Source: The Gift of Fear: Survival Signals That Protect Us from Violence
“You can see, therefore, that as a life story mine does not matter much. As a means, however, of proving certain facts which I know to be essential to the future happiness and progress of humanity—the fact of the Masters, the unfolding future for which the world war (just ended) is but a preparatory stage, and the possibility of telepathic and direct spiritual contacts and knowledge—what I say may prove to be of service. Many isolated mystics, disciples and aspiring men and women down the ages have known all these things. The time has now come when the masses of men everywhere must know them too.”
The Introduction
The Unfinished Autobiography (1951)
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Alice A. Bailey 109
esoteric, theosophist, writer 1880–1949Related quotes

Source: Tertium Organum (1912; 1922), Ch. I
Context: We know that with the very first awakening of knowledge, man is confronted with two obvious facts:
The existence of the world in which he lives; and the existence of psychic life in himself.
Neither of these can he prove or disprove, but they are facts: they constitute reality for him.
It is possible to meditate upon the mutual correlation of these two facts. It is possible to try to reduce them to one; that is, to regard the psychic or inner world as a part, reflection, or function of the world, or the world as a part, reflection, or function of that inner world. But such a procedure constitutes a departure from facts, and all such considerations of the world and of the self, to the ordinary non-philosophical mind, will not have the character of obviousness. On the contrary the sole obvious fact remains the antithesis of I and Not-I — our inner psychic life and the outer world.

Journal entry (8 July 1916), p. 74e
1910s, Notebooks 1914-1916

Creation seminars (2003-2005), Lies in the textbooks

"The Kingdom of Man" https://archive.org/details/kingdomofman289cham (1938)

Source: Initiation, The Perfecting of Man (1923)
Patrick J. Geary, The Myth of Nations: The Medieval Origins of Europe, Princeton University Press, 2003