Introduction to the
colloquium on „Periodicity and Synchronicity in History“, a discussion on the
book „Angelology of History“
Chair of General History,
Faculty of Philosophy, Comenius University in Bratislava, 24th
October 2002
Can an Idealistic Scientific Paradigm be more
Successful than the Materialistic One? *
The Being of Science
In
introduction to the colloquium, I would like to summarize the results of my
research and pose the central question we are meeting to consider. Scientific
knowledge is a process; it is a
thought-organism, in which some parts are already fixed and certain, verified
by so-called „hard“ methods. Other parts are less certain, but probable. And
finally there are indications, assumptions, working hypotheses and ideas, which
are highly variable and malleable. It is no different in the book I wrote:
Facts with varying degrees of certainty are placed next to each other.
Science
does not reside in considering only what is a hundred per cent certain, with
everything else excluded. Scientificness lies
in whether we are aware of the process of origin of our ideas. We know about
every idea, how it originated, what is its basis and we can assess the degree
of its certainty. This is how scientific thinking differs from thinking based
on accepting prepared ideas from authorities.
A
person who wants to see in science only what is fixed is like someone, who only
wants to see the skeleton instead of a whole person. Theories are like
skeletons. They are the final result of movement, formerly of fluid, vivid
processes, they are the deposit of the past. Science is an adventure. Its heart
beats where there is creative activity, where the phase of ossification has still
not arrived. Let us not be afraid to participate in this adventure – as long as
we are aware of every step we take!
Firstly,
it is necessary to know that all the elementary facts I mentioned in the book
were taken from historical and archaeological literature. Where an event or its
date are not certain, I have preliminarily taken into account the most probable
possibilities. I have tried to build on the areas where individual historical
schools agree, not on where they differ. If there are inaccuracies in the book
in spite of this, I will be grateful to colleagues, who help to eliminate them
from the second edition. If the findings up to now shall be revised in the
light of newly discovered documents and excavations, I will accept them. It is
not my ambition to establish new historical evidence, but to rely on the
experts who know best. Therefore, the question of facts should not be a subject
of dispute.
What is
new in my book is the way I have connected generally known facts and the method
by which I understood their causes and significance. As a trained mathematician
and linguist, I was not burdened by any of what is taught in the university
departments of the historical sciences. This enabled me to look at history with
fresh intuition and entirely new eyes.
I
studied five types of phenomena or connections, which form the core of the
book. As far as I know, I am the first to study these types of phenomena
systematically on the world-wide level from the Stone Age to the present day.
Angelology is a synthesis, it is a philosophy of history. There are many
philosophies of history, but this is the first, which can be supported also by
exact mathematics.
The
first phenomenon I studied is cultural physiognomy. Let us look at the example of a plant
– the rose. The individual parts of the plant – leaf, flower, fruit and seed
– are not accidental, but have forms,
which belong together. If we mixed birch with oak or attached rose leaves to a
lilly flower, it would strike anyone’s eye
that they do not belong together. A plant forms an aesthetic unity; it is built
up in an integrated artistic style. It is as if behind all its parts stood a
single entelechy, a single forming
idea. It also applies to the human body. Therefore, a typologist can work out
from the physiognomy of one part of the body, the physiognomy of the other
parts. For example, the form of limbs can be estimated from the form of the
lower jaw, or the width of the pelvis can be guessed from the width of the cheek-bones.
We can
also speak of the physiognomy of cultures in a comparable way to these examples
from nature. If we have a culture with a certain ideational content, it will
also have a certain type of social structure, a certain type of philosophy,
science, art and religion. Cultures are also organisms, in which part
corresponds to the whole and is not accidental. Therefore, if we have two
cultural features found together, there are two possibilities: either these two
features are found together in time and space by accident, or there is a deeper
connection between them and they occur together regularly. This means that if
we find one feature in a given culture, we can very probably expect further
features connected with it.
Some of
these connections are known and it appears to us that we see natural reasons
for their existence. For example, the connection of the Enlightenment type of
rationalism with the development of cities. Or the fact that naturalism in art
is associated with the philosophies of materialism and sensualism. Other
connections are less clear at first sight. For example, why are great poets
harbingers of revolutions or what connects plasticity in architecture with the
coming of a good novelist. Further connections may appear to be really unexpected
and incredible. For example, when pointed forms appear in fashion, the death
rate increases.
Thus,
individual cultural features naturally cluster into groups according to their
increased co-occurrence („clustering“). This enables us to speak of cultural types. I identified seven such
main cultural types and a multitude of sub-types arising from combinations of
them. We should realize that the concept of cultural type enables us to deduce
significant findings, especially in cases, where only a fragment of the
researched culture is known. For example, the Altamira cave paintings enable
use to consider the social structure and world view of Cromagnon man.
The
second type of phenomenon I studied is synchronicity. Jung introduced the concept of synchronicity as a meaningful
coincidence in time of two or more events, without an external causal
connection between them. The most famous synchronicity in history is Jaspers’ „axial epoch“. After 600 BC, great thinkers and
religious founders appeared at the same time in the whole Old World. Confucius,
Lao Tzu, Buddha, Jina, Zoroaster, the Greek philosophers and Jewish prophets
were contemporaries. They not only appeared at the same time, but also
proclaimed common main ideas. Similar social trends appeared everywhere
independently. Jaspers described this epoch, but up to now nobody could explain
its causes.
