-optimism or arrogance. Jupiter is infusing a boost to ego at this time, and one has to know how to handle it.

At the Solstice, Jupiter re-enters Aries continuing its transit from December 20, 2022 to May 16, 2023. Jupiter in Aries encourages to embrace the inner pioneer, believe in ourselves, make opportunities and expands awareness of our personal courage and enterprising nature.

The Jupiter sextile Pluto aspect from May 3rd has moved back into fairly close orb. A time for discovering our ambitions and motivations, a time to improve, grow, and bring something to the next level. There is increased influence, faith, and insight.  Good for taking steps to better ourselves, solving long-standing problem or capitalizing upon an unrecognized resource.

Summary

The next semester should be less intense than the previous, but a passionate combative tendency remains. There could a fair amount of strange, surprising events, with a good share of light-hearted moments, possibly leading to creative, positive solutions.
The difficult Saturn-Uranus square will have faded by the end of January 2023On March 7, Saturn enters Pisces. On March 24th, Pluto enters Aquarius, so the Spring equinox could see significant developments in the Russia-Ukraine conflict, and this period of passage itself could be quite tumultuous. Overall, it can be considered to be the beginning of the more optimistic aspects of the Jovian decade of the Jupiter-Saturn cycle.
References 

Thursday, 17 November 2022

Atlantis, Blavatsky (and Ignatius Donnelly)

Blavatsky first presented her theories of Atlantis in 1877 (Isis Unveiled I, chs. 14 & 15). In 1880, she wrote a long article: A Land of Mystery, a kind of addenda to the Atlantis sections in Isis Unveiled, mainly about archaeology in Meso and South America. ([Theosophist, Vol. I, No. 6, March, 1880, pp. 159-161] Blavatsky, Collected Writings, Vol. 2 , p. 303) 

Blavatsky positively acknowledged Ignatius Donnelly's Atlantis upon publication & quoted a review from the NY Times (?) (Theosophist v3 June 1882 p237 - The Story of Atlantis.) In October 1882, in the Mahatma Letters to A.P. Sinnett, she gives some fairly detailed differences between her theories and Donnelly's (interestingly disagreeing with aspects of Donnelly's theory that have been criticized as colonialist) .

Esoteric Buddhism by A.P. Sinnett  (1883) is the first full presentation of theosophical evolutionary concepts, which includes Atlantis, a summary of the Mahatma Letters from 1880-82 (which were written out mainly by Blavatsky), a mainstream best-seller. In Blavatsky's Esoteric Buddhism commentary, 1883, while trying to spur alternative spirituality & alternative science, she was critiquing fundamentalist religions and materialistic science of the day; therefore denouncing colonialist and white supremacist attitudes.
Man, Fragments of a Forgotten History, Laura Holloway and Mohini Chatterji  (1885)  builds on the concepts introduced in Esoteric Buddhism and is more descriptive than the generally cryptic, fragmentary hints in the original theosophical literature. Finally, Blavatsky gives her fullest exposition of Atlantis in The Secret Doctrine, 1888. She references Donnelly about a dozen times, as someone who has done research that corroborates her theory of Atlantis in general and specifics points of detail. Of the 14 references, only one is about race (Vol. 2, 266n), related to Indo-European migration theories. Also, Blavatsky's writings are full of pointed critiques of colonialist-inflected scientific theories, ex.: 'Ârya (Sk.) now the name has become the epithet of a race, and our Orientalists, depriving the Hindu Brahmans of their birth-right, have made Aryans of all Europeans' (Theosophical Glossary)
 
William Scott-Elliot's The Story of Atlantis 1896 was produced after Blavatsky's break with A. P. Sinnett, so the work ignores the Secret Doctrine and has many differences of approach. I consider it inconsistent with original theosophy and an early example of neo-theosophy.
 
Ignatius Donnelly book on 'Atlantis' was 1st published in 1882. I can see why Donnelly's work gets more credit in mainstream media, it is more specialized, systematic, detailed, accessible and was more popular. However, the relationship between Blavatsky and Donnelly remains somewhat mysterious, and I think that more research needs to be done.  In French, an important precursor is Louis Jacolliot, whom she references (Histoire des vierges : History of the Virgins. Vanished People and Continents, 1874).
 
