In the category of Nature’s
Finer Forces must be included that class of manifestations
which are generally known as Telepathy, Thought Transference,
Thought Force, etc., all of which are based upon
the fact that there is present in all such mental
states as Thought, Emotion, Desire, etc., a certain
rate of vibratory motion, which motion is capable
of being radiated from the mind of the person manifesting
them in such power and force that they may be registered
with more or less distinctness upon the minds of other
persons are at a greater or less distance from the
first person. In the more common forms of its
manifestation, such mental force or power is known
as Thought Force, Mental Influence, etc., and
in its more pronounced and less common phases it is
known as Telepathy, Thought Transference, etc.,
but the basic principle is precisely the same in all
of such cases, simple or complex though their manifestations
may be.
The Higher Forces.
We may say here, frankly and plainly,
however, that the advanced occultists regard this
class of phenomena as comparatively simple and elementary,
and therefore not fully entitled to be included in
the same category with the higher phases of Nature’s
Finer Forces, such as, for instance, Clairvoyance,
Psychometry, Communication with the Higher Planes,
etc. But notwithstanding this, we are of
the opinion that any and every one of the finer forces
of nature, i.e., any of the forces which are
over and above the plane upon which the ordinary senses
of man, normally developed, ordinarily function and
operate, should be placed in one general category
of the Higher Forces of Nature, particularly in a
work of this kind designed for the instruction of the
general public upon these important subjects.
Accordingly, these lesser manifestations of the finer
forces in the natural world shall be carefully considered
in this part of this book, so that the student may
become acquainted with the scientific principles upon
which they are based, and may be enabled to develop
the power of manifesting such powers if he choose
to do so; and that he may understand the nature of
such forces and powers when they are manifested by
other persons.
Chitta, or Mind Substance.
The Hindu Teachings hold that that
which we call “Mind” is not an intangible
something different from anything else in Nature, but
that, on the contrary, it forms a part of Nature’s
general manifestation, and is a substantial thing.
The Hindus have given to this Mind Substance the name
of Chitta. Without going into metaphysical discussion,
or entering into technical details concerning this
Mind Substance or Chitta, we may say that the Hindus
believe it to be one phase of the great Manifestation
which we call Nature just as that which
we call Matter is another phase of Manifestation and,
like Matter, having its own particular kind of force,
or energy, its own rates of vibrations, and its own
attribute of radiating its vibratory force or energy
over space. Chitta manifests its activity in
creating Thought, Emotions, etc., and also in
receiving impressions from the outside world which
it translates into perceptions and ideals. Chitta,
or Mind Substance, is not regarded by the Hindus as
being identical with the Soul, or the Ego; but, on
the contrary, they regard it as being an instrument
for the expression of the activity of the Ego, or
Soul, just as the Body is another kind of instrument.
Both Body and Mind are regarded as being intended for
the use of the Ego or Soul, and not as identical with
the latter. We shall not discuss these distinctions
further in this book, this subject being apart from
the general field and scope of the present work.
What Modern Science Says.
There are many to whom this conception
of the vibration energy of Chitta or Mind Substance
may seem strange. But such persons will be still
more surprised, perhaps, when they are told that modern
science has practically admitted the general truth
contained in the Hindu teachings concerning the same,
though modern science seems to cloak the facts of
the case in technical terms so that the ordinary person
is unable to comprehend the real facts dwelling beneath
these terms. To this latter class we specially
commend the following statement made by Professor
Ochorowicz, the eminent European scientist, a few years
ago. Professor Ochoriwicz says:
A Living Dynamic Focus.
“Every living being is a dynamic
focus. A dynamic focus tends ever to propagate
the motion that is proper to it. Propagated motion
becomes transformed according to the medium it traverses.
Motion always tends to propagate itself. Therefore,
when we see work of any kind mechanical,
electrical, nervic, or psychic disappear
without visible effort, then of two things, one happens,
namely, either a transmission or a transformation.
