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The Occult World
By
Alfred Percy Sinnett
Theosophy Wales are
pleased to present this
Tour de Force of esoteric writing.
The Occult World is an treatise on the
Occult and Occult Phenomena, presented in readable style,
by an early giant of the Theosophical
Movement.
Alfred Percy Sinnett and his wife
Patience were personally invited to join the Theosophical
Society by the founder of modern
Theosophy,
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky herself
Theosophists nowadays hesitate to use the
word “Occult” as it has been kicked around, adapted
and reworked to suit many purposes and
contexts.
A P Sinnett uses the word to describe the
study
of a deeper spiritual reality that extends
beyond
rigid rational thinking and the accepted
boundaries of the physical sciences.
The Occult
World
By
A P Sinnett
Chapter 1
Occultism and its Adepts
1
The powers with which occultism invests its adepts include, to begin
with, a control over various forces in Nature which ordinary science knows
nothing about, and by means of which an adept can hold conversation with any
other adept, whatever intervals on the earth's surface may lie between them.
This psychological telegraphy is wholly independent of all mechanical
conditions or appliances whatever.[ See
Appendix B. ] And the
clairvoyant faculties of the adept are so perfect and complete that they amount
to a species of omniscience as regards mundane affairs. The body is the prison
of the soul for ordinary mortals. We can see merely what comes before its
windows ; we can take cognisance only of what is brought within its bars. But
the adept has found the key of his prison and can emerge from it at pleasure.
It is no longer a prison for him-merely a d welling. In other words, the adept
can project his soul out of his body to any place he pleases with the rapidity
of thought.
The whole edifice of occultism from basement to roof is so utterly
strange to ordinary conceptions that it is difficult to know how to begin an
explanation of its contents. How could one describe a calculating machine to an
audience unfamiliar with the simplest mechanical contrivances and knowing nothing
of arithmetic§ And the highly cultured classes of modern Europe, as regards the
achievements of occultism, are, in spite of the perfection of their literary
scholarship and the exquisite precision of their attainments in their own
departments of science, in the position as regards occultism of knowing nothing
about the A B C of the subject, nothing about the capacities of the soul at all
as distinguished from the capacities of body and soul combined. The occultists
for ages have devoted themselves to that study chiefly; they have accomplished
results in connexion with it which are absolutely bewildering in their
magnificence; but suddenly introduced to some of these, the prosaic
intelligence is staggered and feels in a world of miracle and enchantment. On charts
that show the stream of history, the nations all intermingle more or less,
except the Chinese, and that is shown coming down in a single river without
affluents and without branches from out of the clouds of time. Suppose that
civilized Europe had not come into contact with the Chinese till lately, and
suppose that the Chinamen, very much brighter in intelligence than they really
are, had developed some branch of physical science to the point it actually has
reached with us; suppose that particular branch had been entirely neglected
with us, the surprise we should feel at taking up the Chinese discoveries in
their refined development without having gradually grown familiar with their
small beginnings would be very great.
Now this is exactly the situation as regards occult science. The
occultists have been a race apart from an earlier period than we can fathom-
not a separate race physically, not a uniform race physically at all, nor a
nation in any sense of the word, but a continuous association of men of the
highest intelligence linked together by a bond stronger than any other tie of
which mankind has experience, and carrying on with a perfect continuity of
purpose the studies and traditions and mysteries of self-development handed
down to them by their predecessors. All this time the stream of civilization,
on the foremost waves of which the culture of modern Europe is floating, has
been wholly and absolutely neglectful of the one study with which the
occultists have been solely engaged. What wonder that the two lines of
civilization have diverged so far apart that their forms are now entirely
unlike each other. It remains to be seen whether this attempt to reintroduce
the long-estranged cousins will be tolerated or treated as an impudent attempt
to pass off an impostor as a relation.
I have said that the occultist can project his soul from his body. As an
incidental discovery, it will be observed, he has thus ascertained beyond all
shadow of doubt that he really has got a soul. A comparison of myths has
sometimes been called the science of religion. If there can really be a science
of religion it must necessarily be occultism. On the surface, perhaps, it may
not be obvious that religious truth must necessarily open out more completely
to the soul as temporarily loosened from the body, than to the soul as taking
cognisance of ideas through the medium of the physical senses. But to ascend
into a realm of immateriality, where cognition becomes a process of pure
perception while the intellectual faculties are in full play and centred in the
immaterial man, must manifestly be conducive to an enlarged comprehension of
religious truth.