Below are some basic extracts from Blavatsky's first exposition of Atlantis, only about twenty pages specifically on Atlantis, but overall there are about one hundred pages concerned with Egypt and India that are related. References updated, with added and corrected pages numbers and various other additions and corrections. Click on page number to see scan of original work cited. An important theme in these sections concern the indigenous Americans secretly continuing their spiritual practices, which she views in a positive way, and she does not hesitate to point out the brutal persecution of the Spanish colonialists.
 
Isis Unveiled I, Chapter 14 - Section 2- The Near East, Ancient America and the Legend of Atlantis 545

Lost Inca City 547 / Mexican and Hindu Astronomy 548 / Arabian Nights and Odyssey 549 / The Near East and Ancient America 550 / Stonehenge 551 / Dragon and Sun Symbolism 551 / Biblical Genealogy 554 / The Near East and Central America 555 / Atlantis 557

Lost Inca City
 
Apart from the fact that this mysterious city has been seen from a great distance by daring travellers, there is no intrinsic improbability of its existence, for who can tell what became of the primitive people who fled before the rapacious brigands of Cortez and Pizarro? Dr. Tschuddi, in his work on Peru, (Peruvian Antiquities, Rivero y Ustariz, Mariano Eduardo de, and  Tschudi, Johann Jakob von, p. 214) tells us of an Indian legend that a train of 10,000 llamas, laden with gold to complete the unfortunate Inca’s ransom, was arrested in the Andes by the tidings of his death, and the enormous treasure was so effectually concealed that not a trace of it has ever been found. He, as well as Prescott (History of the Conquest of Peru (1847)) and other writers, informs us that the Indians to this day preserve their ancient traditions and sacerdotal caste, and obey implicitly the orders of rulers chosen among themselves, while at the same time nominally Catholics and actually subject to the Peruvian authorities. Magical ceremonies practiced by their forefathers still prevail among them, and magical phenomena occur. (see Peruvian Antiquities, So persistent are they in their loyalty to the past, that it seems impossible but that they should be in relations with some central source of authority which constantly supports and strengthens their faith, keeping it alive. May it not be that the sources of this undying faith lie in this mysterious city, with which they are in secret communication? Or must we think that all of the above is again but a “curious coincidence”? (546-47)
 
This tradition of the Dragon and the Sun — occasionally replaced by the Moon — has awakened echoes in the remotest parts of the world. It may be accounted for with perfect readiness by the once universal heliolatrous religion. There was a time when Asia, Europe, Africa, and America were covered with the temples sacred to the sun and the dragons. The priests assumed the names of their deities, and thus the tradition of these spread like a net-work all over the globe: Bel and the Dragon being uniformly coupled together, and the priest of the Ophite religion as uniformly assuming the name of his god. (Archaeologia, or, Miscellaneous tracts relating to antiquity / Society of Antiquaries of London. Volume 25, 1834, p. 220 (Observations on Dracontia, Rev. John Bathurst Deane)) But still, “if the original conception is natural and intelligible . . . and its occurrence need not be the result of any historical intercourse,” as Professor Muller tells us (Chips from a German Workshop, Volume 1, 1867, pp. 269-70) the details are so strikingly similar that we cannot feel satisfied that the riddle is entirely solved. The origin of this universal symbolical worship being concealed in the night of time, we would have far more chance to arrive at the truth by tracing these traditions to their very source. And where is this source? Kircher places the origin of the Ophite and heliolatrous worship, the shape of conical monuments and the obelisks, with the Egyptian Hermes Trismegistus. (Archaeologia, or, Miscellaneous tracts relating to antiquity / Society of Antiquaries of London. Volume 25, 1834, p. 192 Where, then, except in Hermetic books, are we to seek for the desired information? Is it likely that modern authors can know more, or as much, of ancient myths and cults as the men who taught them to their contemporaries? Clearly two things are necessary: first, to find the missing books of Hermes; and second, the key by which to understand them, for reading is not sufficient. Failing in this, our savants are abandoned to unfruitful speculations, as for a like reason geographers waste their energies in a vain quest of the sources of the Nile. Truly the land of Egypt is another abode of mystery! (550-51)

