The Ain Soph

It is necessary to comprehend and urgent to know that within the poor intellectual animal mistakenly called man, three perfectly defined aspects exist.

The first one of these aspects is that which is called Essence. In Zen Buddhism, this Essence is denominated Buddhata.

The second aspect is the personality. This aspect in itself is not the physical body, even though it utilizes the physical body for its own expression in the tridimensional world.

The third aspect is the devil, the pluralized “I” within each one of us, that is to say, the “myself.” Continue reading “The Ain Soph”

Protons and Antiprotons

The real existence of the proton and the antiproton was demonstrated absolutely in the year 1955 by a physics team from Berkeley. When a plate of copper was bombarded with the energy of 6,000 million electronvolts, two marvelous nuclei of hydrogen were extracted from the target. They were identical but of opposite charge: one positive proton and the other negative.

By all means it then becomes clear that half of the universe is constituted of antimatter. If the modern wise men could find anti-particles in the laboratories, it is because they also exist in the profound depth of this great Nature. In no way can we deny that to detect the antimatter in space is frightfully difficult.

The light of the anti-stars, even when apparently identical to the light of the stars, and even when photographs register them in the same way, have a difference that is unknown to the “wise men.” Continue reading “Protons and Antiprotons”

Fohat

(Theosophical/Tibetan) A term used by H.P. Blavatsky to represent the essence of cosmic electricity, vital force.

“This light of the Logos is the link . . . between objective matter and the subjective thought of Eswara (or Logos). It is called in several Buddhist books Fohat. It is the one instrument with which the Logos works.” —H.P.Blavatsky, The Secret Doctrine (1888)

“The whole Kosmos must necessarily exist in the One Source of energy from which this light (Fohat) emanates.” Continue reading “Fohat”

The Cosmic Egg

In the beginning of this century, Einstein, the famous author of the Theory of Relativity, conceived in his genius mind a curved, finite universe, enclosed like an egg. The tremendous exclamation of this extraordinary man still comes into our memory. He said, “The infinite tends to a limit.”

It is not ignored that later on, Edwin Hubble, at the famous Observatory at Mount Wilson, discovered with great astonishment that all the galaxies that abide in the infinite space are moving away from each other at fantastic velocities.

This is an undeniable fact. Disgracefully, George Lemaitre did not know how to comprehend this, and in searching for causes, he arrived at mistaken conclusions.

“If the universe is in a constant expansion [he absurdly explained] it is because it exploded from the center of a primeval atom in a foregone day.” Continue reading “The Cosmic Egg”