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in
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Theosophy
we
are pleased to present here an in depth manual of Theosophical ideas and
concepts by Alfred Percy Sinnett
who
was a major contributor to the development of modern Theosophy in the early
years of the Theosophical movement
Esoteric
Buddhism
By
Alfred
Percy Sinnett
The Constitution of Man
Chapter 2
A SURVEY of Cosmogony, as comprehended
by occult science, must precede any attempt to explain the means by which a
knowledge of that cosmogony itself has been acquired. The methods of esoteric
research have grown out of natural facts, with which exoteric science is wholly
unacquainted. These natural facts are concerned with the premature development
in occult adepts of faculties, which mankind at large has not yet evolved; and
these faculties, in turn, enable their possessors to explore the mysteries of
Nature, and verify the esoteric doctrines, setting forth its grand design. The
practical student of occultism may develop the faculties first and apply them
to the observation of Nature afterwards, but the exhibition of the theory of
Nature for Western readers merely seeking its intellectual comprehension, must
precede consideration of the inner senses, which occult research employs. On
the other hand, a survey of cosmogony, as comprehended by occult science, could
only be scientifically arranged at the expense of intelligibility for European
readers. To begin at the beginning, we should endeavour to realize the state of
the universe before evolution sets in. This subject is by no means shirked by
esoteric students, and later on, in the course of this sketch, some hints will
be given concerning the views occultism entertains of the earlier processes
through which cosmic matter passes on its way to evolution. But an orderly
statement of the earliest processes of Nature would embody references to man’s
spiritual constitution, which would not be understood without some preliminary
explanation.
Seven distinct principles are
recognized by esoteric science, as entering into the constitution of man. The
classification differs so widely from any with which European readers will be
familiar that I shall naturally be asked for the grounds on which occultism
reaches so far-fetched a conclusion. But I must, on account of inherent
peculiarities in the subject, which will be comprehended later on, beg for this
Oriental knowledge I am bringing home, a hearing (in the first instance at all
events) of the Oriental kind. The Oriental and the European systems of
conveying knowledge are as unlike as any two methods can be. The West pricks
and piques the learner’s controversial instinct at every step. He is encouraged
to dispute and resist conviction. He is forbidden to take any scientific
statement on authority. Pari Passu, as he acquires knowledge, he must
learn how that knowledge has been acquired, and he is made to feel that no fact
is worth knowing, unless he knows, with it, the way to prove it a fact. The
East manages its pupils on a wholly different plan. It no more disregards the
necessity of proving its teaching than the West, but it provides proof of a
wholly different sort. It enables the student to search Nature for himself, and
verify its teachings, in those regions which Western philosophy can only invade
by speculation and argument. It never takes the trouble to argue about
anything. It says: - “So and so is fact; here is the key of knowledge; now go
and see for yourself.” In this way it comes to pass that teaching per se
is never anything else but teaching on authority. Teaching and proof do not go
hand in hand; they follow one another in due order. A further consequence of
this method is that Eastern philosophy employs the method which we in the West
have discarded for good reasons as incompatible with our own line of
intellectual development - the system of reasoning from generals to
particulars. The purposes which European science usually has in view would
certainly not be answered by that plan, but I think that any one who goes far
in the present inquiry will feel that the system of reasoning up from the
details of knowledge to general inferences is inapplicable to the work in hand.
One cannot understand details in this department of knowledge till we get a
general understanding of the whole scheme of things. Even to convey this
general comprehension by mere language, is a large and by no means an easy
task. To pause at every moment of the exposition in order to collect what
separate evidence may be available for the proof of each separate statement,
would be practically impossible. Such a method would break down the patience of
the reader, and prevent him from deriving, as he may from a more condensed
treatise, that definite conception as to what the esoteric doctrine means to
teach, which it is my business to evoke.