Where does the first end, and where does the second
begin? In an identical medium there is only transmission;
in a different medium there is transformation.
“You send an electric current
through a thick wire. You have the current, but
you do not perceive any other force. But cut that
thick wire, and connect the ends by means of a fine
wire, and this fine wire will grow hot there
will be a transformation of a part of the current
into heat. Take a pretty strong current,
and interpose a wire still more resistant, or a very
thin carbon rod, and the carbon will emit light.
A part of the current, then, is transformed into heat
and light. The light acts in every direction
around about, first visibly as light, then invisibly
as heat and electric current. Hold a magnet near
it. If the magnet is weak and movable, in the
form of a magnetic needle, the beam of light will
cause it to deviate; if it is strong and immovable,
it will in turn cause the beam of light to deviate.
And all this from A distance,
without contact, without special
conductors.
Dynamic Correlate of Thought.
“A process that is at once chemical,
physical and psychical, goes on in the brain.
A complex action of this kind is propagated through
the gray brain matter, as waves are propagated in
water. Regarded on its physiological side, an
idea is only a vibration, a vibration that is propagated,
yet which does not pass out of the medium in which
it can exist as such. It is propagated only as
far as other vibrations allow. It is propagated
more widely if it assumes the character which subjectively
we call emotive. But it cannot go beyond without
being transformed. Nevertheless, like force in
general, it cannot remain in isolation, and it escapes
in disguise.
“Thought stays at home, as the
chemical action of a battery remains in the battery;
it is represented by its dynamic correlate, called
in the case of the battery a ‘current,’
and in the case of the brain, I know not what; but
whatever its name may be, it is the dynamic
correlate of thought. I have chosen
the name ‘dynamic correlate.’ There
is something more than that; the universe is neither
dead nor void.
“A force that is transmitted
meets other forces, and if it is transformed only
little by little it usually limits itself to modifying
another force at its own cost, though without suffering
materially thereby. This is the case particularly
with forces that are persistent, concentrated, well
seconded by their medium. It is the case with
the physiological equilibrium, nervic force, psychic
force, ideas, emotions, tendencies. These modify
environing forces, without themselves disappearing.
They are imperceptibly transformed, and if
the next man is of A nature
exceptionally well adapted to them,
they gain in inductive action.”
Answer to Skeptical Critics
The two most likely objections advanced
against this conception by sceptical critics are as
follows: “(1) The mental vibratory motion,
or vibratory waves, are not known to science, nor
recorded on scientific instruments such as the galvanometer.
What is the rate of such vibrations, and what is their
general character? (2) Granted the existence of such
vibratory energy, or thought-waves, how and by means
of what channel does the second person receive them
from the first person? How are they registered
or recorded?” These objections are capable of
being met in a scientific manner, to the satisfaction
of any fair-minded critic or investigator. We
shall now give you, briefly, the gist of the answer
of science to the aforesaid objections.
The World of Vibrations
It is true that the scientific instruments
of the laboratory, such as the galvanometer, do not
record thought vibrations. This, because such
instruments are capable of registering and recording
on certain rates and modes of vibratory energy.
Thought vibrations are registered only by their appropriate
instruments, namely, the Chitta of Mind substance of
living persons. As to the “general character
and rate of vibration” of these waves of mental
force, we can only say that their general character
is that of “mental force” as opposed to
“physical force.”
As to their rate of vibration, we
can only say that this is not precisely known, not
having as yet been definitely ascertained; but it
should be added that there is plenty
room for these vibrations in the
great field of vibratory energy. Read the following
paragraphs, and decide this last matter for yourself.
Uncharted Seas of Vibration.
