Theosophy; The New Rock ‘n
Roll
Helena
Petrovna Blavatsky
1831
-1891
Theosophy
Megastar
______________________
What is Theosophy?
By
H P Blavatsky
THIS question has
been so often asked, and misconception so widely prevails, that the editors of
a journal devoted to an exposition of the world's Theosophy would be remiss
were its first number issued without coming to a full understanding with their
readers. But our heading involves two further queries: What is the Theosophical
Society; and what are the Theosophists? To each an answer will be given.
According to
lexicographers, the term theosophia is composed of two Greek words--theos,
"god," and sophos, "wise." So far, correct. But the
explanations that follow are far from giving a clear idea of Theosophy. Webster
defines it most originally as "a supposed intercourse with God and
superior spirits, and consequent attainment of superhuman knowledge, by
physical processes, as by the theurgic operations of some ancient Platonists,
or by the chemical processes of the German fire-philosophers."
This, to say
the least, is a poor and flippant explanation. To attribute such ideas to men
like Ammonius Saccas, Plotinus, Iamblichus, Porphyry, Proclus--shows either
intentional misrepresentation, or Mr. Webster's ignorance of the philosophy and
motives of the greatest geniuses of the later Alexandrian School. To impute to
those whom their contemporaries as well as posterity styled
"theodidaktoi," god-taught--a purpose to develop their psychological,
spiritual perceptions by "physical processes," is to describe them as
materialists.
As to the
concluding fling at the fire-philosophers, it rebounds from them to fall home
among our most eminent modern men of science; those, in whose mouths the Rev.
James Martineau places the following boast: "matter is all we want; give
us atoms alone, and we will explain the universe."
Vaughan offers
a far better, more philosophical definition. "A Theosophist," he
says--"is one who gives you a theory of God or the works of God, which has
not revelation, but an inspiration of his own for its basis." In this view
every great thinker and philosopher, especially every founder of a new religion,
school of philosophy, or sect, is necessarily a Theosophist. Hence, Theosophy
and Theosophists have existed ever since the first glimmering of nascent
thought made man seek instinctively for the means of expressing his own
independent opinions.
There were
Theosophists before the Christian era, notwithstanding that the Christian
writers ascribe the development of the Eclectic Theosophical system to the
early part of the third century of their Era. Diogenes Laertius traces
Theosophy to an epoch antedating the dynasty of the Ptolemies; and names as its
founder an Egyptian Hierophant called Pot-Amun, the name being Coptic and
signifying a priest consecrated to Amun, the god of Wisdom. But history shows
it revived by Ammonius Saccas, the founder of the
Hence, the
Buddhistic, Vedantic and Magian, or Zoroastrian, systems were taught in the
fraternal
affection for the whole human race; and a compassionate feeling for even the
dumb animals. While seeking to establish a system of moral discipline which
enforced upon people the duty to live according to the laws of their respective
countries; to exalt their minds by the research and contemplation of the one
Absolute Truth; his chief object in order, as he believed, to achieve all
others, was to extract from the various religious teachings, as from a
many-chorded instrument, one full and harmonious melody, which would find
response in
every truth-loving heart.
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; and the clear
comprehension of it is typified in such names as the Indian Buddh, the
Babylonian Nebo, the Thoth of Memphis, the Hermes of Greece; in the appellations,
also, of some goddesses--Metis, Neitha, Athena, the Gnostic Sophia, and finally
the Vedas, from the word "to know." Under this designation, all the
ancient philosophers of the East and West, the Hierophants of old Egypt, the
Rishis of Aryavart, the Theodidaktoi of Greece, included all knowledge of
things occult and essentially divine. The Mercavah of the Hebrew Rabbis, the
secular and popular series, were thus designated as only the vehicle, the
outward shell which contained the higher esoteric knowledge. The Magi of
Zoroaster received instruction and were initiated in the caves and secret
lodges of
The central
idea of the Eclectic Theosophy was that of a simple Supreme Essence, Unknown
and Unknowable--for--"How could one know the knower?" as enquires
Brihadaranyaka Upanishad. Their system was characterized by three distinct
features: the theory of the above-named Essence; the doctrine of the human
soul--an emanation from the latter, hence of the same nature; and its theurgy.
It is this
last science which has led the Neo-Platonists to be so misrepresented in our
era of materialistic science. Theurgy being essentially the art of applying the
divine powers of man to the subordination of the blind forces of nature, its
votaries were first termed magicians--a corruption of the word
"Magh," signifying a wise, or learned man, and--derided. Skeptics of
a century ago would have been as wide of the mark if they had laughed at the
idea of a phonograph or telegraph. The ridiculed and the "infidels"
of one generation generally become the wise men and saints of the next.
