one can apply only to physical facts! Even Professor Bain,
"a monistic ANNIHILATIONIST,"
as he is called, confesses that "mental and bodily
states are utterly contrasted."4
Thus, the direct conclusion the Occultists and the Theosophists
can come to at any rate on the prima facie evidence furnished
them by writings which no philosophy can now rebut, is--that
Substantial Philosophy, which was brought forth into this
world to fight materialistic science and to slay it, surpasses
it immeasurably in Materialism. No Bain, no Huxley,
nor even Haeckel, has ever confused to this degree mental
and physical phenomena. At the same time the "apostles
of Materialism" are on a higher plane of philosophy than
their opponents. For, the charge preferred against
them of teaching that Soul is "the mere motion of brain and
nerve particles" is untrue, for they never did so
teach. But, even supposing such would be their theory,
it would only be in accordance with Substantialism, since
the latter assures us that Soul and Spirit, as much
as all "the phenomena-producing causes" (?)
whether physical, mental, or spiritual--if not
regarded as SUBSTANTIAL ENTITIES--"must
come within the same category as non-entitative (?)
modes of motion of material particles."
All this is not only painfully vague, but is almost meaningless.
The inference that the acceptance of the received scientific theories
on light, sound and heat, etc., would be
equivalent to accepting the soul motion of molecules--is
certainly hardly worth discussion. It is quite true
that some thirty or forty years ago Büchner and Moleschott
attempted to prove that sensation and thought are a movement of
matter. But this has been pronounced by a well-known English
Annihilationist "unworthy of the name of 'philosophy'."
Not one man of real scientific reputation or of any eminence,
not Tyndall, Huxley, Maudsley, Clifford,
Bain, Spencer nor Lewis, in England, nor
Virchow, nor Haeckel in Germany, has ever gone so
far as to say:--"Thought IS a
motion of molecules." Their only quarrel with the
believers in a soul was and is, that while the latter maintain
that soul is the cause of thought, they (the Scientists)
assert that thought is the concomitant of certain physical
processes in the brain. Nor have they ever said (the real
scientists and philosophers, however materialistic)
that thought and nervous motion are the same, but
that they are "the subjective and objective sides of the
same thing."
John Stuart Mill is a good authority and an example to quote,
and thus deny the charge. For, speaking of the rough
and rude method of attempting to resolve sensation into nervous
motion (taking as his example the case of the nerve-vibrations
to the brain which are the physical side of the light perception),
"at the end of all these motions, there is something
which is not motion--there is a feeling or sensation
of colour" . . . he says.
Hence, it is quite true to say, that "the subjective
feeling" here spoken of by Mill will outlive even the
acceptance of the undulatory theory of light, or heat,
as a mode of motion. For the latter is based on a physical
speculation and the former is built on everlasting philosophy--however
imperfect, because so tainted with Materialism.
Our quarrel with the Materialists is not so much for their soulless
Forces, as for their denying the existence of any "Force-bearer,"
the Noumenon of Light, Electricity, etc.
To accuse them of not making a difference between mental and physical
phenomena is equal to proclaiming oneself ignorant of their theories.
The most famous Negationists are to-day the first to admit
that SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS and MOTION
"are at the opposite poles of existence." That
which remains to be settled between us and the materialistic
IDEALISTS--a living paradox by the way,
now personified by the most eminent writers on Idealistic philosophy
in England--is the question whether that consciousness is only
experienced in connection with organic molecules of the brain
or not. We say it is the thought or mind which sets the
molecules of the physical brain in motion; they deny any
existence to mind, independent of the brain. But
even they do not call the seat of the mind "a molecular
fabric," but only that it is "the mind-principle"--the
seat or the organic basis of the manifesting mind. That
such is the real attitude of materialistic science may be demonstrated
by reminding the reader of Mr. Tyndall's confessions in
his Fragments of Science, for since the days of
his discussions with Dr. Martineau, the attitude
of the Materialists has not changed. This attitude remains
unaltered, unless, indeed, we place the Hylo-ldealists
on the same level as Mr. Tyndall--which would be absurd.
