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Gottfried
Wilhelm von Leibniz
Philosopher, Metaphysician, Scientist & Mathematician
Michael Robbins © 2003
July
1, 1646, NS, Leipzig, Germany, 6:15 PM, LMT. (Source: Ebertin’s book on
Pluto. Various other times are given elsewhere, thus, the data is conflicting.
Also, Leibniz’s father.) Died, November 14, 1716, Hanover, Germany.


(Ascendant, Sagittarius and Neptune also in Sagittarius; MC in Libra;
Sun conjunct Jupiter in Cancer; Moon square Mars conjunct Saturn in Taurus;
Uranus in Scorpio)
We are forced to begin our inquiry with some degree of ambiguity. Reinhold
Ebertin gives us a time of birth at 6:15 PM, local time, in Leipzig. Gottfried
Wilhelm von Leibniz’s father Johann Friedrich Leibniz entered the following
notes in his family journal: “On Sunday 21 June [NS: 1 July] 1646,
my son Gottfried Wilhelm is born into the world after six in the evening,
¼ to seven, Aquarius rising.” While we have no reason to dispute the time
offered by the father (i.e., 6:45 PM), that time certainly does not yield
Aquarius as the Ascendant, but rather the 20th degree of Sagittarius
rather than the 14th (Ebertin’s presumably rectified time).
Not until nearly 9:18 PM (about three hours after the Ebertin time, and
some two hours and a half after the Johann Friedrich’s diary entry) would
Aquarius reach the Ascendant. The course of wisdom in this regard would
be to proceed with Ebertin’s rectified time, while paying some attention
to the implications of the later time given by Johann Friedrich Leibniz.
It is far more likely that Johann Friedrich would make a mistake regarding
his son’s Ascendant than his time of birth. We, therefore, seem to have
a Sagittarius Ascendant and a MC in Libra—in both cases. The esoteric
significances will hold despite the discrepancy in proposed time, which,
perhaps, can be satisfactorily resolved.
Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz was one of the great geniuses of the modern
era. Wisdom Magazine estimated his I.Q. in the middle to high 180s. He
was a genuine polymath (to a degree by necessity), extraordinarily capable
in a diversity of areas of enquiry and application. He contributed significantly
to the fields of metaphysics, theology, philosophy, mathematics, logic,
philology, physics, geology, political theory, law, diplomacy and history.
He is known especially for the discovery of the differential and integral
calculus independently of (and some say prior to) a similar discovery
by Sir Isaac Newton, and for his profound metaphysical theories, including
the theory of the Monad. He upheld a consistently demanding career as
a civil servant while, in his precious spare time, making an abundance
of noteworthy contributions to the advancement of thought in many fields.
No merely speculative thinker, he entered avidly into scientific research
and practical invention.. While he had been offered an academic position
in recognition of his considerable abilities, he refused it, perhaps because
of the limitations it would have imposed upon his freedom of thought.
That thought was extraordinary in its depth and scope, and contributed
significantly to the illumination of his era.
The Ray of Leibniz’s Soul: Given the tremendous depth, diversity
and abstraction of Leibniz’s contribution to human thought, there can
be little doubt that his soul ray is the third ray of “Abstract Intelligence”,
“Active Intelligence”, or “Creative Intelligence”. Leibniz was one of
the great kings of thought produced by the historical period known as
the “Age of Reason” or the “Enlightenment”. The philosophical mode of
enquiry was predominantly Rationalism—the rigorous use of reason
in the quest for truth. Descartes and Spinoza were also products of this
movement. Rationalism was a third ray method rather than the empiricism
of the fifth ray. Above all Leibniz was a philosopher—a metaphysician
of the first rank. His thought process is at once comprehensive, holistic,
subtle, intricate, ingenious and scrupulously rational (though, naturally,
philosophers make it their business to find flaws in the arguments of
other philosophers, and so Leibniz has had his fair share of detractors,
most notably Voltaire who subjected him, albeit posthumously, to devastating
satire for his dictum that God had created “the best of all possible worlds”).
The Tibetan Teacher has the following to say about the third ray metaphysician:
“This is the ray of the abstract thinker, of the philosopher and the metaphysician,
of the man who delights in the higher mathematics but who, unless modified
by some practical ray, would hardly be troubled to keep his accounts accurately.
His imaginative faculty will be highly developed, i.e., he can by the
power of his imagination grasp the essence of a truth; his idealism will
often be strong; he is a dreamer and a theorist, and from his wide views
and great caution he sees every side of a question equally clearly….In
all walks of life he is full of ideas, but is too impractical to carry
them out.” (EP I 204-205)
Some
of this description was eminently true of Leibniz, except that he was
also a very practical man, a resourceful civil servant who was forced
to become “jack of all trades” in order stay in the good graces (and employ)
of his noble patrons. His delight was certainly in philosophy and the
higher mathematics, but his many duties required that he participate in
more mundane activities which could not have been much to his liking.
Of his approach to his work, he give the following revealing account—showing
his third ray in conflict with the requirements of his various more mundane
duties:
“It cannot be said how extraordinarily distracted I am. I dig things
out of the archives, I inspect old papers, I search for unknown manuscripts.
From these I try to throw light on the history of Brunswick. I send and
receive a great number of letters. I truly have so many new results
in mathematics, so many philosophical ideas, so many other scholarly observations
which I would not want to lose, that I often hesitate, wavering between
tasks, and feel almost like that line from Ovid: Inopem me copia fecit
.... Nevertheless, all these labors of mine, if you exclude the historical,
are almost clandestine, for you know that at the Court something far different
is sought and expected.” Letter to Placcius, 5 September 1695 (Dutens
VI.1, 59-60)
Let us look for astrological conduits for Leibniz’s very dominating third
ray. Of the three signs/constellations which transmit this ray, only Cancer
is tenanted, though Libra occupies the MC. In Cancer we find the Sun conjuncted,
within six degrees to Jupiter (the planet of philosophy and broadened
perspective). The Cancerian energy playing through Jupiter adds to the
breadth of any inquiry, and tends towards the consideration of entirety.
Chiron, a planetoid of ‘astute guidance’ is conjuncted to the Sun.
As Leibniz was an advanced soul (though Mme. Blavatsky, correctly or incorrectly,
insists that he was not an initiate), it may be justifiable to consider
the esoteric ruler of the Sun Sign which is Neptune, placed in Sagittarius,
a sign over which Jupiter rules. This Sagittarian Neptune no doubt contributed
to the generation of his transcendent metaphysical doctrines. Neptune,
itself, (with its trident) can be reasonably related to the third ray.
H.P.B. calls it the “god of reasoning”—though, in this case, it is probably
“pure reason” which is meant.
The
orthodox ruler of Cancer is the Moon, which is placed in Aquarius. Aquarius
is a sign associated with universality, eclecticism and a dispersion of
interests and involvements. Aquarius is also associated with networks
and ‘webs’ of relationships. From this is might be adduced that there
is a third ray quality associated with Aquarius and this can be argued
reasonably. Aquarius is the third sign on the clockwise wheel,
and the Tibetan does relate it closely to the third ray (EA 138).
In Leibniz case, his proposed Sagittarian Ascendant contributes powerfully
to the expansion of his abstract mind. In an advanced individual, the
third ray expresses through wide views and a broadened perspective. This
is also true of the manner in which Sagittarius works for the advanced
type—especially for an individual in whom the third ray is already extremely
pronounced. Although Sagittarius does not, constellationally, express
the third ray, there would, nevertheless, be a strong mutual reinforcement
between these two energies.
Interestingly,
in Leibniz’s case, the esoteric ruler of the Ascendant, the Earth, will
be seen to be of considerable importance. The Earth (at its present stage
of development) must be considered a third ray planet—the ray of its personality
(as it is not yet a fully sacred planet). The only way to
place the Earth in a sign of the zodiac is by considering its heliocentric
position, which happens to be Capricorn, since the Earth will always be
seen, heliocentrically, in the sign opposite the Sun. Capricorn is a most
practical earth sign, and transmits the first, third and seventh ray.
In the case of disciples (and Leibniz was certainly a disciple—though
he would not have used that terminology), Capricorn is the main transmitter
of the third ray—not Cancer (his Sun Sign). We can begin to see another
reason for the practicality and ‘earthiness’ of this great abstract thinker—his
principal ruling planet is in an earth sign, and this planet is trine
to earthy Saturn (another third ray planet) placed in the earth sign,
Taurus, and conjunct Mars in Taurus as well as Venus in Taurus (by “translation
of light”).
