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The
three Worlds of our planet are at present the field of evolution for a number
of different kingdoms of life, at various stages of development. Only four of
these need concern us at present, viz.: the mineral, plant, animal, and human
kingdoms.
These four kingdoms are related to the three Worlds in different
ways, according to the progress these groups of evolving life have made in the
school of experience. So far as form is concerned the dense bodies of all the
kingdoms are composed of the same chemical substances--the solids, liquids, and
gases of the Chemical Region. The dense body of a man is as truly a chemical
compound as is the stone, although the latter is ensouled by mineral life only.
But even when speaking from the purely physical standpoint, and laying aside
all other considerations for the time being, there are several important
differences when we compare the dense body of the human being with the mineral
of the Earth. Man moves, grows, and propagates his species--the mineral, in its
native state, does none of these things.
Comparing man with the forms of the plant kingdom, we find that
both plant and man have a dense body, capable of growth and propagation. But
Man has faculties not possessed by the plant. He feels, has the power of motion,
and the faculty of perceiving things exterior to himself.
When we compare man with the animal we see that both have the
faculties of feeling, motion, growth, propagation, and sense-perception. In
addition, man has the faculty of speech, a superior structure of the brain, and
also hands--which are a very great physical advantage. We may note especially
the development of the thumb, which makes the hand much more valuable than even
that of the anthropoid. Man has also evolved a definite language in which to
express his feelings and thoughts, all of which places the dense body of the
human being in a class by itself, beyond the three lower kingdoms.
To account for these differences in the four kingdoms we must go
to the invisible Worlds, and seek the causes which give one kingdom that which
is denied to another.
To function in any world, and express the qualities peculiar to
it, we must first possess a vehicle made of its material. In order to function
in the dense Physical World it is necessary to have a dense body, adapted to
our environment. Otherwise we should be ghosts, as they are commonly called,
and be invisible to most physical beings. So we must have a vital body before
we can express life, grow, or externalize the other qualities peculiar to the
Etheric Region.
To show feeling and emotion it is necessary to have a vehicle
composed of the materials of the Desire World, and a mind formed of the
substance of the Region of Concrete Thought is necessary to render thinking
possible.
When we examine the four kingdoms in relation to the Etheric
Region, we find that the mineral does not possess a separate vital body, and at
once we see the reason why it cannot grow, propagate, or show sentient life.
As an hypothesis necessary to account for other known facts,
material science holds that in the densest solid, as in the rarest and most
attenuated gas, no two atoms touch each other; that there is an envelope of
ether around each atom; that the atoms in the universe float in an ocean of ether.
The occult scientist knows this to be true of the Chemical
Region and that the mineral does not possess a separate vital body of ether.
And as it is the planetary ether alone which envelops the atoms of the mineral,
that makes the difference described. It is necessary, as we have shown, to have
a separate, vital body, desire body, etc., to express the
qualities of a particular realm, because the atoms of the World of Desire, of
the World of Thought and even of the Higher Worlds, inter-penetrate the Mineral
as well as the dense human body, and if the inter-penetration of the planetary
ether, which is the ether that envelops the atoms of the mineral, were enough
to make it feel and propagate its inter-penetration by the planetary World of
Thought would also be sufficient to make it think. This it cannot do, because
it lacks a separate vehicle. It is penetrated by the planetary ether
only, and is therefore incapable of individual growth. Only the lowest of the
four states of ether--the chemical--is active in the mineral. The chemical
forces in minerals are due to that fact.
When we consider plant, animal, and man in relation to the
Etheric Region we note that each has a separate, vital body, in addition to being
penetrated by the planetary ether which forms the Etheric Region. There is a
difference, however, between the vital bodies of the plants and the vital
bodies of animal and man. In the vital body of the plant only the chemical and
the life ethers are fully active. Hence the plant can grow by the action of the
chemical ether and propagate its species through the activity of the life ether
of the separate, vital body which it possesses. The light ether is present, but
is partially latent or dormant and reflecting ether is lacking. Therefore it is
evident that the faculties of sense-perception and memory, which are the
qualities of these ethers, cannot be expressed by the plant kingdom.
Turning our attention to the vital body of the animal we find
that in it the chemical, life and light ethers are dynamically active. Hence
the animal has the faculties of assimilation and growth, caused by the
activities of the chemical ether; and the faculty of propagation by means of
the life ether--these being the same as in plants. But in addition, it has the
faculties of generating internal heat and of sense-perception. The fourth
ether, however, is inactive in the animal, hence it has no thought nor memory.
That which appears as such will be shown later to be of a different nature.
When we analyze the human being, we find that in him all four
ethers are dynamically active in the highly organized vital body. By means of
the activities of the chemical he is able to assimilate food and to grow; the
forces at work in the life ether enable him to propagate his species; the
forces in the light ether supply the dense body with heat, work on the nervous
system and muscles, thus opening the doors of communication with the outside
world by way of the senses; and the reflecting ether enables the spirit to
control its vehicle by means of thought. This ether also stores past experience
as memory.
The vital body of plant, animal, and man, extends beyond the
periphery of the dense body as the Etheric Region, which is the vital body of a
planet, extends beyond its dense part, showing again the truth of the Hermetic
axiom "As above, so below." The distance of this extension of the
vital body of man is about an inch and a half. The part which is outside the
dense body is very luminous and about the color of a new-blown peach-blossom.
