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Parapsychology - Who Was George W. Russell?

 



George W. Russell (1867–1935), an Irish poet, painter, mystic, and journalist, used the pen name AE.

Russell joined the Theosophical Society in 1887, and the following year, when Madame Blavatsky visited Dublin, he studied under her. 

Her thoughts had a profound impact on him. 

He spent a few years living in a tiny Theosophist society in Dublin at 3 Upper Ely Place. 

He wed Violet North, a fellow Theosophist, in 1898. 

Russell founded the first Dublin Lodge of the Theosophical Society in April 1886 with Charles Johnston, Lewis Johnston, William Butler Yeats, H. M. Magee, and others. 

He became acquainted with a number of American Theosophists, including Henry A. Wallace, James Morgan Pryse, and William Quan Judge. 

You reject H. P. Blavatsky somewhat too lightly as "hocus pocus," he said in a letter to the Irish writer Sean O'Faolein, a month before he passed away. 

Nobody has ever used "hocus pocus" to influence the thoughts of so many capable men and women. 

The Secret Doctrine, a treatise on the world's religions that suggests or reveals an underlying oneness between all major faiths, is where her genuine effect may be discovered. 

If you read it only as a romantic collection, it is one of the most thrilling and exhilarating novels produced in the previous 100 years. 

Maeterlinck said that it contained the most magnificent cosmogony in the world. 

Assuming they were drawn to "hocus pocus" is a poor compliment to men like Yeats, Maeterlinck, and other notable men, to men like Sir William Crookes, the greatest chemist of the modern era and a member of her society, to Carter Blake, F.R.S., the anthropologist, and to the scholars and scientists in numerous nations who read H. P. Blavatsky's books. 

You may read "The Proem" to The Secret Doctrine if you ever find yourself at the National Library on Kildare Street and have a few hours to kill. 

You'll learn the secret of how that amazing lady influenced her contemporaries. 

Russell mentioned his friend William Quan Judge, who was a key co-founder of the Theosophical Society in 1875, in a letter to Carrie Rea. 

Russell wrote: I have given you today... a book which I think you will appreciate Letters that have helped me. 

They were written by W.Q. Judge, a guy I regard as the smartest and loveliest I have ever encountered (Z.I.Z.). 

I hold him in higher regard than any other individual I am aware of. 

I hope you will value them as much as the majority of us do. 

They are not poorly written, but while reading them, keep in mind the things you should be keeping in mind at all times rather than fancy words or beautiful phrases. 

I guess he only expresses what he is aware of. 

One such buddy was James Morgan Pryse. 

In his description of Russell and the Irish Theosophists, he stated, "I first met Russell on his numerous travels to the T.S.'s London Headquarters. 

I once saw the Shamrock, a tiny steamer, approaching Dublin while on a walking trip in Wales and seeing Druidic antiquities on the Isle of Anglesea. 

I boarded it and spent the remainder of my holiday with Russell and the other Dublin Lodge members. 

I transferred the original H.P.B. Press, which belonged to Dr. Keightley, to Dublin in 1895 on the recommendation of Mr. Judge and Dr. Keightley. 

I then joined the lodge there and assisted Russell and the others for more than a year in distributing the Irish Theosophist. 

I would have stayed there longer, but Mr. Judge urged that I go to New York since he needed me there because of his sickness. 

Russell produced a number of lovely small poems when he first started studying theosophy, but when I reconnected with him in Dublin, I discovered that he was really despondent since it seemed as if his Muse had abandoned him. 

Every time he tried to compose a rhyme, it failed, and he sadly lamented, "My bogy is dead." Understanding the source of his difficulty, I explained to him that, when he was first introduced to Theosophy, he spontaneously expressed his own ideas in verse, but that his study of the philosophy had filled his mind with new ideas that he had not yet assimilated and could not, therefore, express naturally. 

I told him he would write better than ever after he had internalized these concepts and expanded his mind. 

He immediately accepted my offer to compose poetry for the magazine on an alternating basis as a way to get him going. 

When I was still in my teens, I stopped composing poetry, therefore my main goal in producing poems for the magazine was to inspire Russell to get up again. 

His "bogy" sprang from the grave, and his many mystical poetry went on to enhance literature for many years. 

I put up a favorite hypothesis of mine: much as the Greek dramatists and those of Shakespeare's day, great writers, artists, etc., are usually found in groups. 

In order to discuss our writing, we organized a small group of talented young Irish authors. We met once a week. 

When Mr. Judge summoned me back to New York, I was forced to leave school, but Russell continued the project for years and saw it through to a glorious conclusion, inspiring a lot of talented authors to create the great Irish literary renaissance. 

The captain P. G. Bowen was a friend of Russell's. When Bowen returned to Ireland in 1922 after fighting in South Africa and then France during the First World War, they became friends. AE was a Theosophist first and foremost. 

He disclosed to me that his ultimate goal in life was to spread awareness of the World of Spirit, "where all hearts and minds are one," into the murky realm of human thinking, with the same crystalline honesty and innocent simplicity that always set him apart. 