I have just spoken of the" immaterial man " as distinguished
from the body of the physical senses ; but, so complex is the statement I have
to make, that I must no sooner induce the reader to tolerate the phrase than I
must reject it for the future as inaccurate. Occult philosophy has ascertained
that the inner ethereal self, which is the man as distinguished from his body, is
itself the envelope of something more ethereal still --is itself, in a subtle
sense of the term, material.
The majority of civilized people believe that man has a soul which will
somehow survive the dissolution of the body; but they have to confess that they
do not know very much about it. A good many of the most highly
civilized, have grave doubts on the subject, and some think that researches in
physics which have suggested the notion that even thought may be a mode of
motion, tend to establish the strong probability of the hypothesis that when
the life of the body is destroyed nothing else survives. Occult philosophy does
not speculate about the matter at all ; it knows the state of the facts.
St. Paul, who was an occultist, speaks of man as constituted of body,
soul, and spirit. The distinction is one that hardly fits in with the theory,
that when a man dies his soul is translated to heaven or hell for ever. What
then becomes of the spirit, and what is the spirit as different from the soul,
on the ordinary hypothesis. Orthodox thinkers work out each some theory on the
subject for himself. Either that the soul is the seat of the emotions and the
spirit of the intellectual faculties, or vice versa. No one can put such
conjectures on a solid foundation, not even on the basis of an alleged
revelation. But
The important point which occultism brings out is that the soul of man,
while something enormously subtler and more ethereal and more lasting than the
body, is itself a material reality. Not material as chemistry
understands matter, but as physical science en bloc might understand it
if the tentacle of each branch of science were to grow more sensitive and were
to work more in harmony.
It is no denial of the materiality of any hypothetical substance to say
that one cannot determine its atomic weight and its affinities. The ether that
transmits light is held to be material by anyone who holds it to exist at all,
but there is a gulf of difference between it and the thinnest of the gases. You
do not always approach a scientific truth from the same direction. You may
perceive some directly; you have to infer others indirectly; but these latter
may not on that account be the less certain. The materiality of ether is
inferable from the behaviour of light: the materiality of the soul may be
inferable from its subjection to forces. A mesmeric influence is a force
emanating from certain physical characteristics of the mesmerist. It impinges
on the soul of the subject at a distance and produces an effect perceptible to
him, demonstrable to others. Of course this is an illustration and no proof. I
must set forth as well as I am able--and that can but be very imperfectly-the
discoveries of occultism without at first attempting the establishment by proof
of each part of these discoveries. Further on, I shall be able to prove some
parts at any rate, and others will then be recognised as indirectly
established, too.
The soul is material, and inheres in the ordinarily more grossly
material body; and it is this condition of things which enables the occultist
to speak positively on the subject, for he can satisfy himself at one coup that
there is such a thing as a soul, and that it is material in its nature, by
dissociating it from the body under some conditions, and restoring it again.
The occultist can even do this sometimes with other souls; his primary
achievement, however, is to do so with his own.
When I say that the occultist knows he has a soul I refer to this
power. He knows it just as another man knows he has a great coat. He can put it
from him, and render it manifest as something separate from himself. But
remember that to him, when the separation is effected, he is the soul
and the thing put off is the body. And this is to attain nothing less than
absolute certainty about the great problem of survival after death. The adept
does not rely on faith, or on metaphysical speculation, in regard to the
possibilities of his existence apart from the body. He experiences such an
existence whenever he pleases, and although it may be allowed that the more art
of emancipating himself temporarily from the body would not necessarily inform
him concerning his ultimate destinies after that emancipation should be final
at death, it gives him, at all events, exact knowledge concerning the
conditions under which he will start on his journey in the next world. While
his body lives, his soul is, so to speak, a captive balloon (though with a very
long, elastic and imponderable cable). Captive ascents will not necessarily tell
him whether the balloon will float when at last the machinery below breaks up,
and he finds himself altogether adrift; but it is something to be an aeronaut
already, before the journey begins, and to know definitely, as I said before,
that there are such things as balloons, for certain emergencies, to sail in.
