AARDVARK
No
Aardvarks were harmed in
the preparation of this Website
Modern Science
and
the Higher Self
by
Annie Besant
First Published 1915
(1847
-1933)
THE putting
together of the two phrases — Modern Science on the one side, and the Higher
Self on the other, may strike some of you as strange and even as incongruous;
for the ideas of Modern Science and of the Higher Self are so far removed from
each other in the general mind that to bring them together as though they were
closely related must seem to be unusual and grotesque. And yet I think I shall
be able to show you as we go on, that these two things, the most modern and the
most ancient, the thought of the West working by way of continuous experiment
and the thought of the East working by seeking the Higher Consciousness science
and recording its testimony, that these two are in our own days brought closely
into touch with each other, so that they may aid and strengthen each other, may
be found as servants in a common cause, and not as opposing and incongruous
ideas. I want to show you, in the course of this evening's lecture, that there is
in Modern Science a distinct recognition of the Higher Self, that there is an
agreement between eastern and western
science, conflicting with each other in their methods, that there is a mass of
evidence compiled by western scientific men, which can be cited as showing the
recognition by science of the Higher Self, of the existence of a Jîvâtmâ, a living Spirit, a living intelligence in man, and
that the Spirit finds an ever imperfect instrument for expressing itself in the
body of man.
I want to show
you how the face of Modern Science today is turned in a different direction
from that in which it was turned some twenty or thirty years ago; I want to
show you that there is a growing idea in the West that man in the waking
consciousness is but a small fragment of the real man, that man transcends his
body, that man is greater than his waking mind and
consciousness, that there is evidence in plenty, daily
forthcoming from most unexpected quarters, to show that human
consciousness is far larger and fuller than the consciousness
expressed through the physical brain.
This idea of
a larger consciousness, larger than the moral waking consciousness in man, the
consciousness hitherto recognized in modern psychology, is one that has not
only been suggested but is now beginning to be recognized by Modern Science in
the West. Such is then the reason for putting these two phrases together,
Modern Science and the Higher Self .
Now, I ought
to define what I mean by the Higher Self . I am not
using the phrase in the
strictly technical sense which you find in the Theosophical
literature, that is to say, the Jîvâtmâ in man. I am
using it for the whole expression of that Jîvâtmâ
above the physical. I am using it for everything which transcends the brain
consciousness, which finds the brain too coarse and dense an instrument for its
expression. I am using it, in short, to imply what generally goes under the
term larger consciousness . If we can show definitely
that experimental science has recognized human consciousness to be stronger,
more energetic, more lively than the consciousness working in the physical
brain, if we can prove the existence of yet higher realms, we shall enter on a
path which leads to the highest invisible worlds.
We climb step
by step and see the larger consciousness unfolding itself more and more,
stretching over an immense expanse, till at last we reach that to which men in
every clime have always aspired, till the spiritual aspirations of man are
vindicated. Such is the promise of infinite expansion which lies in the domain
of an enquiry into the consciousness of man. The particular branch of Modern
Science which thus comes into touch with the Ancient Science is that of
psychology.
Psychology in
its modern form, climbing from below by way of experiment, comes into touch
with the ancient psychology of the East; and this is a science of immemorial
antiquity, whereas modern psychology is an infant science in the West. Not that
the West has had no psychology; in the
Middle Ages and in the centuries that went before them there was a psychology
but that psychology was repudiated in modern days. So that if you go back some
thirty or some five-and-thirty years, you will find it distinctly stated by the
representative European thinker
that no psychology could be regarded as sane which
was not based on the science of physiology.
The method of
introspection, of the observation of one's own mental processes, was entirely
discarded in modern thought. The method of studying the mental processes of
others by inference was equally challenged and doubted. It was said, and there
was some truth in the saying, that the moment you began to study
your own
mental process, that moment it changed by the very fact of your observation;
and it was argued also that if you tried to study the mental process of others,
you could only do it by inference and not by direct observation. It is
necessary, it was said by modern thinkers, to first study the brain, the
nervous system and mechanism in man, whereby thought is expressed.
