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by C. W. LEADBEATER
THE beginning of the universe (if ever it had a
beginning) is beyond our ken. At
the earliest point of history that we
can reach, the two great opposites of spirit and matter, of life and
form, are already in full activity. We find that the ordinary conception
of matter needs a revision, for what are commonly called force and
matter are in reality only two varieties of Spirit at different stages
in evolution and the real matter or basis of everything lies in the
background unperceived. A French scientist has recently said:
"There is no matter; there are nothing but holes in the æther."
This also agrees with the celebrated theory of Professor Osborne
Reynolds. Occult investigation shows this to be the correct view, and in
that way explains what Oriental sacred books mean when they say that
matter is an illusion.
The ultimate root-matter as seen at our level is what scientists call
the æther of space.[2] To every
physical sense the space occupied by it appears empty, yet in reality
this aether is far denser than anything of which we can conceive. Its
density is defined by Professor Reynolds as being ten thousand times
greater than that of water, and its mean pressure as seven hundred and
fifty thousand tons to the square inch.
This substance is perceptible only to highly developed clairvoyant
power. We must assume a time (though we have no direct knowledge on this
point) when this substance filled all space. We must also suppose that
some great Being (not the Deity of a solar system, but some Being almost
infinitely higher than that) changed this condition of rest by pouring,
out His spirit or force into a certain section of this matter, a section
of the size of a whole universe. This effect of the introduction of this
force is as that of the blowing of a mighty breath; it has formed within
this aether an incalculable number of tiny spherical bubbles,[3]
and these bubbles are the ultimate atoms of which what we call matter is
composed. They are not the atoms of the chemist, nor even the ultimate
atoms of the physical world. They stand at a far higher level, and what
are usually called atoms are composed of vast aggregations of these
bubbles, as will be seen later.
When the Solar Deity begins to make His system, He finds ready to His
hand this material--this infinite mass of tiny bubbles which can be
built up into various kinds of matter as we know it. He commences by
defining the limit of His field of activity, a vast sphere whose
circumference is far larger than the orbit of the outermost of His
future planets. Within the limit of that sphere He sets up a kind of
gigantic vortex--a motion which sweeps together all the bubbles into a
vast central mass, the material of the nebula that is to be.
Into this vast revolving sphere He sends forth successive impulses of
force, gathering together the bubbles into ever more and more complex
aggregations, and producing in this way seven gigantic interpenetrating
worlds of matter of different degrees of density, all concentric and all
occupying the same space.
Acting through His Third Aspect He sends forth into this stupendous
sphere the first of these impulses. It sets up all through the sphere a
vast number of tiny vortices, each of which draws into itself forty-nine
bubbles, and arranges them in a certain shape. These little groupings of
bubbles so formed are the atoms of the second of the interpenetrating
worlds. The whole number of the bubbles is not used in this way,
sufficient being left in the dissociated state to act as atoms for the
first and highest of these worlds. In due time comes the second impulse,
which seizes upon nearly all these forty-nine bubble-atoms (leaving only
enough to provide atoms for the second world), draws them back into
itself and then, throwing them out again, sets up among them vortices,
each of which holds within itself 2,401 bubbles (492). These form the
atoms of the third world. Again after a time comes a third impulse,
which in the same way seizes upon nearly all these 2,401 bubble-atoms,
draws them back again into their original form, and again throws them
outward once more as the atoms of the fourth world--each atom containing
this time 493 bubbles. This process is repeated until the sixth of these
successive impulses has built the atom of the seventh or the lowest
world--that atom containing 496 of the original bubbles.
This atom of the seventh world is the ultimate atom of the physical
world--not any of the atoms of which chemists speak, but that ultimate
out of which all their atoms are made. We have at this stage arrived at
that condition of affairs in which the vast whirling sphere contains
within itself seven types of matter, all one in essence, because all
built of the same kind of bubbles, "but differing in their degree
of density. All these types are freely intermingled, so that specimens
of each type would be found in a small portion of the sphere taken at
random in any part of it, with, however, a general tendency of the
heavier atoms to gravitate more and more towards the centre.
