The Writings of Alfred Percy Sinnett
Alfred
Percy Sinnett
1840
-1921
The Occult World
By
A P Sinnett
Introduction
THERE is a
For, strange as the statement will appear at
first sight, modern metaphysics, and to a large extent modern physical science,
have been groping for centuries blindly after knowledge which occult philosophy
has enjoyed in full measure all the while. Owing to a train of fortunate
circumstances, I have come to know that this is the case; I have come
into some contact with persons who are heirs of a greater knowledge concerning
the mysteries of Nature and humanity than modern culture has yet evolved; and
my present wish is to sketch the outlines of this knowledge, to record with
exactitude the experimental proofs I have obtained that occult science invest
its adepts with a control of natural forces superior to that enjoyed by
physicists of the ordinary type, and the grounds there are for bestowing the most
respectful consideration on the theories entertained by occult science
concerning the constitution and destinies of the human soul. Of course people
in the present day will be slow to believe that any knowledge worth considering
can be found outside the bright focus of Western culture. Modern science has
accomplished grand results by the open method of investigation, and is very
impatient of the theory that persons who ever attained to real knowledge,
either in sciences or metaphysics, could have been content to hide their light
under a bushel. So the tendency has been to conceive that occult philosophers
of old- Egyptian priests, Chaldean Magi, Essenes, Gnostics, theurgic
Neo-Platonists, and the rest-who kept their knowledge secret, must have adopted
that policy to conceal the fact that they knew very little. Mystery can only
have been loved by charlatans who wished to mystify. The conclusion is
pardonable from the modern point of view, but it has given rise to an
impression in the popular mind that the ancient mystics have actually been
turned inside out, and found to know very little. This impression is absolutely
erroneous. Men of science in former ages worked in secret, and instead of
publishing their discoveries, taught them in secret to carefully selected
pupils. Their motives for adopting that policy are readily intelligible, even
if the merits of the policy may seem still open to discussion. At all events,
their teaching has not been forgotten; it has been transmitted by secret
initiation to men of our own time, and while its methods and its practical
achievements remain secrets in their hands, it is open to any patient and
earnest student of the question to satisfy himself that these methods are of
supreme efficacy, and these achievements far more admirable than any yet
standing to the credit of modern science.
For the secrecy in which these operations
have been shrouded has never disguised their existence, and it is only in our
own time that this has been forgotten. Formerly at great public ceremonies, the
initiates displayed the powers with which their knowledge of natural laws
invested them. We carelessly assume that the narratives of such displays
describe performances of magic: we have decided that there is no such thing as
magic, therefore the narratives must have been false, the persons whom they
refer to, impostors. But supposing that magic, of old, was simply the science
of magi, of learned men, there is no magic, in the modern sense, left in the
matter. And supposing that such science- even in ancient times already the
product of long ages of study- had gone in some directions further than our
much younger modern science has yet reached, it is reasonable to conclude that
some displays in connection with ancient mysteries may have been strictly
scientific experiments, though they sound like displays of magic, and would
look like displays of magic for us now if they could be repeated.
On that hypothesis modem sagacity applying
modem knowledge to the subject of ancient mysteries, may be merely modem folly
evolving erroneous conclusions from modem ignorance.
But there is no need to construct hypotheses in the matter. The facts are
accessible if they are sought for in the right way, and the facts are these:
The wisdom of the ancient world-science and religion commingled, physics and
metaphysics combined- was a reality, and it still survives. It is that which
will be spoken of in these pages as Occult Philosophy. It was already a
complete system of knowledge that had been cultivated in secret, and handed
down to initiates for ages, before its professors performed experiments in
public to impress the popular mind in
It is chiefly in the East that occultism
is still kept up in India and in adjacent countries. It is in India that I have
encountered it; and this little volume is written to describe the experiences I
have enjoyed, and to retail the knowledge I have acquired.
