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The Loss of the World Soul and its Return
by: Anne Baring
You could not discover the boundaries of the soul, even if you travelled
by every path in order to do so, so deep a measure does it have.
-Heraclitus
My heart is longing for a lost knowledge, slipped down out of the
minds of men.
-from the Sanscrit poem Black Marigolds Chaura-panchasika, 1st century
Once upon a time, in a past so distant that we have no memory of it,
the invisible and visible dimensions of life were imagined and instinctively
experienced as a sacred unity. In the great civilisations of the Bronze
Age (c.3000 bce), particularly those of Egypt, India and China, the whole
cosmos was envisioned as a living being and the manifest world was seen
as an epiphany or showing forth of an unseen source which breathed it
into being, animating and sustaining it: the air itself was experienced
as the invisible presence of that world - an “awesome mystery joining
the human and extrahuman worlds.”(1) Just as the stars emerged each
night from the darkness of the night sky, so the visible universe was
born from the dark mystery of the invisible. Everything - plants, trees,
animals and birds as well as moon, sun and stars - was infused with divinity
because each and all were part of a living, breathing web of life.
Although this ancient way of knowing was once experienced in many different
places (and may still be found today), Egypt has bequeathed to us one
of the clearest images of it. Two goddesses were of particular significance
for an understanding of the origins of the later concept of a World Soul:
Hathor - often interchangeable with Isis - and Nut. Hathor was Egypt’s
oldest goddess, imagined as the nurturing Mother of the universe and as
the creative impulse flowing from the cosmic immensity of her being. More
specifically, Hathor was imagined as the Milky Way, whose milk nourished
all life, yet she was immanent within the forms of life, immanent in the
statues that stood in her temples and in the beautiful blue lotus that
was daily laid at her feet. (2) As Divine Mother, she received the souls
of the dead at the entrance to her sacred mountain.
Nut was the night sky, whose vast cosmic body contained all the stars.
The sun vanished into her body on its nightly descent into the underworld
and was reborn from her at the dawn of a new day. Nut’s image was
painted on the inside of coffin lids and sometimes on the base as well,
as if to enfold the soul entrusted to her care in her cosmic embrace.
There is a moving inscription to her on a fragment of stone in the Louvre:
O my mother Nut, stretch your wings over me;
Let me become like the imperishable stars,
like the indefatigable stars.
O Great Being who is in the world of the Dead,
At whose feet is Eternity, in whose hand is the Always,
O Great Divine Beloved Soul who is in the mysterious abyss,
come to me.
Presided over by the Great Mother, this era was characterised by a consciousness
which participated in the deepest imaginative sense with the life of the
cosmos and the life of the earth. It was a totally different way of perceiving
and relating to life than the one we have now. Today we look back on our
"superstitious" past with some contempt, not realising that
our present consciousness has grown out of a far more ancient and instinctive
way of knowing which could be described as lunar because the moon rather
than the sun was of supreme importance in that distant time. It is possible
that the image of a world or cosmic soul arose out of lunar mythology
because the moon was our earliest teacher and the inspiration of some
of the greatest myths of the ancient world: the Egyptian myth of Isis
and Osiris, the Sumerian myth of the Descent of Inanna, the Orphic and
Eleusinian Mysteries of Greece, and the later Christian myth all carry
the same lunar theme of death and regeneration. (3)
What did the moon teach us? The emergence of the crescent moon from the
three days of darkness that preceded it gave us the image of the visible
world emerging from an invisible one, the time-bound world from an eternal
one. The moon nourished the creative imagination, teaching us to observe
and to wonder, helping us to make connections between what was above in
the heavens and what was below on earth – a theme that is carried
through into Hermetic philosophy and Alchemy.
For hundreds of generations people watched the circumpolar movement of
the stars and the changing yet stable course of the luminous moon. They
observed the connection between the cyclical rhythm of the four phases
of the moon’s life and the rhythm of growth, maturation, death and
regeneration in the life of the crops. They experienced the phases of
their own lives – youth, maturity, old age and death as woven into
the rhythm of that greater life. The constant return of the crescent moon
after the three days of darkness laid the foundation for trust in the
survival of the soul and the renewal of life after apparent death and
may have been the original inspiration of the belief in reincarnation.