Since,
by definition, such synchronicities cannot be explained in the framework of the
materialistic scientific paradigm, attention is not devoted to them, as curiosities,
which fall out of the system. In my work, I proved that synchronicities are not
the exception in history, but the rule. There are hundreds of them. I will give
only a few examples of parallel events in the West and the Far East. It was not
only in the 6th century BC that the greatest philosophers appeared
in both regions. In the 4th century BC they had the greatest
logicians, around the turn of the eras the greatest historians, in the 8th
century the greatest poets, in the 15th century painters and in the
17th century the greatest dramatists. Around the 11th
century, the rhythmic element was emphasized in architecture throughout the
world, whereas in the 13th and 14th centuries sharp
pointed forms became dominant everywhere.
I
emphasize that synchronicity is something different from the migration of
cultural elements. Migration occurs with a time delay, so that it is not
synchronicity. Typical synchronicity resides in the parallelism in time of two original cultural achievements, which
are comparable in character, but have different forms, so that one cannot be a
copy of the other. The Gothic cathedral did not develop from the Chinese
pagoda, but both are significantly rhythmic. Indian and Chinese medicine are
not based on Hippocratic principles, but they originated at the same time as
Greek medicine.
Therefore,
the principle of synchronicity means that if we have a cultural type or feature
somewhere, there is a significant probability that this type or feature
developed independently at the same time in another part of the world. Let us
take the classic mystery of the decline of the Mayan civilization. In the light
of this principle, it ceases to be a mystery. It was part of a global wave of
destruction at the end of the 8th century. It joins the Viking and
Magyar raids, and the confusion in which Tang China disintegrated.
The
third researched phenomenon is rhythm. Similar cultural types not only appear synchronously in time.
These synchronous waves also return on the diachronic time axis in a regular
rhythm. Below, we will see, using the examples of the history of poetry,
medicine and history, that the peak periods of creativity in these areas return
every 500 years. I also systematically worked out this and some other rhythms
or hints of rhythms.
Thus,
the principle of rhythm means that if the statistical frequency of a phenomenon
over the five or ten thousand years of the known past increased periodically,
we suppose that it was the same in the unknown past, and will continue in the
future. This has a great impact not only for archaeology, but also for
futurology. It enables us to make predictions. Not only short-term predictions
by extrapolation of existing trends, but to predict entirely new trends for
future centuries and millennia.
The
fourth phenomenon I researched is the connection between historical epochs and the
developmental phases of an individual person. From developmental psychology, we know the psychic
characteristics of individual age periods in human life. For each age another
configuration of mental faculties and qualities is typical. For example,
pictorial thinking, flexible fantasy, playfulness, ability to imitate,
so-called childish phenomenism, childish presentism are characteristic of
children of pre-school age. The mental configuration typical of this age is
also typical of some historical periods, such as the Baroque. It is clear in
architecture, painting, comedy, novels, sensualist philosophy and hedonist
morality of this period.
The
properties prevailing in old age include conservatism, rigidity, orientation
towards the past, emphasis on respect for order and norms, loneliness and
introversion. Whole historical epochs have features of old age. They bring
absolutism, florescence of history writing and monastic movements.
We all
know the features of puberty. It is the time of first love, romanticism, great
idealism, but also of revolutionary temper and rejection of convention. We see
the complete picture of puberty in romanticism. In history, romanticisms
returned regularly and not only in Europe, but throughout the world.
The
fact that historical periods strikingly correspond to age phases might not have
metaphysical importance, if a further circumstance is not added. These psychic
configurations alternate regularly in history and the sequence in which they
alternate in the world soul and in the soul of the individual is identical.
Both are subject to one and the same temporal order! I will not analyse what
this means for the whole of psychology and sociology.
The
fifth and last phenomenon I researched is the analogy between cultural forms
and forms in nature. Synchronicity
and rhythms also exist in the evolution of plants and animals. Similar forms
and functional units developed simultaneously in different species, which do
not inter-breed with each other. The stem of plants and the backbone of
vertebrates developed at the same time. So did also the rhythmic system of
plant leaves and ribs in the rib-cage develop simultaneously. There was a
period in which flowers and the coloured feathers of birds developed and the
whole of nature has been flooded by colour. Or a period when living creatures
grew all kinds of spines, antlers, horns and tusks.
Similarly,
we have historical periods when, for example, in architecture vertical elements
such as columns predominated; or rhythmic elements such as the ribbed vault; or
floral ornament such as rosettes and stained glass windows; or all forms were
made pointed and sharp. Again, this could mean nothing more than that the
architects and artists were simply inspired by themes from nature, if it were
not true that evolutionary periods in nature, cultural waves in history and the
developmental phases of the individual are subject to one and the same temporal
order.
I
intend to study the synchronicities and rhythms in nature in a separate volume.
If they shall be confirmed as in history, it will mean for neo-Darwinism that
so-called accidental genetic mutations cannot be accidental. Creative impulses
directed in an intelligible order influence the evolution of nature, world
history and the personal life of the individual. Please forget for a while that
the world view of the materialist contains no forces, which could have such an
effect in all these three areas at the same time. Whether such forces exist or
do not exist is precisely the subject of our research. We cannot begin from the
pre-conceived idea that they do not exist.
