As for what thou hearest others say, who persuade the many that
the soul, when once freed from the body, neither suffers evil
nor is conscious, I know that thou art better grounded in the
doctrines received by us from our ancestors and in the sacred
orgies of Dionysos, than to believe them; for the mystic symbols
are well known to us, who belong to the Brotherhood "
PLUTARCH
Of late, Theosophists in general, and the
writer of the present paper especially, have been severely taken
to task for disrespect to science We are asked what right
we have to question the conclusions of the most eminent men of
learning, to refuse recognition of infallibility (which implies
omniscience) to our modern scholars? How dare we, in short,
"contemptuously ignore" their most undeniable and "universally
accepted theories," etc., etc. This article is written with
the intention of giving some reasons for our skeptical
attitude.
To begin with, in order to avoid a natural misunderstanding in
view of the preceding paragraph, let the reader at once know that
the title, "The NEGATORS of Science,"
applies in nowise to Theosophists. Quite the reverse. By "Science"
we here mean ANCIENT WISDOM,
while its "Negators" represent modern materialistic
Scientists Thus we have once more "the sublime audacity"
of, David-like, confronting, with an old-fashioned theosophical
sling for our only weapon, the giant Goliath "armed with
a coat of mail," and weighing "five thousand shekels
of brass," truly. Let the Philistine deny facts, and
substitute for them his "working hypotheses"; we reject
the latter and defend facts, "the armies of the one
living TRUTH.
The frankness of this plain statement is certain to awake all
the sleeping dogs, and to set every parasite of modern science
snapping at our editorial heels. "Those wretched Theosophists!"
will be the cry. "How long shall they refuse to humble themselves;
and how long shall we bear with this evil congregation?"
Well, it will certainly take a considerable time to put us down,
as more than one experiment has already shown. Very naturally,
our confession of faith must provoke the wrath of every
sycophant of the mechanical and animalistic theories of the Universe
and Man; and the numbers of these sycophants are large, even if
not very awe-inspiring. In our cycle of wholesale denial the ranks
of the Didymi are daily reinforced by every new-baked materialist
and so-called "infidel," who escapes, full of reactive
energy, from the narrow fields of church dogmatism. We know the
numerical strength of our foes and opponents, and do not underrate
it. More: in this present case even some of our best friends may
ask, as they have done before now: "Cui bono? why
not leave our highly respectable, firmly-rooted, official Science,
with her scientists and their flunkies, severely alone?"
Further on it will be shown why; when our friends will
learn that we have very good reason to act as we do. With the
true, genuine man of science, with the earnest, impartial unprejudiced
and truth-loving scholar of the minority, alas! we can have
no quarrel, and he has all our respect. But to him who, being
only a specialist in physical sciences however eminent,
matters not still tries to throw into the scales of public thought
his own materialistic views upon metaphysical and psychological
questions (a dead letter to him) we have a good deal to say. Nor
are we bound by any laws we know of, divine or human, to respect
opinions which are held erroneous in our school, only because
they are those of so-called authorities in materialistic or agnostic
circles. Between truth and fact (as we understand
them) and the working hypotheses of the greatest living physiologists though
they answer to the names of Messrs. Huxley, Claude Bernard, Du
Bois Reymond, etc., etc. we hope never to hesitate for one instant.
If, as Mr. Huxley once declared, soul, immortality and all spiritual
things "lie outside of [his philosophical inquiry"
(Physical Basis of Life), then, as he has never inquired
into these questions, he has no right to offer an opinion. They
certainly lie outside the grasp of materialistic physical science,
and, what is more important, to use Dr. Paul Gibier's felicitous
expression, outside the luminous zone of most of our materialistic
scientists. These are at liberty to believe in the "automatic
action of nervous centres" as primal creators of thought;
that the phenomena of will are only a complicated form
of reflex actions, and what not but we are as much at liberty
to deny their statements. They are specialists no more. As the
author of Spiritisme et Fakirisme admirably depicts it,
in his latest work:
A number of persons, extremely enlightened on some special, point
of science, take upon themselves the right of pronouncing arbitrarily
their judgment on all things; are ready to reject every thing
new which shocks their ideas, often for the sole reason
that if it were true they could not remain ignorant of it!