It is often seen by persons having very slight involuntary clairvoyance. The
writer has found, when speaking with such persons, that they frequently are not
aware they see anything unusual and do not know what they see.
The dense body is built into the matrix of this vital body
during ante-natal life, and with one exception, it is an exact copy, molecule
for molecule, of the vital body. As the lines of force in freezing water are
the avenues of formation for ice crystals, so the lines of force in the vital
body determine the shape of the dense body. All through life the vital body is
the builder and restorer of the dense form. Were it not for the etheric heart
the dense heart would break quickly under the constant strain we put upon it.
All the abuses to which we subject the dense body are counteracted, so far as
lies in its power, by the vital body, which is continually fighting against the
death of the dense body.
The exception mentioned above is that the vital body of a man is
female or negative, while that of a woman is male or positive. In that fact we
have the key to numerous puzzling problems of life. That woman gives way to her
emotions is due to the polarity noted, for her positive, vital body generates
an excess of blood and causes her to labor under an enormous internal pressure
that would break the physical casement were not a safety-valve provided in the
periodical flow, and another in the tears which relieve the pressure on special
occasions--for tears are "white bleeding."
Man may have and has as strong emotions as woman, but he is
usually able to suppress them without tears, because his negative vital body
does not generate more blood than he can comfortably control.
Unlike the higher vehicles of humanity, the vital body (except
under certain circumstances, to be explained when the subject of
"Initiation" is dealt with) does not ordinarily leave the dense body
until the death of the latter. Then the chemical forces of the dense body are
no longer held in check by the evolving life. They proceed to restore the
matter to its primordial condition by disintegration so that it may be
available for the formation of other forms in the economy of nature.
Disintegration is thus due to the activity of the planetary forces in the
chemical ether.
In texture the vital body may be crudely compared to one of
those picture frames made of hundreds of little pieces of wood which interlock
and present innumerable points to the observer. These points enter into the
hollow centers of the dense atoms, imbuing them with vital force that sets them
vibrating at a higher rate than that of the mineral of the earth which is not
thus accelerated and ensouled.
When a person is drowning, or falling from a height, or
freezing, the vital body leaves the dense body, the atoms of which become
temporarily inert in consequence, but at resuscitation it re-enters the dense
body and the "points" are again inserted in the dense atoms. The
inertia of the atoms causes them to resist the resumption of vibration and that
is the cause of the intense prickly pain and the tingling sensation noted at
such times, but not ordinarily, for the same reason that we become conscious of
the starting or stopping of a clock, but are oblivious to its tick when it is
running.
There are certain cases where the vital body partly leaves the
dense body, such as when a hand "goes to sleep." Then the etheric
hand of the vital body may be seen hanging below the dense arm like a glove and
the points cause the peculiar pricking sensation felt when the etheric hand
re-enters the dense hand. Sometimes in hypnosis the head of the vital body
divides and hangs outside the dense head, one half over each shoulder, or lies
around the neck like the collar of a sweater. The absence of prickly sensation
at awakening in cases like this is because during the hypnosis part of the
hypnotist's vital body had been substituted for that of the victim.
When anesthetics are used the vital body is partially driven
out, along with the higher vehicles, and if the application is too strong and
the life ether is driven out, death ensues. This same phenomenon may also be
observed in the case of materializing mediums. In fact the difference between a
materializing medium and an ordinary man or woman is just this: In the ordinary
man or woman the vital body and the dense body are, at the present stage of
evolution, quite firmly interlocked, while in the medium they are loosely
connected. It has not always been so, and the time will come again when the
vital body may normally leave the dense vehicle, but that is not normally
accomplished at present. When a medium allows his or her vital body to be used
by entities from the Desire World who wish to materialize, the vital body
generally oozes from the left side--through the spleen, which is its particular
"gate." Then the vital forces cannot flow into the body as they do
normally, the medium becomes greatly exhausted, and some of them resort to
stimulants to counteract the effects, in time becoming incurable drunkards.
The vital force from the sun, which surrounds us as a colorless
fluid, is absorbed by the vital body through the etheric counterpart of the
spleen, wherein in undergoes a curious transformation of color. It becomes pale
rose-hued and spreads along the nerves all over the dense body. It is to the
nervous system what the force of electricity is to a telegraph system. Though
there be wires, instruments, and telegraph operators all in order, if the
electricity is lacking, no message can be sent. The Ego, the brain, and the
nervous system may be in seemingly perfect order, but if the vital force be
lacking to carry the message of the Ego through the nerves to the muscles, the
dense body will remain inert. This is exactly what happens when part of the
dense body becomes paralyzed. The vital body has become diseased and the vital
force can no longer flow. In such cases, as in most sickness, the trouble is
with the finer invisible vehicles. In conscious or unconscious recognition of
this fact, the most successful physicians use suggestion--which works upon the
higher vehicles--as aid to medicine. The more a physician can imbue his patient
with faith and hope, the speedier disease will vanish and give place to perfect
health.
