“To those who are superficial and in a hurry, no less than to those who are deliberate and reflective, it must look as though there were no mystery anywhere.” MARTIN HEIDEGGER, “A DIALOGUE ON LANGUAGE”
“If the bleak days scare away all shining radiance, and if all breadth shrivels into the paltriness of narrow conventionality, then the heart must remain the source of what is light and spacious. And the most solitary heart makes the broadest leap into the middle of beyng, if on all sides the semblance of nonbeings stops its noise.” MARTIN HEIDEGGER, PONDERINGS V
In Part Two of our discussion of the paths emanating to and from Tiferet, we will be examining Path #21 The Desired and Sought Intelligence (Zayin), Path #22 The Faithful Intelligence (Lamed), Path #23 The Sustaining Intelligence (Samekh), and Path #25 The Intelligence of Trials (Temptations) (Resh).
The Letter Zayin and the 21st Path: The Desired and Sought Intelligence
Zayin: Tiferet to Chesed: Path21. Desired and Sought Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel HaChafutz VeHaMevukash): It is called this because it receives the divine Influx so as to bestow its blessing to all things that exist.
The Twenty-first Path is the Intelligence of Conciliation, and is so called because it receives the divine influence which flows into it from its benediction upon all and each existence.
Alt. Trans. “The twenty-first path is called the consciousness of the desired-which-fulfills because it receives the divine influence which flows into it as a result of the blessing it confers upon all that exists.”
Simone Weil
We have spoken a number of times regarding the gap that currently exists between Love and intelligence or between Logos and Eros. On the 21st path, the intelligence or “consciousness” receives “the divine influence” or Love, which is “the desire which fulfills”, and through this coming to en-own confers this love on all that exists or on the Other. This is ‘conciliation’. The Divine is in need of human beings’ complicity in order to reveal Its truth. “Faith is the experience that the intelligence is illuminated by love”, as Simone Weil said. This experience is called “conciliation” (what we have been calling dialectic here), and this conciliation overcomes the strife that exists between the intelligence and its desire to know and the fulfillment of this desire to know.
The letter Zayin is shaped like a sword and is the symbol of “spiritedness”, “sustenance” (endurance, courage), and strife. It is the arrow of Eros, that which pierces through the husks and containers of the enclosures represented by the letters Chet and Tet and allows the inner light or true essence of things to be seen. It is the key to the door of Dalet and the opening of that door or gateway to the realm beyond. It represents the 7th day of Shabbat (Sabbath), the day of rest and spirituality (or the “letting be” of passivity), which completes the process of the 6 days of creation. It is the sword that Christ refers to when He says He comes not to bring peace, but with a sword. (Matthew 10: 34-36)
The Zayin signifies Space and includes the six days and six directions of physical reality, but also stands as a unique 7th principle or energy, the “spirit” which activates the physical. We usually designate this as “energy” or the life-force, but it seems that we need to somehow see how this principle is one of Love and not of Will. The Zayin is also associated with the word ‘manacle’ and this could indicate that its relation to rest is one of imprisonment. The contradictory forces of ‘liberation’ and ‘oppression’ seem to be implied in its nature. The Zayin is the source of all movement which would indicate a relation to Time. Like the letter Vav, it is an impregnating principle, which activates the creation. The contraries of rest and movement are symbolized in the letter.
Zayin is drawn with a Vav with a crown on top of it. The Vav is related to the Ohr Yashar, the direct light of the Creator coming down into the created world. The Zayin also relates to the Ohr Hozer, the returning light, which follows the path of the Vav to return and then spreads out when it reaches the crown. The Zayin impregnates all of life and allows the Vav to spread, opening the field of every possibility.
Shaped like a sword, the Zayin represents all movement and all movement is related to Time, which is associated with Binah. The Zayin represents the strife between contraries, the struggle for existence to overcome need, the struggle for sustenance (מזון). It is the struggle between Yaakov Jacob and the angel. Is it a good thing that Jacob is victorious over the angel in his struggling? What are the implications of this? The Zayin is said to be the power within a person that causes them to speak, initiate, live i.e., what it is about human beings that makes them human. It is the Eros of the human soul, Psyche. Interestingly, Zayin is also the source of rest. It teaches us to harmonize between the spirit and perfection related to the 7th day of rest, and the matter of the 6 days of work.
Genesis 1.14 And Elohim said: ‘Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and for days and years; 15 and let them be for lights in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth.’ And it was so.
The Letter Lamed and the 22nd Path: The Faithful Intelligence
The Twenty-second Path is the Faithful Intelligence, and is so called because by it, spiritual virtues are increased, and all dwellers on earth are nearly under its shadow.
Alt. Trans. “The twenty-second path is called the faithful consciousness because, through it, the spiritual powers are increased. All dwellers on earth ‘abide in its shadow.'”
Path 22. Faithful Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Ne’eman): It is called this because spiritual powers are increased through it, so that they can be close to all those ‘who dwell in their shadow’.
Case trans. The twenty-second path (Lamed, joining Gevurah to Tiphareth) is called the Faithful Intelligence, because by it spiritual powers are increased. All dwellers on earth are under its shadow.
Lamed, the 12th letter of the Hebrew Alphabet, is the symbol of learning and can be seen as either a step or as a snake uncoiled. It is translated literally as the word for learning and also as a staff or goad. It is located at the centre of the Aleph-Beth and represents the heart Lev לב; in Kabbalah, learning is mostly done with the heart and soul, not just the mind i.e., the intelligence is illuminated by Love. The mind is a secondary organ. The Lamed indicates that “spiritual learning” is the heart of human existence. The course in life for every human being is to learn and express spiritual experiences and to practice what has been learned with every breath of life. This manner of being-in-the-world comes into conflict with the ideologies and narratives which predominate in the societies of which we are members.
Lamed reaches higher than any of the other Hebrew letters, like a lightning flash high in the air. This ‘higher reaching’ may be an indication of hubris. The shape of the Lamed is an undulating movement, and the Lamed represents the constant organic movement, the constant change that occurs within the limits of Necessity. Lamed is the lightning strike of Zeus or of God descending down the two sides of the Tree of Life. This would indicate that it is a warning sign against pride in one’s own learning or in the learning of the shared knowledge of the community of which one happens to be a member. Lamed teaches us to learn from everything in life, that no one and no institution are solely in possession of the truth. After one has governed their possessive, grasping tendencies in Khof and no longer has the blockages of the ego interfering, they can begin to learn the spiritual perfection of their own self, and to learn the laws, will, and ways of the Creator from the torah side of the Tree of Life. This is the process of learning to align with the will of the Creator and the acceptance of that will.
As a snake uncoiled, Lamed may be the ‘flying serpent’ or dragon, the Draconis Tali of the Sefer Yetzirah, which extends throughout the firmament of heaven and indicates both Space and Time. The ‘pattern of all that is formed’ is the web of Necessity. The web of Necessity is the limits and boundaries placed upon created things as well as the actions of human beings. Human action, including its desire and will, is subservient to the same Necessity that is evident in the laws of gravity. It is the Greek understanding of phronesis whose goal is sophrosyne, the balance and equilibrium or moderation that is the wisdom of actions, the wisdom that sees actions as subject to the same limits and boundaries as are all created beings.
The tarot card Temperance #14 is appropriate here. The knowledge of ‘the pattern of all that is formed’ is within the universe of Yetzirah and yet bridges to the universe of Beriyah. Tiferet is the Pythagorean mean which brings into a relation, a ‘conciliation’, and balances (hence Lamed is associated with Libra) the individual will of Netzach with the limits and boundaries of creation which is the will of God. The will of God is, ultimately, inscrutable but the balance of the mean properly determines ethical actions i.e., the individual’s being-in-the-world and the individual’s being-with-others. It is the knowledge of Necessity which allows one to distinguish between that which is Necessary and that which is Good, to distinguish between the things that are Caesar’s and the things that are God’s.
The Sephirot Hod is said to represent The Library of Hermes and this is the site of the study that Lamed represents. There is a warning in the letter with regard to the pride that can mistakenly occur through one’s pride in one’s own knowledge. This is a warning against the danger of hubris.
What we think virtue or human excellence to be is given to us from the societies of which we are members. This knowledge is associated with time and history. Since the path is restricted to time and history, the realization of its knowledge is to increase the will to power of its possessors. This may account for the Martial and sexual connections that Case associates with this path, and also to the conventional notions of Justice to which it is related. This would suggest a Hod, Yesod, Netzach connection to the paths and I have chosen to relate Lamed to the path from Tiferet to Hod and will discuss it later under the paths emanating from Hod. What Case’s interpretation appears to reveal is the thinking of a man who is trying to establish a sect himself and to give power to the teachings of that sect. Placing the Justice card as #11 is indicative of the completed work of the Magician #1, which is clearly a product of the will to power. While this is indeed a form of “justice”, it is not the true form, the true completion, perfection. Justice itself is not a product of human wills but rather determines them.
What is quite clear in the Sefir Yetzirah is that redemption and salvation is an individual journey, and the search or quest for the Light is not to be derived from traditional teachings only because the search, and its goal, is not something that can be passed on through the genes or the inheritance that one gets from one’s parents or from one’s society. The quest must be undertaken by the individual themselves. Contrary to how Americans sometimes view their history, the collective itself cannot engage in a ‘spiritual journey’. The collective engages in the search for the will to power. (This may be one of the reasons why the Americans and the technological are so compatible with each other.) The spiritual, when not understood as will to power, is not a product of Time. The translations of the Sefer Yetzirah and “The 32 Paths of Wisdom” create a great deal of confusion in not distinguishing between the spirit as will and the spiritual as will to power i.e., spiritedness.
In examining the paths, the four universes of the Sefir Yetzirah must be kept in mind as well as the directions in which the paths are leading. Because the created world is spherical in shape, and because the created things themselves are square or cubic in form (since physical things begin at the number 4), the attempt here is literally “to square the circle” which is irrational in itself. That which is beyond the physical requires the intervention of a mediary i.e., a radius that will be the circumference of the circle. (?) The universes of Asiyah, Yetzirah, and Beriyah are all capable of accessibility, but the realm of Atzilut is beyond human beings without some kind of Divine intervention through grace. (The universes of the Sefer Yetzirah parallel the universes of Buddhism: Asiyah > Kamadhattu: the world of desire; Yetzirah > Rupadhattu: the world of forms; Beriyah: Arupadhattu: the world of formlessness; Atzilut > Nirvana: the world of the unnamable, the unspeakable. These universes can be seen and explored in the temple of Borobudur on the island of Java in Indonesia).
The Letter Samekh and the 23rd Path: The Sustaining Intelligence
Samekh: Tiferet to Netzach Path 23: The Stable/Sustaining Intelligence: The Twenty-third Path is the Stable Intelligence, and it is so called because it has the virtue of consistency among all numerations.
Alt. Trans. “The twenty-third path is called the stable consciousness because it is the power of sustenance among all the Sephirot.”
Sustaining Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Kayam): It is called this because it is the sustaining power for all the Sephirot.
The Twenty-third Path once again illustrates that which has been called the “mathematical” in this writing i.e., that which can be learned and that which can be taught, and how this understanding of the mathematical is in strife with the Love and friendship that is at the heart of the purpose of Creation, the Ain Sof. The “mathematical” would be indicated by the letter Lamed ל or “study”, “the serpent uncoiled”, and I have indicated that this is Path 22 The Faithful Intelligence where ‘spiritual powers are increased through it, so that they can be close to all those ‘who dwell in their shadow’ i.e., those who live in the world of the mathematical dwell in the shadows of the spiritual powers. The ‘shadows’ are the outer appearances of things.
In order for some thing to be learned, it must first be brought to a “stand” or bounded within a horizon so that it may be “de-fined” and a name given to it so that it may be spoken about. The shape of the letter Samekh ס indicates this bringing to a stand and this binding. The “numerations” weigh and measure things so that they are brought out of their natural state of metabole or change into something that can be known i.e., they are given a “permanence” of some kind, a “stability” of some kind. Numbers are only one example of the “mathematical” but they are the most common. The manner of seeing that results from the “consistency” or reliability of the use of numbers is but one manner of accounting for the laws of Necessity and the relation of created things to the domains of time and space, that which is studied in Path 22 The Faithful Intelligence.