The
first question facing this colloquium is the question of facticity: Do synchronicities, periodicities and
rhythms in history really exist, as empirical facts, which can be proved?
My work suggests that they exist. Only one serious objection was raised against
this up to now. The objection that I might have selected the facts already in
the light of the theory, which is yet to be proved. That is, I would select
from history only those facts, which fit into my scheme and would not pay attention
to others. I overcame this objection by leaving the selection of facts to the
opponents. Dr. Viktor Krupa of the Department of Oriental Studies of the Slovak
Academy of Sciences proposed two of the most important control studies. They
are: „Configurations of Culture Growth“ by the leading American
anthropologist Alfred L. Kroeber and „Social and Cultural Dynamics“ by the
American sociologist of Russian origin Pitrim Sorokin. Both were published
before my birth, so I could not have influenced them.
Instead
of the expected falsification, of which various opponents were certain in
advance, both studies largely confirmed my suppositions. I will mention only a
few of the less complicated examples. Sorokin’s detailed
study of revolutionary indices in the history of Europe unambiguously confirmed
a level of revolution 50% higher than usual in the periods supposed by me. A
further study by J. S. Lee confirmed the same rhythm in Chinese history,
synchronous with Europe.
I asked
Prof. Miroslav Mikulecký from the Institute of Preventive and Clinical Medicine
to perform the analysis of Kroeber’s data.
He proposed the standard mathematical tools used for identifying unknown
rhythms in chronobiology. The author of the mathematical algorithm for
analysing data is Prof. Ladislav Kubáèek, former director of the Institute of
Mathematics of the Slovak Academy of Sciences.
First
we analysed the history of ancient Greco-Roman medicine. The programme
received no other input data than the dates of birth of the most important
physicians. The task of the computer was to find out whether the history of
medicine shows any statistically significant rhythms, and if it does, what kind
of? One such rhythm really exists here. It has the period-length of about 500
years. We also researched the history of Indian and Chinese medicine. We not
only found some periodicity in them, but the length of the period is the same
in all three cultural areas, and all three rhythms are synchronized with each
other in phase. Excellent physicians appeared in different parts of the world
at the same time and returned in a regular rhythm.
And now
comes the most significant fact. The acmes of creativity in world medicine
coincide with the periods of rule of the god Nabu in the old Babylonian sacred
calendar. The old Babylonians used a calendar, in which seven deities
associated with heavenly bodies cyclically alternated as spirits of time. Each
of them ruled for 72 years, then was replaced by another. The same deity
returned to rule again every 504 years. Nabu, later in Christian times the
Archangel Raphael, was identified with the planet Mercury and was the patron of
physicians. And the most important physicians really lived in the periods of
his rule.
We
analysed Greco-Roman and Chinese historians. Rhythms are also found here. These
rhythms agree in length, again lasting 500 years and are synchronous. However,
the phase of culmination is different than in the case of medicine. Famous
historians appear during the reign of Ningirsu, the Babylonian Cronus, lord of
time and patron of historians. We also analysed the history of Japanese,
Chinese, Arab, Persian and Greek poetry. World poets are also synchronized and
reappear every 500 years. Poetry culminates in the periods of the Babylonian
goddess of love Inanna or Venus. We scrutinized the waves of creativity in
Western, Byzantine and Indian philosophy. Great philosophers appear in parallel
flow-tides, once in 500 years, during the reign of the god of Sun and truth
Shamash. We analyzed the periods of political instability and chaos in ancient
Egypt and China. They recurred each 500 years during the reign of the babylonian
god of war and death Nergal, Mars.
We
calculated the cross-correlations: If there is a wave of good historians, it is
probable that a wave of physicians will arrive 120 years later, a wave of poets
180 years later and a wave of philosophers after 280 years.
I have
just mentioned eighteen studies from ten countries and five branches of
culture, each of which independently confirms one and the same thing: the
rhythm of seven Babylonian gods in the order – Sin, Nabu, Inanna, Shamash,
Nergal, Marduk and Ningirsu. What the computer uncovered is nothing other than
the sacred calendar of the old Babylonians, several millennia old. The
Babylonian priests correctly predicted the coming of great cultural waves for
millennia into the future. And we have just verified their prediction with an
eighteen times repeated double blind experiment.
In my
monograph, I offered a more sophisticated method, which also enables the
decomposition of complex rhythms into independent qualitative components. I
think that my work is enough to make us realize that we are concerned here with
something more than insignificant accidental coincidences or mere personal
belief of the author. Rhythms and synchronicities in history do exist and this
should be a stimulus for further research into them.
Let us
recall that throughout the 20th century, the scientific community
almost unanimously rejected historic rhythms, and, therefore, they were not
seriously researched. Popper’s book
„The Poverty of Historicism“ set the tone. According to Popper, there are no
laws or rhythms in history, so no long-term predictions are possible. In
particular, he says that nobody can predict the coming of revolutionary
periods. Popper was mistaken. His argument is theoretical and speculative and
has a very weak relationship to reality.