As well, the two other ‘Co-Ascendants’—the East Point and the Anti-Vertex
are both placed in Capricorn, making third ray Saturn (their ruler)
of importance as a subtone in the general harmony of the chart.
In pursuing conduits for the third ray, we cannot fail to mention the
position of Mercury (whose personality ray is arguably the third), placed
in the third sign of the zodiac, Gemini, at the cusp of the seventh
house, generically associated with Libra, whose ray is the third.
If one were to think of a planet which most described Leibniz’s principal
quality, that planet would have to be Mercury (or, perhaps, Jupiter in
combination with Mercury). Leibniz wrote voluminously, though by far the
greater part of his writings have not been published or translated. We
can see the easy flow of thoughts and words through the trine of Mercury
to the spontaneous Moon, and the trine of both of them to the Libran MC.
(This grand trine holds whether the MC is in the fifteenth degree of Libra
or the twenty-third—actually tightening somewhat, overall, with the later
time suggested by Leibniz’s father). It cannot be overlooked that the
grand trine, as a figure, is based upon the number three (thus
numerically resonant to the third ray), and that air signs (as usually
considered) are related to the mind, the third principle
counting from below. While at first we may have thought that the conduits
for the third ray in the proposed chart for Leibniz were not many, further
examination reveals a plentitude of possibilities for third ray access.
The Ray of the Monad: Although it is not possible for us to determine
with accuracy the “unknown quantity” in Leibniz’s ray constitution, he
seems to have been so supremely identified with the Principle of Intelligence,
that the third ray seems to most felicitous choice for the primary or
major ray of the monad, though subrays will qualify the life demonstration.
Because, Leibniz, of all philosophers, thought most and wrote most on
the Monad, determining its ray seems of vital importance.
The contrast of Leibniz’s metaphysics with that of Spinoza (discussed
in the analysis of Spinoza’s chart) gives an important hint. Spinoza’s
(whose monadic ray may very reasonably be construed to be the second)
believed in only one universal Substance—God—with which all entities
were identical. He was thus, with latter day occultists, a true philosophical
pantheist. Leibniz, however is a ‘substantial pluralist’, believing in
an infinitude of monads, ever distinct, “created” by God (Who is the highest
of all possible Monads)—a God Who is other than the monads He creates.
Leibniz, therefore, is not an emanationist, whereas Spinoza (though he
did not use this term) might have no other choice than to embrace all
things as God, and emanatorily derived from God, the One Substance.
With Leibniz, the emphasis is upon an infinitude of distinct, immortal
substances, rather than upon the One Substance. In this emphasis, Leibniz
signals the essential presence of the third ray of Active Intelligence
at the monadic level, the quality of which is discrimination with
its inevitable result—distinction and individualism.
The
Ray of the Personality: This is somewhat difficult to assess. Leibniz
was a character so many-sided, that a number of ray qualities seem to
be demonstrating through his personality.
The Case for the Seventh Ray: Leibniz was, by worldly profession,
a professor of law, a counselor to royalty, a librarian, archivist, and
a civil servant. He was also, at length, a gentleman of means. Given his
flights of abstraction (rarefied in the extreme), he was surprisingly
at home in the physical world, and had constantly to attend to mundane
duties, a number of which included genealogical research (to reinforce
the claims of his royal employers to further privileges). Genealogy, we
know, is related to the seventh ray, as are all manner of duties associated
with the civil service. Leibniz was also associated for a short time with
an alchemical society, and alchemy is a seventh ray discipline. Further,
he was circumspect, diplomatic and polite both in his manner and his writings,
preferring to conciliate rather than criticize and attack. His prose
is polished and his tone, ever in good form and respectful. To stay in
the good graces of his patrons, he would need all the appropriateness
and discretion characteristic of the seventh ray. Unlike Voltaire, who
fell out of favor with royal sponsors, Leibniz maintained his positions
and the respect of his noble employers. It is said of him that he was
an indefatigable worker. This corresponds well with one of the major virtues
of the seventh ray—especially on the personality level.
Astrologically the seventh ray has a number of conduits. The Sun Sign
Cancer distributes the seventh ray, as does Jupiter (exalted in Cancer
and conjunct the Sun). Capricorn, the sign which heliocentrically holds
the Earth, (the esoteric ruler of the proposed Ascendant, Sagittarius),
is the major constellational conduit of the seventh ray during this World
Period. The principal seventh ray planet, Uranus, is the esoteric ruler
of the Libran MC. These facts, notwithstanding, the personality must convincingly
demonstrate the presence of the seventh ray before we can judge it to
be so.
The
Case Against the Seventh Ray: Leibniz however, was not a man of regular
habits. He was either sedentary at his writing desk for days at a time,
or “on the road”, energetically traveling on various commissions ordered
by his sponsors. A comment by a nobleman of the period, also gives us
pause if we intend to assign the well-groomed seventh ray to the personality.
“It is rare to find learned men who are clean, do not stink and have a
sense of humour.”[attributed variously to Charles Louis de Secondat Montesquieu
and to the Duchess of Orléans]
Here we may wonder if the third ray (which like Dr. Samuel Johnson, is
“no friend to clean linen”) was more in effect than the seventh. If the
ray of the physical-etheric body was the third, the influence of the seventh
ray upon the physical plane would be modified.
The
Case for the Second Ray: In Leibniz’s chart we find a Sun/Jupiter
conjunction (which though somewhat wide, is effective). Both of these
are second ray ‘planets’. Jupiter is also the orthodox ruler of the Ascendant.
Chiron (the second ray Mentor) is also conjunct the Sun. The prominent,
angular Mercury of the proposed chart is in a second ray sign, Gemini.
Leibniz was a great student, a collector of information. Not only was
he eclectic (a quality of the third ray) but he found something to appreciate
in a wide variety of views on a given subject, always finding a degree
of value and usefulness in apparently contradictory approaches. He sought
to unify the field of knowledge, and the word “reconcile” was a
consistent part of his thought and speech. The principal reconciliation
which he sought was between Protestantism and Catholicism, and to a lesser
extent, between the different divisions within Protestantism. This urge
could speak for the presence of the fourth ray as well as the second.
His ability to be tactful and diplomatic (avoiding argument and controversy
where possible) correlate with the second ray, and to a degree, with the
seventh. His many relationships (via correspondence) would be well-supported
by this major ray of relationship (as well as by his prominent air signs).
Some quotations by Leibniz qualified by the second ray:
“I read books not to criticize them but to profit from them. The
result is that I find good everywhere, though not equally.” Letter to
Morell, 10/20 December 1696 (A I.13, 398)
“Provided
that something of importance is achieved, I am indifferent whether it
is done in Germany or France, for I seek the good of mankind. I am neither
a phil-Hellene nor a philo-Roman but a phil-anthropos.” Letter to Gilles
des Billettes, 11/21 October 1697 (G VII 456/L 475)
The
following quotation from the Catholic Encyclopedia demonstrates
Leibniz’s tolerant attitude compared to that of Descartes, suggesting
the importance of the second and fourth rays in his approach:
“His sympathies were broad, his convictions were eclectic, and his aim
was not so much that of the synthetic thinker who would found a new system
of philosophy, as that of a philosophic diplomatist who would reconcile
all existing systems by demonstrating their essential harmony. Consequently,
his starting-point is very different from that of Descartes. Descartes
believed that his first duty was to doubt all the conclusions of all his
predecessors; Leibniz was of the opinion that his duty was to show how
near all his predecessors had come to the truth. Descartes was convinced,
or at least assumed the conviction, that all the philosophers who went
before him were in error, because they appeared to be involved in inextricable
contradictions- Leibniz was equally well convinced that all the great
systems agree fundamentally, and that their unanimity on essentials is
a fair indication that they are in the right. Leibniz therefore resolved,
not to isolate himself from the philosophical, scientific, and literary
efforts of his predecessors and contemporaries, but, on the contrary,
to utilize everything that the human mind had up to his time achieved,
to discover agreement where discord and contradiction seemed to reign,
and thus to establish a permanent peace among contending schools.”
The Case Against the Second Ray: While he could be sedentary (as
both those upon the second and third ray can be) his activity level
and indefatigability seem uncharacteristic of the second ray on the personality
level. As well, there is something about the description of his appearance,
which does not suggest the second ray, but, of course, various astrological
factors have to be taken into consideration, among them the Capricornian
sub-tone of his two alternative Ascendants, as well as his dominating
third ray.
