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{{Short description|Quasi material aspect of the human body}}
{{planes of existence}}
{{EngvarB|date=April 2017}}
According to the traditional teachings of [[Yoga]] and various [[esotericism|esoteric]], [[occultism|occult]], and [[mysticism|mystical]] teachings, the '''subtle body''' is an energetic psycho-spiritual body that all sentient beings possess to varying degrees. In humans this body is constituted by several sheaths ([[kosas]]) or sub-bodies, each of increasing subtlety and metaphysical significance. The concept of a subtle body is a common [[philosophy|philosophical]] element in diverse traditions.
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2017}}
{{other uses}}
[[File:Sapta Chakra, 1899 (cropped).jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|The subtle body in Indian mysticism, from a [[yoga]] manuscript in [[Braj Bhasa]] language, 1899. A row of [[chakra]]s is depicted from the base of the spine up to the crown of the head.]]


A '''subtle body''' is a "quasi material"{{sfn|Samuel|Johnston|2013}} aspect of the human body, being neither solely physical nor solely spiritual, according to various [[esotericism|esoteric]], [[occultism|occult]], and [[mysticism|mystical]] teachings. This contrasts with the [[mind–body dualism]] that has dominated Western thought. The subtle body is important in the [[Taoism]] of China and [[Indian religions|Dharmic religion]]s such as [[Hinduism]], [[Buddhism]], and [[Jainism]], mainly in the branches which focus on [[tantra]] and [[yoga]], where it is known as the ''Sūkṣma-śarīra'' ({{lang-sa|सूक्ष्म शरीर}}). However, while mostly associated with Asian cultures, non-dualistic approaches to the mind and body are found in many parts of the world.{{sfn|Samuel|Johnston|2013}}
== Interpretations ==


Subtle body concepts and practices can be identified as early as 2nd century BCE in [[Taoist]] texts found in the [[Mawangdui]] tombs.{{sfn|Samuel|Johnston|2013}} It was "evidently present"{{sfn|Samuel|Johnston|2013}} in Indian thought as early as the 4th to 1st century BCE when the [[Taittiriya Upanishad]] described the [[Panchakosha]]s, a series of five interpenetrating sheaths of the body.{{sfn|Mallinson|Singleton|2017}} A fully formed subtle body theory did not develop in India until the [[tantra|tantric]] movement that affected all its religions in the Middle Ages.{{sfn|Samuel|Johnston|2013}} In [[Indo-Tibetan Buddhism]], the correlation of the subtle body to the physical body is viewed differently according to school, lineage and scholar, but for [[completion stage]] in yoga, it is visualised within the body.<ref name="Shrīmālā | Tibetan Medicine, Buddhism & Astrology | London 2020">{{cite web | title=Tibetan Medicine and the Subtle Anatomy - Tibetan Medicine, Buddhism & Astrology - London | website=Shrīmālā {{!}} Tibetan Medicine, Buddhism & Astrology {{!}} London | date=11 January 2020 | url=https://www.shrimala.com/blog/tibetan-medicine-and-the-subtle-anatomy | access-date=2 April 2021}}</ref> The subtle body consists of focal points, often called [[chakra]]s, connected by channels, often called [[Nadi (yoga)|nadis]], that convey subtle breath, often called [[prana]]. Through breathing and other exercises, a practitioner may direct the subtle breath to achieve [[Siddhi|supernormal powers]], [[immortality]], or [[Moksha|liberation]].
=== Eastern Esotericism ===


Subtle body in the Western tradition is called the ''[[body of light]]''. The concept derives from the philosophy of [[Plato]]: the word 'astral' means 'of the stars'; thus the [[Astral plane#History|astral plane]] consists of the [[Seven Heavens]] of the [[classical planet]]s. [[Neoplatonism|Neoplatonists]] Porphyry and Proclus elaborated on Plato's description of the starry nature of the human psyche. Throughout the [[Renaissance]], philosophers and alchemists, healers including [[Paracelsus]] and his students, and [[natural science|natural scientists]] such as [[John Dee]], continued to discuss the nature of the astral world intermediate between earth and the divine. The concept of the astral body or body of light was adopted by 19th and 20th-century [[ceremonial magic]]ians.
The yogic-occult systems of India (e.g. Tantra) Tibet, China ([[Taoist alchemy]]) and Japan ([[Shingon Buddhism|Shingon]]) describe a subtle physiology or yogic anatonomy in terms of a series of channels ([[Nadi (yoga)|nadis]], [[Acupuncture meridian|meridians]]) that convey life-force ([[prana]], vayu, [[Qi|ch'i, ki]]) and have a number of focal points ([[chakra]]s, acupuncture points). Through practice of various breathing and visualisation exercises one is able to manipulate and direct the flow of vital force, to achieve superhuman (e.g. in martial arts) or miraculous powers ("[[siddhi]]s"), attain higher [[Altered state of consciousness|states of consciousness]], [[immortality]], or [[Moksha|liberation]]. The various attributes of the yogic body are described in terms of often obscure [[symbolism]] (Tantra features references to the sun and the moon and various Indian rivers and deities, Taoist alchemy speaks of cauldrens, cinnibar fields, and so on).


The [[Theosophy]] movement was the first to translate the Sanskrit term as 'subtle body', although their use of the term is quite different from Indic usage as they synthesize Western and Eastern traditions. This makes the term problematic for modern scholars, especially as the Theosophist view often influences [[New Age]] and [[holistic medicine]] perspectives.{{sfn|Samuel|Johnston|2013}} Western scientists have started to explore the subtle body concept in research on meditation.<ref name="Loizzo 2016"/>
=== Theosophy ===


==Asian religions==
Whilst the Eastern esoteric traditions emphasize a single subtle body (apart from the Vedantic concept of five koshas), in the West (beginning with [[Neoplatonism]]) the emphasis has often been on a series of subtle bodies or vehicles (''okhema'') of consciousness. This reached its most detailed and systematic account in the writings of [[C.W. Leadbeater]] and [[Annie Besant]], who established the [[Theosophical Society Adyar|Adyar School of Theosophy]]. They described in detail the seven bodies, and established many of the themes that would be canonical in "new age" thought. The sequence of bodies or "vehicles" is as follows (from densest to most subtle):
The [[Yoga|Yogic]], [[tantra|Tantric]] and other systems of [[Hinduism]], [[Vajrayana|Vajrayana Buddhism]], as well as Chinese [[Taoist alchemy]] contain theories of subtle physiology with focal points ([[chakra]]s, [[acupuncture points]]) connected by a series of channels ([[Nadi (yoga)|nadis]], [[Meridian (Chinese medicine)|meridians]]) that convey subtle breath ([[prana]], vayu, [[Qi|ch'i, ki]], [[lung (Tibetan Buddhism)|lung]]). These invisible channels and points are understood to determine the characteristics of the visible physical form. By understanding and mastering the subtlest levels of reality one gains mastery over the physical realm. Through breathing and other exercises, the practitioner aims to manipulate and direct the flow of subtle breath, to achieve supernormal powers ''([[siddhi]]s)'' and attain higher [[Altered state of consciousness|states of consciousness]], [[immortality]], or [[Moksha|liberation]].{{sfn|Mallinson|Singleton|2017|pp=171–184}}<ref>{{cite book |last=Pregadio |first=Fabrizio |url=http://www.goldenelixir.com/press/occ_03_jindan_history.html |title=The Way of the Golden Elixir: A Historical Overview of Taoist Alchemy |publisher=Golden Elixir Press |year=2012 |format=PDF, 60 pp., free download}}</ref>