For my part I have often met this kind of self-sufficiency
in men whom their knowledge and scientific studies ought to have
preserved from such a sad moral infirmity, had they not been specialists,
holding to their specialty. It is a sign of relative inferiority
to believe oneself superior. In truth, the number of intellects
afflicted with such gaps (lacunes) is larger than is commonly
believed. As there are individuals completely refractory to the
study of music, of mathematics, etc., so there are others to whom
certain areas of thought are closed. Such of these who might have
distinguished themselves in . . . medicine or literature, would
probably have signally failed in any occupation outside of what
I will call their lucid zone, by comparison with the action
of those reflectors, which, during night, throw their light into
a zone of luminous rays, outside of which all is gloomy shadow
and uncertainty. Every human being has his own lucid zone, the
extension, range and degree of luminosity of which, varies with
each individual.
There are things which lie outside the concept of certain
intellects; they are outside their lucid zone.1
This is absolutely true whether applied to the scientist or his
profane admirer. And it is to such scientific specialists
that we refuse the right to sit in Solomon's seat, in judgment
over all those who will not see with their eyes, nor hear with
their ears. To them we say: We do not ask you to believe as we
do, since your zone limits you to your specialty; but then
do not encroach on the zones of other people. And, if you
will do so nevertheless, if, after laughing in your moments of
honest frankness at your own ignorance; after stating repeatedly,
orally and in print, that you, physicists and materialists,
know nothing whatever of the ultimate potentialities of matter,
nor have you made one step towards solving the mysteries of
life and consciousness you still persist in teaching that all
the manifestations of life and intelligence, and the phenomena
of the highest mentality, are merely properties of that matter
of which you confess yourselves quite ignorant,2
then you can hardly escape the charge of humbugging the
world.3 The word "humbug" is used here
advisedly,
in its strictest etymological Websterian meaning, that is, "imposition
under fair pretenses" in this case, of science. Surely it
is not expecting too much of such learned and scholarly gentlemen
that they should not abuse their ascendency and prestige over
people's minds to teach them something they themselves know nothing
about; that they should abstain from preaching the limitations
of nature, when its most important problems have been, are, and
ever will be, insoluble riddles to the materialist! This is no
more than asking simple honesty from such teachers.
What is it, that constitutes the real man of learning? Is not
a true and faithful servant of science (if the latter is accepted
as the synonym of truth) he, who besides having mastered a general
information on all things is ever ready to learn more, because
there are things that he admits he does not know?4
A scholar of this description will never hesitate to give
up his own theories, whenever he finds them not clashing with
fact and truth, but merely dubious. For the sake of truth he
will remain indifferent to the world's opinion, and that of his
colleagues, nor will he attempt to sacrifice the spirit of a doctrine
to the dead-letter of a popular belief. Independent of man or
party, fearless whether he gets at loggerheads with biblical chronology,
theological claims, or the preconceived and in-rooted theories
of materialistic science; acting in his researches in an entirely
unprejudiced frame of mind, free from personal vanity and pride,
he will investigate truth for her own fair sake, not to please
this or that faction; nor will he dislocate facts to make them
fit in with his own hypothesis, or the professed beliefs of either
state religion or official science. Such is the ideal of a true
man of science; and such a one, whenever mistaken for even a
Newton and a Humboldt have made occasional mistakes will hasten
to publish his error and correct it, and not act as the German
naturalist, Hæckel, has done. What the latter did is worth
a repetition. In every subsequent edition of his Pedigree of
Man he has left uncorrected the sozura ("unknown
to science," Quatrefages tells us), and his prosimiæ
allied to the loris, which he describes as "without
marsupial bones, but with placenta" (Ped. of Man, p. 77),
when years ago it has been proved by the anatomical researches
of Messrs. "Alphonse Milne, Edwards and Grandidier . . .
that the prosimiæ of Hæckel have . . . no
placenta" (Quatrefages, The Human Species, p.
110). This is what we, Theosophists, call downright dishonesty.
