GA 13 - Rudolf Steiner's "Secret Science in Outline"

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Güney27
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Re: GA 13 - Rudolf Steiner's "Secret Science in Outline"

Post by Güney27 »

AshvinP wrote: Mon Jul 08, 2024 10:56 pm
Güney27 wrote: Mon Jul 08, 2024 9:47 pm Ashvin,


You are right.
Spiritual science can give us conceptual understanding of inner realities, which can help us to understand our experiences in a deeper way, than when someone without this knowledge, would tap into these „images“.


That’s what Jung did.
He made the unconscious conscious.
I feel like that’s what most esoteric traditions aim to do.
The unconscious processes, which guide or metamorphosis from behind must become conscious, so that we are able to steer it in an other direction.
I don’t know if Jung had knowledge of esoteric terms that were given to describe the conditioning of our experience.
He did it trough going consciously into the dream realm trough active imagination and dream work.

This is maybe an approach that is to one sided, because it doesn’t seem to include prayer, concentration and devotion. I don’t know if Jung had an higher ideal like OMA teaches it.

(I think the fact that Jung hold back from going to deep in an occult direction is explained by the fact that he doesn’t wanted to be called an „mad occultist“.
I don’t know exactly why but I think Jung’s work have a lot of potential for the western world to understand the soul-world and awaken to it.)


Correct me if I’m wrong, but isn’t the current task of humanity to purify one soul, to give our higher nature a pure vessel to incarnate in?


You mentioned sacred sleep I don’t know that term, can you explain it please?

That's right, and sometimes the prayer/devotion is implicit in the work one is doing - for ex. Jung undertook to explore the imaginative space of the soul to help as many patients and people as possible. It was a sacrificial and loving work. However, as far as I know, he did not recognize the direct and objective power of prayer and concentration in transmuting the soul life, since he was not directly conscious of the higher Self that makes it possible.

But we can imagine people who explore 'active imagination' for much less noble intentions and that's what makes all the difference in what results. As Miller said, "how we approach the spiritual world has definite consequences for what we experience there." We cannot underestimate the role of intention in approaching the spiritual world and the beings who comprise the curvatures of our psychic and sensory experience.

The problem is that our intentions are not transparent to us, to begin with. It's not as simple as saying, "I intend to do this inner work for the benefit of the Whole and the glory of God." Our intentions are much more revealed in our concrete thinking, feeling, and willing efforts over time. As Cleric said, working with the virtues (and conversely, resisting the vices) is an inner display of our intentions that will attract the corresponding higher experiences and insights.

In that sense, I am simply calling normal sleep 'sacred' when we intend that it be devoted to entrusting the meaning of our mental, emotional, and sensory experiences throughout the day to the higher worlds, so that meaning can lead to new insights, impulses, and forces which spiritualize and redeem the elemental kingdoms (including our bodies).

BD has a nice prayer that I usually work with. Even if we don't use this particular prayer, it is in this spirit that we can make our sleep sacred.
O, my Lord,

As I sleep tonight, surround me with Your Light and protect me
for I go Beyond to study, to pray and to work.

God of Power, send Your Holy Spirit to illuminate my room with Your Light
and with the Power of Your Spirit, surround my bed with the fiery circle of Your Love
that my room and all of my house may be free from every evil influence.

Perfection in Your Love will be the meaning of my life.

Your perfect Love casts out every fear from my soul and brings peace and joy to my spirit.

/Offer yourself before the Face of God/

Bless me, O God!

I thank You for all that You have given me.

Help me that the freedom of my soul and the strength of my spirit, the light of my mind and the purity of my heart may be increased.

O Lord, I desire that Your Love, Your Wisdom, Your Righteousness and Your Goodness abide within me forever.

Let the Kingdom of God be established within us and among us.
Let God remove all obstacles from the Path of His Kingdom.

God, illuminate our minds and grant us light and knowledge so that we may understand Your Will and do It.
Ashvin,


What is the „objective power of prayer and devotion“?

From a phenomenological point of view, I can say that prayer changes my feelings. I become more loving, patient etc.
But this only for a certain period of time until darkness returns.
Is this the objective power you talk about ?
~Only true love can heal broken hearts~
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Re: GA 13 - Rudolf Steiner's "Secret Science in Outline"

Post by AshvinP »

Güney27 wrote: Tue Jul 09, 2024 8:34 pm Ashvin,


What is the „objective power of prayer and devotion“?

From a phenomenological point of view, I can say that prayer changes my feelings. I become more loving, patient etc.
But this only for a certain period of time until darkness returns.
Is this the objective power you talk about ?
Guney,

This passage from the Part VIII essay may be helpful for orientation (it is also helpful to consider the spiritual IK metaphor previous to this).

The spiritual IK principle also provides a basis for understanding the role of prayer in spiritual retracing. Through fully conscious prayer, we place our imaginative beacon at holistic future-memory states that we cannot conceive clearly but coincide with our highest ideals for ourselves, humanity, the Earth, and the Cosmic organism. The reality is that we will often be unclear on what is best for hitting the bull’s eye within the circumference of our ever-expanding ideals, i.e. what states we need to reach and what paths of experience can lead us there. We can’t picture these more expansive future-memories like we can picture meeting a friend for dinner. Even in the latter case, we know that the harmonic activity of many other relative perspectives is required - our friend, the other drivers on the road, the employees at the restaurant, and so forth. In the case of transpersonal ideals, there are much more complex interferences of spiritual activity involved. Through the technique of prayer, we recognize in humility that our personal desires and purposes are not the sole factors involved in reaching these states, but that the former unfold within the context of more expansive and wiser intents.

The holistic contextual perspectives will not properly receive our prayers and attract our current state through the relevant insights and inspirations, i.e. offer their benediction, if our thoughts and feelings are not concentrically aligned with these wide-ranging evolutionary ideals, since the latter are of primary concern to their gestures. These perspectives are experiencing their own evolution with tasks to accomplish that encompass the inner lives and destinies of many relative perspectives. If we pray for only selfish aims, it is like we are presenting them with gibberish words and sentences from which no useful meaning can be mined. When such concentric alignment is attained, on the other hand, prayer can become the most effective tool for our overall development. It can attract our spirit to holistic states that make possible psychic and even bodily healing for individuals and communities; healing which would otherwise unfold through natural rhythms over relatively longer timespans.

The important thing is that we grow ever-more sensitive to the subtle spiritual activity that makes all our objective-subjective experiences possible. Our subjective state of TFW should always be understood as embedded within and contributing to the objective World state. Concentration is the best tool for intensifying the experience of pure thinking, which draws on moral intuitions that truly shape the World content at all scales from the individual to the collective experience. These shape our 'subjective' soul life and 'objective' physical life alike (the laws/forces of nature). Concentration silences the verbal chatter so that the content of our perceptual state can be spiraled together with our subtle spiritual gestures, 'splitting the now moment'. I have been reading a helpful book that speaks about this technique as well.