=== Hinduism ===
* [[Physical body (Theosophy)|Dense physical body]]
[[File:SahajaSubtleSystem.svg|thumb|An illustration of a subtle body system of seven [[chakra]]s connected by three major [[Nadi (yoga)|nadi]] channels, as commonly adopted by contemporary yoga]]
* [[Etheric body]]
{{Further|Three Bodies Doctrine|Kosha|Chakra|Nadi (yoga)}}
* [[Astral body|Astral or emotional body]]
* [[Mental body]] (concrete mind)
* [[Causal body]] (abstract mind)


==== Early ====
Beyond the causal level are the atmic, buddhic, and monadic levels, but these pertain to the Soul or Spirit ("Higher Triad", "Monad") rather than the subtle body.
Early concepts of the subtle body ([[Sanskrit]]: ''sūkṣma śarīra'') appeared in the [[Upanishads]], including the ''[[Brhadaranyaka Upanishad]]'' and the ''[[Katha Upanishad]]''.{{sfn|Mallinson|Singleton|2017|pp=173-174}} The ''[[Taittiriya Upanishad]]'' describes the theory of five [[kosha]]s or sheaths, though these are not to be thought of as concentric layers, but interpenetrating at successive levels of subtlety:{{sfn|Samuel|2013|p=33}}{{sfn|Mallinson|Singleton|2017|p=184}}


* The ''anna-maya'' ("food body", physical body, the grossest level),
In this worldview, the physical body is the densest, with the various subtle bodies being progressively more refined or spiritual. The subtle bodies exist alongside or within or around the physical, and have various characteristics and attributes. Each "body" has its own [[aura]] and set of [[chakra]]s, and corresponds to a particular [[Plane (cosmology)|plane of existence]], as the individualisation so to speak of that plane. Thus the astral body is made up of the substance or matter of the astral plane, just as the physical body is made up of the elements of the physical plane, and so on with all the bodies. A detailed account of the various subtle bodies and the corresponding planes is provided in a series of books (''The Etheric Body'', ''The Astral Body'', ''The Mental Body'', and ''The Causal Body'') by [[Arthur E Powell]] on the basis of material compiled from the writings of Leadbeater and Besant.
* The ''prana-maya'' (body made of vital breath or [[prana]]),
* The ''mano-maya'' (body made of mind),
* The ''[[Vijñāna|vijñana]]-maya'' (body made of consciousness)
* The ''ananda-maya'' (bliss body, the subtlest level).


Subtle internal anatomy included a central channel ([[Nadi (yoga)|nadi]]).{{sfn|Samuel|2013|p=33}} Later Vedic texts called [[samhita]]s and [[brahmana]]s contain a theory of five "winds" or "breaths" (''vayus, [[prana]]s''):{{sfn|Samuel|2013|p=33}}
====The human energy field====


* ''Prāṇa'', associated with inhalation
The Adyar arrangement seems also to have been one of the inspirations behind [[Barbara Brennan]]'s account of the subtle bodies by in her books ''[[Hands of Light]]'' and ''Light Emerging''. She refers to the subtle bodies as "layers" in the "Human Energy Field" or aura, and presents the following sequence:
* ''Apāna'', associated with exhalation
* ''Uḍāna'', associated with distribution of breath within the body
* ''Samāna'', associated with digestion
* ''Vyāna'', associated with excretion of waste


==== Later ====
* [[Physical body]]
A millennium later, these concepts were adapted and refined by various spiritual traditions. The similar concept of the {{IAST|Liṅga Śarīra}} is seen as the vehicle of consciousness in later [[Samkhya]], [[Vedanta]], and [[Yoga]], and is propelled by past-life tendencies, or ''[[bhava]]s''.{{sfn|Larson|2005|p=242}} Linga can be translated as "characteristic mark" or "impermanence" and the Vedanta term [[Sarira (Vedanta)|sarira]] as "form" or "mould".<ref>Purucker, Gottfried. ''The Occult Glossary''</ref> ''Karana'' or "instrument" is a synonymous term. In the Classical Samkhya system of [[Isvarakrsna]] (ca. 4th century CE), the ''Lińga'' is the characteristic mark of the transmigrating entity. It consists of twenty-five [[tattva]]s from eternal consciousness down to the five organs of sense, five of activity (''buddindriya'' or ''jñānendriya'', and ''karmendriya'' respectively) and the five subtle elements that are the objects of sense (''[[tanmatras]]'') The ''Samkhyakarika'' says:{{sfn|Larson|2005|p=268}}
* [[Emotional body]]
* [[Mental body]]
* [[Astral body]]
* [[Etheric body]] [[Etheric template]]
* [[Celestial body (esotericism)|Celestial body]]
* [[Ketheric template]]


{{Quote|The subtle body (''linga''), previously arisen, unconfined, constant, inclusive of the great one (''mahat'') etc, through the subtle elements, not having enjoyment, transmigrates, (because of) being endowed with ''bhavas'' ("conditions" or "dispositions").
Causality proceeds from the Ketheric template downwards, and each of the layers has its own characteristics and can have its own expression of disease, requiring individual healing. As with the Adyar arrangement, each body or aura also has its own complement of chakras, which interrelate to the chakras in the other layers. The first four bodies correspond to the [[Physical plane]], the Astral body to the [[Astral Plane]], and the higher three bodies or layers to the Spiritual World. In ''Hands of Light'' two higher layers are also briefly referred to beyond the Ketheric Template.


As a picture (does) not (exist) without a support, or as a shadow (does) not (exist) without a post and so forth; so too the instrument (''linga'' or ''karana'') does not exist without that which is specific (i.e., a subtle body).|''Samkhyakarika'', 60–81{{sfn|Larson|2005|p=268}}}}
=== Anthroposophy ===


The classical [[Vedanta]] tradition developed the theory of the five bodies into the theory of the [[kosha]]s "sheaths" or "coverings" which surround and obscure the self ([[Ātman (Hinduism)|atman]]). In classical Vedanta these are seen as obstacles to realization and traditions like Shankara's [[Advaita Vedanta]] had little interest in working with the subtle body.{{sfn|Samuel|2013|pp=34, 37}}
This same theme (of dense to subtle Body and Plane/Universe) is also found in [[Rudolph Steiner]]'s [[Anthroposophical]] teachings, although it is simplified considerably in that only the Physical, Etheric, and Astral Bodies are referred to (beyond the Astral is the Ego which in Steiner's system is the immortal [[soul]] or spiritual aspect of [[Human|man]]).


