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Medicine Medicine As the healing art, medicine is as old as thinking man. Before the latent fires of mind were lighted in the third root-race, disease and death were unknown. However, with the physicalization of protoplastic humanity, and the separation of the sexes, the unnatural linking with the animals in the third and fourth root-races disordered the harmonious relations between man and nature. In addition, self-conscious man's continued evolution into matter, with the involution of his spiritual nature, brought about forms of disorder, disease, and physical death. Then, beings from higher spheres descended, and dynasties of divine kings and spiritual guides taught men, leading them to the invention of all the arts and sciences, including the medical use of plants (cf SD 2:364). Medicine was originally a divine science, providing for the well-being of the spiritual, mental, psychic, astral, and physical man. Archaic medicine included a profound knowledge of genuine astrology, of true alchemy, of occult physiology, of the finer forces vibrating as sound, color, form, thought, and feeling, and whatever related man to his home universe of natural law and order. This was the basis of the natural "magic" which tradition has linked with the medical art. This knowledge was dual in its power to work for life or death, for good or evil ends. Its full comprehension required not only a trained intellect, but the intuitive understanding of a pure spiritual nature. Nevertheless, the Atlanteans acquired enough knowledge of the use of dangerous powers that they became -- albeit with numerous and noteworthy exceptions -- a nation of sorcerers. Then, the white magicians established the Mystery schools in which to safeguard the sacred teachings from evildoers and to protect humanity from their influence. Thus, the deeper truths of the healing art have ever since been entrusted only to pledged disciples and initiates. Such fragments of it as have been rediscovered by intuitive physicians from time to time have usually been in keeping with the general cultural level of their civilization. The exceptions have been men who have frequently been too far ahead of their times to be understood. Such a man was Paracelsus in medieval Europe, persecuted for heretical teachings such as the psychoelectric and magnetic play of sidereal forces which linked man with the stars -- the spiritus vitae in man came from the spiritus mundi. Of the archaic history of medicine -- as of the race -- little is to be found. However, echoes of the primitive wisdom have survived, and every country having a literature of its ancient periods has some account of the healing art. The Hindu sacred scriptures -- the oldest literature extant -- have treatises upon medicine and surgery, showing a profound and intimate knowledge of the subject. This high standard was not maintained when the Vedic writings became misunderstood and mutilated by later commentators. The exclusive Brahmins' assumption of the right to all knowledge also prevented original thought and research. What writings are available today are of little practical value without the lost key. Even our typically matter-of-fact interpretation of legendary and classical beliefs and customs, and of archaeological findings, overlooks that what is known of ancient medical practice is largely exoteric, symbolic of a deeper teaching than we possess. Records of ancient medicine in Babylonia, Egypt, Greece, etc., tell of the temples being used as hospitals, with priest-physicians supported by the state giving every care to the sick who came, both rich and poor. In addition to material means of treatment -- many of which we have rediscovered -- these devotees of the gods of healing used special incense, prayers, the "temple sleep," invocations, music, astrology, etc., which we regard as harmless superstition of an earlier day. However, such conditions, intelligently adapted to each case, in making a pure, serene, uplifting atmosphere around the sick person, would invoke the influences of wholeness within and without him. By putting the inner man in tune with his body, his disordered nature-forces manifesting as disease would tend to flow freely in the currents of health. Natural magic is as practical as the unknown alchemy which transmutes our digested daily bread into molecules of our living body. There is a mystic science attached to the caduceus, the classical emblem of medicine. To the priest-physicians in the temples, this symbol was sacred not only to the god of wisdom and healing, but stood for profound cosmic truths, knowledge of which was held in common by all initiates. It symbolized the tree of life and being. Cosmically this symbol stood for the concealed root or origin of universal duality which manifests as positive and negative, good and evil, subjective and objective, light and darkness, male and female, health and sickness, life and death. (See also: Medicine, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)