This reflection may suggest,
in passing, a new view, having an intimate connection with our present subject,
of the Platonic and Aristotelian systems of reasoning. Plato’s system, roughly
described as reasoning from universals to particulars, is condemned by modern
habits in favour of the later and exactly inverse system. But Plato was in
fetters in attempting to defend his system. There is every reason to believe
that his familiarity with esoteric science prompted his method, and that the
usual restrictions under which he laboured as an initiated occultist, forbade
him from saying as much as would really justify it. No one can study even as
much occult science as this volume contains, and then turn to Plato or even to
any intelligent epitome of Plato’s system of thought, without finding
correspondences cropping out at every turn.
The higher principles of the
series which go to constitute Man are not fully developed in the mankind with
which we are as yet familiar, but a complete or perfect man would be resolvable
into the following elements. To facilitate the application of these
explanations to ordinary exoteric Buddhist writings the Sanskrit names of these
principles are given as well as suitable terms in English. [The nomenclature
here adopted differs slightly from that hit upon when some of the present
teachings were first given out in a fragmentary form in the Theosophist. Later
on it will be seen that the names now preferred embody a fuller conception of
the whole system, and avoid some difficulties to which the earlier names give
rise. If the earlier presentations of esoteric science were thus imperfect, one
can hardly be surprised at so natural a consequence of the difficulties under
which its English exponents laboured. But no substantial errors have to be
confessed or deplored. The connotations of the present names are more accurate
than those of the phrases first selected, but the explanations originally
given, as far as they went, were quite in harmony with those now developed.].
1 |
The Body |
Rûpa |
2 |
Vitality |
Prana, or Jîva |
3 |
Astral Body |
Linga Sharira |
4 |
Animal Soul |
Kâma Rûpa |
5 |
Human Soul |
Manas |
6 |
Spiritual Soul |
Buddhi |
7 |
Spirit |
Âtma |
Directly conceptions, so
transcendental as some of those included in this analysis, are set forth in a
tabular statement, they seem to incur certain degradation, against which, in
endeavouring to realize clearly what is meant, we must be ever on our guard.
Certainly it would be impossible for even the most skilful professor of occult
science to exhibit each of these principles separate and distinct from the
others, as the physical elements of a compound body can be separated by
analysis and preserved independently of each other. The elements of a physical
body are all on the same plane of materiality, but the elements of man are on
very different planes. The finest gases of which the body may to some extent be
chemically composed, are still, on one scale at all events, on nearly the
lowest level of materiality. The second principle which, by its union with
gross matter, changes if from what we generally call inorganic, or what might
more properly be called inert, into living matter, is at once a something
different from the finest example of matter in its lower state. Is the second
principle then anything that we can truly call matter at all? The question
lands us, thus, at the very outset of this inquiry, in the middle of the subtle
metaphysical discussion as to whether force and matter are different or
identical. Enough for the moment to state that occult science regards them as
identical, and that it contemplates no principle in Nature as wholly immaterial.
In this way, though no conceptions of the universe, of man’s destiny, or of
Nature generally, are more spiritual than those of occult science, that science
is wholly free from the logical error of attributing material results to
immaterial causes. The esoteric doctrine is thus really the missing link
between materialism and spirituality.
The clue to the mystery
involved, lies of course in the fact, directly cognizable by occult experts,
that matter exists in other states besides those which are cognizable by the
five senses.
The second principle of Man,
Vitality, thus consists of matter in its aspect as force, and its affinity for
the grosser state of matter is so great that it cannot be separated from any
given particle or mass of this, except by instantaneous translation to some
other particle or mass. When a man’s body dies, by desertion of the higher
principles which have rendered it a living reality, the second, or life
principle, no longer a unity itself, is nevertheless inherent still in the
particles of the body as this decomposes, attaching itself to other organisms
to which that very process of decomposition gives rise. Bury the body in the
earth and its jîva will attach itself to the vegetation which springs above, or
the lower animal forms which evolve from its substance. Burn the body, and
indestructible jîva flies back none the less instantaneously to the body of the
planet itself from which it was originally borrowed, entering into some new
combination as its affinities may determine.