==== Tantra ====
According to both Blavatsky, Adyar Theosophy, Steiner, and some forms of Spiritualism, after physical death one lives in the subtle bodies until these too drop away and the Soul or Spirit returns to its true home to rest before reincarnating (however the details of the sequences vary).
In [[Tantra]] traditions meanwhile ([[Shaivism|Shaiva]] [[Kaula (Hinduism)|Kaula]], [[Kashmir Shaivism]] and Buddhist [[Vajrayana]]), the subtle body was seen in a more positive light, offering potential for yogic practices which could lead to liberation.{{sfn|Samuel|2013|p=34}} Tantric traditions contain the most complex theories of the subtle body, with sophisticated descriptions of energy [[Nadi (yoga)|nadis]] (literally "stream or river", channels through which ''vayu'' and ''prana'' flows) and [[chakra]]s, points of focus where nadis meet.{{sfn|Samuel|2013|pp=38–39}}


The main channels, shared by both Hindu and Buddhist systems, but visualised entirely differently, are the central (in Hindu systems: ''[[sushumna]]''; in Buddhist: ''avadhuti''), left and right (in Hindu systems: ''ida'' and ''pingala''; Buddhist: ''lalana'' and ''rasana'').{{sfn|Samuel|2013|p=39}} Further subsidiary channels are said to radiate outwards from the chakras, where the main channels meet.{{sfn|Mallinson|Singleton|2017|pp=172–174}}
Similar ideas to those of theosophy are found, but less systematically presented, in [[The Mother]]'s talks. And whilst Steiner did indeed draw a lot of his inspiration from Theosophy (one of his early books was even called ''Theosophy''), The Mother's occultism is based in large measure on the teachings of [[Max Theon]].


Chakra systems vary with the tantra; the ''[[Netra Tantra]]'' describes six chakras, the ''Kaulajñana-nirnaya'' describes eight, and the ''Kubjikamata Tantra'' describes seven (the most widely known set).{{sfn|Samuel|2013|p=40}}{{sfn|Mallinson|Singleton|2017|pp=175–178}}
The Adyar arrangement was taken up by [[Alice Bailey]], and from there found its way (with variations) into the New Age worldview.


In the [[Dzogchen]] tradition of [[Tibetan Buddhism]], the subtle body takes a different form. More specifically, the tradition points to four areas of particularly concentration of [[Energy (esotericism)|bodily energy]] – videlicet the heart (''tsitta''), where the enlightened energy resides; the "luminous channels" (''‘od rtsa''), through which the energy flows; the skull (''dung khang''), where it spreads before finally being released through the fourth hot-spot, namely the eyes (''tsakshu'' / ''briguta'').<ref name="Geisshuesler"/>{{rp|63}} Flavio Geisshuesler, who has studied the functioning of the Dzogchen subtle body in the context of the practice of [[sky-gazing (Dzogchen)|sky-gazing]], argues that many of the specific motifs that appear in the tradition's conception of the body are of pre-Buddhist origin. More specifically, he notes that the Dzogchen body's motifs of "deer-hearts, silk-channels, buffalo-horns, or far-reaching lassos [...] reproduce the terminology of the hunting of animalistic vitality as if internalizing the quest for precious substances."<ref name="Geisshuesler">{{cite book | last=Geisshuesler | first=Flavio | title=Tibetan Sky-Gazing Meditation and the Pre-History of Great Perfection Buddhism | date=2024 | location=London | publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing | isbn=978-1-350-42881-2 | url=https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/tibetan-skygazing-meditation-and-the-prehistory-of-great-perfection-buddhism-9781350428812/ | page=5}}</ref>
=== Western Wisdom Teachings ===


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


The modern Indian spiritual teacher [[Meher Baba]] stated that the subtle body "is the vehicle of desires and vital forces". He held that the subtle body is one of three bodies with which the soul must cease to identify with in order to realize God.<ref>{{cite book |author=Baba, Meher |author-link=Meher Baba |year=1967 |title=Discourses, volume 2 |location=San Francisco |publisher=Sufism Reoriented |pages=144–145 |isbn=978-1880619094}}</ref>
* A Dense Body, which is the visible instrument he uses here in this world to fetch and carry (the body we ordinarily think of as the whole man);
* A [[Etheric body|Vital Body]], which is made of Ether and pervades the visible body as ether permeates all other forms, except that human beings specialize a greater amount of the universal ether than other forms (that ethereal body is our instrument for specializing the vital energy of the sun and it is seen by clairvoyant vision to extend about an inch and a half outside our visible body); it is related to the [[Etheric plane|Etheric Region]] of the Physical World.
* A [[Desire body]], which is our emotional nature and this finer vehicle pervades both the vital and dense bodies (it is seen by clairvoyant vision to extend about 16 inches outside our visible body, which is located in the center of this ovoid cloud as the yolk is in the center of an egg); it is related to the [[Astral plane|Desire World]].
* The [[Mental body|Mind]], which functions like a mirror, reflects the outer world and enables the Ego to transmit its commands as thought and word, and also to compel action; it is related to the lower region of the [[Mental plane|World of Thought]], the ''Region of Concrete Thought''.


===Buddhism===
On the other hand, Heindel also teaches the Ego is the threefold Spirit, the ''God Within'', which uses these vehicles to gather experience in the school of life. The three aspects of the Spirit are:
{{further|Luminous mind|Illusory body}}
[[File:Chakras and energy channels 2 (3749594497).jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|A Tibetan illustration of the subtle body showing the central channel and two side channels connecting five chakras]]


In [[Buddhist Tantra]], the subtle body is termed the "innate body" ({{transl|sa|IAST|nija-deha}}) or the "uncommon means body" (''asadhdrana-upayadeha''),<ref name="Wayman 1977">{{cite book |author=Wayman, Alex |title=Yoga of the Guhyasamajatantra: The arcane lore of forty verses : a Buddhist Tantra commentary |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |year=1977 |page=65}}</ref> or {{transl|sa|IAST|sūkṣma śarīra}}, rendered in Tibetan as ''traway-lu'' (transliterated ''phra ba’i lus'').<ref>{{cite web |author=Miller, Lama Willa B. |title=Reviews: Investigating the Subtle Body |date=12 November 2013 |url=https://www.lionsroar.com/reviews-investigating-the-subtle-body/ |access-date=2018-03-18 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180319151239/https://www.lionsroar.com/reviews-investigating-the-subtle-body/ |archive-date=19 March 2018 |df=dmy-all}}</ref> The subtle body is sometimes known as {{transl|sa|IAST|manomaya-kāya}}, the “body made of mind” and is the means for synchronising the body and the mind, particularly during meditation.{{sfn|Simmer-Brown|2002|p=169}}
* The Human Spirit aspect, which has emanated from itself the desire body; it is related to the higher region of the [[Mental plane|World of Thought]], the ''Region of Abstract Thought''.
* The Life Spirit aspect, which has emanated from itself the vital body; it is related to the "World of Life Spirit".
* The Divine Spirit aspect , which has emanated from itself the dense body; it is related to the "World of Divine Spirit". [http://www.rosicrucian.com/images/rccen002.gif]


The subtle body consists of thousands of subtle energy channels ([[nadis]]), which are conduits for energies or "winds" ([[Lung (Tibetan Buddhism)|lung]] or [[prana]]) and converge at [[chakras]].<ref name="Wayman 1977"/> According to Dagsay Tulku Rinpoche, there are three main channels (''nadis''), central, left and right, which run from the point between the eyebrows up to the crown chakra, and down through all seven chakras to a point two inches below the navel.<ref>{{cite book |author=Dagsay Tulku Rinpoche |title=The Practice of Tibetan Meditation: Exercises, Visualizations, and Mantras for Health and Well-being |publisher=Inner Traditions / Bear & Co |year=2002 |page=80 |isbn=978-0892819034}}</ref>
=== Other interpretations ===


