How the
Septenary Scale of
States
of Mind is Reflected in Our Hearts
A Unique, Unfinished Text of Great Value
Helena P. Blavatsky
A Unique, Unfinished Text of Great Value
Helena P. Blavatsky
Francis Hutcheson, Helena P. Blavatsky and
C. Jinarajadasa
A 2013 Editorial Note
Life has many a paradoxical aspect. In the first
decades of the 20th century, while the main leaders of the Adyar Theosophical Society were dedicated to
ritualistic farces and
pseudo-clairvoyant nonsense, C. Jinarajadasa divided his time between
supporting the delusions of his day and doing an active, serious research
regarding the original teachings of theosophy.
His numerous editorial contributions to the authentic literature - and
to the true history of the theosophical effort - include the publication of
unique documents by H.P.B. like “The Original Programme”, or “Why I Do Not
Return to India”, and the 1900 Letter of a Master to A. Besant (of which he did
not destroy the original copy, whose text was later published verbatim).
The following article is one more example of Mr. C. Jinarajadasa’s help
to real esoteric philosophy. It consists of an unfinished draft by H.P.B., and
was first published by C. J. in “The Theosophist”, Adyar, August 1925, pp.
632-634. It was later included in the “Collected
Writings” of H.P. Blavatsky, TPH, Volume XIII, pp. 288-289.
In theosophical parlance, one can say that there is a buddhic sense of things. In the present
article H. P. Blavatsky says that “every one of the five [physical] recognized
senses was primarily a mental sense”. H.P.B. is not alone in that. Irish-Scottish
philosopher Francis Hutcheson (1694-1747) investigated the higher senses in human consciousness. Hutcheson wrote about the moral sense present in human
consciousness, and the sense of an ethical
beauty. The idea belongs to the theosophy of all time and to the platonic
tradition.
(Carlos Cardoso Aveline)
Consciousness
and Self-Consciousness
Helena P.
Blavatsky
The cycle of consciousness. It is argued
that there cannot be more than one object of perception at a time before the
soul because soul is a unit. Occultism teaches that simultaneously our
conscious[ness] could receive no less than seven
distinct impressions, and even pass them into memory.
This
can be proved by striking at the same time seven keys of the scale of an
instrument - say a piano. The 7 sounds will reach consciousness simultaneously;
though the untrained consciousness may not be capable of registering them the
first second, their prolonged vibrations will strike the ear in 7 distinct
sounds one higher than the other in its pitch. All depends on training and
attention. Thus the transference of a sensation from any organ to consciousness
is almost instantaneous if your attention is fixed upon it; but if any noise
distracts your attention it will take a number of seconds before it reaches
consciousness.
The
Occultist should train himself to receive and transmit along the line of the
seven scales of his consciousness every impression or impressions
simultaneously. He who reduces the intervals of physical time the most, has
made the most progress.
The
names and order of the 7 scales are:
1.
Sense-perception;
2.
Self-perception (or apperception);
3.
Psychic apperception - which carries it to
4.
Vital perception.
These
are the four lower scales and belong to the psychophysical man. The[n] come
5.
Manasic discernment;
6. Will
perception and
7.
Spiritual conscious apperception.
The
special organ of consciousness is of course the brain, and is located in the
aura of the pineal gland in the living man. During the process of mind or
thought manifesting to consciousness, constant vibrations of light take place.
If one could see clairvoyantly in the brain of a living man one could almost
count (see with the eye) the seven shades of the successive scales of light,
from the dullest to the brightest.
What
consciousness is can never be defined
psychologically. We can analyse and classify its work and effects - we cannot
define it, unless we postulate an Ego distinct from the body. The septenary
scale of states of consciousness is reflected in the heart, or rather its area [1], which vibrates and illumines the seven brains of the heart as it does the
seven divisions or rays around the pineal gland.
This
consc[iousness] shows to us the difference between the nature and essence of,
say, astral body and Ego. One molecular, invisible unless condensed, the other atomic-spiritual. (See example of
smoker - ten cigarettes the smoke of each retaining its affinity.)
[The] Idea of Ego [is] the only one compatible with the facts of physiological
observation. [2]
The
mind or Ego, the subject of all and
every state of consciousness is essentially a unity. The millions of various
sub-states of consc[iousness] are a proof of the existence of this Ego. Even
the brain cells furnish us with those states which affirm to us that there is
an immortal soul etc.
Every
one of the five recognized senses was primarily a mental sense. A fish born in
a cave is blind - let it out into a river and it will begin to feel it sees, until gradually the
physical organ of sight evolves and it will see. A deaf and dumb man hears internally, in his own way. Knowing,
feeling, willing, [are] not faculties
of [the] mind - [they are] its colleagues. [3]
[H. P.
Blavatsky]
NOTES:
[1] Word difficult to
decipher; may be intended for “aura”, though it looks like “area”. (C. Jinarajadasa)
[2] For an easier understanding, I have
inserted the two words in italics in square brackets in this sentence, and kept
the capital “I” in “Idea”. (CCA)
[3] For an easier understanding, I have
inserted in this last sentence the commas and the four words between square
brackets, in italics. (CCA)
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On the future of
mankind and the victory of truth over falsehood in the esoteric movement, see
the book “The Fire and Light of Theosophical Literature”, by Carlos
Cardoso Aveline.
Published in
2013 by The Aquarian Theosophist, the volume has 255 pages and can
be obtained through Amazon Books.
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