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links to archives related to Alternative Health Dictionary B Popular archives related to Alternative Health Ayurveda, Chakra, Aura, Kundalini, Kundalini Yoga, Meditation, Spiritual Growth, Medical Astrology, Essential Oils, Body Mind and Soul, Yoga, Mudras, Yoga Positions, Feng Shui, Acupuncture, Acupressure, Spiritual Healing, Relaxation, Physical Health, Vibrational Healing, Healing Music, Color Healing, Emotional Health, Health and Healing, Health Foods, Health Man, Fruitarian Diet, Happiness, Inner Child, Flower Essences for Healing, Highly Sensitive Person Alternative Health Dictionary Below are the archives for the 4269 dictionary entries related to alternative health. The great advantage with this dictionary is that each word is linking to an archive with 1. explanations of the word from several sources<br> 2. articles related to the word, where the phrase is used in its natural context.<br> Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary Alternative Health Dictionary - A, Alternative Health Dictionary - B Alternative Health Dictionary - C, Alternative Health Dictionary - D Alternative Health Dictionary - E, Alternative Health Dictionary - F Alternative Health Dictionary - G, Alternative Health Dictionary - H Alternative Health Dictionary - I, Alternative Health Dictionary - J Alternative Health Dictionary - K, Alternative Health Dictionary - L Alternative Health Dictionary - M, Alternative Health Dictionary - N Alternative Health Dictionary - O. Alternative Health Dictionary - P Alternative Health Dictionary - Q, Alternative Health Dictionary - R Alternative Health Dictionary - S, Alternative Health Dictionary - T Alternative Health Dictionary - U, Alternative Health Dictionary - V Alternative Health Dictionary - W, Alternative Health Dictionary - X Alternative Health Dictionary - Y, Alternative Health Dictionary - Z Archives related to Alternative Health Health Care, Womens Health, Mental Health, Health and Beauty, Health and Fitness, Sexual Health, Health Food, Woman Health, Man Health, Alternative Medicine, Health Medicine, Health Problems, Holistic Health, Holistic Health Care, Holistic Health Therapy, Holistic Medicine, Holistic Therapies, Natural Health, Spiritual Health, Mental Health, Spirituality and Health
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links to archives related to Alternative Health Dictionary D Popular archives related to Alternative Health Ayurveda, Chakra, Aura, Kundalini, Kundalini Yoga, Meditation, Spiritual Growth, Medical Astrology, Essential Oils, Body Mind and Soul, Yoga, Mudras, Yoga Positions, Feng Shui, Acupuncture, Acupressure, Spiritual Healing, Relaxation, Physical Health, Vibrational Healing, Healing Music, Color Healing, Emotional Health, Health and Healing, Health Foods, Health Man, Fruitarian Diet, Happiness, Inner Child, Flower Essences for Healing, Highly Sensitive Person Alternative Health Dictionary Below are the archives for the 4269 dictionary entries related to alternative health. The great advantage with this dictionary is that each word is linking to an archive with 1. explanations of the word from several sources<br> 2. articles related to the word, where the phrase is used in its natural context.<br> Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary Alternative Health Dictionary - A, Alternative Health Dictionary - B Alternative Health Dictionary - C, Alternative Health Dictionary - D Alternative Health Dictionary - E, Alternative Health Dictionary - F Alternative Health Dictionary - G, Alternative Health Dictionary - H Alternative Health Dictionary - I, Alternative Health Dictionary - J Alternative Health Dictionary - K, Alternative Health Dictionary - L Alternative Health Dictionary - M, Alternative Health Dictionary - N Alternative Health Dictionary - O. Alternative Health Dictionary - P Alternative Health Dictionary - Q, Alternative Health Dictionary - R Alternative Health Dictionary - S, Alternative Health Dictionary - T Alternative Health Dictionary - U, Alternative Health Dictionary - V Alternative Health Dictionary - W, Alternative Health Dictionary - X Alternative Health Dictionary - Y, Alternative Health Dictionary - Z Archives related to Alternative Health Health Care, Womens Health, Mental Health, Health and Beauty, Health and Fitness, Sexual Health, Health Food, Woman Health, Man Health, Alternative Medicine, Health Medicine, Health Problems, Holistic Health, Holistic Health Care, Holistic Health Therapy, Holistic Medicine, Holistic Therapies, Natural Health, Spiritual Health, Mental Health, Spirituality and Health