Not because he ever forgot about the equal needs of the rest of the world, but rather because he believed—and believed rightly, as every true Theosophist will agree—that we should cultivate the field that is closest to us with the tool that is most convenient. 

He sought to bring it first and foremost to Ireland, his own country. 

Because they provided a ready channel made by "the instrument built up by many lives" (his personal selfhood), his literary pursuits were not pursued in order to gain money or fame, things to which he was utterly indifferent. 

Rather, they provided a channel through which "something of the rhythms of the ONE Life" might flow, and with their touch, "restore to some sort of tune the jangled strings of human consciousness." Henry A. 

Wallace, an American Theosophist with whom Russell had a lot in common, was a correspondent. 

They both came from small towns, produced agricultural publications, belonged to the Theosophical Society, and had mystic spiritual practices. 

Wallace emphasized Russell's effect on rural America, recalling how A.E.'s Irish Homestead was read aloud in Iowa and how Wallace's Farmer included an item on Russell on August 15, 1913. 

Wallace later rose through the ranks in the administration of American President Franklin D. Roosevelt to become the Secretary of Agriculture and eventually Vice President. 

W. Q. Judge was friends with Irish immigrant and publisher of The Canadian Theosophist Albert E. S. Smythe (1861–1947). 

In a letter to James M. Pryse from 1931, Russell explained: "The grey visitor was James M. Pryse who first instructed me in magic, conjuring up pictures in the astral light and holding them before my inner eyes so that I could see initiation scenes, the evolution of the astral from the physical, and the movement of cells and forces in the body." He showed me a significant portion of what he wrote in the "glass" while interpreting the Apocalypse. 

He was one of the few T.S. members that had a considerable degree of occult power and knew things for himself. 

He was a fairly enigmatic individual whose writing and speaking were informed by personal experience. 

As far as I'm aware, only he, Judge, H.P.B., Subba Row, Damodar, and Jasper Niemand were T.S. members who had their own sources of information. 

Though Pryse said Archibald Keightley, who seldom wrote, understood a lot, the majority of the others either wrote intuitively or recounted what they had read. 

Russell left the Theosophical Society after the passing of William Quan Judge in 1896 and Madame Blavatsky in 1891. The Hermetic Society was thus founded by him.

~Kiran Atma


Parapsychology - Who Was Frater Achad?

 





Charles Stansfeld Jones (1886–1950), a British magician and novelist who resided in Cana cay and formed the Fellowship of Ma-Ion, used this mystical name.

He was a disciple of the magician Aleister Crowley, who named him his magical child.

Jones is to be differentiated from theosophical writer George Graham Price, who channeled two popular writings under the alias Frater Achad, Melchizedek Truth Principles (1963) and Ancient Mystical WhiteBrotherhood (1971).

Apart from channeling the two works, nothing is known about Price's life.





Bonner, Margerie Lowry said that while working on Under the Volcano, he started to research the theosophists' canon, which included P.D. Ouspensky, Swedenborg, Blake, James, Böhme, and Yeats, as well as A.E. Waite, Eliphas Levi, Madame Blavatsky, and, by chance, Frater Achad. 


Charles Stansfeld-Jones – a white magician and author of Cabbalistic books and treatises under the name Frater Achad – appeared at Lowry's Dollarton shack and began a long friendship with him, during which time Lowry experimented with astral body projection, the I Ching, and Yoga, and studied the Tree of Life, a reproduction of which was hung on a wall in the shack. 




Lowry discontinued his research after months of immersion for fear of "opening doors that should stay locked." [Originally published in Perle Epstein's The Private Labyrinth of Malcolm Lowry. 

Holt, Reinhart, and Winston, New York, 1969.] While Lowry finished the first draft of Under the Volcano in 1940 before meeting Stansfeld-Jones, he subsequently claimed that he met a Cabbalist at a "critical and serendipitous time in the composition of the novel." Since the receiving of the Book of the Law, Achad has been regarded as the most notable Catholic Thelemite. 


This is because Frater Achad converted to Roman Catholicism in 1928, 19 years after entering the A.A. as a Probationer. 

Achad's claim to fame as a Thelemite—and the reason orthodox Thelemites must contend with him even if they believe his curious researches are mistaken or dangerous—is that he discovered the qabalistic "key" to the Book of the Law, prompting Aleister Crowley to rename the book Liber AL vel Legis instead of Liber Legis. 

This finding was recounted in Achad's magical notebook, Liber 31, which was eventually released. 

Crowley used this insight to consecrate Achad as his magical son, as prophesied in the Book of the Law, and to acknowledge his claim to the Thelemic grade of Magister Templi, or "Babe of the Abyss." However, by the 1920s, Crowley had become disillusioned with his son and successor due to some Achad writings. 

Achad's experiment with changing the courses of the qabalistic Tree of Life was documented in his 1922 Q.B.L.; or the Bride's Reception. 




The Egyptian Revival, published in 1923, and The Anatomy of the Body of God, published in 1925, continued Achad's work. 

To put it plainly, Crowley thought such attempts were foolish. 

