____________
THE
OF
THEOSOPHY
A Definitive Work on Theosophy
By
William Quan Judge
CHAPTER 17
Psychic
Phenomena
and
Spiritualism
In the history of psychical phenomena the records of so-called
"spiritualism" in Europe, America, and elsewhere hold an important
place. Advisedly I say that no term was ever more misapplied than that of
"spiritualism" to the cult in Europe and America just mentioned,
inasmuch as there is nothing of the spirit about it.
The doctrines given in preceding chapters are those of true
spiritualism; the misnamed practises of modern mediums and so-called spiritists
constitute the Worship of the Dead, old-fashioned necromancy, in fact, which
was always prohibited by spiritual teachers. They are a gross materializing of
the spiritual idea, and deal with matter more than with its opposite. This cult
is supposed by some to have originated about forty years ago in America at Rochester,
N. Y., under the mediumship of the Fox sisters, but it was known in Salem
during the witchcraft excitement, and in Europe one hundred years ago the same
practises were pursued, similar phenomena seen, mediums developed, and seances
held.
For centuries it has been well known in India where it is properly
designated "bhuta worship," meaning the attempt to communicate with
the devil or Astral remnants of deceased persons. This should be its name here
also, for by it the gross and devilish, or earthly, parts of man are excited,
appealed to,
and communicated with. But the facts of the long record of forty years
in America demand a brief examination. These facts all studious Theosophists
must admit. The theosophical explanation and deductions, however, are totally
different from those of the average spiritualist. A philosophy has not been
evolved in the ranks or literature of spiritualism; nothing but theosophy will
give the true explanation, point out defects, reveal dangers, and
suggest remedies.
As it is plain that clairvoyance, clairaudience, thought-transference,
prophecy, dream and vision, levitation, apparitional appearance, are all powers
that have been known for ages, the questions most pressing in respect to
spiritualism are those relating to communication with the souls of those who
have left this earth and are now disembodied, and with unclassified spirits who
have not been embodied here but belong to other spheres. Perhaps also the
question of materialization of forms at seances deserves some attention.
Communication includes trance-speaking, slate and other writing,
independent voices in the air, speaking through the physical vocal organs of
the medium, and precipitation
of written messages out of the air. Do the mediums communicate with the
spirits of the dead? Do our departed friends perceive the state of life they
have left, and do they sometimes return to speak to and with us?
The answers are intimated in foregoing chapters. Our departed do not see
us here. They are relieved from the terrible pang such a sight would inflict.
Once in a while a pure-minded, unpaid medium may ascend in trance to the state
in which a deceased soul is, and may remember some bits of what was there
heard;
but this is rare. Now and then in the course of decades some high human
spirit may for a moment return and by unmistakable means communicate with
mortals.
At the moment of death the soul may speak to some friend on earth before
the door is finally shut. But the mass of communications alleged as made day
after day through mediums are from the astral unintelligent remains of men, or
in many
cases entirely the production of, invention, compilation, discovery, and
collocation by the loosely attached Astral body of the living medium. Certain
objections arise to the theory that the spirits of the dead communicate.
Some are:
I. At no time have these spirits given the laws governing any of the
phenomena, except in a few instances, not accepted by the cult, where the
theosophical theory was advanced. As it would destroy such structures as those
erected by A. J. Davis, these particular spirits fell into discredit.
II. The spirits disagree among themselves, one stating the after-life to
be very different from the description by another. These disagreements vary
with the medium and the supposed theories of the deceased during life. One
spirit admits reincarnation and others deny it.
III. The spirits have discovered nothing in respect to history,
anthropology, or other important matters, seeming to have less ability in that
line than living men; and although they often claim to be men who lived in
older civilizations, they show ignorance thereupon or merely repeat recently
published discoveries.
IV. In these forty years no rationale of phenomena nor of development of
mediumship has been obtained from the spirits. Great philosophers are reported
as speaking through mediums, but utter only drivel and merest commonplaces.
V. The mediums come to physical and moral grief, are accused of fraud,
are shown guilty of trickery, but the spirit guides and controls do not
interfere to either prevent or save.