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links to archives related to Alternative Health Dictionary C Popular archives related to Alternative Health Ayurveda, Chakra, Aura, Kundalini, Kundalini Yoga, Meditation, Spiritual Growth, Medical Astrology, Essential Oils, Body Mind and Soul, Yoga, Mudras, Yoga Positions, Feng Shui, Acupuncture, Acupressure, Spiritual Healing, Relaxation, Physical Health, Vibrational Healing, Healing Music, Color Healing, Emotional Health, Health and Healing, Health Foods, Health Man, Fruitarian Diet, Happiness, Inner Child, Flower Essences for Healing, Highly Sensitive Person Alternative Health Dictionary Below are the archives for the 4269 dictionary entries related to alternative health. The great advantage with this dictionary is that each word is linking to an archive with 1. explanations of the word from several sources<br> 2. articles related to the word, where the phrase is used in its natural context.<br> Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary Alternative Health Dictionary - A, Alternative Health Dictionary - B Alternative Health Dictionary - C, Alternative Health Dictionary - D Alternative Health Dictionary - E, Alternative Health Dictionary - F Alternative Health Dictionary - G, Alternative Health Dictionary - H Alternative Health Dictionary - I, Alternative Health Dictionary - J Alternative Health Dictionary - K, Alternative Health Dictionary - L Alternative Health Dictionary - M, Alternative Health Dictionary - N Alternative Health Dictionary - O. Alternative Health Dictionary - P Alternative Health Dictionary - Q, Alternative Health Dictionary - R Alternative Health Dictionary - S, Alternative Health Dictionary - T Alternative Health Dictionary - U, Alternative Health Dictionary - V Alternative Health Dictionary - W, Alternative Health Dictionary - X Alternative Health Dictionary - Y, Alternative Health Dictionary - Z Archives related to Alternative Health Health Care, Womens Health, Mental Health, Health and Beauty, Health and Fitness, Sexual Health, Health Food, Woman Health, Man Health, Alternative Medicine, Health Medicine, Health Problems, Holistic Health, Holistic Health Care, Holistic Health Therapy, Holistic Medicine, Holistic Therapies, Natural Health, Spiritual Health, Mental Health, Spirituality and Health
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Sulfur, Sulphur Sulfur, Sulphur In European medieval alchemy, a cosmic element of which the mineral sulfur was regarded as a manifestation or correspondence. In classical Latin, also used for lightning, and the Greek for sulfur is theion (divine); it was regarded as having a purifying, and protective power. The alchemical division of nature and man into spirit, body, and soul shows sulfur as denoting spirit and the element fire. Sulfur and mercury are used as a means to physical longevity (IU 2:220-1). It is used as a purificatory agent in modern medicine, and popular usage has sanctioned its efficacy in the insoluble form of brimstone. (See also: Sulfur, Sulphur, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body mind and Soul)
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Theosophy Dictionary on Aesculapius, Asklepios Aesculapius Asklepios (Greek) God of healing and medicine, son of Apollo by Coronis, educated by the centaur Chiron. When Aesculapius brought the dead back to life, Zeus at the behest of Hades killed him with a thunderbolt. He is often identified with Mercury, the divine healer or cosmic serpent, represented by the caduceus of Mercury; and in some of his functions he is the same as Ptah in Egypt, creative intellect or wisdom, and as Apollo, Baal, Adonis, and Hercules (SD 2:208; 1:353). Also called the serpent and the savior: "Esculapius, Serapis, Pluto, Knoum, and Kneph, are all deities with the attributes of the serpent. Says Dupuis, 'They are all healers, givers of health, spiritual and physical, and of enlightenment' " (SD 2:26). Thus Aesculapius is mystically the divine healer or healing power, the ray of divine wisdom emanating from the spiritual sun in man. (See also: Aesculapius, Asklepios, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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Shaman Shaman [from Tungusian saman; Russian shaman an idolator] Originally magician or sorcerer of the wandering tribes of Tartary, Mongolia, or Siberia (either man or woman); follower of the primeval religions, such as the Bhon religion of Tibet. Today applied to sorcerers, medicine men, etc., among traditional peoples, or what is based on their practices, anywhere in the world. There are two classes of Shamans, however; "The Shamans of Siberia are all ignorant and illiterate. Those of Tartary and Thibet -- few in number -- are mostly learned men in their own way, and will not allow themselves to fall under the control of spirits of any kind. The former are mediums in the full sense of the word; the latter, 'magicians. . . .' "But, while the illiterate Shaman is a victim, and during his crisis sometimes sees the persons present, under the shape of various animals, and often makes them share his hallucination, his brother Shaman, learned in the mysteries of the priestly colleges of Thibet, expels the elementary creature . . ." (IU 2:625-6). (See also: Shaman, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)