The following quotations from eminent
scientists will serve to give the student a general
idea of the views of science upon the question of the
possibility of the existence and presence of vibratory
energy of kinds and characters as yet unknown to science:
The first scientist says: “There
is much food for speculation in the thought that there
exists sound waves that no human ear can hear, and
color waves that no eye can see. The long, dark,
soundless space between 40,000 and 400,000,000,000,000
vibrations per second, and the infinity of range beyond
700,000,000,000,000 vibrations per second, where light
ceases, in the universe of motion, makes it possible
to indulge in speculation.” The second
scientist says: “There is no gradation between
the most rapid undulations or tremblings that produce
our sensation of sound, and the lowest of those which
give rise to our sensations of gentlest warmth.
There is a huge gap between them, wide enough to include
another world of motion, all lying between our world
of sound and our world of heat and light. And
there is no good reason whatever for supposing that
matter is incapable of such intermediate activity,
or that such activity may not give rise to intermediate
sensations, provided that there are organs for taking
up and sensifying these movements.”
The third scientist says: “The
knowledge we gain by experiment brings home to us
what a miserably imperfect piece of mechanism our bodies
are. The ear can detect the slow-footed sound
vibrations that come to us at the rate of between
40 and 40,000 a second. But the whole of space
may be quivering and palpitating with waves at all
sorts of varying speeds, and our senses will tell
us nothing of them until we get them coming to us
at the inconceivable speed of 400,000,000,000,000 a
second, when again we respond to them and appreciate
them in the form of light.”
The fourth scientist says: “The
first indications of warmth come to us when the vibrations
reach the rate of 35,000,000,000,000 per second.
When the vibrations reach 450,000,000,000,000 the lowest
visible light rays manifest. Then come the orange
rays, the golden yellow, the pure yellow, the greenish
yellow, the pure green, the greenish blue, the ocean
blue, the cyanic blue, the indigo, and finally the
violet, the highest degree of light which the human
eye can register, and which occurs when the vibrations
reach the rate of 750,000,000,000 per second.
Then come the ultra-violet rays, invisible to human
sight but registered by chemical media. In this
ultra-violet region lie the X-Rays, and the other
recently discovered high degree rays; also the actinic
rays which, while invisible to the eye, register on
the photographic plate, sunburn one’s face,
blister one’s nose, and even cause violent explosions
in chemical substances exposed to them, as well as
act upon the green leaves of plants, causing the chemical
transformation of carbonic acid and water into sugar
and starches. These forms of ‘dark light,’
that is, light too high in degree to be perceived
by the human eye, are but faint indications of the
existence of still higher and still finer vibrations
of substance and energy.”
The Human Wireless Telegraph Instrument.
Having seen that the first question
of the sceptical critics is capable of being answered
in the scientific spirit, and by ideas based upon
scientific investigation, we now turn to the second
question of the same critics, viz.: “Granted
the existence of such vibratory energy, or thought-waves,
how and by means of what channel does the second person
receive these from the first person? How are they
registered or recorded?” This same question
is also implied in the concluding sentence of one
of the scientists above quoted, viz.: “There
is no good reason whatever for supposing that matter
is incapable of such intermediate activity, or that
such activity may not give rise to intermediate sensations,
provided that there are organs for taking up and sensifying
these movements.” Let us see what science
has to tell us regarding the provision of Nature for
the reception and “sensing” of this class
of vibratory energy. And the easiest way to ascertain
the report of science regarding this important matter
is to consider carefully what representative leading
scientists have said concerning the same in their
writings or public addresses. We call your attention
to the following quotations from such sources.
A Great Scientist’s Theory.
Let us begin with that great master
of modern science, Sir William Crookes, the inventor
of the celebrated “Crookes’ Tubes,”
without which the discovery of the X-Ray and Radio-Activity
would have been impossible. Several years ago,
this eminent scientist, addressing the Royal Society,
at Bristol, England, a gathering made up
of distinguished scientists from all over the world,
most of the members being extremely sceptical concerning
occult phenomena said to the brilliant
gathering: “Were I now introducing for the
first time these inquiries in the world of science,
I should choose a starting point different from that
of old (where we formerly began). It would be
well to begin with Telepathy; with that fundamental
law, as I believe it to be, that thoughts and images
may be transferred from one mind to another without
the agency of the recognized organs of sense that
knowledge may enter the human mind without being communicated
in any hitherto known or recognized ways. If
Telepathy takes place we have two physical facts,
viz., (a) the physical change in the brain of
A, the transmitter, and the analogous physical change
in the brain of B, the recipient of the transmitted
impression. Between these two physical events
there must exist a train of physical causes.It is unscientific to call in the aid of mysterious
agencies, when with every fresh advance in knowledge
it is shown that ether vibrations have powers and attributes
abundantly able to meet any demand even
the transmission of thought.