For he knows the two creatures he places in the fourteenth
and eighteenth stages of his genealogy in the Pedigree of Man
to be myths in nature, and that far from any possibility
of their being the direct or indirect ancestors of apes let alone
man, "they cannot even be regarded as the ancestors
of the zonoplacental mammals" according to Quatrefages. And
yet Hæckel palms them off still, on the innocent, and the
sycophants of Darwinism, only, as Quatrefages explains, "because
the proof of their existence arises from the necessity of an
intermediate type"! ! We fail to see any difference between
the pious frauds of a Eusebius "for the greater glory of
God," and the impious deception of Hæckel for "the
greater glory of matter" and man's dishonor. Both are forgeries and
we have a right to denounce both.
The same with regard to other branches of science. A specialist say
a Greek or Sanskrit scholar, a paleographer, an archaeologist,
an orientalist of any description is an "authority"
only within the limits of his special science, just as is an electrician
or a physicist in theirs. And which of these may be called infallible
in his conclusions? They have made, and still go on making
mistakes, each of their hypotheses being only a surmise, a theory
for the time being and no more. Who would believe today, with
Koch's craze upon us, that hardly a few years ago, the greatest
authority on pathology in France, the late Professor Vulpian,
Doyen of the Faculty of Medicine in Paris, denied the existence
of the tubercular microbe? When, says Doctor Gibier, (his
friend and pupil) M. Bouley laid before the Academy of Sciences
a paper on the tubercular bacillus, he was told by Vulpian that
"this germ could not exist," for "had it
existed it would have been discovered before now, having
been hunted after for so many years!"5
Just in the same way every scientific specialist of whatever description
denies the doctrines of Theosophy and its teachings; not that
he has ever attempted to study or analyze them, or to discover
how much truth there may be in the old sacred science, but simply
because it is not modern science that has discovered any of them;
and also because, having once strayed away from the main road
into the jungles of material speculation, the men of science cannot
return back without pulling down the whole edifice after them.
But the worst of all is, that the average critic and opponent
of the Theosophical doctrines is neither a scientist, nor even
a specialist. He is simply a flunky of the scientists in
general; a repeating parrot and a mimicking ape of that or another
"authority," who makes use of the personal theories
and conclusions of some well-known writer, in the hope of breaking
our heads with them. Moreover, he identifies himself with the
"gods" he serves or patronizes. He is like the Zouave
of the Pope's body-guard who, because he had to beat the drum
at every appearance and departure of St. Peter's "Successor,"
ended by identifying himself with the apostle. So with the self-appointed
flunky of the modern Elohim of Science. He fondly imagines himself
"as one of us," and for no more cogent reason than had
the Zouave: he, too, beats the big drum for every Oxford or Cambridge
Don whose conclusions and personal views do not agree with the
teachings of the Occult Doctrine of antiquity.
To devote, however, to these braggarts with tongue or pen one
line more than is strictly necessary, would be waste of time.
Let them go. They have not even a "zone" of their own,
but have to see things through the light of other people's intellectual
"zones."
And now to the reason why we have once more the painful duty of
challenging and contradicting the scientific views of so many
men considered each more or less "eminent," in his special
branch of science. Two years ago, the writer promised in the Secret
Doctrine, Vol. II., p. 798, a third and even a fourth volume
of that work. This third volume (now almost ready) treats of the
ancient Mysteries of Initiation, gives sketches from the esoteric
stand-point of many of the most famous and historically known
philosophers and hierophants, (every one of whom is set down by
the Scientists as an imposter), from the archaic down to
the Christian era, and traces the teachings of all these sages
to one and the same source of all knowledge and science the esoteric
doctrine or WISDOM RELIGION.