Similarities between Pre-Colombian and Near Eastern Civilisations

The perfect identity of the rites, ceremonies, traditions, and even the names of the deities, among the Mexicans and ancient Babylonians and Egyptians, are a sufficient proof of South America being peopled by a colony which mysteriously found its way across the Atlantic. When? at what period? History is silent on that point; but those who consider that there is no tradition, sanctified by ages, without a certain sediment of truth at the bottom of it, believe in the Atlantis-legend. There are, scattered throughout the world, a handful of thoughtful and solitary students, who pass their lives in obscurity, far from the rumors of the world, studying the great problems of the physical and spiritual universes. They have their secret records in which are preserved the fruits of the scholastic labors of the long line of recluses whose successors they are. The knowledge of their early ancestors, the sages of India, Babylonia, Nineveh, and the imperial Thebes; the legends and traditions commented upon by the masters of Solon, Pythagoras, and Plato, in the marble halls of Heliopolis and Sais; traditions which, in their days, already seemed to hardly glimmer from behind the foggy curtain of the past; — all this, and much more, is recorded on indestructible parchment, and passed with jealous care from one adept to another. These men believe the story of the Atlantis to be no fable, but maintain that at different epochs of the past huge islands, and even continents, existed where now there is but a wild waste of waters. In those submerged temples and libraries the archaeologist would find, could he but explore them, the materials for filling all the gaps that now exist in what we imagine is history. They say that at a remote epoch a traveller could traverse what is now the Atlantic Ocean, almost the entire distance by land, crossing in boats from one island to another, where narrow straits then existed. (557-58)

3- Comparative Sacred Architecture

Universal Religion 560 / Comparative Sacred Architecture 561 /Origin of the Jewish People 567 / Universal Symbolism of Temple Arches 571 / Common Mathematical Proportions 572 / Archaeology and Philology 574

Comparative Sacred Architecture 

Thus is it that all the religious monuments of old, in whatever land or under whatever climate, are the expression of the same identical thoughts, the key to which is in the esoteric doctrine. It would be vain, without studying the latter, to seek to unriddle the mysteries enshrouded for centuries in the temples and ruins of Egypt and Assyria, or those of Central America, British Columbia, and the Nagkon-Wat of Cambodia. If each of these was built by a different nation; and neither nation had had intercourse with the others for ages, it is also certain that all were planned and built under the direct supervision of the priests. And the clergy of every nation, though practicing rites and ceremonies which may have differed externally, had evidently been initiated into the same traditional mysteries which were taught all over the world. (561)

This chapter uses a very wide variety of references; the following are a general sampling:

Draper, John William (1811-1882), History of the Intellectual Development of Europe, Volume I (1875)
James Martin Peebles (1822 – 1922), Around the World: Or, Travels in Polynesia, China, India, Arabia, Egypt, Syria, and Other ‘Heathen’ Countries, 1875
Christian Charles Josias von Bunsen (1791 –1860), Egypt’s Place In Universal History (1848)
Wilkinson, John Gardner, Sir (1797-1875), The manners and customs of the ancient Egyptians (1878)
Isaac Preston Cory (1802–1842), Cory’s Ancient Fragments (1826, 1832 ed.)
Albrecht Müller (1819–1890), “The First Traces of Man in Europe I,” in Popular Science Monthly Volume 6, April 1875
Abbé Charles-Étienne Brasseur de Bourbourg (8 September 1814 – 8 January 1874), Voyage sur l’Isthme de Tehuantepec dan l’état de Chiapas et la République de Guatémala, 1859 et 1860 (1861)
Popol Vuh. Le livre sacré et les mythes de l’antiquité américaine avec les livres héroïques et historiques des Quichés (1861)
John Lloyd Stephens (American, 1805–1852), Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas, and Yucatan (1845)
Frank Vincent (1848-1916), The Land of the White Elephant: Sights and Scenes in Southeastern Asia. (1874)

Chap. 15, section 3- Atlantis (591)

Atlantis 593 / Lost treasure of Incas 596 /
Destruction of Atlantis and Universal Flood Myths 

