[In an article titled
"Hierosophy and Theosophy" which
appeared in the Theosophist for July, 1883,
William Oxley, F.T.S., referred briefly
to the mummification practiced by the ancient Egyptians in order
to support his speculation about "atoms" and "souls."
To this passage H.P.B. appended a critical
footnote. Then, in the succeeding August issue,
a correspondent, "N.D.K.,"
asked some questions about statements made by H.P.B.
in this footnote. Here we print the July footnote,
followed by a summary of N.D.K.'s questions,
and then the article of the above title, which gave H.P.B.'s
replies. Editors.
Mr. Oxley will permit us to correct
him. He looks at the objective terrestrial and empty
shell the "mummy," and forgets that there
may be hidden under the crude allegory a great scientific and
occult truth. We are taught that for 3,000 years
at least the "mummy" notwithstanding all the chemical
preparations goes on throwing off to the last invisible atoms,
which from the hour of death re-entering the various vortices
of being go indeed "through every variety of organized
life forms." But it is not the soul, the 5th,
least of all the 6th, principle, but the life
atoms of the jiva the 2nd principle. At the
end of the 3,000 years, sometimes more, and
sometimes less, after endless transmigrations all these
atoms are once more drawn together, and are made to form
the new outer clothing or the body of the same monad (the real
soul) which had already been clothed with two or three thousands
of years before. Even in the worst case that of the annihilation
of the conscious personal principle the monad or individual
soul is ever the same as are also the atoms of the lower principles
which regenerated and renewed in this ever flowing river of being
are magnetically drawn together owing to their affinity,
and are once more re-incarnated together. Such was the
true occult theory of the Egyptians.
[In his letter to the Editor, N.D.K.
remarks that H.P.B.'s footnote constitutes
"a new installment of occult teaching" suggesting a
basis of truth in the doctrine of transmigration. "What
then," he asks, "is meant by the life
atoms, and their going through endless transmigrations?"
Also, do "both the invisible atoms of the Jiva after
going through various life-atoms return again to re-form the physical
body, and the Jiva of the entity that has reached the end
of its Devachanic state and is ready to be re-incarnated again?"
Further, "does the term 'lower principles' include
the 'Kama rupa' also, or only the lower triad of body,
Jiva, and Linga sarira?" Finally, "do
the atoms of the 4th principle (Kama rupa) and lower portion of
the 5th, which cannot be assimilated by the 6th .
. . also re-form after going through various transmigrations,
to constitute over again the 4th and lower 5th of the next incarnation?"
We would, to begin with, draw our correspondent's
attention to the closing sentence of the foot-note under his review.
"Such was the true occult theory of the Egyptians" the
word "true" being used there in the sense of its being
the doctrine they really believed in, as distinct from
both the tenets fathered upon them by some Orientalists and quoted
by Mr. Oxley, and that which the modern occultists
may be now teaching. It does not stand to reason that,
outside those occult truths that were known to, and revealed
by, the great Hierophants during the final initiation,
we should accept all that either the Egyptians or any other
people may have regarded as true. The Priests of Isis were
the only true initiates, and their occult teachings were
still more veiled than those of the Chaldeans. There was
the true doctrine of the Hierophants of the inner Temple;
then the half-veiled Hieratic tenets of the Priest of the outer
Temple; and finally, the vulgar popular religion
of the great body of the ignorant who were allowed to reverence
animals as divine. As shown correctly by Sir Gardner Wilkinson,
the initiated priests taught that "dissolution is only the
cause of reproduction . . . nothing perishes
which has once existed, but things which appear to be destroyed
only change their natures and pass into another form."
In the present case, however, the Egyptian doctrine
of atoms coincides with our own occult teachings.