We have to let go of the instinctive ‘thinking about it’ reaction, and all of the other soul reactions that go along with it (such as our vested interests, feelings, emotions, desires, fantasies and associations), in the very moment the simple sight or sound emerges into our field of attention. The more we try to do so, the more we realize that in order to prevent the ‘the counter-thrust of ideas’ that transforms our experiences to representations, thinking must first of all make itself free from the instinctive need to constantly represent all experiences. Then it is transformed into a pure thinking experience, freeing itself from reflecting and explaining all experiences, including the experience of itself. Therefore the lifelong practice of The Philosophy of Freedom is indispensable, not as a theoretical explanation of what thinking is, but as a continuous process of the etherization of thinking itself. (This is described in greater detail in Chapter 5 below.)

When this practice is actualized, we find out to what extent our ordinary consciousness and soul life consist in the desire to use thinking in order to explain, fix, and possess each and every experience, and we also find out how mighty our hunger is for possessing the world in this manner. Ordinary knowledge is taking hold of the world, making it our own, privatizing it. As we shall presently see, what makes this operation of ‘stopping the mental construction of the world’ so difficult is really the almost bodily hunger that we feel when we are ‘burning’ with the desire to explain or name something. It turns out that this desire to know isn’t really so different from all our other desires. As we strive to capture, assimilate and possess whatever we desire, bodily, emotionally, and socially, we do the same thing mentally. But while we are much more aware of our basic body and soul desires, hungers, and needs, this desire and need behind our intellectual appetites usually escapes our attention. We don’t experience this desire consciously because it remains hidden and covered over behind the acquired knowledge, and because we are existentially much more interested in fulfilling our desire and satisfying our hunger for the knowledge itself. But through the cognitive yoga training, we learn to face this desire directly, and we realize that we crave explaining each experience just as much as we crave physical nourishment and emotional comfort and love. 

Therefore, our first task is to slow down this instinctive intellectual desire that motivates the mental feeding process, which functions as fast as any physical instinct. To being with, we will have to struggle to be able to make even the shortest pause in our instinctive rush to gratify our craving for knowledge, but if we persist and intensify the pure, unattached, activity of thinking, we will gradually succeed in expanding and enlarging this delay. First, we can free thinking just enough to open up a tiny interval or gap in time, a momentary flash of spacing, distance, and separation between thinking and experience. Second, with further practise, we will increasingly learn to control this spacing process. We will develop the capacity to bring the continuous composition of thinking and experiences to a halt and command the time of mental composition and synthesis to ‘stand still’. In this way we open and enlarge the time interval between experience and the instinctive need to use thinking in order to name, recognize, and represent whatever knowledge we desire. We can stretch time and enlarge this pause until it becomes a veritable, experiential ‘virtual duration’ or ‘pure time’ as Bergson would call it.

Ben-Aharon, Yeshayahu. Cognitive Yoga: Making Yourself a New Etheric Body and Individuality (pp. 25-26). Temple Lodge Publishing. Kindle Edition. 

Prayer is the best tool we have to confess our instinctive desires and our intent to transform them through the relevant intermediate states. It is complementary to concentration in that sense. Then the periods of darkness grow less significant, which is to say we bring inner understanding to those periods and how they also serve the spiritual intents guiding Earthly evolution. In a certain sense, our higher Self, our true "I", resides in these periods of darkness - both in terms of periods inaccessible to memory and periods of oscillation toward cognitive fog and dissatisfied moods. For one thing, without these periods we would become self-satisfied with our current perspective and level of insight. When things are good and flowing smoothly within a singular level of being, we start to become comfortable, take our lives for granted, etc., and then we tend to lose sight of consecrating our efforts and the fruits of those efforts to the Divine. 

Prayer should also help us come to peaceful terms with these natural oscillations of the spiritual life. One thing we can practice is when we receive a profound sense of insight, awe, or similar feeling, we can immediately try to offer this back to the Divine in gratitude so that it may become a force of healing in the World. It is not about pushing the feelings away but repurposing them so they can be useful beyond our personal soul life. In this way, we don't need to only wait for the oscillations into suffering but can start creatively managing the functions of the 'dark periods' for ourselves. We can smooth out and spiral together the oscillations so our stream of experience unfolds more harmoniously, which itself will help us become attuned to the objective rhythms through which that experience unfolds. 

The need to experience this dead end again and again from the other, living, side is significant, and the student must learn to pay heed to such subtle inner feelings and intimations, because they will always guide her in the right direction. Spiritual practice, to the extent that it is a real and living process, is never a linear stride forward, but always spiralling and pulsating back and forth. The path of research is always diverging and bifurcating, evolving and then involuting to former stages in order to experience the ‘same’ place in a different way, and then breaking through to truly new discoveries and dimensions.

Ben-Aharon, Yeshayahu. Cognitive Yoga: Making Yourself a New Etheric Body and Individuality (p. 31). Temple Lodge Publishing. Kindle Edition. 
"They only can acquire the sacred power of self-intuition, who within themselves can interpret and understand the symbol... those only, who feel in their own spirits the same instinct, which impels the chrysalis of the horned fly to leave room in the involucrum for antennae yet to come."
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Re: GA 13 - Rudolf Steiner's "Secret Science in Outline"

Post by Cleric »

AshvinP wrote: Wed Jul 10, 2024 1:23 pm
We have to let go of the instinctive ‘thinking about it’ reaction, and all of the other soul reactions that go along with it (such as our vested interests, feelings, emotions, desires, fantasies and associations), in the very moment the simple sight or sound emerges into our field of attention. The more we try to do so, the more we realize that in order to prevent the ‘the counter-thrust of ideas’ that transforms our experiences to representations, thinking must first of all make itself free from the instinctive need to constantly represent all experiences. Then it is transformed into a pure thinking experience, freeing itself from reflecting and explaining all experiences, including the experience of itself. Therefore the lifelong practice of The Philosophy of Freedom is indispensable, not as a theoretical explanation of what thinking is, but as a continuous process of the etherization of thinking itself. (This is described in greater detail in Chapter 5 below.)

When this practice is actualized, we find out to what extent our ordinary consciousness and soul life consist in the desire to use thinking in order to explain, fix, and possess each and every experience, and we also find out how mighty our hunger is for possessing the world in this manner. Ordinary knowledge is taking hold of the world, making it our own, privatizing it. As we shall presently see, what makes this operation of ‘stopping the mental construction of the world’ so difficult is really the almost bodily hunger that we feel when we are ‘burning’ with the desire to explain or name something. It turns out that this desire to know isn’t really so different from all our other desires. As we strive to capture, assimilate and possess whatever we desire, bodily, emotionally, and socially, we do the same thing mentally. But while we are much more aware of our basic body and soul desires, hungers, and needs, this desire and need behind our intellectual appetites usually escapes our attention. We don’t experience this desire consciously because it remains hidden and covered over behind the acquired knowledge, and because we are existentially much more interested in fulfilling our desire and satisfying our hunger for the knowledge itself. But through the cognitive yoga training, we learn to face this desire directly, and we realize that we crave explaining each experience just as much as we crave physical nourishment and emotional comfort and love. 

