Matter

From Theosophy Wiki
Revision as of 20:06, 23 March 2012 by Pablo Sender (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

In the Theosophical view matter, as well as as spirit, are the manifestation of one principle, sometimes called svabhavat.

W. Q. Judge wrote:

Theosophy postulates an eternal principle called the unknown . . . The perceived universe is the manifestation of this unknown, including spirit and matter, for Theosophy holds that those are but the two opposite poles of the one unknown principle. They coexist, are not separate nor separable from each other, or, as the Hindu scriptures say, there is no particle of matter without spirit, and no particle of spirit without matter.[1]

Spirit (or life) and matter are thus seen as the two aspects of the same principle. H. P. Blavatsky is reported to have said:

There is no dead matter. Every last atom is alive. It cannot be otherwise since every atom is itself fundamentally Absolute Being. Therefore there is no such thing as ‘spaces’ of Ether, or Akasha, or call it what you like, in which angels and elementals disport themselves like trout in water. That’s a common idea. The true idea shows every atom of substance no matter of what plane to be in itself a LIFE.[2]

Theosophy postulates the existence of different states of matter, forming seven planes, from the highest cosmic matter down to the physical matter.

In manifesting itself the spirit-matter differentiates on seven planes, each more dense on the way down to the plane of our senses than its predecessor, the substance in all being the same only differing in degree. Therefore from this view the whole universe is alive, not one atom of it being in any sense dead. It is also conscious and intelligent, its consciousness and intelligence being present on all planes though obscured on this one. On this plane of ours the spirit focalizes itself in all human beings who choose to permit it to do so, and the refusal to permit it is the cause of ignorance, of sin, of all sorrow and suffering.[3]

All forms of matter, however, are differentiations of a primordial one element, which is ultimately a maya or illusion:

The homogeneous primordial Element is simple and single only on the terrestrial plane of consciousness and sensation, since matter, after all, is nothing else than the sequence of our own states of consciousness, and Spirit an idea of psychic intuition. Even on the next higher plane, that single element which is defined on our earth by current science, as the ultimate undecomposable constituent of some kind of matter, would be pronounced in the world of a higher spiritual perception as something very complex indeed.[4]


Notes

  1. William Quan Judge, Theosophy Generally Stated
  2. Robert Bowen, Madame Blavatsky on How to Study Theosophy (????), ???
  3. William Quan Judge, Theosophy Generally Stated
  4. Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, Secret Doctrine vol. I, (Wheaton, Ill: Theosophical Publishing House, 1993), ?????