VI. It is admitted that the guides and controls deceive and incite to
fraud.
VII. It is plainly to be seen through all that is reported of the spirits
that their assertions and philosophy, if any, vary with the medium and the most
advanced thought of living spiritualists.
From all this and much more that could be adduced, the man of
materialistic science is fortified in his ridicule, but the theosophist has to
conclude that the entities, if there be any communicating, are not human
spirits, and that the
explanations are to be found in some other theories.
Materialization of a form out of the air, independent of the medium's
physical body, is a fact. But it is not a spirit. As was very well said by one
of the "spirits" not flavoured by spiritualism, one way to produce
this phenomenon is by the accretion of electrical and magnetic particles into
one mass upon which matter is aggregated and an image reflected out of the
Astral sphere.
This is the whole of it; as much a fraud as a collection of muslin and
masks. How this is accomplished is another matter. The spirits are not able to
tell, but an attempt has been made to indicate the methods and instruments in
former chapters. The second method is by the use of the Astral body of the
living
medium. In this case the Astral form exudes from the side of the medium,
gradually collects upon itself particles extracted from the air and the bodies
of the sitters present, until at last it becomes visible.
Sometimes it will resemble the medium; at others it bears a different
appearance. In almost every instance dimness of light is requisite because a
high light would disturb the Astral substance in a violent manner and render
the projection difficult. Some
so-called materializations are hollow mockeries, as they are but flat
plates of electrical and magnetic substance on which pictures from the Astral
Light are reflected. These seem to be the faces of the dead, but they are
simply pictured illusions.
If one is to understand the psychic phenomena found in the history of
"spiritualism" it is necessary to know and admit the following:
I. The complete heredity of man astrally, spiritually, and psychically,
as a being who knows, reasons, feels, and acts through the body, the Astral
body, and the soul.
II. The nature of the mind, its operation, its powers; the nature and
power of imagination; the duration and effect of impressions. Most important in
this is the persistence of the slightest impression as well as the deepest;
that every impression produces a picture in the individual aura; and that by
means of this a connection is established between the auras of friends and
relatives old, new, near, distant, and remote in degree: this would give a wide
range of possible sight to a clairvoyant.
III. The nature, extent, function, and power of man's inner Astral
organs and faculties included in the terms Astral body and Kama. That these are
not hindered from action by trance or sleep, but are increased in the medium
when entranced; at the same time their action is not free, but governed by the
mass chord of thought among the sitters, or by a predominating will, or by the
presiding devil behind the scenes; if a sceptical scientific investigator be
present, his mental attitude may totally inhibit the action of the medium's
powers by what we might call a freezing process which no English terms will
adequately describe.
IV. The fate of the real man after death, his state, power, activity
there, and his relation, if any, to those left behind him here.
V. That the intermediary between mind and body -- the Astral body -- is
thrown off at death and left in the Astral light to fade away; and that the
real man goes to Devachan.
VI. The existence, nature, power, and function of the Astral light and
its place as a register in Nature. That it contains, retains, and reflects
pictures of each and every thing that happened to anyone, and also every
thought; that it permeates the globe and the atmosphere around it; that the
transmission of vibration through it is practically instantaneous, since the
rate is much quicker than that of electricity as now known.
VII. The existence in the Astral light of beings not using bodies like
ours, but not human in their nature, having powers, faculties, and a sort of
consciousness of their own; these include the elemental forces or nature
sprites divided into many degrees, and which have to do with every operation of
Nature and every motion of the mind of man. That these elementals act at
seances automatically in their various departments, one class presenting
pictures, another producing sounds, and others depolarizing objects for the
purposes of apportation. Acting with them in this Astral sphere are the
soulless men who live in it. To these are to be ascribed the phenomenon, among
others, of the "independent voice," always sounding like a voice in a
barrel just because it is made in a vacuum which is absolutely necessary for an
entity so far removed from spirit. The peculiar timbre of this sort of voice
has not been noticed by the spiritualists as important, but it is extremely
significant in the view of occultism.
