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To begin with we must know just what the soul is, and what it is not. Then it will be advantageous to know just how it was formed, and how it continues to grow. And finally, as the end which is of paramount value to each individual, the method will be outlined by which Self-Conscious Immortality can be won.
The reflective mind will hardly deny that self-culture is an object of highest import to man. Externals are of value only when there is an inner capacity to appreciate them. Of what value, for instance, is anything to that which has no consciousness? The struggle of life in all its forms seems to be but the effort to acquire, retain, and express, consciousness. Lower creatures cling to life, and the hope of immortality dwells within each human breast. It is the climax and crowning glory of evolution, the longed-for goal of every aspiring heart.
Such being the case, we are warranted in studying thoroughly how this desired end may be reached. And we can do no better in this at the start than to consider the principles underlying other great attainments. Take, for example, the stupendous achievements of the present age along industrial lines. These are without exception, founded upon man’s increased ability for exhaustive detailed research, together with his ability to combine the innumerable factors revealed by such research into an efficient plan of action. Whether he be a builder of warships, skyscrapers, power plants, or railroads, his success depends primarily upon his grasp of all the factors and principles involved, and upon his ability to combine them in such a way as to give a true picture of the means to be used to attain striven-for results.
The Formula of Success
The primary requisite for success in any enterprise, then, is adequate knowledge. That success may actually be attained, adequate knowledge must be followed by adequate action based upon this knowledge. If we were to require a formula for success in any effort we might state it thus: The best and most certain results in any line of endeavor can be attained only by one clearly comprehending all the various factors and principles involved who, after becoming familiar with methods, and having decided upon some definite aim, carefully plans a course of action and persistently adheres to it in the face of all obstacles, making adaptations only to meet changing environment, or as the dictates of matured experience demand.
If the human heart craves immortality, as it universally does, this is an end to be attained. As such it is subject to the formula just stated. That is, it can be attained more surely if its various factors are clearly comprehended and serve as a basis for persistent endeavor.
What is it, then, that may be immortal? The soul. But what is the soul? This we must ascertain. Suppose we begin the explanation by saying that thought implies a thinker. If anything is known, there must be a knower. The individual who thinks and feels logically concludes he has an existence. Furthermore, in some manner, he feels sure of the identity of the “I” of yesterday with the “I” of today. There is something about the “I” of today which is the same as, and something which is different from, the “I” of yesterday. What it is that is the same, and what it is that is different, only analysis will reveal.
Now back of consciousness resides the energy that expresses consciousness. Back of life in manifestation is the energy that expresses life. Back of all expressions of that which ultimately becomes the mind of man is energy. We are unable to think of the universe as nonexistent. Its energies must have been present in some state throughout the entirety of the past. In other words, the universe is manifesting today a potentiality that has always been present; for energy is not derived from nothingness.
Likewise, back of all expressions of individual consciousness and form there is a potentiality. This potentiality, this energy that expresses itself through consciousness and form, finally expressing through the human form as the mind of man, was not derived from nothing. It is a potentiality as eternal as the potentiality behind the universe; for while energies express in different forms, one of the most stable natural laws is that of conservation of energy, the law that there is no more and no less energy in the universe today than there was in the infinitely distant past, or than there will be in the infinitely distant future. The “I”, therefore, that does not change, the “I” that we feel existed farther back than we can remember, and that we can hardly imagine as not existing in the future, is the potentiality which activates our existence. It is usually referred to as the ego.
As to our consciousness, it cannot be said to be changeless. On the contrary it continually changes. I do not mean merely that the objective consciousness is aware of different things at different times, but that because new experiences are each day and each hour added to the total of our consciousness, that consciousness, in its entirety, is in a state of flux. Yet we identify ourselves with our states of consciousness. Insofar as we do this the “I” of today is different from the “I” of yesterday. The totality of these states of consciousness is the soul.
We have no experience of energy not associated with substance, and no experience of consciousness not associated with substance. Nor are we justified in assuming that energy and consciousness are possible apart from some kind of substance. In fact, the human mind is incapable of thinking of a condition in which substance is absent. Of course, there are substances much finer than matter; but for energy to express, or for consciousness to be present, each must be associated with substance. When energy expresses as consciousness in association with substance, the substance is spoken of as the form, or body.