Thus arose
the science which is called psycho-physiology, a science in which the nervous
system and the brain, regarded physiologically, were studied, were analyzed,
were measured, and it was considered impossible to understand thought without
the knowledge of thought's mechanism, and without a knowledge of the process of
the changes in that mechanism. It was considered that along this road of
experiment better results would be obtained than would be obtained by other
methods, and as science became more and more materialistic, as it reached the
point at which Professor Tyndall made his famous statement that we were to look
in matter for the promise and potency of every form of life, it was natural, if
not inevitable, that men should begin to study thought by the study of its
mechanism, of its apparatus, rather than by the way of the direct observation
of its processes. As the method of experiment justified itself more
and more by
most interesting results, it became regarded as the only method which was worth
the consideration of the thoughtful, of those untainted by superstition; hence
the birth of what may be called a new science, the science of psychology, based
on physiological experiments, a science which it was
thought would confirm the statement that thought was the
product of the brain, was really the outcome of the nervous mechanism in man.
So far were
men inclined to go in making rash statements, that it was deliberately laid
down that thought was produced by the brain. You had such a well-known, such a
famous physiologist as the German Carl Vogt, declaring that the brain produced
thought as the liver produced bile. That, perhaps, was the
most extreme statement of the school of thought
represented by many of the German thinkers. The very fact that such a statement
could be made showed the line of thinking which Modern Science was following.
Now directly
in opposition to that stood the immemorial psychology of the East. That was founded on the idea that man in his
essence was not a body but a living Spirit, was not a mere form but an eternal
Intelligence. Eastern psychology was
founded on
the notion that this living Intelligence, this entity, Jîva
or Jîvâtmâ, was the primary thing to be understood,
that instead of considering thought to be the product of a certain arrangement
of matter, the certain arrangement of matter was to be regarded as the result
of thought. Instead of considering that life, consciousness, intelligence were
the results of a mechanism, of an apparatus gradually built up by nature under
the working of blind and unconscious laws, eastern psychology declared that the
primary fact was the fact of consciousness, and that matter was but its
garment, its instrument, the means of its expression, arranged and guided by
intelligence, and only useful and interesting as expressing that intelligence
in the various
worlds of the universe. That is put strongly and
clearly in the
Chhăndogyopanishat, and I quote this because we shall find in the latest
science a strange and startling endorsement of the ancient thought. It is
declared in that Upanishat that Âtmă
exists, and that the bodies and the senses are all the
results of the will of Âtmă. You may remember how
the passage runs, “The eyes are for the perceiving of that Being who dwelleth within the eyes”. It was Âtmă
who desired to hear and to smell and to think; hence arose
the organs of the senses and the mind.
Everywhere Âtmă is the primary fact; the organs, the bodies, come into
form in order that the will of the consciousness may be expressed. Thus great,
then, is the opposition between this western thought of some thirty years ago
and the ancient thought of the East, the one beginning with the body out of
which the consciousness grows, the other beginning with the consciousness by
the activity of which gradually the bodies were formed. Keep
this antithesis in mind as we follow out the lines of
our study.
Come then to
Modern Science, starting with the idea that thought must be understood by the
clear understanding of its mechanism which many considered its producer. Great
scientists began to study carefully the nervous system, and they studied it
with a marvelous patience, they studied it with marvelous success; they
measured the rate at which the impressions made on the surface of the body
traveled to the nerve centers and there appeared as mental perceptions. They
measured the rate at which the thought could travel along the nervous fibers.
They measured
the delicacy .of perception related to the various parts of the mechanism. They
reduced more and more all
thought-processes to processes of chemistry, of electricity, to
be measured by the balances, to be weighed, to be analyzed. They met with great
success; they threw wonderful light on the mechanism of nervous apparatus. They
went, in their researches, in their efforts to map out the nervous system, even
into crime, the crime of vivisection. Thousands of miserable animals had their
skulls taken off, their brains laid bare, and electrical shocks applied to the
various parts of the brain, in order that by these diabolical methods some of
the secrets of consciousness might be wrenched from nature.