The third principle, the
Astral Body or Linga Sharira, is an ethereal duplicate of the physical body,
its original design. It guides jîva in its work on the physical particles, and
causes it to build up the shape which these assume. Vitalized itself by the
higher principles, its unity is only preserved by the union of the whole group.
At death it is disembodied for a brief period, and, under some abnormal
conditions, may even be temporarily visible to the external sight of still
living persons. Under such conditions it is taken of course for the ghost of
the departed person. Spectral apparitions may sometimes be occasioned in other
ways, but the third principle, when that results in a visible
phenomenon, is a mere aggregation of molecules in a peculiar state, having no
life or consciousness of any kind whatever. It is no more a Being, than any
cloud wreath in the sky which happens to settle into the semblance of some
animal form. Broadly speaking, the linga sharira never leaves the body except
at death, nor migrates far from the body even in that case. When seen at all,
and this can but rarely occur, it can only be seen near where the physical body
still lies. In some very peculiar cases of spiritualistic mediumship, it may
for a short time exude from the physical body and be visible near it, but the
medium in such cases stands the while in considerable danger of his life.
Disturb unwillingly the conditions under which the linga sharira was set free,
and its return might be impeded. The second principle would then soon cease to
animate the physical body as a unity, and death would ensue.
During the last year or two,
while hints and scraps of occult science have been finding their way out into
the world, the expression, “Astral Body,” has been applied to a certain
semblance of the human form, fully inhabited by its higher principles, which
can migrate to any distance from the physical body - projected consciously and
with exact intention by a living adept, or unintentionally, by the accidental
application of certain mental forces to his loosened principles, by any person
at the moment of death. For ordinary purposes there is no practical
inconvenience in using the expression “Astral Body” for the appearance to
projected - indeed, any more strictly accurate expression, as will be seen
directly, would be cumbersome, and we must go on using the phrase in both
meanings. No confusion need arise; but, strictly speaking, the linga sharira,
or third principle, is the astral body, and that cannot be sent about as the vehicle
of the higher principles.
The three lower principles,
it will be seen, are altogether of the earth, perishable in their nature as a
single entity, though indestructible as regards their molecules, and absolutely
done with by man at his death.
The fourth principle is the
first of those which belong to man’s higher nature. The Sanskrit designation, kâma
rûpa, is often translated “Body of Desire,” which seems rather a clumsy and
inaccurate form of words. A closer translation, having regard to meanings rather
than words, would, perhaps, be “Vehicle of Will,” but the name already adopted
above, Animal Soul, may be more accurately suggestive still.
In the Theosophist for
October, 1881, when the first hints about the septenary constitution of man
were given out, the fifth principle was called the animal soul, as
contra-distinguished from the sixth or “spiritual soul;” but though this
nomenclature sufficed to mark the required distinction, it degraded the fifth
principle, which is essentially the human principle. Though humanity is animal
in its nature as compared with spirit, it is elevated above the correctly
defined animal creation in every other aspect. By introducing a new name for
the fifth principle, we are enabled to throw back the designation “animal soul”
to its proper place. This arrangement need not interfere, meanwhile, with an
appreciation of the way in which the fourth principle is the seat of that will
or desire to which the Sanskrit name refers. And, withal, the kâma rûpa is
the animal soul, the highest developed principle of the brute creation,
susceptible of evolution into something far higher by its union with the
growing fifth principle in man, but still the animal soul which man is by no
means yet without, the seat of all animal desires, and a potent force in the
human body as well, pressing upwards, so to speak, as well as downwards, and
capable of influencing the fifth, for practical purposes, as well as of being
influenced by the fifth for its own control and improvement.
The fifth principle, human
soul, or Manas (as described in Sanskrit in one of its aspects), is the seat of
reason and memory. It is a portion of this principle, animated by the
fourth, which is really projected to distant places by an adept, when he makes an
appearance in what is commonly called his astral body.
Now the fifth principle, or
human soul, in the majority of mankind is not even yet fully developed. This
fact about the imperfect development as yet of the higher principles is very
important. We cannot get a correct conception of the present place of man in
Nature if we make the mistake of regarding him as a fully perfected being
already. And that mistake would be fatal to any reasonable anticipations
concerning the future that awaits him - fatal also to any appreciation of the
appropriateness of the future which the esoteric doctrine explains to us as
actually awaiting him.