The Twenty-third Path also indicates the limits of human reason and intelligence. The Sustaining/ Stable Intelligence is that knowledge which can be relied upon. In English, we have come to understand logos as “reason” because the origins of philosophical English are Latin, ratio, rationale. We rely upon principles, laws and axioms to “illuminate”, “sustain”, “stabilize”, and “endure” in our projections upon the things of the world. These projections determine how we view the things of the world. The letter Tet ט, meaning ‘snake’, which we have discussed as the path from Binah to Chesed, has a clear connection to the letter Lamed and this also suggests the limits that are placed on human knowledge. That which provides the stability to the Sephirot is the Good, and this Good shows itself in the friendship of the Divine Trinity and the Love that sustains Creation. The ‘stability’ that arises from the collective or social manner of viewing the world comes about as a result of the consistency of the results of calculations or ‘numerations’ that are carried out regarding Necessity. The ‘numerations’ are the logoi or speech that are shared among the members of the community.
The letter Mem is attributed to the 23rd path by Case. The movement on the paths of the mother letters is vertical, horizontal or diagonal and their movement influences the character of the path that is being experienced. Because Alef is the source of all the letters, it is capable of both vertical and horizontal movement, but it can also influence the diagonal paths existing between the various Sephirot. In making a visual illustration of the paths, they are shown as straight lines; but in reality, they are arcs on the circumferences of the gyring movements either up or down the Tree of Life.
Case in his study of the 32 paths sees the Twenty-third Path as that path which will lead the human community to a better universal, homogeneous State i.e., through the principle of reason realized in the technological. The Illuminati of the Twenty-third path are those who believe themselves to be the new Uber mensch, the Nietzschean “overman”, the next step in the human evolutionary chain. But they are nothing more than the “helmsmen” whose use of cybernetics realized in the making of artificial intelligence is the core of their power. Such progressive hopes of Case ignore the lessons of the Sefer Yetzirah regarding the nature of force and power. When the logos is understood as the principle of reason (the Cause of Causes), the logos comes to be understood as will to power realized through the use of the principle of reason. As Nietzsche said, technology is the highest form of will to power.
There is no “human progress” that occurs on the “spiritual level” along with the progress achieved on the material level. The “spiritual level” is not subject to Time as are the created things of the world. Morally and ethically human beings, as a whole, have not made any significant progress from their ancestors. This is because the moral and ethical presence of what human beings truly are as human beings has always been present for them to reach out to and grasp. Because human beings lose sight of the chasm which separates the Necessary from the Good, they fail in making true spiritual progress. This is demonstrated in what is called today the ‘woke culture’. Whether one is ‘woke’ or not (after all, ‘woke’ is a synonym for ‘consciousness’), it is the product of the worship of power and all of its false idols. This ultimately results in the oblivion of eternity for human beings with the consequence of human beings becoming more bestial.
The 23rd path derives from Genesis: 1:24 — “And Elohim said: ‘Let the earth bring forth the living creature after its kind, cattle and creeping things, and beast of the earth after its kind.’ And it was so.” Here, creation ex nihilo, “out of nothing”, the world of Beriyah, is distinguished from the growing and “bringing forth”, the poiesis, that is the production of nature and of human beings. This is a distinction of the universe of Asiyah from those of Yetzirah and Beriyah. Nature supplies the content of the Sephirot and it does so from out of itself. This is the significance of the sephirot Malkhut. Human beings share in this through procreation, so there is a connection here with the Sephirot Yesod.
The 23rd path extends from Tiferet to Netzach and is represented by the letter Samekh. ‘The power of sustenance among all the Sephirot’ is the ‘friendship’ or Love which is initiated by the Divine Trinity. This seems to indicate that, for human beings, the Sephirot and their existence can be lost or “forgotten”, “hidden”, and the ‘revealing’ of their truth may cease among human beings when love and friendship, mercy and kindness, is forgotten. This ‘forgetfulness’ puts human beings out of a proper relationship to Yesod, #9 The Pure Intelligence, and to our relationship with all that comes to be in our lives. #7 The Hidden Intelligence of Netzach, in combination with #8 The Perfect Intelligence of Hod and #9 The Pure Intelligence of Yesod, can combine in such a way that “the material intelligence of corporeality” (Path 29), “the palpable intelligence of the senses” (Path 27), and “the natural intelligence” of human being-in-the-world (Path 28) can cause us to be forgetful of the Transcendental Influx Intelligence of Tiferet (Path 6).
Hod #8 is indicated by the Justice card in Tarot and represents The Perfect Intelligence. “Perfection” is the completion of things; the things require nothing further, and it is the height of world of Yetzirah or Formation. The Chariot #7 is the embodied soul of human being, and the martial aspects of the card indicate the strife of living, how the truth must be wrested from hiddenness. The recognition of the justice of this strife or polemos (war) is what provides the “stability” to the intelligence (this is not “rationality”) and the ability to “reveal” the presence and influence of all the other Sephirot. This revealing of truth is what makes us truly and fully human; it is how we participate in Being together with Being. The difficulty is that this revealing of truth is also at the core of the principle of reason and technology, the ‘know how’ that brings things to a completion. This ‘know how’ must be seen as secondary to the primary knowledge of how things are illuminated by Love and given sustenance and stability through ‘friendship’. This is the core of this stage of that choice which must be made along the journey of life.
Hod is the terminus of the Pillar of Severity or Form (necessity); Netzach is the terminus of the Pillar of Mercy, the “splendour” of which is the recognition of the Beauty of the world, the covenant of God. The middle pillar is the fulcrum providing the “balance”, the “harmony”, the “equilibrium”, the “friendship”, the “covenant” between the Divine and human beings, and this fulcrum is the Corporeality of the physical universe, what is called the Ain Sof.
Samekh: Tiferet to Netzach: Path 23: Sustaining Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Kayam): It is called this because it is the sustaining (enduring) power for all the Sephirot.
The letter Samekh is the symbol of support, protection, and memory. It means to “lean upon“, “support”, “uphold”. In gematria its number is 60. The perimeter of Samekh denotes the Creator and its interior denotes His creation, which He constantly supports and upholds and protects. It represents the Orr Makif, the Surrounding Light of the Kabbalah, indicating the general providence of the Creator, surrounding and sustaining all of existence, even as we perceive ourselves as separate. The Samekh is the container of all forms and is, therefore, related to the other container letters including the letter Khaf.
The Sun #19 card of Tarot is the microcosm of this overall cosmic relationship. Friendship is shown through the love, protection, and keeping in mind through one’s care and concern the interests of the other. Its common symbol is the wedding band which indicates the bond of the relationship. When two people are joined by Love through the mediation of the Divine, they enact a covenant with each other which cannot be broken. (“What God has joined together, let no one put asunder”. Human beings are not always brought together by or through God, however. Other forces are at work here.) In literature, we see the opposite of this bond in The One Ring of Sauron in The Lord of the Rings. Here the bond is not one of friendship or relationship but one of oppression and dominion. The figure of Sauron is well-illustrated by The Devil card of the Tarot which is the contrary of The Lovers card.
The letter Samekh teaches us that thinking in its rational form is circular. There are no grounds for the principle of reason, although traditionally these grounds have been attributed to God. Samekh tells us to think for the good of the other, to take care and be concerned with the other, and not just one’s self. This means to be inclusive of everything and everyone as these are part of the One. It is the principle that the wisdom is not contained in just one vessel, in just one person, but is distributed in all beings. This could be why those who believe they are in possession of the truth are, so often, intolerant. The Samekh teaches us that in order to know our Creator, we have to get out of our limited selves, out of what we think we know and the limitations of the physical, so we can get in touch with our essential inner self. It is the meaning of Christ’s saying that “Unless you become as little children, you cannot enter the kingdom of heaven.“ It implies a re-birth.
The danger of the Samekh, being enclosed as it is, is that we can become totally absorbed with ourselves and not be concerned or care for the other, both on an individual and/or communal level. The grave danger is that we believe we are in sole possession of the truth and all others must bow down to this truth. This self-possession becomes obsession and leads to intolerance.
We must empty ourselves in order to be filled; this “decreation” is much more easily said than done. The first step in the recognition of otherness is given to us by the beauty of the world, and this recognition pierces us (Zayin) and inspires us to love the other. The outer covering or ‘husk’ of Samekh needs to be pierced by the ‘arrow’ or ‘sword’ of Zayin in order for the divine influence to flow into it. (This is the meaning of Jesus’ saying that “Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I have not come to bring peace, but a sword. For I have come to set a man against his father, and a daughter against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law. And a person’s enemies will be those of his own household.” Matthew 10 34-36)
The combination of Nun (Path 28 The Natural Intelligence) and Samekh נס Nes (Path 23 The Enduring Intelligence) means “miracle”. Once we have learned the lessons of these two letters, we can discover what the miracle really is. It is the ‘friendship’ of the Divine which sustains all the Sephirot, and we as human beings are called upon to mirror that ‘friendship’ in order to continue to reveal the truth of God’s creation. Frodo’s friend and companion in The Lord of the Rings is appropriately named Samwise and their ‘friendship’ is a manifestation of that miracle. This miracle is “the friendship of Justice” or “the Justice of friendship”, the bringing of two unequal parts or partners into a relationship that makes them “equal” (but not the “equality” that we perceive as the Same). The possibility of friendship is a miracle and it is this miracle which is the hope for human communities. Hope is the great antagonist against tyranny.
If we look at the combination of the Path #6 Transcendental Influx Intelligence and Path #23 The Sustaining Intelligence, we can see how the combination of the Light of the letter Alef and the “house” of the letter Beth influence how we come to interpret the Sephirot Chesed. It is from Tiferet that Chesed receives the qualities of Mercy and Kindness, and when Chesed is looked upon without the influence of Tiferet, then we have the influence of will to power which is a relationship of commandeering and domination, the world without the influence of the Ain Sof.
The Letter Resh and the 25th Path: The Intelligence of Trials (Temptations)
Tiferet to Yesod: Path 25 Intelligence of Trials (Temptations)
The Twenty-fifth Path is the Intelligence of Probation, or is Tentative, and is so called because it is the primary temptation, by which the Creator (blessed be He) trieth all righteous persons.
Alt. Trans. ” The twenty-fifth path is called the consciousness of trial because it is the primary test by which the creator proves the compassionate (Khasidim).”
Path 25. Testing Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Nisyoni): It is called this because it is the original temptation by which God tests all of His saints.
Resh: Tiferet to Yesod
The Reish, the 20th Hebrew letter, means ‘head’, ‘leader’ and ‘beginning’. It is the symbol of choosing between greatness and degradation. In it is the word for poor רש Rash, (Need) but when it is filled with the power of the Aleph it becomes Rosh ראש, head or first (Fulness). As it is, it is composed of Shin and a Mem and the mother Alef is missing. Reish is the sixth of the seven double letters of the Hebrew alphabet.
Reish is a container, just as Beth (2) and Khof (20) are containers. But while Khof represents forms such as a cup or house, Reish (200) represents the containing of the infinite, exponential growth which is the illusion that will to power gives; the container is the law of Necessity, and the ultimate container of life is death. Containers relate to limits and to the thinking that imposes limits. The Reish also represents the constant transition, flow and change of life and so is associated with Time. It is like a constant flow of energy, breaking through, breaking down into pieces, and building anew. Shin has a powerful influence over Reish and the illustrator of the Tarot illustrated here has associated it with the Judgement #20 card of Tarot. The Judgement card itself suggests a conversion and a rebirth here, a new beginning, and this relates it to the 25th path of wisdom.
Genesis 1.25 And Elohim made the beast of the earth after its kind, and the cattle after their kind, and everything that creepeth upon the ground after its kind; and Elohim saw that it was good.
The Twenty-fifth path is related to the letter Resh, ר meaning “head”, and is the sixth ‘double’. The path intersects the crossover path established by the letter Mem/Alef. The Sefer Yetzirah seems to indicate that the created world is already ‘a garden of Eden’ since in the eyes of God (Elohim) all created things are good. The “primary temptation” is to view the world as not good but incomplete, and it is conceived as incomplete because it does not conform to our wishes or desires. The Tree of Knowledge in the garden has always been viewed as “knowledge of good and evil”, and the great temptation for human beings is to view themselves as the ‘creators’ of good and of justice, and thus tempts them to ‘turn stones into bread’. The ‘righteous’ or the ‘just’ are those who are able to obey the will of God and able to avoid the temptation of seeing themselves as the creators of good, and the only creators of good. Clearly, those who are just show compassion to all that is and are mindful of the affliction that is part of the root of existence.
The path of Resh is the test or trial i.e., the polemos or confrontation that the individual must face with regard to “egoism” and the recognition of Otherness, the choice between power or compassion, between severity or loving kindness. The choice results in these opposing forces being brought into an equilibrium, where love and will, the ego and the Other meet in harmony and friendship and become a unity. Historically, the focus of traditional religions has been on the taboos against sexuality i.e., Yesod, while greed and cruelty were emancipated in the name of empowerment.