VIII. The existence and operation of occult laws and forces in nature
which may be used to produce phenomenal results on this plane; that these laws
and forces may be put into operation by the subconscious man and by the
elementals either consciously or unconsciously, and that many of these occult
operations are automatic in the same way as is the freezing of water under
intense cold or the melting of ice under heat.
IX. That the Astral body of the medium, partaking of the nature of the
Astral substance, may be extended from the physical body, may act outside of
the latter, and may also extrude at times any portion of itself such as hand,
arm, or leg and thereby move objects, indite letters, produce touches on the
body, and so on ad infinitum. And that the Astral body of any person may be
made to feel sensation, which, being transmitted to the brain, causes the
person to think he is touched on the outside or has heard a sound.
Mediumship is full of dangers because the Astral part of the man is now
only normal in action when joined to the body; in distant years it will
normally act without a body as it has in the far past. To become a medium means
that you have to become disorganized physiologically and in the nervous system,
because through the latter is the connection between the two worlds.
The moment the door is opened all the unknown forces rush in, and as the
grosser part of nature is nearest to us it is that part which affects us most;
the lower nature is also first affected and inflamed because the forces used
are from that part of us.
We are then at the mercy of the vile thoughts of all men, and subject to
the influence of the shells in Kama Loka. If to this be added the taking of
money for the practice of mediumship, an additional danger is at hand, for the
things of the spirit and those relating to the Astral world must not be sold.
This is
the great disease of American spiritualism which has debased and
degraded its whole history; until it is eliminated no good will come from the
practice; those who wish to hear truth from the other world must devote
themselves to truth and leave all considerations of money out of sight.
To attempt to acquire the use of the psychic powers for mere curiosity
or for selfish ends is also dangerous for the same reasons as in the case of
mediumship. As the civilization of the present day is selfish to the last
degree and built on the personal element, the rules for the development of
these powers
in the right way have not been given out, but the Masters of Wisdom have
said that philosophy and ethics must first be learned and practised before any
development of the other department is to be indulged in; and their
condemnation of the wholesale development of mediums is supported by the
history of spiritualism, which is one long story of the ruin of mediums in
every direction.
Equally improper is the manner of the scientific schools which without a
thought for the true nature of man indulge in experiments in hypnotism in which
the subjects are injured for life, put into disgraceful attitudes, and made to
do things for the satisfaction of the investigators which would never be done
by
men and women in their normal state. The Lodge of the Masters does not
care for Science unless it aims to better man's state morally as well as
physically, and no aid will be given to Science until she looks at man and life
from the moral and spiritual side. For this reason those who know all about the
psychical world, its denizens and laws, are proceeding with a reform in morals
and
philosophy before any great attention will be accorded to the strange
and seductive phenomena possible for the inner powers of man.
And at the present time the cycle has almost run its course for this
century. Now, as a century ago, the forces are slackening; for that reason the
phenomena of spiritualism are lessening in number and volume; the Lodge hopes
by the time the next tide begins to rise that the West will have gained some
right knowledge of the true philosophy of Man and Nature, and be then ready to
bear the lifting of the veil a little more. To help on the progress of the race
in this direction is the object of this book, and with that it is submitted to
its readers in every part of the world.
ARGUMENTS
SUPPORTING REINCARNATION
DIFFERENTIATION OF SPECIES MISSING LINKS
PSYCHIC
LAWS, FORCES, AND
PHENOMENA
PSYCHIC
PHENOMENA AND SPIRITUALISM
______________________
THE
OF
THEOSOPHY
Find out more about
Theosophy with these links
The Cardiff Theosophical Society Website
The National
Wales Theosophy Website
If you run a Theosophy Group, please feel free
to use any of the material on this site
Theosophy Cardiff’s Instant Guide
One liners and quick explanations
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,
The main criteria
for the inclusion of
links on this
site is that they have some
relationship
(however tenuous) to Theosophy
and are
lightweight, amusing or entertaining.
Topics include
Quantum Theory and Socks,
Dick Dastardly and Legendary Blues Singers.