No need our saying that from the esoteric and legendary materials
used in the forthcoming work, its statements and conclusions differ
greatly and often clash irreconcilably with the data given by
almost all the English and German Orientalists. There is a tacit
agreement among the latter including even those who are personally
inimical to each other to follow a certain line of policy in
the matter of dates;6 of denial to
"adepts"
of any transcendental knowledge of any intrinsic value; of the
utter rejection of the very existence of siddhis or abnormal
spiritual powers in man. In this the Orientalists, even those
who are materialists, are the best allies of the clergy and biblical
chronology. We need not stop to analyze this strange fact, but
such it is. Now the main point of Volume III. of the Secret
Doctrine is to prove, by tracing and explaining the blinds
in the works of ancient Indian, Greek, and other philosophers
of note, and also in all the ancient Scriptures the presence
of an uninterrupted esoteric allegorical method and symbolism;
to show, as far as lawful, that with the keys of interpretation
as taught in the Eastern Hindu Buddhistic Canon of Occultism,
the Upanishuds, the Purânas, the Sutras,
the Epic poems of India and Greece, the Egyptian Book of
the Dead, the Scandinavian Eddas, as well as the Hebrew
Bible, and even the classical writings of Initiates (such
as Plato, among others) all, from first to last, yield a meaning
quite different from their dead letter texts. This is flatly denied
by some of the foremost scholars of the day. They have not got
the keys, ergo no such keys can exist. According
to Dr. Max Müller no pandit of India has ever heard of an
esoteric doctrine (Gupta-Vidya, nota bene). In his Edinburgh
Lectures the Professor made almost as cheap of Theosophists
and their interpretations, as some learned Shastris let alone
initiated Brahmins made of the learned German philologist
himself. On the other hand, Sir Monier Williams undertakes to
prove that the Lord Gautama Buddha never taught any esoteric
philosophy (!!), thus giving the lie to all subsequent history,
to the Arhat-Patriarchs, who converted China and Tibet to Buddhism,
and charging with fraud the numerous esoteric schools still existing
in China and Tibet.7 Nor, according to Professor B.
Jowett, the Master of Balliol College, is there any esoteric or
gnostic element in the Dialogues of Plato, not even in that pre-eminently
occult treatise, the Timus.8 The
Neo-Platonists,
such as Ammonius Saccas, Plotinus, Porphyry, etc., etc., were
ignorant, superstitious mystics, who saw a secret meaning where
none was meant, and who, Plato heading them, had no idea of real
science. In the scholarly appreciation of our modern scientific
luminaries, in fact, science (i.e., knowledge) was in its
infancy in the days of Thales, Pythagoras and even of Plato; while
the grossest superstition and "twaddle" reigned in the
times of the Indian Rishis. Pânini, the greatest grammarian
in the world, according to Professors Weber and Max Müller
was unacquainted with the art of writing, and so also everyone
else in India, from Manu to Buddha, even so late as 300 years
B. C. On the other hand, Professor A. H. Sayce, an undeniably
great paleographer and Assyriologist, who kindly admits such a
thing as an esoteric school and occult symbology among the Accado-Babylonians,
nevertheless claims that the Assyriologists have now in their
possession all the keys required for the right interpretation
of the secret glyphs of the hoary past. Methinks, we know the
chief key used by himself and his colleagues: trace every god
and hero, whose character is in the least doubtful, to a solar
myth, and you have discovered the whole secret; an easier undertaking,
you see, than for a "Wizard of the North" to cook an
omelete in a gentleman's hat. Finally, in the matter of esoteric
symbology and Mysteries, the Orientalists of today seem to have
forgotten more than the initiated priests of the days of Surgeon
(3750 years B.C., according to Dr. Sayce) ever knew. Such is *e
modest claim of the Hibbert Lecturer for 1887.
Thus, as the personal conclusions and claims of the above-named
scholars (and many more) militate against the theosophical teachings,
in this generation, at any rate, the laurels of conquest will
never be accorded by the majority to the latter. Nevertheless,
since truth and fact are on our side, we need not despair, but
will simply bide our time. Time is a mighty conjurer; an irresistible
leveler of artificially grown weeds and parasites, a universal
solvent for truth. Magna est veritas et prevalebit. Meanwhile,
however, the Theosophists cannot allow themselves to be denounced
as visionaries, when not "frauds," and it is their duty
to remain true to their colours, and to defend their most sacred
beliefs. This they can do only by opposing to the prejudiced hypotheses
of their opponents, (a) the diametrically opposite conclusions
of their colleagues other scientists as eminent specialists
in the same branches of study as themselves; and (b) the
true meaning of sundry passages disfigured by these partisans,
in the old scriptures and classics. But to do this, we can
pay no more regard to these illustrious personages in modern science,
than they do to the gods of the "inferior races." Theosophy,
the Divine Wisdom or TRUTH is, no more than
was a certain tribal deity "a respecter of persons."
We are on the defensive, and have to vindicate that which we know
to be implicit truth: hence, for a few editorials to come,
we contemplate a series of articles refuting our opponents however
learned.
