THE SECRET DOCTRINE:
THE SYNTHESIS
OF
SCIENCE, RELIGION, AND PHILOSOPHY.
by H. P. BLAVATSKY
I.
REASONS FOR THESE ADDENDA.
MANY of the doctrines contained in the foregoing
Seven Stanzas and Commentaries having been studied and critically
examined by some Western Theosophists, certain of the occult teachings
have been found wanting from the ordinary stand-point of modern
scientific knowledge. They seemed to encounter insuperable difficulties
in the way of their acceptance, and to require reconsideration in view
of scientific criticism. Some friends have already been tempted to
regret the necessity of so often calling in question the assertions of
modern Science. It appeared to them -- and I here repeat only their
arguments -- that "to run counter to the teachings of its most eminent
exponents, was to court a premature discomfiture in the eyes of the
Western World."
It is, therefore, desirable to define once and for all the position
which the writer, who does not agree in this with her friends, intends
to maintain. So far as Science remains what in the words of Prof. Huxley
it is, viz., "organized common sense"; so far as its inferences are
drawn from accurate premises -- its generalizations resting on a purely
inductive basis -- every Theosophist and Occultist welcomes respectfully
and with due admiration its contributions to the domain of cosmological
law. There can be no possible conflict between the teachings of occult
and so-called exact Science, where the conclusions of the latter are
grounded on a substratum of unassailable fact. It is only when its more
ardent exponents, over-stepping the limits of observed phenomena in
order to penetrate into the arcana of Being, attempt to wrench the
formation of Kosmos and its living Forces from Spirit, and
attribute all to blind matter, that the Occultists claim the right to
dispute and call in question their theories. Science cannot, owing to
the very nature of things, unveil the mystery of the universe around us.
Science can, it is true, collect, classify, and generalize upon
phenomena; but the occultist, arguing from admitted metaphysical data,
declares that the daring explorer, who would probe the inmost secrets of
Nature, must transcend the narrow limitations of sense, and transfer his
consciousness into the region of noumena and the sphere of primal
causes. To effect this, he must develop faculties which are absolutely
[[H. P. Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 478 THE SECRET DOCTRINE.
dormant -- save in a few rare and exceptional cases -- in the
constitution of the off-shoots of our present Fifth Root-race in Europe
and America. He can in no other conceivable manner collect the facts on
which to base his speculations. Is this not apparent on the principles
of Inductive Logic and Metaphysics alike?
On the other hand, whatever the writer may do, she will never be able
to satisfy both Truth and Science. To offer the reader a systematic and
uninterrupted version of the Archaic Stanzas is impossible. A gap of 43
verses or Slokas has to be left between the 7th (already given)
and the 51st, which is the subject of Book II., though the latter are
made to run from 1 et seq. for easier reading and reference.
The appearance of man on Earth alone occupies as many stanzas, which
describe minutely his primal evolution from the human Dhyan Chohans; the
state of the globe at that time, etc., etc. A great number of names
referring to chemical substances and other compounds, which have now
ceased to combine together, and are therefore unknown to the later
offshoots of our Fifth Race, occupy a considerable space. As they are
simply untranslateable, and would remain in every case inexplicable,
they are omitted, along with those which cannot be made public.
Nevertheless, even the little that is given will irritate any follower
and defender of dogmatic materialistic Science who happens to read this.
Before proceeding to other Stanzas, it is proposed, therefore, to
defend those already given. They are not in perfect accord or harmony
with modern Science -- this we all know. Had they been, however, as much
in agreement with the views of modern knowledge as a lecture by Sir W.
Thomson, they would have been rejected all the same. For they teach
belief in conscious Powers and Spiritual Entities; in terrestrial,
semi-intelligent, and highly intellectual Forces on other planes*; and
in Beings that dwell around us in spheres imperceptible, whether through
telescope or microscope. Hence the necessity of examining the beliefs of
materialistic Science: of comparing its views about the "Elements" with
the opinions of the ancients, and of analysing the physical Forces as
they exist in modern perception before the Occultists admit themselves
to be in the wrong. We shall touch upon the constitution of the Sun and
planets, and the occult characteristics of what are called Devas
and Genii, and are now termed by Science, Force, or "modes
of motion," and see whether esoteric belief is defensible or not (Vide
infra, "Gods, Monads, and Atoms)".