2
My narrative of events must be preceded by
some further general explanations, or it would be unintelligible. The identity
of occultism as practised in all ages, must be kept in view, to account for the
magnitude of its organization, and for the astounding discovery that secluded
Orientals may understand more about electricity than Faraday, more about physics
than Tyndall. The culture of Europe has been developed by Europeans for
themselves within the last few hundred years. The culture of occultists is the
growth of vast periods long anterior to these, when civilization inhabited the
East. And during a career which has carried occultism in the domain of physical
science far beyond the point we have reached, physical science has merely been
an object for occultism of secondary importance. Its main strength has been
devoted to metaphysical inquiry, and to the latent psychological faculties in
man, faculties which, in their development, enable the occultist to obtain
actual experimental knowledge concerning the soul's condition of
extra-corporeal existence. There is thus something more than a mere archaeological
interest in the identification of the occult system with the doctrines of the
initiated organisations in all ages of the world's history, and we are
presented by this identification with the key to the philosophy of religious
development. Occultism is not merely an isolated discovery showing humanity to
be possessed of certain powers over Nature, which the narrower study of Nature
from the merely materialistic standpoint has failed to develop; it is an
illumination cast over all previous spiritual speculation worth anything, of a
kind which knits together some apparently divergent systems. It is to spiritual
philosophy much what Sanskrit was found to be to comparative philology ; it is
a common stock of philosophical roots. Judaism, Christianity, Buddhism and the
Egyptian theology are thus brought into one family of ideas. Occultism, as it
is no now invention, is no specific sect, but the professors of no sect can
afford to dispense with the sidelights it throws upon the conception of Nature
and Man's destinies which they may have been induced by their own specific
faith to form; occultism, in fact, must be recognised by anyone who will take
the trouble to put before his mind clearly the problems with which it deals, as
a study of the most sublime importance to every man who cares to live a life
worthy of his human rank in creation, and who can realise the bearing on ethics
of certain knowledge concerning his own survival after death. It is one thing
to follow the lead of a hazy impression that a life beyond the grave, if there
is one, may be somehow benefited by abstinence from wrongdoing on this side; it
will clearly be another to realise if that can be shown to be the case, that
the life beyond the grave must, with the certainty of a sum total built up of a
series of plus and minus quantities, be the final expression of the use made of
opportunities in this.
I have said that the startling importance
of occult knowledge turns on the manner in which it affords exact and
experimental knowledge concerning spiritual things which under all other
systems must remain the subject of speculation or blind religious faith. It may
be further asserted that occultism shows that the harmony and smooth continuity
of Nature observable in physics extend to those operations of Nature that are
concerned with the phenomena of metaphysical existence.
Before approaching an exposition of the
conclusions concerning the nature of man that occult philosophy has reached, it
may be worth while to meet an objection that may perhaps be raised by the
reader on the threshold of the subject. How is it that conclusions of such
great weight have been kept the secret property of a jealous body of initiates.
Is it not a law of progress that truth asserts itself and courts the free air
and light ? Is it reasonable to suppose that the greatest of all truths-the
fundamental basis of truth concerning man and Nature- should be afraid to show
itself? With what object could the ancient professors of, or proficients in,
occult philosophy keep the priceless treasures of their researches to
themselves ?
Now, it is no business of mine to defend
the extreme tenacity with which the proficients in occultism have hitherto not
only shut out the world from the knowledge of their knowledge, but have almost
left it in ignorance that such knowledge exists [ See Appendix A.].