“Leibniz was a man of medium height with a stoop, broad-shouldered but
bandy-legged, as capable of thinking for several days sitting in the same
chair as of travelling the roads of Europe summer and winter. He was an
indefatigable worker, a universal letter writer (he had more than 600
correspondents), a patriot and cosmopolitan, a great scientist, and one
of the most powerful spirits of Western civilisation.”
The
Case for the Fourth Ray: This ray is unquestionably present in Leibniz—at
least astrologically and, if nowhere else in the ray chart, at least as
a subray of the mental body. In the Catholic Encyclopedia we read:
“As a philosopher Leibniz exhibited that many-sidedness which characterized
his mental activity in general. His sympathies were broad, his convictions
were eclectic, and his aim was not so much that of the synthetic thinker
who would found a new system of philosophy, as that of a philosophic diplomatist
who would reconcile all existing systems by demonstrating their essential
harmony.”
Pivotal to his philosophical system was the doctrine of “pre-existing
harmony”, by means of which he sought to explain the manner in which God
correlated the perceptions and action of all monads. The factor of reconciliation
was essential to his thinking.
Astrologically, the three signs which transmit the fourth ray are all
powerfully represented in his chart. Sagittarius rises; Taurus holds three
planets (Saturn, Mars and Venus—the orthodox ruler of Taurus), and Scorpio
(the most powerful of the fourth ray signs) holds Uranus, the esoteric
ruler of the Libran MC. As well the fourth ray Moon is the orthodox ruler
of his Cancer Sun Sign, and his prominent Mercury is a fourth ray planet
in trine with the fourth ray Moon. Leibniz also wrote poetry—in Latin!
Perhaps it has yet to be translated.
The design of the chart can be seen as a kind of “see-saw” pattern, the
dynamics of which would express the oscillation of the fourth ray. But
from another perspective, the chart form would appear as divided in three
parts, with the majority of planets lying to the west, and Uranus and
Neptune, relatively together, and the Moon—all governing their own areas.
This, in the terminology of Marc Edmund Jones, has been called the “splay
pattern”, and indicates a “creative disjunction” more characteristic of
the third ray. If the heliocentric Earth is included, however,
(as esoterically it must be), then the design is more the “seesaw” than
the “splay”.
The
Case Against the Fourth Ray: While the fourth ray is unquestionably
present, it can be doubted that the fourth ray is the personality ray.
A fourth ray personality would be too inconsistent and full of fluctuation
to carry on the type of life Leibniz chose to lead and, indeed, was required
to lead. We do not find him to be an especially colorful character, nor
dramatic. His life seems devoid of those conflicts (sometimes followed
by harmonization) which plague the life of the usual fourth ray personality
types. The following quotation on the nature of music may caution us from
assigning too quickly the fourth ray as the personality ray:
“The pleasure we obtain from music comes from counting, but counting
unconsciously. Music is nothing but unconscious arithmetic.” Quoted in
O Sacks, The Man who Mistook his Wife for a Hat.
This
is hardly the statement of a man who is moved in his soul by the beauty
of music, though it is difficult to judge accurately from one statement.
We will for the moment suspend judgment concerning the personality ray.
If two rays were to be chosen, the seventh and second would be the most
likely candidates (in the opinion of the author). While Leibniz’s many
scientific interests and pursuits suggest the presence of the fifth ray,
the note of specialization which it so often sounds when qualifying the
personality was not characteristic of his eclectic approach. It is far
more likely to see an individual on the seventh ray handling a diversity
of contrasting duties on the physical plane than it would be to see the
fifth ray individual doing so. The fifth ray insists upon patient focus
and seeks to limit the field for the sake of clarity. Leibniz did not
have that privilege—nor, perhaps, the predilection.
The
Choice of the Ray of the Lower Mind: Leibniz was a many-sided, eclectic
individual, and his thought life was rich and diverse. At his stage of
evolution, which one can argue was close to the third degree, the influence
of the soul ray (the third) and of the higher or abstract mind (colored
by the same ray—as all the triadal vehicles would necessarily be) would
fuse and blend with the concrete mind, coloring it accordingly. Nevertheless,
the at least partial presence of the fifth “Ray of Concrete Knowledge”
must be argued—perhaps as the predominant ray of the lower mind, but at
least as the subray.
Leibniz was surely a scientist as well as a metaphysician, and his thought
was precise, analytical and practically inventive. He did love to “count”.
He was at home with all manner of calculation. Just as we cannot imagine
Sir Isaac Newton (one of the discoverer’s of the calculus and the formulator
of an approach to the science of physics which held undisputed sway for
over two centuries) without the fifth ray in his ray formula, so the same
should be true for Leibniz—equally a mathematician of the first rank and
the co-discoverer of the calculus. With the decline of interest in metaphysics,
Leibniz is today remembered even more for his contributions to science
than to philosophy and metaphysics (his deeper callings), but his scientific
work was significant. It is perhaps not realized that Leibniz contributed
much to the science of geology, and proposed that the Earth, at some stage
of its development, must necessarily have been in a molten state. According
to the Encyclopedia Britannica,
“he worked on hydraulic presses, windmills, lamps, submarines, clocks,
and a wide variety of mechanical devices; he devised a means of perfecting
carriages and experimented with phosphorus. He also developed a water
pump run by windmills, which ameliorated the exploitation of the mines
of the Harz Mountains, and he worked in these mines as an engineer frequently
from 1680 to 1685.”
These are all clearly pursuits necessitating a prominent fifth ray.
The following is a notable fifth ray statement, surprising coming from
one who was so much conditioned by the third ray:
“I prefer, a Leeuwenhoek who tells me what he sees to a Cartesian who
tells me what he thinks.”
Leibniz was named a foreign member by the French Academy of Sciences in
1700, and in that same year, with the help of royal patronage, he engineered
the founding of the German Academy of Sciences (of which he became the
first president).
Astrologically,
two of the three signs transmitting the fifth ray are powerful—Sagittarius,
his Ascendant, and Aquarius, the sign in which his Moon is placed. As
well, the North Node is placed in fifth ray Leo and the South, of course,
in fifth ray Aquarius. Also, we find Uranus, opposing Saturn, Mars and
fifth ray Venus. Uranus, Saturn and Mars can, all of them, be reasonably
associated with the fifth ray—Saturn as ruler of the concrete mind, Mars
as the ruler of the five senses and the material sciences, and Uranus
as the ruler of orthodox science. Thus, this grouping of four planets
offer conduits for the fifth ray. This opposition takes places between
the fifth and eleventh houses, which are resonant to Leo and Aquarius—two
signs distributing the fifth ray.
Leibniz’s lower mind, however, seems to carry a certain fourth ray quality
as well, for he was fluid and diplomatic in his writings, and rather more
interested in the commonalties between philosophies than in their differences.
A mind colored, at least in part by the fourth ray, would be an excellent
instrument of reconciliation both in philosophy and theology. One area
to which the reconciling fourth ray was applied was to create a bridge
between mind and matter, spanning the gulf created by Cartesian philosophy.
The prominence of Mercury (a planet resonant, justifiably, with the fourth,
third and fifth rays) would give great diversity to his lower mind, making
it possible for him to use, skillfully, any of these rays in his thought
process. A study of his writings demonstrates, however, very little use
of the first ray in the mind. For the most part his writings do
not transmit the quality of simple assertion, as we might expect to find
when the first ray colors the lower mind; rather, his writings are logically
reasoned and eminently reasonable, polished, polite, fluid. One remembers
that the Tibetan has said that a combination of the third and fifth rays
makes one a “master of the pen”. This was true in the case of Leibniz.
The “bridging” quality is, however, noticeably present, and hence the
probable presence of the bridging, reconciling fourth ray of harmony.
Harmony was such a dominating thought in his philosophical system; without
recourse to the doctrine of “pre-existent harmony” Leibniz could not have
created his Monadology.
The
Ray of the Emotional Nature: Leibniz was one of those who had conquered
his passions. Emotion did not interfere with the clarity of thought, and
so the second ray may well have been conditioning the astral nature. His
sympathies were broad. For a pronouncedly third ray type, he was not critical.