As regards the
Divine essence and the nature of the soul and spirit, modern Theosophy believes
now as ancient Theosophy did. The popular Diu of the Indo European nations was
identical with the Iao of the Chaldeans, and even with the Jupiter of the less
learned and philosophical among the Romans; and it was just as identical with
the Jahve of the Samaritans, the Tiu or "Tiusco" of the Northmen, the
Duw of the Britains, and the Zeus of the Thracians. As to the Absolute Essence,
the One and all--whether we accept the Greek Pythagorean, the Chaldean
Kabalistic, or the Aryan philosophy in regard to it, it will lead to one and
the same result. The Primeval Monad of the Pythagorean system, which retires
into darkness and is itself Darkness (for human intellect) was made the basis
of all things; and we can find the idea in all its integrity in the
philosophical systems of Leibnitz and Spinoza. Therefore, whether a Theosophist
agrees with the Kabala which, speaking of En-Soph propounds the query:
"Who, then, can comprehend It since It is formless, and
Non-existent?"--or, remembering that magnificent hymn from the Rig-Veda
(Hymn 129th, Book 10th)--enquires:
"Who knows from whence this great
creation sprang?
Whether his
will created or was mute.
He knows
it--or perchance even He knows not;"
or again,
accepts the Vedantic conception of Brahma, who in the Upanishads is represented
as "without life, without mind, pure," unconscious, for--Brahma is
"Absolute Consciousness"; or, even finally, siding with the
Svabhâvikas of Nepaul, maintains that nothing exists but "Svabhâvât"
(substance or nature) which exists by itself without any creator; any one of
the above conceptions can lead but to pure and absolute Theosophy--that
Theosophy which prompted such men as Hegel, Fichte and Spinoza to take up the
labors of the old Grecian philosophers and speculate upon the One
Substance--the Deity, the Divine All proceeding from the Divine
Wisdom-incomprehensible, unknown and unnamed--by any ancient or modern
religious philosophy, with the exception of Christianity and Mohammedanism.
Every Theosophist, then, holding to a theory of the Deity "which has not
revelation, but an inspiration of his own for its basis," may accept any
of the above definitions or belong to any of these religions, and yet remain
strictly within the boundaries of Theosophy. For the latter is belief in the
Deity as the ALL, the source of all existence, the infinite that cannot be
either comprehended or known, the universe alone revealing It, or, as some
prefer it, Him, thus giving a sex to that, to anthropomorphize which is
blasphemy. True, Theosophy shrinks from brutal materialization; it prefers
believing that, from eternity retired within itself, the Spirit of the Deity
neither wills nor creates; but that, from the infinite effulgency everywhere
going forth from the Great Centre, that which produces all visible and
invisible things, is but a Ray containing in itself the generative and
conceptive power, which, in its turn, produces that which the Greeks called
Macrocosm, the Kabalists Tikkun or Adam Kadmon--the archetypal man, and the
Aryans Purusha, the manifested Brahm, or the Divine Male.
Theosophy
believes also in the Anastasis or continued existence, and in transmigration
(evolution) or a series of changes in the soul1 which can be defended and
explained on strict philosophical principles; and only by making a distinction
between Paramâtma (transcendental, supreme soul) and Jivâtmâ (animal, or
conscious soul) of the Vedantins.
To fully
define Theosophy, we must consider it under all its aspects. The interior world
has not been hidden from all by impenetrable darkness. By that higher intuition
acquired by Theosophia--or God-knowledge, which carried the mind from the world
of form into that of formless spirit, man has been sometimes enabled in every
age and every country to perceive things in the interior or invisible world.
Hence, the "Samadhi," or Dyan Yog Samadhi, of the Hindu ascetics; the
"Daimonion-photi," or spiritual illumination of the Neo-Platonists;
the "sidereal confabulation of soul," of the Rosicrucians or
Fire-philosophers; and, even the ecstatic trance of mystics and of the modern
mesmerists and spiritualists, are identical in nature, though various as to
manifestation. The search after man's diviner "self," so often and so
erroneously interpreted as individual communion with a personal God, was the
object of every mystic, and belief in its possibility seems to have been coeval
with the genesis of humanity, each people giving it another name. Thus Plato
and Plotinus call "Noëtic work" that which the Yogin and the
Shrotriya term Vidya.