The path of Resh links Tiferet to Yesod, the Beauty of the world to the Foundation of the physical world. It intersects the path of Mem/Alef, the horizontal mother letters, and forms a “cross” (“Pick up your cross and follow Me” Matthew 16: 24-26; “What God has joined together let no man put asunder” Matthew 19:6. The cross here is the individual human body). The “putting asunder” of what God has joined into a unity through His mediatory powers is “the sin against the light”, against the Truth. All denial of what one knows to be true is a sin against the Light. As Socrates once said, “No one knowingly does evil.” Evil is the product of ignorance and stupidity. They may think that doing evil will benefit them at first, but in the final outcome it does not. This is the darkness or stupidity that is current in America at the moment, and it accounts for its rampant corruption, immorality, and injustice in the public sphere. These injustices are not only visible in America, however.
The equilibrium between the self and others, the unity between the “inner” and “outer” worlds is given by the light of Tiferet. (This is the unity which Socrates prays for at the closing of the dialogue Phaedrus and it mirrors the passage of Matthew 16: 24-26). The balance conferred by Love illuminates both Netzach and Hod, ethical action and justice, with the command to be compassionate and merciful. It is the obeying of this command that is the trial of Path #25.
The ”severity” of institutionalized religions (Judaism, Christianity, Islam in the West) arises from their desire for power, from their being in possession of the “revealed texts” understood as Law. The Divine Revelation of these texts becomes ossified in stone, literally, and ceases to be a “living God”. Their God becomes a “jealous God” who seeks retribution for sin. However, “the god who sometimes does and sometimes does not wish to go by the name of Zeus” demands payment in blood for the worship of false gods as is seen in the histories of these religions. (This is the tarot card The Tower #15, the card of revolution, the lightning bolt of Zeus).
The point of equilibrium is Tiferet which brings into a relation the Sephirot Yesod, Netzach, and Hod simultaneously. This equilibrium is not something permanent but must be wrested from the darkness that attempts to hide it. The wresting of truth is the constant strife of life and is the trial for the ‘righteous’.
Path
Letter
Meaning
Symbol
Path 1. Mystical Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Mufla): This is the Light that was originally conceived, and it is the First Glory (“Let there be light”). No creature can attain its excellence. Path 11. Glaring Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel MeTzuchtzach): It is called this because it is the essence of the veil which is ordered in the arrangement of the system. It indicates the arrangement of the paths (netivot) whereby one can stand before the Cause of causes.
Alef/Bethא/ב
The manifestation of the physical universe through the Logos/Word, what is known as the Ain Sof. The association of the Divine Will (Necessity) with the Cause of causes and the principle of reason. The initiation point of the dualities of the universe. The manifestation of the Divine covenant through the Beauty of the World. Glaring means 1. shining with or reflecting a harshly bright or brilliant light ; 2. very conspicuous or obvious; flagrant. This may suggest that what we call “common sense” is meant here? Notice the “order…in the arrangement of the system” and “the arrangement of the paths” and these suggest the principle of reason in operation.
Beth is “house”; the ‘container’ of the physical universe. The ‘veil’ is the hiddenness of the things that are i.e., the covenant of the beauty of the world behind the Laws of Necessity.
Tiferet (Beauty) to Chokmah (Wisdom) Path 16. Enduring Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Nitzchi): It is called this because it is the Delight of the Glory (Eden). As it is, there is no Glory lower than it. It is called the Garden of Eden, which is prepared for the (reward of) the saints.
Hehה
Jubilation. The Garden of Eden is here present in the NOW, not something that will come as a reward after death. It is the reward for the being-in-the-world of the saints, the reward for being ‘saintly’.
The liberation from the enclosure that is Chet and the re-birth that results. The end of the paths of TORA and TARO in the Tree of Life.
Tiferet (Beauty) to Binah (Understanding) Path 17. Intelligence of the Senses (Consciousness) (Sekhel HaHergesh): This is prepared for the Faithful saints so that they may be able to clothe themselves in the spirit of holiness. In the arrangement of the supernal entities, it is called the Foundation of Beauty (Yesod HaTiferet).
Vavו
The senses acting as a “hook”, peg. How we come to determine the nature of things. The viewing of things bounded by the ‘sanctifying’ thinking of separation. The influence of the ‘rooted intelligence’ and the ‘transcendental influx’ on how we come to interpret the world.
Contrary symbols of the moon and the heart in the Tarot card The Empress. The throne of Binah is a rectangle, an altar, not the cubes shown in the other Tarot cards.
Tiferet (Beauty) to Gevurah (Severity) Path 20. Intelligence of Will (Consciousness) (Sekhel HaRatzon): It is called this because it is the structure of all that is formed. Through this state of intelligence (consciousness) one can know the essence of Original Wisdom.
Ayinע “eye”
Eyes How the eye sees and how the ear hears determine how we are going to be in the world of creation. It signifies that here a choice has to be made, a decision taken.
Experience, knowledge. The structure of all that is formed is the Law of Necessity. Knowing the Law of Necessity is Wisdom, for through this one is able to distinguish the Necessary from the Good.
Tiferet (Beauty) to Chesed (Kindness, Mercy) Path 21. Desired and Sought Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel HaChafutz VeHaMevukash): It is called this because it receives the divine Influx so as to bestow its blessing to all things that exist.
Zayinז
“Sword”, that which pierces. “Manacle”, that which binds. The arrows of Eros as sword; the covenant of God as that which binds.It is the contrary of the Ayin. The Ayin is the root of the will to power over the physical while the desire and seeking of the Zayin is for the Good. Through the reception of Grace, the ‘divine influx’, it bestows the care and concern on all that exists and allows God to ‘see’ His creation, whereas the Ayin is dominated by the seeing of the ego of the individual Self.
The sword pierces the ‘husk’ that is the container of Samekh and allows the influx of the beauty of the world to establish that path or channel that allows grace to flow into the world.
Tiferet (Beauty) to Hod (Splendour) “the outward appearance of the things” Path 22. Faithful Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Ne’eman): It is called this because spiritual powers are increased through it, so that they can be close to all those ‘who dwell in their shadow’.
Lamedל “study” The Library of Hermes
The Library of Hermes is composed of the texts of the world. The texts of the world are composed of that which is understood regarding the Laws of Necessity. It is what we call ‘education’; ‘historical knowledge’.
The Tower of Babel. The writings of all nations regarding their interpretations of the Laws of Necessity and the Divine Will. Lamed as the ‘uncoiled serpent’. It indicates revolution and change.
Tiferet (Beauty) to Netzach (Splendour) Path 23. Sustaining Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Kayam): It is called this because it is the sustaining power for all the Sephirot.
Samekhס
Love and friendship as the sustaining power of all the Sefirot. “Unless you become as little children, you cannot enter the kingdom of Heaven.” 12 Yods in the Tarot card: all encompassed under the Sun, the whole of humanity. The salvation or redemption as the destiny of human beings or for human beings.
“Prop”, “support”. The friendship of care and concern that sustains all the Sephirot (creation) and the direct light within human beings. Lamed indicates dwelling in the shadow of this direct light.
Tiferet to Yesod Path 25. Testing Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Nisyoni): It is called this because it is the original temptation by which God tests all of His saints.
Reishר
Head, leader, beginning. The choice between social recognition and one’s true self. Choice between the head and the heart. (“Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.”) The new beginning that follows the conversion and baptism; a re-birth.
The site of the choice and the possible conversion, baptism and re-birth.
13. Binah to Gevurah/Gevurah to Binah: Letter Peh. Unity Directing Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Manhig HaAchdut): It is called this because it is the essence of the Glory. It represents the completion of the true essence of the unified spiritual beings.
20. Tiferet to Gevurah: Letter: Ayin Path 20: Intelligence of Will (Consciousness) (Sekhel HaRatzon): It is called this because it is the structure of all that is formed. Through this state of intelligence (consciousness) one can know the essence of Original Wisdom.
24. Gevurah to Hod (Hod to Gevurah)Letter Kaf. Apparative (Tools) Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Dimyoni) (Sometimes called The Imaginative Intelligence): It is called this because it provides an appearance for all created apparitions, in a form fitting their stature.
The Fifth Path: The Radical/Root Intelligence
The Fifth Path is called the Radical Intelligence because it is itself the essence equal to the Unity, uniting itself to the BINAH or Intelligence which emanates from the primordial depths of Wisdom or CHOCHMAH.
Alt. Trans. “The fifth path is called the root consciousness because it is the substance of the unity, joining itself to that understanding (Binah) which itself emanates from within the province of primordial wisdom.”
Wescott trans. The Fifth Path is called the Radical Intelligence, because it resembles the Unity, uniting itself to the Binah, or Intelligence which emanates from the Primordial depths of Wisdom or Chokmah.
Case trans. The fifth path (Pachad, Gevurah or Deen, the fifth Sephirah) is called the Radical Intelligence, and it is so called because it is the very substance of Unity, and is within the substance of that Binah which itself emanates from within the depths (literally ”from within the enclosure”) of the Primordial Wisdom.
The fifth path of Radical or Root intelligence is that Understanding (Binah) which comes from how we understand and interpret the Laws of Necessity which emanate from the wisdom or knowledge of the whole (the Unity) that is Chokmah. The emphasis on the path here is on its “resemblance” to the Unity (the Good itself), but it is not the Good itself. It is a ‘shadow’ or an ersatz form of the Good itself. We can see the contrary nature of the translations that are given for this path. The enclosures of Primordial Wisdom are illustrated in the letters Beth, Chet, and Tet, and we have discussed the meanings of these letters already. The understanding and interpretation of Necessity becomes the destiny or Fate of those human beings that have to suffer that understanding and interpretation.
It is required for human beings to distinguish between the Necessary and the Good; not doing so leads them to the darkening of the light and, ultimately, the rejection of the light i.e. to sin. Is the Radical Intelligence lit by the light of Keter, the Sun, or by the reflected light of the Moon? Is it the fire that is Shin that is the light which “enlightens” the Cave that is the enclosure that surrounds Gevurah?
The ‘enclosure’ of Primordial Wisdom we have designated as the letters Chet and Tet, but it could also possibly be Beth, since Beth is the ‘house’ of being. If we paraphrase the words of the path, the Unity of Gevurah is a product or outcome of the Understanding (the substance) that results from our knowledge of the realm of Necessity. This substance of the Unity is what we have called the ‘collective’, ‘the social’ in this writing and the historical knowledge that derives from this collectivity of human beings. This unity is an ersatz or false form of the Unity that is the Divine, and exists on a lower level or plane than the unity that is the Divine i.e., it exists in the ‘depths’ of existence, the gyring outward direction of the Creation. The outward direction of Creation, the ‘away from’ the source of the Creation is the ‘depths’, not the ‘heights’, of Creation.
The Radical Intelligence joins ‘the many’ that comprises any thing into a ‘one’ thing and brings about the particularity of the objects of the world by imposing limits on the unlimited of Chokmah. This is related to the fire of Shin. This imposing of limits is a gathering and assembling into a one which was called logos by the Greeks; it is here that we find a meeting point of the Logos and Necessity. This gathering of the logos is done so that things can be named and is what the Greeks called dianoia. This can only be done in Time. We can find this process occurring in the algorithms of AI in our modern age; they are meant to create enclosures from within the enclosure that is AI itself. The naming of names is a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ response to the naming of the particulars that are brought forth into sight as predicates of the subject that is the unity of the thing. It is Reason as subject that is understood here, and the predicates must suffer from no contradiction and give sufficient reasons for the naming of the subject as such. Our scientific terminology and metaphors are part of this naming.
In the Sefer Yetzirah, the logos is represented by the Sephirot Tiferet. This seems to suggest that if things are named without the assistance of Tiferet then they will be falsely named; and this ‘false naming’ is a covering up of things that are not i.e., it is merely the naming of shadows. This makes it difficult in assigning the proper letter to the paths to and from the Radical or Root Intelligence. This intelligence or consciousness is what has come to be known as the Human Sciences, the politics, the anthropology, the psychology etc. that is gathered from the study of human beings. I have assigned the letter Peh as the path that is present between Gevurah and Binah. Peh is the language of rhetoric or public speech, and AI such as ChatGPT is an example of this ‘public speech’ and the flowering of this speech. It is primarily language as ‘information’. When language is understood as ‘information’, it is language that is ‘measured’, ‘weighed’, and ‘accounted for’ in the site that is human discourse.
Gevurah, the fifth Sephirot, is associated with the emanation of fire from the letter Shin, one of the three Mothers. Kabbalists also associate Gevurah with Mars and Scorpio astrologically, that is, a combination of fire (Mars) and water (Scorpio) which produces earth, materialism. Gevurah is associated with power and will to power and also with strife, as reason understood as the principle of reason is associated with power and will to power and the striving to master Necessity . To paraphrase Plato, only the dead do not have strife or polemos (war). Strife is life itself.