Therefore, our first task is to slow down this instinctive intellectual desire that motivates the mental feeding process, which functions as fast as any physical instinct. To being with, we will have to struggle to be able to make even the shortest pause in our instinctive rush to gratify our craving for knowledge, but if we persist and intensify the pure, unattached, activity of thinking, we will gradually succeed in expanding and enlarging this delay. First, we can free thinking just enough to open up a tiny interval or gap in time, a momentary flash of spacing, distance, and separation between thinking and experience. Second, with further practise, we will increasingly learn to control this spacing process. We will develop the capacity to bring the continuous composition of thinking and experiences to a halt and command the time of mental composition and synthesis to ‘stand still’. In this way we open and enlarge the time interval between experience and the instinctive need to use thinking in order to name, recognize, and represent whatever knowledge we desire. We can stretch time and enlarge this pause until it becomes a veritable, experiential ‘virtual duration’ or ‘pure time’ as Bergson would call it.

Ben-Aharon, Yeshayahu. Cognitive Yoga: Making Yourself a New Etheric Body and Individuality (pp. 25-26). Temple Lodge Publishing. Kindle Edition. 
This sounds pretty good and concise, Ashvin. It really targets the cognitive center that we also try to. Is the rest of the book good?
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Re: GA 13 - Rudolf Steiner's "Secret Science in Outline"

Post by Federica »

AshvinP wrote: Sat Jul 06, 2024 12:42 am Federica,

I'm glad this discussion has opened up a few different avenues for thinking to explore.

These are the examples you gave for the ascetic practices - "For example I deprive it of sleep, as a principle, and wake up at 04:00 every morning, I deprive it of sexuality as a principle, I make it rest on bare wood, I sit cross-legged until my joints hurt, I only eat stale bread, etcetera."

When you said "as a principle", that sounded to me like "following a prescribed ascetic mode of conduct because I believe it is the spiritual thing to do". In which case, I agree that's never a good idea.

Is it your position that abstinence from sexuality, for example, cannot possibly be a means of 'freely governing our desires', or altering our sleeping routine in some way that may seem 'extreme' to most people? If so, then I disagree. I don't think there are any set rules for how we can employ our intuitive knowledge to freely regulate our desires, and that will certainly depend on each individual's level of inner development and karmic circumstances. Some people may decide to work with more 'extreme' measures than others. Those measures can still be the free expression of the "I" if they are not rooted in external authorities and shadowy inner impulses but drawn from creative and moral intuition.

What should be kept in mind is that expanding our inner knowledge is not just accumulating facts about 'what's good and what's not' or 'how to regulate our desires'. We are drawing on the spiritual forces that lay at the basis of our psychic constitution, which I believe relates to OMA's quote, which help us spiritualize and transmute our Earthly desires. It is true spiritual alchemy. If we don't do that intimate cognitive and moral work, drawing on the forces of the progressive hierarchies, then neither mortification nor suicide will get rid of the desires, they will simply reappear in a new form later in life or our next incarnation. That is why I say it can't possibly work if it is done "as a principle", rather than as a side effect of our ever-expanding intuitive development.
Saying “as a principle” I meant in observance of external precepts, but also possibly as a principle adopted as a rule for life, beyond external precepts, on basis of the conviction that the bodily rhythms should be overridden, put out of order. I don’t think this can be a healthy approach. One can’t pretend to opt out of the body in this way, and at the same time remain connected to it, as a matter of fact. Desires have to be regulated so that they are not satisfied merely for their own sake, and I agree this may require extreme measures. If one has an obsession, probably the only viable way to regulate it is abstinence, at least short term. We are not talking about sins here, but instincts, rhythmic organization of the physical body. But I agree, there can’t be a code for how to regulate these desires. As I previously said, the key should be the intention to find the balance point between acceptance of the bodily rhythms and rejection of animalistic conduct. In this sense, though, I do question ascetic life in our times. What can justify the attempt to eradicate all bodily rhythms from one’s life, while keeping a flattened shell alive, surviving? I have to come back to the matrix I drew above: such an in-principle fight against the nature of the physical body seems in polar relation with transhumanism. In both cases, there seems to be the intention to know better than God, instead of applying oneself to the evolutionary tasks in proper order. If one is able to regulate the body so that it doesn’t drift to animalistic conduct, why distort that balance? Or is it maybe that one is afraid not to be able to? Of course I am reasoning in abstract terms, and I don’t say that my understanding is perfect and will never change, but I am asking you: beyond fear and pride, what other motives can justify in the present time a life of extreme fight against the body, safe that there are no set rules for how to regulate desires, and that in some cases extreme practices may be appropriate to deal with some obsession or similar? But one cannot try to opt out of all bodily rhythms on grounds that one is supposedly obsessed with life at large. To spiritualize and transmute desires means above all to purify them from animalistic drive. And for the individuals who are more advanced than that, then perhaps the desire gracefully disappears, by virtue of higher recognition of their inner work. If simply purifying desires is too simple for some, if it's below their level of Initiation, then God will make that rhythm lose grip and disapper from their body. That's how I see it at this point. But I doubt that whoever in our times seeks extreme, permanent mortification of all sorts of persisting bodily rhythms can be on a healthy path of Initiation.


AshvinP wrote: Sat Jul 06, 2024 12:42 am
Steiner wrote:Another misunderstanding is possible. It might be imagined that some activity of the soul, intended to lead to supersensible cognition, were in some way connected with changes in the physical organism. As a matter of fact, such activities have nothing whatever to do with anything in man that belongs to the province of physiology, or to other aspects of natural science. They are processes purely of soul and spirit, as far removed from the physical as are ordinary healthy thinking and perceiving. The way in which they take place in the soul is no different from the way in which we think our thoughts or come to our decisions. As much or as little as healthy thinking has to do with the body, just so much and so little have the activities of a genuine training for supersensible knowledge. Any kind of training that affects man in a different way is no true spiritual training, but a caricature of it.


I believe Steiner is here referring to how the fruits of the intuitive thinking path are not the result of changes in the physical organism, as the fruits of some other spiritual paths may be (for ex. Kundalini yoga). He is not saying that developing higher cognition will in no way affect the physical body or allow us to modulate our physiological rhythms. In general, Imaginative cognition gives us the capacity to work creatively on the soul body, Inspiration on the etheric body, and Intuition on the physical body. That's because these bodies are the spiritual beings and forces that we retrace into through inner development. Of course, at this stage, we can't generate entirely new bodies on demand, but we can gain holistic insight into their spiritual nature and creatively work into them by drawing on the higher aesthetic and moral impulses at their foundation. For example, think of all the souls who use higher cognition to work on physically healing not only themselves, but also other people of illness.

Certainly, the emphasis for most of us will be working on the soul body, but that doesn't mean we simply think about transforming our desires without taking physical measures. Again, to what extent ascetic practices will become a part of that creative work will depend on each individual's circumstances. Some physical pleasures will need to be strictly regulated, but we need to always approach these domains with caution and wisdom, paying attention to the continual intuitive feedback we are receiving from our prayer, meditation, study, and experimentation. If we try to wage a war against all desires at the same time, we will simply burn out and be engulfed by the lower nature. This is highly creative and improvisational soul work.