By the
way, one of the most surprising discoveries of chronobiology in recent decades
is the fact that throughout the natural world from single-cell bacteria to man,
we find the so-called circaseptan rhythms, based on the number seven. I have
discovered circaseptan rhythms in history. Both only confirm age-old occult
knowledge, that seven is the number of time.
Therefore,
as the first conclusion, I propose that we re-evaluate our relationship to
medieval angelology and ancient mythology. They are not superstitions or an
extravagant fantasy game with no relationship to reality. They contain
knowledge, which expresses in pictorial form, things that are also an empirical
reality for science.
Let us
progress to the second and more interesting question of this colloquium. If historic synchronicities and rhythms
are facts, what causes them? Is it possible to explain their existence by
means of factors known to science up to now? And if an idealistic episteme enables science to make more exact and
more successful predictions of sociological development (for millennia into the
future) than the materialistic-sensualistic episteme, what really entitles us
to continue insisting that the materialistic episteme is the only one
permissible in science? *
The
classic historical explanations for this type of phenomena are inadequate. For
example, it is not possible to explain the origin of Greek philosophy from the
circumstances in Greece at the time of its origin. Philosophy originated
simultaneously in several widely separated places. These synchronicities have a
global character, and return periodically over tens of thousands of years. They
cannot be explained by any cause limited by place or time. A cause
corresponding to them would need to have a global and long-term – perhaps
geophysical, climatic or cosmic nature?
We know
that the Sun, Moon and even cosmic radiation from the stars influence the
biosphere on Earth and so also man. Prof. Mikulecký shall attempt an explanation
by means of periodic cosmo-physical fields. However, I think that we encounter
insurmountable obstacles in this direction. It is difficult to imagine how, for
example, swings in the magnetic field could stimulate poets at one time, but
mathematicians, physicians, historians or painters at another. We are concerned
here with the periodic alternation of the quality and not only the quantity of
creative personalities. An equally great obstacle is that the Babylonian Zodiac
calendar is only intermittently cyclic. At the end of every Platonic month is a
break, just as in the ordinary calendar, where we begin every month again from
the first. No really periodic physical field can explain such a system.
By
definition, synchronicity cannot be explained in a materialistic way, because
it is a matter of a meaningful coincidence of two or more events, with no
material factor, which could connect them. Of course, the present type of
science will insist that some material factor must be always hidden here, so
that it is not a matter of synchronicity, but of systematic accident. But
„systematic accident“ is a contradictio
in adjecto. A systematic phenomenon cannot be explained everytime ad hoc, in any one case by another agreement
of accidental circumstances. Science of the present type will recommend
investing all human efforts in the search for a material factor, even if it
was unsuccessful for a thousand years, because non-material factors fall
outside the framework of its competence. The episteme of present-day science is
materialistic. We would progress a step further, if we realized that the above
mentioned facts will remain for ever incomprehensible in the framework of a
science, which is connected with a materialist world view.
There
are other epistemes, for example, the Renaissance episteme, based on analogical
thinking, or the medieval Scholastic episteme, based on spiritual realism. In
these epistemes, our mysterious phenomenon appears as something natural: Seven
spiritual intelligences or archangels alternate in a cycle as spirits of time
and inspire humanity. This answer has an astonishing beauty, elegance and
simplicity, because it unites a multitude of facts by means of a cohesive
explanation. It is not unlike the way Kepler grasped the irregular orbits of
the planets with a single model.
However,
there is one objection here: This unifying and simplifying factor is not
material. The so-called Dickerson’s rule,
which scientists observe today, says that science should be a game with one
determining rule: It should attempt to explain the world only by means of
material causes. Allegedly science does not exclude the possible existence of
a spiritual world, but this world cannot be the subject of scientific
knowledge. It can be (so it is said) always only the subject of faith or of
metaphysics. In the eyes of scientists, metaphysics is only unjustified
speculation about things we can know nothing about.
Since
the time of Bacon until today, an idea of science has prevailed, starting from
empirical observations only. However, it cannot stop with observations alone.
It must progress by induction to the ideas, forms and laws governing a given
class of phenomena. But how could an idea govern a phenomenon, if it exists
only in my head? Strangely enough! Sometimes, there is no other way, than to
consider this unifying idea as identical with some unperceivable, but really
effective reality.
Newton
thought of an idea, a mathematical relationship, which explained both the
movements of the heavenly bodies and the tides of the sea. He came to the
conclusion that there must be some invisible force, which acts at any distance,
even through empty space. Leibniz and others criticized him for introducing an
„occult factor“ into science. Newton defended himself: „Gravitation must be caused by a factor acting constantly according to
fixed laws, but whether it is a material or a non-material factor, is a
question I will leave to the consideration of my readers“. For fifty years
his theory remained unaccepted. In the end people recognized that there was no
better way to consider this matter than to imagine, that this phenomenon, in
which bodies attract each other in indirect proportion to the second power of
distance, is caused by a „force of attraction“.
Therefore,
are we entitled to postulate the independent essence of a phenomenon, which is
real, but is not reducible to any other known elementary forces? The history of
science answers this question positively. Nobody ever caught gravitons.
According to Einstein, we do not even have to deal with gravitation, but with
curved space. Newtonian gravitation is only a conceptual supplement, a bolt
with something missing in the area of empirical data.