And now it becomes evident why it is impossible for us to "leave
our highly respectable, firmly-rooted official science severely
alone."
Meanwhile we may close with a few parting words to our readers.
Power belongs to him who knows; this is a very old axiom:
knowledge, or the first step to power, especially that of comprehending
the truth, of discerning the real from the false belongs only
to those who place truth above their own petty personalities.
Those only who having freed themselves from every prejudice, and
conquered their human conceit and selfishness, are ready to accept
every and any truth once the latter is undeniable and
has been demonstrated to them those alone, I say, may hope to
get at the ultimate knowledge of things. It is useless to search
for such among the proud scientists of the day, and it would be
folly to expect the aping masses of the profane to turn against
their tacitly accepted idols. Therefore it is also useless for
a theosophical work of any description to expect justice. Let
some unknown MS. of Macaulay, of Sir W. Hamilton, or John Stuart
Mill, be printed and issued to-day by the Theosophical Publishing
Company, and the reviewers if any would proclaim it ungrammatical
and un-English, misty and illogical. The majority judge of a work
according to the respective prejudices of its critics, who in
their turn are guided by the popularity or unpopularity of the
authors, certainly never by its intrinsic faults or merits. Outside
theosophical circles, therefore, the forthcoming volumes of the
Secret Doctrine are sure to receive at the hands of the
general public a still colder welcome than their two predecessors
have found. In our day, as has been proved repeatedly, no statement
can hope for a fair trial, or even hearing, unless its arguments
run on the lines of legitimate and accepted inquiry, remaining
strictly within the boundaries of either official, materialistic
science, or emotional, orthodox theology.
Our age, reader, is a paradoxical anomaly. It is pre-eminently
materialistic, and as pre-eminently pietist, a Janus age, in all
truth.
Our literature, our modern thought and progress so-called, run
on these two parallel lines, so incongruously dissimilar, and
yet both so popular and so very "proper" and "respectable,"
each in its own way. He who presumes to draw a third line, or
even a hyphen of reconciliation, so to speak, between the two,
has to be fully prepared for the worst. He will have his work
mangled by reviewers, who after reading three lines on the first
page, two in the middle of the book, and the closing sentence,
will proclaim it "unreadable"; it will be mocked by
the sycophants of science and church, misquoted by their flunkies,
and rejected even by the pious railway stalls, while the average
reader will not even understand its meaning. The still absurd
misconceptions in the cultured circles of Society about the teachings
of the "Wisdom-religion" (Bodhism), after the admirably
clear and scientifically presented explanations of its elementary
doctrines by the author of Esoteric Buddhism, are a good
proof in point. They might serve as a caution even to those amongst
us, who, hardened in almost a life-long struggle in the service
of our Cause, are neither timid with their pens, nor in the least
disconcerted or appalled by the dogmatic assertions of scientific
"authorities." And yet they persist in their work, although
perfectly aware that, do what they may, neither materialism nor
doctrinal pietism will give theosophical philosophy a fair hearing
in this age. To the very end, our doctrine will be systematically
rejected, our theories denied a place, even in the ranks of those
ever-shifting, scientific ephemera called the "working hypotheses"
of our day. To the advocates of the "animalistic" theory,
our cosmogenetical and anthropogenetical teachings must be fairy
tales," truly. "How can we," asked one of the champions
of the men of science of a friend, "accept the rigmaroles
of ancient Babus (?!) even if taught in antiquity, once they
go in every detail against the conclusions of modern science .
. . As well ask us to replace Darwin by Jack the Giant Killer!"
Quite so; for those who would shirk any moral responsibility it
seems certainly more convenient to accept descent from a common
simian ancestor, and see a brother in a dumb, tailless
baboon, rather than acknowledge the fatherhood of the Pitris,
the fair "sons of the gods," or to have to recognize
as a brother, a starveling from the slums, or a copper-colored
man of an "inferior" race. "Hold back!" shout
in their turn the pietists, "you can never hope to make respectable
church-going Christians 'Esoteric Buddhists'!"
Nor are we in any way anxious to attempt the metamorphosis; the
less so, since the majority of the pious Britishers have already,
and of their own free will and choice, become Esoteric Boothists.
De gustibus non disputandum.
