| 
			 
			 
  
			 
			  
			
			
			 
			
			  
			
			from
			
			Bonnie'sLinks Website 
			
			extracted from
			'In Search of the Miraculous - Fragments of a 
			Forgotten Teaching' 
  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
				
					
						
							
								
								Contents 
							 
							
						 
					 
				 
			 
			
			
				
					
						  
					 
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			 
  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			 
			 
  
			 
			
			 
			"In Search of the 
			Miraculous" 
			
			
			Chapters 
			1-6 
			  
			
			 
			Chapter 1 
			
				
					
					Page 21  Man is a machine. All his deeds are the results of external 
				influences, external impressions. What is being done, and 
				particularly what has already been done in one way, cannot be, 
				and could not have been, done in another way. 
  Page 22 
					 Everything is dependent on everything else, everything is 
				connected, nothing is separate. 
  Page 24  What is war? It is the results of planetary influences. 
				Somewhere up there two or three planets have approached too near 
				to each other; tension results. Everything that happens on a big 
				scale is governed from the outside, and governed either by 
				accidental combinations of influences or by general cosmic laws.
					
  Page 24  Organic life on earth is acted upon simultaneously by influences 
				proceeding from various sources and different worlds; influences 
				from the planets, influences from the moon, influences from the 
				sun, influences from the stars. All these influences act 
				simultaneously; one influence predominates at one moment and 
				another influence at another moment. 
  Page 26  In real art there is nothing accidental. It is mathematics. 
				Everything in it can be calculated, everything can be known 
				beforehand. The great Sphinx in Egypt is such a work of art.
					 
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Chapter 2 
			
				
					
					Page 31  
					
					And G.'s chief motive became clearer 
				to me. He by no means wanted to make it easy for people to 
				become acquainted with his ideas. On the contrary he considered 
				that only by overcoming difficulties, however irrelevant and 
				accidental, could people value his ideas. 
  Page 37  Knowledge is material. There is a definite quantity of it in a 
				given place at a given time. Taken in a large quantity by one 
				man, it produces very good results; taken in a small quantity by 
				a large number of people, it gives no results at all. 
  Page 39 
					 Knowledge cannot come to people without effort on their own 
				part. 
  Page 40  A man who has attained the full development possible for man 
				consists of four bodies:  
					
						
							- 
							
							Physical body - a carriage
							  
							- 
							
							Astral body (the emotions) 
							- a horse   
							- 
							
							Mental body (the mind) - a 
						driver   
							- 
							
							Causal body - the master
							  
						 
					 
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Chapter 3 
			
				
					
					Page 53  A man is never the same for very long. He is continually 
				changing. 
  Page 57  There exist special forces (of a planetary character) which 
				oppose the evolution of large masses of humanity, and keep it at 
				the level it ought to be. 
  Page 59  Man has no permanent and unchangeable I. Man is a plurality. 
				Man's name is legion.  
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Chapter 4 
			
				
					
					Page 67  Knowledge by itself does not give understanding. Understanding 
				depends upon the relation of knowledge to being. 
  Page 71 
					 Seven types of man:  
					
						
							- 
							
							Man #1 is the man of the 
						physical body.   
							- 
							
							Man #2 is the emotional man.
							  
							- 
							
							Man #3 is the man of reason 
						whose knowledge is based on scholastics.  
							 
							- 
							
							Man #4 is a man who has 
						ideals.   
							- 
							
							Man #5 is a man who has 
						reached unity and has already been crystallized. 
							  
							- 
							
							Man #6 is very close to the 
						ideal man, but some of his properties have not yet 
						become permanent.   
							- 
							
							Man #7 is the man who had 
						reached the full development possible to man. 
							  
						 
					 
					
					Page 72  Every man is born number one, number two, or number three. Man 
				number four is always the product of school work. 
  Page 73 
					 The same order of division into seven categories must be applied 
				to everything relating to man - art, religion, science, 
				philosophy, etc. 
  Page 75  It is impossible to study a system of the universe without 
				studying man. At the same time it is impossible to study man 
				without studying the universe. Man is an image of the world.  
					 Page 77  Every phenomenon is the result of the combination of three 
				forces - positive (active, "1"), negative (passive, "2"), and 
				neutral (neutralizing, "3"). 
  Page 79  The Absolute is designated by the number "1" because the three 
				forces are united. Let us image the Absolute as a circle and in 
				it a number of other circles, worlds of the second order. The 
				small circles will be designated by the number "3", because in a 
				world of the second order the three forces are already divided. 
				The three divided forces in the worlds of the second order 
				create new worlds of the third order. Six different forces will 
				be acting upon the worlds of the third order. 
  Page 80 
					 Orders of the "world"  
					
						- 
						
						1st order world is affected by 1 
					force - the single, independent will of the Absolute 
						 
						- 
						
						2nd order world is affected by 3 
					forces (all the galaxies)  
						- 
						
						3rd order world is affected by 6 
					forces (Milky Way) - (3 [from 2nd] + 3 new forces) 
						 
						- 
						
						4th order world is affected by 
					12 forces (our Sun) - (3 [from 2nd] + 6 [from 3rd] + 3 new 
					forces)  
						- 
						
						5th order world is affected by 
					24 forces (planets in our solar system) - (3 [from 2nd] + 6 
					[from 3rd] + 12 [from 4th] + 3 new forces)  
						- 
						
