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Plane (esotericism)

Planes of existence

Gross and subtle bodies

Theosophy
Rosicrucian

The 7 Worlds & the 7 Cosmic Planes
The Seven-fold constitution of Man
The Ten-fold constitution of Man

Thelema
Body of light | Great Work
Hermeticism
Hermeticism | Cosmogony
Surat Shabda Yoga
Cosmology
Jainism
Jain cosmology
Sufism
Sufi cosmology
Hinduism
Lokas/Talas - Tattvas, Kosas, Upadhis
Buddhism
Buddhist cosmology
Gnosticism
Aeons, Archons
Kabbalah
Atziluth > Beri'ah > Yetzirah > Assiah

Sephirot

Fourth Way

Ray of Creation

In esoteric cosmology, a plane is conceived as a subtle state, level, or region of reality, each plane corresponding to some type, kind, or category of being.

The concept may be found in religious and esoteric teachings—e.g. Vedanta (Advaita Vedanta), Ayyavazhi, shamanism, Hermeticism, Neoplatonism, Gnosticism, Kashmir Shaivism, Sant Mat/Surat Shabd Yoga, Sufism, Druze, Kabbalah, Theosophy, Anthroposophy, Rosicrucianism (Esoteric Christian), Eckankar, Ascended Master Teachings, etc.—which propound the idea of a whole series of subtle planes or worlds or dimensions which, from a center, interpenetrate themselves and the physical planet in which we live, the solar systems, and all the physical structures of the universe. This interpenetration of planes culminates in the universe itself as a physical structured, dynamic and evolutive expression emanated through a series of steadily denser stages, becoming progressively more material and embodied.

The emanation is conceived, according to esoteric teachings, to have originated, at the dawn of the universe's manifestation, in The Supreme Being who sent out—from the unmanifested Absolute beyond comprehension—the dynamic force of creative energy, as sound-vibration ("the Word"), into the abyss of space. Alternatively, it states that this dynamic force is being sent forth, through the ages, framing all things that constitute and inhabit the universe.

Origins of the concept

The concept of planes of existence might be seen as deriving from shamanic and traditional mythological ideas of a vertical world-axis—for example a cosmic mountain, tree, or pole (such as Yggdrasil or Mount Meru)—or a philosophical conception of a Great Chain of Being, arranged metaphorically from God down to inanimate matter.[citation needed]

However the original source of the word plane in this context is the late Neoplatonist Proclus, who refers to to platos, "breadth", which was the equivalent of the 19th-century theosophical use. An example is the phrase en to psychiko platei.[1]

Conceptions in ancient traditions

Directly equivalent concepts in Indian thought are lokas and bhuvanas.[citation needed] In Hindu cosmology, there are many lokas or worlds, that are identified with both traditional cosmology and states of meditation.[citation needed]

Planes of existence may have been referred to by the use of the term corresponding to the word "egg" in English. For example, the Sanskrit term Brahmanda translates to "The entire creation" as opposed to the lazy inference "The Egg of Creation". Certain Puranic accounts posit that the Brahmanda is the superset of a set of fractal smaller Eggs, as is seen in the assertion of the equivalence of the Brahmanda and the Pinda.[2]

The ancient Norse mythology gave the name "Ginnungagap" to the primordial "Chaos", which was bounded upon the northern side by the cold and foggy "Niflheim"—the land of mist and fog—and upon the south side by the fire "Muspelheim".[citation needed] When heat and cold entered into space which was occupied by Chaos or Ginnungagap, they caused the crystallization of the visible universe.[citation needed]

In the medieval West and Middle East, one finds reference to four worlds (olam) in Kabbalah, or five in Sufism (where they are also called tanazzulat; "descents"), and also in Lurianic Kabbalah.[citation needed] In Kabbalah, each of the four or five worlds are themselves divided into ten sefirot, or else divided in other ways.[citation needed]

Esoteric conceptions

The alchemists of the Middle Ages proposed ideas about the constitution of the universe through a hermetic language full of esoteric words, phrases, and signs designed to cloak their meaning from those not initiated into the ways of alchemy.[citation needed] In his "Physica" (1633), the Rosicrucian alchemist Jan Baptist van Helmont, wrote: "Ad huc spiritum incognitum Gas voco" q.e., "This hitherto unknown Spirit I call Gas." Further on in the same work he says, "This vapor which I have called Gas is not far removed from the Chaos the ancients spoke of." Later on, similar ideas would evolve around the idea of 'aether'.

In the late 19th century, the metaphysical term "planes" was popularised by the theosophy of H. P. Blavatsky, who in The Secret Doctrine and other writings propounded a complex cosmology consisting of seven planes and subplanes, based on a synthesis of Eastern and Western ideas. From theosophy the term made its way to later esoteric systems such as that of Alice Bailey, who was very influential in shaping the worldview of the New Age movement.[citation needed] The term is also found in some Eastern teachings that have some Western influence, such as the cosmology of Sri Aurobindo[citation needed] and some of the later Sant Mat,[citation needed] and also in some descriptions of Buddhist cosmology.[citation needed] The teachings of Surat Shabd Yoga also include several planes of the creation within both the macrocosm and microcosm, including the Bramanda egg contained within the Sach Khand egg.[citation needed] Max Theon used the word "States" (French Etat) rather than "Planes", in his cosmic philosophy, but the meaning is the same.[citation needed]

The planes in Theosophy were further systematized in the writings of C.W. Leadbeater[citation needed] and Annie Besant.[citation needed]

In the early 20th century, Max Heindel presented in The Rosicrucian Cosmo-Conception a cosmology related to the scheme of evolution in general and the evolution of the Solar System and the Earth in particular, according to the Rosicrucians.[citation needed] He establishes, through the conceptions presented, a bridge between modern science (currently starting research into the subtler etheric plane of existence behind the physical) and religion, in order that this last one may be able to address man's inner questions raised by scientific advancement.[citation needed]

Emanation vs. Big Bang

Most cosmologists today believe that the universe expanded from a singularity approximately 13.8 billion years ago[3] in a 'smeared-out singularity' called the Big Bang, meaning that space itself came into being at the moment of the big bang and has expanded ever since, creating and carrying the galaxies with it.[4]

However, in esoteric cosmology expansion refers to the emanation or unfolding of steadily denser planes or spheres from the spiritual summit, what Greek philosophy called The One, until the lowest and most material world is reached.[citation needed]

According to Rosicrucians, another difference is that there is no such thing as empty or void space.