Sagittarius, however, is the primary sixth ray sign, and its orthodox
ruler, Jupiter, is placed in the water sign, Cancer, ruled by sixth ray
Neptune. Further, Neptune is found is sixth ray Sagittarius—a very idealistic
position. So Leibniz certainly had access to the sixth ray if he chose.
His level of activity suggests a certain drivenness characteristic of
that ray, and on more than one occasion he was called upon to write patriotic
tracts for political purposes. One feels that he could do almost anything
by design. He had no great sympathy for Louis XIV, and on one occasion
wrote a “violent” pamphlet against that king and his policies. One suspects,
however, a kind of ‘violence-by-design’—simply because his duties required
a violent pamphlet. Such a passionate approach was uncharacteristic of
his usual writings.
The
Ray of the Physical Nature: Judging from his activity level, his constant
travels, his diverse and incessant occupations and preoccupations, his
ability to endure long hours of labor without fatigue—even the fact that
he often slept in his chair and resumed writing as soon as he awoke—all
these point to the presence of the third ray etheric-physical body. The
third ray conduits have already been described and may be applied to the
manner in which that ray could reach the physical nature—astrologically.
Certain
Astrological Features of Leibniz’s Chart
1.
Leibniz Sun Sign is Cancer. Exoterically, we find him working for
royal households and having many duties concerned with the upholding of
the status and image of the household. Cancer is a sign of protection,
and he was certainly was under the protectorship of his royal patrons.
From a pragmatic perspective, we find three planets, and asteroid and
Chiron in the seventh house, the house of the law. Leibniz received a
doctor of law degree in 1666, and was utilized as a diplomat and political
advisor. He thought and wrote extensively in the fields of law and politics.
Cancer, especially with a powerful third ray emphasis, represents, in
this case, a deep interest in history. Exoterically, Leibniz’s duties
required creating and managing libraries (collecting many old books),
supervising archives, researching the records of the past to justify the
political and property claims of his patrons. Esoterically, he was fascinated
with the history of the Earth (geologically considered) and with the racial,
ethnic, social and political development of the human race. Still more
deeply, he sought to understand history from a sacred perspective, never
losing sight of the interdependence of all factors within a whole. His
universal history was never written but his original perspectives served
as a stimulus to other thinkers. In relation to this historical approach
we find the mantram “The Whole is Seen as One” significant. Leibniz’s
eclecticism (under a highly stimulated Mercury in Gemini) was remarkable,
but he never lost sight of the whole context in which all disparate factors
had their proper place and function. We find Cancer promoting universality
of mind.
The influence of the sign Cancer is also noteworthy when considering one
of his foremost doctrines—the existence of an infinitude of individual
“substances” known as Monads. These monads exist insulated from
one another, each in its own world and incapable of interactivity with
other monads. The notable insularity of the monad is a Cancerian
concept.
“Monads have no windows, through which anything could enter or leave.
Accidents cannot be separated from substances or go about outside of them,
as the sensible species of the Scholastics used to do. Thus neither substance
nor accident can enter a monad from without.” Monadology, sec.
7.
This is a remarkable doctrine with unforeseen metaphysical consequences.
2.
Jupiter is conjunct the Sun and also in Cancer. That Jupiter is
exalted in this position (and is, as well, the exoteric ruler of the Sagittarian
Ascendant) further promotes his desire to grasp and understand wholes.
We should note that Jupiter is placed in the Scorpio decanate of Cancer,
and so this Scorpionic coloring (conferring added psychological intensity
and a willingness to go deeply into matters, as well as registering physically
in his physiognomy) is a significant qualitative strand to his character.
The sign placement and decanate placement within that sign of a ruling
planet is usually influential as regards both character and appearance.
Jupiter, in advanced persons, is a philosophical planet representing
a philosophical, speculative sign, Sagittarius. Philosophy is, literally,
the “love of wisdom”. We have a strong second ray conjunction here, contributing
to Leibniz desire for a completed, rounded-out perspective. This conjunction
certainly contributes to the second ray component of his nature.
Jupiter is also a planet of protection, placed in a protective sign. This
position is one of those factors which contributed to Leibniz’s conviction
of the benevolence of God and of the infallibility of Divine Providence.
In his writings, he strikes a high tone of morality and piety—the gifts
of Jupiter. Moreover, he is renowned (and ridiculed) for his philosophical
optimism, also a Jupiterian quality.
3.
Practical Saturn, working through a sign of materiality, Taurus,
is closely sextile Jupiter, conferring a much needed strand of earthy
realism to his hopeful, Jupiterian nature. Leibniz, beset by unavoidable
mundane duties, would have considered himself a realist about the world,
despite his essentially sanguine view. Depending upon which chart is used,
Saturn is operating from the fifth or perhaps late fourth house. Saturn
in Taurus works for the acquisition (Taurus) of knowledge (Taurus), and
in the fifth house related to one’s inner talents, forces the individual
to use in a practical manner all the accumulations of the causal body.
4.
Jupiter, the orthodoxly ruling planet of the Sagittarius Ascendant,
is conjunct the collection of stars knows as “Castor”. Castor is linked
to writers, and speaks of a creativity which flows easily and relatively
devoid of struggle. Leibniz had a remarkably fluid pen, and was able to
write with ease on all manner of subjects. Jupiter and Castor together
promoted these abilities, and contributed to the sheer volume (Jupiter)
of his output.
5.
Chiron is closely conjunct Sun. Although this planet has only recently
been discovered, its influence has certainly been present in our planetary
system. Chiron is closely connected to the Sagittarian Rising Sign, just
as is Jupiter. Mythologically, Chiron represents many things, but mentorship
and advisorship are significant in Leibniz’s case. With all tact
and diplomacy, his function was to be a voice of influence in the lives
and affairs of his patrons, and to steer them into channels of intelligent
and useful action—for the sake of their household and in relation to the
welfare of the larger socio-political context. Of this, Leibniz was eminently
capable, and he practiced it constantly.
Chiron is closely connected with guidance and a sense of direction. It
also represents the individual who is notably self-directing. Leibniz
had two agendas—the agenda of necessity (required by his position as civil
servant) and the agenda of illumination. His was one of the most brilliant
minds of Europe, and he certainly knew what he wanted to accomplish in
his spare time.
6.
The Sun is conjunct both Canopus and Sirius (interestingly, as
in the case of the Dalai Lama—but the major ray is different). Leibniz
lived during the “Age of Reason” as it prepared the way for what has been
known as the “Enlightenment”. Many regard him as the foremost thinker
of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth century. The influence of
these two luminous stars (the most visually luminous from the perspective
of Earth) certainly contributed to the enlightening effect of his thought.
7.
The Sagittarian Ascendant (whether in the Aries decanate or early
into the Leo decanate) spurred Leibniz on in his persistent search for
understanding and a vision of reality. Three planets in Taurus (the sign
of the “Greatest Light”) also assisted. Under the Sagittarian Ascendant,
Leibniz was on a great quest for truth. This quest took him into
extraordinarily diverse areas of inquiry (augmented by Mercury in Gemini),
but, above all, it led him into the realm of metaphysics and theology.
The essence of his philosophy is based upon sight—the major Sagittarian
theme. Perception and apperception (for Leibniz, apperception is self-perception)
hold the key to the nature of the primary substance—the monad. All the
monad can really do is perceive or apperceive, sharpening its registration
of reality until it sees clearly exactly what it is and what place it
holds in the God-created universe.
In the Monadology, the influences of Sagittarius and Cancer are
readily seen. The monad is insular (Cancer) and sheltered from (Cancer)
the external impact of all other monads. Within the monad’s individual
world, its one action is perception/apperception (Sagittarius) by means
of which the totality of Creation is registered as a “representation”
of ever-increasing accuracy. Leibniz also believed that he could demonstrate
the ordering of all nature towards a final goal or cause. The energy of
the sign Sagittarius is prominent in this thought.
8.
Pallas Athene rising, in both the earlier and later chart, speaks
to the resourcefulness and strategy which were constantly required of
him.
9.
Mercury in Gemini at the seventh house cusp, trine the Moon and
MC is for Leibniz a profoundly important placement. Leibniz was an inveterate
letter-writer. His correspondence was truly voluminous and his correspondents
numbered over 600. One can only imagine the situation had he had access
to today’s computer technology. His correspondence was his way of staying
in touch with the best minds in Europe. With some correspondents he carried
on a lengthy dialogue, looking deeply into the metaphysical (and mathematical)
questions which concerned him most.. Several of these extended exchanges
are books in themselves, and admirably reveal the subtlety, finesse and
scope of his reasoning.