Achad was also a member of the Worldwide Brotherhood, an esoteric group that claimed to share universal religious and philosophical knowledge, as well as a "true transcript" of the objective cosmos, by this time. 

Many occultists, including Crowley, thought the convoluted UB system was a "scam" or, worse, a cover for the Catholic Church's infiltration of occult organizations (for more on the UB, see the recent article in the O.T.O. anthology Success is Your Proof). 


Many high-ranking members of the UB converted to Catholicism when it was founded by Merwin-Marie Snell, a Catholic comparative religion professor. 

Crowley and Achad ultimately lost communication, and Achad was expelled from the Order of the Temple

Jones, on the other hand, never stopped thinking about his status as Crowley's magical offspring, and Thelema's revelations remained a major element of his spiritual worldview. 

Following Crowley's death, Achad corresponded with Crowley's executor Gerald Yorke in a lengthy series of letters. 

The letters "announced the arriving of the Aeon of Maat" in April 1948, and "from this point onwards the communication contains information recording the development of the new Aeon which Jones had discovered, and exploring its consequences and implications," according to Starfire. 





An Aeon is governed by a central spiritual idea or formula as well as the god-form that personifies that idea, according to Crowley's Thelemic system. 

It lasts about 2,000 years (coinciding with the precession of the equinoxes) and is ruled by a central spiritual idea or formula as well as the god-form that personifies that idea. 

The Aeon of Horus, which began in 1904 with Crowley's receiving of Liber AL vel Legis, is controlled by Horus, the god's crowned and victorious offspring, and will last for thousands of years. 

Yet, like Achad, some unconventional Thelemites have accepted the possibility of a premature dawning of the Aeon of Maat—for example, Kenneth Grant in his Typhonian Trilogies, the Thelemic magical order Ordo Adeptorum Invisiblum, and Nema, whose received text Liber Pennae Penumbra and system of Maat magick is perhaps the most influential result of Maatian speculations. 



The greatest description of these modern currents in theoretical occultism is Don Karr's book Approaching the Kabbalah of Maat


Despite the fact that Achad's announcement of the Aeon of Maat influenced a number of important occultist researchers in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, his Maatian revelation does not appear to follow from his books, his Catholic conversion, or his involvement with (and eventual leadership of) the UB. 

To truly comprehend the importance of an early Aeon of Truth and Justice—the spiritual concepts symbolized by the god-form of Maat—one must first understand the qabalistic implications of Achad's 1920s views. 

Among early twentieth-century occultists, Achad is possibly the most pro-materialist. 



Unlike many Gnostics, Neo-Buddhists, and Theosophists of the time, Achad believes in a material universe infused with spirit—sacramentally infused, if you will. 


This is in line with the Universal Brotherhood's philosophical realism principles. 

It also corresponds to Achad's extreme qabalistic theories. 

Unlike other qabalists, Achad's multifaceted image of the Tree of Life's primeval fall and eschatological restoration resembles a cosmic fulfillment process rather than a myth of transgression and forgiveness. 

This is something he shares with the modernist Catholic thinkers of his day. 

Idealism and Materialism must join and go hand in hand if a new Civilization is to be established, argues Achad in The Anatomy of the Body of God. 





The Soul of Humanity is the connection that binds everything together. 


Our physical bodies are nothing to be ashamed of, but they would be useless without the Spirit and Will that give them life and action. 

On the other hand, we should not be so timid and selfish as to want to be re-absorbed into Spirit, as if the whole Creative Plan had been a waste of time and should have never been undertaken in the first place. 

No! Let us offer gratitude in our hearts for both our bodies and our spirits, and let us use both properly and to the full extent of our abilities. 

Over the course of the 1920s, Achad's writings became more oriented on the immanent fulfillment of God's Kingdom, a perspective that would be dubbed "realized eschatology" in Christian theology. 

"We must take into the inheritance of Freedom that has been provided for us in the Father's Kingdom upon Earth," says Anatomy, "and begin to construct a 'Living Temple, not created with hands, everlasting in the Heavens'—on Earth." The rousing proclamation, There is a space reserved for every one of you, Here and Now, finishes the book's introduction. 



Everything has its place when everything is placed in its place. 


Take up your positions in the Kingdom of the Ever-Coming Son, fulfill yourself in the fulfillment of God's Will inside you, and demonstrate to those who are still in the dark outside that there is space for everyone who are willing to maintain their place and stop attempting to usurp others'. 

Frater Achad's knowledge of the approaching Kingdom of God is based on his interpretation of Qabalah's cosmic processes. 

In the orthodox Thelemic schema, the Egyptian deity forms Isis—Osiris—Horus correlate to Binah—Kether-Chokmah—and Tiphereth, respectively. 

Malkuth, the Material Kingdom, is represented by Maat, who completes the four-part sequence. 



The four letters of the Hebrew Tetragrammaton, IHVH—Osiris (I), Isis (H), Horus (V), with Maat (final H) completing the sequence—can also be ascribed to the Aeons. 


In most texts on Hermetic Qabalah, the letters of the Tetragrammaton fulfill a cosmic story. 