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PARACELSUS PARACELSUS The famous 16th Century physician and alchemist who taught the maxim, "As above, so below." Born in Einsiedeln, Switzerland, 1493, the full glory of his name was Philippus Aureolus Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim. He taught (before the word was invented) that man is "hologram" of the universe -- the macrocosm dwells within the microcosm. His medicine was based on the observation that health requires the proper balance of sulphur, salt and mercury (male, neutral, female). His understanding was that alchemy was not chemistry so much as an inner human process, yet his pharmacology is still amazing and effective and he is credited with having discovered nitrogen (azote). The secret of the lapis philosophorum was said to have been conferred on him by Solomon of Trismosin. Disease, according to Paracelsus was caused by the separation of man's three elements (sulphur, salt and mercury) from Universe. Smaragdine, yet Venusian Falling As yods but green indicating Undulating flesh-sperm Pushing forth in microposopic splendor vectored in the Four under the Three Substances under the Two Hypostatic Principles under the One Reality And lifting upward in vaster arc from Kingdom to Crown From vacua no more to Gods no less Thus silk primordial Divine foreteller. (See also: PARACELSUS, Magick, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul, )
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PARABLES OF THE AYATOLLAH HAKIMA PARABLES OF THE AYATOLLAH HAKIMA The following are presented without comment: A certain Bedouin went into the desert without water. When thirst overcame him he prayed for the miracle of rain and it did not come. Finally, remembering that water always moves downward, he fell to digging feverishly until at last he reached a well. As he bent over gratefully to drink, a few drops of rain began to fall upon his head. The angel Gabriel, hearing the prayers of a mortal, sought to manifest and award his supplicant the joy of beholding seraphic splendor in the flesh. But no matter what he did, the mortal still saw the angel only in his mind's eye. Finally, Gabriel puckered up his lips and, in imitation of the evening breeze, riffled the pages of a bible that lay on the mortal's table and the holy book fell open at a lovely picture of the angel. This proves that everything in the universe is material. Once there were two philosophers. The pessimist preached that all human life is miserable and on his door hung the word, "Repent!" The optimist taught that human life should be devoted to pleasure. On his wall he hung the word "Rejoice!" The pessimist inherited a good deal of money and lived to a ripe old age. The optimist died at an early age from a painful disease. Two souls appeared at St. Peter's Gate. One was the innocent soul of a 3 year old child who had died in an accident. The other was the soul of a 99 year old man who died of tertiary syphilis. Why did St. Peter let in the old man first? An old native came to the missionary doctor with a baffling fever. The doctor was unable to diagnose the case and none of his medicines worked. Finally, the old man went to the tribal witch doctor for advice. The witch doctor looked at him for a long time and asked, "Is there anything that you can eat?" And the old man shook his head and said, "I can keep nothing down." "Can you keep pawa berries down?" the witch doctor asked. "Perhaps I could keep pawa berries down," the old man admitted. "Then eat nothing but pawa berries for the next two weeks," suggested the witch doctor. At the end of two weeks, the old man was still sick. So he got up, turned around thirteen times, made the sign of the cross at the sun, spat on the ground and then sat back down again. In that instant, the fever broke and the old man was well. (See also: PARABLES OF THE AYATOLLAH HAKIMA, Magick, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul, )