						6th order world is affected by 
					48 forces (Earth) - (3 [from 2nd] + 6 [from 3rd] + 12 [from 
					4th] + 24 [from 5th] + 3 new forces)  
						- 
						
						7th order world is affect by 96 
					forces (Moon) - (3 [2nd] + 6 [3rd] + 12 [4th] + 24 [from 
					5th] + 48 [from 6th] + 3 new forces)  
					 
					
					Page 80  The chain of worlds which links the Absolute to the Moon forms 
				the "ray of creation" in which we find ourselves.  
					 Page 81  The number of forces in each world indicates the number of laws 
				to which the given world is subject. We live in a world subject 
				to 48 orders of laws.  
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Chapter 5 
			
				
					
					Page 83  According to the "ray of creation", the Moon is still an unborn 
				planet. 
  Page 84  A miracle is the manifestation in this world of the laws of 
				another world. 
  Page 85  The influence of the Moon upon everything living manifests 
				itself in all that happens on Earth. Man can not tear himself 
				free from the Moon. All his movements and consequently all his 
				actions are controlled by the Moon. The mechanical part of our 
				life is subject to the Moon. 
  Page 87  The world consists of matter in a state of vibration. The rate 
				of vibration is in inverse ratio to the density of matter.  
					 Page 87  An "atom" of the Absolute is smaller than an "atom" of a 
				1st-order world. An "atom" of a 1st-order world is smaller than 
				an "atom" of the 2nd-order world, etc. 
  Page 90 
					 Every substance has four aspects or states which correspond to 
				fire, air, water, and earth  
					
						
							- 
							
							Substance which conducts the 
						active force is called 'carbon' - "1" 
							  
							- 
							
							Substance which conducts the 
						passive force is called 'oxygen' - "2" 
							  
							- 
							
							Substance which conducts the 
						neutralizing force is called 'nitrogen' - "3" 
							  
							- 
							
							Substance without force is 
						called 'hydrogen' - "6"   
						 
					 
					
					Page 90  Force is divided into "three" types, and matter is divided into 
				"four" types. 
  Page 95  The laws of a game make the essence of the game. A violation of 
				these laws would destroy the entire game. The Absolute can not 
				interfere in our life and substitute other results in the place 
				of the natural results of causes created by us, or created 
				accidentally. 
  Page 95  The Moon is the weight on a clock. Organic life is the mechanism 
				of the clock brought into motion by the weight. If the weight is 
				removed, all movements in the mechanism of the clock will at 
				once stop.  
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Chapter 6 
			
				
					
					Page 99  Until a man has defined his own aim for himself, he will not be 
				able to begin 'to do' anything. There are many aims of 
				existence. 
  Page 100  What happens to us may depend upon three causes: 
					 
					
						
							
								
								(1) upon accident 
								
								(2) upon fate 
								
								(3) upon our own 
							will 
							 
						 
					 
					
					Such as we are, we are almost wholly 
				dependent upon accident. 
  Page 103  Wars cannot be stopped. War is due to cosmic forces, to 
				planetary influences. 
  Page 104  Without self-knowledge, man cannot be free. Self-observation is 
				the work or the way which leads to self-knowledge. 
  Page 111 
					 Daydreaming is absolutely the opposite of 'useful' mental 
				activity. Observation of the activity of imagination and 
				daydreaming forms a very important part of self-study. The next 
				object of self-observation must be habits in general. 
  Page 112 
					 Man is a machine controlled by accidental shocks from outside.
					 
				 
			 
			
			
			
			Top of Page 
			 
			 
			  
			
			  
			
			
			 
			"In Search of the 
			Miraculous" 
			
			
			Chapters 
			7-12 
			  
			
			
			 
			Chapter 7 
			
				
					
					Page 116  You 
					can only know consciousness in yourself. 
					
  Page 117  In order to really observe oneself, one 
					must first of all remember oneself. In self-remembering, 
					one's attention is directed toward the object observed and 
					toward oneself. 
  Page 122 
					 The first fundamental law of the universe is the "Law of 
					Three". Every phenomenon is the result of simultaneous 
					action of the three forces - the positive, the negative, and 
					the neutralizing. 
  Page 122  The next fundamental 
					law of the universe is the "Law of Seven" or the "Law of 
					Octaves". In order to understand the meaning of this law it 
					is necessary to regard the universe as consisting of 
					vibrations. 
  Page 123  In ancient knowledge, the 
					understanding of vibrations is based on the idea of the 
					discontinuity of vibrations. All vibrations in nature do not 
					develop uniformly, but instead develop with periodic 
					accelerations and retardations. The force of the original 
					impulse in vibrations does not act uniformly, but becomes 
					alternately stronger and weaker. The periods of uniform 
					action of the momentum are not equal, and the moments of 
					retardation of the vibrations are not symmetrical. One 
					period is shorter; the other is longer. 
  Page 124  
					In order to determine these moments of retardation, the 
					lines of development of vibrations are divided into periods 
					corresponding to the doubling or the halving of the number 
					of vibrations in a given space of time. It has been found 
					that in this interval of vibrations, between a given number 
					of vibrations and a number twice as large, there are two 
					places where a retardation in the increase of vibrations 
					takes place. One is near the beginning, and the other occurs 
					almost at the end. 
  Page 124  These laws were 
					incorporated into a formula. In this formula, the period in 
					which vibrations are doubled was divided into eight unequal 
					steps corresponding to the rate of increase in the 
					vibrations. The eighth step repeats the first step with 
					double the number of vibrations. This period of doubling the 
					vibrations is called an octave, i.e., composed of eight. The 
					separate "steps" of an octave show acceleration and 
					retardation at different moments of the development of the 
					period. 
  Page 125 
					 The seven-tone scale is the formula of a cosmic law 
					which was applied to music. In the ascending octave, we will 
					designate the low end "do" and the point at which the 
					vibrations have doubled also as "do". The period between one 
					"do" and the next is divided into seven unequal parts 
					because the frequency of vibrations does not increase 
					uniformly. 
  Page 125  The ratio of the pitch of 
					the notes is as follows: 
					 
