Gottfried de Purucker was president of the Theosophical Society Pasadena,
and here, I am going to transcribe what he taught about skandhas.
DEFINITION OF SKANDHAS
In the Encyclopedic Theosophical
Glossary (which Purucker was the Editor-in-Chief) the skandhas were defined
as follows:
« Skandhas (Sanskrit) Skandha-s Bundles, groups
of various attributes forming the compound constitution of the human being.
They are the manifested qualities and attributes forming the human being on all
six planes of Being, beneath the spiritual monad or atma-buddhi, making up the
totality of the subjective and objective person.
They have to do with everything
that is finite in the human being, and are therefore inapplicable to the relatively
eternal and absolute.
Every vibration of whatever kind,
mental, emotional, or physical, that an individual has undergone or made, is
derivative of and from one of the skandhas composing his constitution.
Skandhas are the elements of
limited existence.
The five skandhas of every human
being are:
·
rupa (form), the material
properties or attributes
·
vedana (sensations,
perceptions)
·
sanjna (consciousness,
abstract ideas)
·
sanskara (action),
tendencies both physical and mental
·
vijnana (knowledge),
mental and moral predispositions.
Two further, unnamed skandhas
“are connected with, and productive of Sakkayaditthi,
the ‘heresy or delusion of individuality’ and of Attavada ‘the doctrine of Self,’ both of
which (in the case of the fifth principle the soul) lead to the maya [illusion] of heresy
and belief in the efficacy of vain rites and ceremonies; in prayers and
intercession”-
“The ‘old being’ is the sole
parent — father and mother at once — of the ‘new being.’ It is the former who
is the creator and fashioner, of the latter, in reality; and far more so in
plain truth, than any father in flesh. And once that you have well mastered the
meaning of Skandhas
you will see what I mean” (Mahatma Letters 111).
The human skandhas are the causal
activities which by their action and interaction attract the reincarnating ego
back to earth-life. The exoteric skandhas have to do with objective man; the
esoteric with inner and subjective man.
At death the seeds of causes sown
which have not yet been realized remain latent in our inner principles as
“psychological impulse-seeds” awaiting expression in future lives.
The skandhas “unite at the birth
of man and constitute his personality. After the death of the body the Skandhas
are separated and so remain until the Reincarnating Ego on its downward path
into physical incarnation gathers them together again around itself, and thus
reforms the human constitution considered as a unity” (Occult Glossary 158).
Similarly with suns and planets:
at pralaya, the lower principles of such a cosmic body exist latent in space in
a laya-condition while its spiritual principles are active in higher realms.
“When a laya-center is fired into
action by the touch of wills and consciousnesses on their downward way,
becoming the imbodying life of a solar system, or of a planet of a solar
system, the center manifests first on its highest plane, and later on its lower
plane. The Skandhas are awakened into life one after another: first the highest
ones, next the intermediate ones, and lastly the inferior ones, cosmically and
qualitatively speaking” (ibid.)
The skandhas are likewise closely
connected with the karmic pictures in the astral light, which also is the
medium as well as the register of impressions. »
The Occult Glossary is a Purucker’s book, and in this book he defined the skandhas as follow:
« Skandha(s)
(Sanskrit) Literally "bundles," or groups of attributes,
to use H.P. Blavatsky's definition.
When death comes to a man in any one life, the seeds of those causes
previously sown by him and which have not yet come forth into blossom and
full-blown flower and fruit, remain in his interior and invisible parts as
impulses lying latent and sleeping: lying latent like sleeping seeds for future
flowerings into action in the next and succeeding lives.
They are psychological impulse-seeds lying asleep until their
appropriate stage for awakening into action arrives at some time in the future.
The cosmic bodies also have their skandhas
In the case of the cosmic bodies, every solar or planetary body upon
entering into its pralaya, its prakritika-pralaya — the dissolution of its
lower principles — at the end of its long life cycle, exists in space in the
higher activity of its spiritual principles, and in the dispersion of its
lowest principles, which latter latently exist in space as skandhas in a laya-condition.
When a laya-center is fired into action by the touch of wills and
consciousnesses on their downward way, becoming the imbodying life of a solar
system, or of a planet of a solar system, the center manifests first on its
highest plane, and later on its lower plane. The skandhas are awakened into
life one after another: first the highest ones, next the intermediate ones, and
lastly the inferior ones, cosmically and qualitatively speaking.