To continue the tradition, we have to add that the class of hierophants was divided into two distinct categories: those who were instructed by the “Sons of God,” of the island, and who were initiated in the divine doctrine of pure revelation, and others who inhabited the lost Atlantis — if such must be its name — and who, being of another race, were born with a sight which embraced all hidden things, and was independent of both distance and material obstacle. In short, they were the fourth race of men mentioned in the Popol-Vuh, whose sight was unlimited and who knew all things at once. They were, perhaps, what we would now term “natural-born mediums,” who neither struggled nor suffered to obtain their knowledge, nor did they acquire it at the price of any sacrifice. Therefore, while the former walked in the path of their divine instructors, and acquiring their knowledge by degrees, learned at the same time to discern the evil from the good, the born adepts of the Atlantis blindly followed the insinuations of the great and invisible “Dragon,” the King Thevetat (the Serpent of Genesis?). Thevetat had neither learned nor acquired knowledge, but, to borrow an expression of Dr. Wilder in relation to the tempting Serpent, he was “a sort of Socrates who knew without being initiated.” Thus, under the evil insinuations of their demon, Thevetat, the Atlantis-race became a nation of wicked magicians. In consequence of this, war was declared, the story of which would be too long to narrate; its substance may be found in the disfigured allegories of the race of Cain, the giants, and that of Noah and his righteous family. The conflict came to an end by the submersion of the Atlantis; which finds its imitation in the stories of the Babylonian and Mosaic flood: The giants and magicians ” . . . and all flesh died . . . and every man.” All except Xisuthrus and Noah, who are substantially identical with the great Father of the Thlinkithians  in the Popol-Vuh, or the sacred book of the Guatemaleans (rather the chapter on the Popul Vuh in Max Muller's Chips from a German Workshop, Volume 1, 1867, p. 338), which also tells of his escaping in a large boat, like the Hindu Noah — Vaiswasvata. (593)

Louis Jacolliot (1837-1890), The Bible in India or The life of Iezeus Christna (1869)
History of the Virgins. Vanished People and Continents (1874)
Lydia Maria Child (1802-1880), The Progress of Religious Ideas through Successive Ages (3 vols., New York, 1855)
John Denison Baldwin (1809-1883), Pre-Historic Nations or Inquiries Concerning Some of the Great Peoples and Civilizations of Antiquity and Their Probable (1869)
Xuanzang (602-664), ——— (1856). Histoire de la Vie de Hiouen-Thsang [History of the Life of Xuanzang] (in French). Paris.
Wilhelm Schott (1802-1889), Über den Buddhaismus in Hoch Asien und in China
John L. O’Sullivan (1813-1895)
Max Müller (1823-1890) Three Lectures on the Vedanta Philosophy
Cyprian (200-258), De idolorum vanitate (“On the Vanity of Images,”)
Jacques Joseph Champollion-Figeac (1178-1867), L’Egypt ancienne et moderne (1840)

Some useful links: 
 
Theosophy and the Seven Continents, David Pratt
 
Rise and Demise of Atlantis, Blavatsky
 
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the Secret Doctrine,  Antonios Goyios
 
Producing lost civilisations: Theosophical concepts, Handbook of New Religions & Cultural Production, 2012

Recent scientific articles:
 
A New Understanding of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and Plate Tectonics 
Jackie Rocheleau 8 March, 2021 
The first seismic data obtained directly from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge suggest that upwelling may contribute to seafloor spreading.

Lost Continents Could Be Hidden Inside Earth 
Theo Nicitopoulos Jun 16, 2022
The discovery of ancient rocks at a mid-ocean ridge suggests that if there are lost continents, remnants might still be there.

Articles on Ignatius Donnelly:

Ignatius Donnelly: Paranoid progressive in the Gilded Age 
Atlantis Zac Farber Minnesota Lawyer May 30, 2018
gave a newspaper he founded the motto: “Eternal hostility to every form of oppression of the bodies & souls of men.”
 
Doctor Huguet: Ignatius Donnelly on Being Black 
John R. Bovee Minnesota History Summer 1969 286-94 
'In almost all his books, and certainly in his novels, he stressed above all that men must live as brothers' 'In every intelligent white man the intelligent black man will find a defender; and the reign of peace and love and brotherhood will begin.' collections.mnhs.org/MNHistoryMagaz

 
 
Ignatius Donnelly His Doctor Huguet novel 1891
JS Patterson American Quarterly 22, 4 1970  

update: first major modern study on Ignatius Donnelly, 2024
Zachary Michael Jack, The Strange Genius of Ignatius Donnelly: The Populist Who Debunked Shakespeare and Found Atlantis.  
 
The Peculiar Case of Ignatius Donnelly
Andrew Katzenstein December 12, 2024
https://www.thenation.com/article/culture/ignatius-donnellys-biography-review/