From this lunar pattern constantly speaking to the mythic imagination,
birth and death became a rite of passage for the soul as it journeyed
between the visible and invisible dimensions of life, a journey that was
symbolised by the path through a labyrinth. The ancestors were not lost
to the living but were close by, available to counsel and guide. There
was, therefore, no final demarcation line between life and death.
The constant rhythm of the moon waxing and waning held both light and
darkness in relation to each other - held them in balance - because the
totality of the moon’s cycle embraced both light and dark phases
and therefore symbolically included both life and death. Light and darkness
were not polarised as they were later to become in a solar culture, but
were phases of the total cycle, so that there was always an image of a
unifying whole which included both polarities.
Over countless thousands of years, shamanic rituals and myths kept alive
the sense of connection between this world and another world whose symbol,
initially, may have been the dark phase of the moon. Poets, artists, philosophers
and musicians received their inspiration from the invisible dimension
that Henri Corbin, the great scholar of Sufism, named the mundus imaginalis
(imaginal world), carefully drawing the distinction between the imaginal
and the imaginary. (4) The words spoken, the music heard, the dreams and
visions seen, came not from “inside” us, but from the cosmos,
from goddesses and gods, from daemonic beings and the spirits of animals.
The original role of the philosopher was a shamanic one - to journey into
the Otherworld or Underworld and bring back what was seen and heard to
help the human community harmonise its life with the sacred life of the
cosmos.
Fairy tales like the Sleeping Beauty may be the residual fragments of
that forgotten participatory experience where forests were inhabited by
creatures who would help or hinder us: where spirits of tree and mountain,
stream and sacred spring could speak to us; where bears or frogs might
be princes in disguise and shamans living in the deep forest might offer
us wise counsel, or birds bring us messages and warn us of dangers. "Whoever
denies the daemons, wrote Plutarch in a later time, "breaks the chains
that links the gods to men." There are countless tales which describe
how the hero or heroine who responds to this guidance wins the reward
of the treasure and the royal marriage.
Rituals like those of the Orphic and Eleusinian Mysteries in Greece strengthened
the sense of participation in an unseen reality and gave initiates an
experience of the immortality of the soul. People spoke with goddesses
and gods in dream and vision. Birds were recognised as messengers of the
invisible, very possibly because people dreamed about them in this role
or even heard them as a voice inside themselves, speaking to them. Intuitive
sensibility and the ability to communicate with the spirits of plants
taught people to gather, grind or distil certain herbs and plants for
healing illness. Rites of incubation and healing were practised in many
sanctuaries. Dreams and visions were of great importance in the diagnosis
and healing of disease. Music was used to invoke the presence of a world
that was the foundation of this world and as real as this one; everything
was connected, everything was sacred. The shaman-healers who guided these
cultures were trained to enter a state of utter stillness and to listen
and observe what they heard and saw in an altered state of consciousness.
This lunar culture was primarily feminine in character - receptive to
the presence of the eternal.
If we listen to the Pre-Socratic Greeks of the sixth century bce, we
find that they carry forward the legacy of this lunar consciousness and
cannot be understood except in relation to it: the words of Heraclitus,
suggesting that the Soul is of unfathomable depth, retain the essence
of that ancient perception. Thales of Miletus speaks of the “All”
as being alive and full of daemons who are the agents of the one Soul-substance.
Anaximenes says that humanity and nature are fundamentally inseparable
because both participate in the same underlying “substance”
which he calls Soul. (5) Pythagoras, after he was exiled to Crotona having
spent forty years with the astronomer-priests of Egypt and Babylon, defines
the mathematical laws which embody the divine intelligence of the cosmos.
A few decades later, Parmenides, living at Velia, in southern Italy, describes
his shamanic journey into the Underworld of the Goddess who takes his
right hand in hers, telling him to transmit her teaching to the world
of mortals. (6)
This, therefore, is the foundation upon which the concept of a World
Soul developed. Plato (429-347 bce) was the first to name it as such in
his Timaeus. Was it from the participatory experience of an earlier age
that he drew his concept of the Soul of the World – psyche tou kosmou?
He speaks of a great golden chain of being connecting the deepest level
of reality with its physical manifestation where every particle of life
is a revelation of creative spirit, but there is in his work a distancing
of the sensory world from the world of spiritual or archetypal forms.