During the health the vital body specializes a superabundance of
vital force,which, after passing through a dense body, radiates in straight
lines in every direction from the periphery thereof, as the radii of a circle
do from the center; but during ill-health, when the vital body becomes
attenuated, it is not able to draw to itself the same amount of force and in
addition the dense body is feeding upon it. Then the lines of the vital fluid
which pass out from the body are crumpled and bent, showing the lack of force
behind them. In health the great force of these radiations carries with it
germs and microbes which are inimical to the health of the dense body, but in
sickness, when the vital force is weak, these emanations do not so readily eliminate
disease germs. Therefore the danger of contracting disease is much greater when
the vital forces are low than when one is in robust health.
In cases where parts of the dense body are amputated, only the
planetary ether accompanies the separated part. The separate vital body and the
dense body disintegrate synchronously after death. So with the etheric
counterpart of the amputated limb. It will gradually disintegrate as the dense
member decays, but in the meantime the fact that the man still possesses the
etheric limb accounts for his assertion that he can feel his fingers or suffers
pain in them. There is also a connection with a buried member, irrespective of
distance. A case is on record where a man felt severe pain, as if a nail had
been driven into the flesh of an amputated limb, and he persisted until the
limb was exhumed, when it was found that a nail had been driven into it at the
time it was boxed for burial. The nail was removed and the pain instantly
stopped. It is also in accordance with these facts that people complain of pain
in a limb for perhaps two or three years after the amputation. The pain will
then cease. This is because the disease remains in the still undetached etheric
limb, but as the amputated part disintegrates, the etheric limb follows suit
and thus the pain ceases.
Having noted the relations of the four kingdoms to the Etheric
Region of the Physical World, we will next turn our attention to their relation
to the Desire World.
Here we find that both minerals and plants lack the separate
desire body. They are permeated only by the planetary desire body, the Desire
World. Lacking the separate vehicle, they are incapable of feeling, desire, and
emotion, which are faculties pertaining to the Desire World. When a stone is
broken, it does not feel; but it would be wrong to infer that there is no
feeling connected with such an action. That is the materialistic view, or the
view taken by the uncomprehending multitude. The occult scientist knows that
there is no act, great or small, which is not felt throughout the universe, and
even though the stone, because it has no separate desire body, cannot feel, the
Spirit of the Earth feels because it is Earth's desire body that permeates the
stone. When a man cuts his finger, the finger, having no separate desire body,
does not feel the pain, but the man does, because it is his desire body which
permeates the finger. If a plant is torn up by the roots, it is felt by the
Spirit of the Earth as a man would feel if a hair were torn from his head. This
Earth is a living, feeling body, and all the forms which are without separate
desire bodies through which their informing spirits may experience feeling, are
included in the desire body of the Earth and that desire body has
feeling. The breaking of a stone and the breaking off of flowers are productive
of pleasure to the Earth, while the pulling our of plants by the root causes
pain. The reason is given in the latter part of this work, for at this stage of
our study the explanation would be incomprehensible to the general reader.
The planetary Desire World pulsates through the dense and vital
bodies of animal and man in the same way that it penetrates the mineral and
plant, but in addition to this, animal and man have separate desire bodies,
which enable them to feel desire, emotion and passion. There is a difference,
however. The desire body of the animal is built entirely of the material of the
denser regions of the Desire World, while in the case of even the least
spiritually advanced human beings a little matter of the higher Regions enters into the composition
of the desire body. The feelings of animals and the least spiritually developed
class of human beings are
almost entirely concerned with the gratification of the lowest desires and
passions which find their expression in the matter of the lower Regions of the
Desire World. Hence, in order that they may have such emotions to educate them
for something higher, it is necessary that they should have the corresponding
materials in their desire bodies. As man progresses in the school of life, his
experiences teach him, and his desires become purer and better. Thus by degrees
the material of his desire body undergoes a corresponding change. The purer and
brighter material of the higher Regions of the Desire World replaces the murky
colors of the lower part. The desire body also grows in size, so that in a
saint it is truly a glorious object to behold, the purity of its colors and its
luminous transparency being beyond adequate simile. It must be seen to be
appreciated.
At present the materials of both the lower and the higher
Regions enter into the composition of the desire bodies of the great majority
of mankind. None are so bad that they have not some good trait. This is
expressed in the materials of the higher Regions which we find in their desire
bodies. But, on the other hand, very, very few are so good that they do not use
some of the materials of the lower Regions.
In the same way that the planetary vital and desire bodies
inter-penetrate the dense material of the Earth, as we saw in the illustration
of the sponge, the sand and the water, so the vital and desire bodies
inter-penetrate the dense body of plant, animal, and man. But during the life
of man his desire body is not shaped like his dense and vital bodies. After
death it assumes that shape. During life it has the appearance of a luminous
ovoid which, in waking hours, completely surrounds the dense body, as the
albumen does the yolk of an egg. It extends from twelve to sixteen inches
beyond the dense body. In this desire body there are a number of sense centers,
but, in the great majority of people, they are latent. It is the awakening of
these centers of perception that corresponds to the opening of the blind man's
eyes in our former illustration. The matter in the human desire body is in
incessant motion of inconceivable rapidity. There is in it no settled place for
any particle, as in the dense body. The matter that is at the head one moment
may be at the feet in the next and back again. There are no organs in the desire
body, as in the dense and vital bodies, but there are centers of perception,
which, when active, appear as vortices, always remaining in the same relative
position to the dense body, most of them about the head. In the majority of
people they are mere eddies and are of no use as centers of perception. They
may be awakened in all, however, but different methods produce different
results.