In our next, we mean to inquire how far Prof. Jowett is right,
in his Preface to Timus, in stating that "the
fancies of the Neo-Platonists have nothing to do with the interpretation
of Plato," and that "the so-called mysticism
of Plato is purely Greek, arising out, of his imperfect knowledge,"
not to say ignorance. The learned Master of Balliol denies the
use of any esoteric symbology by Plato in his works. We Theosophists
maintain it and must try to give our best proofs for the claims
preferred.
II
ON AUTHORITIES IN GENERAL, AND THE AUTHORITY
OF MATERIALISTS, ESPECIALLY
In assuming the task of contradicting "authorities"
and of occasionally setting at nought the well established opinions
and hypotheses of men of Science, it becomes necessary in the
face of repeated accusations to define our attitude clearly at
the very outset. Though, where the truth of our doctrines is concerned,
no criticism and no amount of ridicule can intimidate us, we would
nevertheless be sorry to give one more handle to our enemies,
as a pretext for an extra slaughter of the innocent; nor would
we willingly lead our friends into an unjust suspicion of that
to which we are not in the least prepared to plead guilty.
One of such suspicions would naturally be the idea that we must
be terribly self-opinionated and conceited. This would be false
from A to Z. It does not at all stand to reason that because we
contradict eminent professors of Science on certain points, we
therefore claim to know more than they do of Science; nor, that
we even have the benighted vanity of placing ourselves on the
same level as these scholars. Those who would accuse us of this
would simply be talking nonsense, for even to harbour such a thought
would be the madness of conceit and we have never been guilty
of this vice. Hence, we declare loudly to all our readers that
most of those "authorities" we find fault with, stand
in our own opinion immeasurably higher in scientific knowledge
and general information than we do. But, this conceded, the
reader is reminded that great scholarship in no way precludes
great bias and prejudice; nor is it a safeguard against personal
vanity and pride. A Physicist may be an undeniable expert in acoustics,
wave-vibrations, etc., and be no Musician at all, having no ear
for music. None of the modern boot makers can write as Count Leo
Tolstoi does; but any tyro in decent shoemaking can take the great
novelist to task for spoiling good materials in trying to make
boots. Moreover, it is only in the legitimate defence of our time-honoured
Theosophical doctrines, opposed by many on the authority of materialistic
Scientists, entirely ignorant of psychic possibilities, in the
vindication of ancient Wisdom and its Adepts, that we throw down
the gauntlet to Modern Science. If in their inconceivable conceit
and blind Materialism they will go on dogmatizing upon that about
which they know nothing nor do they want to know then those
who do know something have a right to protest and to say so publicly
and in print.
Many must have heard of the suggestive answer made by a lover
of Plato to a critic of Thomas Taylor, the translator of
the works of this great sage. Taylor was charged with being but
a poor Greek scholar, and not a very good English writer. "True,"
was the pert reply; "Tom Taylor may have known far less Greek
than his critics; but he knew Plato far better than any of
them does." And this we take to be our own position.
We claim no scholarship in either dead or living tongues, and
we take no stock in Philology as a modern Science. But we do claim
to understand the living spirit of Plato's Philosophy, and
the symbolical meaning of the writings of this great Initiate,
better than do his modern translators, and for this very simple
reason. The Hierophants and Initiates of the Mysteries in the
Secret Schools in which all the Sciences inaccessible and useless
to the masses of the profane were taught, had one universal, Esoteric
tongue the language of symbolism and allegory. This language
has suffered neither modification nor amplification from those
remote times down to this day. It still exists and is still taught.
There are those who have preserved the knowledge of it, and also
of the arcane meaning of the Mysteries; and it is from these Masters
that the writer of the present protest had the good fortune of
learning, howbeit imperfectly, the said language. Hence her
claim to a more correct comprehension of the arcane portion
of the ancient texts written by avowed Initiates such as were
Plato and Iamblichus, Pythagoras, and even Plutarch than can
be claimed by, or expected from, those who, knowing nothing
whatever of that "language" and even denying its
existence altogether, yet set forth authoritative and conclusive
views on everything Plato and Pythagoras knew or did not know,
believed in or disbelieved. It is not enough to lay down the audacious
proposition, "that an ancient Philosopher is to be interpreted
from himself [i.e., from the dead-letter texts and by the
contemporary history of thoughts' (Prof. Jowett); he who lays
it down has first of all to prove to the satisfaction,
not of his admirers and himself alone, but of all, that
modern thought does not wool gather in the question of Philosophy
as it does on the lines of materialistic Science. Modern thought
genies Divine Spirit in Nature, and the Divine element in mankind,
the Soul's immorta1ity and every noble conception inherent in
man. We Al I know that in their endeavors to kill that which they
have agreed to call "superstition" and the "relics
of ignorance" (read "religious feelings and metaphysical
concepts of the Universe and Man" ), Materialists like Prof.