The fallen Daughter (Heh final) must combine with the Son (Vav) to ascend to the level of Heh prime, establishing the Daughter/Malkuth on the throne of Binah, the Mother, in order to restore the Tree of Life to its pre-Fall condition (Heh prime). 

The Mother then "arouses the active power of THE FATHER, and these twain being UNITED, everything is RE-ABSORBED into THE CROWN," as Achad describes in Q.B.L. 

As a result of Malkuth's union with Kether, the eschatological kingdom is realized on Earth, fulfilling God's goal for creation. 

The salvation economy of Mary, a Daughter of Israel and child of the earth, conceiving the Son, the Christos, by the Holy Spirit, then being joined with God the Father in her Coronation as the Mother of Heaven, may be expressed in the Catholic system. 

Through the inbreaking of the eschatological Kingdom in the event of Jesus Christ, the Son's Incarnation thus redeems Malkuth's material world—represented in miniature by Mary. 


Through the Eucharistic Mass, Catholics engage in this reality—the eschaton made manifest here and now in fulfillment of God's design. 


Many orthodox Thelemites have proposed bizarre explanations for why Frater Achad would ever switch to the Roman Church, including insanity, a desire to convert the Church to Thelema's Law, or being lost in the Abyss as a Black Brother. 

Achad, on the other hand, offers a different reason for his strange conversion: Achad needed to be escorted to the Temple's opposite Pillar in order to discover the secrets of the R[oman] Catholic Church. 

He joined the Church as an orthodox member and obtained his first communion during Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve, 1928. 

This step, and only this step, resulted in the start of the Initiations and Ordeals that were to follow, as per Liber Legis. 

(Jones, letter to Gerald Yorke and Albert Handel, May 6, 1948; cited in Hymenaeus Beta, Prolegomenon to Aleister Crowley's Liber Aleph, Second Edition, Hymenaeus Beta, Prolegomenon to the Second Edition, Hymenaeus Beta, Prolegomenon to the Second Edition, Hymenaeus Beta, Prolegomenon to the Second Edition, Hymenaeus Beta, Pro Achad was poised to herald the beginning of the Aeon of Truth and Justice—the eschatological Kingdom realized on earth, glyphed in esoteric terms by the goddess Maat and glyphed in the New Testament by St. John the Divine's vision of the New Jerusalem: Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, since the previous heaven and earth had vanished, and the sea had vanished as well. 

And I saw the holy city, the new Jerusalem, descending down from God like a bride adorned for her husband (Revelation 21:1-3) This is the banquet for the bride—the New Jerusalem has come down to earth, the divine has become one with the mundane world. 

"Jones relayed the news of his 1932 Silver Star Ordeal not only to Crowley, but also to the Catholic Church," states Hymenaeus Beta. 

Achad considered his initiations into this new New Aeon as vital to both the occult world and the Catholic Church. 

"He came to believe that the Aeon of Horus was coming to an end, and that a new Aeon of Truth and Justice, ruled by the Egyptian goddess Maat (or Ma), was about to begin." Achad's conversion allowed him to participate in the Church's sacramental life. 

This implies he took part in the Eucharist, with his first Mass being the Christmas 1928 Mass commemorating the Incarnation. 

For Catholics, the Eucharist is the eschatological reality bursting into our current moment, the Kingdom of God made visible on earth. 

The Eucharist is "a guarantee of future grandeur," according to the Catholic Church's Catechism, "a foretaste of the celestial feast to come" (CCC 1323). 

The Aeon of Maat is a "backwards current," granting us a vision of an age in which "we all may become something far greater, something which exists in the form of seeds within us in the eternal Now" (Horus/Maat Lodge FAQ page), much like the inbreaking Kingdom of God, which rushes in from the future to meet us in the present (see, for example, radical Catholic theologian Edward Schillebeeckx's God the Future of Man). 

Unlike other non-orthodox Thelemites who believe in a "double current" in which both the Aeons of Horus and Maat are active at the same time, or those who believe that the Aeon of Maat will arrive too soon to replace the Aeon of Horus, my reading of Frater Achad through the lens of the Catholic Mass suggests that the new Aeon of Truth and Justice is present in the present at the same time as the "force and fire" of the Aeon The Mother's Daughter ascends to the throne, the Father awakens, and the Son of God is born among the people of the world. 

"Kether is in Malkuth, and Malkuth is in Kether," Frater Achad declares.


Further Reading:


Achad, Frater [Charles Stansfeld Jones]. The Anatomy of the Body of God. New York: Samuel Weiser, 1969.

Achad, Frater [George Graham Price]. Ancient Mystical White Brotherhood. Lakemont, Ga.: CSA Press, 1971.

Melchizedek Truth Principles. Phoenix, Ariz.: Lockhart Research Foundation, 1963.



Kiran Atma

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Parapsychology - Who Was Abraham The Jew (1362–1460)?

 




Little is known about this German Jew who lived about 1400 and was an alchemist, magician, and philosopher.


The majority of what is known comes from a manuscript held in the Archives of the Bibliotheque de l'Arsenal in Paris, a repository of esoteric texts.