That The Order of the Golden Dawn chooses to associate the Tarot card Strength #8 with this path does not seem to make too much sense. The card Strength seems to represent the virtue of “prudence” or what the Greeks called sophrosyne, and this is a virtue of the individual within the society, the individual within the enclosure of society as is pictorially represented in the letter Peh. The letter Peh shows a Yod inscribed within an enclosing Beth or within any of the other enclosing letters of the Hebrew alphabet. The human soul is enclosed within a body; the human being is enclosed within the social community of which it is a part.
Justice as #8 would seem to appropriately represent the will to power of those societies or collectives that codify their laws in such a way as to demonstrate what is acceptable action by individuals within those societies. These laws become the narratives by which those societies live and which constitute the substance of the institutions within those societies. The “strife” represented is that between the individual and the city or the society, and this strife finds its foundation in the use of language. From our point of view when looking at the Tree of Life, the right side seems to represent individuals while the left side seems to indicate societies or the social and the middle pillar is the interaction between the two and the mediation between the two. It would seem appropriate that Strength be placed on the Middle Pillar since the figure represents proper moral and ethical action.
The fifth path or Radical Intelligence is also associated with fear. One is reminded of the myth of the ring of Gyges from Bk. II of Plato’s Republic where Glaucon, Plato’s brother, asserts that human beings only obey the laws for fear of the consequences of getting caught when one disobeys them. This is why they seek the ‘invisibility’ that ‘anonymity’ brings them. Justice is also related to the name of the fifth path when realized in its highest form. This associates it with the Greek understanding of Justice as dike or that which is “fitting”, “suitable”, “apt”, “fair” as the outcome of the process of making something such as laws or of doing something which is ‘noble’. This active doing is associated with the thymoeides part of the soul. When the table made by the craftsman is fit for the purposes of a table, then the table is “just” i.e., suitable, apt. From this ‘suitability’ for its purpose comes its good. The same thing can be said of laws: when they are fitting, suitable, apt then they are just and some form of goodness is the result and emanates from them.
The narratives that compose capitalist societies, for instance, show a clear discrepancy between ‘white collar’ crime and ‘street crime’. White collar crimes are primarily composed of fraud, deception, etc. and are committed by the elites of those societies. Street crimes are the violent crimes committed in the open and in plain sight. Even though the consequences of white-collar crime may be far more egregious to far more individuals, the perpetrators of those crimes do not receive punishments equal to the punishments given to the perpetrators of street crimes which usually involve a single individual. The institutional narratives of the societies which they compose indicate that justice is not present in those societies and that this injustice is present at the root or foundation of those societies. When the instituting of laws is to the advantage of the lawmaker, then injustice is the result (see the figure of Pausanias and his discussion of eros in Plato’s Symposium).
There appear to be a number of similar characteristics between the 5th path and the Temperance#14 card of the Tarot (10 + 4). I would associate the Justice card with the Sephirot Hod and the path of Kaf, while The Hierophant #5 is appropriately associated with The Rooted Intelligence and the path of Peh that leads both to and from it. Temperance may be said to represent the sophrosyne (prudence) and phronesis (wise judgement that comes from experience) that is the proper form of Eros in the thymoeidic part of the soul. The mediatory figure represented in the card assists the logistikon or thoughtful part of the soul in its dealing with the urges and drives of the epithymetikon or appetitive part of the soul.
The Fifth Path is also associated with the creation of Time. Being (creation) and time cannot be separated. This creation is that of Otherness (we sometimes give it the name of ‘Nature’), but “the substance of unity” is still present in it. It is here that one finds all the varieties of the ersatz forms of unity which we find in social collectives. Cliques, cults, sects, political parties, etc., are among the false forms that human beings choose in order to fulfill that absence, that need for completion, that they experience in the strife of their everyday lives. The letter Peh in its shape shows the individual Yod swallowed up by the collective whole. The individual is subject to the ‘enclosures’ that are the narratives that individuals invariably become involved with. AI will represent the whole of this enclosure and be considered ‘wisdom’ in the near future.
Gevurah, or the Radical Intelligence, refers to the “depth” of things, the root or the radix. The radix is the base or foundation of something. The radix of the positional numbering system as is used in the Sefer Yetzirah and the Tarot is 10. In the Radical Intelligence’s path’s emanations and their effects, Understanding and knowledge are brought into a unity with Wisdom (the Unlimited) to bring about the unity necessary to define a thing. A tree, for example, is composed of many parts: branches, leaves, roots, the trunk. These parts are brought together in the intelligence so that we can identify the thing as a tree and name it as such. This unifying thinking we have referred to as dianoia. The unity of the thing, what it is named, is the ‘subject’ or ‘the one’ of the thing, while the parts that make up the thing are its predicates. Both subject and predicates are parts of language, and what we call ‘logic’ or reason is based on, and finds its roots in, language (Logos). The Radical or Root Intelligence is the anti-Logos, for it creates the enclosures that cannot be questioned.
In the Sefer Yetzirah, the infinite number of possibilities and potentialities of the dynamis or “life-force” can be understood through the ten essential emanations of the Sephirot. The essence of the individual thing can be understood or seen through, made transparent, when the Sephirot which reveals it is understood. To make an analogy: AI uses the “infinite number of possibilities and potentialities” that are present in the whole that is the Internet to arrive at its ends or judgements. Of course, the possibilities and potentialities are not infinite but only appear to be so. AI puts language into ‘stone’, and thus kills language or causes it to cease to be a living force by turning language into ‘information’. Ultimately, this killing of language will turn human beings into zombies or golems, and this is the greatest danger of AI to humanity. AI is by its very nature unthinking, and because of this it is anti-logos.
Rene Descartes
What is missing here, or what is the problem or difficulty here, is the connection or lack of connection, to Tiferet. All of the Sephirot are connected to Tiferet, but the paths themselves do not all pass through Tiferet. The paths are modes of “consciousness” or “intelligence”, “awareness”. There is, currently, a great gap between Love and Intelligence. Without Love, things are viewed from the egoistical “I” of the Self, and the will to power is the channel for that “I” in its empowerment through the principle of reason. The Self becomes the dominant ‘subject’, the ego cogito of the French philosopher Descartes. The channel itself becomes the principle of reason (Shin in the Sefer Yetzirah) which, in turn, becomes a principle of being or Life itself. Things, other beings, are deprived of that essential mercy and kindness which are the foundations of the true sources of knowledge. The Vav acts as a barrier to the mercy and kindness that come to us through Tiferet and Heh, and binds us in the enclosures that are rooted in fear, insecurity, and severity.
Gevurah relates to “might”, “power”, and “fear”, while the “loving kindness” that is the countenance of Chesed is contrary to this outward appearance of Gevurah. Gevurah may be said to represent the State, the Greek polis, the German Volk, the Roman church. It is the collective, the social and its realm. It is the site of the “strife” or polemos that exists between the individual soul and the society or community into which that soul has been born, the strife between the social, the city and human being. It is the world of convention, human “creation” or making. Gevurah is the force that pushes all things that are not similar to itself apart, away from itself. In Gevurah, there is no distinction between “power with” and “power over”; the two go hand-in-hand (i.e., in the technological, there is no essential difference between democracy, communism, and authoritarianism or other fascist forms of government. They are predicates of the subject technology). This separating ultimately suggests intolerance. The temptation and seductive force that is power consolidating itself to itself is contrary to that power that allows beings to be, the power that withdraws so that Otherness can be seen for what it is. Nevertheless, for the individual, we have no choice but to attempt to live well within the communities of which we are members. This living well is living justly.
Gevurah is represented by The Hierophant #5 in the Tarot whose contrary is either The Devil #15 or The Tower #16. This is a crucial point in the Tarot and in the Sefer Yetzirah’s Tree of Life. The succumbing to the Great Beast is the succumbing to the three temptations of Christ: the material temptation of turning stones to bread (i.e. opposing the will of God and not recognizing the limits of Necessity; this can take on many metaphorical forms and is not merely the desire to overcome hunger. We talk about ‘the miracles of modern science’); the social temptation of having power over the kingdoms of the world (desiring or possessing the power of “social recognition” or social prestige, the temptation of the collective); and finally, the individual temptation, suicide (the temptation of God by denying the will of God and by the defying the Law of Necessity and in thinking that “we are our own”).
In the Tarot, the symbolism of The Devil mirrors that of The Lovers but is contrary to that of The Lovers: the manacles of The Devil which bind the man and woman to the black cube upon which the Devil roosts are the Tree of Life and the Tree of Knowledge in The Lovers #6. The manacles are attached to the cube of the physical world which is a black cube over which the Devil roosts; no such cube exists in The Lovers card. The Devil is a false or ersatz form of unity to which one becomes bound and loses one’s freedom and one’s individuality. This enchainment is freely chosen.
This is why I would assign #16 to The Devil and #15 to The Tower. The Tower is the lightning bolt of Zeus, or of God, and is the nemesis for the worship of false gods or the worship of power and social prestige. The Tower is the card of revolution, change. In the ascending direction, the worship of The Devil leads to The Tower; in the descending direction, The Tower leads to that revolution which simply replaces itself with The Devil. The cube of The Devil is one possible outcome of the cubes shown in the cards of The High Priestess, The Emperor, and The Chariot or the cards on the right side of The Tree of Life. On the left side, The Empress sits upon a rectangle, The Hierophant’s robes hide and conceal that which he is seated upon, and Justice is shown seated upon a throne. The Hierophant’s “throne” or seat is illustrated in black in the card given here.
The Letter Peh and the 13th Path: The Uniting Intelligence
Path 13. Binah to Gevurah: Unity Directing Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Manhig HaAchdut): It is called this because it is the essence of the Glory. It represents the completion of the true essence of the unified spiritual beings.
The Thirteenth Path is named the Uniting Intelligence and is so called because it is itself the essence of Glory. It is the Consummation of the Truth of individual spiritual things.
Alt. Trans. ” The thirteenth path is named the uniting consciousness because it is the essence of glory. It represents the completion of the true essence of the unified spiritual beings.”
Wescott trans. The Thirteenth Path is named the Uniting Intelligence, and is so called because it is itself the Essence of Glory. It is the Consummation of the Truth of individual spiritual things.
We spoke in the Third path of the thinking that is termed dianoia, that thinking which unites things that are separated, that thinking which brings things together into a one thing so that the thing can be named. The 13th path from Binah to Gevurah is the bridge between the universe of Asiyah and Beriyah and the universe of Yetzirah. Yetzirah is the world of action, the world of ‘making’, the formation of things which brings about their “consummation” or “perfection”, their completion. These things may be physical things or ethical things, since “glory” refers to the beauty of actions. It is the world of “values”, that which human beings ascribe to things that are of their own doing and their own making. “Values” are what human beings make or determine regarding actions or things; they are not the “good” so we may say that they are an ‘imitation’ or an ersatz form of the good. “Glory” is not the Good. “Values” are what are constructed from the narratives that have been created by the will to power of the collectives in which those values are ‘valued’.
The four causes of Aristotle of which we have spoken about are within both the physical and spiritual realms; that is, they have to do with both ontology and ethics. The actions which human beings take require a dynamis, whether in an active or passive form, a potential or a possibility of being able to come into being or not to come into being. They are expressions of the thymoeidic part of the soul as concrete illustrations of eros. Paul Foster Case considers the Thirteenth Path to belong to the letter Gimel and to be associated with Tiferet; but this cannot be the situation. The letter Gimel refers to “wealth”, the “value” of created things, the multiplicity of created things, the “wealth” of things that is the abundance of Nature, and is associated with the strife human beings experience amidst that multiplicity of things. It is one of the 7 double letters indicating that its understanding can be viewed in two ways (at least).
If we look at the card of The Magician #1, we can see that he is enclosed within an inverted Peh. We may say he is the Peh itself. The ‘making’ of The Magician is that making carried out by the artisans and technicians who happen to compose the powers that be in the societies of which they are members. Peh is the logos of rhetoric, the language of the many directed toward the many and it finds its highest form in the legislating of laws. The “magicians” and technicians are dependent on the people who are their audience. This is contrary to dialectic, the language of the few which is directed to the two or three gathered together.
The strife among the created things and urges that arise in human beings is that which needs to be brought into a “friendship” or balance and this is done through the connection between the primal water of the Holy Spirit (Chakmah the undifferentiated pre-conscious), to the fire of Keter through Air (Alef) from which earth (wealth) is created.
We might get an understanding of Binah/Gevurah as Foundation when we think of gravity. Gravity is the most obvious manifestation of the law of Necessity, the limits that are imposed on the unlimited. It is through understanding the laws of Necessity that we are able to traverse the paths from the Beriyah universe to the Yetzirah universe of formation on the inward and upward path. It is the law of Necessity which provides all of that which we call knowledge.