But as they
carried on their experiments, certain results appeared which seemed to challenge
the starting point from which they had come. They were dealing with thought as
the product of the nervous system, and necessarily, therefore, they
thought that as the nervous system increased in
perfection, the thought increased in complexity, in accuracy, in dependability.
The
constitution of the brain, the relation of the parts of the brain to one
another, the functions that belonged to different portions of the brain, all
these were mapped out, analyzed, explained. But as they began to study, or rather
as they carried on the study, they found that there were certain results of
consciousness that did not fit into the theory with which they had started.
They found that there were certain results of consciousness which took place
when the brain was
not in its normal state, in its full activity, and that these could not be
ignored, that no theory of consciousness could be true
that did not explain these as well.
First the
attention was turned to what were called the results of dream consciousness. The
waking consciousness had been carefully examined. But what of the consciousness
that went on when the man was asleep ? The phenomena
of sleep
must also be explained. Interesting experiments began
on the dreaming consciousness, on the functioning of consciousness when the
body was asleep.
Experiments
were made with the usual care, with the usual ingenuity, with the usual
patience. We have no time to deal in detail with them. Many of you can find for
yourself a large amount of details in the famous book of Du
Prel, The
Philosophy of
Mysticism. It seems
sufficient for the moment to give you one example which covers a large class of
experiments. They began by taking a sleeping man, touching his body at some
point, and then waking him at the moment, and asking him: “What have you
dreamed ? ” Very often there was no
dream, no result, but in a large number of cases the
man reported a dream. I will take one illustration. The back of the neck was
touched. The man was asked: “What have you dreamed ? ”
He said: “I dreamed that I committed a murder; I was brought to trial for the
murder; I dreamed the whole of the trial.
The speeches
of the barristers, the summing up of the judge; I waited for the verdict of
jury; I was pronounced guilty; I was doomed to death; I was taken away to the
condemned cell; I remained there for so many days; I was led to the place of
execution and, as the knife of the guillotine descended on me, I felt it touch
my neck, and I awoke”. Many such experiments were tried and put on record. What
was the result that came out of them ? The stimulus to
the dream came from the touch, as the touch on the back of the neck had
suggested the idea of death by guillotine. How can we explain all that went on
in the dream
consciousness after the touch and before the awakening ? How
did the dream consciousness pass through a long series of events in order to
explain the touch, and how was it that the events which followed the touch
seemed to precede and to explain it?
That was the problem.
After long discussion and cogitation,
the suggestion was made that consciousness in the
dream state was working in some medium other than the dense matter of the cells
of the brain. The speed by which, the nervous impulse traveled from any part of
the body to the brain had been measured and was known. But here was a long
series of phenomena in consciousness which came between the touch on the body
and the knowledge of that touch in the brain. There must therefore be some
finer medium in which consciousness is working, through which the knowledge has
gone more
rapidly than through the nervous matter, so that there
is time to build up the story to account for the touch before the consciousness
of the brain knew it had been made on the body.
The mind
then, in sleep, was not thinking by the dense brain, but by some subtler medium
which answers more rapidly to the vibrations of consciousness. Just as two men
might start from the same point and one running quickly might run to the goal
fast, turn back, and might meet the other long before he had covered a quarter
of the distance, so consciousness in the
subtler medium could travel faster, make up the story to
explain, return and meet the consciousness in the physical brain, and give the
story as the explanation of the touch that had been felt outside.
Such was a
suggestion made to explain the rapidity of action in the dream consciousness.
But much more than that was wanted to make a satisfactory theory. And science
said: “It is not enough to have dreams examined in this way. Let us try to
throw a man into the dream-state and examine him while he is in it
instead of waking him out of it. Let us try to come into
touch with him while the dream is going on”. Then began the long series of
experiments spoken of as hypnotic, where a man was thrown into a trance and
thus a prolonged dream state
was attained, a state produced by, and under the
control of the operator.