"The space is Spirit in its attenuated form; while matter is crystallized space or Spirit. Spirit in manifestation is dual, that which we see as Form is the negative manifestation of Spirit--crystallized and inert. The positive pole of Spirit manifests as Life, galvanizing the negative Form into action, but both Life and Form originated in Spirit, Space, Chaos! On the other hand, Chaos is not a state which has existed in the past and has now entirely disappeared. It is all around us at the present moment. Were it not that old forms--having outlived their usefulness--are constantly being resolved back into that Chaos, which is also as constantly giving birth to new forms, there could be no progress; the work of evolution would cease and stagnation would prevent the possibility of advancement."[5]

The planes

In occult teachings and as held by psychics and other esoteric authors there are seven planes of existence.[citation needed]

Most occult and esoteric teachings are in agreement that seven planes of existence exist; however, many different occult and metaphysical schools label the planes of existence with different terminology.

Physical plane

The physical plane, physical Word, or physical universe, in emanationist metaphysics taught in Neoplatonism, Hermeticism, Hinduism and Theosophy, refers to the visible reality of space and time, energy and matter: the physical universe in Occultism and esoteric cosmology is the lowest or densest of a series of planes of existence.[citation needed]

According to Theosophists, after the material plane is the etheric plane and both of these planes are connected to make up the first (physical) plane.[6] Theosophy also teaches that when the physical body dies the etheric body is left behind and the soul forms into an astral body on the astral plane.[7]

The psychical researcher F. W. H. Myers proposed the existence of a “metetherial world”, which he wrote to be a world of images lying beyond the physical world. He wrote that apparitions have a real existence in the metetherial world which he described as a dream-like world.[8]

Kamasic or Astral plane

 
The astral spheres were thought to be planes of angelic existence intermediate between Earth and heaven.

The astral plane, also called the astral world, is where consciousness goes after physical death. According to occult philosophy, all people possess an astral body. The astral plane (also known as the astral world) was postulated by classical (particularly neoplatonic), medieval, oriental, and esoteric philosophies and mystery religions.[9] It is the world of the planetary spheres, crossed by the soul in its astral body on the way to being born and after death, and generally said to be populated by angels, spirits, or other non-physical beings.[10] In the late 19th and early 20th century the term was popularised by Theosophy and neo-Rosicrucianism.

Throughout the Renaissance, philosophers, Paracelsians, Rosicrucians and alchemists continued to discuss the nature of the astral world intermediate between Earth and the divine. The Barzakh, olam mithal or intermediate world in Islam and the "World of Yetzirah" in Lurianic Kabbalah are related concepts.[citation needed]

According to occult teachings the astral plane can be visited consciously through astral projection, meditation, and mantra, near-death experience, lucid dreaming, or other means. Individuals that are trained in the use of the astral vehicle can separate their consciousness in the astral vehicle from the physical body at will.[11]

The Theosophist author Curuppumullage Jinarajadasa wrote: "When a person dies, they become fully conscious in the astral body. After a certain time, the astral body disintegrates, and the person then becomes conscious on the mental plane."[12]

Occultist George Arundale wrote:

In the astral world exist temporarily all those physical entities, men and animals, for whom sleep involves a separation of the physical body for a time from the higher bodies. While we "sleep", we live in our astral bodies, either fully conscious and active, or partly conscious and semi-dormant, as the case may be, according to our evolutionary growth; when we "wake", the physical and the higher bodies are interlocked again, and we cease to be inhabitants of the astral world.” [13]

Some writers have asserted the astral plane can be reached by dreaming. Sylvan Muldoon and psychical researcher Hereward Carrington in their book The Projection of the Astral Body (1929) wrote:

"When you are dreaming you are not really in the same world as when you are conscious – in the physical – although the two worlds merge into one another. While dreaming, you really are in the astral plane, and usually your astral body is in the zone of quietude."[14]

Astral projection author Robert Bruce describes the astral as seven planes that take the form of planar surfaces when approached from a distance, separated by immense coloured "buffer zones". These planes are endlessly repeating ruled Cartesian coordinate system grids, tiled with a single signature pattern that is different for each plane. Higher planes have bright, colourful patterns, whereas lower planes appear far duller. Every detail of these patterns acts as a consistent portal to a different kingdom inside the plane, which itself comprises many separate realms. Bruce notes that the astral may also be entered by means of long tubes that bear visual similarity to these planes, and conjectures that the grids and tubes are in fact the same structures approached from a different perceptual angle.

In his book Autobiography of a Yogi, Paramhansa Yogananda provides details about the astral planes learned from his resurrected guru Swami Sri Yukteswar Giri.[15] Yogananda reveals that nearly all individuals enter the astral planes after death. There they work out the seeds of past karma through astral incarnations, or (if their karma requires) they return to earthly incarnations for further refinement. Once an individual has attained the meditative state of nirvikalpa samadhi in an earthy or astral incarnation, the soul may progress upward to the "illumined astral planet" of Hiranyaloka.[15] After this transitional stage, the soul may then move upward to the more subtle causal spheres where many incarnations allow them to further refine until final unification.[16]

Manasic or Mental plane

The mental plane is the third lowest plane according to Theosophy. The mental plane is divided into seven sub-planes.[citation needed]

Charles Webster Leadbeater wrote:

In the mental world one formulates a thought and it is instantly transmitted to the mind of another without any expression in the form of words. Therefore on that plane language does not matter in the least; but helpers working in the astral world, who have not yet the power to use the mental vehicle.[17]

Annie Besant wrote that "The mental plane, as its name implies, is that which belongs to consciousness working as thought; not of the mind as it works through the brain, but as it works through its own world, unencumbered with physical spirit-matter."[18]

A detailed description of the mental plane, along with the mental body, is provided by Arthur E. Powell, who has compiled information in the works of Besant and Leadbeater in a series of books on each of the subtle bodies.