Since the fifth principle is
not yet fully developed, it goes without saying that the sixth principle is
still in embryo. This idea has been variously indicated in recent forecasts of
the great doctrine. Sometimes it has been said, we do not truly possess any
sixth principle, we merely have germs of a sixth principle. It has also been
said, the sixth principle is not in us; it hovers over us; it is a
something that the highest aspirations of our nature must work up towards. But
it is also said: - All things, not man alone, but every animal, plant, and
mineral have their seven principles, and the highest principles of all - the seventh
itself - vitalizes that continuous thread of life which runs all through
evolution, uniting into a definite succession, the almost innumerable
incarnations of that one life which constitute a complete series. We must
imbibe all these various conceptions and weld them together, or extract their
essence, to learn the doctrine of the sixth principle. Following the order of
ideas which just now suggested the application of the term animal soul to the
fourth principle, and human soul to the fifth, the sixth may be called the
spiritual soul of man, and the seventh, therefore, spirit itself.
In another aspect of the idea
the sixth principle may be called the vehicle of the seventh, and the fourth
the vehicle of the fifth; but yet another mode of dealing with the problem
teaches us to regard each of the higher principles from the fourth upwards, as
a vehicle of what, in Buddhist philosophy, is called the One Life or Spirit.
According to this view of the matter of one life is that which perfects, by
inhabiting the various vehicles. In the animal the one life is concentrated in
the kâma rûpa. In man it begins to penetrate the fifth principle as
well. In perfected man it penetrates the sixth, and when it penetrates the
seventh, man ceases to be man, and attains a wholly superior condition of
existence.
This latter view of the
position is especially valuable as guarding against the notion that the four
higher principles are like a bundle of sticks tied together, but each having
individualities of their own if untied. Neither the animal soul alone, nor the
spiritual soul alone, has any individuality at all; but, on the other hand, the
fifth principle would be incapable of separation from the others in such a way,
that its individuality would be preserved while both the deserted principles
would be left unconscious. It has been said that the finer principles
themselves even, are material and molecular in their constitution, though
composed of a higher order of matter than the physical senses can take note of.
So they are separable, and the sixth principle itself can be imagined as
divorcing itself from its lower neighbour. But in that state of separation, and
at this stage of mankind’s development, it could simply reincarnate itself in
such an emergency, and grow a new fifth principle by contact with a human
organism; in such a case, the fifth principle would lean upon and become one
with the fourth, and be proportionately degraded. And yet this fifth principle,
which cannot stand alone, is the personality of the man; and its cream, in
union with the sixth, his continuous individuality through successive lives.
The circumstances and
attractions under the influence of which the principles do divide up, and the
manner in which the consciousness of man is dealt with then, will be discussed
later on. Meanwhile, a better understanding of the whole position than could
ensue from a continued prosecution of the inquiry on these lines now, will be
obtained by turning first to the processes of evolution by means of which the
principles of man have been developed.
ANNOTATIONS
Some objection has been
raised to the method in which the Esoteric Doctrine is presented to the reader
in this book, on the ground that it is materialistic. I doubt if in any other
way the ideas to be dealt with could so well be brought within the grasp of the
mind, but it is easy, when they once are grasped, to translate them into terms
of idealism. The higher principles will be the better susceptible of treatment
as so many different states of the Ego, when the attributes of these states
have been separately considered as principles undergoing evolution. But it may
be useful to dwell for awhile on the view of the human constitution according
to which the consciousness of the entity migrates successively through the
stages of development, which the different principles represent.