					
						
							- 
							
							do: 1   
							- 
							
							re: 9/8   
							- 
							
							mi: 10/8, 
							or 5/4
								  
							- 
							
							fa: 4/3   
							- 
							
							sol: 
							12/8, or 3/2
								  
							- 
							
							la: 5/3   
							- 
							
							si: 15/8  
							 
							- 
							
							do: 16/8, 
							or 2
								  
						 
					 
					
					Page 125  The 
					difference in acceleration is as follows: 
					 
					
						
							- 
							
							do -> re: 
							(9/8 : 1) = 9/8   
							- 
							
							re -> mi: 
							(10/8 : 9/8) = 10/9   
							- 
							
							mi -> fa: 
							(4/3 : 10/8) = 16/15 [increase retarded]   
							- 
							
							fa -> so: 
							(3/2 : 4/3) = 9/8   
							- 
							
							so -> la: 
							(5/3 : 3/2) = 10/9   
							- 
							
							la -> si: 
							(15/8 : 5/3) = 9/8   
							- 
							
							si -> do: 
							(16/8 : 15/8) = 16/15 [increase again retarded]   
						 
					 
					
					Page 126  The 
					differences in the pitch of the notes are called intervals. 
					There are three kinds of intervals in an octave: 9/8, 10/9, 
					and 16/15. The smallest interval 16/15 occurs in the places 
					of retardation in the octave. In music, one semitone is 
					found between the following pairs: do-re, re-mi, fa-sol, 
					sol-la, and la-si. A semitone does not exist in the mi-fa 
					and si-do intervals. 
  Page 127  The law of octaves 
					explains why there are no straight lines in nature. At the 
					moment of the retardation of vibration a deviation from the 
					original direction takes place. Let us assume that a 
					movement begins at "do". It will continue in a straight line 
					through "mi". But a deviation occurs between "mi" and "fa" 
					which causes a change from the original direction. From "fa" 
					through "si", the movement continues in the new direction. 
					Between "si" and "do" the second interval occurs which 
					causes a new change in direction. The next octave gives an 
					even more marked deviation so that the line of octaves may 
					eventually complete a circle. 
  Page 129  The 
					"intervals" cause the line of the development of force to 
					constantly change. Think how many turns the line of 
					development of forces must have taken to come from the 
					Gospel preaching of love to the Inquisition. 
  Page 
					129  The law of octaves explains many phenomena in our 
					lives: 
					 
					
						
							- 
							
							The 
							principle of the deviation of forces   
							- 
							
							The fact 
							that everything in the world is moving and changing   
							- 
							
							In 
							development rises and falls are constantly taking 
							place   
						 
					 
					
					Page 130  
					Nothing can develop by staying on one level. Ascent or 
					descent is the inevitable cosmic condition of any action. 
  
					Page 131 
					 The consistent development of an octave is based on what 
					looks like an accident. If octaves are going parallel to a 
					given octave and intersect its "interval", they can "fill 
					up" the "interval". This "additional shock" must correspond 
					in force and character to the interval it is filling. In the 
					ascending octave, the second interval si-do is much larger 
					than the first interval mi-fa. In the descending octave, the 
					greatest "interval" occurs at the very beginning of the 
					octave. A descending octave develops much more easily than 
					an ascending octave. 
  Page 132  The lines of 
					development of forces which are straightened out by accident 
					give man the illusion of straight lines. If by accident 
					man's activity gives a result, he assumes that he can attain 
					his aim. 
  Page 134  Man can learn to recognize the 
					moments of the "intervals" in all lines of his activity and 
					can learn to create the necessary "additional shocks". 
					Descending cosmic octaves are creative, and ascending cosmic 
					octaves are evolutionary. 
  Page 134  Octaves are 
					divided into fundamental and subordinate. The fundamental 
					octave is like the trunk of a tree. The seven fundamental 
					notes and the two "intervals", the bearers of new 
					directions, give altogether nine links in a chain, three 
					groups of three links each. The human body has nine basic 
					measurements expressed by the numbers of a definite measure. 
  
					Page 135 
					 Within vibrations, other vibrations proceed. Each note 
					of any octave can be regarded as an octave on another plane. 
  
					Page 138 
					 Organic life takes in those influences coming from the 
					planetary sphere which otherwise would not be able to reach 
					the earth. All great events in the life of the human masses 
					are caused by planetary influences.  
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Chapter 8 
			
				
					
					Page 141  There are four states of consciousness possible for man: 
					 
					
						
							
								
								(1) sleep 
								
								(2) clear 
							consciousness 
								
								(3) 
							self-remembering 
								
								(4) objective state of 
							consciousness (enlightenment) 
							 
						 
					 
					
					Page 145  Self-observation brings man to the realization of the necessity 
				for self-change. 
  Page 150  A man identifies with a small problem which confronts him, and 
				he completely forgets the great aims with which he began his 
				work. He fails to see the forest for the trees. 
  Page 151 
					 Identifying is the chief obstacle to self-remembering. On the 
				most prevalent occasions a man is identified with what others 
				think about him, how they treat him, what attitude they show 
				towards him. 
  Page 153  By considering externally a man does that which makes life easy 
				for other people and for himself. Right external considering is 
				very important in the work. 
  Page 155  Buffers are created slowly and gradually so that man will not 
				feel the "shocks". They are created artificially through 
				"education" and through the influence of the surrounding life. 
				"Buffers" make a man's life easier and help him not to feel his 
				conscience. Consciousness is a state in which a man knows all at 
				once. Conscience is a state in which a man feels all at once.
					