There would be infinite grandeur in the faculty I have described alone,
supposing that were the end of adeptship : but instead of being the end, it is
more like the beginning. The seemingly magic feats which the adepts in
occultism have the power to perform, are accomplished, I am given to
understand, by means of familiarity with a force in nature which is referred to
in Sanskrit writings as akaz.
Western science has done much in discovering some of the properties and
powers of electricity. Occult science, ages before, had done much more in
discovering the properties and powers of akaz. In " The Coming
Race," the late Lord Bulwer Lytton, whose connexion with occultism appears
to have been closer than the world generally has yet realised, gives a
fantastic and imaginative account of the wonders achieved in the world to which
his hero penetrates, by means of Vril. In writing of Vril, Lord Lytton has
clearly been poetising akaz. "The Coming Race" is described as
a people entirely unlike adepts in many essential particulars--as a complete
nation, for one thing, of men and women all equally handling the powers, even
from childhood, which- or some of which among others not described- the adepts
have conquered.
This is a mere fairy-tale, founded on the achievements of occultism. But
no one who has made a study of the latter can fail to see, can fail to
recognise with a conviction amounting to certainty, that the author of
"The Coming Race " must have been familiar with the leading ideas of
occultism, perhaps with a great deal more. The same evidence is afforded by
Lord Lytton's other novels of mystery, " Zanoni," and "The
Strange Story." In "Zanoni," the sublime personage in the
background, Mejnour, is intended plainly to be a great adept of Eastern
occultism, exactly like those of whom I have to speak. It is difficult to know
why in this case, where Lord Lytton has manifestly intended to adhere much more
closely to the real facts of occultism than in " The Coming Race," he
should have represented Mejnour as a solitary survivor of the Rosicrucian
fraternity.
The guardians of occult science are content to be a small body as
compared with the tremendous importance of the knowledge which they save from
perishing, but they have never allowed their numbers to diminish to the extent
of being in any danger of ceasing to exist as an organised body on earth. It is
difficult again to understand why Lord Lytton, having learned so much as he
certainly did, should have been content to use up his information merely as an
ornament of fiction, instead of giving it to the world in a form which should
claim more serious consideration.
At all events, prosaic people will argue to that effect; but it is not
impossible that Lord Lytton himself had become, through long study of the
subject, so permeated with the love of mystery which inheres in the occult mind
apparently, that he preferred to throw out his information in a veiled and
mystic shape, so that it would be intelligible to readers in sympathy with
himself, and would blow unnoticed past the commonplace understanding without
awakening the angry rejection which these pages, for example, if they are
destined to attract any notice at all, will assuredly encounter at the hands of
bigots in science, religion, and the great philosophy of the commonplace.
Akaz, be it then understood, is a force for which we have
no name, and in reference to which we have no experience to guide us to a
conception of its nature. One can on)y grasp at the idea required by conceiving
that it is as much more potent, subtle, and extraordinary an agent than
electricity, as electricity is superior in subtlety and variegated efficiency
to steam. It is through his acquaintance with the properties of this force,
that the adept can accomplish the physical phenomena, which I shall presently
be able to show are within his reach, besides others of far greater
magnificence.
2
Who are the adepts who handle the tremendous forces of which I speak ?
There is reason to believe that such adepts have existed in all historic ages,
and there are such adepts in
The conclusion has to be worked out from a mass of literary evidence,
and it will be enough to state it for the moment, pointing out the proper
channels of research in the matter afterwards. For the present let us consider
the position of the adepts as they now exist, or, to use the designation more
generally employed in
They constitute a Brotherhood, or Secret Association, which ramifies all over
the East, but the principal seat of which for the present I gather to be in
Never, I believe, in less than seven years from the time at which a
candidate for initiation is accepted as a probationer, is he ever admitted to
the very first of the ordeals, whatever they may be, which bar the way to the
earliest decrees of occultism, and there is no security for him that the seven
years may not be extended ad libitum.