In the involuntary clairvoyant developed along improper,
negative lines, these vortices turn from right to left, or in the opposite
direction to the hands of a clock--counterclockwise.
In the desire body of the properly trained voluntary
clairvoyant, they turn in the same direction as the hands of a
clock--clockwise, glowing with exceeding splendor, far surpassing the brilliant
luminosity of the ordinary desire body. These centers furnish him with means
for the perception of things in the Desire World and he sees, and investigates
as he wills, while the person whose centers turn counter-clockwise is like a
mirror, which reflects what passes before it. Such a person is incapable of
reaching out for information. The reason for this belongs to a later chapter,
but the above is one of the fundamental differences between a medium and a
properly trained clairvoyant. It is impossible for most people to distinguish
between the two; yet there is one infallible rule that can be followed by
anyone: No genuinely developed seer will ever exercise this faculty for
money or its equivalent; nor will he use it to gratify curiosity; but only to
help humanity.



No one capable of teaching the proper method for the development
of this faculty will ever charge so much a lesson. Those demanding money for
the exercise of, or for giving lessons in these things never have anything
worth paying for. The above rule is a safe and sure guide, which all may follow
with absolute confidence.
In a far distant future man's desire body will become as
definitely organized as are the vital and dense bodies. When that stage is reached
we shall all have the power to function in the desire body as we do now in the
dense body, which is the oldest and best organized of these bodies of man--the
desire body being the youngest.
The desire body is rooted in the liver, as the vital body is in
the spleen.
In all warm-blooded creatures, which are the highest evolved,
and have feelings, passions and emotions, which reach outward into the world
with desire, which may be said to really live in the fuller meaning of the term
and not merely vegetate--in all such creatures the currents of the desire body
flow outward from the liver. The desire stuff is continually welling out in
streams or currents which travel in curved lines to every point of the
periphery of the ovoid and then return to the liver through a number of
vortices, much as boiling water is continually welling outward from the source
of heat and returning to it after completing its cycle.
The plants are devoid of this impelling, energizing principle,
hence they cannot show life and motion as can the more highly developed
organisms.
Where there is vitality and motion, but no red blood,
there is no separate desire body. The creature is simply in the transition
stage from plant to animal and therefore it moves entirely in the strength of
the group-spirit.
In the cold-blooded animals which have a liver and red
blood, there is a separate desire body and the group-spirit directs the
currents inward, because in their case the separate spirit (of the
individual fish or reptile for instance) is entirely outside the dense vehicle.
When the organism has evolved so far that the separate spirit
can commence to draw into its vehicles then it (the individual spirit)
commences to direct the currents outward, and we see the beginning of
passionate existence and warm blood. It is the warm, red blood in the liver of
the organism sufficiently evolved to have an Indwelling spirit which energizes
the outgoing currents of desire stuff that cause the animal or the man to
display desire and passion. In the case of the animal the spirit is not yet
entirely indwelling. It does not become so until the points in the vital
body and the dense body come into correspondence, as explained in Chapter XII. For this reason the animal is not a
"liver," that is, he does not live as completely as does man, not
being capable of as fine desires and emotions, because not as fully conscious.
The mammalia of today are on a higher plane than was man at the animal stage of
his evolution, because they have warm, red blood, which man did not have at
that stage. This difference in status is accounted for by the spiral path of
evolution, which also accounts for the fact that man is a higher type of
humanity than the present Angels were in their human stage. The present
mammalia, which have in their animal stage attained to the possession of warm,
red blood, and are therefore capable of experiencing desire and emotion to some
extent will, in the Jupiter Period, be a purer and better type of humanity than
we are now, while from among our present humanity there will be some, even in
the Jupiter Period, who will be openly and avowedly wicked. Moreover, they will
not then be able to conceal their passions as is now possible, but will be
unabashed about their evil doing.
In the light of this exposition of the connection between the
liver and the life of the organism, it is noteworthy that in several European
languages (English, German, and the Scandinavian tongues) the same word
signifies the organ of the body (the liver) and also "one who lives."
When we turn our attention to the four kingdoms in their
relation to the World of Thought we find that minerals, plants and animals lack
a vehicle correlating them to that World. Yet we know some animals think, but
they are the highest domesticated animals which have come into close touch with
man for generations and have thus developed a faculty not possessed by other
animals, which have not had that advantage. This is on the same principle that
a highly charged wire will "induce" a weaker current of electricity
in a wire brought close to it; or that a man of strong morals will arouse a
like tendency in a weaker nature, while one morally weak will be overthrown if
brought within the influence of evil characters. All we do, say, or are,
reflects itself in our surroundings. This is why the highest domestic animals
think. They are the highest of their kind, almost on the point of
individualization, and man's thought vibrations have "induced" in
them a similar activity of a lower order. With the exceptions noted, the animal
kingdom has not acquired the faculty of thought. They are not individualized.
This is the great and cardinal difference between the human and other kingdoms.
Man is an individual. The animals, plants and minerals are divided into
species. They are not individualized in the same sense that man is.