In the
hypnotic trance, as you must know, the body is reduced to the lowest point of vitality. The eye
cannot see, the ear cannot hear; lift up the eyelids and flash an electric
light into the eye, there is no contraction of the pupil; the heart well-nigh
ceases to beat, the lungs have no perceptible action; only by the most delicate
apparatus can it be shown that the heart is not entirely
still, that the lungs have not entirely ceased to
contract and to expand.
Now what
would be the state of the brain under these conditions according to the theory
that thought is produced by the brain ? The brain is
reduced to the condition of coma, lethargy. It cannot work; it is badly
supplied with blood; the blood it obtains is surcharged with carbonic acid and
waste products, for it
has not been supplied with sufficient oxygen. From
such a brain, according to the modern theory, no thought ought to be able to
proceed. But what were the startling facts that answered the enquirers, when
they questioned the consciousness under these abnormal conditions
?
Where there
should have been lethargy there was increased rapidity, where there should have
been stupor there was very much increased intelligence, where there should have
been apparent death, there was life in overflowing measure, and the whole of
the mental faculties were stronger and more vivid. Take the memory of the man
in the waking state. Question him about his childhood, he will have forgotten
many events, they have vanished into the past. Throw the man into trance,
question him then about his childhood, and memory gives up the stores that
apparently had been lost, and the most trivial incidents are recalled.
Take a man,
read to him in his waking moments a page of a book that he has not before
heard, and ask him to repeat it; he will stumble over a sentence or two, he is
unable to recite
it. Throw the same man into a trance, read the page
to him then, and he will repeat it word for word even when the language is to
him unknown. Memory, then, in the dream or trance state is immensely increased
in its range and power.
Take the
perceptive faculties. As I said, the eye would not answer to the flash of
electric light, but the faculty for perceiving the material world, of which the
eye is the organ, finds expression in the trance state such as in its waking
state it cannot exert. The man in the trance will be able to see through a
barrier that blocks the waking vision, and tell you what is happening on the
other side of a closed door, or what is within the
body; tell you not only what is happening on the other side of an obstacle but
what is happening hundreds of miles away.
These are not
the dreams of the Orientals, of the Theosophists; I am confining myself to
cases where experiments have been put on record, where men who do not believe
in the superphysical were confronted by facts they
found it impossible to explain. I have myself seen experiments of this kind in
the days before I was a Theosophist. This proved to demonstration that opaque
bodies were not obstacles to the vision of the man plunged into the hypnotic
trance, and this is now admitted by all students of hypnotism. Memory and
perception then are increased in power when the brain is stupefied. So I might
take you through one faculty of the mind after another and show you that in
every case consciousness is stronger, more vivid, more
active, when its physical mechanism is paralyzed.
Out of all
these experiments there arose again the question: What then is the relation
between consciousness and the brain ? It was
established that, with paralysis of the brain, consciousness becomes more active
than it was before.
The result of
these experiments on the condition of mental faculties,
was a proof that whatever the dream consciousness of man might be, it was far
wider in extent, far more powerful, than the same consciousness working through
the physical brain.
Thus
gradually way was made for the recognition of the fact,
well-known to the eastern psychologists, that the waking
consciousness is only a part, an imperfect and fragmentary expression, of the
total consciousness of man.
The modern
psychologists meanwhile were proceeding on a new line of investigation, and
they began to study what are called the abnormal phenomena of consciousness,
not only the normal and the common-place but the abnormal and the exceptional,
and at first the study along these lines seemed to carry most of the thinkers
directly against the psychology of the East. Study in one
school of psychology came to what seemed a terrible
conclusion.