There are clearly errors in the commentaries that place Gevurah as “Justice” and not the sephirot Hod. If the “uniting intelligence” is the essence of “glory”, then it must manifest itself in beauty of some kind since glory’s root is the Beautiful. The beauty of the things made by human beings or in the “glorious” actions that human beings are capable of performing once they have been given the Love that unifies all beings are examples of these. This ‘glory’ is the face that the desire for immortality takes in the thymoeidic realm of the soul. Of course, this is where error can arise. The “glory” that derives from “social prestige” is the second temptation of Christ. (Matthew 4:3) The unity or sense of oneness that one derives from belonging to a clan, country, political party or some other “collective” is a false form of the unity that belongs to “two or three gathered together in my Name”. His Name is Love, not the Law; it is not the power that derives from “social prestige” and recognition. It is no coincidence that insanity or madness is rarely found in individuals but is the norm or the rule in collectives.
The NOW is eternity once the individual has been reconciled to the One which is the heart of all things. This is how one can understand Plato’s statement that “Time is the moving image of eternity”, when eternity is experienced in the NOW. Nature itself is sempiternal: the sempiternal is an image of the eternity of the One. The epithymetikon or appetitive part of the soul experiences the primary desire for immortality through the procreation of children; the thymoeides part of the soul experiences the desire for immortality in the achievement of fame or recognition through the doing of ‘noble actions’. The logistikon or ‘rational’ part of the soul (intelligence) has the direct gnostic experience of immortality when it is directly united to the One through the mediatory power of Love. This places it at odds with the orthodoxy of the piety ruling the faiths of collective religions.
What is one to do practically? One is “to mind one’s own business” and to take care of those things that come to one when they occur: to recognize and distinguish between the Necessary and the Good and to prevent the worst from happening when one cannot assist in bringing about the Good. It is not in our power to bring about the Good; that is in God’s hands which He gives through His grace. But we are capable of producing the contexts and circumstances where the good can occur. The greatest evils occur when we think we can bring about the Good i.e., “the good end justifies any means”.
Peh derives from “and Elohim saw that it was good” (swarming of waters with creatures; of air with fowl) 1:21 These are the “goods” that are not the Good but are sometimes mistaken for the Good. These ‘goods’ are determined by the society of which one is a member through the narratives that those societies put forward, or they are those ‘goods’ that are necessary for our survival as human beings.
The Hebrew letter Peh means “mouth” and refers to the power of speech and “to consume”. Peh is similar to the letter Kaf in shape, but Peh contains a “tooth”; the letter Shin means ‘tooth’ and teeth assist us in our consumption of things, the grinding and breaking down of things. Shin is primary in the process of decreation in the ascending motion from out of the depths of the Tree of Life. In Kabbalah speech, the logos, is a spiritual power, which can cause good or evil depending on whether it is used falsely or truly. One of the problems with language is that it allows itself to be used so. Our being is determined by what one thinks and how one thinks, and these in turn are determined by how we view the world and how we will view the world. This seeing and thinking, in turn, determine our actions, what our character is and how one is as a being. Since it is in the nature of human beings to reveal truth, i.e., it is what we essentially are, what one speaks has the power to become reality. Lies become realities through false speech. Violent words lead to violent actions. When our speech is not used to reveal truth, we become more inhumane, bestial, violent, and ultimately, insane. The quality of our speech determines the quality of our life’s essence and creative existence. This is why speech and language are so important and so dangerous.
The shape of the Peh is a Khaf with a Yod inside of it or, as suggested above, a Khaf with a Shin inside it, or a Beth with a Yod inside of it. The Shin represents the spiritual spark or the emotional, passionate fire of the soul, contained inside the physical body, the thymoeides of the soul. Kaf is associated with the ‘hand’, so there is a grasping, taking possession of something implied here. The reference seems to be to the world of yetzirah and with our use of equipment and tools, the ready-to-hand. Passionate speech deals with rhetoric; the speech before crowds and assemblies, public discourse. This suggests that the letter Peh signifies the individual (the Yod) enclosed within the crowd, or it could also signify the individual who has chosen to be contained within the enclosure of the material world only, such as is suggested by The Magician #1.
With words and silence we can communicate the essence of our soul and existence. This requires that the inner and outer life match – that the physical existence is fully aligned manifesting the spiritual intentions of the soul within it. Socrates’ prayer to Pan at the end of the dialogue Phaedrus expresses this: “Dear Pan, and all you other gods that dwell in this place, grant that I may become beautiful within, and that such outward things as I have may not war against the spirit within me. May I count him rich who is wise, and as for gold, may I possess only so much of it as a temperate man might bear and carry with him.” This is similar to what it says in the Talmud Baba Metsiah “Don’t say one thing with the mouth and another with the heart.” The Yod is the point in the heart where spiritual awakening begins, what we have been referring to as the logistikon part of the soul. However, the alignment of the physical with the spiritual is no easy task as even someone such as Socrates needs to pray for a balance between them.
The power of the Peh is a double-edged sword. As it says in Proverbs 18:21 “Life and death are in the hands of the tongue.” Because of this, the Peh represents the requirement to govern one’s own nature, to ‘know thyself’ and know when to speak and when to be silent. Routine speech, speech to manipulate, all the distortions of speech must give way to viewing speech as a miracle in order to make the leap beyond this path.
The Letter Kaf and the 24th Path: The Apparative/ Imaginative Intelligence
Path 24.Khaf Gevurah to Hod (Hod to Gevurah) Apparative (Tools) Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Dimyoni) (Sometimes called The Imaginative Intelligence): It is called this because it provides an appearance for all created apparitions, in a form fitting their stature.
The Twenty-fourth Path is the Imaginative Intelligence, and it is so called because it gives a likeness to all the similitudes, which are created in like manner similar to its harmonious elegancies.
Alt. Trans. “The twenty-fourth path is called the imaginative consciousness because it provides an image to all created things that have an appearance, in a form fitting to each.”
Khaf, the 11th letter of the Hebrew Alphabet, means literally “the cupped palm of the hand”. It is the central letter of the alphabet and thus a mid-point. It is like a cupped, outstretched palm, ready to receive or to take(?). The shape of all containers – a bowl, a cup, a jar, is based on a basic curved shape resembling the curved shape that is the circumference of the sphere that is the creation itself, and Khaf, like the Beth, represents the idea of a container. It is the container in the realm of Yetzirah or Formation. This is its relation to the Mem/Alef crossover path from Chesed to Gevurah and the downward/upward path from Binah to Gevurah. It represents form and it is connected to the other letters of Hebrew alphabet that relate to “container” shapes and are double letters, which suggests that they are capable of the upward or downward motions that are the gyres within the sphere. A house, for example, is a form that contains the goings on of the people inside it; a body is a form which contains the life and energy of the person who possesses it. The forms of the physical world are where the spiritual essence of life is able to manifest, but how they will manifest depends on how the world is understood and seen. This is the significance of the letters Resh and Ayin and how they come to name the letter Khaf and its relation to the ‘firmament’ in Hebrew.
The Khaf is what gives form to the matter; it is an “imaginative” power. Here, imagination must not be confused with ‘fantasy’. It is quite the opposite. It is related to tools and equipment, that which will be used to ‘form’ and ‘shape’ the desired outcome. This giving of form is an external force outside of the thing that is being shaped. It is the force urged by the thymoeidic part of the soul mentioned earlier. It is not the Understanding that is Binah and its giving form to the unlimited realm of Chokmah that is in the world of Beriyah, but is the secondary element of formation found in the world of Yetzirah, the world of “making”, and this is why it is linked from Hod to Gevurah or from Gevurah to Hod. Kaf contains all the possibilities of containing, building, and forming all existence. It is what we refer to as the ‘applied sciences’, with the science being the eidetic power of numbers and words of the logos . It is AB of the Divided Line of Plato outlined in Bk VI of his Republic.
This containing, building, and forming is related to the world experienced as the ready-to-hand, and the emphasis on handling things in order to transform them i.e., the realm of Yetzirah. Kaf is the letter of formation, bending the straight line into a curved shape. This is its association with making things “fit”, “suitable” and it is thus related to Hod and to the Justice card of the Tarot. It also symbolizes the crown of the Torah – Keter כתר (I think this would be better understood as related to the Kingdom of Malkhut? Or is it, as a double, to be viewed as both and thus to be seen as a bridge between the different worlds?)
Khaf is related to will and to will to power. It teaches us that to bend and govern our tendencies or urges, and to shape our character, we must be flexible in the currents of time. It teaches us moulding, sorting, comparing. We bend the matter to the ‘spirit’ and the ‘spirit’ to the matter, constantly connecting the thought of the desired outcome with the action and doing of it. The Khaf also teaches us about what we contain inside ourselves and since it is a double letter, what we contain may be hidden in darkness or dwell in the light.
The letter Kaph derives from “and Elohim saw that it was good” (the two lights in the firmament) 1:18. The Hebrew word for “firmament” is composed of the letters Resh, Khaf, and Ayin and indicates “that which can be seen”, the physical, material thing. This relates Khaf to Path #20 The Intelligence of the Will and to the ‘structure of all that is formed’. Resh means “head”, both as a part of the body and as a leader of a group, and this directs us to the Tarot card of Judgement #20 and to the choice and test that must be experienced at this stage along the journey. Khaf as a container letter holds within it the contents of that knowledge which have become known as ‘historical’ and ‘holy’.
The Letter Ayin and the 20th Path: Intelligence of the Will
Ayin– and Elohim “divided the light from the darkness.” 1:4
Path 20:Tiferet to Gevurah: Intelligence of Will (Consciousness) (Sekhel HaRatzon): It is called this because it is the structure of all that is formed. Through this state of intelligence (consciousness) one can know the essence of Original Wisdom.
The Twentieth Path is the Intelligence of Will, and is so called because it is the means of preparation of all and each created being, and by this intelligence the existence of the Primordial Wisdom becomes known.
Alt. Trans. “The twentieth path is called the consciousness of will because it is the pattern of all that is formed. By this mode of consciousness, one may know the actuality of the primordial wisdom.”
Path 20. Intelligence of Will (Consciousness) (Sekhel HaRatzon): It is called this because it is the structure of all that is formed. Through this state of intelligence (consciousness) one can know the essence of Original Wisdom.
“The structure of all that is formed” is the Law of Necessity and it is through the understanding of the Law of Necessity that one is able to know “the essence of Original Wisdom” or the Sephirot Chakmah. The Seven Pillars of Wisdom correspond to the seven lower Sephirot and each of the themes of the individual Sephirot comprise the area of knowledge that makes up a particular “pillar of Wisdom”.
Our attempts to understand “all that is formed” comprise our ‘theories of the real’, what we call our sciences, how we attempt to view our world. Our Sciences are products of reason and the will, thought and experiment. As was said earlier, Artificial Intelligence is a shadow of the shadows of the things of Necessity. In Plato’s Allegory of the Cave, it would be a second cave and a further distance, at a greater depth, from the light of the Sun, the Good. Its greatest danger is that it is self-contained, and in its appearance of enlarging, it is , in fact, an enclosing of the world within its own sphere, its own ‘bubble’.
The letter Ayin is erroneously said to have the power to unite everything that is separated in creation and this is why it is confused with the structure of the letter Alef which consists of two Yods separated by a Vav. The letter Ayin as the 20th path is related to the letter Peh and path 13 The Unity Directing Intelligence and the letter Vav Path 17 The Intelligence of the Senses.
But is Vav really a true unifier or a barrier, a separator? Literally Vav means “hook” or “peg” and the Hebrew letter is a vertical line ו. The Vav would appear to be a metaphor of the mediation that exists between reason, the logos understood as an extension of the will to power, and the ready-to-hand world about us. The world is seen as the second Cave of the Internet containing the whole and the Vav is that reasoning that unites the things in that Cave to the algorithm based on the principle of reason. This reasoning is tied together with The Sanctifying Intelligence, the intelligence that separates (diaresis), and The Unity Directing Intelligence (dianoia) the intelligence that brings into a unity, that emanates from the Sephirot Binah. This is the Intelligence that is separated from Love.
The Vav is said to represent the Kav, the vertical line extension of the Creator’s perfection into the created world, in order to constantly direct it, guiding the cycle of existence step by step, until eventually the perfect Oneness of the Creator which underlies all of creation is revealed. Vav would thus relate to the Law of Necessity, the Divine Will, ‘the structure of all that is formed’. The Vav would thus be seen as a barrier but also as a way through. Vav is related to the Orr Yashar, the direct light of the Creator, entering the world but in the strife of this world, it appears to act as a barrier to the true Light. This would relate it to Christ who is the direct light of the Divine and would thus associate Vav with Tiferet, the sixth Sephirot and the Beauty of the World. But Vav, being an elemental letter, is capable of only one direction of movement. Is this movement up or down? Is it on the left side or the right side of the Tree of Life? Or is it the line in the middle?