According to Hindu occultism the mental plane consists of two divisions, the lower division is known as heaven (swarglok) and the upper division is known as the causal plane (maharlok).[19]

Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami wrote:

The causal plane is the world of light and blessedness, the highest of heavenly regions, extolled in the scriptures of all faiths. It is the foundation of existence, the source of visions, the point of conception, the apex of creation. The causal plane is the abode of Lord Siva and his entourage of Mahadevas and other highly evolved souls who exist in their own self-effulgent form—radiant bodies of centillions of quantum light particles.[20]

Sri Aurobindo developed a very different concept of the mental plane, through his own synthesis of Vedanta (including the Taittiriya Upanishad), Tantra, Theosophy, and Max Théon ideas (which he received via The Mother, who was Theon's student in occultism for two years). In this cosmology, there are seven cosmic planes, three lower, corresponding to relative existence (the Physical, Vital, and Mental), and four higher, representing infinite divine reality (Life Divine bk. 1 ch. 27) The Aurobindonian Mind or Mental Plane constitutes a large zone of being from the mental vital to the overmental divine region (Letters on Yoga, Jyoti and Prem Sobel 1984), but as with the later Theosophical concept it constitutes an objective reality of sheer mind or thought.[citation needed]

Buddhic or Causal or Soul plane

The buddhic plane is described as a realm of pure consciousness.[21] According to Theosophy the buddhic plane exists to develop buddhic consciousness which means to become unselfish and solve any problems with the ego.[22] Charles Leadbeater wrote that in the buddhic plane man casts off the delusion of the self and enters a realization of unity.[23]

Annie Besant defined the buddhic plane as

Persistent, conscious, spiritual awareness. This is the full consciousness of the buddhic or intuitional level. This is the perceptive consciousness which is the outstanding characteristic of the Hierarchy. The life focus of the man shifts to the buddhic plane. This is the fourth or middle state of consciousness.[24]

Sri Aurobindo calls the level above the mental plane the supermind.[25]

Atmic or Spiritual plane or planes

Spiritual is the name for a plane (in theories of four planes) or more than one (such as four in theory of seven planes). George Winslow Plummer wrote that the spiritual plane is split into many sub-planes and that on these planes live spiritual being who are more advanced in development and status than ordinary man.[26] According to metaphysical teachings the goal of the spiritual plane is to gain spiritual knowledge and experience.[27] 1800s Theosophy translated four higher Hindu lokas as "spiritual planes" and various later Theosophy gave them several sets of specific names (multiple English, Greek, Sanskrit) including Buddhic/Soul (individual spirit) plane and each in the rest of this section.

Anupapaduka or Monadic plane

The Anupapaduka or Monadic plane is where Monad or Holy Spirit or Oversoul is said to exist. In Theosophy, the Monadic Plane is the plane in which the monad (also called the oversoul) is said to exist.[citation needed] The term 'monad' is from a Greek word (μονᾰ́ς), which means 'one', 'unit', and was used by ancient Greek philosophers such as Pythagoras[how?], Plato[how?], Hermes Trismegistus[how?][citation needed]. According to Alan Schneider[who?], the Monadic Plane is the sixth plane of ascension, and is analogous to the sixth chakra, ajna, and the hidden sephirah of the Kabbalistic Tree of Life: daath. (Da'ath/da'at represents the 'reflection of' (the 'inner dimension' of) the infinity of kether). It would appear, though it is not certain by any means, that it is possible for a human to attain this spiritual realm after ascending through lower, possibly inferior, planes of existence (the higher consciousness has also to descend into mind, into life, into matter), the physical plane being the lowest of all. It is rare occurrence indeed to meet someone on the monadic plane, and thus of great spiritual significance.[28]

Adi or Divine or Logoic plane

The Adi or Divine or logoic plane is highest (in theory of seven planes) and has been described as a plane of total oneness, the "I AM Presence", The Divine (Logos).[citation needed]

According to some occult teachings, all souls are born on the divine plane and then descend down through the lower planes; however souls will work their way back to the divine plane.[29][30] On the divine plane souls can be opened to conscious communication with the sphere of the divine known as the Absolute and receive knowledge about the nature of reality.[31]Joshua David Stone describes the plane as complete unity with God.[32]

Rosicrucianism teaches that the divine plane is where Jesus dwelt in Christ consciousness.[33]

31 planes

In Buddhism, the world is made up of 31 planes of existence that one can be reborn into, separated into 3 realms.[citation needed]

The Summerland

The Summerland is the name given by Theosophists, Spiritualists, Wiccans, and some earth-based contemporary pagan religions to their conceptualization of existence on a plane in an afterlife.[34]

Emanuel Swedenborg (1688–1772) inspired Andrew Jackson Davis (1826–1910), in his major work The Great Harmonia to say that Summerland is the pinnacle of spiritual achievement in the afterlife; that is, it is the highest level, or sphere, of the afterlife we can hope to enter. The common portrayal of the Summerland is as a place of rest for souls after or between their earthly incarnations. Some believe spirits will stay in the Summerland for an eternal afterlife, though others believe after an amount of time some spirits will reincarnate. The Summerland is also envisioned as a place for recollection and reunion with deceased loved ones.[35]

As the name suggests, it is often imagined as a place of beauty and peace, where everything people hold close to their hearts is preserved in its fullest beauty for eternity. It is envisioned as containing wide (possibly eternal) fields of rolling green hills and lush grass. In many ways, this ideology is similar to the Welsh view of Annwn as an afterlife realm. The Summerland is also viewed as the place where one goes in the afterlife in traditions of Spiritualism and Theosophy, which is where Wicca got the term.[citation needed]

In Theosophy, the term "Summerland" is used without the definite article "the". Summerland, also called the Astral plane Heaven, is depicted as where souls who have been good in their previous lives go between incarnations. Those who have been bad go to Hell, which is believed to be located below the surface of the Earth and is on the astral plane and is composed of the densest astral matter; the Spiritual Hierarchy functioning within Earth functions on the etheric plane below the surface of the Earth.[36]

It is believed by Theosophists that most people (those at high levels of initiation) go to a specific Summerland that is set up for people of each religion. For example, Christians go to a Christian heaven, Jews go to a Jewish heaven, Muslims go to a Muslim heaven, Hindus goes to a Hindu heaven, Theosophists go to a Theosophical heaven, and so forth, each heaven being like that described in the scriptures of that religion. There is also a generic Summerland for those who were atheists or agnostics in their previous lives. People who belong to religions that don't believe in reincarnation are surprised to find out when they get to heaven that they will have to reincarnate again within a few dozen to a few hundred years. Each heaven is believed to be an extensive structure composed of astral matter located on the astral plane about three or four miles (5–6 km) above the surface of Earth, above that part of the world where the particular religion that the heaven is meant for is most predominant.

Theosophists also believe there is another higher level of heaven called Devachan, also called the Mental plane Heaven, which some but not all souls reach between incarnations—only those souls that are more highly developed spiritually reach this level, those souls that are at the first, second, and third levels of initiation. Devachan is several miles (around 10 km) higher above the surface of Earth than Summerland.[36]

The final permanent eternal afterlife heaven to which Theosophists believe most people will go millions or billions of years in the future, after our cycle of reincarnations in this Round is over.[37] In order to go to Nirvana, it is necessary to have attained the fourth level of initiation or higher, meaning one is an arhat and thus no longer needs to reincarnate.