Lati Rinbochay describes the subtle body as consisting of 72,000 channels, various winds and a white and a red drop whilst a further very subtle body is a wind abiding in a drop at the centre of the heart chakra. The central channel is then described as being squeezed by two channels that encircle it at each chakra and thrice at the heart chakra, ensuring the winds do not move upward or downward until death.<ref name="Rinbochay 1985 p. ">{{cite book | last=Rinbochay | first=L. H. J. | title=Death, Intermediate State, and Rebirth in Tibetan Buddhism | publisher=Snow Lion Publications | year=1985 | isbn=978-1-55939-756-8 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nEZZwXn25QUC | access-date=1 March 2021 | page=}}</ref>
An interesting variant on the concept of subtle bodies is found in both Alchemical Taoism and the "[[Fourth Way]]" teachings of [[Gurdjieff]] and [[Ouspensky]], where it is said that one can create a subtle body, and hence achieve post-mortem immortality, through spiritual or yogic exercises.


Buddhist tantras generally describe four or five chakras in the shape of a lotus with varying petals. For example, the [[Hevajra Tantra]] (8th century) states:<blockquote>In the Center [i.e. chakra] of Creation [at the sexual organ] a sixty-four petal lotus. In the Center of Essential Nature [at the heart] an eight petal lotus. In the Center of Enjoyment [at the throat] a sixteen petal lotus. In the Center of Great Bliss [at the top of the head] a thirty-two petal lotus.{{sfn|Samuel|2013|p=40}}</blockquote>In contrast, the historically later [[Kalachakra|Kalachakra tantra]] describes six chakras.{{sfn|Samuel|2013|p=40}}
== Projection and exteriorisation ==


In [[Vajrayana]] Buddhism, liberation is achieved through subtle body processes during [[Deity yoga|Completion Stage]] practices such as the [[Six Yogas of Naropa]].{{sfn|Samuel|2013|p=38}}
The practice of [[astral projection]], as described in various literature, is supposed to involve the separation of the Astral body from the Physical. But according to The Mother, not only is it possible to go out from a denser to a more subtle body or self (she referred to this as ''[[exteriorisation]])'', but if one has the right training this process can be repeated until one reaches the border of the infinite (or [[The Absolute|Absolute Reality]]).


== Perceiving the subtle body ==
=== Other traditions ===
Other spiritual traditions teach about a mystical or divine body, such as "the most sacred body" (''wujud al-aqdas'') and "true and genuine body" (''jism asli haqiqi'') in [[Sufism]], the [[Meridian (Chinese medicine)|meridian system]] in [[Religion in China|Chinese religion]], and "the immortal body" (''soma athanaton'') in [[Hermeticism]].{{sfn|White|2018}}


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


The ''body of light'' is elaborated on according to various [[Western esotericism|Western esoteric]], [[occult]], and [[mysticism|mystical]] teachings. Other terms used for this body include ''body of glory'',{{sfn|Behun|2010}} ''spirit-body'', ''radiant body'',{{sfn|Mead|1919}} ''luciform body'', ''augoeides'' ('radiant'), ''astroeides'' ('starry' or 'sidereal body'), and ''celestial body''.{{sfn|Mead|1919|pp=34-35}}
The existence of subtle bodies is unconfirmed by the [[scientific community]].


The concept derives from the philosophy of [[Plato]]: the word 'astral' means 'of the stars'; thus the [[Astral plane#History|astral plane]] consists of the [[Seven Heavens]] of the [[classical planet]]s. The idea is rooted in common worldwide religious accounts of the [[afterlife]]{{sfn|Miller|1995|p={{pn|date=January 2022}}}} in which the [[Soul (spirit)|soul's]] journey or "ascent" is described in such terms as "an ecstatic, mystical or out-of body experience, wherein the spiritual traveller leaves the physical body and travels in their body of light into 'higher' realms."{{sfn|Woolger|n.d.}}
==See also==


[[Neoplatonism|Neoplatonists]] Porphyry and Proclus elaborated on Plato's description of the starry nature of the human psyche. Throughout the [[Renaissance]], philosophers and alchemists, healers including [[Paracelsus]] and his students, and [[natural science|natural scientists]] such as [[John Dee]], continued to discuss the nature of the astral world intermediate between earth and the divine. The concept of the astral body or body of light was adopted by 19th-century [[ceremonial magic]]ian [[Éliphas Lévi]], [[Florence Farr]] and the magicians of the [[Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn]], including [[Aleister Crowley]].
'''Traditions'''

* [[Vedanta]] (the five ''[[kosas]]'')
== Western syncretic tradition ==
* [[Samkhya]] (the ''[[linga sarira]]'' or ''[[sukshma sarira]]'')
{{see also|Astral body}}
* [[Tantra]] (the '''yogic body''')
[[File:Cosmicman.jpg|thumb|100px|The subtle body and the cosmic man, Nepal 1600s]]
* [[Neoplatonism]] (the '''okhemas''')

* [[Sufism]]
=== Theosophy ===
* [[Taoism]]
In the 19th century, [[H. P. Blavatsky]] founded the esoteric religious system of [[Theosophy (Blavatskian)|Theosophy]], which attempted to restate Hindu and Buddhist philosophy for the Western world.{{sfn|Samuel|2013|pp=1-3}} She adopted the phrase "subtle body" as the English equivalent of the Vedantic ''sūkṣmaśarīra'', which in [[Adi Shankara]]'s writings was one of three bodies (physical, subtle, and causal). Geoffrey Samuel notes that theosophical use of these terms by Blavatsky and later authors, especially [[C. W. Leadbeater]], [[Annie Besant]] and [[Rudolf Steiner]] (who went on to found [[Anthroposophy]]), has made them "problematic"{{sfn|Samuel|2013|pp=1-3}} to modern scholars, since the Theosophists adapted the terms as they expanded their ideas based on "psychic and clairvoyant insights", changing their meaning from what they had in their original context in India.{{sfn|Samuel|2013|pp=1-3}}
* [[Spiritism]]
<!--
* [[Surat Shabd Yoga]]
* "Prana" - the "Life Force", the breath of Life
* [[Hermeticism]]
* ''[[Linga sarira|Linga Sharira]]'' - the Double or [[Astral body]], the vehicle of Prana
* [[Theosophy]] (the [[Septenary (Theosophy)|Septenary]], inspired by the five koshas of Vedanta)
* ''Kama rupa'' - the "desire-body," the seat of animal desires and passions
* [[Anthroposophy]] (the [[etheric body|etheric]] and [[astral body|astral]] bodies)

* [[Rosicrucian]]ism, in the [[Western Wisdom Teachings]] philosophy (a ''[[Rosicrucian_Fellowship#The_Seven-fold_constitution_of_Man|Seven-fold]]'' and a ''[[Rosicrucian_Fellowship#The_Ten-fold_constitution_of_Man|Ten-fold]]'' constitution of Man)
The later Theosophists proposed a series of four subtle bodies, each with its own [[Aura (paranormal)|aura]] and set of [[chakra]]s:
* [[Thelemic mysticism]]