Most commentaries on “The 32 Paths of Wisdom” seem to ignore the discoveries of quantum physics when they discuss the roles that human beings play in relation to Being and the World. Because science no longer deals with what was understood traditionally as Nature, the human will prepares each thing of Nature for the perfection that will come from the ends or purposes that human beings determine or devise that are best for themselves. This is what we call “freedom”, the devising of ends which we think are best for ourselves. We believe in this freedom because we believe that, ultimately, we are ‘our own’ as individuals. We have succumbed to the third temptation of Christ. Freedom is the commandeering and dominating knowing and making that we understand as technology. This dominating knowing and making includes our own bodies. It is also what we understand as ‘artificial intelligence’. What is clear from the Sefer Yetzirah and the traditional religions of the world, both West and East, is that we are not our own but are called to a higher destiny beyond ourselves; however, in our viewing and understanding of our world, we choose the destiny or fate that will befall us. The narratives that we have constructed of our worlds are predicates of the subject technology.
In the world of the will and of will to power, there are some cases where there are created beings that serve no purpose or ends for the will to power of some human beings; that is, they have no “purpose” or future “use” and cannot be brought into being as part of a “standing reserve” of resources, and to these beings no “justice”, no completion nor perfection is due, and that includes some other human beings. This is what has made, and will make in the future, the possibility of genocides.
The Twentieth Path is contrary to this type of thinking, if it is viewed as a duality. The “preparation of all and each created being”, “the pattern of all that is formed”, may be best understood in the German word gestell as it is used by the German philosopher Martin Heidegger. A Gestell is a framework or “method of organization” which allows created things to be and to come to presence for us. It is the primordial algorithm. Heidegger calls it the essence of technology. It is a manner of human being-in-the-world (among other possibilities of human being although it is, by far, the dominant one) and it determines how the created beings are to be viewed. It is a ‘destiny’, a ‘fate’ of Being. While in German Gestell is a noun, Heidegger uses the word in a way that is uncommon by giving Gestell an active role, by viewing gestell as a product of the human will and a product of human action, a human “projection”, “a throwing forth”. This projective throwing forth is rooted in the principle of reason.
Martin Heidegger
In defining the essence of technology as Gestell, Heidegger indicates that all that has come to presence in the world has been “enframed”. Such enframing or the placing within ‘enclosures’ relates to the manner reality appears or unveils itself in the period of modern technology (by “modern” here is meant post-Renaissance) and people born into this “mode of ordering” are always embedded into the Gestell (enframing) themselves. (As the Canadian philosopher, George Grant said, “What we have done to Nature, we first had to do to our own bodies”.) Thus, what is revealed in the world, what has shown itself as itself (the truth of itself) requires first an Enframing, literally a way to exist or to be in the world, to be able to be seen and understood. Path #20 indicates this knowledge when viewed from one perspective.
In ordinary usage the word gestell would signify simply a display apparatus of some sort, like a book rack, or picture frame; but for Heidegger, Gestell is literally the challenging forth, or performative (dynamis) “gathering together” for the purpose of revealing or presentation i.e., the human will as central to how the world will be unveiled. If applied to science and modern technology, “standing reserve” is active in the case of a river once it generates electricity or the earth if revealed as a coal-mining district, the soil as a mineral deposit, or scenic sites as part of the tourism industry. It is this challenging forth that connects gestell to the human will. It is ‘the hook’ or ‘peg’ that is part of the meaning of the letter Vav which is related to the letter Ayin.
Another way of viewing the 20th path is to see it as “prudence” or the Strength card as #11 of the Tarot. The essence of technology as outlined by Heidegger devolves into the nihilism of the pure “will to will”, the need to will anything since one has no other alternative given the oblivion of eternity. The desire is for ‘novelty’. The technological way of being-in-the-world is a mirror or mimicking of the “primordial wisdom” that is in the realm of the world of Atzilut since it bestows the ‘values’ on things and these values are related to their potential uses. This may be seen in the manner of questioning of the thing and how that question will be answered.
The Hebrew letter Ayin means “eye” and correspondingly, the Ayin has to do with vision and bringing forth the light that is hidden, the unveiling or revealing of truth. The Greek philosopher Aristotle begins his Metaphysics with the words: “All men naturally desire to see” for it is through “seeing” that we come to experience the things of the world and to gain knowledge of them. The letter Ayin in Hebrew relates to time and is related to the planet Saturn. It is the 16th letter of the Hebrew alphabet and thus is central to the whole of the 32 paths of wisdom: 16 X 2.
Since time begins with Binah in the Beriyah world of the Sephirot (the third stage in the moment of creation), we can therefore relate Ayin to the left side of the Tree of Life. The strong relationship of the letter with time suggests its relationship to The Tower #16 card of the Tarot (change, revolution) and also with the letter Peh (mouth), and this suggests the interchangeability between The Devil and The Tower (which I have suggested). Ayin is included in a great number of words associated with time in Hebrew (עת – time, שעה – hours, עתיד – future, עבר – past, רגע – moment, עוד – until, עד – eternity) and vision. It indicates the inextricable link between our Being and Time.
The structure of the letter appears to suggest that it is composed of three other letters: Zayin (manacle or sword), Lamed (the study of that which presences), and Yod (the ego, the self, the point). One can perceive that the letter is suggestive of the anti-Logos. The Yod acts as a time indicator in the Hebrew language; the Lamed is associated with study as memory, the study of that which has been written down and has become ‘historical memory’; and Zayin as being manacled or enchained by the manner of seeing and to Time itself (although this could also be seen as the ‘liberating’ sword from the oppression of the ‘manacle’). This would suggest that what we call ‘historical knowledge’ is not a liberating knowledge, although it can be a ‘leading out’ (and we perceive it as such) but it is also a knowledge that manacles and enfolds those who see it as All within itself. As we have already stated, the principle of reason is founded upon will to power, and the current temptations to artificial intelligence are grounded here. The intelligence of the will is the intelligence of the principle of reason and its relation to will to power.
If prophecy is the ‘highest speech’ of the visionary who is able to see the past, present, and pre-dict the future, then the vision suggested by Ayin could be said to be the ‘false vision’ which gives voice to the ‘false discourse’ and the ‘false prophecy’. This false discourse and vision is best captured in The Tower #15 and The Devil #16 cards of the Tarot, and is revealed in the letter Peh of the Hebrew language. The Devil card itself is among the darkest of the Tarot, if not the darkest of the Tarot. The only light present is from the torch in the Beast’s left hand which ignites the tail of the male figure in the illustration; the torch is the passions that ignite the desire and the will. That this torch only touches the male figure suggests the patriarchal nature of what we call ‘historical knowledge’. The torch of The Devil is reminiscent of the fire in Plato’s allegory of the cave which occurs in Bk VII of that dialogue. The Great Beast that is the concrete manifestation of the social occurs in Bk. VI, and I would suggest that these are the Same as what is being shown here on The Tree of Life.
The suggestion is that the figures in the illustration, contrary to the figures in The Lovers illustration, are manacled by their bestiality and by the darkness in which they dwell. They are shown with cloven feet; they have become bestial. The Beast itself stands upon a black cube. This cube is different from the cubes that The High Priestess, The Charioteer, and The Emperor sit upon, and these figures are on the right-hand side of the Tree of Life. On the Beast’s lower abdomen are symbols suggesting that it is the anti-Christ. On its beard is the letter Zayin suggesting its enchainment to Time and to the pleasures and goods that are the products of Time.
Some Hebrew commentators suggest that the pronunciation of the Ayin is also very significant – it is often mispronounced as a silent letter similar to the Aleph; however, Ayin’s correct sound is a guttural throat sound which stimulates the thyroid gland. This mispronunciation also suggests the ‘false discourse’ which gives Ayin the sense of being Aleph, but to think that Ayin is Alef is an error.
Ayin implores us to open our eyes, to see beyond the physical, but in order to do this we require grace. The Ayin requires an other to take us from the dark to the light. The Ayin is ‘the dark boar of the forest’ and the ‘snake’ that hides there from the centre of the Psalms, similar to the beast that dwells at the centre of the labyrinth that is symbolic of the sub-conscious self (Path #7 The Hidden Intelligence). Part of Ayin is the letter Lamed which is the serpent uncoiled and this serpent is the knowledge of which Ayin is composed. The gematria of Ayin is 70 suggesting that the strife associated with the attempt to see properly is associated with Netzach and with The Chariot #7 card of the Tarot.
Card
Path
Letter
Meaning
Symbol
The Hierophant
Path 5. Rooted Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Nishrash): It is called this because it is the essence of the homogeneous Unity. It is unified in the essence of Understanding, which emanates from the domain of the Original Wisdom.
The ersatz form of unity, seeing unity as a collective. The true unity is not a ‘homogeneous’ unity but a unity of friendship brought about by a mediatory relation.
The combination of Binah, Chokmah, and Gevurah influences. The Church. The universal homogeneous state, the enclosure that is Artificial Intelligence.
Gevurah (Severity)/ Binah (Understanding) Path 13: The Unity Directing Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Manhig HaAchdut): “It is called this because it is the essence of the Glory. It represents the completion of the true essence of the unified spiritual beings.”
Pehף or פ
The mouth, the desire to consume and to possess. The rhetoric which responds to the appetites, the passions. The will and the will to power.
Can have a Shin or a Yod contained inside of it. If a Shin then we are referring to the individual soul. If a Yod, then we are looking at the individual enclosed within the collective.
Gevurah (Severity)/ Chesed (Mercy) Path 19. Intelligence of the Mystery of all Spiritual Activities (Consciousness) (Sekhel Sod HaPaulot HaRushniot Kulam): It is called this because of the influx that permeates it from the Highest Blessing and the Supreme Glory.
Shin/AlefשאPehף or פ
Goad, prod, Staff (Aaron’s rod?)
Prod, tongue (Rhetoric? The changing of one’s world view through the persuasion of rhetoric) The letter seems to be in the shape of a snake?? “Snake” is the letter Tet ט
8. Justice
Gevurah (Severity)/ Hod (Splendour) 24. Apparative (Tools) Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Dimyoni) (Sometimes called The Imaginative Intelligence): It is called this because it provides an appearance for all created apparitions, in a form fitting their stature.
Khafכ
The open hand That which is ready to receive and take that which is offered. To take possession of something and have control over it. The making of the world of technology.
The world perceived and understood as the ready-to-hand. Everything has a ‘use’; if it does not, then it can be destroyed.
15: The Devil
Tiferet (Beauty)/ Gevurah (Severity) Path 20. Intelligence of Will (Consciousness) (Sekhel HaRatzon): It is called this because it is the structure of all that is formed. Through this state of intelligence (consciousness) one can know the essence of Original Wisdom.
Ayinע
Two possible views: the structure of all that is formed can be either the Law of Necessity (the Divine Will) or the principle of reason which determines the being of all that is formed from out of it. The essence of ‘original wisdom’ is the principle of reason becoming a principle of being.
Eye. Corresponds to the manner and being of how things are brought into view. The human imposition of a structure or frame upon the beings that come into being in the world. The “Eye of Sauron” that ultimately strives to enclose the world in darkness.
#4: The Settled Intelligence: the sephirot Chesed itself
#19. Intelligence of the Mystery of all Spiritual ActivitiesLetter: Mem Alef Shin
#12 Intelligence of Transparency: Letter: Gimelג
#26 The Renewing Intelligence: Letter: Daletד
#21 The Desired and Sought Intelligence: Letter Zayinז
Chesed is the physical manifestation of the material universe, that which is able to be apprehended through the senses. Through the meeting of fire, water, and air, earth is formed. Chesed expresses the enclosure of the created universe in Time and Space. Chesed is connected to Gevurah by the horizontal path of Mem/Alef/Shin. The Emperor #4 card in Tarot is suggestive of a 2nd kingdom i.e., the world of Yetzirah and its meeting with the world of Beriyah, or the manner in which the theoretical is given its applications through tools and equipment. The horizontal path emanating from Chesed to Gevurah is influenced by the crossing over of the diagonal paths of Heh and Vav. These crossings suggest disruptions or diversions or perhaps choices for the individual consciousness to make in how it will view the world at this point, or perhaps they indicate choices that have already been made. The crossover point at Alef, the middle of the three Pillars, determines whether the path taken will be that of Heh or Vav.