The just criticism of our observing brother, who takes
naturally enough the sentence "The life-atoms of the Jiva"
in its literal sense, reminds us at the same time,
more than ever, of that most important fact that one can
never take too much care to express clearly new ideas while writing
on metaphysical subjects. In penning the words under review,
no thought was given in fact, that the idea was "a
new installment," and, therefore, its
incompleteness gave rise to a fresh misunderstanding. Without
any doubt Jiva or Prana is quite distinct
from the atoms it animates. The latter belong to the lowest
or grossest state of matter the objectively conditioned;
the former to its highest state: that state which the
uninitiated, ignorant of its nature, would call
the "objectively finite," but which, to
avoid any future misunderstanding, we may, perhaps,
be permitted to call the Subjectively Eternal, though
at the same time, and in one sense the subsistent existence however
paradoxical and unscientific the term may appear.1
Life, the occultist says, is the eterna1 uncreated
energy, and it alone represents in the infinite universe,
that which the physicists have agreed to name the principle? or
the law of continuity, though they apply it only to the
endless development of the conditioned. But since modern
science admits through her most learned professors that "energy
has as much claim to be regarded as an objective reality as matter
itself,"2 and that life, according
to the occult doctrine, is the one energy acting
Proteus-like under the most varied forms, the occultists
have a certain right to use such a phraseology. Life is
ever present in the atom or matter, whether organic or
inorganic, conditioned or unconditioned a difference that
the occultists do not accept. Their doctrine is that life
is as much present in the inorganic as in the organic matter:
when life-energy is active in the atom, that atom is organic;
when dormant or latent, then the atom is inorganic.
Therefore, the expression "life-atom" though
apt in one sense to mislead the reader, is not incorrect
after all, since occultists do not recognise that anything
in nature can be inorganic and know of no "dead atoms,"
whatever meaning science may give to the adjective.
The alleged law of Biogenesis is the result of the ignorance
of the man of science of occult physics. It is accepted
because the man of science was hitherto unable to find the necessary
means to awaken into activity dormant life in what he terms an
inorganic atom: hence the fallacy that a living thing can
only be produced from a living thing, as though there ever
was such a thing as dead matter in Nature! At this rate,
and to be consistent, a mule ought to be also classed with
inorganic matter, since it is unable to reproduce itself, and generate life.
We lay so much stress upon the above to answer at once any future
objection to the idea that a mummy several thousand years old,
can be throwing off atoms. Nevertheless the sentence may
perhaps have been more clearly expressed by saying instead of
the "life-atoms of Jiva," the atoms "animated
by dormant Jiva or life energy." Again, the
sentence quoted by our correspondent from Fragment No.
1,* though quite correct on the whole, might be
more fully, if not more clearly, expressed.
The "Jiva," or life principle which animates
man, beast, plant or even a mineral, certainly
is "a form of force, indestructible,"
since this force is the one life, or anima mundi,
the universal living soul, and that the various modes
in which the various objective things appear to us in nature in
their atomic aggregations, such as minerals, plants,
animals, etc., are all the different forms or states
in which this force manifests itself. Were it to become,
we will not say absent, for this is impossible,
since it is omnipresent, but for one single instant inactive,
say in a stone, the particles of the latter would lose
instantly their cohesive property and disintegrate as suddenly though
the force would still remain in each of its particles,
but in a dormant state. Thus the continuation of the sentence
which states that, when this indestructible force is "disconnected
with one set of atoms, it becomes attracted immediately
by others" does not imply that it abandons entirely the first
set, but only that it transfers its vis viva
or living power, the energy of motion, to another
set. But because it manifests itself in the next set as
what is called Kinetic energy, it does not follow that
the first set is deprived of it altogether; for it is still
in it, as potential energy, or life latent.3
This is a cardinal and basic truth of occultism, on the
perfect knowledge of which depends the production of every phenomenon.
Unless we admit this point, we should have to give up all
the other truths of occultism. Thus what is "meant
by the life-atom going through endless transmigration" is
simply this: we regard and call in our occult phraseology
those atoms that are moved by Kinetic energy as "life-atoms,"
while those that are for the time being passive, containing
but invisible potential energy, we call "sleeping
atoms," regarding at the same time those two forms
of energy as produced by the one and same force, or life.