  Page 156  Conscience is a general and a permanent phenomenon. It is 
				possible only in the absence of "buffers". Morality consists of 
				buffers. There is no general morality. Morality is merely 
				self-suggestion. 
  Page 160  The consciousness of one's nothingness alone can conquer the 
				fear of subordination to the will of another. 
  Page 161 
					 Fate is the result of planetary influences which correspond to a 
				man's type. Fate only relates to a man's essence. A man consists 
				of two parts: essence and personality. Essence in a man is what 
				is his own. Personality in man is what has come from the 
				outside, what he has learned or reflects. Essence is the truth 
				in man. 
  Page 164  It happens fairly often that essence dies in a man while his 
				personality and his body are still alive. 
  Page 165  Collective accident and collective fate are governed by general 
				laws. General laws are by no means all obligatory for man.  
					 Page 165  Nothing shows up people so much as their attitude towards money. 
				They are ready to waste as much as you like on their own 
				personal fantasies but they have no valuation whatever of 
				another person's labor.  
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Chapter 9 
			
				
					
					Page 167  All suns of the Milky Way influence our sun. The sun influences 
				the planets. All planets influence our earth, and the earth 
				influences the moon. These influences are transmitted by means 
				of radiations passing through starry and interplanetary space. 
				Let us study these radiations in an abridged form of the "ray of 
				creation" - Absolute --> Sun --> Earth --> Moon. This forms 
				three octaves of radiation. 
  Page 169  The "shock" in the octave Sun --> Earth is organic life on 
				Earth. 
  Page 178  Man never on any account wants to pay for anything; and above 
				all he does not want to pay for what is most important to him. 
				Everything must be paid for, and it must be paid for in 
				proportion to what is received. 
  Page 179  It is necessary to learn how to save the greater part of the 
				energy we possess for useful work instead of wasting to 
				unproductively. Energy is spent chiefly on unnecessary and 
				unpleasant emotions, on the expectation of unpleasant things, on 
				bad moods, on unnecessary haste, and so on. 
  Page 180  "Learn to separate the fine from the course" 
					- this principle 
				from the "Emerald 
				Tablets of Hermes Trismegistus" refers to the work of 
				the human factory. 
  Page 181  The human organism receives three kinds of food: 
					 
					
						
						(1) ordinary 
								food we eat 
						
						(2) the air 
								we breathe 
						
						(3) our 
								impressions 
					 
					
					Page 182  The process of transforming the substances which enter the 
				organism into finer ones is governed by the law of octaves.  
					 Page 189  An old alchemical law states that "in order to make gold, it is 
				first of all necessary to have a certain quantity of real gold".
					 
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Chapter 10 
			
				
					
					Page 199  Man lives in life under the law of accident and under two kinds 
				of influences again governed by accident. The first kind are 
				influences created in life itself - race, nation, climate, 
				family, and so on. The second kind are influences created 
				outside this life - religious systems, philosophical doctrines, 
				works of art, and so on. 
  Page 201  The moment when the man who is looking for the way meets a man 
				who knows the way is called the first threshold or the first 
				step. From this first threshold the stairway begins. The way 
				begins when the stairway ends. 
  Page 203  The pupil cannot go on without the teacher, and the teacher 
				cannot go on without the pupil or pupils. No one can ascend onto 
				a higher step until he places another man in his own place. What 
				a man has received he must immediately give back; only then can 
				he receive more. Otherwise from him will be taken even what he 
				has already been given. 
  Page 205  Knowledge begins with the teaching of the cosmoses 
					- "as 
				above, so below". There are actually seven cosmoses: 
					 
					
						
							- 
							
							Protocosmos - the first 
						cosmos (the Absolute, "1")   
							- 
							
							Ayocosmos or Megalocosmos 
							- the holy cosmos (all worlds, "3")  
							 
							- 
							
							Macrocosmos - the large 
						cosmos (Milky Way, "6")   
							- 
							
							Deuterocosmos - the second 
						cosmos (the Sun, the solar system, "12")
							  
							- 
							
							Mesocosmos - the middle 
						cosmos (all planets, "24")   
							- 
							
							Tritocosmos - the third 
						cosmos (man, "48")   
							- 
							
							Microcosmos - the small 
						cosmos (atom)   
						 
					 
					
					Page 206  Each cosmos is a living being which lives, breathes, thinks, 
				feels, is born, and dies. All cosmoses results from the action 
				of the same forces and the same laws. Laws are the same 
				everywhere. The interrelation of the cosmoses is permanent and 
				always the same. One cosmos is related to another as zero is to 
				infinity. 
  Page 207  The manifestation of the laws of one cosmos in another cosmos 
				constitutes what we call a miracle. There can be no other kind 
				of miracle. A miracle is not a breaking of laws, nor is it a 
				phenomenon outside laws. 
  Page 209  We have a perfectly clear example of the relation of zero to 
				infinity. In geometry this is the relationship between a body of 
				dimension "n" to a body of dimension "n+1" - a point to a line, 
				a line to a plane, a plane to a solid, and so on. 
  Page 210 
					 The plane is only a projection of a body, the line is a 
				projection of a plane, and the point is a projection of a line. 
				When we say a thing "exists", we mean by this existence in time. 
				Time, as we feel it, is the fourth dimension. Eternity is the 
				fifth dimension. The sixth dimension is the line of the 
				actualization of all possibilities. As every cosmos has a real 
				physical existence, every cosmos therefore is three-dimensional 
				for itself or in itself. 
  Page 213  Time is different in different cosmoses. Time is breath. 
				Twenty-four hours constitute the "breath of organic life". 
					