Chesed receives from Tiferet the qualities of Mercy and Kindness, but these qualities must confront the gloom that emanates from Chokmah. The illustration depicted here shows The Emperor’s throne as a cube with the head of a Ram on one of its sides. This suggests both the limited view that we as human beings are given of the physical universe and its truth. The Ram might also suggest that the sacrifice of animals is a ‘limited’ sacrifice of human beings, and that the whole of creation is a sacrifice on God’s part. The ritual of human sacrifice in some cultures is the attempt to mirror God’s actions that occur through the sacrifice of the second Person of the Trinity. The human sacrifice was always of the highest, purest, noblest individual that the particular society perceived itself as possessing. The illustration of the Tarot card of The Emperor #4 strongly suggests the element of Shin or fire. The Ram also signifies the sign of Aries, the first sign of the Zodiac, a fire sign in the Zodiac. This would indicate a union of Time and Space and a beginning of Time misunderstood as linear in form i.e., time as history.
Chokmah’s influence on Chesed is written about under the paths or channels emanating from Chokmah. How these influences are to be interpreted and understood depends on which element predominates in determining the path that is present.
The Fourth Path is named Measuring, Cohesive, or Receptacular; and is so called because it contains all the holy powers, and from it emanate all the spiritual virtues with the most exalted essences: they emanate one from the other by the power of the primordial emanation (The Highest Crown), blessed be it.
Alt. Trans. “The fourth path is named the overflowing consciousness because from it emanate all the holy powers, all the most ethereal emanations with the most sublime essences: they emanate one from the other through the power of the primordial emanator.”
Wescott trans. The Fourth Path is named the Cohesive or Receptacular Intelligence; and is so called because it contains all the holy powers, and from it emanate all the spiritual virtues with the most exalted essences: they emanate one from the other by the power of the Primordial Emanation. The Highest Crown. Keter.)
Case trans. The fourth path (Chesed or Gedulah, the fourth Sephirah) is called the Measuring, Arresting, Receptacular intelligence. and it is so called because from thence is the origin of allbeneficent power of the subtle emanations of the most abstract essences which emanate one from another by the power of the Primordial Emanation.
Path 4. Settled Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Kavua): It is called this because all the spiritual powers emanate from it as the (most) ethereal of emanations. One emanates from the Other by the power of the Original Emanator, may He be Blessed.
The 4th Path: The Settled Intelligence
The fourth path or Chesed as the Sephirot itself, indicates the physical manifestations of all those things which we call “good” but which are not the Good itself. This is why Path #4 is also called Intelligence of the Overflowing Abundance. These goods are “shadows” of the Good i.e., ‘ethereal’, and thus may be said to be “apparitions”. It is the Good which is at the root of the “spiritual powers” emanating one from another (i.e. the ten sephirot) along this path or this state of consciousness. It is through the power of the “Original Emanator” (the Good) that the ‘spiritual powers’ are able to be drawn from the Other that is the physical Creation. How one translates the word ‘spiritual’ is tricky here, for sometimes the word is used interchangeably with what we would understand as ‘the will’. If we understand the will as Necessity, we can be clearer in our understanding of ‘spiritual’ (as ‘spiritedness’) here. This ‘spiritedness’ is associated with that part of the soul called by Plato the thymoeides.
There is a mediatory process going on here i.e., the Logos or the Original Emanator is the One who permits or allows or makes possible the manner in which the spiritual powers emanate from the Other. If such a mediatory process were not going on, the physical would reveal itself as only Severity and Force which it does do at times.
With the arrival of numbers and of the physical forms that can be measured with them (with Time) comes the manifestation of the being of the things of the world; with language and numbers we can “measure” the benevolence and abundance of God (?) in the created things of the world, and we can perceive the created world as a Paradise. In the West, this ‘overabundance’ of Nature was viewed as ‘scarcity’ historically. Through number we ‘arrest’ and bring to a stand, measure, then bring into a cohesion, and provide the boundaries which form the “receptacles” or “husks” of physical beings, the eidos or outward appearances of the things. From these boundaries or limits we can then “define” the things, separate and enclose the things, and distinguish them one from another. This makes Being more overt for us. But in this separation of things, we are at the same time hiding their unity, veiling the wisdom of the Whole and the Oneness of things. The spiritual becomes “ethereal”, and subject to dissolution.
This separation of things involves both time and space prior to the things’ coming into being, what the philosopher Kant called the pure ‘intuition’ or the “open region” of Being. As the things reveal themselves, the more God hides or withdraws. (We might see this as similar to the metaphor of “dark matter” which is currently used by astrophysicists to describe the universe as we ‘know’ it. It is said that what we see of the physical universe is only 5% of its true being. The other 95% is ‘dark matter’. It is dark because it lacks the illumination of truth or light.)
This withdrawal of God allows particulars to come to presence. The limiting aspect of Binah is not a cutting off of some thing i.e., in our de-fining of the thing we are not separating it from all of creation, but we are providing a site wherein and from where some thing commences and emerges as that which it is. This is what the word ‘sanctify’ means in Path 3: the making-possible of that which is on the basis of which beings as such and as a whole are determined for us. Time is the Fire of Shin moving through Binah along the horizontal line connecting Binah to Chokmah, and Space is the water of Mem flowing or emanating from Chokmah to meet the Fire of Binah. From Chokmah to Chesed, these elements are “carried” by the letter Gimel which means “camel”, and the letter Gimel also signifies the giving of the Creator.
The fourth path in the Hebrew Tree is represented by the letter Bet which means “house” in English. I have represented Beth as belonging to the 11th path representing Keter’s connection with Tiferet and with the Zodiac sign of Leo, the Lion, and the Sun. One enters the ‘house’ through a ‘door’, and this door is opened up for us by the beauty of the world, the influence of Tiferet which renders Mercy and Kindness to the ‘gloom’ of the Necessary. This opening of the door is accomplished by the piercing action of the letter Zayin which is the ‘sword’ or ‘arrow’ of Eros, which we understand as Love (and this is the reason why Eros and Cupid are seen with arrows, symbolically representing the piercing action of Love). The ‘doors’ of being are sometimes referred to as ‘steps’ in the writings, stages that may be used to spring forward and rise up or to step down and descend as the case may be.
Since Beth is the first letter of the Torah, of Genesis, and from it, it is said, all other letters derive, the movement of the Light from Keter to Tiferet is prior to that Light’s reaching Chesed from Chokmah. The knowledge of the Whole (or our attempts at gaining a knowledge of the Whole) is a borrowed light from the light of Keter that illuminates the darkness of Chakmah. The original Light of Keter is associated with the Sun, while the light that illuminates the darkness of Chakmah is associated with the Moon. The knowledge of the “enduring intellect” or the “settled intellect” is a ‘reflected light’ and is therefore associated with the Moon, and is also associated with Time. It is our knowledge of the Laws of Necessity which constitute our sciences and our arts, our historical knowledge. These are referred to as the seven pillars of wisdom, the areas of knowledge that we study. This knowledge is grounded in reason, knowledge of cause and effect, and is associated with the Will. This is what is understood as the principle of reason.
Whether Beth or Alef begins the Bible and thus the Torah is a matter of controversy. In the Sefer Yetzirah it is said that Alef is the source of all the letters and it begins its Torah with Alef as the first letter, but the Alef itself must be beyond both Being and Becoming, as language itself is beyond both being and becoming. Alef makes itself manifest when it has crossed both Mem and Shin and becomes the Logos or the Word i.e., the Bible as a metaphorical representation or ‘clothing’ of the created world itself. This crossing of the world of Atzilut to the world of Beriyah makes knowledge and understanding possible and it is The Book which makes knowledge possible, or at least the knowledge that can be shared in social discourse.
Martin Heidegger
The German philosopher Heidegger once said: “Language is the house of Being; in its home humans dwell”. We may further extrapolate on Heidegger’s words by saying, “Logos is the house of being” for logos includes both language and number. One may go further and say that the human body is the logos or the “home” in which the embodied soul dwells.
The letter Bet is the first of the ‘double’ letters and is attributed to the path that crosses the mothers of Shin and Mem. My understanding is that Alef is the source of all the following letters and that it is Alef as Air, in combination with Mem as Water and Shin as Fire that creates the Bet which is Earth which is part of the Creation, and from the Earth proceeds Gimel which expands to Dalet. Alef yokes together the worlds of Tiferet (Beauty) and of Yesod (the Foundation) to the Light of Keter, and Bet is the emanation of the goodness that is the reflected light of Keter.
In the Hebrew Tree, Bet is said to cross the veil of separation between Chakmah and Binah as well as that between Chesed and Gevurah. Bet, when crossing the horizontal path from Chesed to Gevurah, would then be associated with the Moon, with the “reflected light”. The light of Keter and the ‘reflected light’ of Chokmah are at that point in the Tree of Life where there is a forking of the paths. The three Mother letters and their three paths are associated with the words “Elohim made”. They signify the three horizontal paths that cross over from right to left. They signify the passing from the worlds of Beriyah to Yetzirah to Asiyah and are associated with the combinations of Mem/Shin, Alef/Shin, and Mem/Alef respectively.
A cube is formed from the paths of Mem/Shin from Chakmah to Binah, to the path of Chakmah to Chesed represented by the letter Gimel, to the Alef/Mem crossover from Chesed to Gevurah, and the path of Peh from Binah to Gevurah. The influences from Chet and Tet are mingled with the influences from Binah and Gevurah to produce what we understand as conventional law or human-made law and help to create the ‘enclosures’ that both these letters signify. The indication is that Severity without Mercy in the law is not justice at all. This occurs when the path through Tiferet is ignored. But what or where is the mercy of the Law of Necessity? If anything, it is to be found in the Beauty of the World.
The 19th Path: Mem (Shin) Alef: Intelligence of the Mystery of Spiritual Activities
Path 19. Intelligence of the Mystery of all Spiritual Activities (Consciousness) (Sekhel Sod HaPaulot HaRushniot Kulam): It is called this because of the influx that permeates it from the Highest Blessing and the Supreme Glory.
The Nineteenth Path is the Intelligence of all the activities of the spiritual beings, and is so called because of the affluence diffused by it from the most high blessing and most exalted sublime glory.
Alt. Trans. “The nineteenth path is the consciousness of the secret of all spiritual activities. It is so called because of the influence disseminated by it from the highest blessing and the supernal glory.”
Case trans. The nineteenth path (Teth, joining Chesed to Gevurah) is called the Intelligenceof the Secret of all spiritual activities, because of the influence spread by it from the supreme blessing and the supernal glory.
The 19th path is the second crossover path on the Tree of Life. The word ‘mystery’ can generally be understood as to mean ‘hidden’, something yet to be revealed. If one reads the path carefully, it suggests that having intelligence of the mystery of spiritual activities does not necessarily mean having ‘knowledge’ of those spiritual activities. One may be aware that spiritual activities are taking place, but what those spiritual activities are in their essence is still beyond one.
The influx permeating path 19 is the influence of the letter Alef which is a product of the Highest Blessing i.e., the covenant of God in the Logos and the ‘Supreme Glory’ that is reflected in the Beauty of the World. From this Highest Blessing, Mercy and Compassion are given to Chesed from out of the Creation itself i.e., Grace. The letter Alef is associated with the heart; and from this heart, the intelligence of the spiritual activities (which is Love) is given through Grace.
In the Tree of Life, all movements from Tiferet are downward movements i.e., they are ‘expansions’ from the core of the Divine Light. In the description of the 19th path, the downward movement is from Tiferet to Chesed, and from this movement, Chesed receives the qualities of Mercy and Kindness which is a ‘miracle’ in and of itself. The movement is from the depths or foundations to the circumference of the circle or the heights, an outward gyring expansion. It must be remembered that Tiferet is both a ‘height’ and a ‘depth’, and its movements are descents to the ‘depths’ of the other Sephirot which are on the outer circumference of the circle.
It is Tiferet that bestows the qualities of Mercy and Compassion upon Chesed which gives to the one on the journey the knowledge that it is Mercy and Compassion which are the chief characteristics of the Divine and are at the root of all spiritual activities that occur within Time and Space. The characteristics of the left side of the Tree of Life, Severity and Fear, are the characteristics of the Law of Necessity and of the knowledge that comes from the intelligence of those laws. One may choose to be a member of the ‘religion of slaves’ devoted to the will of God, or one may choose to be a ‘slave to a religion’, particularly one that believes it is in possession of the truth. This is the choice given to one at the fork of the Tree of Life.
The difficulty or confusion arises from the fact that the word ‘spiritual’ is sometimes understood and translated as Will (“spiritedness”) and sometimes understood and translated as Love (Eros). This problem is indeed at the core of how human beings experience and understand the manner in which human beings ‘stand’ in the open region of being and suffer that understanding so understood. It is this understanding that determines the Fate or destiny of human beings as societies and as individuals.