Like so many third ray individuals, Leibniz was most alive on the plane
of mind and the physical plane. It would seem that the life of the emotions
required less attention. (For this reason, third and fifth ray types more
easily pass the second initiation with its emphasis upon emotional control.)
Something of the considerable energy he invested in the process of meaningful
correspondence can be seen by the sextile and semi-sextile configuration
between Mercury and Jupiter, and the midpoint of the Saturn/Mars conjunction.
Corresponding was a kind of compulsive duty—both an enjoyment (Jupiter)
and a burden (Mars/Saturn). He met the world as an intelligent, communicative
mind, and the field of energy which he most influenced was the mental
field.
10.
The asteroid Vesta in also in Gemini in the seventh house, and
speaks to the intensity of his commitment to the process of exchanging
thought. Although for much of his life physically isolated in Hanover,
through his relentless correspondence (Mars semi-sextile Mercury), he
became an intellectual presence throughout Europe.
11.
Uranus is opposed Mars/Venus, involving Saturn by translation of
light. The opposition of transformative Uranus to two planets which so
often express as the relation between the sexes may indicate the transmutation
of sexual energy into creative mentality in the search for light. Both
Mars and Uranus are associated with the sacral center, and Venus (when
in relation to Taurus) with sex. Saturn, of course, is a restraining and
disciplining energy. Venus in Taurus (the orthodox ruler of the Libran
MC) represents the quest for light. In this case, it appears that Venus
is the master of Mars, which is also subdued by is conjunction with Saturn.
Mars in Taurus represents a considerable amount of instinctual power,
placed (because of is position between Venus and Saturn) at the disposal
of the higher creative process. Saturn represents the throat center in
disciples; Venus is the ruler of Taurus which is always associated with
the throat; for more advanced disciples, the seventh ray (distributed
by Uranus) rules the throat center. One can see in this configuration,
the transfer of sacral energies to the throat center, thus releasing a
great deal of energy for personal creativity of the kind indicated by
the fifth house. Such creativity need not always be artistic in the usual
sense.
At the age of fifty, Leibniz proposed marriage to a woman, who said she
needed time to contemplate her decision. While she was contemplating,
he thought better on the idea, and was, apparently, never bothered by
the matrimonial urge again. It is said, however, that Leibniz had the
highest respect for women and, especially, for their mental abilities.
A Uranus/Mars opposition can be difficult to handle, as can an opposition
of Uranus to Saturn or Venus. As stated, this opposition has much to do
with the transmutation of energy from the sacral center (and in general
from sub-diaphragmatic areas) to the throat. It would also give a high
level tension to the life, and incline towards abruptness within
the field of personal relations represented orthodoxly by Mars and Venus.
Probably these tendencies were moderated by the diplomatic Leibniz, and
the effect of this opposition was used to intensify his labors.
12.
We find transformational Uranus square to the Moon in Aquarius.
Really, there is a kind of T-Square with the Moon on the short leg and
the opposition between Uranus and the three planets—Saturn, Mars and Venus,
representing the long arm of the T-Square. The Moon in Aquarius in the
second house reveals the diversity of pursuits at which Leibniz had to
labor to bring sufficient resources. He had to use all his ingenuity (Uranus)
and simple hard labor (Saturn/Mars) as well as charm, and presumably,
a well-spoken manner (so evident in his letters).
13.
The Moon is the “prison of the soul”. In this case it contributed
to a diffusion of energies which may have prevented the consolidation
of his gains, making it necessary for others to gather up many threads
of his life and present them favorably to the world.
The Moon, however, is also a point of transformation, and if we consider
the planet which it veils, it is certainly scientific, innovative Uranus.
Leibniz was always forced to use the ‘materials and hand’ to advance his
ends. This position contributes to his resourcefulness. Uranus, transposed
to this house of wisdom, light and prana (the second house), contributed
to the ability to transform all materials into usefulness. Reading the
chart in this way, we have a trine between Moon-as-Uranus, Mercury and
the MC which is esoterically ruled by natal Uranus. The second house is
the “occult treasury” where the contents of the causal body are represented,
and Uranus is the planet of genius (square to its own natal position,
if it is substituted for the Moon). If his personality did have strong
elements of the seventh ray, this second house position would be one of
the important places of application. He surely earned his living using
the planet Uranus—a genius in a mundane setting, having to do all manner
of things which geniuses usually do not do. We can also think of this
position as indicating one who comes forth with a new form of enlightenment,
to which his novel metaphysical theories attest. Leibniz’s Monadology
is to this day strikingly original and fresh.
14.
Neptune is in the twelfth house opposed to Pluto. Though diligently
rational in his approach to metaphysical thought, one cannot help but
suspect the presence of deep almost mystical intuitions underlying the
tightly reasoned metaphysical systems which Leibniz proposed. Neptune
in Sagittarius is the visionary mystic, the transcendentalist, seeking
a vision of sublime heights beyond the earthly sphere. The twelfth house
is a house of psychism and sensitivity. The position of Neptune here promotes
the functioning of the intuition and promotes the essential idealism
and pan-psychism of Leibniz philosophy .
The dramatic interplay between faith and reason which exercised so many
of his contemporaries, was vividly alive in his thought process. Mercury
(in relation to the other air signs) represents his rationality, offered
voluminously to the world. Any sincere reader of his work will, however,
quickly encounter the depth of faith, hope and optimism by which he was
animated. Although the opposition between Mercury in Gemini and Neptune
in Sagittarius is too wide to be judged effective under normal circumstances,
it is an important polarity in the dynamics of his chart. Neptune is easily
pulled into the opposition because of its wide conjunction with the earlier
of the Sagittarian Ascendants.
Once Leibniz had a most impressive dream—a “philosophical dream”. It will
be offered below, and the reader will see how the great Sagittarian quest
for transcendental truth (Neptune) was foundational to his psychological
dynamics.
15.
Lion, Isis and Morya are among the hypothesized, yet undiscovered
planets. Astrologers, as well as some mathematicians and astronomers believe
they are ‘there’, but no unquestionably reliable orbits have yet been
determined, because no true sightings have been achieved. However, those
who study their effects in charts, judge them to be relatively well-located
and effective even with circular rather than elliptical orbital elements.
The extremely remote planet Lion (with a period of approximately 1600
years) is conjunct with Leibniz’s Sun in Cancer within a little more than
a degree. In principle, aspects with these undiscovered or unseen planets
must be quite close (though in practice it may not always be so). In any
case, 1º22’ is close enough. Lion (according to the astrologer Niklas
Nihlen) represents all that distinguishes. It is closely associated
with civilization, culture and refinement. Leibniz (it would seem) is
at work within the Department of Civilization, under the Mahachohan. Further,
it has much to do with learning, libraries, books, history and education.
Leibniz was hired as a librarian and archivist and he was constantly surrounded
by books (another hint for the prominence of the second ray energy).
The undiscovered planet Isis (there is also an asteroid called Isis) is
even more closely conjunct the Sun. Nihlen writes of Isis as follows:
“X-, New, Freshness, Pioneering, Trail-blazing, Aspiration, Unveiling,
Seeing through the veils, Incandescent light, Reality, Restlessness,…”
We can see Leibniz, ever driven by divine discontent, blazing trails in
the field of thought, unveiling that which obscures the truth.
The planet Morya is closely conjunct Leibniz’s all important Mercury in
Gemini. Morya is a planet of power, emphasizing essence, being, purpose,
and will. As a metaphysician Leibniz sought for the fundamental substance,
essential being—in short, the monad. His thought was also powerful, impressive,
a force with which to reckon.
16. The “Uranian” (or
Trans-Neptunian) planets Kronos, Admetus, Hades, Cupido, Zeus, Transpluto
are also prominent—some of them in the chart for the earlier time and
some for the later.
Kronos, the planet of eminence, superiority, prestige, and “high places”
is within a few degrees of the MC is both charts, and speaks of the influence
with royalty, nobility and those positioned authoritatively played in
Leibniz’s life.
Admetus, which represents rotary resistance and repetitive tasks, would
only be effective in the later chart. Certainly, there was much in Leibniz’s
career which called for repetitive actions—those which inhibited his sense
of arriving at his own self-selected goals.