Since
the time of the quantum-relativist breakthrough, this approach to science
became evidently progressive. The philosophy of science did not notice this.
Present-day physics teems with quantities, which can be detected neither by our
senses nor by any instruments. Quarks and strings are the result of
„thought-experiments“, they result from equations. We only think the supposed
structure of matter, which is behind what can be perceived. It is
meta-physical. From the multitude of ideas, those which are useful, which
explain that which is visible, fit in with other knowledge or enable to make
predictions and propose experiments, which are being confirmed, are considered
to correspond to reality.
Therefore,
can we not also consider the existence of a group of seven principles, which
act in history? Nobody ever saw the force of gravity itself, but always only
its effects. Similarly, we do not have to see archangels to be able to
understand that they exist. The facts of the world, consistently examined to
the end, unavoidably lead to recognition of them.
What
then is the source of the opposition of scientists to metaphysics? It is
because, in the past, it was very unspecific and unfruitful as a scientific
hypothesis. We found metaphysics full of abstract phrases about concepts empty
of content, such as „God“, the „Absolute“, „Being“ and „soul“. It does not help
a scientist to explain any specific phenomenon, to say that God caused it,
because that was what he decided. Such an explanation is equally good for
explaining the presence of any phenomenon, or for explaining its absence. It
does not allow to predict or explain anything. It is not fruitful.
Let us
note that, in the case of Newton’s
hypothesis, the important thing was not whether the unknown factor was
material or non-material, but the fact that it was specific. It was given by a
mathematical formula. This enabled the derivation of specific, verifiable
results. It was not even important that contradictions disproved Newton’s hypothesis. It could not explain the shift of the
perihelion of Mercury or the real orbit of the Moon. These cases did not imply
that the force of gravity did not exist. But it was later proved that other
factors worked alongside gravity.
Dickerson
and his adherents did not notice, what makes science scientific. The soul of
science does not lie in limiting itself only to what can be perceived with the
physical senses, but in doing everything in terms of specific and precise
concepts. Dickerson and his followers implicitly connect the idea of the
lawful, regular, distinct and logical only with the material world, and the spiritual
world only with the idea of an irrational, unpredictable, one-time act of a
non-transparent divine will. Therefore, it is impossible to think about it.
What right do they have to foist us this idea that the spiritual world is not
intelligible and rational, that there is nothing lawful in it? Why, according
to the best philosophical traditions, the spiritual cosmos is the realm of
universal reason, in which perfect order and harmony prevail.
The
unexpected thing about Angelology is that it is a specific metaphysics. It
contains a sufficiently clear and sharp image of supra-sensory forces and
processes, which enables us to formulate specific hypotheses, and falsify them
or make verifiable predictions. Therefore, it falls within the framework of science.
It enables us to simplify great variety of phenomena, it is stimulating, useful
and fruitful in solving the riddle of the world. And that is the decisive
attribute, because of which the method used in Angelology shall assert itself
as a pilot example of the coming scientific paradigm. We shall gradually get
used to the fact that there is no better way of thinking about cultural waves
than to suppose the existence of an independent noosphere, a sphere of thought,
in which consistent processes occur.
I propose
as a second conclusion: Let us accept that what our ancestors called angels,
whatever they are, are something real, which act and have effects.
We have
concluded that empirical observations naturally lead to a need for a concept
comparable to the medieval concept of the angel. That is, if we apply only the
ability of rational consideration consistently on sensory perception, we are
inevitably led to the recognition that angels exist, although they are
invisible. The English biologist Rupert Sheldrake came to this conclusion in
discussions with the former Dominican monk Matthew Fox in the book „Physics of
Angels“. Sheldrake called these unknown forces beyond nature and history
„morphogenetic fields“, but both agreed that it is a concept equivalent to
Aristotle’s entelechy or the
medieval angel.
Therefore,
if from all human abilities, we want to use only one – reason – it appears that
the concept of angel is only supposed, thought, theoretical. It is unavoidably
following from empirical observations, but itself not empirical.
Man is
also equipped with other abilities, for example imagination. Do we know what is
its actual ability and potential? The notion of angel did not originate in
history on the basis of theoretical deductions, but on the basis of
experience. There were always specific people, who claimed to have had revelations
or visions, that a messenger (angelos) or god had come to them. They received
inspiration, images containing volitional and moral impulses, which powerfully
changed their lives. For example, after 600 BC sages appeared independently in
different parts of the world, who had the experience that the spiritual
intelligence of the Sun appeared to them and gave them knowledge about balance
and the golden middle way. In the cyclic alternation of ages it was indeed
Michael, Archangel of the Sun, the one holding scales in his hands, who came to
the fore precisely in 600 BC, and ruled until 246 BC.
However,
we maintain that these experiences are not really empirical experiences. That
they are not perceptions, but only constructions of our imagination. On
what basis do we maintain this? On the basis of a pre-conceived idea, an
unproved assumption, which is part of the materialistic episteme: „There is nothing in mind, which was not in
senses before“. An alternative episteme arises, when we abandon this thesis
and replace it with the old Platonic-Scholastic thesis about the direct
observation of ideas by reason. The problem does not lie in the fact that this
idealistic episteme was not empirical, but in the fact that Locke prohibited spiritual empiricism! Locke’s thesis implies that the originators of the greatest
moral and cultural impulses of humanity were all either psychotics or liars.