* Various [[New Age]] practices
* [[Etheric body]] (vehicle of [[prana]])
* [[Spiritual science]].
* [[Astral body|Emotional or astral body]] (vehicle of desires and emotions)
* [[Mental body]] (vehicle of the concrete or lower mind)
'''Other topics'''
* [[Causal body]] (vehicle of the abstract or higher mind)-->
* [[Aura (paranormal)|Aura]]

* [[biofield]]
=== Post-theosophists ===
* [[Clairvoyance]]

* [[Esoteric cosmology]]
The later theosophical arrangement was taken up by [[Alice Bailey]], and from there found its way into the [[New Age]] worldview<ref name="Johnston 2002">{{cite journal |last1=Johnston |first1=Jay |title=The "Theosophic Glance": Fluid Ontologies, Subtle Bodies and Intuitive Vision |journal=Australian Religion Studies Review |date=2002 |volume=15 |issue=2 |pages=101–117 |url=https://openjournals.library.sydney.edu.au/index.php/ARSR/article/view/8979}}</ref> and the human [[Aura (paranormal)|aura]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Hammer |first=Olav |title=Claiming Knowledge: Strategies of Epistemology from Theosophy to the New Age |year=2001 |publisher=Brill |isbn=900413638X |page=55}}</ref> Other authors treated the subtle body in varying ways. [[Max Heindel]] divided the subtle body into the [[Etheric body|Vital Body]] made of Ether; the [[Desire body]], related to the [[Astral plane]]; and the [[Mental body]].{{sfn|Heindel|1911}} [[Barbara Brennan]]'s account of the subtle bodies in her books ''Hands of Light'' and ''Light Emerging'' refers to the subtle bodies as "layers" in the "Human Energy Field" or aura.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Dale |first1=Cyndi |title=Energetic Anatomy: A Complete Guide to the Human Energy Fields and Etheric Bodies |date=11 October 2016 |url=https://www.consciouslifestylemag.com/human-energy-field-aura/ |publisher=Conscious Lifestyle magazine |access-date=9 August 2019}}</ref>
* [[Kirlian photography]]

* [[Life review]]
=== Fourth Way ===
* [[Reincarnation]]
Subtle bodies are found in the "[[Fourth Way]]" teachings of [[Gurdjieff]] and [[Ouspensky]], who write that one can create a subtle body, and hence achieve post-mortem immortality, through spiritual or yogic exercises. The "soul" in these systems is not something one is born with, but developed through esoteric practice to acquire complete understanding and to perfect the self. According to the historian Bernice Rosenthal, "In Gurdjieff's cosmology our nature is tripartite and is composed of the physical (planetary), emotional (astral) and mental (spiritual) bodies; in each person one of these three bodies ultimately achieves dominance."<ref name="Rosenthal 1997"/> The "divine body" represents a fourth way, and the ultimate task of the teachings is to harmoniously develop the four ways into a single way.<ref name="Rosenthal 1997">{{cite book | last=Rosenthal | first=Bernice | title=The Occult in Russian and Soviet Culture | publisher=Cornell University Press | year=1997 | isbn=978-0-8014-8331-8 | oclc=35990156 | page=[https://archive.org/details/occultinrussians00unse/page/361 361] | url=https://archive.org/details/occultinrussians00unse/page/361 }}</ref>
* [[Perispirit]]

* [[Silver cord]]
== Meditation research ==
* [[Spiritual evolution]]
Western scientists have started to explore the subtle body concept in relation to research on meditation. The subtle body model can be cross-referenced onto modern maps of the [[central nervous system]], and applied in research on meditation.<ref name="Loizzo 2016">{{cite journal |last=Loizzo |first=Joseph J. |title=The subtle body: an interoceptive map of central nervous system function and meditative mind-brain-body integration |journal=Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences |publisher=Wiley |volume=1373 |issue=1 |date=10 May 2016 |issn=0077-8923 |doi=10.1111/nyas.13065 |pages=78–95|pmid=27164469 |bibcode=2016NYASA1373...78L |s2cid=5042508 }}</ref>
* [[Spirituality]]

==See also==
*[[Saṃbhogakāya]]
*[[Spirit body|Spirit body (Mormonism)]]


== References ==
== References ==
{{unclear citation style|date=March 2022}}

===Citations===
{{Reflist}}

===Works cited===
{{refbegin|2|indent=yes}}
*{{cite journal |last=Behun |first=W. |year=2010 |title=The Body of Light and the Body without Organs |journal=Substance: A Review of Theory & Literary Criticism |volume=39 |number=1 |pages=125–140}}
*{{cite book |last=Heindel |first=Max |title=The Rosicrucian Mysteries |chapter=Chapter IV: The Constitution of Man: Vital Body - Desire Body - Mind |chapter-url=http://www.rosicrucian.com/rms/rmseng02.htm#Chapter_IV |year=1911 |publisher=Rosicrucian Fellowship |isbn=0-911274-86-3}}
*{{cite book | last=Larson | first=Gerald James | author-link=Gerald James Larson | title=Classical Samkhya : an interpretation of its history and meaning | publisher=Motilal Banarsidass | year=2005 | isbn=978-81-208-0503-3 | oclc=637247445 }}
*{{cite book | last1=Mallinson | first1=James | author1-link=James Mallinson (author) |last2=Singleton |first2=Mark | author2-link=Mark Singleton (yoga scholar) |name-list-style=amp | title=Roots of Yoga | publisher=Penguin Books | year=2017 | isbn=978-0-241-25304-5 | oclc=928480104 }}
*{{cite book |first=G. R. S. |last=Mead |author-link=G. R. S. Mead |title=The Doctrine of the Subtle Body in Western Tradition |publisher=Watkins |year=1919}}
*{{cite book |first=Suki |last=Miller |title=After Death: How People around the World Map the Journey after Death |year=1995}}
* {{cite book | last=Samuel | first=Geoffrey | author-link=Geoffrey Samuel | title=Religion and the subtle body in Asia and the West : between mind and body | publisher=Routledge | year=2013 | isbn=978-0-415-60811-4 | oclc=690084604 }}
*{{cite book | last1=Samuel | first1=G. | last2=Johnston | first2=J. | title=Religion and the Subtle Body in Asia and the West: Between Mind and Body | publisher=Taylor & Francis | series=Routledge studies in Asian religion and philosophy | year=2013 | isbn=978-1-136-76640-4}}
*{{cite book |last=Simmer-Brown |first=J. |title=Dakini's Warm Breath: The Feminine Principle in Tibetan Buddhism |publisher=Shambhala |year=2002 |isbn=978-1-57062-920-4}}
*{{cite journal |last=White |first=John |date=May 2018 |url=http://www.wie.org/j21/white.asp |title=Enlightenment and the Body of Light |journal=Journal of Conscious Evolution |volume=1 |issue=1 |access-date=2022-01-06}}
*{{cite web |first=Roger J. |last=Woolger |date=n.d. |title=Beyond Death: Transition and the Afterlife |website=Royal College of Psychiatrists |url=http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/PDF/RWoolgerTransition.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081002073503/https://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/PDF/RWoolgerTransition.pdf |archive-date=2008-10-02}}
{{refend}}