Hades is quite close to his Mercury, and would involve him with old books,
antiques, and, in general, promote a respect for antiquity.
Cupido (a planet of union, amity, empathy, identification and reconciliation)
would be exactly conjunct his Part of Fortune in the earlier chart. This
position fits well with his desire to unite Catholicism and Protestantism,
and, in general, to be a unitive thinker and an agent of reconciliation
in the world of thought.
Transpluto would closely conjoin the Ascendant of the earlier chart, and
Zeus the Ascendant of the later. Transpluto has to do with the sudden
release of transformative energy and Zeus with great control and with
mechanism. Both would contribute to the high tension under which he undoubtedly
worked, and Zeus to his experiments with various kinds of machinery.
Certain
Philosophical Doctrines
and their Ray and Astrological Correlations
Let
us review a few of the principal thoughts which characterized Leibniz’s
approach to philosophical thought, seeking to determine the ray and astrological
constituents which contributed to the formulation of this thought.
1.
The Doctrine of the Monads: Leibniz believed in an infinitude
of essential, simple substances called monads. Monads, each characterized
by a greater or lesser degrees of perception (relatively developed monads,
for instance, human monads, possessing apperception or self-perception),
are harmoniously related by the will of God, are indivisible and devoid
of extension. Substance (or that which stands beneath—‘sub-stance’) is
defined in terms of action. To be is to act. The action of the monad is
not to act upon an external world, but to represent or reflect the entirety
of the world (the infinite aggregation of other monads) with ever-increasing
degrees of clarity and accuracy.
Leibniz’s basic ontological thesis, appearing in a letter to de Volder,
is as follows:
“considering matters accurately, it must be said that there is nothing
in things except simple substances, and, in them, nothing but perception
and appetite. Moreover, matter and motion are not so much substances or
things as they are the phenomena of percipient beings, the reality of
which is located in the harmony of each percipient with itself (with respect
to different times) and with other percipients.”
Each state of a created monad is a causal consequence of its preceding
state, and each individual substance (or monad) is the cause of its own
(internal) states. External or inter-substantial causality is impossible;
intra-substantial causality governs the monad.
According to the Oxford Companion two principle theses lie at the
heart of Leibniz’s philosophy:
“(1) the thesis that each created monad perceives every other monad
with varying levels of distinctness; (2) the thesis that God so programmed
the monads at creation that, although none causally interacts with any
other, each has the perceptions we would expect it to have, were they
to interact, and each has the perceptions we would expect it to have,
were there extended material objects that are perceived. The first is
the thesis of universal expression; the second, the thesis of the pre-established
harmony”.
Astro-rayologically, we can see the importance of the sign Sagittarius
in this doctrine. All true beings (“actual existents” or monads), are
principally “percipients”—perceivers. Their principal function is sight
and appetite. The two mantrams of Sagittarius apply here. The first mantram
emphasizes sight: “I see the goal. I reach the goal. Then I see
another”. The second mantram emphasizes appetite: “Let food be
sought”. “Food” here symbolizes that which fulfills any desire.
The following excerpt from Monadologie emphasizes the importance
of perception and perspective in relation to the dynamics of monads:
“so through the infinite multitude of simple substances, it is as if there
were so many different universes, which nevertheless are only perspectives
on a single universe, according to the different point of view of each
monad.” (sec. 147)
The third ray is also powerfully emphasized, as reality is defined both
in terms of perception/cognition and action—the two major qualities of
the third ray.
The doctrine of intra-substantial causality rather than inter-substantial
causality is, as stated, promoted by the insular energy of Cancer.
2.
The Doctrine of Pre-Existent Harmony: “The soul follows
its own laws, and the body has its laws. They are fitted to each other
in virtue of the pre-established harmony among all substances, since they
are all representations of one and the same universe.” (Monadologie, thesis
lxxviii)
All activity of the monad is immanent activity (occurring intra-substantially,
within the monad itself). The essential action of substance is
“representation” (universal perception at greater and lesser degrees of
clarity and accuracy). Each monad is causally independent of every other
monad, and represents the universe of monads independently of the influence
of other monads. But if each monad is its own world, and proceeds
with its activity as if within its own world, some (divinely) masterful
correlation of monadic process would be needed if a monad is to faithfully
(rather than chaotically) represent that which is occurring in or with
respect to the other monads which it perceives. If this correlation does
not occur, each monad will remain forever deluded concerning the true
activities of the universe and the other members of the universe. For
in a way, the monad is forever in its own world, ‘blind’ to the actual
presence of other monads and incapable of registering the impacts of other
monads. What then, will faithfully reveal the condition of those other
monads if not the intervention of a God Who arranges that the revelation
occur? For all practical purposes, according to Leibniz’s view, no monad
actually ‘sees’ another monad, for this sight would be a kind of interaction
with or communication from another monad, and would be causal in
the life of the monad which ‘saw’. Instead, God, must arrange it so that
the infinitude of other, ‘unseen’ monads (with whom no real or direct
interaction is possible) are “represented” within the perception of any
given monad—and represented accurately. Each monad thus keeps distinctly
to its own world, aware of an infinitude of other monads but not registering
them directly.
The Doctrine of Pre-Established Harmony is explained in the following
manner:
“God so programmed the monads at creation that, although none causally
interacts with any other, each has the perceptions we would expect it
to have, were they to interact, and each has the perceptions we would
expect it to have, were there extended material objects that are perceived.”
Critique
of the Doctrine of Pre-Established Harmony
The
concept of Pre-Established Harmony sounds innocuous enough, but it is
a difficult concept which seems to fly in the face of common sense. From
the Catholic Encyclopedia we read:
“We must, therefore, conceive that God at the beginning of creation so
arranged things that the changes in one monad correspond perfectly to
those in the other monads which belong to its system. In the case of the
soul and body, for instance, neither has a real influence on the other:
but, just as two clocks may be so perfectly constructed and so accurately
adjusted that, though independent of each other, they keep exactly the
same time, so it is arranged that the monads of the body put forth their
activity in such a way that to each physical activity of the monads of
the body there corresponds a psychical activity of the monad of the soul.
This is the famous doctrine of pre-established harmony. ‘According to
this system’, says Leibniz, ‘bodies act as if (to suppose the impossible)
there were no souls at all, and souls act as if there were no bodies,
and yet both body and soul act as if the one were influencing the other’
”. (op. cit., thesis lxxxii)
By a “monad which belongs to its system”, Leibniz may mean a lesser monad
(incapable of apperception) which belongs to the body of a greater monad
(capable of apperception). The cells and atoms of our body are presumably
animated by such lesser monads. But, in a way, all monads perceived
by any monad constitute its body. “Body” and “representation” are
really identical. Something must coordinate these representations so they
are relatively faithful to the condition of that which they represent—namely
the host of other monads.
Any individual trained in occultism will immediately see problems with
the Doctrine of Pre-Established Harmony as Leibniz conceives it. It seems
to require too much intervention on the part of God. It abrogates the
occult Doctrine of Identification and leaves “God” forever at a distance—ever
transcendent; never immanent. Because Leibniz feels the necessity to assert
both monadic isolation and a plurality of individual substances (rather
than—as the occultist would insist—the One Substance of which all substances
are an inherent part), his thesis demands a condition in which all
created entities are eternally isolated from each other, a condition
in which each monad is forever separated from communication or interaction
with every other monad (at least in the usual worlds of interaction)
.
In the opinion of the author, the whole scheme proves labored, unwieldy,
inelegant, unnatural and even ugly. It lacks simplicity and seems to require
of God a kind of divine ‘trick’ whereby at the outset of Creation, He
‘so arranges things’, that each of His creations should forever live in
its own world without any possibility of real communication, interchange
or communion, yet, somehow, although no interaction is occurring, every
change in the state ‘within’ each of an infinitude of monads is registered,
reflected or represented (with greater or lesser clarity) within the perception
of every other monad. The means whereby God accomplishes this monumental
supernatural feat cannot even be suggested, but is allowed as possible
because man cannot possibly understand the greatness of God nor His abilities.
This doctrine impresses the author as the apotheosis of artificiality—created
by a brilliant mind in which the principle of distinction dominates the
principle of unity. Why should an Infinite God ‘wish’ to maintain such
a system which guarantees the perpetually inviolate distinction of an
infinitude of indivisible substances?