There is a fading of the feeling of participation in an ensouled world,
a disjunction between rational mind and sensory experience, an objective
definition of Soul rather than the experience of it so intrinsic to the
earlier time. Plotinus (204-70 ce), who was steeped in Platonic thought,
developed further the concept of a Universal Soul that he called All-Soul
or Soul of the All (anima-mundi) but in his philosophy as well as in Plato’s
there is the idea that this material world is the lowest level in the
hierarchy of divine emanation. (7) Implicit in this immensely influential
definition of reality, is the idea that nature is “lower”
than spirit, body “lower” than mind and that animals and plants
are “lower” in the scale of being than humans.
Aristotle (384-322 bce) took this distinction further, defining matter
as something inanimate - separate and distinct from spirit and soul –
leading eventually to the modern idea that matter is “dead”.
While Plato and Plotinus had a strong influence on the development of
Christian doctrine, the mainstream teaching of Western philosophy and
science followed Aristotle. His philosophy draws a clear demarcation line
between an ancient way of knowing and a new way whose emphasis is on the
rational human mind distancing itself from what it is observing rather
than participating in its life. The increasing separation between these
two ways of knowing was henceforth profoundly to influence the development
of the philosophy, religion and science of the West. However, the sense
of being within an ensouled cosmos lasted until the end of the Middle
Ages when the School of Chartres, influenced by the brilliant Islamic
scholars and architects of Moorish Spain, initiated the building of the
great cathedrals of France. It found new expression in fifteenth century
Florence when Marsilio Ficino translated Plato and recovered the texts
of the Hermetic tradition and it survived in Kabbalah and Alchemy. However,
the older vision faded rapidly with the Reformation and the scientific
revolution which succeeded it. What was lost was an imaginal or visionary
way of knowing, grounded in shamanic experience. Yet, in the late eighteenth
century, the poet and artist Blake would write “Everything That
Lives Is Holy.”
Having described a lunar culture where people lived within a sacred cosmos,
we may ask what wider cultural influences led to the demise of the World
Soul? Why did D.H. Lawrence despairingly write, “We have lost the
cosmos”? (8) To answer that question we have to look back some 4000
years. From about 2000 bce, we begin to see developing a new phase in
the evolution of human consciousness – a phase whose focus is the
sun rather than the moon. As this process develops, solar mythology begins
to displace lunar mythology: linear time begins to replace lunar cyclical
time, and a linear, literal and objective way of thinking slowly replaces
the older imaginal and participatory way of knowing. Concurrently, the
human psyche draws away from nature and as it does so, the predominant
image of spirit changes from Great Mother to Great Father. The greater
the withdrawal from nature, the more transcendent and disengaged from
nature becomes the image of the deity: divine immanence is lost. The mind
is focussed beyond nature on the realm of intellectual ideas: philosophy
becomes discourse on these ideas rather than relationship with an invisible
reality.
A second major influence was the impact of literacy on our way of thinking.
The written word replaced the oral tradition that had carried the wisdom
and insights of the older culture. David Abram has shown in his book,
The Spell of the Sensuous, how the new emphasis on the written word contributed
to the loss of the older participatory consciousness: “Only as the
written text began to speak would the voices of the forest, and of the
river, begin to fade. And only then would language loosen its ancient
association with the invisible breath, the spirit sever itself from the
wind, the psyche dissociate itself from the environing air.”(9)
Perhaps because literacy distanced us from nature, creation in the Judeo-Christian
tradition is now believed to arise from the word of the transcendent Father,
no longer from the womb of the Mother. This is a crucially important distinction
because the unity of life is again broken: invisible spirit no longer
animates and inhabits nature. The earth is desacralised. Religious belief
replaces shamanic experience. Ancient ways of connection are forbidden.
With this shift in archetypal imagery, everything formerly associated
with the feminine archetype (the Great Mother) is downgraded in relation
to the masculine one (the Great Father). The lunar way of knowing is subjugated
to the solar way and, under the influence of solar mythology, first nature,
then cosmos, are ultimately de-souled.