The manu script, written completely in French, claimed to be a translation from Hebrew, and the handwriting style suggests that the writer lived in the early eighteenth century, if not earlier.




The French script has a distinct illiteracy to it, with punctuation that is either incorrect or visibly lacking.

Abraham was most likely a Mayence native, and he was born about 1362.

His father, Simon, was a seer and magician, and the youngster began his esoteric studies under his father's tutelage, then later under the tutelage of another teacher, Moses, whom Abraham characterizes as "truly a nice man, but utterly unaware of The True Mystery, and of The Veritable Magic." After that, Abraham chose to travel to further his studies.

He traveled via Austria and Hungary with his buddy Samuel, a Bohemian by origin, through Greece, and then to Constantinople (now Istanbul), where he stayed for two years.

After that, Abraham journeyed to Arabia, a well-known center of mystic study at the time, and then to Palestine and Egypt.

In Egypt, he met Abra-Melin, a great Egyptian philosopher, who entrusted him with important papers and revealed a lot of vital secrets.

Abraham then left Egypt for Europe, finally settling in Würzburg, Germany, where he got extensively immersed in alchemy study.

He had three daughters and two sons, the older called Joseph and the younger Lamech, after marrying a lady who seems to be his cousin.

He trained both sons in esoteric matters, and he bestowed a dowry of 100,000 golden florins on each of his three daughters.

He claimed to have gained this substantial fortune, as well as other huge wealth, while traveling as an alchemist.

He was well-known and was asked to do magical deeds in front of many wealthy and powerful individuals, including Emperor Siegmund of Germany, the bishop of Würzburg, King Henry VI of England, the Duke of Bavaria, and Pope John XXII.

There are no details concerning the remainder of Abraham's life, and his death date is unknown, although it is widely assumed to have occurred about 1460.

The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abra-Melin, as bequeathed by Abraham the Jew unto his son Lamech, is the title of the book that supplied this biographical information.

This title is deceptive and inaccurate, since Abra-Melin had no involvement in the work's introductory section, which includes a description of Abraham's boyhood and early journeys in quest of enlightenment, as well as guidance to a young man striving to become expert in esoteric arts.

The second section, on the other hand, is either based on the records given to Abraham by Abra-Melin or on the secrets revealed to Abraham by the Egyptian sage.

"How Many, and What are the Classes of Veritable Magic?" is one of the chapters in this section of the manuscript, which deals with the fundamentals of magic in general.

"What we Should Consider Before Conducting the Operation," "Concerning the Convocation of the Spirits," and "How We Should Conduct the Operations." The third and last section of the paper is primarily taken directly from Abra-Melin, and the author, avoiding theoretical matters as much as possible, focuses on practical magic practice.

First and foremost, he explains how to "get various Visions," "retain the Familiar Spirits, bound or free, in whatever shape," and "excite Them bugs." In other chapters, he talks of reviving the dead, transforming into "divers shapes and forms," flying through the air, smashing buildings, finding robberies, and swimming underwater.

The author discusses the thaumaturgic treatment of leprosy, dropsy, paralysis, and a variety of other maladies including fever and seasickness.

He also gives tips on "How to Be Loved by a Woman," as well as how to gain the favor of popes, emperors, and other powerful figures.

In "How to induce Armed Men to Appear," he answers the question of summoning visions and explains how to conjure "Comedies, Operas, and all types of Music and Dances." Many of these achievements are accomplished via the use of Kabalistic letter squares.

Many distinct symptoms of this kind are detailed in the book.

As described in this book, Abraham's demeanor and temperament depict a guy who scorns most other magicians and speaks with great mockery of practically all spiritual works other than his own and those of his hero, Abra-Melin.

Abraham harshly condemns anybody who denies the faith in which they were reared, claiming that no one who does so would ever be able to master magic.

Nonetheless, Abraham exhibits minimal selfishness throughout the writings and seems to have labored for accomplishment in his skill in order to use it for the good of humanity as a whole.

His works also indicate a strong conviction in the existence of a higher self in every individual, as well as a strong desire to develop it.

(Also see Nicholas Flamel.) 


Further Reading:


The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abra-Melin the Sage. Translated by S. L. MacGregor-Mathers. Chicago: De Laurence, 1932. Reprint, New York: Causeway Books, 1974.



Kiran Atma

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Parapsychology - What Is The Phenomenon Of UFO Abduction?

 


During the 1980s, ufologists began to devote more time to investigating accounts of people who claimed to have not only seen various types of spacecraft, but also to have been dragged aboard and forced to undergo various medical-like procedures, the most common of which were various types of body probes.

People having direct touch with entities in charge of spaceships were reported to the UFO community.

These were usually accounts of amicable encounters with extraterrestrials who delivered a warning about society's present direction, which should be opposed by a renewed understanding of the Earth's place in the wider realm of spiritual truths.

Contactees were described by ufologists as persons who claimed to have had these types of encounters with extraterrestrials.

In the 1960s, the first reports that matched what would become the general pattern of abduction accounts surfaced.

Betty Hill, a New Hampshire housewife, reported a UFO experience to NICAP in 1961.

