The Arcane Teaching The Arcane I

The Arcane Teaching The Arcane I by William Walker Atkinson is a comprehensive exploration of what the author refers to as “the Arcane Teachings,” presenting insights into ancient wisdom and spiritual knowledge. Published by CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform on December 12, 2015, this edition spans 176 pages and is written in English. The book delves into the historical lineage of these teachings, tracing their origins from ancient civilizations such as Egypt and Greece, and discusses their influence on various philosophical schools of thought.
Readers will find a detailed examination of the connections between the Arcane Teachings and significant historical figures, including Pythagoras and Gautama, the founder of Buddhism. Atkinson highlights the intricate relationships between different cultures and their esoteric traditions, suggesting that these teachings have persisted through time, evolving yet remaining rooted in a shared heritage. The text also addresses the potential links to the lost continent of Atlantis, offering a unique perspective on the continuity of spiritual knowledge across ages and civilizations.
Official synopsis Publisher
This is the first volume of The Arcanes. In this book Atkinson gives us the story and content of what he calls “the Arcane Teachings”, or wisdom of the ages. It will provide the seeker -the one who is ready and is paying attention-, some of the deepest answers to life.In the first chapter, he says that “The Arcane Teaching has come down to the present age through the corridors of time, from the dim ages of past eras, races, and schools of thought. Even those highest in the councils of “The Custodians of The Scroll,” are unable to trace the Teaching, in an unbroken direct line, further back than the time of Pythagoras (about 500 b. c.), and a little later in Ancient Greece, although they find many references to, and extracts from, the teachings of ancient Egypt and Chaldea, which serve to show that the Pythagorean and Ancient Grecian Arcane Schools were founded on occult instruction still more remote, received in a direct line of succession of teachers and pupils extending over centuries. Investigators have found traces of the Arcane Teaching in the records of Persia and Medea, and it is believed that the inspiration for the original philosophical teaching (not the religion or the pessimism, however) of Gautama, the founder of Buddhism, was received from Arcane sources. Traces are also to be found in the Hebrew Esoteric Teachings of the “Kabbalah” and the “Zohar.”The Grecian Arcane Teaching was undoubtedly obtained directly from Egyptian sources through Pythagoras, the relation between the early Grecian teaching and philosophies, and the older school of old Egypt, being very close and intimate. Pythagoras is known to have received instruction from Egyptian and Persian hierophants. Besides the traditions of the Arcanes, there is to be found the closest resemblance between the ancient Grecian teachings, and those of the Egyptian Esoteric Fraternities. Some of the Teachers, however, hold that the Grecian and Egyptian schools, respectively, were but two separate off shoots of an original and older Teaching which had its origin in the lost continent of Atlantis. There are many Arcane traditions connecting the Teaching with Atlantis, and it is possible that both Egypt and Greece received it from this common source, instead of Greece being indebted to Egypt for the line of transmission. But, be this as it may, it is a fact that all of the traces of teaching that the various occult schools gather from the traditions, scraps of doctrine, and legends regarding Atlantis can be reconciled with the Grecian Arcane Teaching.”
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