It was the
diseased or over-strained nervous apparatus. He went
further, and he declared that the manifestation known as genius was closely
allied to insanity, that the brain of the genius and the brain of the madman
were akin, until the phrase “genius is allied to madness”, became the stock
axiom of that school. This
appeared to be the final death-blow dealt by materialism
to the hope of humanity nourished by the grandest inspirations that had come to
men through the geniuses, the saints, the prophets, the seers, the religious
teachers of the world.
Was all this
truly but the result of disordered intelligence ? Was
all religion but the grand dream of diseased brains and nerves
? Was religion really a nervous disease ? Are
all people who see and hear, where other people are blind and deaf, neuropaths ? That became the terrible question set rolling
by this psychological school. At first there was silence, caused by the very
shock of the question. Men were so taken aback that they knew not how to answer
them, knew not how to argue. Gradually, 1 however, there came from the ranks of
thoughtful men a challenge. Granted that this is true that you have
discovered,
granted that these brains through which the visions of religion, the
revelations of religion have come, are abnormal, is it after all so important,
so vital a matter ? May it not be that as the higher worlds come into touch
with man, they may well be able to affect only the most delicate brains, and in
that very touch they may throw the delicate mechanism slightly out of gear ? Is
it not possible that the subtle vibrations of the higher worlds to which the
human brain is unaccustomed yet to respond, may in some individual differing
from the standard of ordinary evolution, find an answer, and the higher world
may speak
through these abnormal brains to men ?
The question
of importance to humanity is not whether the physical brain of the genius is
allied in its mechanism to the
physical brain of the madman, but whether what comes
through the brain of a madman and the brain of a genius are equally important
to humanity. If we receive, through the disordered brain of a madman, a jangle
of useless disconnected ideas and dreams, that result is worthless and we set
it aside. But
if through
the brain of the genius, of the religious teacher, through the brain of a
prophet, through the brain of the saint, come forth the highest inspirations,
the loftiest ideas that have raised mankind above the brute and the savage,
shall we cast them aside as well ? We judge the results not by the mechanism
through which we have received them, but by their value to
humanity and, no matter what the mechanism of the brain
may have been, there remains the thought that has been given to the world.
Everything of
which humanity is most proud, all its sublimed hopes and aspirations, the most
beautiful imaginings of poetry, the transcendental flights of metaphysics, and
the sublimed conceptions of art, are all product of neuropathy, of abnormal
brains. When men tell us that the great religious teachers are neuropathy, that
Buddha, Christ, S. Francis, are neuropaths, then we are inclined to cast our
lot with the abnormal few, rather than with the normal many. We know what they
were. They were men who saw far more and knew far more than we; what matters it
whether we call their brains normal or abnormal ?
In these
men's consciousness is a ray of the Divine splendor;
as Browning says:
Through
such souls alone
God,
stooping, shows sufficient of His Light
For us in
the dark to rise by.
And if in
those cases the brain change from a normal to an abnormal state, then humanity
must ever remain thankful to abnormality.
That is the
first answer which may be made to this statement of Lombroso,
and you find a man like Dr. Maudsley, the famous
doctor, asking whether there is any law
that nature shall use only for her purposes what we call the perfect brains ?
May it not be that for her higher performances she needs brains
which are different from the ordinary, the normal,
brains of man ? For, take the normal brain that is the product of evolution,
the result of the past; that brain is fitted for the ordinary affairs of life,
it is fitted for the calculations of the market place, for the observation of
material things, for the work of the world, for carrying on the ordinary
affairs of life; brought to its present state by the practice of such thinking,
it is the best machinery for
such work. But when you come to deal with higher
thought, with abstract speculation, when you come to deal with religious ideas
and with the possibilities of higher worlds, that brain is the most unfit of instruments;
it is not delicately organized enough for the subtler vibrations of the higher
worlds. For just as you may take a watch delicately wrought and by that watch
you may measure small intervals of time which you could not measure by a
clumsier mechanism, so is it with the different brains of
men.