“It is supposed by some physiologists
that the essential cells of nerves do not actually
touch, but are separated by a narrow gap which widens
in sleep while it narrows almost to extinction during
mental activity. This condition is
so singularly like A BRANLY or
Lodge coherer [a device which led to the
discovery of wireless telegraphy] as to suggest
A further analogy. The structure of
brain and nerve being similar, it is conceivable that
there may be present masses of such nerve coherers
in the brain, whose special function it may be to
receive impulses brought from without, through the
connecting sequence of ether waves of appropriate
order of magnitude. Roentgen has familiarized
us with an order of vibrations of extreme minuteness
as compared with the smallest waves with which we
have hitherto been acquainted; and there is no reason
to suppose that we have here reached the limit of frequency.
It is known that the action of thought is accompanied
by certain molecular movements in the brain, and here
we have physical vibrations capable from their extreme
minuteness of acting direct upon individual molecules,
while their rapidity approaches that of internal and
external movements of the atoms themselves. A
formidable range of phenomena must be scientifically
sifted before we effectually grasp a faculty so strange,
so bewildering, and for ages so inscrutable, as the
direct action of mind upon mind.”
Human Electro-Magnetism
Professor Bain, another eminent authority,
tells us: “The structure of the nervous
substances, and the experiments made upon the nerves
and nerve-centres, establish beyond a doubt certain
peculiarities as belonging to the force that is exercised
by the brain. This force is of a current nature;
that is to say, a power generated at one part of the
structure is conveyed along an intervening substance
and discharged at some other part. The different
forms of electricity and magnetism have made us familiar
with this kind of action.”
Professor Draper, another eminent
authority, says: “I find that the cerebrum
is absolutely analogous to in construction to any other
nervous arc. It is composed of centripetal and
centrifugal fibres, having also registering ganglia.
If in other nervous arcs the structure is merely automatic,
and can display no phenomena of itself, but requires
the influence of an external agent the
optical apparatus inert save under the influence of
light, the auditory save under the impression of sound the
cerebrum, being precisely analogous in its elementary
structure, presupposes the existence of some agent
to act through it.”
Prof. M. P. Hatfield has said:
“The arrangement of the nerve-envelopes is so
like that of the best constructed electrical cables
that we cannot help thinking that both were constructed
to conduct something very much alike. I know
that there are those who stoutly maintain that nerve
force is not electricity, and it is not in the senses
that an electrical battery is not the same thing as
a live man; but, nevertheless, nerve-force is closely
allied to that wonderful thing that for want of a
better and clearer understanding we agree to call ‘electricity.’”
Human Etheric Force.
Professor Haddock, a popular writer
along the lines of scientific psychology and kindred
subjects, in a part of his work in which he was considering
the idea that thought may be communicated by means
of ether-vibrations, forcibly says: “The
ether is accepted by science as a reality, and as
a medium for light, heat, electricity, magnetism, etc.
The nervous system is certainly comparable to an electric
battery with connecting wires. Communications
of thought and feeling without the mediation of sense-perceptions
as commonly understood, is now established. Inanimate
objects exert, now and then, ’strange influences.’
People certainly carry with them a personal atmosphere.
The representation of the condition of these facts
by a psychic field, compared to the magnetic or electric
field, becomes, therefore, if not plausible, at least
convenient. As such a ‘field’ exists
surrounding the sun, so may a ‘field’
be assumed as surrounding each human individual.