"By
reflection, self-knowledge and intellectual discipline, the soul can be raised
to the vision of eternal truth, goodness, and beauty--that is, to the Vision of
God--this is the epopteia," said the Greeks. "To unite one's soul to
the Universal Soul," says Porphyry, "requires but a perfectly pure
mind.
Through
self-contemplation, perfect chastity, and purity of body, we may approach
nearer to It, and receive, in that state, true knowledge and wonderful
insight." And Swami Dayanand Saraswati, who has read neither Porphyry nor
other Greek authors, but who is a thorough Vedic scholar, says in his Veda
Bháshya (opasna prakaru ank. 9)--"To obtain Diksh (highest initiation) and
Yog, one has to practise according to the rules . . . The soul in human body
can perform the greatest wonders by knowing the Universal Spirit (or God) and
acquainting itself with the properties and qualities (occult) of all the things
in the universe. A human being (a Dikshit or initiate) can thus acquire a power
of seeing and hearing at great distances." Finally, Alfred R. Wallace,
F.R.S., a spiritualist and yet a confessedly great naturalist, says, with brave
candour: "It is 'spirit' that alone feels, and perceives, and thinks--that
acquires knowledge, and reasons and aspires . . . there not unfrequently occur
individuals so constituted that the spirit can perceive independently of the
corporeal organs of sense, or can perhaps, wholly or partially, quit the body for
a time and return to it again . . . the spirit . . . communicates with spirit
easier than with matter." We can now see how, after thousands of years
have intervened between the age of Gymnosophists and our own highly civilized
era, notwithstanding, or, perhaps, just because of such an enlightenment which
pours its radiant light upon the psychological as well as upon the physical
realms of nature, over twenty millions of people today believe, under a
different form, in those same spiritual powers that were believed in by the
Yogins and the Pythagoreans, nearly 3,000 years ago. Thus, while the Aryan
mystic claimed for himself the power of solving all the problems of life and
death, when he had once obtained the power of acting independently of his body,
through the Atmân--"self," or "soul"; and the old Greeks
went in search of Atmu--the Hidden one, or the God-Soul of man, with the
symbolical mirror of the Thesmophorian mysteries;--so the spiritualists of
today believe in the faculty of the spirits, or the souls of the disembodied
persons, to communicate visibly and tangibly with those they loved on earth.
And all these, Aryan Yogins, Greek philosophers, and modern spiritualists,
affirm that possibility on the ground that the embodied soul and its never
embodied spirit--the real self, are not separated from either the Universal
Soul or other spirits by space, but merely by the differentiation of their
qualities; as in the boundless expanse of the universe there can be no
limitation. And that when this difference is once removed--according to the
Greeks and Aryans by abstract contemplation, producing the temporary liberation
of the imprisoned Soul; and according to spiritualists, through
mediumship--such an union between embodied and disembodied spiritst becomes possible.
Thus was it
that Patanjali's Yogins and, following in their steps, Plotinus, Porphyry and
other Neo-Platonists, maintained that in their hours of ecstasy, they had been
united to, or rather become as one with God, several times during the course of
their lives. This idea, erroneous as it may seem in its application to the
Universal Spirit, was, and is, claimed by too many great philosophers to be put
aside as entirely chimerical. In the case of the Theodidaktoi, the only
controvertible point, the dark spot on this philosophy of extreme mysticism,
was its claim to include that which is simply ecstatic illumination, under the
head of sensuous perception. In the case of the Yogins, who maintained their
ability to see Iswara "face to face," this claim was successfully
overthrown by the stern logic of Kapila. As to the similar assumption made for
their Greek followers, for a long array of Christian ecstatics, and, finally,
for the last two claimants to "God-seeing" within these last hundred
years--Jacob Böhme and Swedenborg--this pretension would and should have been
philosophically and logically questioned, if a few of our great men of science
who are spiritualists had had more interest in the philosophy than in the mere
phenomenalism of spiritualism.
The
Alexandrian Theosophists were divided into neophytes, initiates, and masters,
or hierophants; and their rules were copied from the ancient Mysteries of
Orpheus, who, according to Herodotus, brought them from
multitude."
In his turn, Aristotle declares that of the "Divine Essence pervading the
whole world of nature, what are styled the gods are simply the first
principles."