The seventh impulse sent out from the Third Aspect of the Deity does
not, as before, draw back the physical atoms which were last made into
the original dissociated bubbles, but draws them together into certain
aggregations, thus making a number of different kinds of what may be
called proto-elements, and these again are joined together into the
various forms which are known to science as chemical elements. The
making of these extends over a long period of ages, and they are made in
a certain definite order by the interaction of several forces, as is
correctly indicated in Sir William Crookes's paper, The Genesis of the
Elements. Indeed the process of their making is not even now concluded;
uranium is the latest and heaviest element so far as we know, but others
still more complicated may perhaps be produced in the future.
As ages rolled on the condensation increased, and presently the stage
of a vast glowing nebula was reached. As it cooled, still rapidly
rotating, it flattened into a huge disc and gradually broke up into
rings surrounding a central body--an arrangement not unlike that which
Saturn exhibits at the present day, though on a far larger scale. As the
time drew near when the planets would be required for the purposes of
evolution, the Deity set up somewhere in the thickness of each ring a
subsidiary vortex into which a great deal of the matter of the ring was
by degrees collected. The collisions of the gathered fragments caused a
revival of the heat, and the resulting planet was for a long time a mass
of glowing gas. Little by little it cooled once more, until it became
fit to be the theatre of life such as ours. Thus were all the planets
formed.
Almost all the matter of those interpenetrating worlds was by this
time
concentrated into the newly formed planets. Each of them was and is
composed of all those different kinds of matter. The earth upon which we
are now living is not merely a great ball of physical matter, built of
the atoms of that lowest world, but has also attached to it an abundant
supply of matter of the sixth, the fifth, the fourth and other worlds.
It is well known to all students of science that particles of matter
never actually touch one another, even in the hardest of substances. The
spaces between them are always far greater in proportion than their own
size--enormously greater. So there is ample room for all the other kinds
of atoms of all those other worlds, not only to lie between the atoms of
the denser matter, but to move quite freely among them and around them.
Consequently, this globe upon which we live is not one world, but seven
interpenetrating worlds, all occupying the same space, except that the
finer types of matter extend further from the centre than does the
denser matter.
We have given names to these interpenetrating worlds for convenience
in speaking of them. No name is needed for the first, as man is not yet
in direct connection with it; but when it is necessary to mention it, it
may be called the divine world. The second is described as the monadic,
because in it exist those Sparks of the divine Life which we call the
human Monads; but neither of these can be touched by the highest
clairvoyant investigations at present possible for us. The third sphere,
whose atoms contain 2,401 bubbles, is called the spiritual world,
because in it functions the highest Spirit in man as now constituted.
The fourth is the intuitional world,[4]
because from it come the highest intuitions. The fifth is the mental
world, because from its matter is built the mind of man. The sixth is
called the emotional or astral world, because the emotions of man cause
undulations in its matter. (The name astral was given to it by mediæval
alchemists, because its matter is starry or shining as compared to that
of the denser world.) The seventh world, composed of the type of matter
which we see all around us, is called the physical.
The matter of which all these interpenetrating worlds are built is
essentially the same matter, but differently arranged and of different
degrees of density. Therefore the rates at which these various types of
matter normally vibrate differ also. They may be considered as a vast
gamut of undulations consisting of many octaves. The physical matter
uses a certain number of the lowest of these octaves, the astral matter
another group of octaves just above that, the mental matter a still
further group, and so on.