In
reality, the human soul is open to two worlds – downwards to the material and
upwards to the spiritual. It receives perceptions from both. Our imagination
can receive stimuli from our sense organs, but also „an angel moves our imagination“ as Aquinas says in Summa
Theologica. If we prove the non-existence of the spiritual world by pointing
out, that some people may create erroneous ideas about it, the same also
applies to the material world. Hume proved this. We directly perceive only our
own soul and can never really know what happens outside us. We do not know
whether we do not live in virtual reality. But in life we must act so that if
two perceptions always occur together, if they act on us independently of our
will and other observations also confirm this, we must take them seriously.
However, this applies to all
perceptions, whether they come through the physical senses or by another route.
After all, what are the reasons for supposing the material world to be more
real than the spiritual?
The
view that ideas do not come from inside, was never the subject of proof, but
was Locke’s experience. It is a generalization of
Locke’s own spiritual constitution and that of his
contemporaries. At the end of the 17th century, humanity found
itself at an extreme turning point, in which it so immersed itself in the
material that it lost its internal connection with the supra-sensory world. The
light of ideas within human beings was extinguished. However, in history,
humanity passes through regular periods in which the supra-sensory essence of
man alternately penetrates deeper into the material or disengages from it.
Locke’s thesis was progressive in his time. It stimulated
the development of the empirical sciences, but for a long time now it has been
a brake. Once alive, because it was rooted in the spirit of the age, in the
sub-conscious impressions of the people of the time, but today it spooks in
academic institutions like the mummy of something, which was formerly alive and
fruitful. The present spirit of time is working towards a new Organon of
supra-sensory empiricism, which we can expect to crystallize around 2100.
So how
can we decide between two scientific paradigms or epistemes? In the first
place, we should not take one as the measure and criterion for the other. The
adherents of the materialistic episteme have usurped nowadays the monopoly on
scientificness. They generously allow us to believe in a spiritual world, but
only in a non-scientific, subjective way.
Why is
it not scientific to talk about the spiritual world? Spiritual realities are
allegedly not empirical, nobody ever observed them. Why? Because, although they
were observed, this could not be true according to Locke’s assumption, and must involve something else! This
scientific method contains as a dogma, that if somebody observed something, it
could not be the spiritual world, and then argues that nobody ever observed the
spiritual world. This is a vicious
circle. The presuppositions already contain the conclusions, which are
only to be proved.
A
leading member of the Department of Philosophy of an unnamed Slovak university
is a good example of this approach. He published an expert article on the theme
of whether we can know what comes after death. First of all, it was necessary
to define death. Therefore, he chose the definition that death is when a person
definitively loses consciousness. Then he analysed various near death experiences
and concluded that these people were still not dead, because they were still
conscious. That is why we can never be conscious of what is beyond the
threshold of death. If we are conscious, we are, by definition, not dead. It is
enough to replace this definition with the older definition, that death is the
separation of the soul from the body. Then follows, that a mystic or a
philosopher can die even when alive. If he is capable of renunciation and
detaches himself from carnal things, he enters the same state of consciousness,
in which he will be after the disintegration of the physical body. Various
experts and specialists know much, but they do not know themselves. They are
not aware of the hidden presuppositions and origins of their own thinking.
Knowledge without self-knowledge turns into ignorance.
Archangels
are a factor by experience, not by
theory. Everybody perceives them. The
hierarchies of angels work in the supra-conscious of humanity and demons in the
sub-conscious. For example, the alternation of spirits of time is always felt
by every person in the world up to the last inhabitant of the most remote
island. Different images, dreams, desires and life-feeling begin to emerge from
within. Although only the initiates can make clear the origin of these
impulses, and geniuses can creatively transform and express them in the form of
arts, philosophy, leadership and others. The masses perceive them
instinctively, as a general mood.
These
impulses emerge from the human subconscious, about which material science knows
absolutely nothing. It follows only from its central dogma that this activity
must be enclosed in the nerve pathways in the cranial cavity of the individual.
The synchronicity and rhythmicity of mental waves in the world soul contradict
this so clearly that it strikes the eye. The thousands of experimental series
with transmission of thoughts include dozens that made the most obstinate
sceptics run out of fantasy in inventing objections. This endless search for
material factors even where they do not exist, is the real materialistic
mysticism, which is maintained even at the price of sacrificing healthy reason.
Present-day empiricism betrays its own principles, when it attempts to fit all
findings onto the Procrustean bed of the materialist philosophy.
In the
end, the criterion of the correctness of a paradigm can only be its usefulness
and fruitfulness. As Goethe says: „only
what is fruitful is true and beautiful“ or: „By their fruits shalt thou know them“. If a given episteme is able
to form concretely verifiable hypotheses, explain much and simplify and make
successful predictions, it will certainly continue to be used. The Angelology
of History proved this, to a degree beyond the dreams of sociologists and
historians up to now. It showed that science can be done also in connection
with the idealistic episteme, and that it can be, at least in some areas,
incomparably more successful than materialistic science. Therefore, I propose
that the method used in Angelology be recognized as scientific. I intercede for
that both the materialist and the idealist epistemes should develop together,
side by side.