Inhabitants of the various planes

Occult writers such as Geoffrey Hodson, Mellie Uyldert, and Dora van Gelder had attempted to classify different spiritual beings into a hierarchy based on their assumed place and function on the planes of existence.[citation needed]

Charles Webster Leadbeater fundamentally described and incorporated his comprehension of intangible beings for Theosophy. Along with him there are various planes intertwined with the quotidian human world and are all inhabited by multitudes of entities. Each plane is purported as composed of discrete density of astral or ethereal matter and frequently the denizens of a plane have no discernment of other ones. Other Theosophical writers such as Alice Bailey, a contemporary of Leadbeater, also gave continuousness to Theosophical concepts of ethereal beings and her works had a great impact over New Age movement.[38][39] She puts the nature spirits and devas as ethereal beings immersed in macro divisions of an interwoven threefold universe, usually they belong to the etheric, astral, or mental planes. The ethereal entities of the four kingdoms, Earth, Air, Fire, and Water, are forces of nature.

The Dutch writer and clairvoyant Mellie Uyldert characterized the semblance and behavior of ethereal entities on the etheric plane, which, she said, hover above plants and transfer energy for vitalizing the plant, then nourishing themselves on rays of sunlight. She depicted them as asexual gender, and composed of etheric matter. They fly three meters over the ground, some have wings like butterflies while others only have a small face and an aura waving graciously. Some are huge while others may have the size of one inch.[40]

See also

References

  1. ^ Dodds, cited in Poortman, 1978, vol II, p. 54
  2. ^ Kak, Subhash: The Architecture of Knowledge
  3. ^ "Cosmic Detectives". The European Space Agency (ESA). 2013-04-02. Retrieved 2013-04-15.
  4. ^ Wright, E.L. (9 May 2009). "What is the evidence for the Big Bang?". Frequently Asked Questions in Cosmology. UCLA, Division of Astronomy and Astrophysics. Retrieved 2009-10-16.
  5. ^ Heindel, Max, The Rosicrucian Cosmo-Conception (Chapter XI: The Genesis and Evolution of our Solar System), 1909, ISBN 0-911274-34-0
  6. ^ John Friedlander, Gloria Hemsher Psychic Psychology: Energy Skills for Life and Relationships 2011, p. 196
  7. ^ Norman C. McClelland Encyclopedia of Reincarnation and Karma 2010, p. 32
  8. ^ Myers, F. H. W. (1903). Human personality and its survival of death. London: Longmans.
  9. ^ G. R. S. Mead, The Doctrine of the Subtle Body in Western Tradition, Watkins 1919.
  10. ^ Plato, The Republic, trans. Desmond Lee, Harmondsworth.
  11. ^ J. H. Brennan, Astral Doorways, Thoth Publications 1996 ISBN 978-1-870450-21-8
  12. ^ First Principles of Theosophy, pp. 139–140
  13. ^ Curuppumullagē Jinarājadāsa First Principles of Theosophy Theosophical Publishing House, 1922, p. 93
  14. ^ Sylvan J. Muldoon and Hereward Carrington Projection of the Astral Body Kessinger reprint edition, 2003, p. 97
  15. ^ a b Paramhansa Yogananda (1946). Autobiography of a Yogi (Google books). The Philosophical Library, Inc. ISBN 9788120725249. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
  16. ^ Paramhansa Yogananda (1946). "Autobiography of a Yogi". Retrieved 20 July 2011.
  17. ^ Charles Leadbeater, The Inner Life, p. 264
  18. ^ Annie Besant The Ancient Wisdom: An Outline of Theosophical Teachings 1939, Chapter IV
  19. ^ Ravindra Kumar, Jytte Larsen The Kundalini book of living and dying: gateways to a higher consciousness 2004, p. 39
  20. ^ Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami, Dancing With Siva : Hinduism's Contemporary Catechism, 1996, xxxv, 1008 pp, ill., Sixth Edition, First Printing, 2003 Himalayan Academy online
  21. ^ Joshua David Stone, Janna Shelley A Beginner's Guide to the Path of Ascension p. 11
  22. ^ Charles Leadbeater Inner Life Kessinger reprint edition, 2003, p.226
  23. ^ Charles Leadbeater The Masters and the Path 2007, p. 180
  24. ^ Alice Bailey The Rays and the Initiations 1971, p. 463
  25. ^ Madis Senner The Way Home: Making Heaven on Earth 2009, p. 239
  26. ^ George Winslow Plummer Mercury: An Official Organ of the Societas Rosicruciana in America 1916-1921 Kessinger reprint edition, 1998, p. 106
  27. ^ Raymond T. Kranyak Metaphysical Secrets for Health and Success in Life 2009, p. 12
  28. ^ "The Monadic Plane". www.searchlightforyou.com. Retrieved 2019-04-28.
  29. ^ M. C. Poinsot Complete Book of the Occult and Fortune Telling Kessinger reprint edition, 2003, p. 472
  30. ^ The encyclopedia of occult sciences, R. M. McBride and company, 1939, p. 472
  31. ^ John Hamlin Dewey New Testament of Occultism Kessinger reprint edition, 2003, p. 105
  32. ^ Joshua David Stone, Janna Shelley Parker A Beginner's Guide to the Path of Ascension 1998, p. 13
  33. ^ The Rosicrucian Digest September 1932, p. 288
  34. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-11-09. Retrieved 2012-05-11.
  35. ^ Life in the Spirit World: Part One General Introduction By Rev. Simeon Stefanidakis
  36. ^ a b Leadbeater, C.W A Textbook of Theosophy 1912
  37. ^ Various Levels of the Afterlife in Theosophy: 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine
  38. ^ Gary Laderman, Luis D. León; Religion and American cultures: an encyclopedia of traditions, diversity, and popular expressions - Volume 3, 2003; p. 236. ISBN 1-57607-238-X.
  39. ^ Michael York, The emerging network: a sociology of the New Age and neo-pagan movements, 1995; p. 66. ISBN 0-8476-8001-0.
  40. ^ Mellie Uyldert The psychic garden: Plants and their esoteric relationship with man Thorsons, 1980 ISBN 0-7225-0548-5