(the National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena).

Uncertain aspects of the narrative came to light during follow-up interviews with NICAP investigators.

One of them had a two-hour gap.

Betty and her husband were coming home when they saw the sighting.

They came two hours after they were supposed to.

The pair eventually sought psychotherapy and detailed their encounter with a group of entities described as around five feet tall, with a huge hairless head, greyish skin, wide slanted eyes, a slit mouth, small nose and ears, and long fingers, while under hypnosis.

They were examined and brought onboard a spaceship.

Betty's stomach was pierced with a needle.

They were advised to forget about the event before they departed, and as the space ship left the earth, their memories of what had just happened disappeared.

If writer John Fuller hadn't found the Hills and written a book chronicling the events disclosed in the series of hypnotic sessions, the Hill's story may have been buried within the massive databases of UFO accounts.

Fuller's book Interrupted Journey, released in 1966, as well as a simplified version of the narrative published in Look magazine, put abductions on the radar of the UFO community.

Other reports of forced contact with extraterrestrials have been reported to various UFO groups, to be sure.

One of them, the narrative of Antonio Villas Boas, a young Brazilian guy who claimed to have been kidnapped in 1957, was published in 1965 in Flying Saucer Review, a respected British UFO magazine.

Following the publishing of the Hill case, it was given a full examination.

He was purportedly brought onboard the saucer and made to have intercourse with a human-like lady, following which samples of his sperm were collected and kept.

Despite the fact that two well-documented incidents were already under investigation, new reports were sluggish to emerge.

It wasn't until the 1970s that a series of abduction incidents rekindled interest in the phenomenon.

Charles Hickson and Calvin Parker, two shipyard employees, were kidnapped while fishing in Pasacagoula, Mississippi, in 1973.

Several others occurred in the same year.

Then, in 1975, six guys in Arizona claimed that one of their coworkers had vanished as he approached a hovering UFO.

Five days later, Travis Walton emerged and proceeded to tell his narrative of a forced meeting with the entity onboard the vessel.

Other lesser-known abduction incidents were reported again that year, but more importantly, a made-for-TV movie on the Hill case aired on NBC on October 20.

Through the conclusion of the decade, a rising number of cases were documented each year.

The interactions themselves were usually years, if not decades, previous to any investigator hearing of the abduction incidents, since the abduction accounts generally contained an element of memory loss.

Betty Andreasson's situation was typical.

Despite the fact that her alleged kidnapping happened in 1967, Raymond Fowler's inquiry did not begin until 1976, and his book detailing the event did not emerge until 1979.

However, his The Andreas Son Affair (1979) and Ann Druffel and D. Scott Rogo's The Tujunga Canyon Contacts (1980) primed the UFO community for a new look at the abduction accounts during the following decade.

In the 1980s, kidnapping tales would take center stage.

Budd Hopkins, a relative newbie to the subject, was in the forefront of the demand that ufologists pay attention to abduction cases.

His 1981 book, Missing Time, documented a number of abduction cases he had unearthed.

He also noticed parallels in the cases, such as the gray humanoids that carried out the abductions, the physical examination that included blood or skin samples, and special attention to the reproductive organs.

Hopkins' investigation brought to light the fact that there were a huge number of instances with a lot of quantifiable commonalities.

In 1987, when prominent horror fiction writer Whitley Streiber was sued for his book Communion, in which he described the account of his own abduction, interest in the work reached a new peak.

The book became a best-seller, bringing the UFO community a level of attention it hadn't seen since the Condon Report (1969).

Folklorist Thomas E. Bullard stated the presence of more than 300 incidents in a collection of cases published by the Fund for UFO Research the same year.

The increased attention devoted to abductions in 1987 resulted in a significant increase in the number of reports.

These hundreds of cases, which have arisen from people who are dependent on others or who are aware of abduction stories in general, tell a very similar story, despite the fact that the details vary greatly.

Strange beings interrupt the abductee's life, and their will to resist is weakened.

They are transported onboard a space ship, sometimes with the assistance of levitation, and subjected to an intrusive physical examination.

In most cases, the victim is made to forget the occurrence, and it is only years later, when troubled emotions develop in nightmarish dreams, that the victim seeks psychotherapy or hypnosis, during which the recollection of the abduction resurface.

The element of memory loss, combined with the intrusive invasion of the body during the examination, has led to comparisons of abduction stories with a very similar story of Satanic ritual abuse, in which stories emerge of people being forced to participate in a Satanic ritual where they were raped while undergoing psychotherapy and/or hypnosis.

They eventually forgot about the incident (s).

The abduction and satanism stories have combined to form a new term for the lost memory condition.

As fundamental research on abductions progressed, experts were split on how to interpret the findings.

Many ufologists, like historian David Jacobs, agreed with Hopkins that the instances were fundamentally true and that they were the greatest proof of an alien presence on Earth.

More crazy elements woven more insane stories of government conspiracies and extraterrestrial alliances.

Most abductees, on the other hand, have merely wanted to know what had happened to them, and have been relieved to hear that others had had similar experiences.