  Page 214  It was later decided to take man as the 
					Microcosmos, and 
				to take Tritocosmos as organic life on earth.  
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Chapter 11 
			
				
					
					Page 217  "To awake", "to die", and "to be born". 
				These are three successive stages. If a man dies without have 
				awakened he cannot be born. Being "born" relates to the 
				beginning of a new growth of essence. In order to do this, man 
				must "die" - he must free himself from the attachments to 
				everything in his life. Then one must "die" all at once and 
				forever. 
  Page 220  Kundalini is not anything desirable or useful for man's 
				development. It is the power of imagination, the power of 
				fantasy, which takes the place of a real function. Kundalini is 
				a force put into men in order to keep them in their present 
				state. 
  Page 222  Therefore a man who wants to awake must look for other people 
				who also want to awake and work together with them. The work 
				must be organized and it must have a leader. All the members of 
				a group must keep secret everything they hear or learn in the 
				group. The next demand which is made of the members of the group 
				is that they must tell the teacher of the group the whole truth. 
				Then they must remember why they came into the group. Finally, 
				the members in the group must actually work. 
  Page 226 
					 "Doing" is magic and "doing" can be only of one kind. There 
				cannot be two kinds of "doing". Therefore in true work, the 
				producing of infatuation in people is not allowed. "Black" 
				magic is based on infatuation and on playing upon 
				human weaknesses. 
  Page 228  In properly organized groups no faith is required; what is 
				required is simply a little trust. In the beginning, only very 
				simple tasks are given. More difficult tasks, called "barriers", 
				can cause a man to stop between two barriers and be unable to 
				move forward or backward. This is the worst thing that can 
				happen to a man. Having stopped before some barrier, people turn 
				against the work, against the teacher, and against other members 
				in the group. 
  Page 229  Every effort a man makes increases the demands made upon him. 
				Nothing a man did yesterday excuses him today. 
  Page 230 
					 Lack of considering in relation to the teacher and the other in 
				the group is the first barrier. The second barrier is very often 
				the conquest of fear. Positive efforts and even sacrifices in 
				the work do not justify or excuse mistakes which may follow. 
				Things that could be forgiven in a man who has made no effort 
				will not be forgiven in another who has already made great 
				sacrifices. A man's efforts and sacrifices are written down on 
				one side of a book, and his mistakes and misdeeds on the other 
				side. What is written down on the positive side can never atone 
				for what is written down on the negative side. What is recorded 
				on the negative side can only be wiped out by the truth.  
					 Page 231  A group is a big thing. In a group all are responsible for one 
				another. A mistake on the part of one is considered as a mistake 
				on the part of all. Members of a group are responsible not only 
				for the mistakes of others, but also for their failures. A group 
				must work as one machine. 
  Page 233  In the human machine there are two small accumulators near each 
				center filled with the particular substance necessary for the 
				work of the given center. In addition, a large accumulator feeds 
				the small ones. The large accumulator contains an enormous 
				amount of energy. Connected with the large accumulator a man is 
				literally able to perform miracles. Small accumulators suffice 
				for the ordinary everyday work of life. But for the inner 
				growth, we must learn how to draw energy straight form the large 
				accumulator. This is possible only with the help of the 
				emotional center. 
  Page 236  Yawning is the pumping of energy into the small accumulators. 
				Laughter is the pumping out and the discarding of superfluous 
				energy collected in the accumulators. Laughter is an antidote 
				for energy which we are unable to use and which might become a 
				poison.  
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Chapter 12 
			
				
					
					Page 239  A man has a role for every kind of circumstance in which he 
				ordinarily finds himself in life - one or two for his family, 
				one or two for the office, and yet another one for friends in a 
				restaurant. Outside his repertoire, a man feels very 
				uncomfortable. To begin to work and to continue to work is very 
				difficult because life runs too smoothly. 
  Page 243  There is only one thing incompatible with work and that is 
				"professional occultism", in other words, professional 
				charlatanism. A man must be disappointed in ordinary ways and he 
				must be able to accept the idea that there may be something - somewhere. These ideas could either unite people or separate 
				them. 
  Page 246  There are twelve fundamental types of people. According to 
				legend, the twelve apostles represented the twelve types.  
					 Page 250  Ouspensky says to Gurdjieff "what does it matter 
				how we shall call things. You never answers the questions I 
				ask". 
  Page 251  Planetary influences can change. They are not permanent. There 
				is a definite time, a definite term, for everything. 
				Possibilities for everything exist only for a definite time.  
					 Page 255  Everything people do is connected with sex. Cosmic forces have 
				created this state of affairs and cosmic forces control this 
				state of affairs. "New birth" depends as much upon sex energy as 
				do physical birth and the propagation of species.  
				 
