by
Anthony Forwood
Introduction
There
are certain secrets that the powers-that-be do not want the rest of
mankind to know about. When they see that one of these secrets is
becoming too perceptible to the public, they take measures to
suppress or discredit it. The following is not only a historical
review of how one of these secrets was discovered and then publicly
suppressed and discredited, it is also an attempt to show what this phenomenal secret is and how, once it was discovered, was immediately put to use
in a most deceptive way to capture and control the minds of an
ever-growing segment of the population, from the top down.
There
is a great deal of historical evidence to show that this secret had first been discovered long ago, carefully guarded within the ancient
occult schools of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and India, and has since found
its way into the possession of certain secret societies that evolved
out of those schools and have since become very powerful worldwide.
These secret societies still exist today and include among their
highest ranks the richest and most powerful people in the world. Although I don’t
intend to cover the full historical background of this here, I’ll
begin at the point where this secret appears to have first come into
the hands of these secret societies, drawing on key pieces of
evidence from the historical record.
Opening Pandora’s Box
In the
mid-1700s, around the same time that Adam Weishaupt was busy forming
the Order of the Illuminati on the instructions of Amschel
Mayer Rothschild, a young French medical doctor named Franz Anton
Mesmer was just beginning to discover a strange phenomenon that he
called ‘animal magnetism’,
which he thought was a magnetic fluidic force that circulated through
the human body and could be manipulated with iron magnets.
He viewed the human organism
as a self-healing entity that required the proper balance of this
universal magnetic fluid to affect the ebb and flow of the life
force, and the techniques that he devised to manipulate what he
perceived as this magnetic fluid were geared to restoring that
balance in people suffering from illness. Through
his experiments, first with the use of magnets but eventually with
nothing more than the sweeping passes of his hands, he
was able to affect cures for many ailments. At one point, up to two
hundred patients a day were coming to him in search of his skills.
This quickly caught the
attention of many other doctors and physicians who began to
investigate this phenomenon as well.
Mesmer
set up schools to teach his methods, charging a considerable fee for
his instruction and having his students sign confidentiality
agreements. This had the effect of assuring that his methods were
valued enough among his students that the finer details of his art
would remain secret, not being shared among the general public.
Although this might have been a wise move from a financial standpoint
and was only intended to safeguard his professional career, the
secrecy surrounding the more controversial aspects of his discovery
would continue right up to the present day, leaving the rest of the
world with a far more limited understanding about hypnosis. His
schools, by the way, also functioned as Masonic lodges, indicating
that Mesmer was himself a Mason, and one of high standing, to have
been allowed to open his own lodges.
But
I’m getting ahead of myself here, since I still haven’t explained
what these controversial aspects are…
A
student of Mesmer’s, the Marques de Puységur, discovered some of
the more interesting effects of this ‘magnetizing fluidic force’.
He discovered that some
individuals would fall into a trance state when animal magnetism was
applied to them. Although they appeared to be asleep, they were still
conscious and could reply to questions and convey information. In
this trance state, the patient was also very suggestible, believing
any idea or proposition that Puységur might offer as fact. Upon
awakening from this trance state, the patient would remember nothing
that had taken place while asleep.
Puységur discovered that
many people in this state could apparently diagnose their own
illnesses and those of others, and even prescribe effective remedies
for the conditions they perceived. For
example, in 1784 Puységur reported that he could cause a sick young
man named Victor to fall into a trance, during which he could
communicate with the man as though he were awake. Victor proved to be
extremely suggestible while in this state and showed a dramatic
change in personality as well. He could suddenly speak very
articulately, diagnose his own sickness, and even read the thoughts
of Puységur. When Victor was awakened, he would have no memory of
what had taken place. Through continuing investigation, Puységur
also noticed that although magnetized subjects had no memory in the
waking state of what took place in the state of magnetic sleep, they
did retain a continuous memory from sleep state to sleep state.
These
were very significant discoveries, because they revealed a number of
remarkable aspects of the human mind that could be unleashed in this
induced trance state:
- that
a person in this trance state was extremely suggestible and would
perceive things exactly as the ‘magnetizer’ described them;
- that
spontaneously induced multiple personalities could arise during a
hypnotic trance;
- that
a person’s memory while in this trance state was continuous between
these states while remaining separate from their waking memory;
- that
telepathic communication between the ‘magnetizer’ and his subject
arose spontaneously during a hypnotic trance.