Astro-rayologically, the intricacy of third ray thought (abetted by fifth
ray analysis) seems to be at work in conceiving this doctrine. The insularity
of Cancer (which at the beginning of human evolution contributes to a
condition in which “the blind unit is lost”) (EA 332) reappears on a much
higher turn of the spiral as, shall we say, ‘the encapsulated unit (i.e.,
monad) is forever distinct and isolated’. Psychologically, Leibniz seems
to fear the possibility of merging with God as leading to a loss
of distinct identity. The Cancerian “shell” is maintained forever, with
no possibility of dissolution (though the entirety of the universe is
“reflected” or “represented” within it. One can forever be only the limited
individual (however relatively glorious), reflecting an infinitude of
other limited individuals, each reflecting each other. One can never actually
be the Whole. Perhaps, in this condition of ‘self-contained universal
perception’, it is possible that the “whole is seen as one’, but one never
becomes the whole. One merely perceives it. If the Doctrine
of Cyclically Recurring Universes had occurred to Leibniz and seemed acceptable,
his metaphysical conception of the monad and its place in universe would
probably have been altered considerably. Because, however, he did not
consider the universe as cyclic, he embraced the idea of an infinite,
God-created universe with an infinitude of permanent substances—i.e.,
monads
Though Leibniz was an extremely advanced thinker in every respect (some
say the greatest thinker of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries),
his propagation of this psychologically separative doctrine suggests that
he was, in this particular conception at least, subject to illusion.
It is illusion which must be overcome before it is possible to take the
third initiation. An initiate of the third degree is capable of revealing
the reality of the “One”. Though it is inadvisable to oversimplify
the situation or to underestimate the subtlety of Leibniz’s thought, Leibniz,
in his deepest metaphysics, seems intent on revealing the eternally unchangeable
existence of the “Many”—even though each of the “Many” is, he would say,
a ‘One Alone’. It is apparently abhorrent to him to resolve the many into
One, as the individual would be lost. He abhors the fact that Spinoza
has done this, saying that he merely brought to explicit expression that
which Descartes implied.
The Fundamental Principles of the Secret Doctrine simply do not
enter into his thought. One cannot reasonably expect that they would,
for they are primarily an Eastern Teaching and were not brought to the
West until more than one hundred fifty years after his death (though Leibniz
was aware of Chinese metaphysics and respected it). Had he taken these
Three Fundamentals into consideration, they would have helped to resolve
many of the difficulties present in his Doctrine of the Monad. It is likely,
however, that even if Leibniz had known of these Principles, he would
have rejected them as fundamentally flawed, illusory.
These principles are:
a.
The existence of a Boundless Immutable Principle
b.
The adherence of all entities to the Law of Periodicity
c.
The identity of every soul with the Oversoul.
These
Fundamentals necessitate unity, fusion, merging and identification and
do not permit of a permanent individuality. The individual becomes a temporary
structure superceded inevitably by a Greater Identity—that of the Whole.
Eternally encapsulated individualism has no place in the Ageless Wisdom
Doctrine.
3.
The Doctrine of Continuity: “Nature Makes no Leaps”: Monads
appear in an infinite continuum—the upper reach of which, at least, is
infinite. The continuum ranges from the monads who are incapable of apperception
(for instance, the monads associated with the lesser, unselfconscious
lives), and proceeds towards those monads capable of apperception (the
monads of human beings, capable of self-reflection). Presumably, monads
more advanced than the human are capable of ever-increasing degrees of
apperception. Leibniz would have had the problem of how to determine when
God created this infinitude of monads—at a single “Creation”, with man
being the leading monadic type? Many metaphysical problems arise should
this be the case.
If “Creation” had occurred as a single Event and a definite Time, it is
inconceivable how there could presently exist an infinite continuum of
monads existing in infinitudinous gradations of perceptions. But his is
not the place to enter into possible discrepancies or inconsistencies
in Leibniz’s metaphysics. Suffice it to say that, through his Doctrine
of Continuity, he attempted to overcome the sharp Cartesian “split” between
mind and matter, demonstrating, thereby, the presence of the softer or
bridging rays such as the second and fourth, and the effectiveness of
Mercurian linking and Jupiterian fusion in his thought process.
As well, a vision of a distant, sublime (even infinite) goal is suggested,
and this is promoted by indefinite Neptune in Sagittarius. Neptune is
a planet which has much to do with the indefinite and, thus, with
the concept of Infinity.
4.
Optimism: Leibniz’s view of God and the universe is optimistic.
All monads are organized by God into a vast and harmonious system, over
which God, the Infinite Monad and Creator, presides. The power, wisdom
and goodness of God are infinite. The monads which God created are as
good as they can possibly be and the world (or universe) is the “best
of all possible worlds”. The law which governs this universe is, as well,
the best possible law. While evil does exist in the world, it exists so
that a greater good may be accomplished. God has so arranged the world
that evil is made to serve the purpose of harmony, symmetry and beauty.
Because we are only related to a small portion of the universe, that
portion makes the greatest demands upon our sympathies. We do not understand
the larger context or the larger purpose, and so misjudge as evil that
which serves to accomplish a greater good than we can conceive.
Leibniz’s Sagittarian/Jupiterian optimism emerges in his doctrine of “the
best of all possible worlds”. His meticulous reasoning is based upon a
profound faith in God’s transcendent Goodness. Mystical Neptune in optimistic
Sagittarius placed in the twelfth house of faith contributes to his positivity
concerning God and Creation. Under the influence of Jupiter and the Sun
in Cancer, Leibniz embraces wholeness, and under Sagittarius, Jupiter
and Neptune he sees that wholeness, not only as good, but as
good as it can possibly be—maximally good. A great subtlety of intellect
(for instance, the pondering of the possibility of multiple universes—and
such related questions as now occupy the speculations of quantum physicists)
was at work behind Leibniz’s sanguine and apparently naive doctrine of
“the best of all possible worlds”, which he understood as a philosophical
necessity given a morally perfect God animated by the principle of “sufficient
reason”. Out of all the infinitude of universes which God might choose
to actuate, according to the principle of sufficient reason, a morally
perfect God would have to have a “sufficient reason” for choosing exactly
this universe, hence the superiority of this particular universe
over every other possible universe. This universe, then, would be the
best possible. A morally perfect God could choose to create no
less than the best possible universe. This doctrine is absolutely
positive—a supremely appreciative affirmation relating to the second
ray even more than to the sixth.
Leibniz’s Philosophical Dream
Translated by Donald Rutherford
There
follows an account of a most revealing dream. We find in this dream super-conscious
factors at work. Leibniz’s deeper motivations are revealed as well as
numinous contacts with those higher aspects of his nature which served
to guide him. This dream establishes him as a confirmed seeker of truth
and enlightenment, longing for the “supernal light”. One cannot help but
compare the substance of this dream to Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave”.
It is a dream which charts the course towards enlightenment and confirms
Leibniz as a disciple intent on following the dictates of his Sagittarian
Rising Sign and thus approaching more closely to the source of illumination.
I was satisfied with what I was among men, but I was not satisfied
with human nature. I often considered with chagrin the hardships to which
we are subjected, the shortness of our life, the vanity of glory, the
improprieties that are born of sensual pleasure, the illnesses that overwhelm
even our spirit; finally, the annihilation of all our greatness and all
our perfections in the moment of death, which appears to reduce to nothing
the fruits of our labors. These meditations left me full of melancholy.
I naturally loved to act well and to know the truth. Yet it appeared that
I punished myself unnecessarily, that a successful crime was worth more
than an oppressed virtue, and that a madness that is content is preferable
to an aggrieved reason. However, I resisted these objections and directed
my spirit on the right course by thinking about the divinity who must
have given a proper order to everything and who sustained my hopes with
the expectation of a future capable of redressing everything. This conflict
was renewed in me by the sight of some great disturbance, either among
men, when I saw injustice triumph and innocence chastened, or in nature,
when hurricanes or earthquakes destroyed cities and provinces and caused
thousands to die without distinguishing the good from the wicked, as though
nature cared no more for us than we trouble ourselves about ants or worms
that we encounter in our path. I was greatly moved by these spectacles
and could not stop myself pitying the condition of mortals.