Further reading

External links

  • Vedic cosmology - planetarium
  • The Thirty-one Planes of Existence, according to Buddhist cosmology
  • “The Grand Scheme of All Creation”, part of the Sant Ajaib Singh Ji Memorial Site (a small Radhasoami cosmological diagram)
  • The Creation According to Sant Mat
  • The Inner Planes of Creation - a Surat Shabd Yoga/Sant Mat diagram
  • The Material World a Reverse Reflection of the Spiritual Worlds according to Rosicrucian cosmology:
    • The Seven Worlds
    • The Supreme Being, The Cosmic Planes and God

plane, esotericism, planes, existencegross, subtle, bodiestheosophyfull, list1, spiritual, divine, logoic, mahaparanirvanic, plane, divine, spirit, word, first, logos, theon, pranava, parabrahman, paramatman2, spiritual, monadic, paranirvanic, plane, anupapadu. Planes of existenceGross and subtle bodiesTheosophyFull list1 Spiritual Divine Logoic Mahaparanirvanic plane Adi Divine Spirit Word First Logos Theon Pranava Parabrahman paramatman2 Spiritual Monadic Paranirvanic plane Anupapaduka Holy Spirit Word Second Logos Monad Nirguna Brahman oversoul monad jivatman3 Spiritual Pneuma Nirvanic Atmic plane Holy Spirit Word Third Logos Pneuma Saguna Brahman individual spirit pneuma atman4 Spiritual Soul Causal Intuitional Noetic Buddhic plane soul nous buddhi causal body5 Mental Manasic Causal Intellectual plane mind manas phren mental amp causal amp higher mental bodies projection out of body experience OBE 6 Astral Emotional plane ghost thymos kama emotional astral body projection OBE7 Material Ethereal plane material soma sthula amp life ethereal phasma linga vital bodies shariras aura prana projection OBERosicrucianThe 7 Worlds amp the 7 Cosmic PlanesThe Seven fold constitution of ManThe Ten fold constitution of ManThelemaBody of light Great WorkHermeticismHermeticism CosmogonySurat Shabda YogaCosmologyJainismJain cosmologySufismSufi cosmologyHinduismLokas Talas Tattvas Kosas UpadhisBuddhismBuddhist cosmologyGnosticismAeons ArchonsKabbalahAtziluth gt Beri ah gt Yetzirah gt AssiahSephirotFourth WayRay of CreationThis box viewtalkeditThis article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Plane esotericism news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may not adequately summarize its contents To comply with Wikipedia s lead section guidelines please consider modifying the lead to provide an accessible overview of the article s key points in such a way that it can stand on its own as a concise version of the article August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In esoteric cosmology a plane is conceived as a subtle state level or region of reality each plane corresponding to some type kind or category of being The concept may be found in religious and esoteric teachings e g Vedanta Advaita Vedanta Ayyavazhi shamanism Hermeticism Neoplatonism Gnosticism Kashmir Shaivism Sant Mat Surat Shabd Yoga Sufism Druze Kabbalah Theosophy Anthroposophy Rosicrucianism Esoteric Christian Eckankar Ascended Master Teachings etc which propound the idea of a whole series of subtle planes or worlds or dimensions which from a center interpenetrate themselves and the physical planet in which we live the solar systems and all the physical structures of the universe This interpenetration of planes culminates in the universe itself as a physical structured dynamic and evolutive expression emanated through a series of steadily denser stages becoming progressively more material and embodied The emanation is conceived according to esoteric teachings to have originated at the dawn of the universe s manifestation in The Supreme Being who sent out from the unmanifested Absolute beyond comprehension the dynamic force of creative energy as sound vibration the Word into the abyss of space Alternatively it states that this dynamic force is being sent forth through the ages framing all things that constitute and inhabit the universe Contents 1 Origins of the concept 1 1 Conceptions in ancient traditions 2 Esoteric conceptions 3 Emanation vs Big Bang 4 The planes 4 1 Physical plane 4 2 Kamasic or Astral plane 4 3 Manasic or Mental plane 4 4 Buddhic or Causal or Soul plane 4 5 Atmic or Spiritual plane or planes 4 6 Anupapaduka or Monadic plane 4 7 Adi or Divine or Logoic plane 5 31 planes 6 The Summerland 7 Inhabitants of the various planes 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksOrigins of the concept EditThe concept of planes of existence might be seen as deriving from shamanic and traditional mythological ideas of a vertical world axis for example a cosmic mountain tree or pole such as Yggdrasil or Mount Meru or a philosophical conception of a Great Chain of Being arranged metaphorically from God down to inanimate matter citation needed However the original source of the word plane in this context is the late Neoplatonist Proclus who refers to to platos breadth which was the equivalent of the 19th century theosophical use An example is the phrase en to psychiko platei 1 Conceptions in ancient traditions Edit Directly equivalent concepts in Indian thought are lokas and bhuvanas citation needed In Hindu cosmology there are many lokas or worlds that are identified with both traditional cosmology and states of meditation citation needed Planes of existence may have been referred to by the use of the term corresponding to the word egg in English For example the Sanskrit term Brahmanda translates to The entire creation as opposed to the lazy inference The Egg of Creation Certain Puranic accounts posit that the Brahmanda is the superset of a set of fractal smaller Eggs as is seen in the assertion of the equivalence of the Brahmanda and the Pinda 2 The ancient Norse mythology gave the name Ginnungagap to the primordial Chaos which was bounded upon the northern side by the cold and foggy Niflheim the land of mist and fog and upon the south side by the fire Muspelheim citation needed When heat and cold entered into space which was occupied by Chaos or Ginnungagap they caused the crystallization of the visible universe citation needed In the medieval West and Middle East one finds reference to four worlds olam in Kabbalah or five in Sufism where they are also called tanazzulat descents and also in Lurianic Kabbalah citation needed In Kabbalah each of the four or five worlds are themselves divided into ten sefirot or else divided in other ways citation needed Esoteric conceptions EditThe alchemists of the Middle Ages proposed ideas about the constitution of the universe through a hermetic language full of esoteric words phrases and signs designed to cloak their meaning from those not initiated into the ways of alchemy citation needed In his Physica 1633 the Rosicrucian alchemist Jan Baptist van Helmont wrote Ad huc spiritum incognitum Gas voco q e This hitherto unknown Spirit I call Gas Further on in the same work he says This vapor which I have called Gas is not far removed from the Chaos the ancients spoke of Later on similar ideas would evolve around the idea of aether In the late 19th century the metaphysical term planes was popularised by the theosophy of H P Blavatsky who in The Secret Doctrine and other writings propounded a complex cosmology consisting of seven planes and subplanes based on a synthesis of Eastern and Western ideas From theosophy the term made its way to later esoteric systems such as that of Alice Bailey who was very influential in shaping the worldview of the New Age movement citation needed The term is also found in some Eastern teachings that have some Western influence such as the cosmology of Sri Aurobindo citation needed and some of the later Sant Mat citation needed and also in some descriptions of Buddhist cosmology citation needed The teachings of Surat Shabd Yoga also include several planes of the creation within both the macrocosm and microcosm including the Bramanda egg contained within the Sach Khand egg citation needed Max Theon used the word States French Etat rather