Notwithstanding the efforts made to the contrary, an unprejudiced
mind will discover
[[Footnote(s)]] -------------------------------------------------
* Their intellection, of course, being of quite a different nature to
any we can conceive of on Earth.
[[H. P. Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 479 DUAL NATURE OF THE SUN.
under Newton's "agent, material or immaterial" (of his third letter
to Bentley), the agent which causes gravity, and, in his
personal working God, one finds just as much of the
metaphysical devas and genii, as in Kepler's
angelus rector conducting each planet, and the species
immateriata by which the celestial bodies were carried along in
their courses, according to that astronomer.
We shall have, in Book II., to openly approach dangerous subjects. We
must bravely face Science and declare, in the teeth of materialistic
learning, of Idealism, Hylo-Idealism, Positivism and all-denying modern
Psychology, that the true Occultist believes in "Lords of Light;" that
he believes in a Sun, which, far from being simply "a lamp of day"
moving in accordance with physical law, and far from being merely one of
those Suns, which according to Richter -- ". . . . are Sun-flowers of a
higher light" -- is, like milliards of other Suns, the dwelling or the
vehicle of a god, and a host of gods.
In this question, of course, it is the Occultists who will be
worsted. They will be considered on the prima facie aspect of
the dispute to be ignoramuses, and labelled with more than one of the
usual epithets given to those whom the superficially judging public,
itself ignorant of the great underlying truths in nature, accuses of
believing in mediaeval superstitions. Let it be so. Submitting
beforehand to every criticism in order to go on with their task, they
only claim the privilege of showing that the physicists are as much at
loggerheads among themselves in their speculations, as the latter are
with the teachings of Occultism.
The Sun is matter, and the Sun is Spirit. Our ancestors -- the
"heathen," -- along with their modern successors, the Parsis -- were,
and are, wise enough in their generation to see in it the symbol of
Divinity, and at the same time to sense within, concealed by the
physical Symbol, the bright God of Spiritual and terrestrial Light. Such
belief is now regarded as a superstition only by rank materialism, which
denies Deity, Spirit, Soul, and admits no intelligence outside the mind
of man. But if too much of wrong superstition bred by "Churchianity" --
as Lawrence Oliphant calls it -- "renders a man a fool," too much
scepticism makes him mad. We prefer the charge of folly in believing too
much, to that of a madness which denies everything, as do Materialism
and Idealism. Hence, the Occultists are fully prepared to receive their
dues from Materialism, and to meet the adverse criticism which will be
poured on this work, not for writing it, but for believing in that
which it contains.
Therefore the discoveries, hypotheses, and unavoidable objections
which will be brought forward by the scientific critics must be
anticipated and disposed of. It has also to be shown how far the
[[H. P. Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 480 THE SECRET DOCTRINE.
occult teachings depart from real science, and whether the ancient or
the modern theories are the most logically and philosophically correct.
The unity and mutual relations of all parts of Kosmos were known to the
ancients, before they became evident to modern astronomers and
philosophers. And if even the external and visible portions of the
Universe and their mutual relations cannot be explained in any other
terms than those used by the adherents of the mechanical theory of the
Universe in physical science, it follows that no materialist, who denies
that the Soul of Kosmos (which appertains to metaphysical philosophy)
exists, has the right to trespass upon that metaphysical domain. That
physical science is trying to, and actually does, encroach upon it, is
only one more proof that "might is right," and no more.
Another good reason for these Addenda is this. Since only a certain
portion of the Secret teachings can be given out in the present age, if
they were published without any explanations or commentary, the
doctrines would never be understood even by theosophists. Therefore they
must be contrasted with the speculations of modern science. Archaic
axioms must be placed side by side with modern hypotheses and comparison
left to the sagacious reader.