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Centaurs Centaurs (Greek) Greek mythology preserves legends of monsters, half man, half horse, located in wild spots in Greece. "See, for comparison, the account of creation by Berosus (Alexander Polyhistor) and the hideous beings born from the two-fold principle (Earth and Water) in the Abyss of primordial creation: Neras (Naras) (Centaurs, men with the limbs of horses and human bodies), and Kimnaras (men with the heads of horses) created by Brahma in the commencement of the Kalpa" (SD 2:65). The centaurs were also said to be the offspring of Ixion, king of the Lapith people, and a cloud shaped like Hera, sent by Zeus to test his wickedness; or as being offsprings of Ixion's son and mares. They were considered a rude, wild race living in the mountains of Thessaly. From another standpoint, however, Greek mythology represents the centaurs as being wiser than men: thus Chiron, son of Kronos and Philyra, most famous of the Centaurs, is a teacher not only of the heroes, but instructed Apollo and Diana in hunting, medicine, music, and the art of prophecy. Later, centaurs were shown as forming part of the following of Dionysus. (See also: Centaurs, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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Naga Naga (Sanskrit) Serpent; the symbol of immortality and wisdom, of renewed births, of secret knowledge and, when the tail is held in the mouth, of eternity. The nagas or serpents of wisdom are, therefore, full initiates: "the first Nagas -- beings wiser than Serpents -- are the 'Sons of Will and Yoga,' born before the complete separation of the sexes, 'matured in the man-bearing eggs produced by the power (Kriyasakti) of the holy sages' of the early Third Race" (SD 2:181). These first nagas were the original human adepts, who were later symbolized by the terms serpents and dragons. "These 'originals' -- called to this day in China 'the Dragons of Wisdom' -- were the first disciples of the Dhyanis, who were their instructors; in short, the primitive adepts of the Third Race, and later, of the Fourth and Fifth Races. The name became universal, and no sane man before the Christian era would ever have confounded the man and the symbol" (SD 2:210). The early Mexican word nagual, now meaning sorcerer and medicine man, is akin in its meaning, for "Some of the descendants of the primitive Nagas, the Serpents of Wisdom, peopled America, when its continent arose during the palmy days of the great Atlantis, (America being the Patala or Antipodes of Jambu-Dwipa, not of Bharata-Varsha)" (SD 2:182). The Hebrew equivalent is nahash also meaning magic, enchantment, thus showing the same connection of ideas. Naga may be equated with Ananta-sesha, the seven-headed endless serpent of Vishnu, "the great dragon eternity biting with its active head its passive tail, from the emanations of which spring worlds, beings and things. . . . The Nag awakes. He heaves a heavy breath and the latter is sent like an electric shock all along the wire encircling Space" (ML 73). (See also: Naga, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)
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Zoolatry Zoolatry [from Greek zoon animal + latreia worship] Animal worship; animal symbols are found in all religions, as in the religions of ancient Egypt and in Christianity, as the dove and the lamb. The Maharajas of the four quarters of space are sometimes represented as elephants; most of the zodiacal signs are animals, as the name implies. These symbols should not be regarded as arbitrarily chosen on account of a fancied resemblance: the animals are actually emblems, if not in all cases manifestations, of the powers in question. It is the same with plants and stones: they are not emblems only but actually enshrine certain occult qualities. If plants may have medicinal virtues, and stones possess magical powers, why may not animals have the same? The phrase animal worship implies that the veneration has often been transferred from the power to its symbol or emblem, as in the case of idolatry. Yet no polished or cultivated nation of antiquity, no more so than the Christians today, worshiped these animal emblems as otherwise than figurations, or also at times as manifestations, of cosmic powers or beings -- end-products of divine cosmic originants. Man himself falls into the same category, not only as being an offspring of the gods, but as an end-product of a divine hierarchy manifesting in greater or less degree the spiritual-divine attributes, functions, faculties, and powers of his sublime ancestors or parents. (See also: Zoolatry, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body mind and Soul)