It is enough here to point out that it would be foolish to shut our eyes to a
revelation that may now be partially conceded, merely because we are piqued at
the behaviour of those who have been in a position to make it before, but have
not chosen to do so. Nor would it be wiser to say that the reticence of the
occultists so far discredits anything we may now be told about their
acquirements. When the sun is actually shining it is no use to say that its
light is discredited by the behaviour of the barometer yesterday. I have to
deal, in discussing the acquirements of occultism, with facts that have
actually taken place, and nothing can discredit what is known to be true. No
doubt it will be worth while later on to examine the motives which have
rendered the occultists of all ages so profoundly reserved. And there may be
more to say in justification of the course that has been pursued than is
visible at the first glance. Indeed, the reader will not go far in an
examination of the nature of the powers which proficients in occultism actually
possess, without seeing that it is supremely desirable to keep back the
practical exercise of such powers from the world at large. But it is one thing
to deny mankind generally the key which unlocks the mystery of occult power; it
is another to withhold the fact that there is a mystery to unlock. However, the
further discussion of that question here would be premature. Enough for the
present to take note of the fact that secrecy after all is not complete if
external students of the subject are enabled to learn as much about the
mysteries as I shall have to tell. Manifestly, there is a great deal more
behind, but, at all events, a great deal is to be learned by inquirers who will
set to work in the right way, and that which may now be learned is no new
revelation at last capriciously extended to the outer world for the first time.
In former periods of history , a great
deal more has been known about the nature of occultism by the world at large
than is known at this moment to the modern West. The bigotry of modem
civilization, and not the jealousy of the occultist, is to blame if the
European races are at this moment more generally ignorant of the extent to
which psychological research has been carried, than the Egyptian populace in
the past, or the people of India in the present day. As regards the latter,
amongst whom the truth of the theory just suggested can easily be put to the
test, you will find the great majority of Hindus perfectly convinced of the
truth of the main statements which I am about to put forward. They do not
generally or readily talk about such subjects with Europeans, because these are
so prone to stupid derision of views they do not understand or believe in
already. The Indian native is very timid in presence of such ridicule. But it
does not affect in the slightest degree the beliefs which rest in his own mind
on the fundamental teaching he will always have received, and in many cases on
odds and ends of experiences he may himself have had. The Hindus are thus well
aware, as a body, of the fact that there are persons who by entire devotion to
certain modes of life acquire unusual powers in the nature of such as Europeans
would very erroneously call supernatural. They are quite familiar with the
notion that such persons live secluded lives, and are inaccessible to ordinary
curiosity, and that they are none the less approachable by fit and determined
candidates for admission to occult training. Ask any cultivated Hindu if he has
ever heard of Mahatmas and Yog Vidya or occult science, and it is a hundred to
one that you will find he has-and, unless he happens to be one of the hybrid
products of Anglo-Indian Universities, that he fully believes in the reality of
the powers ascribed to Yoga. It does not follow that he will at once say "
Yes" to a European asking the question. He will probably say just the
reverse from the apprehension I have spoken of above, but push your questions
home and you will discover the truth, as I did, for example, in the case of a
very intelligent English-speaking native vakeel in an influential position and
in constant relations with high European officials, last year. At first my new
acquaintance met my inquiries as to whether he knew anything about these
subjects with a wooden look of complete ignorance, and an explicit denial of
any knowledge as to what I meant at all. It was not till the second time I saw
him in private, at my own house, that by degrees it grew upon him that I was in
earnest, and knew something about Yoga myself, and then he quietly opened out
his real thoughts on the subject, and showed me that he knew not only perfectly
well what I meant all along, but was stocked with information concerning
occurrences and phenomena of an occult or apparently supernatural order, many
of which had been observed in his own family and some by himself.
The point of all this is that Europeans
are not justified in attributing to the jealousy of the occultists the absolute
and entire ignorance of all that concerns them which pervades the modern
society of the West. The West has been occupied with the business of material
progress to the exclusion of psychological development. Perhaps it has done
best for the world in confining itself to its specially, but however this may
be, it has only itself to blame if its concentration of purpose has led to
something like retrogression in another branch of development.
Jacolliot, a French writer, who has dealt
at great length with various phases of Spiritism in the East, was told by one
who must have been an adept to judge by the language used: " You have
studied physical Nature, and you have obtained through the laws of Nature
marvellous results- steam, electricity, etc.,etc. For twenty thousand years or
more we have studied the intellectual forces; we have discovered their laws,
and we obtain, by making them act alone or in concert with matter, phenomena
still more astonishing than your own." Jacolliot adds: " We have seen
things such as one does not describe for fear of making his readers doubt his
intelligence......... but still we have seen them."