On the question of the "Seven Governors," as Hermes calls the "Seven
Builders," the Spirits which guide the operations of nature, the
animated atoms of which are the shadows, in their world, of their
Primaries in the astral realms -- this work will, of course, besides the
men of Science, have every materialist against it. But this opposition
can, at most, be only temporary. People have laughed at everything and
scouted every unpopular idea at first, and then ended by accepting it.
Materialism and scepticism are evils that must remain in the world as
long as man has not quitted his present gross form to don the one he had
during the first and second races of this Round. Unless scepticism and
our present natural ignorance are equilibrated by intuition and a
natural spirituality, every being afflicted with such feelings will see
in himself no better than a bundle of flesh, bones, and muscles, with an
empty garret inside him which serves the purpose of storing his
sensations and feelings. Sir Humphry Davy was a great scientist, as
deeply versed in physics as any theorist of our day, yet he loathed
materialism. "I heard with disgust," he says, "in the dissecting-rooms,
the plan of the physiologist, of the gradual secretion of matter, and
its becoming endued with irritability, ripening into sensibility, and
acquiring such organs as were necessary, by its own inherent forces, and
at last rising into intellectual existence." Nevertheless, physiologists
are not the most to be blamed for speaking of that only which they can
see and estimate on the evidence of their physical senses. Astronomers
[[H. P. Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 481 THE SONS OF LIGHT.
and physicists are, we consider, far more illogical in their
materialistic views than even physiologists, and this has to be proved.
Milton's --
. . . . . . . . . . . . "Light
Ethereal, first of things, quintessence pure,"
has become with the materialists only --
. . . . . . Prime cheerer, light,
Of all material beings, first and best.
For the occultists it is both Spirit and Matter. Behind the "mode of
motion," now regarded as "the property of matter" and nothing more, they
perceive the radiant noumenon. It is the "Spirit of Light," the first
born of the Eternal pure Element, whose energy (or emanation) is stored
in the Sun, the great Life-Giver of the physical world, as the hidden
Concealed Spiritual Sun is the Light- and Life-Giver of the Spiritual
and Psychic Realms. Bacon was one of the first to strike the key-note of
materialism, not only by his inductive method (renovated from
ill-digested Aristotle), but by the general tenor of his writings. He
inverts the order of mental Evolution when saying that "the first
Creation of God was the light of the sense; the last was the light of
the reason; and his Sabbath work ever since is the illumination of the
Spirit." It is just the reverse. The light of Spirit is the eternal
Sabbath of the mystic or occultist, and he pays little attention to that
of mere sense. That which is meant by the allegorical sentence, "Fiat
Lux" is,-- when esoterically rendered -- "Let there be the 'Sons of
Light,' " or the noumena of all phenomena. Thus the Roman Catholics
rightly interpret the passage as referring to Angels, and wrongly as
meaning Powers created by an anthropomorphic God, whom they personify in
the ever thundering and punishing Jehovah.
These beings are the "Sons of Light," because they emanate from, and
are self-generated in, that infinite Ocean of Light, whose one pole is
pure Spirit lost in the absoluteness of Non-Being, and the
other, the matter in which it condenses, crystallizing into a
more and more gross type as it descends into manifestation. Therefore
matter, though it is, in one sense, but the illusive dregs of that Light
whose limbs are the Creative Forces, yet has in it the full presence of
the Soul thereof, of that Principle, which none -- not even the "Sons of
Light," evolved from its ABSOLUTE DARKNESS -- will ever know. The idea
is as beautifully, as it is truthfully, expressed by Milton, who hails
the holy Light, which is the --
". . . . . Offspring of Heaven, first-born,
And of th' Eternal co-eternal beam;
. . . . . Since God is light,
And never but in unapproached Light
Dwelt from Eternity,. dwelt then in thee
Bright effluence, of bright essence increate."
[[H. P. Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 482 THE SECRET DOCTRINE.
from
The Secret Doctrine,
by H. P. Blavatsky
**
**
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