You are right, he is not saying that developing higher cognition will in no way affect the physical body or allow us to modulate our physiological rhythms. :) I agree, he is saying that the fruits of inner development can't result from changes brought to the physical organism. For example, inner development can't result from psychoactive and transhumanstic enhancements. That's why I quoted the passage! :)


PS. This Kuhlewindian "improvisational" work sounds dissonant to my ears, at least when seamlessly slipped into the text in this way. It goes diametrically against the common meaning of improvisation. To be clear, such bending of language, without notice, is perplexing to me. There is a thin line between artistic creativity, and even license on one hand, and coercion on the other. This is my personal opinion based on a scratching feeling of dissonance. It seems like you want to fit a square peg into a round hole, and also push the reader to, but seamlessly, as if to instill a habit, as you endeavor to deliver the habitual meaning through the new but dissonant form.

AshvinP wrote: Sat Jul 06, 2024 12:42 am
I don't think Cleric was suggesting a universal rule that applies to every single human soul. Yes, the very nature of current evolution is that there are human souls spanning the entire gradient from the lowest to most advanced stages of Earthly evolution. We should remember that initiation is about going ahead of the general stream of evolution, not to feel superior or leave it behind, but to work redemptively back into it.
I remember that initiation is about going ahead of the general stream of Earthly evolution. But mastering the templates of physicality is not a part of Earthly evolution, correct?
"On Earth the soul has a past, in the Cosmos it has a future. The seer must unite past and future into a true perception of the now." Dennis Klocek
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Re: GA 13 - Rudolf Steiner's "Secret Science in Outline"

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Cleric K wrote: Fri Jul 12, 2024 4:01 pm This sounds pretty good and concise, Ashvin. It really targets the cognitive center that we also try to. Is the rest of the book good?

Cleric,

I am still trying to decide that. I can say that the rest isn't bad so far :) (I am about 40% through)

I feel that there is not much explication in the way of practice, techniques, and hints for 'pure perception' or pure thinking, but it is more a brief discussion of what a practice might look like followed by a more lengthy discussion of what can result from that practice. The results are described pretty abstractly with spiritual terms from my perspective.

On the other hand, I found some other books by him, that were originally lectures, to be quite helpful. I am currently reading these:

Spiritual Science in the 21st Century: Transforming Evil, Meeting the Other, and Awakening to the Global Initiation of Humanity - https://a.co/d/cRNoYZ8
(this one has some fascinating discussion of 20th century philosophy and its relation to modern initiation, particularly French postmodernism)

Jerusalem (quoted to Anthony on the other thread)
"They only can acquire the sacred power of self-intuition, who within themselves can interpret and understand the symbol... those only, who feel in their own spirits the same instinct, which impels the chrysalis of the horned fly to leave room in the involucrum for antennae yet to come."
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Re: GA 13 - Rudolf Steiner's "Secret Science in Outline"

Post by AshvinP »

Federica wrote: Sat Jul 13, 2024 11:24 am
AshvinP wrote: Sat Jul 06, 2024 12:42 am Federica,

I'm glad this discussion has opened up a few different avenues for thinking to explore.

These are the examples you gave for the ascetic practices - "For example I deprive it of sleep, as a principle, and wake up at 04:00 every morning, I deprive it of sexuality as a principle, I make it rest on bare wood, I sit cross-legged until my joints hurt, I only eat stale bread, etcetera."

When you said "as a principle", that sounded to me like "following a prescribed ascetic mode of conduct because I believe it is the spiritual thing to do". In which case, I agree that's never a good idea.

Is it your position that abstinence from sexuality, for example, cannot possibly be a means of 'freely governing our desires', or altering our sleeping routine in some way that may seem 'extreme' to most people? If so, then I disagree. I don't think there are any set rules for how we can employ our intuitive knowledge to freely regulate our desires, and that will certainly depend on each individual's level of inner development and karmic circumstances. Some people may decide to work with more 'extreme' measures than others. Those measures can still be the free expression of the "I" if they are not rooted in external authorities and shadowy inner impulses but drawn from creative and moral intuition.

What should be kept in mind is that expanding our inner knowledge is not just accumulating facts about 'what's good and what's not' or 'how to regulate our desires'. We are drawing on the spiritual forces that lay at the basis of our psychic constitution, which I believe relates to OMA's quote, which help us spiritualize and transmute our Earthly desires. It is true spiritual alchemy. If we don't do that intimate cognitive and moral work, drawing on the forces of the progressive hierarchies, then neither mortification nor suicide will get rid of the desires, they will simply reappear in a new form later in life or our next incarnation. That is why I say it can't possibly work if it is done "as a principle", rather than as a side effect of our ever-expanding intuitive development.
Saying “as a principle” I meant in observance of external precepts, but also possibly as a principle adopted as a rule for life, beyond external precepts, on basis of the conviction that the bodily rhythms should be overridden, put out of order. I don’t think this can be a healthy approach. One can’t pretend to opt out of the body in this way, and at the same time remain connected to it, as a matter of fact. Desires have to be regulated so that they are not satisfied merely for their own sake, and I agree this may require extreme measures. If one has an obsession, probably the only viable way to regulate it is abstinence, at least short term. We are not talking about sins here, but instincts, rhythmic organization of the physical body. But I agree, there can’t be a code for how to regulate these desires. As I previously said, the key should be the intention to find the balance point between acceptance of the bodily rhythms and rejection of animalistic conduct. In this sense, though, I do question ascetic life in our times. What can justify the attempt to eradicate all bodily rhythms from one’s life, while keeping a flattened shell alive, surviving? I have to come back to the matrix I drew above: such an in-principle fight against the nature of the physical body seems in polar relation with transhumanism. In both cases, there seems to be the intention to know better than God, instead of applying oneself to the evolutionary tasks in proper order. If one is able to regulate the body so that it doesn’t drift to animalistic conduct, why distort that balance? Or is it maybe that one is afraid not to be able to? Of course I am reasoning in abstract terms, and I don’t say that my understanding is perfect and will never change, but I am asking you: beyond fear and pride, what other motives can justify in the present time a life of extreme fight against the body, safe that there are no set rules for how to regulate desires, and that in some cases extreme practices may be appropriate to deal with some obsession or similar? But one cannot try to opt out of all bodily rhythms on grounds that one is supposedly obsessed with life at large. To spiritualize and transmute desires means above all to purify them from animalistic drive. And for the individuals who are more advanced than that, then perhaps the desire gracefully disappears, by virtue of higher recognition of their inner work. If simply purifying desires is too simple for some, if it's below their level of Initiation, then God will make that rhythm lose grip and disapper from their body. That's how I see it at this point. But I doubt that whoever in our times seeks extreme, permanent mortification of all sorts of persisting bodily rhythms can be on a healthy path of Initiation.

There is nothing that justifies any of the bold phrases. Nothing that I have written so far should be construed as justifying anything like that. I also realize you didn't suggest I was taking such an extreme position.