It is true that we divide mankind into races, tribes and
nations; we note the difference between the Caucasian, the Black African, the
Indian, etc.; but that is not to the point. If we wish to study the
characteristics of the lion or the elephant or any other species of the lower
animals, all that is necessary is to take any member of that species for that
purpose. When we learn the characteristics of one animal, we know the
characteristics of the species to which it belongs. All members of the same
animal tribe are alike. That is the point. A lion, or its father, or it son,
all look alike; there is no difference in the way they will act under like
conditions. All have the same likes and dislikes; one is the same as another.
Not so with human beings. If we want to know about the
characteristics of Negroes, it is not enough that we examine one single
individual. It would be necessary to examine each individually, and even then
we will arrive at no knowledge concerning Negroes as a whole, simply because
that which was a characteristic of the single individual does not apply to the
race collectively.
If we desire to know the character of Abraham Lincoln it will
avail us nothing to study his father, his grandfather, or his son, for they
would differ entirely. Each would have his own peculiarities quite distinct
from the idiosyncrasies of Abraham Lincoln.
On the other hand, minerals, plants, and animals are described
if we devote our attention to the description of one of each species; while
there are as many species among human beings as there are individuals. Each
individual person is a "species," a law unto himself, altogether
separate and apart from any other individual, as different from his fellow men
as one species in the lower kingdom is from another. We may write the biography
of a man, but an animal can have no biography. This is because there is in each
man an individual, indwelling spirit which dictates the thoughts and
actions of each individual human being; while there is one
"group-spirit" common to all the different animals or plants
of the same species. The group-spirit works on the all from the outside.
The tiger which roams in the wilds of the Indian jungle and the tiger penned up
in the cage of a menagerie are both expressions of the same group-spirit. It
influences both alike from the Desire World, distance being almost annihilated
in the inner Worlds.
The group-spirits of the three lower kingdoms are variously
located in the higher Worlds, as we shall see when we investigate the
consciousness of the different kingdoms; but to properly comprehend the
positions of these group-spirits in the inner Worlds it is necessary to
remember and to clearly understand what has been said about all the forms that
are in the visible world having crystallized from models and ideas in the inner
Worlds, as illustrated by the architect's house and the inventor's machine. As
the juices of the soft body of the snail crystallize into the hard shell which
it carries upon its back, so the Spirits in the higher Worlds have, in a
similar manner, crystallized out from themselves the dense, material bodies of
the different kingdoms.
Thus the so-called "higher" bodies, although so fine
and cloudy as to be invisible, are not by any means "emanations" from
the dense body, but the dense vehicles of all kingdoms correspond to the shell
of the snail, which is crystallized from its juices, the snail representing the
spirit; and the juices of its body in their progress towards crystallization
representing the mind, desire body and vital body. These various vehicles
were emanated by the spirit from itself for the purpose of gaining
experience through them. It is the spirit that moves the dense body where it
will, as the snail moves its house, and not the body that controls the
movements of the spirit. The more closely the spirit is able to enter into
touch with its vehicle the better can it control and express itself through
that vehicle, and vice versa. That is the key to the different states of
consciousness in the different kingdoms. A study of diagram
3 and diagram 4 should give a clear
understanding of the vehicles of each kingdom, the manner in which they are
correlated to the different Worlds and the resulting state of consciousness.


From diagram 3 we learn that the
separate Ego is definitely segregated within the Universal Spirit in the Region
of Abstract Thought. It shows that only man possesses the complete chain of
vehicles correlating him to all divisions to the three Worlds. The animal lacks
one link of chain--the mind; the plant lacks two links; the mind and the desire
body; and the mineral lacks three links of the chain of the vehicles necessary
to function in a self-conscious manner in the Physical World--the mind, the
desire and the vital bodies.
The reason for the various deficiencies is that the Mineral
Kingdom is the expression of the latest stream of evolving life; the Plant
Kingdom is ensouled by a life wave that has been longer upon the path of
evolution; the life wave of the animal kingdom has a still longer past; while
Man, that is to say, the life now expressing itself in the human form, has
behind it the longest journey of all the four kingdoms, and therefore leads. In
time, the three life-waves which now animate the three lower kingdoms will
reach the human, and we shall have passed to higher stages of development.
To understand the degree of consciousness which results from the
possession of the vehicles used by the life evolving in the four kingdoms, we
turn our attention to diagram 4, which show that
man, the Ego, the Thinker, has descended into the Chemical Region of the
Physical World. Here he has marshaled all his vehicles, thereby attaining the
state of waking consciousness. He learning to control his vehicles. The organs
of neither the desire body nor the mind are yet evolved. The latter is not yet
even a body. At present it is simply a link, a sheath for the use of the Ego as
a focusing point. It is the last of the vehicles that have been built. The
spirit works gradually from finer into coarser substance, the vehicles also
being built in finer substance first, then in coarser and coarser substance.
The dense body was built first and has now come into its fourth stage of
density; the vital body is in its third stage and the desire body in its
second, hence it is still cloud-like, and the sheath of mind is filmier still.
As those vehicles have not, as yet, evolved any organs, it is clear that they alone
would be useless as vehicles of consciousness. The Ego, however, enters into
the dense body and connects these organless vehicles with the physical sense
centers and thus attains the waking state of consciousness in the Physical
World.