We have to beg our readers' indulgence: we are neither
a man of science, nor an English scholar. Forced
by circumstances to give out the little we know, we do
the best we can and explain matters to the best of our ability.
Ignorant of Newton's laws, we claim to know something only
of the Occult Laws of motion. And now to the Hindu
doctrine of Metempsychosis.
It has a basis of truth; and, in fact, it
is an axiomatic truth but only in reference to human atoms and
emanations, and that not only after a man's death,
but during the whole period of his life. The esoteric meaning
of the Laws of Manu (Sec. XII, 3, and XII,
54 and 55), of the verses that state that "every act,
either mental, verbal or corporeal, bears good or
evil fruit (Karma), the various transmigrations of men
(not souls) through the highest, middle, and
lowest stages, are produced by his actions";
and again that "A Brahman-killer enters the body of a dog,
bear, ass, camel, goat, sheep,
bird, etc.," bears no reference to the human
Ego, but only to the atoms of his body, of his lower
triad, and his fluidic emanations.
It is all very well for the Brahmins to distort in their own interest,
the real meaning contained in these laws, but the words
as quoted never meant what they were made to yield from the above
verses later on. The Brahmins applied them selfishly to
themselves, whereas by "Brahman," man's
seventh principle, his immortal monad and the essence of
the personal Ego were allegorically meant. He who kills
or extinguishes in himself the light of Parabrahm, i.e.,
severs his personal Ego from the Atman and thus kills the
future Devachanee, becomes a "Brahman-killer."
Instead of facilitating, through a virtuous life and spiritual
aspirations the mutual union of the Buddhi and the Manas,
he condemns by his own evil acts every atom of his lower principles
to become attracted and drawn, in virtue of the magnetic
affinity thus created by his passions, into the forming
bodies of lower animals or brutes. This is the real meaning
of the doctrine of Metempsychosis. It is not that such
amalgamation of human particles with animal or even vegetable
atoms can carry in it any idea of personal punishment per se,
for of course it does not. But it is a cause created,
the effects of which may manifest themselves throughout the next
rebirths unless the personality is annihilated. Otherwise,
from cause to effect, every effect becoming in its turn
a cause, they will run along the cycle of rebirths,
the once-given impulse expending itself only at the threshold
of Pralaya. But of this anon.
Notwithstanding their esoteric meaning, even the words
of the grandest and noblest of all the adepts, Gautama
Buddha, are misunderstood, distorted and ridiculed
in the same way. The Hina-yana, the lowest
form of transmigration of the Buddhist, is as little comprehended
as the Maha-yana, its highest form, and,
because Sakya Muni is shown to have once remarked to his Bhikkus,
while pointing out to them a broom, that "it had formerly
been a novice who neglected to sweep out" the Council room,
hence was reborn as a broom (!), therefore, the
wisest of all of the world's sages stands accused of idiotic superstition.
Why not try and find out, before accusing, the true
meaning of the figurative statement? Why should we scoff before we understand?
Is or is not that which is called magnetic effluvia a something,
a stuff, or substance, invisible, and imponderable
though it be? If the learned authors of "The Unseen Universe"
object to light, heat and electricity being regarded merely
as imponderables, and show that each of these phenomena
has as much claim to be recognized as an objective reality as
matter itself our right to regard the mesmeric or magnetic fluid
which emanates from man to man or even from man to what is termed
an inanimate object, is far greater. It is
not enough to say that this fluid is a species of molecular energy
like heat, for instance, for it is vastly more.