The normal
brain is the commonplace brain; the normal brain is the average brain. It has
no promise for the future; it is but the product of the past. But the abnormal
brain, that which can answer the higher vibrations, the brain which, if you
will, you may call by the insulting name of morbid, that is the brain which
stands in the front of evolution, which is the 1
promise of the future, and shows us what man shall be in the generations yet to
come.
As the
struggle went on another answer came. When, in times of unusual strain and
unusual excitement, the brain answers to the higher vibrations, then it is very
likely that nervous disease will accompany the answer. It is not always the
brain of the genius to which strange experiences occur. They occur to people of
all types; the average man and woman have their experiences. When a person has
been rapt in ecstasy of prayer, or is fasting, and the body is weakened or is
under great stress of excitement, the brain will certainly be affected far more
easily than under normal conditions, and it will be able to register finer
vibrations more easily than the so-called healthy brain.
Take a very
common illustration. You have a violin or a vînă. You
find that you can get from the string of your instrument a certain note, but
you want a higher note; what do you do ? You tighten
the string. Just so with the human brain. It does not
answer to the higher notes of life in its ordinary
state; you must tighten the string by intense concentration or devotion, and
then the brain will answer. But in the tightening there is danger; in the
tightening there is possibility of breakage; and so in the normal brain
tightened to respond to the stress of the subtler vibrations, there is the
danger of nervous disturbance, there
is the danger of unbalancing the mechanism.
How can that
be met ? We look to the science of the East, to its
old psychology, and it gives us the answer — it is the only science that knows
the answer — and this answer is strengthened by a modern discovery touching the
mechanism of the brain. What is the process of Yoga ?
It is a process by which gradually, by
physical, by mental training, the man develops a higher
consciousness, and enables that higher consciousness to express itself in the
physical body. Now every one of you, who knows anything of
Yoga, knows perfectly that in Yoga there is a physical training, purification
of the body, purification of the brain, which precedes the practice of any of
the higher forms.
You know that
it has always been told that if a man would practice Yoga he must become an
ascetic in his life. That he must give up liquor and the grosser articles of
diet, that he must purify the body, and then purify the mind. You know that only
as that is being done, can the mental Yoga be effectually performed, and then
as the body is becoming purer day by day, consciousness develops, its higher
powers show themselves through the purified brain without disease, without
over-strain,
without any injurious nervous or morbid results. Eastern
psychology recognizes the danger of nervous disturbance, and enables the
necessary sensitiveness to be obtained without the overstraining of the
physical instrument.
But I said
that a late discovery in Modern Science with regard to the brain had justified
the process. What is the discovery ? That the brain
cells in which thought is carried on develop, and increase in size and in
complexity by the process of thought; that as a man thinks, his brain cells
grow; they send out processes which anastomose, join
one to another, and thus make a very
complicated mechanism by which higher thought can be
expressed, that the whole process of the expression of thought depends on this
growth in the cells of the brain, and that as you think you are really making
your brain, you are creating
the mechanism by which hereafter a higher thought
may be expressed.
The latest
anatomy of the West has laid down this, that these cells grow under the direct impulses
of thought, and that as you think you prepare the brain for better and higher
thought; as the thought acts on the nervous cells, the nervous cells become
more complicated, intercommunicate more fully, are more apt for the
processes of thought.
The Yoga
practice of concentration, of steadying the mind by fixing the thought, makes
the brain cells grow, and thus creates an instrument adaptable for higher
thinking in the future. As you carry on your meditation you are building fresh
mechanism in the brain; as you carry on concentration, you
are creating the apparatus for higher performances.
Thus as the
purification of the body, of the brain, of the mind, goes on in Yoga, you are
building up the brain, making it able to come into touch with a higher world,
without losing its balance, without losing its sanity and its strength. There
lies the scientific justification of Yoga from the latest investigations of the
West. What then does the East tell us as to the result of Yoga
? It tells us that man is a consciousness expressing his powers through
the body which he moulds to his own purpose, that man's consciousness in the
brain is far less than his consciousness out of the brain; that man uses the
brain as an instrument on the
physical plane, but is not limited by it, is not confined
by it. That old theory of the ancient Sages is now being promulgated in the
West by such men as Sir Oliver Lodge, who declares that the investigation of
hypnotism, the study of consciousness, the study of abnormal states of
consciousness, prove that human
consciousness is larger than the consciousness in the brain,
and that there is much more of us outside the body than is shown by the working
of the brain. That is the last word on consciousness from the West, and it is
identical with the testimony of the East.