’We have already strong grounds for believing
that we live in a medium which conveys to-and-fro
movements to us from the sun, and that these movements
are electro-magnetic, and that all the transformation
of light and heat, and indeed the phenomena of life,
are due to the electrical energy which comes to us
across the vacuum which exists between us and the
sun a vacuum which is pervaded by the ether,
which is a fit medium for the transmission of electro-magnetic
waves.’ By means, then, of a similar theory
applied to mind and brain and body, we may find reasonable
explanations of many otherwise insoluble mysteries
of life, and, which is of more importance, deduce
certain suggestions for the practical regulation of
life in the greatest individual interest.”
The Brain-Battery.
The same writer says: “All
states of body and mind involve constant molecular
and chemical change. The suggestion arises that
the brain, with its millions of cells and its inconceivable
changes in substance, may be regarded as a transmitting
and receiving battery. The brain being a kind
of battery, and the nerves being conductors of released
stored-up energy to different parts of the body, by
a kind of action similar to the actions of electricity
and magnetism, it is suggested that, either by means
of the ether, or of some still finer form of matter,
discharges of brain energy may be conducted beyond
the limits of the body. If the nerve-track corresponds
to wires, this refined medium may correspond to the
ether-field supposed to be employed in wireless telegraphy.
As electrical movements are conducted without wires,
or other visible media, so may brain-discharges be
conveyed beyond the mechanism of the battery, without
the intervention of nerves except as they
may constitute a part of the battery. Generally
speaking, such discharges would originate in two ways,
viz., by direct mental action, or by mental or
physical states perhaps by a combination.”
A Peculiar Organ
So much for the conceptions of modern
western science, which agree in the main with those
of the ancient oriental occultists, although of course
different names and terms are employed. But, we
think it worth while to call your attention to the
fact that the western scientists have failed to note
the significant presence of a peculiar organ in the
human body, which is regarded as most important in
its functions and offices by the oriental teachers,
and which we believe has a very close connection to
the subject just discussed by the western scientists.
We refer to that strange organ or gland known to western
science as the Pineal Gland. Let us see just
what this is.
The Pineal Gland
The Pineal Gland is a mass of nervous
substance which is found located in the human brain
in a position near the middle of the skull, almost
directly above the extreme top of the spinal column.
It is shaped like a small cone, and is of a reddish-gray
color. It lies in front of the cerebellum, and
is attached to the third ventricle of the brain.
It contains a small quantity of peculiar particles
of a gritty, sand-like substance, which is commonly
known as “brain sand.” It derives
its scientific name from its shape, which resembles
a pine-cone. Western physiologists are at sea
regarding the function and office of this interesting
organ, or gland, and the text books generally content
themselves with stating that “the functions of
the Pineal Gland are not understood.” The
oriental occultists, on the other hand, claim that
the Pineal Gland, with its peculiar arrangement of
nerve-cell corpuscles, and its tiny grains of “brain-sand,”
is intimately associated with certain forms of the
transmission and reception of waves of mental vibrations.
Western students of occultism have been struck with
the remarkable resemblance between the Pineal Gland
and a certain part of the receiving apparatus employed
in wireless telegraphy, the latter also containing
small particles which bear a close resemblance to the
“brain-sand” of the Pineal Gland; and this
fact is often urged by them to substantiate the theory
of the oriental occultists concerning the function
and office of this interesting organ of the human body
which is located in the brain of man.
Transmission of Thought.
Many other facts set forth by modern
western science could be cited in our consideration
of the question of the existence of any possible organ
for the reception of thought vibrations, but it is
thought that sufficient evidence of this kind has
already been submitted to your attention sufficient
to remove any reasonable doubts, and to give the student
at least a clear and open mind on the subject.