			 
			
			
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			"In Search of the 
			Miraculous" 
			
			
			
			Chapters 
			13-18 
			  
			
			 
			Chapter 13 
			
				
					
					Page 266  It is a complete absurdity to think that it is possible to study 
				phenomena of a higher order like "telepathy", foreseeing 
				the future, and so on, in the same way as electrical, chemical, 
				or meteorological phenomena are studied. Phenomena of a higher 
				order require a particular emotional state for their observation 
				and study. This excludes any possibility of "properly conducted" 
				laboratory experiments and observations. The impossibility of 
				violence to produce anything positive is an esoteric principle.
					
  Page 272  People fear silence more than any other thing. 
					
  Page 274  In order to do the work, people must sacrifice only what they 
				imagine they have and which in reality they do not have. They 
				must sacrifice their fantasies. People must also sacrifice their 
				suffering. A man will renounce any pleasures you like but he 
				will not give up his suffering. 
  Page 277  You must learn to get information from jokes, from stories. You 
				must know how to take when knowledge is not given, to steal if 
				necessary, but not to wait for somebody to come and give it to 
				you.  
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Chapter 14 
			
				
					
					Page 278  All our ordinary knowledge which is based on ordinary 
				observation he called subjective. Knowledge based upon ancient 
				methods - knowledge of the All, he called objective knowledge. 
				One of the most central ideas of objective knowledge is the idea 
				of the unity of everything, of unity in diversity. With 
				objective consciousness it is possible to see and feel the unity 
				of everything. 
  Page 279  "Myths" were designed to transmit ideas to the higher emotional 
				center; "symbols" were designed for the higher thinking center.
					
  Page 280  Symbols were divided into the fundamental and the subordinate; 
				the first included the principles of separate domains of 
				knowledge; the second expressed the essential nature of 
				phenomena in their relation to unity. One formula which had 
				particular significance, "As above, so below", can from 
				the "Emerald 
				Tables of Hermes Trimegistus". This formula stated 
				that all the laws of the cosmos could be found in the atom or in 
				any other phenomenon which exists as something completed 
				according to certain laws. 
  Page 281  Man must first see the manifestation of two principles, one 
				opposed to the other, which, in conjunction or in opposition, 
				give one result or another. He will introduce the "line of will" 
				into the circle of time and afterwards into the cycle of 
				eternity. When this is accomplished, it will create in him the 
				great symbol known as the "Seal of Solomon". A symbol becomes a 
				synthesis of a man's knowledge. 
  Page 281  The more simple symbols are as follows: 
					 
					
						
							- 
							
							Number 2 - two parallel 
						lines   
							- 
							
							Number 3 - equilateral 
						triangle   
							- 
							
							Number 4 - square 
							  
							- 
							
							Number 5 - 5-pointed star 
						which points upward, the pentagram   
							- 
							
							Number 6 - 6-pointed star, 
						the Star of David, Seal of Solomon   
						 
					 
					
					Page 281  Man, in the normal state natural to him, is taken as a duality. 
				He consists entirely of "pairs of opposites" - positive and 
				negative, useful and harmful, good and bad, pleasant and 
				unpleasant. Thoughts oppose feelings. Moving impulses oppose 
				instinctive craving for quiet. 
  Page 282  The creation of a permanent third principle is for man the 
				transformation of the duality into the trinity. 
  Page 282 
					 A man has five centers:  
					
						
						(1) thinking 
						
						(2) emotional 
						
						(3) moving 
						
						(4) instinctive 
						
						(5) sex 
					 
					
					If a man brings the work of these 
				five centers into harmonious accord, he "locks the pentagram 
				within him" and becomes a finished type of the physically 
				perfect man. When man becomes directly and permanently connected 
				with objective consciousness and objective knowledge, the man 
				becomes the six-point star - the Seal of Solomon. A symbol can 
				never be fully interpreted, it can only be experienced. 
  Page 283 
					 The law of octaves gives another system of symbols. Every 
				completed process is a transition of the note "do" through a 
				series of successive tones to the "do" of the next octave. The 
				seven fundamental tones of the octave express the law of seven. 
				The seven fundamental tones, the two "intervals" or "shocks", 
				and the "do" of the next octave, generate ten steps - the 
				decimal system of numbers. 
  Page 283  The symbology of number is based on this idea. In "theosophical 
				addition", the definition of a number consisting of more than 
				one digit is the sum of those digits - "casting out nines". 
				Numbers are connected with definite geometrical figures. In the 
				Cabala, a symbology of letters and a symbology of words are 
				used. There also exists a symbology of magic, a symbology of 
				alchemy, and a symbology of astrology. A symbol can never be 
				taken in a final and definite meaning. 
  Page 284  Exact knowledge concerning details, communicated to a man before 
				he has acquired an understanding of the essential nature of a 
				thing, makes it difficult for him to understand this essential 
				nature. A man will attain knowledge only by his own efforts. No 
				one can ever give him what he did not possess before; no one can 
				do for him the work he should do for himself. 
  Page 285 
					 The law of octaves connects all processes of the universe, and 
				it presents the possibility of an exact cognition of every 
				phenomenon in its essential nature. The symbol which unites the 
				idea of the octave is a circle divided into nine equal parts 
				with lines connecting the nine points on the circumference in a 
				certain order. The symbol takes the following form: 
  Page 287 
					 This symbol expresses the law of seven in its union with the law 
				of three. The octave possesses seven tones, and the eighth is a 
				repetition of the first. Two additional "shocks" fill the 
				"intervals" mi-fa and si-do so that there are nine elements.
					