Heat is produced whenever visible energy is transformed into molecular
energy, we are told, and it may be thrown out by
any material composed of sleeping atoms or inorganic matter as
it is called: whereas the magnetic fluid projected by a
living human body is life itself. "Indeed it
is life-atoms" that a man in a blind passion throws off,
unconsciously, and though he does it quite as effectively
as a mesmeriser who transfers them from himself to any object
consciously and under the guidance of his will. Let any
man give way to any intense feeling, such as anger,
grief, etc., under or near a tree, or in
direct contact with a stone; and many thousands of years
after that any tolerable Psychometer will see the man and sense
his feelings, from one single fragment of that tree or
stone that he had touched. Hold any object in your hand,
and it will become impregnated with your life atoms, indrawn
and outdrawn, changed and transferred in us at every instant
of our lives. Animal heat is but so many life atoms in
molecular motion. It requires no adept knowledge,
but simply the natural gift of a good clairvoyant subject to see
them passing to and fro, from man to objects and vice
versa like a bluish lambent flame.
Why then should not a broom, made of a shrub, which
grew most likely in the vicinity of the building where the lazy
novice lived, a shrub, perhaps, repeatedly
touched by him while in a state of anger, provoked by his
laziness and distaste to his duty, why should not a quantity
of his life atoms have passed into the materials of the future
besom and therein have been recognised by Buddha, owing
to his superhuman (not supernatural) powers? The processes
of nature are acts of incessant borrowing and giving back.
The materialistic sceptic, however, will not take
anything in any, save in a literal, dead-letter
sense. We would invite those Christian Orientalists who
chuckle at this record of Buddha's teachings to compare it with
a certain passage in the Gospels a teaching of Christ.
To his disciples' query "who did sin, this man or
his parents, that he was born blind?" the answer
they received was "neither hath this man sinned,
nor his parents: but that the works of God should be made
manifest in him." (John ix. 2-3.)
Now Gautama's statement has a scientific and philosophic meaning
for every occultist at least, if it lacks a clear meaning
for the profane; while the answer put (probably centuries
later4) into the mouth of the founder of Christianity
by his over-zealous and ignorant biographers has not even that
esoteric meaning, which so many of the sayings of Jesus
are pregnant with. This alleged teaching is an uncalled-for
and blasphemous insult to their own God, implying,
as it clearly does, that for the pleasure of manifesting
his power, the Deity had foredoomed an innocent man to
the torture of a life-long blindness. As well accuse Christ
of being the author of the 39 Articles!
To conclude our too long answer, the "lower principles"
mentioned in the foot-note are the 1st, 2nd and 3rd.
They cannot include the Kamarupa, for this "rupa"
belongs to the middle, not the lower principles.
And, to our correspondent's further query, "do
the atoms of these (the 4th and the 5th) also re-form after going
through various transmigrations to constitute over again the 4th
and the lower 5th of the next incarnation" we answer "they
do." The reason why we have tried to explain the doctrine
of the "life atoms" at such length, is precisely
in connection with this last question, and with the object
of throwing out one more valuable hint. We do not feel
at liberty at present, however, to give any further details.
Theosophist, July, August, 1883
H. P. Blavatsky
1 Though there is a distinct term for it in the language
of the adepts, how can one translate it into a European
language? What name can be given to that which is objective
yet immaterial in its finite manifestations, subjective
yet substantive (though not in our sense of substance)
in its eternal existence? Haring explained it the best we
can, we leave the task of finding a more appropriate term
for it to our learned English occultists. Ed. back to text
2 Unseen Universe. back to text
* From "Fragments of Occult Truth I"
(Theosophist
III, 18; see THEOSOPHY 2:100).
The full sentence reads: "The Vital principle (or
Jiv-atma), a form of force, indestructible,
and when disconnected with one set of atoms, becoming attracted
immediately by others." back to text
3 We fell constrained to make use of terms that have
become technical in modern science though they do not always
fully express the idea to be conveyed for want of better words.
It is useless to hope that the occult doctrine may be ever thoroughly
understood even the few tenets that can be safely given to the
world at large unless a glossary of such words is edited;
and, what is of a still more primary importance until
the full and correct meaning of the terms therein taught is thoroughly
mastered. Ed. back to text
4 And probably by, or under, the inspiration
of Irenæus since the sentence is found in the 4th
Gospel, that of John, that did not exist yet at
the time of his quarrels with the Gnostics.-Ed. back to
text
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