Tertium Organum, by P.D. Ouspensky, [1922], at sacred-texts.com
For ease of online reading, I have exchanged the rows and columns in this chart.—JBH
|
1ST FORM |
2ND FORM |
3RD FORM |
4TH FORM |
THE SENSE OF SPACE AND TIME |
The sense of one-dimensional space. The world on the line. The line as space, everything else as time. Everything except things lying on this line is in motion. |
The sense of two-dimensional space. The world on the plane. The plane as space, everything else as time. Angles and curves as motions. |
The sense of three-dimensional space. The world in an infinite sphere. The sphere as space. Everything else as time. Phenomena as motions. A becoming and changing universe. |
The sense of four-dimensional space. |
PSYCHOLOGY |
Appearance of the first sensation. Sensation a unit. Its division into two. The gradual evolution of sensations and the accumulation of remembrances concerning them. |
Perception. The expression of sensations by cries, sounds, motions. The absence of words and speech. Were there speech it would consist of substantives only. |
Concept. |
Self-consciousness. |
LOGIC |
The absence of thinking, or a confused thinking of the 2nd form. |
This is this. |
A is A. |
A is both A and Not-A. |
MATHEMATICS |
The absence of numeration, or a confused numeration of the 2nd form. |
The comparison of separate visible objects or separate perceptions. |
Every magnitude is equal to itself. The part is less than the whole, etc. |
A magnitude can be not equal to itself. The part can be equal to the whole, etc. |
FORMS OF ACTIONS |
Reflex, unconscious, responsive action to external irritation. |
Instinct. "Emotional" end expedient action without consciousness of results. Seeming consciousness. |
The consciousness of the purpose of actions performed. The possibility of a consciousness of results. The cause of actions in the outer world in impressions received from the outer world. The impossibility of in dependent actions without impulses coming from the outside. |
The starting of conscious actions. The starting of actions with the understanding of their cosmical meaning and purposes. The commencement of independent actions proceeding from oneself. |
MORALS |
Unconscious actions (like the actions of a man asleep). |
The beginnings of the maternal, family, and tribal instincts. |
Logical and conventional division into good and evil. The submission to the group consciousness of the family, of the clan, of the tribe, of the nation, of humanity, of the class, of the party, of a custom, of a fashion, etc. |
The return to the law inside oneself. A new conscience. Emancipation from submission to the group-consciousness. The realization of oneself as an independent unit. |
FORMS OF CONSCIOUSNESS |
Potential consciousness. Consciousness in a latent state—asleep. Consciousness as in sleep without dreams. |
Simple consciousness. "It pains me," but the impossibility of saying, "I am conscious that it pains me." The reflected state of consciousness. Vision as in dreams. The passive state of consciousness. |
The ability to think of one's states of consciousness. The division of I and Not-I. Active consciousness. |
The commencement of self-consciousness. |
FORMS OF KNOWLEDGE |
Unconscious receptivity of the environment, and unconscious reaction to it. |
The beginnings of attention. Observation. The accumulation of instincts. The recognition of everything sensed as real. The failure to discriminate between that which is illusory and that which is real. |
Experience. Experimental knowledge. A complete and deep division and mutual misunderstanding between four forms of knowledge—religion, philosophy, science and art. |
The beginning of the development of forms of knowledge. Mystic knowledge. A new sensation of time. The sensation of infinity. The sensation of the unreality of the phenomenal, visible world. A knowledge of the hidden substance of things by their outer signs. Unfoldment of the "world of the wondrous." Co-ordination in a complete whole of religion, philosophy, science and art. |
FORMS OF SCIENCE |
An accumulation of "traces" from the produced reflexes. The appearance of instinct and the accumulation of simple instincts. |
Personal knowledge. Impotence to communicate experience. The beginnings of the communication of experience in the training of the young. |
Positive science. Positive philosophy. Materialism. Spiritualistic philosophy. Dogmatic religions. Spiritism and pseudo-occultism. Sectarianism. Dualism. Matter and spirit. Separation of different forms of science. |
Idealistic philosophy. Mathematics of the infinite. Tertium Organum. Mystical religion. God and the Cosmos—one. The sensation of a living and conscious universe. The union of all sciences into one. Occultism. Understanding of "Dharma," i.e., of laws of relativity. |
DIFFERENT BEINGS |
The lower animal. Cells of the tissues and organs of the body. The one-dimensional being. Vegetative or semi-vegetative life. |
The higher animal. The body of man. The two-dimensional being. The absence of duality, divisibility and disharmony. Animal life. |
Man. A three-dimensional being outwardly and dual inwardly. Inner warfare. The impossibility of attaining inner harmony. The "soul" as the battlefield of the "spirit" and the "flesh." The kingdom of the personal. Unconscious automatism. The absence of personal immortality. |
The beginnings of the transition to a new type, and a new sensation of space. Victory of consciousness. "Men of cosmical consciousness." Triumph of the super-personal principle. Conscious automatism. The attainment of inner unity and harmony. The "soul" as the center of independent actions, The beginnings of personal immortality. |