A selection of articles
on Reincarnation
Provided in
response to the large
number of
enquiries we receive at
Cardiff
Theosophical Society on this subject
The Voice of the Silence Website
This is for everyone, you don’t have to live
in Wales to make good use of this Website
No Aardvarks were harmed in the
The Spiritual Home of Urban Theosophy
The Earth Base for Evolutionary Theosophy
Theosophy Birmingham (England)
The Birmingham Annie Besant Lodge
Theosophy Cardiff has links with the
_______________________
Your Own
Theosophy Group Starts Here
A Guide to
starting your own
Theosophy Group
& of course
you don’t need to live in Wales
to take advantage
of this guide
__________________
The Theosophy Cardiff
Glastonbury Pages
The Theosophy Cardiff Guide to
The Theosophy Cardiff Guide to
The Theosophy Cardiff Guide to
The Terraced Maze of Glastonbury Tor
Glastonbury and
Joseph of Arimathea
The Grave of King Arthur & Guinevere
Views of Glastonbury High Street
The Theosophy Cardiff Guide to
__________________
Camberley,
Surrey, England GU15 2LF
Concerns about the
fate of the wildlife as
Tekels Park is to
be Sold to a Developer
Concerns are raised
about the fate of the
wildlife as The Spiritual
Retreat,
Tekels Park in
Camberley, Surrey,
England is to be
sold to a developer.
Tekels Park is a 50
acre woodland park,
purchased for the Adyar
Theosophical
It doesn’t require a Diploma in
Finance
and even someone with a Diploma
in
Astral Travel will know that
this is a
bad time economically to sell Tekels Park
In addition to
concern about the park,
many are worried about the
future
of the Tekels Park
Deer as they
Confusion as the Theoversity moves
out of
Tekels Park to Southampton,
Glastonbury &
Chorley in Lancashire while the
leadership claim
that the Theosophical Society will
carry on using
Tekels Park despite its sale to a developer
Anyone planning a
“Spiritual” stay at the
Tekels Park Guest
House should be aware of the sale.
Future of Tekels Park Badgers in Doubt
Party On! Tekels Park Theosophy NOT
Tekels Park & the Loch Ness Monster
A Satirical view of
the sale of Tekels Park
in Camberley,
Surrey to a developer
The Toff’s Guide to the Sale of Tekels Park
What the men in top
hats have to
say about the sale
of Tekels Park
____________________
A B C D EFG H IJ KL M N OP QR S T UV WXYZ
Complete Theosophical Glossary in Plain Text Format
1.22MB
Theosophy Cardiff Nirvana Pages
Quick Explanations with Links to More Detailed Info
What is Theosophy ? Theosophy Defined (More Detail)
Three Fundamental Propositions Key Concepts of Theosophy
Cosmogenesis Anthropogenesis Root Races
Ascended Masters After Death States
The Seven Principles of Man Karma
Reincarnation Helena Petrovna Blavatsky
Colonel Henry Steel Olcott 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
The Theosophical Order of
Service (TOS)
Glossaries of Theosophical Terms
by
Annie Besant
THE BUDDHIC AND
NIRVANIC PLANES
______________________
Annie Besant Visits Cardiff 1924
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
Try these if you are looking for a local
Theosophy Group or Centre
UK Listing of Theosophical Groups
Please tell us about your UK Theosophy Group
___________________
into categories
and presented according to relevance of website.
Web Directory
- Add Link - Submit Article - Online Store - Forum
Cardiff, Wales, UK, CF24 – 1DL
_________________
Wales Picture Gallery
The Great Orme
llandudno
Promenade
Great Orme
Tramway
New Radnor
Blaenavon
Ironworks
Llandrindod
Wells
Cardiff
Theosophical Society in Wales
Cardiff, Wales, UK. CF24 – 1DL
Presteign
Railway
Caerwent Roman Ruins
Denbigh
Nefyn
Penisarwaen
Cardiff
Theosophical Society in Wales
Cardiff, Wales, UK. CF24 – 1DL
A National Wales Theosophy Website
Dedicated
to Independent Theosophy in Wales