== Further reading ==
* Alfass, Mirra (The Mother) ''[[The Agenda (Mother)|Mother's Agenda]]''
* {{cite book |last=Dale |first=Cyndi |year=2014 |title=The Subtle Body: An Encyclopedia of Your Energetic Anatomy |publisher=Sounds True |isbn=978-1591798279 |ref=none}}
* Besant, Annie, ''Man and His Bodies''
* {{cite book |author-link=Mircea Eliade |last=Eliade |first=Mircea |title=Yoga: Immortality and Freedom |translator=W. R. Trask |publisher=[[Princeton University Press]] |year=1969 |ref=none}}
* Brennan, Barbara Ann, ''Hands of Light : A Guide to Healing Through the Human Energy Field'', Bantam Books, 1987
* {{cite book |last=Poortman |first=J. J. |title=Vehicles of Consciousness; The Concept of Hylic Pluralism (Ochema) |volume=I-IV |publisher=The Theosophical Society in Netherlands |year=1978 |ref=none}}
* &mdash;, ''Light Emerging: The Journey of Personal Healing'', Bantam Books, 1993
* {{cite journal |last=Samuel |first=G. |title=Unbalanced Flows in the Subtle Body: Tibetan Understandings of Psychiatric Illness and How to Deal With It |journal=J Relig Health |date=June 2019 |volume=58 |number=3 |pages=770–794 |doi=10.1007/s10943-019-00774-1 |pmid=30788755 |pmc=6522444 |ref=none}}
* Mircea Eliade, ''Yoga: Immortality and Freedom''; transl. by W.R. Trask, Princeton University Press, 1969
*{{cite book |last=White |first=David Gordon |year=2012 |title=The Alchemical Body: Siddha Traditions in Medieval India |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=978-0226149349 |ref=none}}
* C. W. Leadbeater, ''Man, Visible and Invisible''
* Sheila Ostrander and Lynn Schroeder ''Psychic Discoveries Behind the Iron Curtain'', Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall Inc., 1970.
* Poortman, J. J. ''Vehicles of Consciousness; The Concept of Hylic Pluralism (Ochema)'', vol I-IV, The Theosophical Society in Netherlands, 1978
* Powell, Arthur E. ''The Astral Body and other Astral Phenomena''
* &mdash;, ''The Causal Body and the Ego''
* &mdash;, ''The Etheric Double''
* &mdash;, ''The Mental Body''
* Steiner, Rudolph, ''Theosophy: An introduction to the supersensible knowledge of the world and the destination of man''. London: Rudolf Steiner Press. (1904) 1970
* &mdash;, ''Occult science - An Outline''. Trans. George and Mary Adams. London: Rudolf Steiner Press, 1909, 1969
* Heindel, Max, ''The Rosicrucian Mysteries (Chapter IV: [http://www.rosicrucian.com/rms/rmseng02.htm#Chapter_IV The Constitution of Man: Vital Body - Desire Body - Mind])'', 1911, ISBN 0-911274-86-3


{{Yoga}}
== External links ==
{{Authority control}}
* [http://www.kheper.net/topics/subtlebody/ kheper Subtle body]
* [http://www.noetic.org The Institute of Noetic Sciences] supporting research into supposed subtle body phenomena


{{DEFAULTSORT:Subtle Body}}
[[Category:Buddhist philosophical concepts]]
[[Category:Eastern esotericism]]
[[Category:Esoteric cosmology]]
[[Category:Esoteric cosmology]]
[[Category:Esotericism]]
[[Category:Hindu philosophical concepts]]
[[Category:Paranormal worlds and bodies]]
[[Category:Samkhya]]
[[Category:Shabd paths]]
[[Category:Tantric practices]]
[[Category:Theosophical philosophical concepts]]
[[Category:Theosophical philosophical concepts]]
[[Category:Vitalism]]
[[Category:Vitalism]]
[[Category:Mythemes]]
[[Category:Yoga]]
[[de:Energiekörper]]

Latest revision as of 20:18, 1 April 2024

The subtle body in Indian mysticism, from a yoga manuscript in Braj Bhasa language, 1899. A row of chakras is depicted from the base of the spine up to the crown of the head.

A subtle body is a "quasi material"[1] aspect of the human body, being neither solely physical nor solely spiritual, according to various esoteric, occult, and mystical teachings. This contrasts with the mind–body dualism that has dominated Western thought. The subtle body is important in the Taoism of China and Dharmic religions such as Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism, mainly in the branches which focus on tantra and yoga, where it is known as the Sūkṣma-śarīra (Sanskrit: सूक्ष्म शरीर). However, while mostly associated with Asian cultures, non-dualistic approaches to the mind and body are found in many parts of the world.[1]

Subtle body concepts and practices can be identified as early as 2nd century BCE in Taoist texts found in the Mawangdui tombs.[1] It was "evidently present"[1] in Indian thought as early as the 4th to 1st century BCE when the Taittiriya Upanishad described the Panchakoshas, a series of five interpenetrating sheaths of the body.[2] A fully formed subtle body theory did not develop in India until the tantric movement that affected all its religions in the Middle Ages.[1] In Indo-Tibetan Buddhism, the correlation of the subtle body to the physical body is viewed differently according to school, lineage and scholar, but for completion stage in yoga, it is visualised within the body.[3] The subtle body consists of focal points, often called chakras, connected by channels, often called nadis, that convey subtle breath, often called prana. Through breathing and other exercises, a practitioner may direct the subtle breath to achieve supernormal powers, immortality, or liberation.

Subtle body in the Western tradition is called the body of light. The concept derives from the philosophy of Plato: the word 'astral' means 'of the stars'; thus the astral plane consists of the Seven Heavens of the classical planets. Neoplatonists Porphyry and Proclus elaborated on Plato's description of the starry nature of the human psyche. Throughout the Renaissance, philosophers and alchemists, healers including Paracelsus and his students, and natural scientists such as John Dee, continued to discuss the nature of the astral world intermediate between earth and the divine. The concept of the astral body or body of light was adopted by 19th and 20th-century ceremonial magicians.

The Theosophy movement was the first to translate the Sanskrit term as 'subtle body', although their use of the term is quite different from Indic usage as they synthesize Western and Eastern traditions. This makes the term problematic for modern scholars, especially as the Theosophist view often influences New Age and holistic medicine perspectives.[1] Western scientists have started to explore the subtle body concept in research on meditation.[4]

Asian religions[edit]

The Yogic, Tantric and other systems of Hinduism, Vajrayana Buddhism, as well as Chinese Taoist alchemy contain theories of subtle physiology with focal points (chakras, acupuncture points) connected by a series of channels (nadis, meridians) that convey subtle breath (prana, vayu, ch'i, ki, lung). These invisible channels and points are understood to determine the characteristics of the visible physical form. By understanding and mastering the subtlest levels of reality one gains mastery over the physical realm. Through breathing and other exercises, the practitioner aims to manipulate and direct the flow of subtle breath, to achieve supernormal powers (siddhis) and attain higher states of consciousness, immortality, or liberation.[5][6]

Hinduism[edit]

An illustration of a subtle body system of seven chakras connected by three major nadi channels, as commonly adopted by contemporary yoga

Early[edit]

Early concepts of the subtle body (Sanskrit: sūkṣma śarīra) appeared in the Upanishads, including the Brhadaranyaka Upanishad and the Katha Upanishad.[7] The Taittiriya Upanishad describes the theory of five koshas or sheaths, though these are not to be thought of as concentric layers, but interpenetrating at successive levels of subtlety:[8][9]

  • The anna-maya ("food body", physical body, the grossest level),
  • The prana-maya (body made of vital breath or prana),
  • The mano-maya (body made of mind),
  • The vijñana-maya (body made of consciousness)
  • The ananda-maya (bliss body, the subtlest level).