  Page 288  The circle symbolizes a uninterruptedly flowing process. The 
				separate points in the division of the circumference symbolize 
				the steps of the process. The symbol as a whole is "do". It is a 
				circle - a completed cycle, the zero of our decimal system. The 
				stages in the process are connected with the remaining numbers 1 
				through 9. Every beginning and ending of the cycle is situated 
				in the apex of the triangle. Since it is the ninth step which 
				closes and begins a cycle, the upper point of the triangle 
				corresponds to the number 9. 
  Page 289  We must take a unit and divide it into seven equal parts. These 
				decimal divisions generate a series of fractions which consist 
				of exactly the same six digits in a definite sequence. If you 
				know the first digit of the period, it is possible to 
				reconstruct the whole period in full. The fractions are as 
				follows:  
					
						
							- 
							
							1/7 = 0.142857 . . .
							  
							- 
							
							2/7 = 0.285714 . . .
							  
							- 
							
							3/7 = 0.428571 . . .
							  
							- 
							
							4/7 = 0.571428 . . .
							  
							- 
							
							5/7 = 0.714285 . . .
							  
							- 
							
							6/7 = 0.857142 . . .
							  
							- 
							
							7/7 = 0.999999 . . .
							  
						 
					 
					
					Page 289  If we start with the first number in a fraction and connect in 
				sequence to the remaining numbers in the fraction, we shall 
				obtain the figure found inside the circle. For example, we will 
				follow the digits in "1/7th". We start at "1" on the circle, and 
				connect it to "4", then to "2", then to "8", then to "5", and 
				finally to "7". The final step would be to connect the "7" back 
				to the "1". The numbers "3", "6", and "9" are not included in 
				the period. They form a separate triangle - the free trinity of 
				the symbol. 
  Page 289  The divisions of the circle are also related to the notes and 
				"intervals" in an octave. 
  Page 294  Each completed whole, each cosmos, each organism, each plant, is 
				an enneagram. The inner triangle stands for the presence 
				of higher elements. The enneagram is a universal symbol. All 
				knowledge can be included in the enneagram. The enneagram is 
				perpetual motion, and it is also the philosopher's stone of the 
				alchemists. 
  Page 296  There are two kinds of art - objective art and subjective art. 
				In subjective art everything is accidental. I measure the merit 
				of art by its consciousness. 
  Page 297  Objective music is all based on "inner octaves". It can obtain 
				definite psychological and physical results. Such music can 
				freeze water and can kill a man. The music used to destroy the 
				walls of Jericho was objective music.  
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Chapter 15 
			
				
					
					Page 299  Religion is a relative concept; it corresponds to the level of a 
				man's being. Religion is "doing"; a man should "live" his 
				religion. Man should think about what God is and what he is. 
				These thoughts do for him what he asks God to do. The Christian 
				church is a school. Prehistoric Egypt was Christian many 
				thousands of years before the birth of Christ. Schools of 
				repetition were taken as a model for Christian churches.  
					 Page 304  Every real religion consists of two parts. One part teaches what 
				is to be done. The other part teaches how to do what the first 
				part teaches. This part is preserved in secret in special 
				schools. This secret part exists in Christianity. 
  Page 305 
					 Organic life transmits planetary influences of various kinds to 
				the earth, and it serves to feed the Moon and to enable it to 
				grow and strengthen. But the Earth is also growing in the sense 
				of greater consciousness, greater receptivity. 
  Page 306 
					 The cessation of evolution may mean the destruction of humanity. 
				Humanity is moving in a circle. In one century it destroys 
				everything it created in another. The growth of knowledge in one 
				domain evokes the growth of ignorance in another. 
  Page 307 
					 A balanced process cannot be changed at any moment it is 
				desired. It can be changed and set on a new path only at certain 
				"crossroads". In the law of octaves, these "crossroads" are 
				called the "intervals" mi-fa and si-do. 
  Page 309 
					 Life is governed by those who are the least conscious, by those 
				who are most asleep. In life we see a preponderance of vulgarity 
				and stupidity of all kinds. Contemporary culture requires 
				automatons. Man is becoming a willing slave. 
  Page 310 
					 The whole of humanity is composed of several concentric circles. 
				The inner circle, the "esoteric", consists of people who have 
				attained the highest development possible for man. The next 
				outer circle, the "mesoteric", is the middle circle. The third 
				circle is called the "exoteric". There also exists an outermost 
				circle. 
  Page 312  There are four ways to enter the innermost circle: 
					 
					
						
							- 
							
							Way of the fakir - the 
							physical body   
							- 
							
							Way of the monk - the 
							religious way   
							- 
							
							Way of the yogi - the 
							way of the mind   
							- 
							
							Fourth way - the way of 
							the work   
						 
					 
					
					Page 314  Transitions from one level of being to another were marked by 
				ceremonies of presentation of a special kind, that is, 
				initiation. But a change of being cannot be brought about by any 
				rites. 
  Page 315  Systems and schools can indicate methods and ways, but no system 
				or school whatever can do for a man the work that he must do 
				himself. Inner growth, a change of being, depends entirely upon 
				the work which a man must do on himself.  
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Chapter 16 
			
				
					
					Page 316  Everything happens; no one does anything. The human mind is 
				incapable of even realizing its own helplessness. 
  Page 317 
					 The density of vibrations and the density of matter express many 
				other properties of matter. The speed of vibrations shows the 
				intelligence or the consciousness of matter. There is nothing 
				dead or inanimate in nature. 
  Page 320  In ordinary science, classification is made according to 
				external traits - bones, teeth, and so on. In exact knowledge, 
				classification is made according to cosmic traits. The cosmic 
				level of being is determined by  
					
						
							
							(1) what the 
							creature eats 
							
							(2) what he 
							breathes 
							
							(3) the medium in 
							which he lives 
						 
					 
					
					A man can not improve on his food or 
				air, but he can improve on his impressions. 
  Page 329  A breath is 3 seconds. In a normal state, a man takes about 
				twenty full breaths in a minute. The "breath of organic life" is 
				twenty-four hours.  
					