On top
of this, Puységur recognized that the cultivation of a special bond
between the magnetizer and his subject was the key, rather than a
magnetic fluid. He also recognized that the role of human will was
important, and the need for the magnetizer and patient to both
exercise ‘good will’, as well as to hold a firm belief and
confidence in the power of animal magnetism, in order for the results
to be effective.
From
this time on, many other ‘magnetizers’ of that period began to
report these same strange phenomena arising in their subjects again
and again, and these would become some of the most controversial
aspects reported in the literature on animal magnetism for many
years.
But
already, in the same year that Puységur made these findings, the
powers-that-be were at work to stop the line of research that Mesmer
had started and others were taking up as well. In 1784, the same year
that Puységur reported his findings, the French government ordered
two separate commissions to investigate Mesmer's claims. They were
rigged investigations and only intended to discredit Mesmer and his
work. Both commissions gave negative conclusions, dismissing the idea
that a magnetic fluid was involved and alleging that the effects of
animal magnetism were merely the products of the imagination.
In
spite of this, many physicians who had been having positive results
with Mesmer’s methods voiced their criticisms of the commissions,
and mesmerism (as it was now being called) soon became very popular
among the highest levels of society throughout the world.
By
1825, another French commission was convened, again investigating the
subject of animal magnetism. When they gave their report in 1831, the
conclusions were surprisingly different than those of the previous
commissions. Amongst other things, they announced that they had been
able to demonstrate the fact that some mesmeric subjects possessed
clairvoyant power, that such subjects could, with their eyes closed,
distinguish objects, tell the color and number of cards, and read
lines of a book opened at a chance page. They
also demonstrated that a person could be telepathically put into the
trance state from a distance.
In
1829, during the time that this latter commission was still
conducting its investigations, a
physician and poet named Justinus Kerner published a book called
Seeress of Prevorst,
in which he described his treatment of a woman using animal
magnetism. The woman proved to be a good subject and easily fell into
trance. In this state, she had visions, premonitions, and clairvoyant
experiences. Identical phenomena were occurring with many other
experimenters as well, showing that there was certainly something
remarkable going on when people were put in this trance state, even
if Mesmer’s initial theories about a magnetic fluid being the cause
were proving to be in error.
Apparently,
with the many in the medical profession all discovering these amazing
phenomena surrounding mesmerism, it would have been difficult for
this commission to deny that there was something to it. But
nonetheless, the commission’s
conclusions caused a great deal of controversy in the scientific
community.
The
powers-that-be would have to come up with a different tactic to
denounce these latest findings and safeguard their secret. It
appeared that one such method had already been found when, soon
after, a large sum of money was put up for offer to anyone who could
demonstrate the reality of clairvoyant power to a committee appointed
for the purpose. Many attempts were made, but all of them ended in
dismal failure. I
will explain in due course why this was,
but for the time being, readers shouldn’t assume that it disproved
their abilities in any way.
When
mesmerism eventually reached America around 1835, it quickly became
popular among the middleclass, mostly within developing spiritualist
circles or as a form of stage or parlor-room entertainment. Lectures
given by a man named Charles Poyen St. Sauveur on animal magnetism
excited the imagination of the country and led to the emergence of
magnetic practitioners of a peculiarly American type. Mesmerists
began wandering the countryside with professional somnambulists
(easily hypnotizable subjects) at their sides, stopping in each town
along the way and giving medical clairvoyant readings. This
all had a huge effect on the spiritualist movement by the turn of the
twentieth century, and although it may have all been a natural
development, it may have just as likely been by purposeful design.
But we’re getting ahead of ourselves…
By
1841, after witnessing several public experiments in mesmerism, Dr.
James Braid came to the realization that mesmerism wasn’t caused by
any magnetic fluid or the direct actions of the mesmerist on the
subject, as Mesmer had believed, since Braid had discovered that a
trance state could be induced in a person by merely having them stare
at an object. In fact, a person could self-induce a trance state this
way. After experimenting further, Braid concluded that the
effects of mesmerism were due to a physiological condition of the
nerves. He coined the term ‘hypnotism’ to replace ‘animal
magnetism’ and ‘mesmerism’, doing away with many of the older
ideas and the methods that they were applied. Braid also emphasized
the role of suggestion both in producing the hypnotic state and in
bringing about the effects associated with it. He recognized the
post-hypnotic responses to these suggestions as well. Eventually
Braid’s view became the dominant one and his terminology became the
accepted nomenclature. Hypnotism began to be widely accepted among
the medical community in France and Germany, and was more slowly
taken up in England.