Plotinus, the
pupil of the "God-taught" Ammonius, tells us that the secret gnosis
or the knowledge of Theosophy, has three degrees--opinion, science, and
illumination. "The means or instrument of the first is sense, or
perception; of the second, dialectics; of the third, intuition. To the last,
reason is subordinate; it is absolute knowledge, founded on the identification
of the mind with the object known." Theosophy is the exact science of
psychology, so to say; it stands in relation to natural, uncultivated
mediumship, as the knowledge of a Tyndall stands to that of a school-boy in physics.
It develops in man a direct beholding; that which Schelling denominates "a
realization of the identity of subject and object in the individual"; so
that under the influence and knowledge of hyponia man thinks divine thoughts,
views all things as they really are, and, finally, "becomes recipient of
the Soul of the World," to use one of the finest expressions of Emerson.
"I, the imperfect, adore my own perfect"--he says in his superb Essay
on the Oversoul. Besides this psychological, or soul-state, Theosophy cultivated
every branch of sciences and arts. It was thoroughly familiar with what is now
commonly known as mesmerism. Practical theurgy or "ceremonial magic,"
so often resorted to in their exorcisms by the Roman Catholic clergy--was
discarded by the theosophists. It is but Iamblichus alone who, transcending the
other Eclectics, added to Theosophy the doctrine of Theurgy.
When ignorant
of the true meaning of the esoteric divine symbols of nature, man is apt to
miscalculate the powers of his soul, and, instead of communing spiritually and
mentally with the higher, celestial beings, the good spirits (the gods of the
theurgists of the Platonic school), he will unconsciously call forth the evil,
dark powers which lurk around humanity--the undying, grim creations of human
crimes and vices--and thus fall from theurgia (white magic) into göetia (or
black magic, sorcery). Yet, neither white, nor black magic are what popular
superstition understands by the terms.
The
possibility of "raising spirits" according to the key of Solomon, is
the height of superstition and ignorance. Purity of deed and thought can alone
raise us to an intercourse "with the gods" and attain for us the goal
we desire. Alchemy, believed by so many to have been a spiritual philosophy as
well as physical science, belonged to the teachings of the Theosophical school.
It is a
noticeable fact that neither Zoroaster, Buddha, Orpheus, Pythagoras, Confucius,
Socrates, nor Ammonius Saccas, committed anything to writing.
The reason for
it is obvious. Theosophy is a double-edged weapon and unfit for the ignorant or
the selfish. Like every ancient philosophy it has its votaries among the
moderns; but, until late in our own days, its disciples were few in numbers,
and of the most various sects and opinions. "Entirely speculative, and
founding no school, they have still exercised a silent influence upon
philosophy; and no doubt, when the time arrives, many ideas thus silently
propounded may yet give new directions to human thought"--remarks Mr.
Kenneth R. H. Mackenzie IXo . . . himself a mystic and a Theosophist, in his
large and valuable work, The Royal Masonic Cycloepædia (articles Theosophical
Society of New York and Theosophy, p. 731).3 Since the days of the
fire-philosophers, they had never formed themselves into societies, for,
tracked like wild beasts by the Christian clergy, to be known as a Theosophist
often amounted, hardly a century ago, to a death-warrant.
The statistics
show that, during a period of 150 years, no less than 90,000 men and women were
burned in
Theosophist,
October, 1879
1 In a series
of articles entitled "The World's Great Theosophists," we intend
showing that from Pythagoras, who got his wisdom in India, down to our best
known modern philosophers and theosophists--David Hume, and Shelley, the
English poet--the Spiritists of France included--many believed and yet believe
in metempsychosis or reincarnation of the soul; however unelaborated the system
of the Spiritists may fairly be regarded.
2 The reality
of the Yog-power was affirmed by many Greek and Roman writers, who call the
Yogins Indian Gymnosophists; by Strabo, Lucan, Plutarch, Cicero (Tusculum),
Pliny (vii,2), etc.
3 The Royal
Masonic Cycloepædia of History, Rites, Symbolism, and Biography. Edited by
Kenneth R. H. Mackenzie IXo (Cryptonymous), Hon. Member of the Canongate
KD-winning Lodge, No. 2,
___________________
Find out more about the
New Rock ‘n Roll
Theosophy links
Independent Theosophical Blog
One liners and quick explanations
About aspects of Theosophy
H P Blavatsky is usually
the only
Theosophist that most
people have ever
heard of. Let’s put that
right
The Voice of the Silence Website
An
Independent Theosophical Republic
Links
to Free Online Theosophy
Study
Resources; Courses, Writings,
Try these if you are looking
for a local group
UK Listing of Theosophical Groups
Hey Look! Theosophy in Cardiff