There is a concept called steel-manning, which is similar to what I quoted from Tomberg before. This helps us explore ideas we are initially uncomfortable with or intellectually set against from different angles that we normally wouldn't explore, keeping our thinking flexible and open to inspirations from the 'darkness'.

Related to that, I wonder if you could elaborate on what it means to "simply purify desires". What are concrete examples of this path of purification in your view and how could you envision those examples changing, expanding, or intensifying as development proceeds?

Federica wrote:
AshvinP wrote: Sat Jul 06, 2024 12:42 am
Steiner wrote:Another misunderstanding is possible. It might be imagined that some activity of the soul, intended to lead to supersensible cognition, were in some way connected with changes in the physical organism. As a matter of fact, such activities have nothing whatever to do with anything in man that belongs to the province of physiology, or to other aspects of natural science. They are processes purely of soul and spirit, as far removed from the physical as are ordinary healthy thinking and perceiving. The way in which they take place in the soul is no different from the way in which we think our thoughts or come to our decisions. As much or as little as healthy thinking has to do with the body, just so much and so little have the activities of a genuine training for supersensible knowledge. Any kind of training that affects man in a different way is no true spiritual training, but a caricature of it.


I believe Steiner is here referring to how the fruits of the intuitive thinking path are not the result of changes in the physical organism, as the fruits of some other spiritual paths may be (for ex. Kundalini yoga). He is not saying that developing higher cognition will in no way affect the physical body or allow us to modulate our physiological rhythms. In general, Imaginative cognition gives us the capacity to work creatively on the soul body, Inspiration on the etheric body, and Intuition on the physical body. That's because these bodies are the spiritual beings and forces that we retrace into through inner development. Of course, at this stage, we can't generate entirely new bodies on demand, but we can gain holistic insight into their spiritual nature and creatively work into them by drawing on the higher aesthetic and moral impulses at their foundation. For example, think of all the souls who use higher cognition to work on physically healing not only themselves, but also other people of illness.

Certainly, the emphasis for most of us will be working on the soul body, but that doesn't mean we simply think about transforming our desires without taking physical measures. Again, to what extent ascetic practices will become a part of that creative work will depend on each individual's circumstances. Some physical pleasures will need to be strictly regulated, but we need to always approach these domains with caution and wisdom, paying attention to the continual intuitive feedback we are receiving from our prayer, meditation, study, and experimentation. If we try to wage a war against all desires at the same time, we will simply burn out and be engulfed by the lower nature. This is highly creative and improvisational soul work.

You are right, he is not saying that developing higher cognition will in no way affect the physical body or allow us to modulate our physiological rhythms. :) I agree, he is saying that the fruits of inner development can't result from changes brought to the physical organism. For example, inner development can't result from psychoactive and transhumanstic enhancements. That's why I quoted the passage! :)

Again, nothing I have written has suggested inner development can result from psychoactive or bodily enhancements. Now I am no longer so sure you weren't suggesting I have taken an extreme position :)

PS. This Kuhlewindian "improvisational" work sounds dissonant to my ears, at least when seamlessly slipped into the text in this way. It goes diametrically against the common meaning of improvisation. To be clear, such bending of language, without notice, is perplexing to me. There is a thin line between artistic creativity, and even license on one hand, and coercion on the other. This is my personal opinion based on a scratching feeling of dissonance. It seems like you want to fit a square peg into a round hole, and also push the reader to, but seamlessly, as if to instill a habit, as you endeavor to deliver the habitual meaning through the new but dissonant form.

This is hard to understand for me unless you are assuming "improvisational" can only mean what you understand it to mean at any given time, which has been associated for you with second-rate cover bands who arbitrarily botch other's people quality work :)

To call the mere use of the word 'improvisational' "Kuhlewindian" or "coercion" is very inflexible, I think. The wide diversity of words that can be employed are simply anchor points for deeper meaning, and if a particular anchor point doesn't resonate with us, we can still see through that point to the deeper meaning based on the whole context of what is being discussed. The points themselves should not grab all our attention. We can even substitute our own anchor points, whatever concepts feel the most useful for us to orient to the deeper meaning.

Here we are talking about evolution, the ability to remain fluid, flexible, and adaptable in the face of changing environmental circumstances. That is a critical part of all higher development. I am sure Kuhlewind is not the first to refer to this as "improvisational" since the Idea of evolution is often referred to in artistic terms by those who understand it as the result of creative spiritual activity (instead of mindless mechanisms). But again, we can try to see past that concept if it becomes a stumbling block and substitute whatever concept works for us.

Federica wrote:
AshvinP wrote: Sat Jul 06, 2024 12:42 am
I don't think Cleric was suggesting a universal rule that applies to every single human soul. Yes, the very nature of current evolution is that there are human souls spanning the entire gradient from the lowest to most advanced stages of Earthly evolution. We should remember that initiation is about going ahead of the general stream of evolution, not to feel superior or leave it behind, but to work redemptively back into it.
I remember that initiation is about going ahead of the general stream of Earthly evolution. But mastering the templates of physicality is not a part of Earthly evolution, correct?

It isn't all or nothing, either master physicality 100% or not at all, and neither can it be separated into clearly bounded stages, i.e. first we work on the soul, then on the life body, then on physicality. The cake metaphor is a helpful one to orient us toward how all the layers are intermixed and overlapping, so interacting with one necessarily means interacting with the others, although some layers will be more 'in focus' for our creative consciousness before others are.

Specifically with regards to new technologies that can be activated through moral intents and ideas, I think that is something anticipated for the general stream in the not-too-distant future, as souls become more conscious of the etheric spectrum. Steiner speaks about it in terms of machines that will be activated through 'etheric vibrations'.

It also depends on what we mean by "Earthly evolution". If we are including all globes and rounds that we evolve through before the Pralaya and reincarnation into Jupiter, then we will certainly be creatively active in physicality by the end. For example:


https://rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA093a/E ... 27p01.html
In the Fifth Round, the plastic-astral man will no longer need to retain his hand. The hand will only be formed when it is needed. It will be something like a tendril, because then everything will have taken on the nature of a plant. Then too all that develops separate existence will be a plant-product. Likewise everything that proceeds from man will be plantlike. We shall then be living in the plant kingdom.

In the Sixth Round we shall live in the animal kingdom. Then everything that proceeds from man, which streams out from him, will be a living product that has within it life and sensation. A word will then be a living being—a bird that one sends out into the world.

In the Seventh Round man will create himself. He will then be able to duplicate, to reproduce himself. In the Seventh Round everyone will have reached the stage at which our Masters stand today. Then our ego will be the bearer of all earthly experiences. To begin with this will be concentrated in the Lodge of the Masters.67 The higher ego then will draw itself together, become atomic and form the atoms of (future) Jupiter.
"They only can acquire the sacred power of self-intuition, who within themselves can interpret and understand the symbol... those only, who feel in their own spirits the same instinct, which impels the chrysalis of the horned fly to leave room in the involucrum for antennae yet to come."
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Re: GA 13 - Rudolf Steiner's "Secret Science in Outline"

Post by Güney27 »

AshvinP wrote: Sat Jul 13, 2024 1:25 pm
Cleric K wrote: Fri Jul 12, 2024 4:01 pm This sounds pretty good and concise, Ashvin. It really targets the cognitive center that we also try to. Is the rest of the book good?