The student should particularly note that it is because of their
connection with the splendidly organized mechanism of the dense body that these
higher vehicles become of value at present. He will thus avoid a mistake
frequently made by people who, when they come into the knowledge that there are
higher bodies, grow to despise the dense vehicle; to speak of it as
"low" and "vile"--turning their eyes to heaven and wishing
that they might soon be able to leave this earthly lump of clay and fly about
in their "higher vehicles."
These people generally do not realize the difference between
"higher" and "perfect." Certainly, the dense body is the
lowest vehicle in the sense that it is the most unwieldy, correlating man to
the world of sense with all the limitations thus implied. As stated, it has an
enormous period of evolution back of it; is in it fourth state of development
and has now reached a great and marvelous degree of efficiency. It will, in
time, reach perfection, but even at present it is the best organized of man's
vehicles. The vital body is in its third stage of evolution, and less
completely organized than the dense body. The desire body and the mind are, as
yet, mere clouds--almost entirely unorganized. In the very lowest human beings
these vehicles are not even definite ovoids; they are more or less undefined in
form.
The dense body is a wonderfully constructed instrument and
should be recognized as such by everyone pretending to have any knowledge of
the constitution of man. Observe the femur, for instance. This bone carries the
entire weight of the body. On the outside it is built of a thin layer of
compact bone, strengthened on the inside by beams and cross-beams of
cancellated bone, in such a marvelous manner that the most skilled bridge or
construction engineer could never accomplish the feat of building a pillar of
equal strength with so little weight. The bones of the skull are built in a
similar manner, always the least possible material is used and the maximum of
strength obtained. Consider the wisdom manifested in the construction of the
heart and then question if this superb mechanism deserves to be despised. The
wise man is grateful for his dense body and takes the best possible care of it,
because he knows that it is the most valuable of his present instruments.
The animal spirit has in its descent reached only the Desire
World. It has not yet evolved to the point where it can "enter" a
dense body. Therefore the animal has no individual indwelling spirit,
but a group-spirit, which directs it from without. The animal has the
dense body, the vital body and the desire body, but the group-spirit which
directs it is outside. The vital body and the desire body of an animal are not
entirely within the dense body, especially where the head is concerned. For
instance, the etheric head of a horse projects far beyond and above the dense
physical head. When, as in rare cases it happens, the etheric head of a horse
draws into the head of the dense body, that horse can learn to read, count and
work examples in elementary arithmetic. To this peculiarity is also due the
fact that horses, dogs, cats and other domesticated animals sense the Desire
World, though not always realizing the difference between it and the Physical
World. A horse will shy at the sight of a figure invisible to the driver; a cat
will go through the motions of rubbing itself against invisible legs. The cat
sees the ghost, however without realizing that it has no dense legs available
for frictional purposes. The dog, wiser than a cat or horse, will often sense
that there is something he does not understand about the appearance of a dead
master whose hands it cannot lick. It will howl mournfully and slink into a
corner with its tail between its legs. The following illustration may perhaps
be of service to show the difference between the man with his indwelling spirit
and the animal with its group-spirit.
Let us imagine a room divided by means of a curtain, one side of
the curtain representing the Desire World and the other the Physical. There are
two men in the room, one in each division; they cannot see each other, nor can
they get into the same division. There are, however, ten holes in the curtain
and the man who is in the division representing the Desire World can put his
ten fingers through these holes into the other division, representing the
Physical World. He now furnishes an excellent representation of the
group-spirit which is in the Desire World. The fingers represent the animals
belonging to one species. He is able to move them as he wills, but he cannot
use them freely nor as intelligently as the man who is walking about in the
Physical division uses his body. The latter sees the fingers which are thrust
through the curtain and he observes that they all move, but he does not see the
connection between them. To him it appears as if they were all separate and
distinct from one another. He cannot see that they are fingers of the man
behind the veil and are governed in their movements by his intelligence. If he
hurts one of the fingers, it is not only the finger that he hurts, but chiefly
the man on the other side of the curtain. If an animal is hurt, it suffers, but
not to the degree that the group-spirit does. The finger has no individualized
consciousness; it moves as the man dictates--so do the animals moves as the
group-spirit dictates. We hear of "animal instinct" and "blind
instinct." There is no such vague, indefinite thing as "blind"
instinct. There is nothing "blind" about the way the group-spirit
guides its members--there is Wisdom, spelled with capitals. The trained
clairvoyant, when functioning in the Desire World, can communicate with these
spirits of the animal species and finds them much more intelligent than a large
percent of human beings. He can see the marvelous insight they display in
marshaling the animals which are their physical bodies.
It is the spirit of the group which gathers its flocks of birds
in the fall and compels them to migrate to the south, neither too early nor too
late to escape the winter's chilly blast; that directs their return in the
spring, causing them to fly at just the proper altitude, which differs for the
different species.
The group-spirit of the beaver teaches it to build its dam
across a stream at exactly the proper angle. It considers the rapidity of the
flow, and all the circumstances, precisely as a skilled engineer would do,
showing that it is as up-to-date in every particular of the craft as the
college-bred, technically-educated man. It is the wisdom of the group-spirit
that directs the building of the hexagon cell of the bee with such geometrical
nicety; that teaches the snail to fashion its house in an accurate, beautiful
spiral; that teaches the ocean mollusk the art of decorating its iridescent
shell. Wisdom, wisdom everywhere! So grand, so great that one who looks with an
observant eye is filed with amazement and reverence.