The function of the skandhas
The term skandhas in theosophical philosophy has the general
significance of bundles or groups of attributes, which together form or compose
the entire set of material and also mental, emotional, and moral qualities.
Exoterically the skandhas are "bundles" of attributes five in
number, but esoterically they are seven.
These unite at the birth of man and constitute his personality. After
the death of the body the skandhas are separated and so remain until the reincarnating ego on its downward path into physical incarnation
gathers them together again around itself, and thus reforms the human constitution
considered as a unity.
In brief, the skandhas can be said to be the aggregate of the groups of
attributes or qualities which make each individual man the personality
that he is; but this must be sharply distinguished from the individuality. »
THE ATOMS ALSO HAVE ITS SKANDHAS
In his book Fundamentals of the Esoteric Philosophy, Purucker wrote:
« The atoms are trailed
by a train of skandhas, resident in the life-atoms, and which are karmic
impressions. These life-atoms are inferior beings, trailing after it, making up
its bodies, so to say, as certain elements make up our bodies.
Each one of these atoms, in its
turn, concretes around itself, gathers to itself, the life-atoms waiting over
for it from previous cycles of activity, which are the skandhas belonging to
that plane of manifestation, and thus forms its physical vehicle in which all
the other principles (mostly latent) reside. »
(Chapters 28 and 33)
THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE SKANDHAS
IN ELEMENTALS
IN ELEMENTALS
In his book Fountain-Source of Occultism, Purucker wrote:
« In this connection,
the following passage from the E.S. Instructions
(III) issued by H.P.B. will be of value:
“The Kama Rupa may last centuries
and — in some, though very exceptional cases — even survive with the help of
some of its scattered Skandhas, which are all transformed in time into
Elementals. See the Key to
Theosophy, pp. 141 et
seq., in which work it was impossible to go into details, but where
the Skandhas are spoken of as the germs of Karmic effects.”
The tanhic elementals may be
otherwise described as the emotional and mental thought-deposits, as Patanjali
did; and these remain after the second death — and before the ego's entering
the devachan — stamped upon the various kinds of life-atoms which had
functioned on all the lower planes of man's constitution.
The reincarnation
Some of these tanhic elementals
or life-atoms peregrinate, and finally are psychomagnetically attracted back to
the reincarnating ego during its process of bringing forth a new astral form
preceding rebirth. Others belong to the monadic substances of the auric egg,
and consequently remain therein in a latent condition, to awaken only when the
devachani leaves the devachan.
Then these dormant tanhic
elementals, in combination with the other life-atoms which had been
peregrinating, combine in building up the new astral form that H.P.B. speaks
of; and it is largely these two classes of tanhic life-atoms or elementals
which compose the skandhas (a Sanskrit word meaning bundles or aggregates) of
the man in his coming incarnation.
And these skandhas are the
various groups of mental, emotional, psychovital and physical characteristics
which, when all collected together, make the new personality through which the
higher man or egoic individuality works. They slowly begin to recombine and
fall into their appropriate functions and places during the gestation period,
continuing such 'fixation' in the womb, and finally after birth maturing as the
entity grows to adulthood.
And these skandhas are the
various groups of mental, emotional, psychovital and physical characteristics
which, when all collected together, make the new personality through which the
higher man or egoic individuality works.
They slowly begin to recombine
and fall into their appropriate functions and places during the gestation
period, continuing such 'fixation' in the womb, and finally after birth
maturing as the entity grows to adulthood.
The five types of skandhas
In exoteric Buddhism, skandhas
(literally 'bundles' or 'aggregates') are five in number: form (rupa),
sensation or sense-perception (vedana), self-conscious intellection (sanjna),
mental propensities (samskara), and consciousness (vijnana).
The first skandha represents the
material world or the materiality of things, while the remaining four belong to
the astral monad and the mind. The second one appertains to the perception of
objects of sense; the third to that which is elaborated by the mind; the fourth
refers to what might be termed the formative principle of the mind, creating
mental molds vitalized by its own energies; and the fifth represents egoic mentation.
Buddhist philosophical analysis
has thrown these various characteristics and attributes into the five
categories enumerated above.
Thus the skandhas are the various
groups of personal attributes or characteristics which make one human
personality different from another; and it is through these groups of
psychological and psycho-emotional-astral attributes or characteristics that
the higher man or ego, i.e. the egoic individuality, works. »
(Section 12-II, part
2)