Cleric,

I am still trying to decide that. I can say that the rest isn't bad so far :) (I am about 40% through)

I feel that there is not much explication in the way of practice, techniques, and hints for 'pure perception' or pure thinking, but it is more a brief discussion of what a practice might look like followed by a more lengthy discussion of what can result from that practice. The results are described pretty abstractly with spiritual terms from my perspective.

On the other hand, I found some other books by him, that were originally lectures, to be quite helpful. I am currently reading these:

Spiritual Science in the 21st Century: Transforming Evil, Meeting the Other, and Awakening to the Global Initiation of Humanity - https://a.co/d/cRNoYZ8
(this one has some fascinating discussion of 20th century philosophy and its relation to modern initiation, particularly French postmodernism)

Jerusalem (quoted to Anthony on the other thread)
Ashvin,
I have that book since 2022.
I didn’t read it fully because at that time I couldn’t understand it in depth.

It seems that he starts with explaining that ordinary cognition consists of a synthesis of thinking and sense perception.
This process of synthesis is unconscious and condition our waking consciousness.

The practice he teaches is to decompose sense perception and thinking.
I remember that he wrote that one has to detach for example colors from the object (the idea) and experience it in a pure way.

It seems to contradict the practices given by Steiner or Cleric. Instead of concentrate the inner voice, he emphasize to stop it for an interval, to experience how the world of perception changes without thinking.

But I have to read it again and fully to say that with 100% certainty.
~Only true love can heal broken hearts~
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Re: GA 13 - Rudolf Steiner's "Secret Science in Outline"

Post by AshvinP »

Güney27 wrote: Sat Jul 13, 2024 3:50 pm
AshvinP wrote: Sat Jul 13, 2024 1:25 pm
Cleric K wrote: Fri Jul 12, 2024 4:01 pm This sounds pretty good and concise, Ashvin. It really targets the cognitive center that we also try to. Is the rest of the book good?

Cleric,

I am still trying to decide that. I can say that the rest isn't bad so far :) (I am about 40% through)

I feel that there is not much explication in the way of practice, techniques, and hints for 'pure perception' or pure thinking, but it is more a brief discussion of what a practice might look like followed by a more lengthy discussion of what can result from that practice. The results are described pretty abstractly with spiritual terms from my perspective.

On the other hand, I found some other books by him, that were originally lectures, to be quite helpful. I am currently reading these:

Spiritual Science in the 21st Century: Transforming Evil, Meeting the Other, and Awakening to the Global Initiation of Humanity - https://a.co/d/cRNoYZ8
(this one has some fascinating discussion of 20th century philosophy and its relation to modern initiation, particularly French postmodernism)

Jerusalem (quoted to Anthony on the other thread)
Ashvin,
I have that book since 2022.
I didn’t read it fully because at that time I couldn’t understand it in depth.

It seems that he starts with explaining that ordinary cognition consists of a synthesis of thinking and sense perception.
This process of synthesis is unconscious and condition our waking consciousness.

The practice he teaches is to decompose sense perception and thinking.
I remember that he wrote that one has to detach for example colors from the object (the idea) and experience it in a pure way.

It seems to contradict the practices given by Steiner or Cleric. Instead of concentrate the inner voice, he emphasize to stop it for an interval, to experience how the world of perception changes without thinking.

But I have to read it again and fully to say that with 100% certainty.

That's correct. I didn't spend much time on the 'etherization of sight' because I am not too familiar with it and figured I could return to it later. It's not necessarily contradictory but is approaching the delamination of soul forces from the opposite pole of pure thinking, i.e. sensory perception. I would be interested to hear Cleric's understanding of this as well. It seems to me that we are starting from where perceptions are most out-of-phase with our current spiritual activity (unlike pure thought-perceptions), so it would require a much greater strength of devotional willpower to 'decompose' the sensory-perceptual representation. On the other hand, sight is closely tied to our cognitive capacity so it would be less problematic than the other bodily senses. He does mention that this etherization should be undertaken only after we have become quite accustomed to pure thinking in the sense of PoF. And I believe the soul disposition of abundant gratitude for the free gift of our perceptual experience that he expresses below is of prime importance to cultivate no matter what sort of spiritual exercises we are doing.

Here is the relevant passage:

"The breathing in of colours and light is the least difficult among the various sense inhalation processes undertaken in the course of cognitive yoga practice and research. The reason for this is that the sense of sight is in the middle between the mostly unconscious bodily senses and the super-conscious senses that perceive the other person.* Furthermore, it is also more conscious in comparison to sensations of cold and warmth, sounds, and especially smelling, tasting and touching.
...
Of course for most people today, in the case of colour breathing, the first reaction is ‘I don’t feel anything when I see blue or red’, but this relative neutrality of affect and effect is an advantage. Colour influences and purification processes stand somewhat in between the unconscious bodily senses which are altogether too intense on the one hand, and pure light, which is too ethereal, on the other. Also, the still higher, human-spiritual senses: the perception of the ‘I’, and the perception of the thoughts and words of the other person, are as difficult to bring down to ordinary cognition as it is difficult to bring the lower body and soul sensations up to consciousness. Therefore, among the senses sight will be chosen as the most suitable candidate for demonstrating the process of sense purification, etherization and inhalation.
...
The first step in the decomposition and deconstruction of the ‘cognitive composition’ in seeing is to concentrate our attention on the colour alone, and disregard the object to which it is attached. As was pointed out above, in the formation of the representation of any object, manifold sense impressions and bodily sensations are amalgamated and synthesized together with many and various concepts, representations, memories and associations. Untangling this complex knot of the representation of the whole object to which a colour is attached is therefore the first step in the purification process. (In the case of pure light, with which we are not primarily concerned here, this would mean, for example, unknotting the representation ‘a ray of light’ with all its invested concepts and focusing solely on the non-objectified light impression.)

The separation of the pure sense quality from the object to which it is attached is an active cognitive process. We aim to both separate the quality from its object as well as focus our attention on the freed quality ‘red’, while fully erasing from consciousness the complex body of representations associated with this object or the form or surface to which the colour is attached. This seems to be a daunting task, and as any real empirical scientific research, it requires meticulous experimentation, variation, and verification over many years. Naturally, only an abbreviated report of this can be given here.

The first major obstacle is that it proves difficult to hold the separated sense quality in our consciousness in this object-free state for a long time. It easily dissipates while our attention is immediately pulled back to the manifold representations associated with the object ‘red cinnabar’ or ‘red patch’. Furthermore, being pulled back to the representation of the red cinnabar, reactivates the whole instinctive set of representations connected to it. In no time at all, we find that we have rekindled and relinked diverse chains of representations that we have formed in our life about red things in general, and so on. And then we have to start all over again.