The Sole Attribute of the Ego Is Potentiality
From the fact that we now exist, no new energy ever being created, it is logical to assume that we each have at least potentially always existed. That is, the potentiality which we call the ego never had a beginning and never can have an end. But states of consciousness are more than potentialities, they are the result of specific activities. Until the ego inaugurated these specific activities there was no consciousness, consequently no soul. The ego must always have existed, but the soul only came into existence as the result of definite activities of the ego. The soul, therefore, probably has not always existed.
When that potentiality which we now call the ego inaugurated the specific activities that resulted in the first gleam of consciousness, the activity was a movement of substance, and the consciousness itself was a special kind of motion in substance. Thus, the moment there was consciousness there was also a form. Consciousness, in fact, must be nothing, or it must be a movement in some kind of substance. Logically it cannot be nothing. And as movement in substance has form, and the soul embraces states of consciousness, the soul is ever associated with a form. Consequently, as soon as the ego has the first rudiments of a soul it also has at least the rudiments of some kind of a body.
Before it had a soul, the ego existed as a potentiality, as an eternal spark of the infinite; coeternal with Deity. But there came a time when it initiated specific activities. Hermetic tradition holds that this was due to the love vibrations of angelic parents occupying a plane interior to the spiritual. That is, the undifferentiated potential spark of Deity was drawn to the celestial realm and there given birth by beings occupying that realm. At least it is certain that its potentialities were given a definite trend, otherwise there would have been no soul.
As soon as specific activities commenced, there also developed an awareness of these activities. The ego came in contact with its environment, which was that of the celestial realm, and began to have states of consciousness as the result of its experiences. These states of consciousness of the celestial realm developed a soul sphere, a sphere of consciousness organized in celestial substance, about the ego. But the trend of activity given the ego by its divine progenitors was of immensely greater scope than could find expression in the infinitely tenuous realms of celestial life. Its potentialities were directed to penetrating and conquering, that it might develop deific attributes, the lower realms of existence known as the spiritual plane, the astral plane, and the material plane.
Hermetic tradition holds that due to laws governing such processes, the celestial soul sphere—the organizations of consciousness in celestial substance surrounding the ego—is unable to communicate energy to, or receive energy from, substances grosser than that of the highest spiritual realm. Because celestial substance is so much finer than the others, there are insufficient points of contact to transmit motion. A familiar illustration of this principle is the transmission of energy by radio. This energy has not sufficient points of contact with most physical objects to affect them. To cause motion in physical substance requires special conditions. And the ego, so Hermetic tradition holds, is able to impart its energies and directing power to substance coarser than the finest spiritual substance, only under conditions of a certain kind.
These conditions, under which the ego, operating from the seventh state of the spiritual world, is able to contact lower spiritual substance and thus transmit energy to still coarser astral substance and physical substance, are believed to be the polarization of its energies into two separate channels of flow; related to each other as positive and negative, masculine and feminine. The states of consciousness evolved by the ego, then, in the spiritual world, the astral world, and the physical world, represent two separate organizations. Each of these organizations of consciousness is a soul.
We are familiar with somewhat similar organizations in the study of the structure of the atom. Each atom of matter, according to the chemistry of today, is a positive nucleus of energy about which revolves one or more negative charges of energy, or electrons. Each different element has a definite number of electrons revolving around the positive nucleus. In the case of man, according to the Hermetic conception, the constant factors are a single ego, about which revolve two human souls.
The potentialities of the ego, therefore, are directed, due to the trend given it by its angelic parents, to developing these two, male and female, souls.
This development is accomplished through experience. In fact, the only possible way of developing consciousness is through experience. All knowledge, as was illustrated in detail in Chapter 1 (Serial Lesson No. 39), Course I, Laws of Occultism, necessarily rests upon experience. This will the more readily be understood when it is realized that consciousness is a perception of relations, and that apart from an awareness of relations there can be no consciousness. But in order for there to be such awareness, relative conditions must be contacted. These conditions are present only in association with substances. That is, it is possible to evolve consciousness only through contact with substances that in some manner display differences; for only through the awareness which perceives likeness and unlikeness is there consciousness.