than Planes in his cosmic philosophy but the meaning is the same citation needed The planes in Theosophy were further systematized in the writings of C W Leadbeater citation needed and Annie Besant citation needed In the early 20th century Max Heindel presented in The Rosicrucian Cosmo Conception a cosmology related to the scheme of evolution in general and the evolution of the Solar System and the Earth in particular according to the Rosicrucians citation needed He establishes through the conceptions presented a bridge between modern science currently starting research into the subtler etheric plane of existence behind the physical and religion in order that this last one may be able to address man s inner questions raised by scientific advancement citation needed Emanation vs Big Bang EditFurther information Emanationism Most cosmologists today believe that the universe expanded from a singularity approximately 13 8 billion years ago 3 in a smeared out singularity called the Big Bang meaning that space itself came into being at the moment of the big bang and has expanded ever since creating and carrying the galaxies with it 4 However in esoteric cosmology expansion refers to the emanation or unfolding of steadily denser planes or spheres from the spiritual summit what Greek philosophy called The One until the lowest and most material world is reached citation needed According to Rosicrucians another difference is that there is no such thing as empty or void space The space is Spirit in its attenuated form while matter is crystallized space or Spirit Spirit in manifestation is dual that which we see as Form is the negative manifestation of Spirit crystallized and inert The positive pole of Spirit manifests as Life galvanizing the negative Form into action but both Life and Form originated in Spirit Space Chaos On the other hand Chaos is not a state which has existed in the past and has now entirely disappeared It is all around us at the present moment Were it not that old forms having outlived their usefulness are constantly being resolved back into that Chaos which is also as constantly giving birth to new forms there could be no progress the work of evolution would cease and stagnation would prevent the possibility of advancement 5 The planes EditIn occult teachings and as held by psychics and other esoteric authors there are seven planes of existence citation needed Most occult and esoteric teachings are in agreement that seven planes of existence exist however many different occult and metaphysical schools label the planes of existence with different terminology Physical plane Edit The physical plane physical Word or physical universe in emanationist metaphysics taught in Neoplatonism Hermeticism Hinduism and Theosophy refers to the visible reality of space and time energy and matter the physical universe in Occultism and esoteric cosmology is the lowest or densest of a series of planes of existence citation needed According to Theosophists after the material plane is the etheric plane and both of these planes are connected to make up the first physical plane 6 Theosophy also teaches that when the physical body dies the etheric body is left behind and the soul forms into an astral body on the astral plane 7 The psychical researcher F W H Myers proposed the existence of a metetherial world which he wrote to be a world of images lying beyond the physical world He wrote that apparitions have a real existence in the metetherial world which he described as a dream like world 8 Kamasic or Astral plane Edit Main article Astral plane The astral spheres were thought to be planes of angelic existence intermediate between Earth and heaven The astral plane also called the astral world is where consciousness goes after physical death According to occult philosophy all people possess an astral body The astral plane also known as the astral world was postulated by classical particularly neoplatonic medieval oriental and esoteric philosophies and mystery religions 9 It is the world of the planetary spheres crossed by the soul in its astral body on the way to being born and after death and generally said to be populated by angels spirits or other non physical beings 10 In the late 19th and early 20th century the term was popularised by Theosophy and neo Rosicrucianism Throughout the Renaissance philosophers Paracelsians Rosicrucians and alchemists continued to discuss the nature of the astral world intermediate between Earth and the divine The Barzakh olam mithal or intermediate world in Islam and the World of Yetzirah in Lurianic Kabbalah are related concepts citation needed According to occult teachings the astral plane can be visited consciously through astral projection meditation and mantra near death experience lucid dreaming or other means Individuals that are trained in the use of the astral vehicle can separate their consciousness in the astral vehicle from the physical body at will 11 The Theosophist author Curuppumullage Jinarajadasa wrote When a person dies they become fully conscious in the astral body After a certain time the astral body disintegrates and the person then becomes conscious on the mental plane 12 Occultist George Arundale wrote In the astral world exist temporarily all those physical entities men and animals for whom sleep involves a separation of the physical body for a time from the higher bodies While we sleep we live in our astral bodies either fully conscious and active or partly conscious and semi dormant as the case may be according to our evolutionary growth when we wake the physical and the higher bodies are interlocked again and we cease to be inhabitants of the astral world 13 Some writers have asserted the astral plane can be reached by dreaming Sylvan Muldoon and psychical researcher Hereward Carrington in their book The Projection of the Astral Body 1929 wrote When you are dreaming you are not really in the same world as when you are conscious in the physical although the two worlds merge into one another While dreaming you really are in the astral plane and usually your astral body is in the zone of quietude 14 Astral projection author Robert Bruce describes the astral as seven planes that take the form of planar surfaces when approached from a distance separated by immense coloured buffer zones These planes are endlessly repeating ruled Cartesian coordinate system grids tiled with a single signature pattern that is different for each plane Higher planes have bright colourful patterns whereas lower planes appear far duller Every detail of these patterns acts as a consistent portal to a different kingdom inside the plane which itself comprises many separate realms Bruce notes that the astral may also be entered by means of long tubes that bear visual similarity to these planes and conjectures that the grids and tubes are in fact the same structures approached from a different perceptual angle In his book Autobiography of a Yogi Paramhansa Yogananda provides details about the astral planes learned from his resurrected guru Swami Sri Yukteswar Giri 15 Yogananda reveals that nearly all individuals enter the astral planes after death There they work out the seeds of past karma through astral incarnations or if their karma requires they return to earthly incarnations for further refinement Once an individual has attained the meditative state of nirvikalpa samadhi in an earthy or astral incarnation the soul may progress upward to the illumined astral planet of Hiranyaloka 15 After this transitional stage the soul may then move upward to the more subtle causal spheres where many incarnations allow them to further refine until final unification 16 Manasic or Mental plane Edit The mental plane is the third lowest plane according to Theosophy The mental plane is divided into seven sub planes citation needed Charles Webster Leadbeater wrote In the mental world one formulates a thought and it is instantly transmitted to the mind