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The Astral Plane

C. W. LEADBEATER

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** So when we speak of a man as rising from one plane or subplane to another, we do not think of him as necessarily, movftig in space ^t all, but rather as transferring his con- , sciousness from one level to another—gradually becoming unresponsive to the vibrations of one order of matter, and beginning instead to answer to those of a higher and more refined order; so that one world with its scenery and i8
inhabitants would seem to fade slowly away from his view, while another world of a more elevated character would dawn upon him in its stead.
Numbering these subdivisions from the highest and least material downwards, we find that they naturally fall into three classes, divisions i, 2, and 3 forming one such class, and 4, 5, and 6 another, while the seventh and lowest of all stands alone. The difference between the matter of one of these classes and the next would be commensurable with that,between a solid and a liquid, while the difference between the matter of the subdivisions of a class would rather resemble that between two kinds of solid, such as, say, steel and sand. Putting aside for
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