At this point the thought will naturally occur that if the
animal group-spirit is so wise, considering the short period of evolution of
the animal as compared with that of man, why does not the latter display wisdom
to a much greater degree and why must man be taught to build dams and
geometrize, all of which the group spirit does without being taught?
The answer to that question has to do with the descent of the
Universal Spirit into matter of ever-increasing density. In the higher Worlds,
where its vehicles are fewer and finer, it is in closer touch with cosmic
wisdom which shines out in a manner inconceivable in the dense Physical World,
but as the spirit descends, the light of wisdom becomes temporarily more and
more dimmed, until in the densest of all the Worlds, it is held almost entirely
in abeyance.
An illustration will make this clearer. The hand is man's most
valuable servant; its dexterity enables it to respond to his slightest bidding.
In some vocations, such as bank teller, the delicate touch of the hand becomes
so sensitive, that it is able to distinguish a counterfeit coin from a genuine
in a way so marvelous that one would almost think the hand were endowed with
individual intelligence.
Its greatest efficiency is perhaps reached in the production of
music. It is capable of producing the most beautiful, soul-stirring melodies.
The delicate, caressing touch of the hand elicits the tenderest strains of soul-speech
from the instrument, telling of the sorrows, the joys, the hopes, the fears and
the longings of the soul in a way that nothing but music can do. It is the
language of the heaven world, the spirit's true home, and comes to the divine
spark imprisoned in flesh as a message from its native land. Music appeals to
all, regardless of race, creed, or other worldly distinction. The higher and
more spiritual the individual the plainer does it speak to him and even
"the savage breast" is not unmoved by it.
Let us now imagine a master musician putting on thin gloves and
trying to play his violin. We note at once that the delicate touch is less
subtle; the soul of the music is gone. If he puts another and a heavier pair of
gloves over the first pair, his hand is hampered to such an extent that he may
occasionally create a discord instead of the former harmony. Should he at last
put on, in addition to the two pairs of gloves already hampering him, a pair of
still heavier mittens, he would, temporarily, be entirely unable to play, and
one who had not heard him play previously to the time he put on the gloves and
the mittens, would naturally think that he had never been able to do so,
especially if ignorant of the hampering of his hands.
So it is with the Spirit; every step down, every descent into
coarser matter is to it what the putting on of a pair of gloves would be to the
musician. Every step down limits its power of expression until it has become
accustomed to the limitations and has found its focus, in the same way that the
eye must find its focus after we enter a house on a bright summer day. The
pupil of the eye contracts to its limit in the glare of the sun and on entering
the house all seems dark; but, as the pupil expands, and admits the light, the man
is enabled to see as well in the dimmer light of the house as he did in the
sunlight.
The purpose of man's evolution here is to enable him to find his
focus in the Physical World, where at present the light of wisdom seems
obscured. But when in time we have "found the light," the wisdom of
man will shine forth in his actions, and far surpass the wisdom expressed by
the group-spirit of the animal.
Besides, a distinction must be made between the group spirit and
the virgin spirits of the life wave now expressing itself as animals. The
group-spirit belongs to a different evolution and is the guardian of the animal
spirits.
The dense body in which we function is composed of numerous
cells, each having separate cell-consciousness, though of a very low order.
While these cells from part of our body they are subjected to and dominated by our
consciousness. An animal group-spirit functions in a spiritual body,
which is its lowest vehicle This vehicle consists of a varying number of virgin
spirits imbued for the time being with the consciousness of the group-spirit.
The latter directs the vehicles built by the virgin spirits in its charge,
caring for them and helping them to evolve their vehicles. As its wards evolve,
the group-spirit also evolves, undergoing a series of metamorphoses, in a
manner similar to that in which we grow and gain experience by taking into our
bodies the cells of the food we eat, thereby also raising their consciousness
by enduing them with ours for a time.
Thus while a separate, self-conscious Ego is within each human
body and dominates the actions of its particular vehicle, the spirit of the
separate animal is not yet individualized and self-conscious, but forms part of
the vehicle of a self-conscious entity belonging to a different evolution--the
group-spirit.
The group-spirit dominates the actions of the animals in harmony
with cosmic law, until the virgin spirits in its charge shall have gained
self-consciousness and become human. Then they will gradually manifest wills of
their own, gaining more and more freedom from the group-spirit and becoming
responsible for their own actions. The group-spirit will influence them,
however (although in a decreasing degree), as race, tribe, community, or family
spirit until each individual has become capable of acting in full harmony with
cosmic law. Not until that time will the Ego be entirely free and independent
of the group-spirit, which will then enter a higher phase of evolution.
The position occupied by the group-spirit in the Desire World
gives to the animal a consciousness different from that of man, who has a
clear, definite waking consciousness. Man sees things outside of himself
in sharp, distinct outlines. Owing to the spiral path of evolution, the higher
domestic animals, particularly the dog, horse, cat and elephant see objects in
somewhat the same way, though perhaps not so clearly defined. All other animals
have an internal "picture consciousness" similar to the dream-state
in man. When such an animal is confronted by an object, a picture is
immediately perceived within, accompanied by a strong impression that
the object is inimical or beneficial to its welfare. If the feeling is one of
fear, it is associated with a suggestion from the group-spirit how to escape
the threatened danger. This negative state of consciousness renders it easy for
the group-spirit to guide the dense bodies of its charges by suggestion, as the
animals have no will of their own.