We came
to the remarkable conclusion that idealistic science does not differ from
materialistic science in its scientificness. It is also rational and empirical.
Moreover, it is not one-sided, it does not deny sensual experience.
Materialistic science attempts to explain the supra-sensory half of human
experience away as non-existent. Supra-sensory experience is obtained by
introspection, but otherwise it is verified just like sensory experience: by
observation, by active experiment, by comparison with other supra-sensory
experience from an independent source, by formulation of predictions. In
addition, supra-sensory experience is verified with the help of sensory
experience. A genuine vision is in harmony with sensory observation. Sensory
and supra-sensory empiricism supplement each other, and only the two together
form one whole. The first is the touch-stone for the other and the second is
the explanation of the first.
Let us
think about why science up to now is not only unable to recognize the spiritual
world, but also to explain a great part of the material world. These material
phenomena have a spiritual essence. Let us return to Popper’s example of revolutionary periods. What was it, that
enabled us to predict the curve of revolution indices? How did we proceed?
The
seven archangels include two, who act especially on our emotional nature (Anael
and Samael). They influence the person during the two most emotionally unstable
and conflicting periods of life: puberty and the mid-life crisis. Anael is
Inanna, the ancient goddess of love and passion and Samael is Nergal, god of
hatred and death. Another two (Zachariel and Rafael) strengthen thinking. That
is, they calm and cool the head as an antidote to the passions. Rafael is Nabu,
the healer god, while Zachariel is Marduk, the embodiment of law and order.
This is a supra-sensory observation, of how these beings appear to the inner
vision.
Our
hypothesis is as follows: Anael and Samael will increase revolutionary tendencies.
In a period, when one of these two acts as spirit of the age alongside other
archangels, revolutionary tendencies will increase and culminate at a time when
both spirits act together. Zachariel and Rafael will reduce revolutionary
tendencies. When at least one of them acts, revolutionary tendencies shall
reduce and shall be the lowest when both act together. Opposing angels can act
at the same time, and their effects will cancel each other out. In periods of
Anael and Rafael or Samael and Zachariel, the level of revolutionary tendencies
will neither be very high nor very low. Revolutionary tendencies will also be
average, when none of these four are active.
On this
basis, we compiled a hypothetical curve of revolutionary indices. The real
curve of revolutionary indices significantly correlates with it (correlation
index = 0,7). Our hypothesis was not compiled ex post or ad hoc.
Firstly, because it preceded the control studies. And secondly, because we deal
with one and the same sevenfold rhythm, which is valid for all times, countries
and branches of culture. We do not produce a new hypothesis for every new
historical phenomenon.
Why did
anthropologists such as Kroeber or Sorokin find no regularity or system in
their own curves? They always sought only a trivial regular rhythm and when
they did not find it, they concluded that everything has an accidental
character. Deciphering the curve of revolutionary tendencies required a clear
vision of the number and nature of invisible forces, and about the qualities
and rhythms of their activities. The result of the confluence of these forces
is a complex trajectory, which does not have a regular appearance at first
sight. Scientists lack precisely such a vision.
Present-day
science places extreme emphasis on the rational method, by means of which
hypotheses are verified. Measurement and mathematical processing of data are
also emphasized. However, every new discovery has two phases. The first is
formation of a hypothesis, the second is its verification. In the first phase,
more irrational approaches related to art are applied: imagination, intuition.
The researcher may dream a hypothesis or it may only occur to him. Present-day
scientific methodology is silent about this first phase as if it did not exist.
However, both phases are equally important. If the first phase prevails, a
reverie arises without a firm foundation. But if the second phase predominates,
we get a sea of meaningless data and no idea.
The
first phase is synthetic, the second analytic. The instrument of the first
phase is the right and of the second the left hemisphere of the brain. The same
functional differentiation applies to the terrestrial organism as a whole. The
eastern hemisphere received introspective religious truths, while the western
hemisphere created experimental science.
Supra-sensory
and sensory experience must be in balance, if real knowledge is to arise.
Supra-sensory perception supplies the hypothesis for the sensory and its
explanation. It is that, which the empirical observation demands as its
inevitable conceptual supplement. Thinking becomes true in the moment when it
changes into a perception organ of the spiritual world. Present-day science
concentrated almost exclusively or identifies with the second phase and with
the analytic method. And religion left itself the first. However, both phases
become unfruitful in isolation. Scientist and priest must merge in one person!
The
research, for which Roger Sperry was awarded the Nobel Prize, confirmed that
the most creative people are those, who can use and flexibly connect the two
hemispheres of the brain. A good researcher must live in rhythmic alternation
between the introvert and extrovert, passive and active, male and female
aspects of his psyche, between receiving of inspiration from higher worlds and
its rational verification in the external world. One-sided use of the left
hemisphere of the brain cannot lead to anything other than a materialistic
world view.
The
scientists have dug up mountains of information, to which they cannot give any
meaning. They cannot find any logos, any idea in it. The prevailing part of the
world appears to them to be chaos, an accidental event. The history of the
world, the evolution of nature, human dreams – everything is chaos, blind and
meaningless accident. Where could Kroeber acquire a clear picture of the nature
of individual archangels and the relations between them? He collected data for
thirty years, but he had no idea. If he had had the idea, he could immediately
have confirmed it, but it did not occur to him.