One
day, being fatigued from these thoughts, I fell asleep and found myself
in a dark place which resembled an underground cavern. It was vast and
very deep and everywhere there swarmed men who strangely rushed into the
darkness in pursuit of luminous trifles they called "honors,"
or glittering little flies they called "riches." There were
many who searched the ground for bright bits of rotten wood they called
"sensual pleasures." Each of these evil lights had its followers;
there were some who had changed parties and others who had quit the chase
altogether because of exhaustion or despair. Some of those who ran blindly
and often believed they had reached their goal fell into crevasses, out
of which only moans were heard. Some were bitten by scorpions and other
venomous creatures that left them wretched and often mad. Yet neither
these examples nor the arguments of persons better informed stopped others
from chasing the same hazards and even entering into fights in order to
forestall rivals or keep themselves from being forestalled.
In the vault of this huge cavern there were little holes and almost imperceptible
cracks. Here a trace of daylight entered; yet it was so weak that it required
careful attention to notice it. One frequently heard voices which said,
"Stop you mortals, or run like the miserable beings you are."
Others said, "Raise your eyes to the sky." But no one stopped
and no one raised their eyes except in pursuit of these dangerous trinkets.
I was one of those who was greatly struck by these voices. I began often
to look above me and finally recognized the small light which demanded
so much attention. It seemed to me to grow stronger the more I gazed steadily
at it. My eyes were saturated with its rays, and when, immediately after,
I relied on it to see where I was going, I could discern what was around
me and what would suffice to secure me from dangers. A venerable old man
who had wandered for a long time in the cave and who had had thoughts
very similar to mine told me that this light was what is called "intelligence"
or "reason" in us. I often changed position in order to test
the different holes in the vault that furnished this small light, and
when I was located in a spot where several beams could be seen at once
from their true point of view, I found a collection of rays which greatly
enlightened me. This technique was of great help to me and left me more
capable of acting in the darkness.
After testing many positions, I was at last led by my good fortune to
a place which was unique and the most advantageous in the cave, a place
reserved for those whom the divinity wished to remove completely from
this darkness. Hardly had I begun to look upward than I was surrounded
by a bright light shining from all sides: the whole cave and its miseries
were fully disclosed to my eyes. But a moment later a dazzling clarity
surprised me. It soon expanded and I saw before me the image of a young
man whose beauty enchanted my senses. There seemed a majesty about him,
which produced a veneration mixed with apprehension; yet the gentleness
of his gaze reassured me. I began, however, to be aware of myself weakening
and was about to faint, when I felt myself touched by a bough imbued with
a marvelous liquor. I could compare it to nothing I had ever felt before
and it gave me the strength to endure the presence of this celestial messenger.
He called me by name and spoke to me in a charming voice: "Give thanks
to the divine goodness which releases you from this madness." At
the same time he touched me again and at that instant I felt myself rise.
I was no longer in the cavern; I no longer saw the vault above me. I found
myself on a high mountain, which revealed to me the face of the earth.
I saw at a distance what I only wanted to consider in general; yet when
I studied some spot in a determined way, it at once grew and I needed
no other telescopic vision than my own attention to see it as though it
were next to me. This gave me a marvelous pleasure and emboldened me to
say to my guide: "Mighty spirit--for I cannot doubt that you are
of the number of those celestial figures who make up the court surrounding
the sovereign of the universe--since you have wanted to clarify to my
eyes, will you do as much for my mind?"
It seemed to me that he smiled at this speech and took pleasure in hearing
of my desire. "Your wish is granted," he said to me, "since
you hold wisdom above the pleasure of those vain spectacles the world
presents to your eyes. However, you will lose nothing that is substantial
in those same spectacles. You will see everything with eyes clarified
in a completely different way. Your understanding being fortified from
above, it will discover everywhere the brilliant illumination of the divine
author of things. You will recognize only wisdom and happiness, wherever
men are accustomed to find only vanity and bitterness. You will be content
with your creator; you will be enraptured with the vision of his works.
Your admiration will not be the effect of ignorance as it is with the
vulgar. It will be the fruit of knowledge of the grandeur and marvels
of God. Instead of scorning with men the unraveled secrets, which in earlier
times they regarded with astonishment, you will find that when you are
admitted into the interior of nature your raptures, you will go on growing
the farther you advance.
For you will only be at the beginning of a chain of beauties and delights
that go on growing into infinity. The pleasures that enchain your senses
and that Circe of your legends who changes men into beasts will have no
hold on you, so long as you attach yourself to the beauties of the soul,
which never die and never disappoint. You will belong to our fold and
will go with us from world to world, from discovery to discovery, from
perfection to perfection. With us you will pay court to the supreme being,
who is beyond all worlds and fills them without being divided. You will
be at once before his throne and among those who are distant from it.
For God will establish his siege in your soul and heaven follows him everywhere.
Go, therefore, and raise your spirit above all that is mortal and perishable,
and cleave only to the eternal truths of the light of God. You will not
always live here below, this mortal life which sufficiently approaches
that of beasts. There will come a time when you will be delivered entirely
of the chains of this body. Use well, therefore, the time that providence
gives you here, and seek that your perfections to come will be proportional
to the cares you give yourself here in achieving them."
Those who have studied the third initiation carefully will recognize that
Leibniz is dealing with precisely those themes which indicate its achievement.
He was certainly passionately concerned with exactly those recognitions
which distinguish a third degree initiate.
Conclusion
Gottfried
Wilhelm von Leibniz once said “He who knows me by my published works alone
does not know me at all.”(Qui me non nisi editis novit, non novit).
In 1903 there were discovered 15,000 letters and unedited fragments of
his work. Many of these still have neither been published or translated.
The fact that we know as much about Leibniz as we do is the result of
the work of one of his followers, Christian Wolfe (1679-1754) who reduced
the diffusion of a portion of Leibniz’s work into more compact and readable
form. Perhaps for this reason alone, Leibniz’s influence was able to reach
a wider public and was able to have an important impact on the Enlightenment—particularly
in Germany where it influenced a movement known as “German Illumination”.
Even what we have of Leibniz’s work is so extensive, rich and varied that
few minds can assay to understand it in its completeness. Perhaps some
understand his mathematics; others perhaps are more attuned to his metaphysics
or his theology. It is a rare individual whose philosophical-mathematical-spiritual-scientific
embrace is sufficient for full comprehension. Such an individual would
perhaps have to be a genuine polymath as Leibniz was.
From the occult perspective, we can view Leibniz as a member of the third
ray Ashram under the direction of the Mahachohan. His driving purpose
was to explain the nature of reality and man’s place in the universe.
Only an advanced soul can undertake such a quest with any hope of success,
and it must be judged that Leibniz was relatively successful.
Should he be considered an initiate? Surely, it could be said that he
was at least an initiate of the second degree. As perhaps the greatest
thinker of the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, he would have
to be. Far lesser thinkers than he judge themselves to have passed the
Baptism Initiation. Surely, the quality of Leibniz’s emotional life was
sufficiently serene, his idealism sufficiently strong, and his aspiration
sufficiently keen to indicate that he had (however unconsciously) passed
the test of purification.
As well it may be said that he passed the tests of temptation, encountered
according to the esoteric doctrine, midway between the second and third
degrees.. He worked within a worldly setting, amongst royalty and nobility,
but he seems to have keep his motives pure and lofty. He was not compromised
to any significant extent by “the world, the flesh and the devil”. His
eyes were fastened upon the elevation of thought and the betterment of
humanity, and there they remained.
It seems that he was speeding fast (Sagittarius) towards the Mountain
of Illumination, and surely experienced the quality of that illumination
from time to time—the “light supernal”. His alternative Capricorn Rising
Signs (the East Point and the Anti-Vertex) would indicate this possibility
as would the heliocentric Earth (the esoteric ruler of his Sagittarian
Ascendant) in Capricorn. His revelatory “Philosophical Dream” shows his
motivation beyond question, as a committed, one-pointed seeker of truth,
regardless of the diversity of fields in which he sought. In Leibniz,
genius served both God and a lofty morality befitting his strong Sagittarian
and Jupiterian influence.
His legacy certainly includes the calculus—an invaluable mathematical
tool, but even more a metaphysics in which the essential nature of the
human being (the monadic nature) was established as immortal and inviolate,
and the goodness of an infinite God was held before the eyes of humanity
as a philosophical certainty. In many respects, Leibniz’s philosophy solved,
to his satisfaction, the problems of the nature of Time and Space, reducing
them to phenomenological illusions—certainly the task of an initiate consciousness.
The noblest thought of the great metaphysician, Gottfried Wilhelm von
Leibniz, was a highly intelligent affirmation of God, man and the universe.
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