To Become Conscious the Ego Must Contact Relative Existence
It will now be perceived that if the ego is to emerge from its state of unconsciousness, in which it has neither wisdom nor feeling, its sole attribute being potentiality, it must contact the plane of relative existence; it must contact the region of substances; it must contact conditions that provide it a basis for comparison. Let us get this clear: Either the ego remains in a state of absolute ignorance and absolute insensibility—a state that is better than complete annihilation only because it contains the potentiality of becoming the other alternative—or it must gain experience through contact with relative conditions. If the ego is to possess the qualities that make for an existence that can be considered worthwhile, it must have experience with various grades, or conditions, of substances.
What, then, is necessary to contact substance, and what is necessary to utilize the perceptions gained by such contact? To contact substance, there must be an attractive power. To utilize impressions gained from substance there must be developed a mechanism of consciousness. The soul, then, develops a dual function: It acquires the power to attract substance, and it evolves the quality of retaining, in specially organized substances, the consciousness of its experiences with other substances.
In order that these experiences should be varied enough to constitute worthwhile knowledge, to constitute a consciousness of some scope, it is obligatory that the ego, through the soul, should contact numerous conditions and states of substance. These are to be found in form. Thus it is that the various forms of life with which we are familiar are all being used as vehicles, by which souls gain experience and so widen their knowledge.
The scope of experience that may be had in association with any single form is limited. Therefore, the soul developed the power of attracting one form and using it as a vehicle of experience for a time, and then attracting another form. Yet before the second form can be utilized as a vehicle, the first form must be left, or repelled. But the universe is not filled with ready-made forms. Consequently, in order that it may have just the form to meet its temporary requirements, the soul developed the power to mold forms.
To state this conception in a somewhat more concrete way, let us think of the ego as the source of energy. The ego has no wisdom, no consciousness, until it has experience; for consciousness is the result of experience. When it does commence to have experiences, these experiences are recorded as states of consciousness; and the sum total of all these states of consciousness comprise the two souls of one ego. That is, according to the Hermetic tradition, each ego, in so far as substance coarser than the finest spiritual substance is concerned, has two different organizations of consciousness, two souls.
But the function of a soul is not merely to record states of consciousness. A state of consciousness is not nothingness, therefore, it must be something. And it can only be an organization of energy in some kind of substance. It may be an organization of energy in astral substance, or if fine enough, in spiritual substance, or if of still greater sublimation, even in substance interior to the spiritual. But it is always an organization of energy, and as such has the power to perform work. That is a function of all energy; to perform work. And the energy of consciousness has the power to attract substance and mold itself a form, or body, that corresponds to that consciousness.
It uses this form to gain still further experiences, and these experiences are recorded and become a portion of the soul. Because it now has a more complex organization than before, it is able, after repelling a form, to attract another that is of greater complexity. Experiences in successive forms enlarging its states of consciousness, which are additional organizations of energy, enable it later to attract a body of still higher organization.
The Soul Has a Dual Function
Thus it is that the soul has a dual function: that of attracting, molding, and repelling the various forms that give it experience; and that of recording these experiences. Consciousness, which records these experiences, implies an adjustment of internal relations to external relations, and this process of continuous adjustment we call conscious life.
But even as there can be no consciousness, knowledge, or wisdom, except that based upon experience with forms; so there can be no love, no attraction, other than through association with form. The former are perceptions of relations; but these relations which are perceived are simply the feelings of various degrees of attraction and repulsion. Without the perception of relations there are no attractions and repulsions. Yet these, when they become sufficiently complex, we term love. As love is dependent upon perceptions of relations, and these are dependent upon experience, it will be seen that apart from experience with relative conditions there can be no love, and no knowledge of love.
There can be no consciousness of attraction, no love, except that developed through experience with forms that have various qualities. Not only then, does the soul exercise the power of attracting and repelling forms, but its ability to attract and repel forms depends upon its experiences in so doing; for each experience adds to the consciousness. It should be plain, therefore, that without the experiences of external life, without the experience of functioning through various forms in some sort of substance, there would be no soul, and there could be neither feeling nor knowledge, neither Love nor Wisdom.
Life, likewise, implies change. We cannot think of life apart from alterations of the internal structure. Yet movement is impossible apart from substance. Consequently, the ego could have no life, other than being merely a potentiality, except through association with form. Without the experience of functioning through various forms in some sort of substance there could be no love, no wisdom, and no Life.
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