He has no security that he will ever be admitted to any initiation
whatever. Nor is this appalling uncertainty, which would alone deter most
Europeans, however keen upon the subject intellectually, from attempting to
advance, themselves, into the domain of occultism, maintained from the mere
caprice of a despotic society, coquetting, so to speak, with the eagerness of
its wooers.
The trials through which the neophyte has to pass are no fantastic
mockeries, or mimicries of awful peril. Nor, do I take it, are they artificial
barriers set up by the masters of occultism, to try the nerve of their pupils,
as a riding-master might put up fences in his school.
It is inherent in the nature of the science that has to be explored,
that its revelations shall stagger the reason and try the most resolute
courage. It is in his own interest that the candidate's character and fixity of
purpose, and perhaps his physical and mental attributes, are tested and watched
with infinite care and patience in the first instance, before he is allowed to
take the final plunge into the sea of strange experiences through which he must
swim with the strength of his own right arm, or perish.
As to what may be the nature of the trials that await him during the
period of his development, it will be obvious that I can have no accurate
knowledge, and conjectures based on fragmentary revelations pictured up here
and there are not worth recording, but as for the nature of the life led by the
mere candidate for admission as a neophyte it will be equally plain that no
secret is involved.
The ultimate development of the adept requires amongst other things a
life of absolute physical purity, and the candidate must, from the beginning,
give practical evidence of his willingness to adopt this. He must, that is to
say, for all the years of his probation, be perfectly chaste, perfectly
abstemious, and indifferent to physical luxury of every sort. This regimen does
not involve any fantastic discipline or obtrusive asceticism, nor withdrawal
from the world. There would be nothing to prevent a gentleman in ordinary
society from being in some of the preliminary stages of training for occult
candidature without anybody about him being the wiser. For true occultism, the
sublime achievement of the real adept, is not attained through the loathsome
asceticism of the ordinary Indian fakir, the yogi of the woods and
wilds, whose dirt accumulates with his sanctity--of the fanatic who fastens
iron hooks into his flesh, or holds up an arm until it is withered. An
imperfect knowledge of some of the external facts of Indian occultism will
often lead to a misunderstanding on this point.
Yog Vidya is the Indian name for occult science, and it is easy
to learn a good deal more than is worth learning about the practices of some
misguided enthusiasts who cultivate some of its inferior branches by means of
mere physical exercises. Properly speaking, this physical development is called
Hatta Yog, while the loftier sort, which is approached by the discipline
of the mind, and which leads to the high altitudes of occultism, is called Raya
yog. No person whom a real occultist would ever think of as an adept, has
acquired his powers by means of the laborious and puerile exercises of the Hatta
yog. I do not mean to say that these inferior exercises are altogether
futile. They do invest the person who pursues them with some abnormal faculties
and powers. Many treatises have been written to describe them, and many people
who have lived in
I do not wish to fill these pages with tales of wonder that I have had
no means of sifting, or it would be easy to collect examples; but the point to
insist on here is that no story anyone can have heard or read which seems to
put an ignoble, or petty, or low-minded aspect on Indian yogeeism can
have any application to the ethereal yogeeism which is called Raya
yog, and which leads to the awful heights of true adeptship.
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Concerns about
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Tekels Park is to
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Concerns are
raised about the fate of the wildlife as
The Spiritual
Retreat, Tekels Park in Camberley,
Surrey, England
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Tekels Park is a
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Complete Theosophical Glossary in Plain Text Format
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What is Theosophy ? Theosophy Defined (More Detail)
Three Fundamental Propositions Key Concepts of Theosophy
Cosmogenesis
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Root Races
Karma
Ascended Masters After Death States Reincarnation
The Seven Principles of Man Helena Petrovna Blavatsky
Colonel Henry Steel Olcott William Quan Judge
The Start of the Theosophical Society
History of the Theosophical Society
Theosophical Society Presidents
History of the Theosophical Society in Wales
The Three Objectives of the Theosophical Society
Explanation of the Theosophical Society Emblem
Glossaries of Theosophical Terms
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
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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High Drama & Worldwide Confusion
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Theosophy Cardiff Cancels its Affiliation
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