The
majority of phenomena do not openly reveal their idea. It is necessary to do
something in the mind like vector decomposition of the phenomenon into its
independent components. If rhythms in history should become visible to us, we
must be able to break them down into components originating from various
spiritual causes. For example, to distinguish spirits of time from spirits of
nations. Spirits of time act globally, they bring waves of creativity in one
area of culture across all nations of the world. The spirits of nations act
locally, inspiring groups of great personalities of all kinds, but limited to
one nation. The spirit of a nation and the spirit of time have their own
rhythms, and if we cannot distinguish them mentally and mix everything
together, we cannot see any regularity in history.
If we
proceeded in physics the same way as in cultural anthropology, we would not be
able to prove even the existence of the force of gravity. A leaf dancing in the
wind or a rocket flying away from Earth would have to be taken as evidence that
bodies only sometimes move downwards with uniformly accelerated motion.
Therefore, the law of gravity is not a law. However, the true answer is that
the attraction of the Earth always acts, but other forces act alongside it. The
trajectory of bodies is the result of interaction of these forces.
The
magnificent perspective of science does not lie in the further perfecting of
rational instruments. This is not work for computers. It must begin with deliberate
perfecting of the human imagination, to achieve balance. The ennobled, purified
imagination changes into the organ of sight of the spirit. However, this
demands that the scientist also perfects his emotional and volitional life, not
only his intellect.
In
this, the sophiological method really differs from Baconism: Spiritual science
requires the adept to master all the abilities, which materialistic science
requires from its adherents. But it also requires something more. That is first
of all a versatile development of the human being as a whole, not only of some
of his faculties. It requires further the ability to create not only
quantitative, but also qualitative concepts. Material science is a subset of
the spiritual, and spiritual science is the extension of the material to higher
worlds.
Materialistic
science is only really successful in research into the mineral realm. It is the
part of the world, which can be understood well in connection with quantitative
terms, that is with mathematical equations. The higher realms – vegetable,
animal and human – require a different creation of conceptions. They represent
matter enlivened, ensouled and spiritualized by higher principles, which penetrate
and organize it. To decipher this organization means to be able to create such
concepts, which correspond to these living ideas, which act behind these realms
as creative forces. It will never be possible to understand history, except by
means of inspired concepts, because those who act in it are the spirits of inspiration
– the archangels.
This
new dimension, which is opening to science, lies in the refined creation of
concepts and ideas. Science has stagnated for a long time, not because of lack
of measured data, but because of conceptual blindness. The astro-physicists are
vainly seeking an equation of the universe. Beings, which embody aesthetic and
moral qualities and virtues are active around us. As soon as we are able to
create these virtues and qualities in ourselves, they will become visible to
us.
Our hypothesis
about archangelic powers does not differ from Newton’s
hypothesis about gravitation in not being empirical. Both speak about a sort of
supra-sensory essence. But it differs in that the content of the concept
archangel is qualitative, it has aesthetic and moral content. This is the more
essential frontier, on the threshold of which science stands. Angels are not
invisible, but we are aesthetically and morally blind!
As soon
as we raise ourselves to the inner experience and clear vision of a spiritual
being, we are able to recognize, even to quantify his expressions in the world
around us. This approach is scientific to the degree to which we are able to
create non-mathematical concepts exactly and unambiguously, but it is no
different in psychology, history and all the other humanities. Until they are
not in grade to create accurate concepts corresponding to non-physical
realities, they are not sciences.
These
sciences feel that they are not really entitled to produce any synthesis. For
example, the historian never knows whether two partly similar events can
correctly be grouped under a common term, let us say the French Revolution and
the revolution in Vietnam, which happened in the same year. They think,
together with Benedetto Croce, that every such term will be only nominalist,
subjectively created by the narrator. Henceforth we know that in this case
there exists an idea (in the sense of spiritual realism), which links the two
events: it is the archangel Anael. The Angelology of History is the first
modern age philosophy of history, the first historic synthesis, which also
achieved its methodological justification.
Therefore,
where can we, as researchers, obtain correct hypotheses, which fit as a key
to the lock of the world? Only from those beings, which really act within
these things as living ideas and creative principles! Here is the way to overcome
Kant’s subject-object split. Within ourselves, we can unite
with things in themselves, with the actual creative forces, which are the
ideas of these things. Otherwise, we know the idea only in the case of artefacts
created by man, because we are ourselves their creators. Whoever understands
the idea of the combustion engine, knows everything substantial about it.
In the same way there are beings, which stand behind nature and history as
their ideas. Love and respect awaken the latent ability of our souls to connect
with them. All of them together form one harmonic whole, as the limbs of one
being, Sophia, the Heavenly Wisdom.
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* This paper has been published in: Acta Historica Posoniensis, Comenius University, Bratislava, 2003.
* episteme = the sum of a priori and unconsciously accepted world-view presuppositions in a given period, which influences the way of knowing. Foucault´s notion of episteme approximately corresponds to Kuhn´s notion of scientific paradigm and Sorokin´s notion of system of truth.