Other
experimenters were discovering other remarkable aspects of this
induced trance state at this time as well. It was in the 1840s that
the first successful amputation was conducted using hypnosis as an
anesthetic to block the pain. However, this quickly fell out of vogue
in 1847 when ether began to be used instead. Nonetheless, another
amazing aspect of this strange phenomenon had been revealed.
The
secret was slowly becoming recognized…
The
Dawn of the Dead?
In
1848, the earliest recorded case of modern spiritism in the USA
occurred at the home of the Fox family in Hydesville, NY, and
centered around the two Fox sisters, Margaret and Kate. Strange
phenomena in the form of noises and moved objects first began to
occur in the home early in the year, and increased in intensity over
the next several months until the family was no longer able to sleep
at night because of it. But even after moving out of the house, they
soon discovered that the strange noises followed them. It was
nine-year-old Kate who first noticed that the noises would respond to
her own noises and gestures. Further exploration by the family
revealed that the noises seemed to have intelligence behind them,
since they would respond accurately to questions posed to them. News
of this story traveled rapidly throughout the country and across the
ocean to circulate among spiritualist circles in Europe.
Thus
began a period of psychic exploration among a growing number of
mostly amateur experimenters who would hold séances that focused
mainly on producing table-rappings, table-tippings, disembodied
voices, automatic writing, floating objects, apparitions,
materializations, etc. The theories of the day were based on a very
limited understanding of the phenomena that were being witnessed, and
the idea that they were caused by disembodied spirits – and were
therefore evidence of an afterlife – was only natural to assume. In
fact, as time progressed and these phenomena were investigated more
and more with that idea in mind, this assumption appeared to be true
when these ‘spirits’, talking through an entranced medium, began
to give details that would appear to be coming from a recently
deceased friend or relative of someone who was present at the séance.
The
hypnotic trance state, by the way, has always been an important
factor in these channeled communications, and it was often the case
that such a state would arise spontaneously in someone sitting in on
a séance, and although the communications would often be very
tentative at first, with each successive sitting they tended to come
through more and more easily for that person. These people would
become the ‘medium’ through which the spirits communicated, and
they very often took on a markedly different voice, different manner
of speaking, and different personality than when in a normal waking
state. When it was the spirit of some deceased person who was being
called up, the medium would often speak in a similar manner to how
that person was known to, even if the medium had no idea what that
person was like or how they had spoken when alive. This tended to
convince many séance attendees that there was indeed an afterlife
and that they were communicating with real spirits.
And so
it quickly came to be believed that mediums could communicate with
the dead, and this raised the hopes and interests of many people,
particularly those who had lost loved ones and wished to make contact
with them again, which in turn encouraged many charlatans to take
advantage of the situation, devising schemes to find out some
relevant background information on their prospective target and then
appeasing that person’s wishful thinking by feeding this
information back to them as ‘spirit communications’.
Not
every medium was a charlatan, however, and very often these channeled
communications proved remarkable without any cheating. But this isn’t
to say that these were necessarily spirits communicating from the
other side. As in the case of the young man named Victor who Puységur
had reported on in 1784, and in many other cases like it that have
been documented since, a person in a hypnotic trance state often
appeared to be instilled with a personality and abilities that they
didn’t possess in the normal waking state.
Besides
channeling spirits, these mediums very often produced other
remarkable phenomena as well. Aside from the already familiar
table-rappings, automatic writing, levitation of objects,
materializations, etc., they also revealed an ability to read minds
and see what was going on in distant places (clairvoyance). Some
even appeared to be able to predict future events, although there is
little to no certainty that this was really ever the case, as I’ll
try to explain later.
By
about 1853 or so, spiritualism (as it came to be called) spread to
England and Europe. Spiritualist
churches were established, spiritualist alliances were formed, and
spiritualist books and newspapers came into print. A proliferation of
apparently paranormal spiritualistic phenomena began to take place
like never before.
For
the next half-century, hypnosis and psychic phenomena would remain
intricately associated with each other, but somewhere along the way
this would change, at least as far as anyone who wasn’t a skilled
hypnotist understood it. For natural psychics, the hypnotic trance
state wasn’t always necessary, or it would be assumed to just be a
natural mental state for them when they were engaging their psychic
abilities.