Subtle internal anatomy included a central channel (nadi).[8] Later Vedic texts called samhitas and brahmanas contain a theory of five "winds" or "breaths" (vayus, pranas):[8]

  • Prāṇa, associated with inhalation
  • Apāna, associated with exhalation
  • Uḍāna, associated with distribution of breath within the body
  • Samāna, associated with digestion
  • Vyāna, associated with excretion of waste

Later[edit]

A millennium later, these concepts were adapted and refined by various spiritual traditions. The similar concept of the Liṅga Śarīra is seen as the vehicle of consciousness in later Samkhya, Vedanta, and Yoga, and is propelled by past-life tendencies, or bhavas.[10] Linga can be translated as "characteristic mark" or "impermanence" and the Vedanta term sarira as "form" or "mould".[11] Karana or "instrument" is a synonymous term. In the Classical Samkhya system of Isvarakrsna (ca. 4th century CE), the Lińga is the characteristic mark of the transmigrating entity. It consists of twenty-five tattvas from eternal consciousness down to the five organs of sense, five of activity (buddindriya or jñānendriya, and karmendriya respectively) and the five subtle elements that are the objects of sense (tanmatras) The Samkhyakarika says:[12]

The subtle body (linga), previously arisen, unconfined, constant, inclusive of the great one (mahat) etc, through the subtle elements, not having enjoyment, transmigrates, (because of) being endowed with bhavas ("conditions" or "dispositions"). As a picture (does) not (exist) without a support, or as a shadow (does) not (exist) without a post and so forth; so too the instrument (linga or karana) does not exist without that which is specific (i.e., a subtle body).

— Samkhyakarika, 60–81[12]

The classical Vedanta tradition developed the theory of the five bodies into the theory of the koshas "sheaths" or "coverings" which surround and obscure the self (atman). In classical Vedanta these are seen as obstacles to realization and traditions like Shankara's Advaita Vedanta had little interest in working with the subtle body.[13]

Tantra[edit]

In Tantra traditions meanwhile (Shaiva Kaula, Kashmir Shaivism and Buddhist Vajrayana), the subtle body was seen in a more positive light, offering potential for yogic practices which could lead to liberation.[14] Tantric traditions contain the most complex theories of the subtle body, with sophisticated descriptions of energy nadis (literally "stream or river", channels through which vayu and prana flows) and chakras, points of focus where nadis meet.[15]

The main channels, shared by both Hindu and Buddhist systems, but visualised entirely differently, are the central (in Hindu systems: sushumna; in Buddhist: avadhuti), left and right (in Hindu systems: ida and pingala; Buddhist: lalana and rasana).[16] Further subsidiary channels are said to radiate outwards from the chakras, where the main channels meet.[17]

Chakra systems vary with the tantra; the Netra Tantra describes six chakras, the Kaulajñana-nirnaya describes eight, and the Kubjikamata Tantra describes seven (the most widely known set).[18][19]

In the Dzogchen tradition of Tibetan Buddhism, the subtle body takes a different form. More specifically, the tradition points to four areas of particularly concentration of bodily energy – videlicet the heart (tsitta), where the enlightened energy resides; the "luminous channels" (‘od rtsa), through which the energy flows; the skull (dung khang), where it spreads before finally being released through the fourth hot-spot, namely the eyes (tsakshu / briguta).[20]: 63  Flavio Geisshuesler, who has studied the functioning of the Dzogchen subtle body in the context of the practice of sky-gazing, argues that many of the specific motifs that appear in the tradition's conception of the body are of pre-Buddhist origin. More specifically, he notes that the Dzogchen body's motifs of "deer-hearts, silk-channels, buffalo-horns, or far-reaching lassos [...] reproduce the terminology of the hunting of animalistic vitality as if internalizing the quest for precious substances."[20]

Modern[edit]

The modern Indian spiritual teacher Meher Baba stated that the subtle body "is the vehicle of desires and vital forces". He held that the subtle body is one of three bodies with which the soul must cease to identify with in order to realize God.[21]

Buddhism[edit]

A Tibetan illustration of the subtle body showing the central channel and two side channels connecting five chakras

In Buddhist Tantra, the subtle body is termed the "innate body" (nija-deha) or the "uncommon means body" (asadhdrana-upayadeha),[22] or sūkṣma śarīra, rendered in Tibetan as traway-lu (transliterated phra ba’i lus).[23] The subtle body is sometimes known as manomaya-kāya, the “body made of mind” and is the means for synchronising the body and the mind, particularly during meditation.[24]

The subtle body consists of thousands of subtle energy channels (nadis), which are conduits for energies or "winds" (lung or prana) and converge at chakras.[22] According to Dagsay Tulku Rinpoche, there are three main channels (nadis), central, left and right, which run from the point between the eyebrows up to the crown chakra, and down through all seven chakras to a point two inches below the navel.[25]

Lati Rinbochay describes the subtle body as consisting of 72,000 channels, various winds and a white and a red drop whilst a further very subtle body is a wind abiding in a drop at the centre of the heart chakra. The central channel is then described as being squeezed by two channels that encircle it at each chakra and thrice at the heart chakra, ensuring the winds do not move upward or downward until death.[26]

Buddhist tantras generally describe four or five chakras in the shape of a lotus with varying petals. For example, the Hevajra Tantra (8th century) states:

In the Center [i.e. chakra] of Creation [at the sexual organ] a sixty-four petal lotus. In the Center of Essential Nature [at the heart] an eight petal lotus. In the Center of Enjoyment [at the throat] a sixteen petal lotus. In the Center of Great Bliss [at the top of the head] a thirty-two petal lotus.[18]

In contrast, the historically later Kalachakra tantra describes six chakras.[18]

In Vajrayana Buddhism, liberation is achieved through subtle body processes during Completion Stage practices such as the Six Yogas of Naropa.[27]

Other traditions[edit]

Other spiritual traditions teach about a mystical or divine body, such as "the most sacred body" (wujud al-aqdas) and "true and genuine body" (jism asli haqiqi) in Sufism, the meridian system in Chinese religion, and "the immortal body" (soma athanaton) in Hermeticism.[28]

Western esoteric tradition[edit]

The body of light is elaborated on according to various Western esoteric, occult, and mystical teachings. Other terms used for this body include body of glory,[29] spirit-body, radiant body,[30] luciform body, augoeides ('radiant'), astroeides ('starry' or 'sidereal body'), and celestial body.[31]

The concept derives from the philosophy of Plato: the word 'astral' means 'of the stars'; thus the astral plane consists of the Seven Heavens of the classical planets. The idea is rooted in common worldwide religious accounts of the afterlife[32] in which the soul's journey or "ascent" is described in such terms as "an ecstatic, mystical or out-of body experience, wherein the spiritual traveller leaves the physical body and travels in their body of light into 'higher' realms."[33]

Neoplatonists Porphyry and Proclus elaborated on Plato's description of the starry nature of the human psyche. Throughout the Renaissance, philosophers and alchemists, healers including Paracelsus and his students, and natural scientists such as John Dee, continued to discuss the nature of the astral world intermediate between earth and the divine. The concept of the astral body or body of light was adopted by 19th-century ceremonial magician Éliphas Lévi, Florence Farr and the magicians of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, including Aleister Crowley.