In the highest evolution we
need concern ourselves with at present - that of the perfected Mahatma - it is
sometimes asserted in occult teaching that the consciousness of the Ego has acquired
the power of residing altogether in the sixth principle. But it would be a
gross view of the subject, and erroneous, to suppose that the Mahatma has on
that account shaken off altogether, like a discarded sheath or sheaths, the
fourth and fifth principles, in which his consciousness may have been seated
during an earlier stage of his evolution. The entity, which was the
fourth or fifth principle before, has come now to be different in its
attributes, and to be entirely divorced from certain tendencies or
dispositions, and is therefore a sixth principle. The change can be
spoken of in more general terms as an emancipation of the adept’s nature from
the enthralments of his lower self, from desires of the ordinary earth-life -
even from the limitations of the affections; for the Ego, which is entirely
conscious in his sixth principle, has realized the unity of the true Egos of
all mankind on the higher plane, and can no longer be drawn by bonds of
sympathy to any one more than to any other. He has attained that love of
humanity as a whole which transcends the love of the Maya or illusion
which constitutes the separate human creature for the limited being on the
lower levels of evolution. He has not lost his fourth and fifth principles,
- these have themselves attained Mahatmaship; just as the animal soul of the
lower kingdom, in reaching humanity, has blossomed into the fifth state. That
consideration helps us to realize more accurately the passage of ordinary human
beings through the long series of incarnations of the human plane. Once fairly
on that plane of existence the consciousness of the primitive man gradually
envelopes the attributes of the fifth principle. But the Ego at first remains a
centre of thought activity working chiefly with impulses and desires of the
fourth stage of evolution. Flashes of the higher human reason illumine it
fitfully at first, but by degrees the more intellectual man grows into the
fuller possession of this. The impulses of human reason assert themselves more
and more strongly. The invigorated mind becomes the predominant force in the
life. Consciousness is transferred to the fifth principle, oscillating,
however, between the tendencies of the lower and higher nature for a long while
- that is to say, over vast periods of evolution and many hundred lives, - and
thus gradually purifying and exalting the Ego. All this while the Ego is thus a
unity in one aspect of the matter, and its sixth principle but a potentiality
of ultimate development. As regards the seventh principle, that is the true
Unknowable, the supreme controlling cause of all things, which is the same for
one man as for every man, the same for humanity as for the animal kingdom, the
same for the physical as for the astral or devachanic or nirvanic planes of
existence. No one man has got a seventh principle, in the higher
conception of the subject: we are all in the same unfathomable way overshadowed
by the seventh principle of the cosmos.
How does this view of the
subject harmonize with the statement in the foregoing chapter, that in a
certain sense the principles are separable, and that the sixth even can be
imagined as divorcing itself from its next lower neighbour, and, by
reincarnation, as growing a new fifth principle by contact with a human
organism? There is no incompatibility in the spirit of the two views. The
seventh principle is one and indivisible in all Nature, but there is a
mysterious persistence through it of certain life impulses, which thus
constitute threads on which successive existences may be strung. Such a life
impulse does not expire even in the extraordinary case supposed, in which an
Ego, projected upon it and developed along it to a certain point, falls away
from it altogether and as a complete whole. I am not in a position to dogmatize
with precision as to what happens in such a case, but the subsequent
incarnations of the spirit along that line of impulse are clearly of the
original sequence; and thus, in the materialistic treatment of the idea, it may
be said, with as much approach to accuracy as language will allow in either
mode, that the sixth principle of the fallen entity in such a case separates
itself from the original fifth, and reincarnates on its own account.
But with these abnormal
processes it is unnecessary to occupy ourselves to any great extent. The normal
evolution is the problem we have first to solve; and while the consideration of
the seven principles as such is, to my own mind, the most instructive method by
which the problem can be dealt with, it is well to remember always that the Ego
is a unity progressing through various spheres or states of being, undergoing
change and growth and purification all through the course of its evolution, -
that it is a consciousness seated in this, or that, or the other, of the
potential attributes of a human entity.
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Theosophical Movement in Wales
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One liners and quick explanations
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Links
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Concerns about the fate of the
wildlife as
Tekels Park is to be Sold to a
Developer
Concerns are raised about the fate of
the wildlife as
The Spiritual Retreat, Tekels Park in
Camberley,
Surrey, England is to be sold to a
developer.