Enter
the Masters of Deception
Within
five years, one of the people who would play a very significant role
in creating the modern-day New Age movement – Madame
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, who would eventually found the
Theosophical Society – was just beginning to make a name for
herself in Russia as a spiritualist. She started out as a parlor
magician, and although she often used sleight-of-hand tricks and
hidden props to fool her patrons, paranormal phenomena were known to
spontaneously occur in her presence as well. In 1856, she was
initiated into a form of Freemasonry called Carbonarism, and over the
following years extended her membership to a number of other secret
societies, reaching the highest degrees in some. These are probably
where she gained much of her knowledge and later influence. By 1873,
she arrived in America and quickly became a prominent figure in
spiritualist circles there, gravitating towards the wealthier social
circles.
Blavatsky
was known to go into a self-induced trance state and then begin
channeling spirits. These spirits weren’t of the usual type,
however, and identified themselves as ‘Ascended Masters’ –
advanced beings who claimed that they had evolved beyond the ordinary
physical state and were now intent on seeking out those few
candidates within the human species who were ready to advance to
their level. Blavatsky’s channeled communications were heavily
steeped in metaphysical mumbo-jumbo, much of it barely comprehensible
to the average reader, but nonetheless amazing for its sheer volume
and complexity. It was a mix of various different philosophies and
occult teachings that Blavatsky had picked up throughout her travels,
presented in the form of a cosmology that rewrote the entire history
and evolution of the universe and mankind’s place in it.
I want
to interject here and explain how I believe Blavatsky (and many other
channelers) was able to produce such fantastically complex material
that incorporated so many ideas from such diverse sources without
making any apparent errors of memory or comprehension. The following
comes from The Law of
Psychic Phenomena, by
Thompson Jay Hudson, published in 1899, and it provides an anecdotal
example of the power of hypnosis to generate such material from the
memory, the imagination, or perhaps even telepathically from the
minds of others:
Place
a man of intelligence and cultivation in the hypnotic state, and give
him a premise, say in the form of a statement of a general principle
of philosophy, and no matter what may have been his opinions in his
normal condition, he will unhesitatingly, in obedience to the power
of suggestion, assume the correctness of the proposition; and if
given an opportunity to discuss the question, will proceed to deduce
therefrom the details of a whole system of philosophy. Every
conclusion will be so clearly and logically deducible from the major
premise, and withal so plausible and consistent, that the listener
will almost forget that the premise was assumed. To illustrate:
The
writer once saw Professor Carpenter, of Boston, place a young
gentleman in the hypnotic state at a private gathering in the city of
Washington. The company was composed of highly cultivated ladies and
gentlemen of all shades of religious belief; and the young man
himself - who will be designated as C - was a cultured gentleman,
possessed a decided taste for philosophical studies, and was a
graduate of a leading college. In his normal condition he was liberal
in his views on religious subjects, and, though always unprejudiced
and open to conviction, was a decided unbeliever in modern spiritism.
Knowing his love of the classics and his familiarity with the works
of the Greek philosophers, the professor asked him how he should like
to have a personal interview with Socrates.
“I
should esteem it a great privilege, if Socrates were alive.”
answered C.
“It
is true that Socrates is dead,” replied the professor, “but I can
invoke his spirit and introduce you to him. There he stands now.”
exclaimed the professor, pointing towards a corner of the room.
C
looked in the direction indicated, and at once arose, with a look of
the most reverential awe depicted on his countenance. The professor
went through the ceremonial of a formal presentation, and C, almost
speechless with embarrassment, bowed with the most profound
reverence, and offered the supposed spirit a chair. Upon being
assured by the professor that Socrates was willing and anxious to
answer any question that might be put to him, C at once began a
series of questions, hesitatingly and with evident embarrassment at
first; but, gathering courage as he proceeded, he catechised the
Greek philosopher for over two hours, interpreting the answers to the
professor as he received them. His questions embraced the whole
cosmogony of the universe and a wide range of spiritual philosophy.
They were remarkable for their pertinency, and the answers were no
less remarkable for their clear-cut and sententious character, and
were couched in the most elegant and lofty diction, such as Socrates
himself might be supposed to employ. But the most remarkable of all
was the wonderful system of spiritual philosophy evolved. It was so
clear, so plausible, and so perfectly consistent with itself and the
known laws of Nature that the company sat spell-bound through it all,
each one almost persuaded, for the time being, that he was listening
to a voice from the other world. Indeed, so profound was the
impression that some of them - not spiritists, but members of the
Christian Church - then and there announced their conviction that C
was actually conversing either with the spirit of Socrates or with
some equally high intelligence.