Man is not so easily managed from without, either with or without
his consent. As evolution progresses and man's will develops more and more, he
will become non-amenable to outside suggestion and free to do as he pleases
regardless of suggestions from others. This is the chief difference between man
and the other kingdoms. They act according to law and the dictates of the
group-spirit (which we call instinct), while man is becoming more and more a
law unto himself. We do not ask the mineral whether or not it will crystallize,
nor the flower whether it will or will not bloom, nor the lion whether it will
or will not cease to prey. They are all, in the smallest as in the greatest
matter, under the absolute domination of the group-spirit, being without free
will and initiative which, in some degree, are possessed by every human being.
All animals of the same species look nearly alike, because they emanate from
the same group-spirit, while among the fifteen hundred millions of human beings
who people the Earth no two look exactly alike, not even twins when adolescent,
because the stamp that is put upon each by the indwelling individual Ego makes
the difference in appearance as well as in character.
That all oxen thrive on grass, and all lions eat flesh, while
"one man's meat is another man's poison" is another illustration of
the all-inclusive influence of the group-spirit as contrasted with the Ego
which makes each human being require a different proportion of food from every
other. Doctors note with perplexity the same peculiarity in administering
medicine. Its acts differently upon different individuals, while the same
medicine will produce identical effects on two animals of the same species,
owing to the fact that animals all follow the dictates of the group-spirit and
Cosmic Law--always act similarly in identical circumstances. Man alone is, in
some measure, able to follow his own desires within certain limits. That his
mistakes are many and grievous, is granted, and to many it might seem better if
he were forced into the right way, but if this were done, he would never learn
to do right. Lessons of discrimination between good and evil cannot be learned
unless he is free to choose his own course and has learned to eschew the wrong
as a veritable "womb of pain." If he did right only because he had no
choice, and had no chance to do otherwise, he would be but an automaton and not
an evolving God. As the builder learns by his mistakes, correcting past errors
in future buildings, so man, by means of his blunders, and the pain they cause
him, is attaining to a higher (because self-conscious) wisdom than the animal,
which acts wisely because it is impelled to action by the group-spirit. In time
the animal will become human, have liberty of choice and will make mistakes and
learn by them as we do now.
Diagram 4 shows that the group-spirit
of the plant kingdom has its lowest vehicle in the Region of Concrete Thought.
It is two steps removed from its dense vehicle and consequently the plants have
a consciousness corresponding to that of dreamless sleep. The
group-spirit of the mineral has it slowest vehicle in the Region of Abstract
Thought and it is, therefore, three steps removed from its dense vehicle; hence
it is in a state of deep unconsciousness similar to the trance
condition.
We have now shown that man is an individual indwelling spirit,
an Ego separate from all other entities, directing and working in one set of
vehicles from within, and that plants and animals are directed from without
by a group-spirit having jurisdiction over a number of animals or plants in our
Physical World. They are separate only in appearance.
The relations of plant, animal and man to the life currents in
the Earth's atmosphere are symbolically represented by the cross. The Mineral
Kingdom is not represented, because as we have seen, it possesses no individual
vital body, hence cannot be the vehicle for currents belonging to the higher
realms. Plato, who was an Initiate, often gave occult truths. He said "The
World-Soul is crucified."
The lower limb of the cross indicates the plant with its root in
the chemical mineral soil. The group-spirits of plants are at the center of the
Earth. They are (it will be remembered) in the Region of Concrete Thought,
which inter-penetrates the Earth, as do all the other Worlds. From these
group-spirits flow streams or currents in all directions to the periphery of
the Earth, passing outward through the length of plant or tree.
Man is represented by the upper limb; his is the inverted
plant. The plant takes its food through the root. Man takes his food
through the head. The plant stretches its generative organs towards the sun.
Man, the inverted plant, turns his towards the center of the earth. The plant
is sustained by the spiritual currents of the group-spirit in the center of the
earth, which enter into it by way of the root. Later it will be shown that the
highest spiritual influence comes to man from the sun, which sends its rays
through man, the inverted plant, from the head downwards. The plant inhales the
poisonous carbon-dioxide exhales by man and exhales the life-giving oxygen used
by him.
The animal, which is symbolized by the horizontal limb of the
cross, is between the plant and the man. Its spine is in a horizontal position
and through it play the currents of the animal group-spirit which encircle the
Earth. No animal can be made to remain constantly upright, because in that case
the currents of the group-spirit could not guide it, and if it were not
sufficiently individualized to endure the spiritual currents which enter the
vertical human spine, it would die. It is necessary that a vehicle for the
expression of an individual Ego shall have three things--an upright walk, that
it may come into touch with the currents just mentioned; an upright larynx, for
only such a larynx is capable of speech (parrots and starlings are examples of
this effect of the upright larynx); and, owing to the solar currents, it must
have warm blood. The latter is of the utmost importance to the Ego, which will
be logically explained and illustrated later. These requisites are simply
mentioned here as the last words on the status of the four kingdoms in relation
to each other and to the Worlds.
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