Huxley or Mr. Grant Allen are ready to go to any length in order
to ensure the triumph of their soul-killing Science. But when
we find Greek and Sanskrit scholars and doctors of theology, playing
into the hands of modern materialistic thought, pooh-poohing everything
they do not know, or that of which the public or rather
Society, which ever follows in its impulses the craze of fashion,
of popularity or unpopularity disapproves, then we have the right
to assume one of two things: the scholars who act on these lines
are either moved by personal conceit, or by the fear of public
opinion; they dare not challenge it at the risk of unpopularity.
In both cases they forfeit their right to esteem as authorities.
For, if they are blind to facts and sincere in their blindness,
then their learning, however great, will do more harm than good,
and if, while fully alive to those universal truths which Antiquity
knew better than we do though it did express them in more ambiguous
and less scientific language our Philosophers will still keep
them under the bushel for fear of painfully dazzling the majority's
eyes, then the example they set is most pernicious. They suppress
the truth and disfigure metaphysical conceptions, as their colleagues
in Physical Science distort facts in material Nature into mere
props to support their respective views, on the lines of popular
hypotheses and Darwinian thought. And if so, what right have they
to demand a respectful hearing from those to whom TRUTH
is the highest, as the noblest, of all religions?
The negation of any fact or claim believed in by the teeming millions
of Christians and non-Christians, of a fact, moreover, impossible
to disprove, is a serious thing for a man of recognized scientific
authority, in the face of its inevitable results. Denials and
rejections of certain things, hitherto held sacred, coming from
such sources, are, for a public taught to respect scientific data
and bulls, as good as unqualified assertions. Unless uttered
in the broadest spirit of Agnosticism and offered merely
as a personal opinion, such a spirit of wholesale negation especially
when confronted with the universal belief of the whole of Antiquity,
and of the incalculable hosts of the surviving Eastern nations
in the things denied becomes pregnant with dangers to mankind.
Thus the rejection of a Divine Principle in the Universe, of Soul
and Spirit in man and of his Immortality, by one set of Scientists;
and the repudiation of any Esoteric Philosophy existing in Antiquity,
hence, of the presence of any hidden meaning based on that system
of revealed learning in the sacred writings of the East (the Bible
included), or in the works of those Philosophers who were
confessedly Initiates, by another set of "authorities" are
simply fatal to humanity. Between missionary enterprise encouraged
far more on political than religious grounds9 and
scientific Materialism, both teaching from two diametrically opposite
poles that which neither can prove or disprove, and mostly that
which they themselves take on blind faith or blind hypothesis,
the millions of the growing generations must find themselves at
sea. They will not know, any more than their parents know now,
what to believe in, whither to turn for truth. Weightier proofs
are thus required now by many than the mere personal assumptions
and negations of religious fanatics and irreligious Materialists,
that such or another thing exists or has no existence.
We, Theosophists, who are not so easily caught on the hook baited
with either salvation or annihilation, we claim our right to demand
the weightiest, and to us undeniable proofs that truth
is in the keeping of Science and Theology. And as we find no answer
forthcoming, we claim the right to argue upon every undecided
question, by analyzing the assumptions of our opponents. We, who
believe in Occultism and the archaic Esoteric Philosophy, do not,
as already said, ask our members to believe as we do, nor charge
them with ignorance if they do not. We simply leave them to make
their choice. Those who decide to study the old Science are given
proofs of its existence; and corroborative evidence accumulates
and grows in proportion to the personal progress of the student.