As the sun becomes the new focus of consciousness, the cultural hero
is no longer the lunar shaman who ventures into the darkness, assimilates
its mysteries and returns from it with the treasure of wisdom, but rather
the solar hero, often a king, warrior or outstanding individual, who is
celebrated as the one who conquers and overcomes darkness. The emphasis
is now on ascent to the light and repudiation of whatever is identified
with darkness. Iron Age mythology (from c. 2000 bce) celebrates a great
contest between a hero-god and a dragon or monster of the underworld (see
the Epic of Gilgamesh and the Greek myth of Apollo killing the she-dragon
at Delphi). The emphasis is no longer on relationship with the invisible
world but on the light conquering the darkness. The theme of conquest
and victory becomes the dominating ethos of the hero myths of the Iron
Age and so it is even today in our modern hero myth and the battle against
“the axis of evil”. In this solar phase, good and evil, light
and dark, life and death are drawn as opposites inimical to each other
and become increasingly polarised. George W. Bush’s words “Those
who are not with us are against us” are a modern re-statement of
solar mythology.
For over 4000 years, under the influence of this mythology, war and conquest
were glorified as the noblest activity for man; victory and the spoils
of war the coveted treasure to be won in battle, courage in battle the
supreme virtue in the warrior. Wherever today we find the tendency to
omnipotence and grandiose ambitions of empire and world domination, whether
religious or secular, we can discern the influence of solar mythology
and the inflation of leaders who unconsciously identify themselves with
the archetypal role of the solar god or hero.
Solar mythology reflects an immense change in human consciousness, the
formulation of an entirely new perception of life, one where, as technology
advances, nature becomes something to be controlled and manipulated by
human ingenuity, to human advantage. It had a dramatic influence on Greek,
Hebrew, Persian and Christian cultures. The imagery of opposition and
conflict between light and darkness, good and evil pervades the Old Testament
and other mythologies. As people move to cities and cities become states,
and as more and more men are conscripted into armies which obey a warrior
leader, the cosmic battle is increasingly projected into the world: a
fascination with conquest and dominance possesses the psyche and leads
to the creation of vast empires (Assyrian, Persian, Greek, Roman). It
is as if the heroic human ego, identified with the solar hero, has to
seek out new territories to conquer, has to embody the myth in a literal
sense. The terminology of conquest and dominance still influences our
own modern culture with its focus on the conquest of nature, of space,
of our enemies. It is as if we have been conditioned by this powerful
mythology to think only in oppositional terms – victory or defeat
- never in terms of dialogue and reconciliation.
Solar mythology is, above all, the story of the heroic individual. In
the West, it has been the driving inspiration behind the Promethean quest
for freedom, justice, knowledge and power. A major theme of solar myth
is escape from the bondage of the body and ascent to the light and, by
association, release from the bondage of mortality and ascent to spiritual
enlightenment. In the West, we find it first in Plato in his metaphor
of the cave. It carries with it the human longing to go beyond all constraints
and limitations, to reach higher, progress further, discover more. It
is overwhelmingly male because the male psyche has been the dominant influence
in many cultures over some 4000 years and it is the achievements and discoveries
of exceptional men which have inspired other men. A strong sense of self
and a focused ego, that was ultimately identified with the conscious,
rational mind, can be acknowledged as the supreme achievement of the male
psyche during this solar era. But the voice of women who were denied access
to education, the priesthood and the healing profession was silenced.
The influence of solar mythology gradually created a fissure between
spirit and nature, mind and body which has defined our way of thinking
and influenced the way we behave. During this solar phase, the male psyche
unconsciously identified itself with the supremacy of spirit and mind
over nature, woman and body and came to relate the former to the image
of light and order and the latter to the image of darkness and chaos.
Woman was named as an inferior creation: woman and body came to be viewed
as a danger, a threat, a temptation to man. (10) The religions of the
solar era carry this polarisation within their teaching, wherever this
is associated with the ascetic subjugation of the body, the mistrust of
sexuality and the oppression and persecution of women. Because nature
and instinct became something dangerous and threatening to the supremacy
of the rational mind, much effort was expended in eradicating all vestiges
of goddess-worship, and of animism or belief in “spirits”.
Further to the east, in China, Confucianism replaced the older Taoist
vision of an ensouled and conscious nature. The sages of India, with certain
exceptions, turned away from the body and sensory experience and held
the phenomenal world to be an illusion.