of another without any expression in the form of words Therefore on that plane language does not matter in the least but helpers working in the astral world who have not yet the power to use the mental vehicle 17 Annie Besant wrote that The mental plane as its name implies is that which belongs to consciousness working as thought not of the mind as it works through the brain but as it works through its own world unencumbered with physical spirit matter 18 A detailed description of the mental plane along with the mental body is provided by Arthur E Powell who has compiled information in the works of Besant and Leadbeater in a series of books on each of the subtle bodies According to Hindu occultism the mental plane consists of two divisions the lower division is known as heaven swarglok and the upper division is known as the causal plane maharlok 19 Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami wrote The causal plane is the world of light and blessedness the highest of heavenly regions extolled in the scriptures of all faiths It is the foundation of existence the source of visions the point of conception the apex of creation The causal plane is the abode of Lord Siva and his entourage of Mahadevas and other highly evolved souls who exist in their own self effulgent form radiant bodies of centillions of quantum light particles 20 Sri Aurobindo developed a very different concept of the mental plane through his own synthesis of Vedanta including the Taittiriya Upanishad Tantra Theosophy and Max Theon ideas which he received via The Mother who was Theon s student in occultism for two years In this cosmology there are seven cosmic planes three lower corresponding to relative existence the Physical Vital and Mental and four higher representing infinite divine reality Life Divine bk 1 ch 27 The Aurobindonian Mind or Mental Plane constitutes a large zone of being from the mental vital to the overmental divine region Letters on Yoga Jyoti and Prem Sobel 1984 but as with the later Theosophical concept it constitutes an objective reality of sheer mind or thought citation needed Buddhic or Causal or Soul plane Edit The buddhic plane is described as a realm of pure consciousness 21 According to Theosophy the buddhic plane exists to develop buddhic consciousness which means to become unselfish and solve any problems with the ego 22 Charles Leadbeater wrote that in the buddhic plane man casts off the delusion of the self and enters a realization of unity 23 Annie Besant defined the buddhic plane asPersistent conscious spiritual awareness This is the full consciousness of the buddhic or intuitional level This is the perceptive consciousness which is the outstanding characteristic of the Hierarchy The life focus of the man shifts to the buddhic plane This is the fourth or middle state of consciousness 24 Sri Aurobindo calls the level above the mental plane the supermind 25 Atmic or Spiritual plane or planes Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it January 2013 Spiritual is the name for a plane in theories of four planes or more than one such as four in theory of seven planes George Winslow Plummer wrote that the spiritual plane is split into many sub planes and that on these planes live spiritual being who are more advanced in development and status than ordinary man 26 According to metaphysical teachings the goal of the spiritual plane is to gain spiritual knowledge and experience 27 1800s Theosophy translated four higher Hindu lokas as spiritual planes and various later Theosophy gave them several sets of specific names multiple English Greek Sanskrit including Buddhic Soul individual spirit plane and each in the rest of this section Anupapaduka or Monadic plane Edit The Anupapaduka or Monadic plane is where Monad or Holy Spirit or Oversoul is said to exist In Theosophy the Monadic Plane is the plane in which the monad also called the oversoul is said to exist citation needed The term monad is from a Greek word monᾰ s which means one unit and was used by ancient Greek philosophers such as Pythagoras how Plato how Hermes Trismegistus how citation needed According to Alan Schneider who the Monadic Plane is the sixth plane of ascension and is analogous to the sixth chakra ajna and the hidden sephirah of the Kabbalistic Tree of Life daath Da ath da at represents the reflection of the inner dimension of the infinity of kether It would appear though it is not certain by any means that it is possible for a human to attain this spiritual realm after ascending through lower possibly inferior planes of existence the higher consciousness has also to descend into mind into life into matter the physical plane being the lowest of all It is rare occurrence indeed to meet someone on the monadic plane and thus of great spiritual significance 28 Adi or Divine or Logoic plane Edit The Adi or Divine or logoic plane is highest in theory of seven planes and has been described as a plane of total oneness the I AM Presence The Divine Logos citation needed According to some occult teachings all souls are born on the divine plane and then descend down through the lower planes however souls will work their way back to the divine plane 29 30 On the divine plane souls can be opened to conscious communication with the sphere of the divine known as the Absolute and receive knowledge about the nature of reality 31 Joshua David Stone describes the plane as complete unity with God 32 Rosicrucianism teaches that the divine plane is where Jesus dwelt in Christ consciousness 33 31 planes EditMain article Buddhist cosmology In Buddhism the world is made up of 31 planes of existence that one can be reborn into separated into 3 realms citation needed The Summerland Edit Summerlands redirects here For other uses see Summerland disambiguation Main article The Summerland The Summerland is the name given by Theosophists Spiritualists Wiccans and some earth based contemporary pagan religions to their conceptualization of existence on a plane in an afterlife 34 Emanuel Swedenborg 1688 1772 inspired Andrew Jackson Davis 1826 1910 in his major work The Great Harmonia to say that Summerland is the pinnacle of spiritual achievement in the afterlife that is it is the highest level or sphere of the afterlife we can hope to enter The common portrayal of the Summerland is as a place of rest for souls after or between their earthly incarnations Some believe spirits will stay in the Summerland for an eternal afterlife though others believe after an amount of time some spirits will reincarnate The Summerland is also envisioned as a place for recollection and reunion with deceased loved ones 35 As the name suggests it is often imagined as a place of beauty and peace where everything people hold close to their hearts is preserved in its fullest beauty for eternity It is envisioned as containing wide possibly eternal fields of rolling green hills and lush grass In many ways this ideology is similar to the Welsh view of Annwn as an afterlife realm The Summerland is also viewed as the place where one goes in the afterlife in traditions of Spiritualism and Theosophy which is where Wicca got the term citation needed In Theosophy the term Summerland is used without the definite article the Summerland also called the Astral plane Heaven is depicted as where souls who have been good in their previous lives go between incarnations Those who have been bad go to Hell which is believed to be located below the surface of the Earth and is on the astral plane and is composed of the densest astral matter the Spiritual Hierarchy functioning within Earth functions on the etheric plane below the surface of the Earth 36 It is believed by Theosophists that most people those at high levels of initiation go to a specific Summerland that is set up for people of each religion For example Christians go to a Christian heaven Jews go to a Jewish heaven Muslims go to a Muslim heaven Hindus goes to a Hindu heaven Theosophists