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CASS: I GUESS WE AGREE

May 17, 2006 06:58 AM
by carlosaveline


Cass,

Thanks. 

This time you did not say Socrates lacked inner connection. Great. 

I tend to think that the difference between initiation-affiliation  and the eastern sense of the word is clear. 

Socrates had a sane, healthy, good inner connection to the sources of eternal wisdom, even if unaffilitiated to the "esoteric schools", or " Mysteries" of his time.    

Then, as this was the main if not the only point under evaluation, I guess we agree!

With respect and appreciation,  Carlos. 


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Cópia:

Data:Tue, 16 May 2006 18:09:09 -0700 (PDT)

Assunto:Re: Theos-World TO CASS ON WHAT IS 'INITIATION"

> The fathers had decided to pervert the meaning of the word "daimon" *
> *"The beings which the philosophers of other peoples distinguish by the name "Daemons,' Moses names "Angels" says Philo Judaeus - "De Gigant," i.253. Isis V2.P34
> 
> "An is a radical, signifying in Sanscrit a spirit, a being; and, we presume, what the Greeks meant by the word Daemon, a semi-god. Isis V2.P257
> 
> "Plato acknowledges man to be the toy of the element of necessity, which he enters upon in appearing in this world of matter; he is influenced by external causes, and these causes are "daimonia", like that of Socrates. Happy is the man physically pure, for if his external soul (body) is pure, it will strengthen the second one (astral body), or the soul which is termed by him the higher mortal soul, which though liable to err from its own motives, will always side with reason against the animal proclivities of the body. The lusts of man arise in consequence of his perishable material body, so do other diseases,; but though he regards crimes as 'involuntary' sometimes, for they result like bodily disease from external causes, Plato clearly makes a wide distinction between these causes. The fatalism which he concedes to humanity, does not preclude the possibility of avoiding them, for though pain, fear, anger, and other feelings are given to men by necessity, "if they
> conquered these they would live righteously, and if they were conquered by them, unrighteously." The dual man, i.e. one from whom the divine immortal spirit has departed, leaving but the animal form and astral body (Plato's higher mortal soul), is left merely to his instincts, for he was conquered by all the evils entailed on matter; hence, he becomes a docile tool in the hands of the invisibles - beings of sublimated matter, hovering in our atmosphere and ever ready to inspire those who are deservedly deserted by their immortal counsellor, the Divine Spirit, called by Plato "genius". According to this great philosopher and initiate, one "who lived well during his appointed time would return to the habitation of his star, and there have a blessed and suitable existence. But if he failed in attaining this in the second generation he would pass into a woman - become helpless and weak as a woman; and should he not cease from evil in that condition, he would be changed into
> some brute, which resembled him in his evil ways, and would not cease from his toils and transformations until he followed the original principle of sameness and likeness within him, and overcame, by the help of reason, the latter secretions of turbulent and irrational elements (elementary daemons) composed of fire and air, and water and earth, and returned to the form of his first and better nature.
> 
> Hope this clarifies it for you
> 
> Cass
> 
> carlosaveline wrote: 
> 
> 
> CASS,
> 
> Thanks for your commentaries below. 
> 
> 1) HPB never said Socrates was an Initiate in the eastern sense of the term.
> She said Socrates was NOT an initiated in the western, formal, sense of the term, that is, he was no AFFILITATED to the current Greek "Esoteric Schools" or "Mysteries". 
> 
> 2) HPB clarifies in many texts that Socrates had an independent, inner, legitimate source of inspiraration.
> 
> 
> 3) It is clear that Socrates "Daimon" was his own higher self. "Daimon" is the spirit within oneself, as Marcus Aurelius and others wrote. Now, Socrates might have other inner contacts. The important thing is to understand the word "initiate" in its various meanings, eastern or western.
> 
> Best regards, Carlos. 
> 
> 
> 
> De:theos-talk@yahoogroups.com
> 
> Para:theos-talk@yahoogroups.com
> 
> C�pia:
> 
> Data:Mon, 15 May 2006 19:27:07 -0700 (PDT)
> 
> Assunto:Re: Theos-World SOCRATES & THE STARTING POINT
> 
> > 
> > 
> > carlosaveline wrote: 
> > Dear Friends, 
> > Since Socrates of Athens -- Plato's Master -- is a starting point for Philosophy along with Pythagoras, it it worthwhile to take a look on what HPB wrote about him. Three short, but revealing quotations on him and his "divine Daimon", as HPB calls it, are below.
> > Best regards, Carlos. 
> > ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
> > 
> > ONE
> > 
> > �Things have strangely altered since the days of antiquity, when the truly wise made it their duty to conceal their knowledge, deeming it too sacred to even mention before the hoi polloi. While the medieval Rosecroix, the true philosopher, keeping old Socrates in mind, repeated daily that all he knew was that the knew nothing, his modern self-styled successor announces in our day, through press and public, that those mysteries in Nature and her Occult laws of which he knows nothing, have never existed at all. There was a time when the acquirement of Divine Wisdom (Sapientia) required the sacrifice and devotion of a man�s whole life. It depended on such tings as the purity of the candidate�s motives; on his fearlessness and independence of spirit; but now, to receive a patent for wisdom and adeptship requires only unblushing impudence.� 
> > 
> > (�Collected Writings of H. P. Blavatsky�, TPH, Wheaton, USA, volume XII, 1980, 859 pp., see pp. 314-315.) 
> > 
> > oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
> > 
> > Cass: HPB is referring to Socrates as a Philosopher, which I agree with, and quotes Socrates philosophy as all I know is that I know nothing.
> > 
> > TWO
> > 
> > �From the days of the primitive man described by the first Vedic poet, down to our modern poet, there has not been a philosopher worthy of that name, who did not carry in the silent sanctuary of his heart the grand and mysterious truth. If initiated, he learnt it as a sacred science; if otherwise, then, like Socrates repeating to himself, as well as to his fellow-men, the noble injuction, �O man, know thyself��, he succeeded in recognizing his God within himself. 
> > 
> > Cass: Again, she is talking about those that are initiated and is not specifically referring to Socrates as the one initiated. 
> > 
> > (�Isis Unveiled�, by H. P. Blavatsky, Theosophical University Press, Pasadena, California, USA, 1988, two volumes, see volume II, p. 318. Reproduced by H.P. Blavatsky in �Collected Writing�, TPH Wheaton, volume XIV, 1985, 733 pp., see p. 48.) 
> > 
> > ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
> > 
> > 
> > THREE 
> > 
> > [For H.P.B., his daimon, spirit, was divine:]
> > 
> > �(...) Nor would Socrates have been put to death, had he kept secret the revelations of his divine daimon. He knew how little his century � save those initiated � would understand his meaning, had he given all he knew about the moon. Thus he limited his statements to an allegory...� 
> > 
> > (�Collected Writings of H. P. Blavatsky�, TPH, Wheaton, USA, volume XIV, 1985, 733 pp., see p. 35 , footnote.) 
> > 
> > Cass: He was put to death because he revealed that all knowledge that he had came from his divine daimon. She actually says, "he knew HOW LITTLE, OTHER THAN AN INITIATE WOULD UNDERSTAND HIS MEANING, THEREFORE IT WAS AN EXERCISE IN FUTILITY. AS THERE IS NO POINT IN PREACHING TO THOSE IN THE KNOW, AND WORSE STILL BREAKING THE LAW OF SILENCE.
> > 
> > CASS
> > 
> > 
> > ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
> > 
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> > 
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