Western syncretic tradition[edit]

The subtle body and the cosmic man, Nepal 1600s

Theosophy[edit]

In the 19th century, H. P. Blavatsky founded the esoteric religious system of Theosophy, which attempted to restate Hindu and Buddhist philosophy for the Western world.[34] She adopted the phrase "subtle body" as the English equivalent of the Vedantic sūkṣmaśarīra, which in Adi Shankara's writings was one of three bodies (physical, subtle, and causal). Geoffrey Samuel notes that theosophical use of these terms by Blavatsky and later authors, especially C. W. Leadbeater, Annie Besant and Rudolf Steiner (who went on to found Anthroposophy), has made them "problematic"[34] to modern scholars, since the Theosophists adapted the terms as they expanded their ideas based on "psychic and clairvoyant insights", changing their meaning from what they had in their original context in India.[34]

Post-theosophists[edit]

The later theosophical arrangement was taken up by Alice Bailey, and from there found its way into the New Age worldview[35] and the human aura.[36] Other authors treated the subtle body in varying ways. Max Heindel divided the subtle body into the Vital Body made of Ether; the Desire body, related to the Astral plane; and the Mental body.[37] Barbara Brennan's account of the subtle bodies in her books Hands of Light and Light Emerging refers to the subtle bodies as "layers" in the "Human Energy Field" or aura.[38]

Fourth Way[edit]

Subtle bodies are found in the "Fourth Way" teachings of Gurdjieff and Ouspensky, who write that one can create a subtle body, and hence achieve post-mortem immortality, through spiritual or yogic exercises. The "soul" in these systems is not something one is born with, but developed through esoteric practice to acquire complete understanding and to perfect the self. According to the historian Bernice Rosenthal, "In Gurdjieff's cosmology our nature is tripartite and is composed of the physical (planetary), emotional (astral) and mental (spiritual) bodies; in each person one of these three bodies ultimately achieves dominance."[39] The "divine body" represents a fourth way, and the ultimate task of the teachings is to harmoniously develop the four ways into a single way.[39]

Meditation research[edit]

Western scientists have started to explore the subtle body concept in relation to research on meditation. The subtle body model can be cross-referenced onto modern maps of the central nervous system, and applied in research on meditation.[4]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Samuel & Johnston 2013.
  2. ^ Mallinson & Singleton 2017.
  3. ^ "Tibetan Medicine and the Subtle Anatomy - Tibetan Medicine, Buddhism & Astrology - London". Shrīmālā | Tibetan Medicine, Buddhism & Astrology | London. 11 January 2020. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  4. ^ a b Loizzo, Joseph J. (10 May 2016). "The subtle body: an interoceptive map of central nervous system function and meditative mind-brain-body integration". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 1373 (1). Wiley: 78–95. Bibcode:2016NYASA1373...78L. doi:10.1111/nyas.13065. ISSN 0077-8923. PMID 27164469. S2CID 5042508.
  5. ^ Mallinson & Singleton 2017, pp. 171–184.
  6. ^ Pregadio, Fabrizio (2012). The Way of the Golden Elixir: A Historical Overview of Taoist Alchemy (PDF, 60 pp., free download). Golden Elixir Press.
  7. ^ Mallinson & Singleton 2017, pp. 173–174.
  8. ^ a b c Samuel 2013, p. 33.
  9. ^ Mallinson & Singleton 2017, p. 184.
  10. ^ Larson 2005, p. 242.
  11. ^ Purucker, Gottfried. The Occult Glossary
  12. ^ a b Larson 2005, p. 268.
  13. ^ Samuel 2013, pp. 34, 37.
  14. ^ Samuel 2013, p. 34.
  15. ^ Samuel 2013, pp. 38–39.
  16. ^ Samuel 2013, p. 39.
  17. ^ Mallinson & Singleton 2017, pp. 172–174.
  18. ^ a b c Samuel 2013, p. 40.
  19. ^ Mallinson & Singleton 2017, pp. 175–178.
  20. ^ a b Geisshuesler, Flavio (2024). Tibetan Sky-Gazing Meditation and the Pre-History of Great Perfection Buddhism. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 5. ISBN 978-1-350-42881-2.
  21. ^ Baba, Meher (1967). Discourses, volume 2. San Francisco: Sufism Reoriented. pp. 144–145. ISBN 978-1880619094.
  22. ^ a b Wayman, Alex (1977). Yoga of the Guhyasamajatantra: The arcane lore of forty verses : a Buddhist Tantra commentary. Motilal Banarsidass. p. 65.
  23. ^ Miller, Lama Willa B. (12 November 2013). "Reviews: Investigating the Subtle Body". Archived from the original on 19 March 2018. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  24. ^ Simmer-Brown 2002, p. 169.
  25. ^ Dagsay Tulku Rinpoche (2002). The Practice of Tibetan Meditation: Exercises, Visualizations, and Mantras for Health and Well-being. Inner Traditions / Bear & Co. p. 80. ISBN 978-0892819034.
  26. ^ Rinbochay, L. H. J. (1985). Death, Intermediate State, and Rebirth in Tibetan Buddhism. Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 978-1-55939-756-8. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  27. ^ Samuel 2013, p. 38.
  28. ^ White 2018.
  29. ^ Behun 2010.
  30. ^ Mead 1919.
  31. ^ Mead 1919, pp. 34–35.
  32. ^ Miller 1995, p. [page needed].
  33. ^ Woolger n.d.
  34. ^ a b c Samuel 2013, pp. 1–3.
  35. ^ Johnston, Jay (2002). "The "Theosophic Glance": Fluid Ontologies, Subtle Bodies and Intuitive Vision". Australian Religion Studies Review. 15 (2): 101–117.
  36. ^ Hammer, Olav (2001). Claiming Knowledge: Strategies of Epistemology from Theosophy to the New Age. Brill. p. 55. ISBN 900413638X.
  37. ^ Heindel 1911.
  38. ^ Dale, Cyndi (11 October 2016). "Energetic Anatomy: A Complete Guide to the Human Energy Fields and Etheric Bodies". Conscious Lifestyle magazine. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
  39. ^ a b Rosenthal, Bernice (1997). The Occult in Russian and Soviet Culture. Cornell University Press. p. 361. ISBN 978-0-8014-8331-8. OCLC 35990156.

Works cited[edit]

Further reading[edit]