3
Occult phenomena must not be confused with
the phenomena of spiritualism. The latter, whatever they may be, are
manifestations which mediums can neither control nor understand in a scientific
sense. The former are achievements of a conscious, living operator
comprehending the laws with which he works. If these achievements appear
miraculous, that is the fault of the observer's ignorance. The spiritualist
knows perfectly well, in spite of ignorant mockery on the part of outsiders
content to laugh without knowing what they are laughing at, that all kinds of
occurrences distinctly outside the range of physical causation do constantly
take place for inquirers who hunt them with sufficient diligence. But he has
never been able to do more than frame hypotheses in respect to the hidden laws
of Nature by virtue of which they have been produced. He has taken up a certain
hypothesis faute de mieux in the first instance, and working always on
this idea, has constructed such an elaborate edifice of theory round the facts
that he is very reluctant to tolerate the interposition of a new hypothesis
which will oblige him to revise his conclusions in some very important particulars.
There will be no way of avoiding this necessity, however, if he belongs to the
order of inquirers who care rather to be sure they have laid hold of the truth
than to fortify a doctrine they have espoused for better or for worse.
Broadly speaking, there is scarcely one of
the phenomena of spiritualism that adepts in occultism cannot reproduce by the
force of their own will, supplemented by a comprehension of the resources of
Nature. As will be seen when I come to a direct narrative of my own experiences,
I have seen some of the most familiar phenomena of spiritualism produced by
purely human agency. The old original spirit-rap which introduced the mightier
phenomena of spiritualism has been manifested for my edification in a countless
variety of ways, and under conditions which render the hypothesis of any
spiritual agency in the matter wholly preposterous. I have seen flowers fall
from the blank ceiling of a room under circumstances that gave me a practical
assurance that no spiritual agency was at work, though in a manner as
absolutely " supernatural" in the sense of being produced without the
aid of any material appliances, as any of the floral showers by which some
spiritual mediums are attended. I have over and over again received "
direct writing," produced on paper in sealed envelopes of my own, which
was created or precipitated by a living human correspondent. I have
information, which, though second-hand, is very trustworthy, of a great variety
of other familiar spiritual phenomena produced in the same way by human adepts
in occultism. But it is not my present task to make war on spiritualism. The
announcements I have to make will, indeed, be probably received more readily
among spiritualists than in the outer circles of the ordinary world, for the
spiritualists are at all events aware, from their own experience, that the
orthodox science of the day does not know the last word concerning mind and
matter, while the orthodox outsider stupidly clings to a denial of facts when
these are of a nature which he foresees himself unable to explain. As the facts
of spiritualism, though accessible to any honest man who goes in search of
them, are not of a kind which anyone can carry about and fling in the faces of
pragmatic" sceptics," these latter are enabled to keep up their
professions of incredulity without the foolishness of their position being
obvious to each other, plain as it is to" the initiated." However,
although in this way the ordinary scientific mind will be reluctant to admit either
the trustworthiness of my testimony or the conceivability of my explanations,
it may allay some hostile prejudices to make clear at the onset that occult
science deals with no guesswork concerning the post-mortem intervention of
human beings in the affairs of this world. Its methods are as precise, and its
mental discipline as rigid, as those of the laboratory or the university
lecture-room. Wedding with theosophic research, spiritualism itself might guard
itself from all those hasty inferences which have done so much to turn large
sections of the cultivated people against it, and if they will but take the
trouble to approach the subject from the point of view of occult science,
students of physical Nature will be enabled at last to handle the phenomena
of spiritualism freely, to consider them apart from the theories to which they
have prematurely given rise ; and thus relieved of the repugnance they feel for
them at present, to bring them within the area of that which they at last will
willingly recognise as true scientific generalisations.
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