Arikah Map

Subtle body

Planes of existence

Subtle bodies

Theosophy

Causal plane: Causal body
Mental plane: Mental body
Astral plane: body, projection
Etheric plane: Etheric body
Physical plane: Physical body

Rosicrucian

The 7 Worlds & the 7 Cosmic Planes
The Seven-fold constitution of Man
The Ten-fold constitution of Man

Thelema

Body of Light | Thelemic mysticism

Surat Shabda Yoga

Cosmology

Sufism

Sufi cosmology

Hinduism
Lokas - Kosas
Buddhism
Buddhist cosmology
Kabbalah
Atziluth - Beri'ah - Yetzirah - Asiyah

Sephirot

Fourth Way

Ray of Creation
The Laws
Three Centres
Five Centres

Popular culture

Plane (Dungeons & Dragons)
  Inner Plane
  Prime Material Plane
  Outer Plane

According to the traditional teachings of Yoga and various esoteric, occult, and mystical teachings, the subtle body is an energetic psycho-spiritual body that all sentient beings possess to varying degrees. In humans this body is constituted by several sheaths (kosas) or sub-bodies, each of increasing subtlety and metaphysical significance. The concept of a subtle body is a common philosophical element in many traditions, including:

A detailed comparative study can be found in J.J. Poortman's multivolume work Vehicles of Consciousness.


Contents

The Yogic body

The yogic-occult systems of India (e.g. Tantra) Tibet, China (Taoist alchemy) and Japan (Shingon) describe a subtle physiology or yogic anatonomy in terms of a series of channels (nadis, meridians) that convey life-force (prana, vayu, ch'i, ki) and have a number of focal points (chakras, acupuncture points). Through practice of various breathing and visualisation exercises one is able to manipulate and direct the flow of vital force, to achieve superhuman (e.g. in martial arts) or miraculous powers ("siddhis"), attain higher states of consciousness, immortality, or liberation. The various attributes of the yogic body are described in terms of often obscure symbolism (Tantra features references to the sun and the moon and various Indian rivers and deities, Taoist alchemy speaks of cauldrens, cinnibar fields, and so on).


See also biofield [1]

The subtle bodies in Theosophy

Whilst the Eastern esoteric traditions emphasise a single subtle body (apart from the Vedantic concept of five koshas), in the West (beginning with Neoplatonism) the emphasis has often been on a series of subtle bodies or vehicles (okhema) of consciousness. This reached its most detailed and systematic account in the writings of C.W. Leadbeater and Annie Besant, who established the Adyar School of Theosophy. They described in detail the seven bodies, and established many of the themes that would be canonical in "new age" thought. The sequence of bodies or "vehicles" is as follows (from densest to most subtle):

Beyond the causal level are the atmic, buddhic, and monadic levels, but these pertain to the Soul or Spirit ("Higher Triad", "Monad") rather than the subtle body.

In this worldview, the physical body is the densest, with the various subtle bodies being progressively more refined or spiritual. The subtle bodies exist alongside or within or around the physical, and have various characteristics and attributes. Each "body" has its own aura and set of chakras, and corresponds to a particular plane of existence, as the individualisation so to speak of that plane. Thus the astral body is made up of the substance or matter of the astral plane, just as the physical body is made up of the elements of the physical plane, and so on with all the bodies. A detailed account of the various subtle bodies and the corresponding planes is provided in a series of books (The Etheric Body, The Astral Body, The Mental Body, and The Causal Body) by Arthur E Powell on the basis of material compiled from the writings of Leadbeater and Besant.

The human energy field

The Adyar arrangement seems also to have been one of the inspirations behind Barbara Brennan's account of the subtle bodies by in her books Hands of Light and Light Ascending. She refers to the subtle bodies as "layers" in the "Human Energy Field" or aura, and presents the following sequence:

Causality proceeds from the Ketheric template downwards, and each of the layers has its own characteristics and can have its own expression of disease, requiring individual healing. As with the Adyar arrangement, each body or aura also has its own complement of chakras, which interrelate to the chakras in the other layers. The first four bodies correspond to the Physical plane, the Astral body to the Astral Plane, and the higher three bodies or layers to the Spiritual World. In Hands of Light two higher layers are also briefly referred to beyond the Ketheric Template.