Therefore, when we deconstruct the object, separate the chosen quality and focus our attention solely on its perception, we cannot simply remain passive, because the quality diffuses and slips away from our consciousness immediately. Provided that the work on the purification of thinking is constantly practised, using The Philosophy of Freedom, the next step will be possible. After trying many alternatives to hold and prolong the pure quality, I came to the practical conclusion that I have to export and attach a quantity of life force to it from my own resources to keep it alive and growing in its separate, pure state. This force proves necessary for prolonged spiritual experience and research. This solution, however, immediately brought the next problem. (This is how it happens in real research – any solution is but an invitation for new problems.) Now the crucial problem with this move is: if we want to be absolutely certain that we are investigating the red in itself and not our subjective, personal reactions to its influences on body and soul, we must take special care that the energy we donate to the red impression flows solely from the red and not from anything else, inner or outer, otherwise attached to this experience. But this still seems to beg the main question. And the cognitive yoga work takes this paradox and contradiction fully into account: if I have to donate the life force, how can it be red's pure force? This force must possess a miraculous power, to give back to the chosen being the essential being of this other being! And so it does, in fact.

Therefore, we have to search for deeper human forces, through which we hope to find what is less personal in our experience of red. And this leads us to the soul and life forces through which we experience the red as a freely given gift. After all, red gives everything it has, it gives itself. In ordinary life we naturally consume and use its gift to serve our personal, sensual, cognitive and practical daily purposes. We aren’t interested in the red for itself, but only in how we can use it to fulfil our own needs and interests. But the more we experience the objective gift of pure red, the more we feel an inner need and impulse to give back to the red what we have received from it during our life. This impulse can only come about by itself, from real soul experience and should not come about through autosuggestion or command. We feel the colour red as an inspiration that has constantly blessed us since the moment of our birth and that it continues to give its gift of life in this very moment. When we become conscious of this persistent blessing and grace, it fires our soul and we feel the following intensely: we want to give back something of the abundant gifts that we have received from red all our life. This is what establishes the first cognitive-moral bond, an essential subjective-objective, reciprocal determination and exchange of forces between the red and us. And a kind of ‘mutual trust’ is established as well, without which no further ‘cooperation’ is to be expected with the forces of the real spiritual world working through red. In a sense, we have to prove to the real spiritual world our loving and grateful acknowledgement of the fact that this red is part of life as a whole, and that through red it is the whole universe that brings us into being and supports us. Only this repeatedly activated selflessness, our ability to experience the pure quality as a world gift apart from our special interests, gradually allows us to return the gift, intensified by our own forces, as a free and loving donation. This ‘mutual gifting’ makes the purified red quality more intense, vibrant and saturated, not only in comparison to the shadowy ‘red’ experienced in the perception of ‘red cinnabar’, but also in comparison to the soul experience of the pure quality experienced thus far. Our donation becomes vibrant when it is reciprocally acknowledged; we experience how it is received by the deeper being of red, and how it calls forth a further, reciprocal inflow of red's deeper life forces that, at least for us, flow more freely and abundantly through the quality red. This mutual interplay becomes increasingly more alive and intense until a mutual exchange of intensities comes about, that is self-intensifying and self-supporting. And now comes a moment, perhaps only after many efforts, in which the experience of the pure quality of red becomes so intense, vibrant, saturated and alive, that we begin to forget ourselves for more than a fleeting second and we experience that our conscious awareness is maintained and carried without our self-conscious reflection. And the remarkable scientific discovery now is that while we forget ourselves the greatly enhanced forces of red take over and support our self-consciousness when we cannot support it ourselves. When this happens we know that we are beginning to find the firm ground for our cognitive yoga research in the field of perception. We note in our lab. diaries this great moment, this event: we have found a path; we know we are on the right track."

Ben-Aharon, Yeshayahu. Cognitive Yoga: Making Yourself a New Etheric Body and Individuality (p. 55). Temple Lodge Publishing. Kindle Edition.
"They only can acquire the sacred power of self-intuition, who within themselves can interpret and understand the symbol... those only, who feel in their own spirits the same instinct, which impels the chrysalis of the horned fly to leave room in the involucrum for antennae yet to come."
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Re: GA 13 - Rudolf Steiner's "Secret Science in Outline"

Post by Federica »

AshvinP wrote: Sat Jul 13, 2024 2:30 pm There is nothing that justifies any of the bold phrases. Nothing that I have written so far should be construed as justifying anything like that. I also realize you didn't suggest I was taking such an extreme position.
...

Ashvin, I have written half a reply, but I have to admit I struggle to see the value of this discussion, where it is going, and if it's worth this friction. I would like to let it rest a little.
"On Earth the soul has a past, in the Cosmos it has a future. The seer must unite past and future into a true perception of the now." Dennis Klocek
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Re: GA 13 - Rudolf Steiner's "Secret Science in Outline"

Post by Güney27 »

AshvinP wrote: Sat Jul 13, 2024 4:55 pm
Güney27 wrote: Sat Jul 13, 2024 3:50 pm
AshvinP wrote: Sat Jul 13, 2024 1:25 pm


Cleric,

I am still trying to decide that. I can say that the rest isn't bad so far :) (I am about 40% through)

I feel that there is not much explication in the way of practice, techniques, and hints for 'pure perception' or pure thinking, but it is more a brief discussion of what a practice might look like followed by a more lengthy discussion of what can result from that practice. The results are described pretty abstractly with spiritual terms from my perspective.

On the other hand, I found some other books by him, that were originally lectures, to be quite helpful. I am currently reading these:

Spiritual Science in the 21st Century: Transforming Evil, Meeting the Other, and Awakening to the Global Initiation of Humanity - https://a.co/d/cRNoYZ8
(this one has some fascinating discussion of 20th century philosophy and its relation to modern initiation, particularly French postmodernism)

Jerusalem (quoted to Anthony on the other thread)
Ashvin,
I have that book since 2022.
I didn’t read it fully because at that time I couldn’t understand it in depth.

It seems that he starts with explaining that ordinary cognition consists of a synthesis of thinking and sense perception.
This process of synthesis is unconscious and condition our waking consciousness.

The practice he teaches is to decompose sense perception and thinking.
I remember that he wrote that one has to detach for example colors from the object (the idea) and experience it in a pure way.

It seems to contradict the practices given by Steiner or Cleric. Instead of concentrate the inner voice, he emphasize to stop it for an interval, to experience how the world of perception changes without thinking.

But I have to read it again and fully to say that with 100% certainty.

That's correct. I didn't spend much time on the 'etherization of sight' because I am not too familiar with it and figured I could return to it later. It's not necessarily contradictory but is approaching the delamination of soul forces from the opposite pole of pure thinking, i.e. sensory perception. I would be interested to hear Cleric's understanding of this as well. It seems to me that we are starting from where perceptions are most out-of-phase with our current spiritual activity (unlike pure thought-perceptions), so it would require a much greater strength of devotional willpower to 'decompose' the sensory-perceptual representation. On the other hand, sight is closely tied to our cognitive capacity so it would be less problematic than the other bodily senses. He does mention that this etherization should be undertaken only after we have become quite accustomed to pure thinking in the sense of PoF. And I believe the soul disposition of abundant gratitude for the free gift of our perceptual experience that he expresses below is of prime importance to cultivate no matter what sort of spiritual exercises we are doing.