Treating of the phenomenon of Consciousness, the great
physicist quotes this question from Mr. Martineau:
"A man can say 'I feel, I think, I love';
but how does consciousness infuse itself into the problem?"
And he thus answers: "The passage from the physics
of the brain to the corresponding facts of consciousness is unthinkable.
Granted that a definite thought and a molecular action in the
brain occur simultaneously; we do not possess the intellectual
organ, nor apparently any rudiments of the organ,
which would enable us to pass by a process of reasoning from one
to the other. They appear together, but we do
not know why. Were our minds and senses so expanded,
strengthened and illuminated, as to enable us to see and
feel the very molecules of the brain; were we capable
of following all their motions, all their groupings,
all their electric discharges, if such there be;
and were we intimately acquainted with the corresponding states
of thought and feeling, we should be as far as ever from
the solution of the problem, 'How are these physical processes
connected with the facts of consciousness?' The chasm between
the two classes of phenomena would still remain intellectually
impassable."
Thus, there appears to be far less disagreement between
the Occultists and modern Science than between the former and
the Substantialists. The latter confuse most hopelessly
the subjective with the objective phases of all phenomena,
and the Scientists do not, withstanding that they limit
the subjective to the earthly or terrestrial phenomena
only. In this they have chosen the Cartesian method with
regard to atoms and molecules; we hold to the ancient and
primitive philosophical beliefs, so intuitively perceived
by Leibnitz. Our system can thus be called, as his
was--"Spiritualistic and Atomistic."
Substantialists speak with great scorn of the vibratory theory
of science. But, until able to prove that
their views would explain the phenomena as well, filling,
moreover, the actual gaps and flaws in the modern hypotheses,
they have hardly the right to use such a tone. As all such
theories and speculations are only provisional, we may
well leave them alone. Science has made wonderful discoveries
on the objective side of all the physical phenomena. Where
it is really wrong is, when it perceives in matter alone--i.e.,
in that matter which is known to it--the alpha and the
omega of all phenomena. To reject the scientific
theory, however, of vibrations in light and sound,
is to court as much ridicule as the scientists do in rejecting
physical and objective spiritualistic phenomena
by attributing them all to fraud. Science has ascertained
and proved the exact rapidity with which the sound-waves
travel, and it has artificially imitated--on the data of
transmission of sound by those waves--the human voice and other
acoustic phenomena. The sensation of sound--the
response of the sensory tract to an objective stimulus
(atmospheric vibrations) is an affair of consciousness:
and to call sound an "Entity" on this plane,
is to objectivate most ridiculously a subjective phenomenon
which is but an effect after all--the lower end of a concatenation
of causes. If Materialism locates all in objective matter
and fails to see the origin and primary causes of the Forces--so
much the worse for the materialists; for it only shows
the limitations of their own capacities of hearing and seeing--limitations
which Huxley, for one, recognizes, for he
is unable on his own confession to define the boundaries of our
senses, and still asserts his materialistic tendency by
locating sounds only in cells of matter, and on our sensuous
plane. Behold, the great Biologist dwarfing our
senses and curtailing the powers of man and nature in his usual
ultra-poetical language. Hear him (as quoted by Sterling
"Concerning Protoplasm") speak of "the wonderful
noonday silence of a tropical forest," which "is
after all due only to the dullness of our hearing, and
could our ears only catch the murmurs of these tiny maelstroms
as they whirl in the innumerable myriads of living cells which
constitute each tree, we should be stunned as with the
roar of a great city."
The telephone and the phonograph, moreover, are
there to upset any theory except the vibratory one--however materialistically
expressed. Hence, the attempt of the Substantialists
"to show the fallacy of the wave-theory of sound as universally
taught, and to outline the substantial theory of acoustics,"
cannot be successful. If they shew that sound is not a
mode of motion in its origin and that the forces are not merely
the qualities and property of matter induced or generated in,
by and through matter, under certain conditions--they
will have achieved a great triumph. But, whether
as substance, matter or effect, sound and light
can never be divorced from their modes of manifesting through
vibrations--as the whole subjective or occult nature is
one everlasting perpetual motion of VORTICAL
vibrations.
H.P.B.
Lucifer, September, 1891
1 This is a very wrong word to use. See
text.--H.P.B.