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Craft Witchcraft Dictionary on WICCA WICCA: 1) The contemporary pagan religeon predating Christianity. Expresses reverence for Nature, viewing Diety in all natural things; uses magick; worship is of God (Lord) and Goddess (Lady). A follower of Wicca, is a Wiccan. 2) Meaning: wise ones, and, or to turn, bend & shape. Wicca is often termed the 'new name' for Witches, and there seems to be some argument as to its proper use. 3) "A religion of experience rather than dogma." 4) from an old Anglo-Saxon word Wiccae, a masculine noun meaning "wizard"; the feminine form of the word is Wicce. 4) the British Traditional family of Witchcraft religions derived from Gerald Gardner's tradition. 5) any of the modern eclectic Witchcraft traditions obviously related to the Witchcraft described by Gerald Gardner in his published books. 6) a Word which has come to mean Witch or Magick worker. 7) the Shamans or "Medicine Men" of the Celtic Tribe or the "Witches" of the village. This was the Herb Woman or Cunning Man of the English community of medieval times. NOTE: Anglo-Saxon, wicca is masculine & wicce, feminine; and means a person who Divines information. Old English, wicce & Saxon, wych; means 'to turn, bend, and shape'. Indo-European root word of 'wic' & 'weik'; also means 'to bend or shape'. Germanic 'wit', means knowledge, or to know. Including 'witch' as one of its derivatives. (See also: WICCA, Witchcraft, Wicca, Paganism, Pagan Dictionary)
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ESSENES ESSENES Christ -- myth or man -- was only theoretically attached to the Essenes. It's an assumption added on much after the fact. The "Messiah" of Xtianity was a formidable figure who had to be made palatable by throwing in a generous dollop of humanistic Essenianism. So of course there would be similarities between the Essenes and the Xtians. The Xtians (as they have done with every rival for human attention ever since) took over the Essene trappings -- under linens, cap and bootstrap! If Xtianity could swallow an elephant, it would. A thousand years from now, if the world still stood, Elizabeth Clare Prophet would be hailed as the last Xtian saint because she raked in all the clutter of 20th Century occult cults, including the Anti-Christ, under one final, eschatological banner of Jesus. It's interesting to me that the early Xtians also tried to swallow up their arch-rival, Gnosticism, along with Essenianism (the Essenes and Gnostics held many ideas in common), but while it tried to hold onto the Essenianism, it had to spit out the Gnostic medicine. In fact, the more I think about it, the more hope I hold out for the Keristans, whom the Christians probably will never appropriate, because they can't. Its founder, an old, white-bearded geezer with young, hippie-like disciples, claims to have been told by a "voice" in his head at age 11 to form a new religion. In the second place, their mythos -- as written in comic book bible -- has Christ selling his (tennis) shoes to a cheap, plastic, children's doll, who is the true Goddess. What's more, the doll is brown. (See also: ESSENES, Magick, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul, )
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Naga Naga (Sanskrit). Literally "Serpent". The name in the Indian Pantheon of the Serpent or Dragon Spirits, and of the inhabitants of Patala, hell. But as Patala means the antipodes, and was the name given to America by the ancients, who knew and visited that continent before Europe had ever heard of it, the term is probably akin to the Mexican Nagals the (now) sorcerers and medicine men. The Nagas are the Burmese Nats, serpent-gods, or "dragon demons". In Esotericism, however, and as already stated, this is a nick-name for the "wise men" or adepts in China and Tibet, the "Dragons." are regarded as the titulary deities of the world, and of various spots on the earth, and the word is explained as meaning adepts, yogis, and narjols. The term has simply reference to their great knowledge and wisdom. This is also proven in the ancient Sutras and Buddha’s biographies. The Naga is ever a wise man, endowed with extraordinary magic powers, in South and Central America as in India, in Chaldea as also in ancient Egypt. In China the "worship" of the Nagas was widespread, and it has become still more pronounced since Nagarjuna (the "great Naga", the "great adept" literally), the fourteenth Buddhist patriarch, visited China. The "Nagas" are regarded by the Celestials as "the tutelary Spirits or gods of the five regions or the four points of the compass and the centre, as the guardians of the five lakes and four oceans" (Eitel). This, traced to its origin and translated esoterically, means that the five continents and their five root-races had always been under the guardianship of "terrestrial deities", i.e., Wise Adepts. The tradition that Nagas washed Gautama Buddha at his birth, protected him and guarded the relics of his body when dead, points again to the Nagas being only wise men, Arhats, and no monsters or Dragons. This is also corroborated by the innumerable stories of the conversion of Nagas to Buddhism. The Naga of a lake in a forest near Rajagriha and many other "Dragons" were thus converted by Buddha to the good Law. (See also: Naga, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )
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