At
subsequent gatherings other pretended spirits were called up, among
them some of the more modern philosophers, and one or two who could
not be dignified with that title. When a modern spirit was invoked,
the whole manner of C changed. He was more at his ease, and the
conversation on both sides assumed a purely nineteenth-century tone.
But the philosophy was the same; there was never a lapse or an
inconsistency. With the introduction of every new spirit there was a
decided change of diction and character and general style of
conversation, and each one was always the same, whenever
reintroduced. If the persons themselves had been present, their
distinctive peculiarities could not have been more marked; but if all
that was said could have been printed in a book verbatim, it would
have formed one of the grandest and most coherent systems of
spiritual philosophy ever conceived by the brain of man, and its only
blemish would have been the frequent change of the style of diction.
It
must not be forgotten that C was not a spiritist, and that the whole
bent of his mind inclined to materialism. He frequently expressed the
most profound astonishment at the replies he received. This was held
to be an evidence that the replies were not evolved from his own
inner consciousness. Indeed, it was strenuously urged by some of the
company present that he must have been talking with an independent
intelligence, else his answers would have coincided with his own
belief while in his normal condition.
Many
instances of such feats are described in the older literature on
hypnosis and mesmerism, so this was by no means an isolated case or a
rare side effect of the hypnotic trance state. It only requires the
application of properly presented suggestions to produce similarly
amazing material from any properly hypnotized person. Blavatsky was a
skilled hypnotist who had already studied many different occult
teachings, and she knew how to put herself into a trance state, so in
all probability she had drawn her material from her own memory and
imagination, prompted by self-suggestion. Thompson J. Hudson, the
author of the book from which the above quote was taken, provides
many other examples of similar hypnotic feats that have been
documented over the years, as well as a very thorough explanation of
the hypnotic trance state from which the interested reader would gain
a great deal more clarity regarding what is being discussed here. But
as
I will attempt to show with my more limited abilities to convince,
there is no reason to think that some ‘independent intelligence’
or spirit was the source of the material in any of these cases – at
least not any beyond
the ordinary living human type.
But
let’s move on, since we still have much more to cover…
At
around the same time that Blavatsky was crossing the Atlantic on a
steamship bound for New York, another development that appears to
have been significant to our main story was unfolding in France…
In the
early 1870s, a Frenchman
named Joseph Alexander Saint-Yves d'Alveydre was in the process of
formulating a political-occult ideology that he called ‘Synarchy’.
This was a period in which many new political ideas were taking hold,
and, like many others of a conservative philosophy, Saint-Yves was
becoming alarmed by the rise of Anarchy, so he developed Synarchy as
a means to counter it. Whereas Anarchists believed that the state
should have no authority over the life and behavior of an individual,
Synarchy took quite the opposite view, where the more control the
state had over the individual, the better. Essentially, Synarchy
advocated government by secret society or, in its own terms, by an
elite of enlightened initiates who would rule from behind the scenes.
It therefore wouldn’t matter which political party held power in a
state or even what political system that state had. In order to
implement this system, Synarchists would first have to take control
of the key state institutions. Saint-Yves identified three key
pillars of society that, once under the control of his elite, would
allow them to rule without the population even being aware of their
existence. These were the political and social institutions, the
economic institutions and the religious institutions. Although
Synarchy could thereby rule in any kind of state, for obvious reasons
it would find itself more at home among totalitarian regimes. It
would therefore attract a greater following from the political right.
Synarchy was totally opposed to ideas of democracy and social
equality, since it proposed that some people, i.e. Synarchists, are
natural leaders. This system appealed to many powerful people and to
many people who wanted power, and it soon came to be permanently
adopted by many secret societies of the day.