Why should not the Negators of ancient Science to wit, modern
Scholars do the same in the matter of their denials and assertions;
i.e., why don't they refuse to say either yea or
nay in regard to that which they really do not know,
instead of denying or affirming it d priori as they
all do? Why do not our Scientists proclaim frankly and honestly
to the whole world, that most of their notions e.g., on
life, matter, ether, atoms, etc., each of these being an unsolvable
mystery to them are not scientific facts and axioms, but
simple "working hypotheses"? Or again, why should not
Orientalists but too many of them are Reverends" or a Regius
Professor of Greek, a Doctor of Theology, and a translator of
Plato, like Professor Jowett, mention, while giving out his personal
views on the Greek Sage, that there are other scholars as learned
as he is who think otherwise? This would only be fair, and more
prudent too, in the face of a whole array of evidence to the contrary,
embracing thousands of years in the past. And it would be more
honest than to lead less learned people than themselves into grave
errors, by allowing those under the hypnotic influence of "authority,"
and thus but too inclined to take every ephemeral hypothesis on
trust, to accept as proven that which has yet
to be proved. But the "authorities" act on different
lines. Whenever a fact, in Nature or in History, does not fit
in with, and refuses to be wedged into, one of their personal
hypotheses, accepted as Religion or Science by the solemn majority,
forthwith it is denied, declared a "myth," or, revealed
Scriptures are appealed to against it.
It is this which brings Theosophy and its Occult doctrines into
everlasting convict with certain Scholars and Theology. Leaving
the latter entirely out of question in the present article, we
will devote our protest, for the time being, but to the former.
So, for instance, many of our teachings corroborated in a mass
of ancient works, but denied piecemeal, at various times, by sundry
professors have been shown to clash not only with the conclusions
of modern Science and Philosophy, but even with those passages
from the old works i to which we have appealed for evidence. We
have but to point to a certain page of some old Hindu work, to
Plato, or some other Greek classic, as corroborating some of our
peculiar Esoteric doctrines, to see
H. P. B.
Lucifer, April, 1891
H. P. Blavatsky
l "Analyse des Choses." Physiologie
Transcendentale.
Dr. Paul Gibier, pp. 33, 34. back to text
2 "In perfect strictness, it is true that chemical
investigation can tell us little or nothing directly of
the composition of living matter, and . . . it is also in strictness
true, that we KNOW NOTHING
about the composition of any body whatever, as it is." (Prof.
Huxley). back to text
3 This is what the poet laureate of matter, Mr. Tyndall,
confesses in his works concerning atomic action: "through
pure excess of complexity . . . the most highly trained intellect,
the most refined and disciplined imagination retires In bewilderment
from the contemplation of the problem. We are struck dumb
by an astonishment which no microscope can relieve, doubting not
only the power of our instrument, but even whether we ourselves
possess the intellectual elements which will ever enable us to
grapple with the ultimate structural energies of nature."
And yet they do not hesitate to grapple with nature's spiritual
and psychic problems life, intelligence and the highest consciousness and
attribute them all to matter. back to text
4 And therefore it is not to such that these well-known
humorous verses, stm6 at Oxford, would apply:
"I am the master of this college
And what I know not is not knowledge." back to text
5 Analvse des Choses, etc., Dr. P. Gibier,
pp. 213 and 214. back to text
6 Says Prof. A. H. Sayce in his excellent Preface
to Dr. Schliemann's Trop: "The natural tendency of the
student of to-day is to post-date rather than to ante date, and
to bring everything down to the latest period that is possible."
This is so, and they do it with a vengeance. The same reluctance
is felt to admit the antiquity of man, as to allow to the ancient
philosopher any knowledge of that which the modern student does
not know. Conceit and vanity! back to text
7 See Edkin's Chinese Buddhism,, and read what
this missionary, an eminent Chinese scholar who lived long years
in China, though himself very prejudiced as a rule, says of the
esoteric schools. back to text
8 See Preface to his translation of Timus back to text
9 We maintain that the fabulous sums spent on, and
by, Christian missions, whose propaganda brings forth such wretched
moral results and gets so few renegades, are spent with a political
object in view. The aim of the missions, which, as in India, are
only said to be "tolerated" (sic) seems to be
to pervert people from their ancestral religions, rather than
to convert them to Christianity, and this is done in order
to destroy in them every spark of national feeling. When the spirit
of patriotism is dead in a nation, it very easily becomes mere
puppet in the hands of the rulers. back to text
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