Do you see
now why I put together Modern Science and the Higher Self? The Higher Self is
the consciousness beyond the physical, the larger, wider, greater consciousness
which is our real Self, the Self of which the consciousness in the brain is
only the faintest of reflections. This body of ours is only a house in which we
dwell for our physical work; we hold the key of
the body; we should put it in the lock by Yoga, and
try and release the imprisoned consciousness. We are greater than we appear to
be; we are formed in the divine image; we live not in this world only but also
in other worlds; our consciousness outstretches the physical. In this planet of
mud our foot is
planted, but our heads touch the heavens; they are
bathed in the light of the spiritual world far above, in the world unseen,
bathed in the light of God.
We may trust
the consciousness and the testimony of the Saints, the Prophets, the Seers, and
the Teachers of humanity. They told us what They knew,
that which we may also know for ourselves. They were divine, showing Their divinity to the worlds. We are none the less divine,
although our divinity is veiled. Let us
claim our birthright, to know as They knew. These
great Ones of the past, these Saints and Teachers of humanity, They are the
promise of what we shall be in the future, and the heights They have touched in
ages past, we also will attain in days to come. Every one of us is a divine
fragment, every one of us an eternal
Spirit, every
one of us a deific life, striving to attain through matter to consciousness of
our own divinity. That is the teaching of all faiths, that is
the fundamental principle of life, of religion,
of nature , and Modern Science is
finding that even physical nature is not intelligible without the understanding
of the higher world, without the recognition of larger possibilities.
_____________________
AARDVARK
For more info on Theosophy
Try these
Dave’s
Streetwise Theosophy Boards
If you run a Theosophy Study Group,
Please feel free to use any of the
The Cardiff Theosophical Society Website
The
National Wales Theosophy Website
This
is for everybody not just people in Wales
Cardiff Lodge’s Instant Guide to Theosophy
One Liners & Quick Explanations
The Most Basic Theosophy Website in the Universe
If you run a
Theosophy Group you can use
this as an
introductory handout
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.
Lentil burgers, a
thousand press ups before breakfast and
the daily 25 mile
run may put it off for a while but death
seems to get most of
us in the end. We are pleased to
present for your
consideration, a definitive work on the
subject by a Student of
Katherine Tingley entitled
General pages
about Wales, Welsh History
and The History of
Theosophy in Wales
The Spiritual Home of Urban Theosophy
The Earth Base for Evolutionary Theosophy
The Birmingham Annie Besant Lodge
_______________________
Tekels Park to
be Sold to a Developer
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 Society in England in 1929.
In addition to concern about the
park, many are
worried about the
future of the Tekels Park Deer
as they are not a
protected species.
Anyone planning a “Spiritual” stay at
the
Tekels Park Guest House should be
aware of the sale.
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
____________________
The Theosophy
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
_____________________
Classic Introductory
Theosophy Text
A Text Book of Theosophy By C
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 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
Try these if you are looking
for a
local Theosophy Group or Centre
UK Listing of Theosophical Groups
Worldwide Directory of Theosophical Links
General pages
about Wales, Welsh History
and The History of
Theosophy in Wales
Wales is a
Principality within the United Kingdom and
has an eastern border
with England.
The land area is
just over 8,000 square miles.
Snowdon in North Wales is
the highest mountain at 3,650 feet.
The coastline is
almost 750 miles long.
The population of Wales as at the 2001 census is 2,946,200.
And as “I’m Sorry I Haven’t a
Clue” is
very
popular with Theosophists