All this had the effect of disconnecting us from nature and denying us
access through the mythic imagination to that mysterious and all-embracing
dimension of Soul. As the ego and rational mind grew stronger and more
powerfully controlling, so, increasingly, did we lose the ability to relate
instinctively and imaginatively to earth and cosmos. The Judeo-Christian
myth of the Fall describes this process of estrangement and loss and,
in the story of the Expulsion from the Garden, discloses a total reversal
of the way of knowing which had guided older cultures. (11)
The shamanic way of knowing survived in Kabbalah and Sufism as well as
in certain gnostic sects, the Hermetic Tradition and Alchemy but for centuries
these had to remain hidden for fear of persecution. In the gnostic Gospel
of Thomas (c. 70 ce), the old shamanic vision shines through the words
of Jesus: “Cleave a piece of wood, I am there; lift up the stone
and you will find Me there.” (logion 77)
With the psychological insight which has become available to us over
the last hundred years, particularly through the depth psychology of C.G.
Jung, we can understand that this solar phase of our evolution reflects
a radical dissociation within the human psyche between the growing strength
of the ego (the hero) and the older and greatly feared power of instinct
(the dragon). (12) As this dissociation gathers momentum, so the feeling
of containment within a cosmic entity and the sense of relationship with
an invisible dimension of reality fades and with it, the participatory
consciousness of an earlier time. The legacy of the Platonic and Aristotelian
emphasis on reason and the rational mind, together with the solar emphasis
on ascent to spirit and light and the deep suspicion of sexuality and
sensual experience, hastened the demise of the lunar way of knowing.
The danger of this solar phase is that the human mind, breaking away
from its instinctive ground, and its relationship with nature and cosmos,
begins to assimilate a god-like power to itself, seeing itself engaged
in a great struggle to gain mastery of nature. The priceless evolutionary
achievement of the solar era and its masculine culture was the emergence
of a strong ego from the matrix of instinct and the creation of the conscious,
rational mind. But, tragically, this was won at the expense of repressing
and denying whatever was perceived as threatening to it. The inner conflict
between the two aspects of the psyche was projected into the world as
the drive for power and control over others, whether in the religious
or political field.
The influence of solar mythology was to divide life into two halves:
spirit and nature, light and dark, good and evil, mind and body, subject
and object. These oppositions became fixed in our consciousness as an
actual belief system. The solar myth is carried in all ideologies which
strive to reach the light and split off the darkness. It entered not only
into the sacred texts of Judaism, Christianity and Islam but into our
behaviour towards the “dark” and so-called primitive races
or anyone different from ourselves. As time went on religions took on
the mantle of solar mythology in a struggle for supremacy and are tragically
engaged in it to this day: the split between Catholic and Protestant in
Christianity and between Shia and Sunni in Islam may be traced to the
polarising influence of this mythology. Finally, it is reflected in the
secular totalitarian ideologies which ravaged the last century because
these separated the heroic race or “chosen” social group from
those they demonised as inferior or expendable. These ideologies justified
the elimination of racial or class enemies just as Christianity and Islam
had justified the elimination of heretics and apostates. (Giordano Bruno
was burnt at the stake in 1600 for refusing to deny that God was present
in nature).
From this long historical process, it is possible to see that the belief
system of scientific reductionism which has so powerfully influenced modern
secular culture may be understood as the end-result of the long-standing
dissociation between spirit and nature, mind and matter but, above all,
the sundering within us of thinking and feeling, rational mind and instinctive
soul – the conscious and unconscious aspects of our nature. It has
concluded that the universe is indifferent to us, that we are the products
of impersonal forces operating on inanimate matter: atoms are not living
elements of divinity but lifeless particles, floating randomly in an inanimate
universe. We are the outcome of genetic, social and environmental conditioning.
Consciousness is an epi-phenomenon of the physical brain: there is no
such “thing” as soul; when we die, that is the end of us.
This belief system reflects a situation where we have become so estranged
from nature that we believe that we have the right to exploit it for our
own material advantage – even the right to control space in order
to protect ourselves from attack by our enemies. Although we may profess
a belief in God, nothing is sacred save our own survival or the survival
of our group and our religion.
To sum up: over the four millennia that solar mythology became the dominant
influence on world culture, we have achieved an extraordinary advance
in scientific and technological skills and their application to improving
the conditions of human life on this planet and a phenomenal expansion
of the ability to express ourselves as individuals in myriad different
fields of endeavour. But at the same time, we have suffered a catastrophic
loss of soul, a loss of the ancient instinctive awareness of the sacred
interweaving of all aspects of life, a loss of the sense of participation
in the life of nature and the invisible dimension of the cosmos, a loss
of instinct and imagination.