They've been looking for a bigger significance in this occurrence for a long time.

The majority of studies have determined that the abductee has no psychopathology and has no motivation to give such a terrible account.

The huge number of reported interactions is a source of criticism to the story's literal acceptance as evidence of alien contacts.

Given the current level of interstellar travel, the amount of spacecraft that could or would come to Earth to account for all of the connections is quite unlikely.

The many exams of reproductive organs also raises concerns about the aim of bodily probing.

What is there to gain? Furthermore, although the tales are supported by their consistency, they lack independent supporting evidence.

Evidence may have been lost in many situations involving reports of long-ago occurrences.

However, there has been little cooperation overall.

Some hoped to find proof in things implanted in contactees' bodies, however such foreign objects detected in abductees' bodies have shown out to be completely commonplace in nature.

The claims' closeness to abduction and Satanic abuse accounts was highlighted once again by the absence of supporting proof.

Others, both sympathetic and antagonistic to the abductees, have come up with their own explanations.

The abduction claims have been criticized by certain UFO debunkers, headed by tradition critic Philip Klass, as either frauds or delusions.

A purely psychological view has been endorsed by several psychologists.

The most appealing argument stems from the concept of the forgotten ten memory condition, which also accounts for the extremely similar Satanic abuse claims.

This hypothesis proposes that the abductee has been through a true trauma, generally sexual molestation as a kid, but that during efforts to retrieve the memories, a tale is created that validates the trauma while simultaneously disguising it in a Satanic cult or a spacecraft.

The abduction tales started to blend with the contactee stories in the 1990s, adding another crucial aspect to the abduction accounts.

In the sequel to Communion, Transformation: The Breakthrough, Whitley Strieber focused attention to this feature of abduction accounts (1988).

Strieber recounted a series of encounters with the "Visitors" that started when he was a boy, and his developing feeling that their interference into human existence was fundamentally good.

Leo J. Sprinkle, who had been organizing yearly contactee gatherings at the University of Wyoming each summer, finally joined him in this assessment.

As other abductees attended the meetings, he saw the lines between their accounts dissolving over time.

In a similar vein, psychiatrist John Mack discovered that when the accounts of the abductees he counseled were placed in a wider framework of personal growth and changes in consciousness, they could be explained.

They came to believe that the experience was best viewed as a difficult but necessary lesson that led to spiritual growth and change.

In the New Age community, both Strieber and Mack found a large following.

Though ufologists lost part of their attention on the reports in the 1990s, probably owing to a lack of fresh material, there is no such thing as a consensus when it comes to abductions.

The investigation looked to have come to a halt.

They haven't yielded hard physical evidence of extraterrestrials, such as a spaceship, alien materials, or an alien, like other areas of UFO research.



Further Reading:


Bullard, Thomas E. ‘‘Abduction Phenomenon.’’ In Jerome Clark, ed. UFO Encyclopedia. Detroit: Apogee Books, 1999.

Druffel, Ann, and D. Scott Rogo. The Tujunga Canyon Contacts. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1980.

Fowler, Raymond. The Andreasson Affair. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1979.

Hopkins, Budd. Missing Time: A Documented Study of UFO Abductions. New York: Richard Marek Publishers, 1981.

Jacobs, David J. The Terror That Comes in the Night: An Experience-Centered Study of Supernatural Assault Traditions. Philadel￾phia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1982.

Klass, Philip J. UFO Abductions: A Dangerous Game. Buffalo, N.Y.: Prometheus Books, 1988.

Mack, John E. Abduction: Human Encounters with Aliens. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1994.

Pritchard, Andrea, et al., eds. Alien Discussions: Proceedings of the Abduction Study Conference. Cambridge, Mass.: North Cambridge Press, 1994.

Strieber, Whitley. Communion: A True Story. New York: Beach Tree/William Morrow, 1987. 

Transformation: The Breakthrough. New York: William Morrow and Co., 1988.


Kiran Atma

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Hinduism - What Is The Vedanta Society?

 


The oldest Hindu missionary organization in America, established in 1897 by Swami Vivekananda.

The society stresses the philosophical teachings of Vedanta, which it understands as referring solely to the Advaita Vedanta school, Vivekananda’s major emphasis.

The society’s tone has been nontheistic, nonritual, and rationalist; its constituency has been drawn from liberals and intellectuals, such as the writer Aldous Huxley.


~Kiran Atma


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Hinduism - Who Was Vedanta Deshika?

 


Vedanta Deshika(13th c.) was a writer and commentator in the Vishishthadvaita Vedanta philosophical school.


Vedanta Deshika was a follower of Ramanuja and interpreted Ramanuja as teaching that there were two sorts of liberation: 


  1. a lower one in which one was subject to no outside forces, 
  2. and a higher one in which one’s entire being was focused on the Lord, whom Ramanuja identified as the god Vishnu.


The human being is considered both identical to and different from the Lord, which means the perfect identity is never possible; God’s transcendence leads to the exaltation of devotion (bhakti) and the stress on submission to God’s grace.


~Kiran Atma


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Hinduism - Who Was Vatsyayana?