Tekels Park is a 50 acre woodland
park, purchased
for the Adyar Theosophical Society in England
in 1929.
In addition to concern about the
park, many are
worried about the future of the Tekels Park
Deer
as they are not a protected species.
Anyone planning a “Spiritual” stay at
the
Tekels Park Guest House should be
aware of the sale.
It doesn’t require a Diploma in Finance
and even someone with a Diploma in
Astral Travel will know that this is a
bad time economically to sell Tekels Park
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What is Theosophy ? Theosophy Defined (More Detail)
Three
Fundamental Propositions Key
Concepts of Theosophy
Cosmogenesis Anthropogenesis Root Races
Ascended Masters
After Death States
The
Seven Principles of Man Karma Reincarnation
Helena
Petrovna Blavatsky Colonel
Henry Steel Olcott
The Start of the Theosophical Society
History of the Theosophical Society
Theosophical
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History of the Theosophical Society in Wales
The Three Objectives of the Theosophical Society
Explanation of the Theosophical Society Emblem
The Theosophical Order of Service (TOS)
Glossaries of Theosophical
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Index
of Searchable
Full
Text Versions of
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H P Blavatsky’s Secret Doctrine
Isis Unveiled by H P Blavatsky
H P Blavatsky’s Esoteric Glossary
Mahatma Letters to A P Sinnett 1 - 25
A Modern Revival of Ancient Wisdom
(Selection of Articles by H P Blavatsky)
The Secret Doctrine – Volume 3
A compilation of H P Blavatsky’s
writings published after her death
Esoteric Christianity or the Lesser Mysteries
The Early Teachings of The Masters
A Collection of Fugitive Fragments
Fundamentals of the Esoteric Philosophy
Mystical,
Philosophical, Theosophical, Historical
and Scientific
Essays Selected from "The Theosophist"
Edited by George
Robert Stow Mead
From Talks on the Path of Occultism - Vol. II
In the Twilight”
Series of Articles
The In the
Twilight” series appeared during
1898 in The
Theosophical Review and
from 1909-1913
in The Theosophist.
compiled from
information supplied by
her relatives
and friends and edited by A P Sinnett
Letters and
Talks on Theosophy and the Theosophical Life
Obras
Teosoficas En Espanol
Theosophische
Schriften Auf Deutsch
An Outstanding Introduction to Theosophy
By a student of Katherine Tingley
Elementary Theosophy Who is the Man? Body and Soul
Body, Soul and Spirit Reincarnation Karma
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What Theosophy Is From the Absolute to Man
The Formation of a Solar System The Evolution of Life
The Constitution of Man After Death Reincarnation
The Purpose of Life The Planetary Chains
The Result of Theosophical Study
An Outline of Theosophy
Charles Webster Leadbeater
Theosophy - What it is How is it Known? The Method of Observation
General Principles The Three Great Truths The Deity
Advantage Gained from this
Knowledge The Divine Scheme
The Constitution of Man The True Man Reincarnation
The Wider Outlook Death Man’s Past and Future
Cause and Effect What Theosophy does for us
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Vanguard Van Circa 1952
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General pages about Wales, Welsh History
and The History of Theosophy in Wales
Wales is a
Principality within the United Kingdom and has an eastern
border with
England. The land area is just over 8,000 square miles.
Snowdon in North
Wales is the highest mountain at 3,650 feet.
The coastline is almost
750 miles long. The population of Wales
as at the 2001 census is 2,946,200.
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Bangor Conwy & Swansea Lodges are
members
of the Welsh Regional Association
(Formed 1993).
Theosophy Cardiff separated from the
Welsh Regional
Association in March 2008 and became an independent
body within the Theosophical Movement in March 2010
High
Drama & Worldwide Confusion
as
Theosophy Cardiff Separates from the
Welsh
Regional Association (formed 1993)
Theosophy Cardiff cancels its Affiliation
to the Adyar Based Theosophical Society
Cardiff, Wales, UK, CF24 – 1DL