						
							- 
							
							Breath Day and Night 
							Life   
							- 
							
							Small Cells - - 3 
							seconds   
							- 
							
							Large Cells - 3 seconds 
							24 hours   
							- 
							
							Man 3 seconds 24 hours 
							79 years   
							- 
							
							Organic Life 24 hours 79 
							years 2,500,000 years   
							- 
							
							Earth 79 years 2,500,000 
							years 75,000,000,000 years   
						 
					 
					
					Page 336  Time goes beyond four dimensions. The 
					Minkovski formula, 
				[sqrt(-1) * ct], denotes time as the fourth "world" coordinate.
					
  Page 343  Why didn't these ideas come earlier when Russia was at peace? 
				Probably precisely because these ideas could come only in such a 
				time when the attention of the majority is distracted in some 
				other direction and when these ideas can reach only those who 
				look for them.  
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Chapter 17 
			
				
					
					Page 347  Schools are imperative because of the complexity of man's 
				organization. A man is unable to keep watch on the whole of 
				himself. A man is much too lazy. He will never attain the 
				necessary intensity by himself. In work, only super-efforts are 
				counted. A super-effort is an effort beyond the effort that is 
				necessary to achieve a given purpose. Another form of 
				super-effort is carrying out any kind of work at a faster rate 
				than is called for by the nature of the work. 
  Page 348 
					 The three principal centers - the thinking, the emotional, and 
				the moving - are connected together, and in a normal man, they 
				are always working in unison. This unison is what present the 
				chief difficulty in work on oneself. Everything is connected, 
				and one thing cannot exist without another thing. In life 
				everything is always arranged far too comfortably for man to 
				work. 
  Page 350  Man must learn to relax the unnecessary tension of his muscles. 
				He gave us many exercises for gradually relaxing the muscles 
				always beginning with the muscles of the face. 
  Page 352 
					 A man is unable to change the form of his thinking or his 
				feeling until he has changed his repertory of postures and 
				movements. All our movements are automatic. Our thoughts and 
				feelings are just as automatic. The "stop" exercise was used to 
				"freeze" the student in whatever position he was caught. He had 
				to hold that position exactly until "enough" was called. 
					
  Page 356  The chief difficulty for most people was the habit of talking. 
				Voluntary silence can be the most severe discipline to which a 
				man can subject himself. With everything there is a limit to 
				what is necessary. After this, "sin" begins. "Sin" is something 
				which is not necessary. People are afraid of suffering. They 
				want pleasure not, at once and forever. They do not want to 
				understand that pleasure is an attribute of paradise and that it 
				must be earned. 
  Page 358  When one fasts, he must expend as much energy as possible so 
				that the strong solutions normally used to digest food will not 
				poison his system. A man begins any exercise with his mind; only 
				when the last stage of fatigue is reached can the control pass 
				to the moving center. 
  Page 362  People of the objective way simply life in life. They are those 
				whom we call good people. They do not of necessity do much good, 
				but they do no evil. 
  Page 364  There is only one thing which should be serious to a man 
					- escaping from the general law, to be free. People who are not 
				serious live by fantasies, chiefly by the fantasy that they are 
				able to do something. 
  Page 366  A man always wishes to begin with something big. We must begin 
				with the things of today. 
  Page 366  Astrology deals with only one part of man, with his type, his 
				essence - it does not deal with personality, with acquired 
				qualities. In the same situation, one man sees and does one 
				thing, another - another thing, a third - a third thing, and 
				so on. Each one acted according to his type.  
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Chapter 18 
			
				
					
					Page 372  We began rhythmic exercises to music, mental exercises, the 
				study of different ways of breathing, and so on. We also studied 
				psychic phenomena. 
  Page 376 He began to separate G. and his ideas. 
					Ouspensky 
				had to go. It was very difficult for him to reject the idea of 
				working with G. 
  Page 377  Ouspensky began studying the 
					enneagram. He 
				inserted the "do" of the three octaves at the location of the 
				"shocks". He found that there was no wrong place for a "shock" 
				at all. 
  Page 378  He also found that the seven points could represent the seven 
				planets of the ancient world. The enneagram could be an 
				astrological symbol. He took the order of the planets in the 
				order of the days of the week. 
  Page 379  Ouspensky published his ideas in a book called "A 
				New Model of the Universe". 
  Page 380  
					Ouspensky had acquired a strange confidence in the 
				unimportance and the insignificance of self, that self which we 
				usually know. 
  Page 387  Without mastering breathing nothing can be mastered. There are 
				three kinds of breathing:  
					
						
						(1) normal 
							breathing 
						
						(2) inflation 
						
						(3) breathing 
							assisted by movements 
					 
				 
			 
			
			
			
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