Summing up such evidence, we may say that modern science
is fast approaching the position which is so well
expressed by Camille Flammarion, the eminent French
scientist, as follows: “The action of one
mind upon another at a distance the transmission
of thought, mental suggestion, communication at a
distance all these are not more extraordinary
than the action of the magnet on iron, the influence
of the moon on the sea, the transportation of the
human voice by electricity, the revolution of the
chemical constituents of a star by the analysis of
its light, or, indeed, all the wonders of contemporary
science. Only these psychic communications are
of a more elevated kind, and may serve to put us on
the track of a knowledge of human nature. What
is certain is this: That Telepathy can and ought
to be henceforth considered by Science as an incontestible
reality; that minds are able to act upon each other
without the intervention of the senses; that psychic
force exists, though its nature is yet unknown.”
A General Principle.
At this point we wish to impress upon
the minds of the students of this book that what has
been above said regarding that class of mental communications
generally classed under the head of Telepathy also
applies to many much higher phases of occult phenomena
and psychic manifestations. In fact, this is
one of the reasons why we have paid such close attention
to the scientific evidence substantiating this class
of phenomena. It is not too much to say that in
what has been said in the foregoing pages there is
to be found a scientific basis for the phenomenon
of “spirit communication,” at least in
many of its phases. It is but a step in thought and
a natural and easy step at that from the
matter of the communication of thought from the mind
of one person or the material plane of life to another
person on the same plane, on to the matter of the
communication of thought from the mind of an individual
entity on a higher plane of life to a second person
who is abiding on the lower material plane occupied
by us at this stage of our existence. It is seen
that the difference consists largely in the matter
of the degree and rate of vibratory energy employed,
and the preparation of a proper receiving instrument
for the reception and translation of such messages.
This phase of the subject will be considered in fuller
detail in a subsequent portion of this book.
Transformation of Vibrations.
One of the things which seem to greatly
puzzle the average student of the subject of mental
vibrations, and thought-transference, is that which
may be called “thought waves.” The
student is unable to conceive of a wave of “thought”
being projected into the air, and then traveling along
until it reaches the mind of other persons. The
difficulty, upon analysis, is seen to consist of the
inability to conceive of “thought” as
being a material substance capable of traveling in
“waves.” It is no wonder that the
student finds this conception difficult, for there
is no such thing as “thought” traveling
in this way. The phenomenon of thought transference
is accounted for scientifically in quite another manner,
as we shall see in a moment. The student is advised
to carefully note this distinction, for upon its understanding
depends greatly the intelligent comprehension of the
entire subject of thought vibrations and thought-transference.
Example of Electric Light
Perhaps this matter may be best explained
by means of illustrations of the operation of electricity
and light electric vibrations and light
vibrations. In both cases the secret of the transmission
of the vibrations or waves of vibratory energy may
be summed up in the word “Transformation.”
For instance: When we transmit electric vibrations
over a fine wire or thread of carbon, the electric
vibrations are transformed into light vibrations and
manifest as “electric light.” In
another form of transmission the electric vibrations
are transformed into “electric heat.”
But this is merely one phase of the transformation;
consider carefully the more complex phases, as follows:
We speak into the receiver of a telephone and the sound
vibrations produced by our voice are transformed into
electrical vibrations and in that form travel over
the telephone wire; arriving at the other end of the
wire, these electric vibrations enter into the receiver,
and are there transformed into sound vibrations, and
as such are heard by the person holding the receiver.
Now note this: the sound vibrations do not travel
at all; instead, they are transformed into electric
waves, which in turn are transformed at the receiving
end of the line into sound vibrations once more.
And unless the receiving apparatus be present, and
properly adjusted, there is no second transformation
at all; and in such case the electric vibrations remain
such.
Example of Wireless Telegraphy.
Likewise, in the case of the wireless
telegraphy, the electric energy produced by the sending
instrument is transformed into subtle and finer etheric
waves, which travel to the receiving instrument, and
are there transformed into electric waves, the latter
producing physical changes in the receiving apparatus
which enable them to be read by the observer.