Synarchy
as devised by Saint-Yves was not a purely political movement. Having
been active in the esoteric world of 19th
century Europe, and a friend of such key figures as Victor Hugo and
Lord Bulwer-Lytton, he incorporated specific mystical and occult
ideas into his system that originated from these occultists. For
instance, Saint-Yves believed in the existence of spiritually
superior beings that could be contacted telepathically, and his elite
were to be made up of people who were in telepathic communication
with these beings. He himself claimed that he was in touch with these
beings, and that they had given him the principles of Synarchy. Just
as Blavatsky had done, he borrowed his ideas from both eastern and
western occultism, and made his unknown superiors into spiritually
advanced beings that lived in a remote part of Tibet, from where they
guided the development of the human race. He introduced the concept
of ‘Agartha’, a mysterious underworld realm peopled by these
superior beings and hidden somewhere in the mountains of Tibet. Also
like Blavatsky, Saint-Yves’ doctrines included ideas about the
evolution and history of the human race that were later to become
popular among occult and New Age circles. Also central to his
reconstruction of history was that Atlantis had been an advanced,
global civilization. Saint-Yves also promoted the idea of root races
– a succession of dominant races that are each allocated a period
of supremacy, but each destined to be supplanted by the next,
superior race. The current dominant race, according to Saint-Yves,
was the white Aryans. All of these ideas would become incorporated
into subsequent occult systems, mostly through Madam Blavatsky and
her Theosophical Society, where they would be further embellished and
promoted.
I
would like to call attention to a key point here that readers will
probably have missed the full significance of, but which should
become clearer as we progress. These ‘spiritually superior beings’
were depicted by Saint-Yves as being in telepathic communication with
the elite Synarchists, who he said would be specifically chosen for
this group because of this fact. Consider for a moment how this would
have had to play out for someone to discover that they were one of
these elite. Quite simply, they would have had to spontaneously
receive telepathic communications from what appeared to be one of
these superior beings – or at least somebody pretending to be one
of them. And to receive telepathic communications, at least from
someone pretending to be one of these beings, it would probably have
been necessary to first put them into a hypnotic trance so as to
establish a telepathic link with them. From that point on, convincing
them that these superior beings were what they claimed would be
rather easy. Unless the person was aware that they had been
hypnotized and knew that hypnosis could induce a telepathic link with
their hypnotizer, they would be very unlikely to figure out what was
really going on.
As was
already pointed out earlier, Saint-Yves’ ideologies had been
quickly adopted by some very powerful secret societies (e.g. the
Freemasons, Rosicrucians, Illuminati, etc.) whose ranks were filled
with people in positions of power, so he was very likely already
involved with at least one of these secret societies himself for his
ideologies to have come to their attention, and these secret
societies were undoubtedly already quite familiar with the full range
of hypnotic phenomena since many practicing hypnotists of the time
were themselves involved with these secret societies, where their
knowledge and skills would certainly have been put to use.
My
research traces the origins of the Rosicrucians back to 1407, when it
was a sect of alchemists and hermetic philosophers, while Freemasonry
wasn’t founded until 1717 (by Rosicrucians), and Weishaupt (who was
a Freemason) didn’t found the Order of the Illuminati until 1776.
Blavatsky’s Theosophical Society had still not been established at
this point and wouldn’t be for several years (in 1875). It is in
Blavatsky’s teachings that we find the first mention of anything
matching the ‘superior intelligences’ described by Saint-Yves
(which she referred to as the ‘Mahatmas’), and so it stands to
reason that Saint-Yves’ ideologies were adopted at least by
Blavatsky, but probably by these other secret societies as well,
since they’re all connected by way of their founders. At some
point, Rosicrucianism also adopted ideas very similar to Saint-Yves
(including these ‘superior intelligences’, which they called
‘Ascended Masters’), but when this was – before or after
Saint-Yves formulated his doctrines – I’m not certain of.
Rosicrucianism has its roots in alchemy and Hermeticism and has
always involved itself in occult practices, including those of a
psychic nature, so there’s little doubt that they would have
experimented with hypnosis and knew of the various phenomena
associated with it. Certain branches of Freemasonry are also known to
study and practice occultism, often providing courses or seminars to
its members, and hypnosis would undoubtedly be explored extensively
in all three of these secret societies. As for Illuminism, there is
very little information available on them at all, but since they’re
an offshoot of Rosicrucianism and most or all of their members are
likely drawn from the upper ranks of these other secret societies,
it’s almost certain that they would have adopted some of
Saint-Yves’ ideas as well.
What
we see taking place here is the establishment of Saint-Yves’
doctrines within very prominent secret societies – all essentially
linked together – that promoted to its membership the idea of
superior intelligences that were guiding the affairs of mankind from
the shadows by communicating with chosen individuals telepathically.
In turn, these secret societies, which practiced hypnotic techniques
on their members (often during initiation), were drawing in people
who were in positions of power who would be effective in fulfilling
their agendas, to which these members were sworn to dedicate
themselves above all else.
Stay
tuned for Part Two…
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