So we come to the present day where, in a secular culture, the rational
mind has established itself as the supreme value, master of all it surveys,
recognising no power, no consciousness beyond itself. It has lost its
connection to soul, not only soul in the individual sense but Soul as
a cosmic matrix or field in whose life we participate. In its hubristic
stance, the rational mind has become disconnected from the deeper instinctive
ground out of which it has evolved which, ultimately, is the life of the
cosmos. Cut off from its roots, it stands like a tyrant over and against
nature, over and against the earth, over against whatever it defines as
threatening to its supremacy. This leaves the human heart lonely and afraid
and the neglected territory of the soul a barren wasteland. The rage and
despair of denied inner needs confront us in the world as the enemies
who seek to destroy us and whom we seek to destroy. We struggle to contain
the effects of a dysfunctional way of thinking – believing that
ever greater power and control will enable us to eradicate the evils we
bring into being.
Yet, beneath the surface of our culture, the ancient concept of Soul
is returning. The challenge of the immense problems facing humanity is
urging us to change our current understanding of reality and jettison
the mechanistic paradigm we have inherited from the secular beliefs which
control the ethos of our culture. A deep human instinct is attempting
to restore balance and wholeness in us by articulating values rooted in
a different way of knowing: the ecological movement is restoring sacredness
to the earth; compassion is growing for those suffering from poverty,
disease and the obscene effects of war; shamanic methods of healing are
being recovered; a new image of reality is struggling to be born. We are
beginning to understand that we are poisoning the earth, the seas and
our own immune system with toxic chemicals and pesticides, and inviting
our destruction as a species through our predatory behaviour. Many individuals
are awakening to awareness that we and the phenomenal world that we call
nature are woven into a cosmic tapestry whose threads connect us not only
with each other at the deepest level but with many dimensions of reality
and multitudes of beings inhabiting those dimensions. Beyond the present
limits of our sight an immense field of consciousness interacts with our
own, asking to be recognised by us, embraced by us. What is emerging at
the cutting edge of science is a grand unified theory of quantum, cosmos,
life and consciousness where physics is reunited with metaphysics. (13)
As this deep soul-impulse gathers momentum, the “marriage”
of the emerging lunar values with the ruling solar ones is changing our
perception of reality. If we can recover the ancient way of knowing in
a modern context, without losing the priceless evolutionary attainment
of a strong and focused ego, we could heal the fissure in our psyche.
In the words of D.H. Lawrence, “The great range of responses that
have fallen dead in us have to come to life again. It has taken two thousand
years to kill them. Who knows how long it will take to bring them to life”
(14)
Notes:
1. David Abram, The Spell of the Sensuous, p. 250, Vintage Books, New
York 1996
2. For poems to Hathor and Nut see Andrew Harvey and Anne Baring, The
Divine Feminine, Conari Press 1996
3. See Jules Cashford, The Moon: Myth and Image, Cassell Illustrated,
London 2003
4. The phrase used by Henri Corbin in his writings on Ibn Arabi and Suhrawardi.
5. Gertrude Levy, The Gate of Horn, pp. 301-3, Faber & Faber, London
1958
6. Peter Kingsley, In the Dark Places of Wisdom; see also his Reality,
Golden Sufi Press, California, 1999 and 2003
7. Plotinus, The Enneads, transl. Stephen MacKenna, Faber and Faber, London,
1956 and 1969
8. D.H. Lawrence, Apocalypse and Other Writings, Cambridge University
Press, 1931, p. 78
9. David Abram, The Spell of the Sensuous, p. 254
10. The concept of the inferiority of woman is found in Plato’s
Timaeus as well as the Book of Genesis.
11. See Anne Baring and Jules Cashford, The Myth of the Goddess: Evolution
of an Image, Viking1991 and Penguin Books, London and New York, 1993 (chapter
13: Eve, The Mother of All Living)
12. C.G. Jung, The Undiscovered Self (Collected Works Vol.10) and Man
and His Symbols, Aldus Books, London, 1964
13. See Science and the Reenchantment of the Cosmos by Ervin Laszlo, Inner
Traditions, Vermont, 2006 and Richard Tarnas, Cosmos and Psyche, Viking,
New York, 2006
14. Apocalypse, p. 78 © 2006 Anne Baring,
www.annebaring.com
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