 

Vatsyayana(4th c.) was a writer and commentator in the Nyaya school of ancient Hindu philosophy

The Nyaya school has been integrated with another of the six schools, the Vaisheshikas, from the early common period.

Vatsyayana is most known for his commentary on Gautama's Nyaya Sutras, which are the Nyaya school's fundamental literature.


~Kiran Atma


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Hinduism - How Was Henry David Thoreau Influenced By Hinduism?

 


 (1817–1862) American writer and philosopher who, according to his own account, was profoundly influenced by the Hindu religious text known as the Bhagavad Gita, particularly the text's instruction to perform one's duties selflessly for the good of In both Walden and A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, Thoreau mentions this work, and in letters to his friends, Thoreau expresses his wish to practice yoga.

~Kiran Atma


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Hinduism - Who Was Sushruta?

 


Sushruta (4th c.) is traditionally considered as the author of the Sushruta Samhita, he was a physician and writer.

The Sushruta Samhita is one of two key sources for Ayurveda, an Indian medicinal tradition, along with the somewhat older Charaka Samhita.


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Shitala

 

 

Goddess of Hinduism who is both revered and dreaded.

Shitala was regarded to be the corporeal embodiment of smallpox, a fatal virus, and a person affected with the disease was thought to be possessed by the goddess, a belief bolstered by the fever and madness that often accompanied the illness.

Shitala is also connected with heat, both because of the fever induced by smallpox and because her biggest religious celebration, Shitalashtami, falls towards the beginning of the hot sea summer.

Shitala is said to be a vengeful, spiteful goddess who punishes people who disobey and displease her.

The literal meaning of her name, "Cool One," might be interpreted as a flattering effort to placate her fury.

Despite the World Health Organization's declaration that smallpox has been eliminated, Shitala has maintained her status.

Shitala has modified the dis ease through which she manifests herself, and now comes in the shape of tuber culosis, according to one writer, in an interesting illustration of religious development.


See Margaret Thrice Egnor, "The Changed Mother, or What the Smallpox Goddess Did When There Was No More Smallpox," Contributions to Asian Studies XVIII, 1984.




Shankaracharya

 

(788–820?) Shankaracharya - Writer and religious thinker who is clearly the most important person in the Advaita Vedanta intellectual school, and possibly the single most important Hindu religious figure.

His life is shrouded in mystery—his dates are unknown—but popular legends persist.

According to legend, he was the deity Shiva incarnate, who came to earth to teach the ultimate wisdom.

Shankara is one of Shiva's epithets, while acharya is an honorific suffix that means "teacher." He is said to have been born into a Nambudiri brahmin household in Kaladi, Kerala, to have been an ascetic at an early age and to have traveled far participating in religious debates, notably with Buddhists, whose religious influence he placed on the decrease.

He is said to have founded the 10 Dashanami Sanyasi orders and the four maths that serve as their headquarters, to have authored comments on the three primary scriptures of the Vedanta school—the Upanishads, Vedanta Sutras, and Bhagavad Gita—and to have died at the age of 32 in the Himalayas.

Many of these assertions are unsubstantiated, yet his work's importance cannot be questioned.

The Brahmasutra Bhashya, his commentary on the Vedanta Sutras, provides the traditional Advaita Vedanta formulation, emphasizing that the Ultimate Reality is the unqualified (nirguna) Brahman, which is everlasting and unchanging, and to which the human soul is identical.

The changing phenomenal world (the universe we see and feel) is an illusion, generated by superimposing (adhyasa) erroneous concepts upon the unqualified Brahman.

Because Shankaracharya thinks that the only way to be free is to replace one's erroneous understanding with the proper one, he feels that insight, not action, is the way to go.

This epiphany may be defined as a flash of insight, however describing Shanka racharya as a mystic seems to be inaccurate.

This is because he places a significant emphasis on the holy books' legitimacy as a source of precise information about the ultimate truth.

Although Shankara charya felt that obligatory ritual activities should be undertaken out of a feeling of responsibility, this emphasis on insight devalues the ultimate usefulness of ritual activity, save in a preliminary function of clearing defilements.

Shankaracharya's quiet, as much as his speech, has philosophical significance.

Many philosophical questions remain unanswered, including whether selves are one or many, whether the seat of ignorance (avidya) was Brahman or the person, the nature of ignorance, and the actual nature of the material universe.

Because he refused to take a stand on these matters, those who followed after him had a lot of options.

Shankaracharya himself focused on epistemological difficulties, such as how people come to know things and, more importantly, how to repair the false beliefs that bind people.

His writings conjure up a picture of a genuinely religious guy whose principal purpose was to assist his listeners in dispelling their illusions and achieving complete spiritual emancipation (moksha).

Given this underlying objective and his keen intellectual mind, one might argue that he was aware of such metaphysical issues but decided to ignore them since they were irrelevant to his main goal.

Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan and Charles A. Moore (eds. ), A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, 1957; and Karl H. Potter (ed. ), Advaita Vedanta up to Samkara and His Pupils, 1981, for further information on Shankaracharya's thinking.