In the case of wireless telephony there is still more
complex process of transformation, as follows:
the speaker conveys sound vibrations into the instrument;
these are transformed into electric vibrations; and
the latter into the etheric vibrations which travel
through space to the receiver. Reaching the receiver,
the etheric vibrations are transformed into ordinary
electric vibrations, and these in turn into sound waves
capable of being sensed by the listener.
Example of Light Waves.
The same process is detected in the
transmission of what we call light waves. The
activities manifested by the substance of the sun set
up certain vibrations which we call “light vibrations.”
These are communicated to the ether in the form of
so-called “light waves” but which are
merely etheric waves of a certain rate of vibration.
These waves travel through space and are transformed
into “light” only when they reach some
material substance capable of receiving and reflecting
their vibrations. Science tells us that empty
space is perfectly dark, and that light manifests
only when the etheric light vibrations come in contact
with material substance and are there transformed into
“light.” Light, as “light”
does not travel from the sun what we know
as “light” is simply the result of the
transformation of certain etheric waves into “light”
by reason of their contact with material substances.
Transformation of Mental Vibrations
Now for the analogy. Mental vibrations
are so only when they remain in their own uninterrupted
medium of channel of activity, i.e., the brain
and the nervous system of the individual. Many
hold that they are able to leap over the barrier of
flesh separating two persons when such persons are
in immediate physical contact, and the conditions are
of a certain kind; but as a rule they do not do so.
But, as all investigators know, mental vibrations
are capable of being transformed into some subtle
form of etheric vibrations, and the latter when coming
in contact with the nervous system of other persons
may be again transformed, this time into mental vibrations
which produced thoughts, feelings and mental images
in the minds of the second persons or persons, corresponding
with these mental states in the first person.
Think over this carefully, until you grasp the idea
fully.
Vibrational Attunement
And here we find another startling
correspondence between the phenomena of wireless telegraphy
and that of thought transference or transmission of
mental vibrations. We allude to the fact that
while a wireless telegraphic sending instrument may
be sending forth vibrations of the strongest power,
its messages are capable of being received or “picked
up” only by those instruments which are “in
tune” with the sending instrument to at least
a certain degree; to all other instruments, those
which are not “in tune” with the sending
instrument, there is no message perceptible.
Precisely this same state of affairs is found to prevail
in the realm of mental vibrations and thought transmission.
The individual receives only such messages as emanate
from instruments with which he is “in tune” to
all the rest he is deaf and unconscious. But once
“in tune” with the higher vibrations of
the mental realm, he will receive every message traveling
on that particular plane at that particular time,
unless he deliberately shut them out. We shall
see how this works out in ordinary life, when we consider
the general subject of Telepathy and Thought Transference
in the succeeding Chapter.
In Tune With Higher Planes
But, in connection with the above
statement of the “in tune” law or rule
of manifestation, we wish to call to the attention
of the student the important fact that the same law
prevails in the case of communications from the higher
planes of existence the so-called “spirit
communications” and other messages of this kind
reaching individuals on our own plane of existence.
It is only when the individual on the “earth
plane” becomes “in tune” with the
sending mental instrument of the entity abiding on
a higher plane of existence, that it is able to “pick
up” the message being sent to earth. Even
the same individual is often unable to “catch”
the messages at one time, while at other times he
experiences no difficulty whatsoever. An understanding
of this fact this law or rule of manifestation will
throw a great light over many dark places of misunderstanding
and perplexity concerning certain phases of occult
and psychic phenomena. This feature of such phenomena
will be considered in detail in subsequent parts of
this book.
The Two Key-Words
Concluding our consideration of the
“just how” of the transmission of thoughts,
messages, and “psychograms” between two
minds, be they both on earth plane, or one of the
two on the higher planes, we would say: “Always
remember the two Key-Words, namely transformation
and attunement.” These two Key-Words
will enable you to unlock many doors of thought on
these subjects doors which otherwise will
remain closed to you.