The subtle bodies in Anthroposophy

This same theme (of dense to subtle Body and Plane/Universe) is also found in Rudolph Steiner's Anthroposophical teachings, although it is simplified considerably in that only the Physical, Etheric, and Astral Bodies are referred to (beyond the Astral is the Ego which in Steiner's system is the immortal soul or spiritual aspect of man).

According to both Blavatsky, Adyar Theosophy, Steiner, and some forms of Spiritualism, after physical death one lives in the subtle bodies until these too drop away and the Soul or Spirit returns to its true home to rest before reincarnating (however the details of the sequences vary).

Similar ideas to those of theosophy are found, but less systematically presented, in The Mother's talks. And whilst Steiner did indeed draw a lot of his inspiration from Theosophy (one of his early books was even called Theosophy), The Mother's occultism is based in large measure on the teachings of Max Theon.

The Adyar arrangement was taken up by Alice Bailey, and from there found its way (with variations) into the New Age worldview.

The subtle bodies in the Western Wisdom Teachings

Max Heindel's Rosicrucian writings teach that man is a complex being who possesses:

On the other hand, Heindel also teaches the Ego is the threefold Spirit, the God Within, which uses these vehicles to gather experience in the school of life. The three aspects of the Spirit are:

The "Astral body" (Soul body)

According to the Western Wisdom Teachings, the term "Astral body" - a vehicle made of ether (from the Vital body), which is lighter than air and therefore capable of levitation - was employed by the mediaeval Alchemists, because of the ability it conferred upon the one who has it to traverse the "starry" regions. The Astral body should not to be confounded with the Desire body: during the soul flights the desire body molds itself readily into this prepared matrix; when the individual returns to the physical body, the effort of will whereby he enters it automatically dissolves the intimate connection between the desire body and the soul body. The Astral body is also known as the 'Soul body', the 'Golden Wedding Garment', the 'Philosopher's Stone', or the 'Living Stone', spoken of in some of the ancient philosophies as the 'Diamond Soul' ("for it is luminous, lustrous, and sparkling--a priceless gem"), and will eventually be evolved by humanity as a whole.

The subtle body in Spiritual Science

According to the science of Spirituality, a human being has two bodies – the gross body and the subtle body. Along with this he has vital energy that links these two bodies together.

The subtle body continues to exist beyond our physical death, and comprises of the following:

Other interpretations

An interesting variant on the concept of subtle bodies is found in both Alchemical Taoism and the "Fourth Way" teachings of Gurdjieff and Ouspensky, where it is said that one can create a subtle body, and hence achieve post-mortem immortality, through spiritual or yogic exercises.

Projection and exteriorisation

The practice of astral projection, as described in various literature, is supposed to involve the separation of the Astral body from the Physical. But according to The Mother, not only is it possible to go out from a denser to a more subtle body or self (she referred to this as exteriorisation), but if one has the right training this process can be repeated until one reaches the border of the infinite (or Absolute Reality).

Perceiving the subtle body

Clairvoyants say that they can see the subtle bodies in the aura. There are several books (Barbara Brennan's Hands of Light being perhaps the most popular and influential) and websites which include paintings of subtle bodies, their colours and structure. And Kirlian and other forms of high voltage photography claim to be able to photograph the subtle body (or at least its densest member, the electromagnetic body, sometimes identified with the etheric), including what appear to be acupuncture meridians.

The existence of subtle bodies is unconfirmed by the scientific community.

See also

References

Categories


Esoteric cosmology | Esotericism | Paranormal worlds and bodies | Shabd paths | Theosophical philosophical concepts | Vitalism | Mythemes

Find

Find

Find