Here is the relevant passage:

"The breathing in of colours and light is the least difficult among the various sense inhalation processes undertaken in the course of cognitive yoga practice and research. The reason for this is that the sense of sight is in the middle between the mostly unconscious bodily senses and the super-conscious senses that perceive the other person.* Furthermore, it is also more conscious in comparison to sensations of cold and warmth, sounds, and especially smelling, tasting and touching.
...
Of course for most people today, in the case of colour breathing, the first reaction is ‘I don’t feel anything when I see blue or red’, but this relative neutrality of affect and effect is an advantage. Colour influences and purification processes stand somewhat in between the unconscious bodily senses which are altogether too intense on the one hand, and pure light, which is too ethereal, on the other. Also, the still higher, human-spiritual senses: the perception of the ‘I’, and the perception of the thoughts and words of the other person, are as difficult to bring down to ordinary cognition as it is difficult to bring the lower body and soul sensations up to consciousness. Therefore, among the senses sight will be chosen as the most suitable candidate for demonstrating the process of sense purification, etherization and inhalation.
...
The first step in the decomposition and deconstruction of the ‘cognitive composition’ in seeing is to concentrate our attention on the colour alone, and disregard the object to which it is attached. As was pointed out above, in the formation of the representation of any object, manifold sense impressions and bodily sensations are amalgamated and synthesized together with many and various concepts, representations, memories and associations. Untangling this complex knot of the representation of the whole object to which a colour is attached is therefore the first step in the purification process. (In the case of pure light, with which we are not primarily concerned here, this would mean, for example, unknotting the representation ‘a ray of light’ with all its invested concepts and focusing solely on the non-objectified light impression.)

The separation of the pure sense quality from the object to which it is attached is an active cognitive process. We aim to both separate the quality from its object as well as focus our attention on the freed quality ‘red’, while fully erasing from consciousness the complex body of representations associated with this object or the form or surface to which the colour is attached. This seems to be a daunting task, and as any real empirical scientific research, it requires meticulous experimentation, variation, and verification over many years. Naturally, only an abbreviated report of this can be given here.

The first major obstacle is that it proves difficult to hold the separated sense quality in our consciousness in this object-free state for a long time. It easily dissipates while our attention is immediately pulled back to the manifold representations associated with the object ‘red cinnabar’ or ‘red patch’. Furthermore, being pulled back to the representation of the red cinnabar, reactivates the whole instinctive set of representations connected to it. In no time at all, we find that we have rekindled and relinked diverse chains of representations that we have formed in our life about red things in general, and so on. And then we have to start all over again.

Therefore, when we deconstruct the object, separate the chosen quality and focus our attention solely on its perception, we cannot simply remain passive, because the quality diffuses and slips away from our consciousness immediately. Provided that the work on the purification of thinking is constantly practised, using The Philosophy of Freedom, the next step will be possible. After trying many alternatives to hold and prolong the pure quality, I came to the practical conclusion that I have to export and attach a quantity of life force to it from my own resources to keep it alive and growing in its separate, pure state. This force proves necessary for prolonged spiritual experience and research. This solution, however, immediately brought the next problem. (This is how it happens in real research – any solution is but an invitation for new problems.) Now the crucial problem with this move is: if we want to be absolutely certain that we are investigating the red in itself and not our subjective, personal reactions to its influences on body and soul, we must take special care that the energy we donate to the red impression flows solely from the red and not from anything else, inner or outer, otherwise attached to this experience. But this still seems to beg the main question. And the cognitive yoga work takes this paradox and contradiction fully into account: if I have to donate the life force, how can it be red's pure force? This force must possess a miraculous power, to give back to the chosen being the essential being of this other being! And so it does, in fact.

Therefore, we have to search for deeper human forces, through which we hope to find what is less personal in our experience of red. And this leads us to the soul and life forces through which we experience the red as a freely given gift. After all, red gives everything it has, it gives itself. In ordinary life we naturally consume and use its gift to serve our personal, sensual, cognitive and practical daily purposes. We aren’t interested in the red for itself, but only in how we can use it to fulfil our own needs and interests. But the more we experience the objective gift of pure red, the more we feel an inner need and impulse to give back to the red what we have received from it during our life. This impulse can only come about by itself, from real soul experience and should not come about through autosuggestion or command. We feel the colour red as an inspiration that has constantly blessed us since the moment of our birth and that it continues to give its gift of life in this very moment. When we become conscious of this persistent blessing and grace, it fires our soul and we feel the following intensely: we want to give back something of the abundant gifts that we have received from red all our life. This is what establishes the first cognitive-moral bond, an essential subjective-objective, reciprocal determination and exchange of forces between the red and us. And a kind of ‘mutual trust’ is established as well, without which no further ‘cooperation’ is to be expected with the forces of the real spiritual world working through red. In a sense, we have to prove to the real spiritual world our loving and grateful acknowledgement of the fact that this red is part of life as a whole, and that through red it is the whole universe that brings us into being and supports us. Only this repeatedly activated selflessness, our ability to experience the pure quality as a world gift apart from our special interests, gradually allows us to return the gift, intensified by our own forces, as a free and loving donation. This ‘mutual gifting’ makes the purified red quality more intense, vibrant and saturated, not only in comparison to the shadowy ‘red’ experienced in the perception of ‘red cinnabar’, but also in comparison to the soul experience of the pure quality experienced thus far. Our donation becomes vibrant when it is reciprocally acknowledged; we experience how it is received by the deeper being of red, and how it calls forth a further, reciprocal inflow of red's deeper life forces that, at least for us, flow more freely and abundantly through the quality red. This mutual interplay becomes increasingly more alive and intense until a mutual exchange of intensities comes about, that is self-intensifying and self-supporting. And now comes a moment, perhaps only after many efforts, in which the experience of the pure quality of red becomes so intense, vibrant, saturated and alive, that we begin to forget ourselves for more than a fleeting second and we experience that our conscious awareness is maintained and carried without our self-conscious reflection. And the remarkable scientific discovery now is that while we forget ourselves the greatly enhanced forces of red take over and support our self-consciousness when we cannot support it ourselves. When this happens we know that we are beginning to find the firm ground for our cognitive yoga research in the field of perception. We note in our lab. diaries this great moment, this event: we have found a path; we know we are on the right track."

Ben-Aharon, Yeshayahu. Cognitive Yoga: Making Yourself a New Etheric Body and Individuality (p. 55). Temple Lodge Publishing. Kindle Edition.
Ashvin,

I find the book helpful, because it is written in a practical way and in a theoretical.
He gives exercises and explain why they are fruitful for one’s inner development.
I think BA become successful with these exercises himself in order to teach them.
One thing I like is that he emphasizes he’s exercises as tools for spiritual investigation.

I found it quite helpful how he explained that the brain sacrifice higher forces, in order to give us a stable orientation in the earthly realm.
He used the blackhole metaphor to give the reader an illustrative example to think of the brain.

I will re-read his book and maybe buy another books he written.


Here is a video about his book and the exercises:

~Only true love can heal broken hearts~
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