go to a Theosophical heaven and so forth each heaven being like that described in the scriptures of that religion There is also a generic Summerland for those who were atheists or agnostics in their previous lives People who belong to religions that don t believe in reincarnation are surprised to find out when they get to heaven that they will have to reincarnate again within a few dozen to a few hundred years Each heaven is believed to be an extensive structure composed of astral matter located on the astral plane about three or four miles 5 6 km above the surface of Earth above that part of the world where the particular religion that the heaven is meant for is most predominant Theosophists also believe there is another higher level of heaven called Devachan also called the Mental plane Heaven which some but not all souls reach between incarnations only those souls that are more highly developed spiritually reach this level those souls that are at the first second and third levels of initiation Devachan is several miles around 10 km higher above the surface of Earth than Summerland 36 The final permanent eternal afterlife heaven to which Theosophists believe most people will go millions or billions of years in the future after our cycle of reincarnations in this Round is over 37 In order to go to Nirvana it is necessary to have attained the fourth level of initiation or higher meaning one is an arhat and thus no longer needs to reincarnate Inhabitants of the various planes EditOccult writers such as Geoffrey Hodson Mellie Uyldert and Dora van Gelder had attempted to classify different spiritual beings into a hierarchy based on their assumed place and function on the planes of existence citation needed Charles Webster Leadbeater fundamentally described and incorporated his comprehension of intangible beings for Theosophy Along with him there are various planes intertwined with the quotidian human world and are all inhabited by multitudes of entities Each plane is purported as composed of discrete density of astral or ethereal matter and frequently the denizens of a plane have no discernment of other ones Other Theosophical writers such as Alice Bailey a contemporary of Leadbeater also gave continuousness to Theosophical concepts of ethereal beings and her works had a great impact over New Age movement 38 39 She puts the nature spirits and devas as ethereal beings immersed in macro divisions of an interwoven threefold universe usually they belong to the etheric astral or mental planes The ethereal entities of the four kingdoms Earth Air Fire and Water are forces of nature The Dutch writer and clairvoyant Mellie Uyldert characterized the semblance and behavior of ethereal entities on the etheric plane which she said hover above plants and transfer energy for vitalizing the plant then nourishing themselves on rays of sunlight She depicted them as asexual gender and composed of etheric matter They fly three meters over the ground some have wings like butterflies while others only have a small face and an aura waving graciously Some are huge while others may have the size of one inch 40 See also EditAstral body Astral projection Aura Chain of being Many worlds interpretation Plane Dungeons amp Dragons Silver cord Spiritual evolution Spirituality Subtle body Transcendental realism Evola References Edit Dodds cited in Poortman 1978 vol II p 54 Kak Subhash The Architecture of Knowledge Cosmic Detectives The European Space Agency ESA 2013 04 02 Retrieved 2013 04 15 Wright E L 9 May 2009 What is the evidence for the Big Bang Frequently Asked Questions in Cosmology UCLA Division of Astronomy and Astrophysics Retrieved 2009 10 16 Heindel Max The Rosicrucian Cosmo Conception Chapter XI The Genesis and Evolution of our Solar System 1909 ISBN 0 911274 34 0 John Friedlander Gloria Hemsher Psychic Psychology Energy Skills for Life and Relationships 2011 p 196 Norman C McClelland Encyclopedia of Reincarnation and Karma 2010 p 32 Myers F H W 1903 Human personality and its survival of death London Longmans G R S Mead The Doctrine of the Subtle Body in Western Tradition Watkins 1919 Plato The Republic trans Desmond Lee Harmondsworth J H Brennan Astral Doorways Thoth Publications 1996 ISBN 978 1 870450 21 8 First Principles of Theosophy pp 139 140 Curuppumullage Jinarajadasa First Principles of Theosophy Theosophical Publishing House 1922 p 93 Sylvan J Muldoon and Hereward Carrington Projection of the Astral Body Kessinger reprint edition 2003 p 97 a b Paramhansa Yogananda 1946 Autobiography of a Yogi Google books The Philosophical Library Inc ISBN 9788120725249 Retrieved 20 July 2011 Paramhansa Yogananda 1946 Autobiography of a Yogi Retrieved 20 July 2011 Charles Leadbeater The Inner Life p 264 Annie Besant The Ancient Wisdom An Outline of Theosophical Teachings 1939 Chapter IV Ravindra Kumar Jytte Larsen The Kundalini book of living and dying gateways to a higher consciousness 2004 p 39 Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami Dancing With Siva Hinduism s Contemporary Catechism 1996 xxxv 1008 pp ill Sixth Edition First Printing 2003 Himalayan Academy online Joshua David Stone Janna Shelley A Beginner s Guide to the Path of Ascension p 11 Charles Leadbeater Inner Life Kessinger reprint edition 2003 p 226 Charles Leadbeater The Masters and the Path 2007 p 180 Alice Bailey The Rays and the Initiations 1971 p 463 Madis Senner The Way Home Making Heaven on Earth 2009 p 239 George Winslow Plummer Mercury An Official Organ of the Societas Rosicruciana in America 1916 1921 Kessinger reprint edition 1998 p 106 Raymond T Kranyak Metaphysical Secrets for Health and Success in Life 2009 p 12 The Monadic Plane www searchlightforyou com Retrieved 2019 04 28 M C Poinsot Complete Book of the Occult and Fortune Telling Kessinger reprint edition 2003 p 472 The encyclopedia of occult sciences R M McBride and company 1939 p 472 John Hamlin Dewey New Testament of Occultism Kessinger reprint edition 2003 p 105 Joshua David Stone Janna Shelley Parker A Beginner s Guide to the Path of Ascension 1998 p 13 The Rosicrucian Digest September 1932 p 288 The Spirit World Descriptions by Early Spiritualists by Barbara N Starr Archived from the original on 2016 11 09 Retrieved 2012 05 11 Life in the Spirit World Part One General Introduction By Rev Simeon Stefanidakis a b Leadbeater C W A Textbook of Theosophy 1912 Various Levels of the Afterlife in Theosophy Archived 2011 07 22 at the Wayback Machine Gary Laderman Luis D Leon Religion and American cultures an encyclopedia of traditions diversity and popular expressions Volume 3 2003 p 236 ISBN 1 57607 238 X Michael York The emerging network a sociology of the New Age and neo pagan movements 1995 p 66 ISBN 0 8476 8001 0 Mellie Uyldert The psychic garden Plants and their esoteric relationship with man Thorsons 1980 ISBN 0 7225 0548 5Further reading EditBlavatsky H P The Secret Doctrine Theosophical Publishing House 1888 Heindel Max The Rosicrucian Mysteries Chapter III The Visible and the Invisible Worlds 1911 ISBN 0 911274 86 3 Poortman Johannes Jacob Vehicles of Consciousness The Concept of Hylic Pluralism The Theosophical Society in Netherlands 1978 Yogananda Paramahansa Autobiography of a Yogi Los Angeles CA Self Realization Fellowship 1946 Chapter 43 External links EditVedic cosmology planetarium The Thirty one Planes of Existence according to Buddhist cosmology The Grand Scheme of All Creation part of the Sant Ajaib Singh Ji Memorial Site a small Radhasoami cosmological diagram The Creation According to Sant Mat The Inner Planes of Creation a Surat Shabd Yoga Sant Mat diagram The Material World a Reverse Reflection of the Spiritual Worlds according to Rosicrucian cosmology The Seven Worlds The Supreme Being The Cosmic Planes and God Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Plane esotericism amp oldid 1111410604, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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