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Kundalini and Tantra: Theosophical and Rainbow Theories of Chakras

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The Theosophical Theory of Chakras

The chakras according to Leadbeater

Tantric theories about the chakras are based very much on the traditional religious concepts and iconography of that particular culture.  A much freer interpretation of the chakras was introduced in the West by the Theosophists, beginning with C. W. Leadbeater, in his books The Inner Life and The Chakras. (the latter being the source of the above illustration).  The latter book incidentally, first published in 1927, has since sold more copies than any other Theosophical book.  In these books Leadbeater makes several important and original observations, which have been followed by almost all subsequent theosophical and New Age writers and clairvoyants, although very few actually give him credit for being the first to come up with these ideas.

According to this understanding, the chakras can be perceived through psychic vision, or Clairvoyance (French: "clear seeing").  This is something quite different from what we find in Tantra.  In Tantra, especially Tibetan Tantra, the yogi "creates" the chakras as part of his mental exercises; a sort of stylised yogic visualisation.  But the Theosophical and New Age idea of clairvoyance implies that the chakras have an independent objective existence in the subtle bodies that can be perceived by anyone who has developed the appropriate faculties.

According to clairvoyant perception, the chakras are seen as energy vortexes in the each of the subtle bodies.  This again is quite different to the Indian, Tibetan, and other traditions, where the chakras are subtle centres of consciousness, but have no energy-status of their own.

Leadbeater was also the first to suggest that the chakras are energy/consciousness transformers, linking the various subtle bodies (the etheric body, the astral body, the mental body, etc) by stepping down the frequency of the consciousness-energy of the higher body, so it can be received by the lower one.

Most esoteric writers now also seem to agree that the chakras are energy/consciousness receivers and transmitters that enable the person to assimilate the cosmic vitality that is so necessary for well-being.  Emphasis therefore is placed on the health of the chakras; whether they are open or closed, blocked or clear, rotating clockwise or anti-clockwise.

Each of the chakras is also associated with particular endocrine glands and ganglions or plexii in the sympathetic nervous system; the idea being that the subtle workings of the chakras are related and repeated in the physical body through the activity of the various glands and nerve plexii.  Although Woodroffe and various contemporary Hindu writers made some contributions here, it was the theosophists such as Leadbeater and Alice Bailey who actually fixed this idea as dogma.  Locating the chakras at specific vertebrae is also a relatively recent idea; the original Tantric writers may have lacked the anatomical knowledge to make precise statements such as this.  But it is also a fact that despite modern knowledge, contemporary writers often disagree over the exact positions of the chakras.  The Manipura for example is sometimes located in the navel (the Tantric positioning) and sometimes in the Solar Plexus.

The idea of the spleen chakra was taken up by Alice Bailey (or her source, "the Tibetan"), and through both her and Leadbeater became established as "fact" within the general theosophical occult-esoteric world-view.


 

 
name of chakra and position number of petals associated vertebrae associated nerve plexus
Crown 972 n/a n/a
Brow or Frontal 96 1st cervical caratid
Throat 16 3rd cervical pharyngeal
Heart 12 8th cervical cardiac
Navel 10 8th thoracic coelac or solar
Spleen 6 1st lumbar splenic
Coccygeal 4 4th sacral coccygeal


attributes of the chakras according to Leadbeater (The Chakras)

 

The Rainbow Theory of Chakras

After Woodroffe and Leadbeater, the next most influential person regarding the chakras is Christopher Hills, a spiritual philosopher and researcher who set up his own university, the University of Trees

In a very thick book, Nuclear Evolution, published in the early 1970s, Hills suggests that each of the chakras corresponds to one of the seven colours of the spectrum  He then associates each chakra and colour with a particular  personality type.  A great deal of his book "Nuclear Evolution" is devoted to explaining each of these personality types in detail.  His typology is quite fascinating, and certainly equal in profundity to the personality typology of comparable systems of  character analysis, such as Carl Jung and Humanistic Astrology.   The basic scheme is as follows:


 
Sanskrit term position type Personality-characteristics
Sahasrara crown primordial imagination type Imagination, shame and wonder
Ajna forehead intuitive-visionary type Intuition, sensitivity, envy or admiration
Vishuddha throat contemplative- nostalgic  Mental concepts, authority, reverence
Anahata Heart security or self-centred type Vital force; possession, jelousy, power
Manipura Solar Plexus  intellectual Thinking; Intellect, Change
Swadhistana "Splenic Plexus" social-gregarious Social; Ambition
Muladhara genitals physical-sensation Sensation; Sex, fear and anger

Note that the positions of the chakras are a little different from the standard positions.  The Muladhara is identified with the genitals (ordinarily the position of the Swadhisthana), while, following Leadbeater, the Swadhistana is identified with the "splenic plexus", although with total anatomical ignorance this centre is still located more or less beneath the navel [see diagram in Nuclear Evolution, p.435].  The Manipura is then located at the solar plexus, rather than (as in the Indian system) the Navel.

Although the psychological aspects of this theory did not catch on, the idea of matching the seven chakras with the seven colours of the spectrum was so appealing that just about every book on the chakras written since then show the chakras in rainbow colours.

 

Interpretation:

It is my understanding that the chakras referred to here are not the same as the chakras referred to in Tantric yoga.  All the attributes are totally different for one thing, and the chakras as described here represent major organs of the external personality, whereas in Indian and Tibetan tantra the chakras (and the tan-tiens in Taoism) represent subtle faculties that are only activated in advanced yogic practice, and that if they pertain to anything, it is the subtle inner being.

It would seem plausible to identify the rainbow chakras with the etheric body chakras in Barbara Ann Brennan's formulation, and perhaps also the focal concentration points in Mantak Chia's "Healing Tao" microcosmic orbit.  The rainbow chakras therefore, if they have any validity at all, have validity inasmuch as they pertain to the etheric bodies (and if Barbara Brennan is to be believed only the second ("emotional"), fourth ("astral") and sixth ("celestial") etheric(energy field) bodies at that). They would pertain to the secondary, and even the tertiary, order of chakras.

from: http://www.kheper.net/topics/chakras/secondary.html

 

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