Not only has each of these worlds its own type of matter; it has also
its own set of aggregations of that matter--its own substances. In each
world we arrange these substances in seven classes according to the rate
at which their molecules vibrate. Usually, but not invariably, the
slower oscillation involves also a larger molecule--a molecule, that is,
built up by a special arrangement of the smaller molecules of the next
higher subdivision. The application of heat increases the size of the
molecules and also quickens and amplifies their undulation, so that they
cover more ground, and the object, as a whole expands, until the point
is reached where the aggregation of molecules breaks up, and the latter
passes from one condition to that next above it. In the matter of the
physical world the seven subdivisions are represented by seven degrees
of density of matter, to which, beginning from below upwards, we give
the names solid, liquid, gaseous, etheric, superetheric, sub-atomic and
atomic.
The atomic subdivision is one in which all forms are built by the
compression into certain shapes of the physical atoms, without any
previous collection of these atoms into blocks or molecules. Typifying
the physical ultimate atom for the moment by a brick, any form in the
atomic subdivision would be made by gathering together some of the
bricks, and building them into a certain shape. In order to make matter
for the next lower subdivision, a certain number of the bricks (atoms)
would first be gathered together and cemented into small blocks of say
four bricks each, five bricks each, six bricks or seven bricks; and then
these blocks so made would be used as building stones. For the next
subdivision several of the blocks of the second sub-division cemented
together in certain shapes would form building-stones, and so on to the
lowest.
To transfer any substance from the solid condition to the liquid
(that is to say, to melt it) is to increase the vibration of its
compound molecules until at last they are shaken apart into the simpler
molecules of which they were built. This process can in all cases be
repeated again and again until finally any and every physical substance
can be reduced to the ultimate atoms of the physical world.
Each of these worlds has its inhabitants, whose senses are normally
capable of responding to the undulations of their own world only. A man
living (as we are all-doing) in the physical world sees, hears, feels,
by vibrations connected with the physical matter around him. He is
equally surrounded by the astral and mental and other worlds which are
interpenetrating his own denser world, but of them he is normally
unconscious, because his senses cannot respond to the oscillations of
their matter, just as our physical eyes cannot see by the vibrations of
ultra-violet light, although scientific experiments show that they
exist, and there are other consciousnesses with differently-formed
organs who can see by them. A being living in the astral world might be
occupying the very same space as a being living in the physical world,
yet each would be entirely unconscious of the other and would in no way
impede the free movement of the other. The same is true of all other
worlds. We are at this moment surrounded by these worlds of finer
matter, as close to us as the world we see, and their inhabitants are
passing through us and about us, but we are entirely unconscious of
them.
Since our evolution is centred at present upon this globe which we
call the earth, it is in connection with it only that we shall be
speaking of these higher worlds, so in future when I use the term
"astral world" I shall, mean by it the astral part of our own
globe only, and not (as heretofore) the astral part of the whole solar
system. This astral part of our own world is also a globe, but of astral
matter. It occupies the same place as the globe which we see, but its
matter (being so much lighter) extends out into space on all sides of us
further than does the atmosphere of the earth--a great deal further. It
stretches to a little less than the mean distance of the moon, so that
though the two physical globes, the earth and the moon, are nearly
240,000' miles apart, the astral globes of these two bodies touch one
another when the moon is in perigee, but not when she is in apogee. I
shall apply the term "mental world" to the still larger globe
of mental matter in the midst of which our physical earth exists. When
we come to the still higher globes we have spheres large enough to touch
the corresponding spheres of other planets in the system, though their
matter also is just as much about us here on the surface of the solid
earth as that of the others. All these globes of finer matter are a part
of us, and are all revolving round the sun with their visible part. The
student will do well to accustom himself to think of our earth as the
whole of" this mass of interpenetrating worlds--not only the
comparatively small physical ball in the centre of it.
Suggested Further Reading
[2] This has been described in
Occult Chemistry under the name of koilon.
[3] The bubbles are spoken of in
The Secret Doctrine as the holes which Fohat digs in space.
[4] Previously called in
Theosophical literature the buddhic plane.
| Source:
Chapter 3 A TEXTBOOK OF THEOSOPHY by C. W. LEADBEATER [ 1912] |
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