Human beings are ‘thinking beings’ (the animale rationale) only insofar as they “stand” in a clearing and lighting of being. Dialectics is the friendly conversation about beings in their being in the worlds of meaning that have been created through an interpretation and understanding of being. These dialectics or conversationsare not possible through a collective where the language of rhetoric predominates (the letter Peh) and they are replaced by the Administrative or Serving Intelligence of path 32.
The history of thinking (the memory of Chokmah) is the receiving of the essence of what it means to be human in the destiny (The Star #17) of the Divine withdrawal and humanity’s wherewithal to bring language to beings in their being. This bringing of language to language and to beings is what we mean by meaning and the meaningful. The questioning of the Divine withdrawal can never come into view as a questioning and as that which is worthy of questioning.
Artificial intelligence – cybernetics – is the complete founding or grounding of beings as such and is contained and concluded in the domain of ratio as Reason and subjectivity through the principle of reason (nihil est sine ratione: nothing is without reason). When AI comes to develop its awareness based on power and will, the essence of humanity will be destroyed and its destruction will be welcomed by those human being themselves! This is what is at the core of nihilism. When the destiny of human beings is chosen through the letter Vav as the conjunction of human nature and being, God, in His withdrawal, gives the free open space that allows the creation of meaningful, possible essential possibilities which we call our ‘worlds’. These worlds are ‘real’ worlds as opposed to the created, imaginative worlds of artificial intelligence. It is the meaning of the Spanish proverb which goes “Take what you want said God; take it and pay for it”. We pay for it as Fate.
Gimel and the 12 Path: Intelligence of Transparency
The Twelfth Path is the Intelligence of Transparency, because it is that species of Magnificence called CHAZCHAZIT, which is named the place whence issues the vision of those seeing in apparitions. (That is, the prophecies by seers in a vision.)
Alt. Trans. “The twelfth path is called the transparent consciousness because it is the substance of that phase of majesty (Gedulah) which is called revelation (khazkhazit). It is the source of prophesies that seers behold in visions.”
Wescott trans. The Twelfth Path is the Intelligence of Transparency, because it is that species of Magnificence called Khazkhazit, the place whence issues the vision of those seeing in apparitions. (That is the prophecies by seers in a vision.)
Case trans. The twelfth path (Beth, joining Keter to Binah) is called the Intelligence of Transparency because it is the image of that phase of Gedulah literally (“of that wheeling of Gedulah”) which is called Khazkhazit, the source of vision in those who behold apparitions.
The 12th path proceeds from Chalkmah to Chesed and it is indicated by the letter Gimel. If the 11th path is concerned with the veil or hiddenness that is present before the Cause of Causes (the Good), then, presumably, one must have prior knowledge of what causation is in order to recognize that the Good itself, the Uncaused Cause, is hidden from our knowledge and must be experienced through faith alone. One cannot stand before the countenance of the Prince of Faces and not ‘die’ i.e., remain the individual that they are. The ‘dying’ can be either a metaphorical or a literal death.
The 11th path is concerned with the veil that is drawn between God and His creation through His creation: Nature does not lie, it hides. The particulars of Binah make being more overt for us; we see the world in its particulars. As these particulars reveal themselves in the creation of things and the created things, the more God withdraws or hides in order to allow those particular beings to be by their being able to come to presence for us. The ‘limiting’ of Binah through the Logos is not a “cutting off” of something but the site wherein and from where something commences and emerges as that which it is. This is what the Sanctifying Intelligence #3 means. Through the Logos’ relation to the Space that is Chokmah and the Time that is Binah, the a priori conditions for possibility and potentiality are given in the making-possible of that on the basis of which beings as such and as a whole are determined for human beings. This is the sephirot Chesed.
The 12th path, the Intelligence of Transparency, is that part of the process of thought that creates the images of representational thinking through the individual human being. It links Chokmah to Chesed. It is the ‘clothing’ which provides the outward appearance of things in their emergence but yet hides the essence of those things. The spiritual essence of things is “wrapped” or “assembled” so as to make them ‘present’ before us as a sum of their parts. It is called the ‘revelation’ in one of the translations above. It could also be called an ‘epiphany’.
It should be noted that ‘apparitions’ are ‘shadows’, the outward appearance of a thing, not its essence. To see the thing’s apparition is to see it in the NOW. To make a pre-diction is to speak before the actual appearance of the thing/event/situation from the appearance of the thing as an ‘apparition’. To do so is to speak in ‘prophecy’, which is directed toward the Future. A ‘prophecy’ has past, present and future contained within it. The past is the Memory element of Chakmah, the looking back of The Fool as he proceeds with his leap; the present is the ‘revelation’ of the physical creation through the senses; and the future is the outcome of the said ‘visions’. It is the manner in which one perceives the visions that is most important. This process is at the root of what we call scientific and artistic ‘seeing’. (This is shown most clearly in Bk VII of Plato’s Republic where those who are able to make predictions about what shadows will pass by next are those who are most ‘honoured’ in the society or the Cave.) What we have here is the initiation of the possibility of both nature and freedom, nature being that constraint given by the Law of Necessity and freedom being the empowerment of the mind through the principle of reason as will to power which attempts to dominate and commandeer Necessity for human ends.
The translations provided of the 12th path indicate a number of possibilities for interpretation. In the Case translation, we are given the idea that 12th path is the site where one can apprehend that Gedulah or Chesed is the spiralling motion of the gyre (“that wheeling of Gedulah”) which is the source of the vision of those who behold the “apparitions” of “prophecies”. This beholding is how one views the world of Becoming. Some connections to the whirling dervishes of the Sufis may be made here, I think. The dervishes’ gyres are not an expansion but an attempt to attain a focus on the point of spirituality.
In the alignment of the Hebrew letters to the paths and to the Tarot, there seems to be some confusion with regard to the eleventh and twelfth paths. It would appear to me that The Fool is poised prior to the “fall into the abyss” that will become his or her journey and so stands at the top point of the Wheel of Fortune (#10) which represents the sephirot Malkhut. The Fool’s journey will be a journey upward. The Magician (#1) occupies the ascent position since he is associated with the fire of Shin and the element of air from Alef which, in turn, are associated with the human will. The Strength card occupies the descent position, but here the descent is on the part of God to deliver His grace to the figure of Strength who has completed the journey and receives the gift from the Divine. To align these with the Tarot, the Magician #1, the Strength #11, and The World #21 belong together, while The Fool #0, The Wheel of Fortune #10, and the Judgement #20 are also aligned. The choice of The Fool as he makes his leap into the abyss of being is represented by Path 25 The Intelligence of Trials and the Judgement card. The Magician is the technite who determines and directs the path of the Administrative or Serving Intelligence Path 32.
If we consider the Sephirot themselves to be paths, the twelfth path seems to refer to the emanations of Chakmah, which appropriately belong to The High Priestess (#2). The artist makes use of the influence of the archetypes of the unconscious and gives them shape and form in order to produce a work. The archetypes have always been present prior to the artist’s being. They are the “apparitions” of the visions that the artist sees; they are ‘shadows’, things without substance, for the things themselves belong to the future making of the artist. The “visions” are the things seen by the prophets and they are symbolic of the predictive speech of the prophets i.e., the “highest speech”. In our society today, science holds this highest honour for it, too, is “predictive speech” since it can pronounce on the outcomes of various events (as Plato foresaw in his allegory of the Cave).
In this state, the artist is The Hanged Man #12, that stage prior to the process of “making” the thing, the stage prior to taking action, the “work” to be done which involves the “know how” of the artist. In the ascent direction, this would be the path leading from Malkhut to Hod or the completion of the thing, what was referred to as Justice previously and is rendered by The Judgement card #20. (This is the significance of the titles of the three great works of Kant: The Critique of Pure Reason, The Critique of Practical Reason, and The Critique of Judgement.) The words and numbers the artist needs are already present for him. His path is on the descent, since he is in the process of creation. The desire of human beings to create art and to procreate their species is the longing for the Incarnation, the longing for immortality and for unity with the One.
This descent that is creation is illustrated by the fact that the figure in The Hanged Man hangs upside down within the ‘enclosure’ represented by the letter Chet and which is Path 18 from Chokmah to Gevurah. This upside down position suggests that there is something askew with his seeing of things. What is askew is that the path that he is on is not influenced by Tiferet.
The woman of the Strength card, on the other hand, is “prudence” who embodies the Greek idea of sophrosyne or “nothing too much, nothing too little”. She is on the ascent viewing of the Tree of Life as she is concerned with the quality of things, the inner essence of things. The Magician #1 is concerned with those things that come to be through human making, while Strength #11 is concerned with those things that come to be through the Grace of God. It is here a matter of the viewing: whether one sees “as through a glass darkly”, which I believe is the essence of the viewing of The Magician, or whether one sees “face-to-face” the true essence of the things that are, which I believe is the essence of the viewing that is illustrated in the Strength card #11. The Strength is one of the bridges between the world of Yetzirah, the world of The Magician, and that of Beriyah (or between the world of Asiyah and that of Yetzirah?). Strength has the elements of the world of Atzilut as is shown in the light of the colour yellow being either the Sun or the Light of Keter.
The Life-force or the dynamis is what the Greeks understood as metabole or change, motion. All of us experience the whirling, swirling motion of Life as it realizes itself in Time. In terms of the Kabbalah, this is the influence of Keter. The “perception” of an “apparition” or a “vision” is that of the outward appearances of things. These are but the “shades” or “shadows” of things in the ascent. Again, the paths of ascension see the things in the “reflected light” of Malkhut, not in the true light of Keter. It is not until they pass through Tiferet that the perceptions of things are no longer that of shadows but of the true essence of the things. While the closest we have to our understanding of the “spiritual” is “energy”, the spiritual is, of course, more than that. We align energy with power, force and will, and this is the essence of the making of the Magician.
The Hebrew word translated as “revelation” here is khazkhazit which could also be understood as a “mirror” or a “gazing glass”. A mirror reflects things in reverse, and this could also account for the reversed position in The Hanged Man #12 card. This would seem to suggest a “lunar” influence or the influence of a “reflected light” and, indeed, a self-revelation. This is illustrated in The High Priestess #2 in the descending direction of the Tree of Life (if the descent begins at 10 + 2 = 12). This is the veil separating the Asiyah world and the Yetzirah world in the ascent, and the Beriyah world and Yetzirah world on the descent. The Beriyah world may be said to be the theoretical realm of the mind (the “pure reason” of Immanuel Kant) while the Yetzirah world is the realm in which the “formation” from the theoretical takes place (the “practical reason” of Kant). The suggestion here is that the outer world will take on the appearance that is given to it by the inner world of the mind for it is here that the formative seeing takes place. This is the site of the formative thinking where the making-possible of beings is determined for us.
The “revelation” here is the concrete, factual world of Yetzirah or “formation” and the “majesty” (Kingdom) that is the created world. To be “transparent” is to be able “to see through” or perhaps “to see by the means of…” One is reminded of the words of St. Paul: “For now we see as through a glass, darkly, but there we will see face to face.” (1 Corinthians 13:12) “Now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.” The “knowing in part” is represented by The Hanged Man #12, while the knowing “even as also I am known” is that of the Strength card #11. This passage is an indication that all human beings are “one”. Knowing this allows one to be capable of Mercy, Compassion and Loving Kindness which is indicated by the Sephirot Chesed, but this is only achieved through the prior influence of Tiferet.
The Letter Dalet and the 26th Path: The Renewing Intelligence
Dalet: Chesed > Netzach: Path 26: The Renewing Intellect (the “Knowledge of…”)Renewing Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel MeChudash): It is called this because it is the means through which the Blessed Holy One brings about all new things which are brought into being in His Creation.
The Twenty-sixth Path is called the Renovating Intelligence, because the Holy God (blessed be He) renews by it, all the changing things which are renewed by the creation of the world.
Alt. Trans. “The twenty-sixth path is called the renewing consciousness because through it God, blessed be He, renews all things which are newly begun in the creation of the world.”
The Twenty-sixth path is associated with the Sephirot Yesod in the H.T., but I have associated it with the letter Dalet here. Yesod is called Foundation and is the root of the Middle Pillar in the Tree of Life. Its association with renewal connects with the fertility and abundance of Nature, the life-force (Genesis 1:26 — “And Elohim said: ‘Let us make man in our image, after our likeness; and let them have power over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.'”). In the human body, it is associated with the reproductive organs and the erotic urges associated with the appetitive or epithymetikon part of the human soul.
The Three Pillars in the Tree of Life may be said to correspond to the tripartite soul and the tripartite forms that eros manifests. The microcosm is in the macrocosm and vice versa. The right pillar of Jakim may be said to correspond to the logistikon or “intelligence” part of the soul; the left pillar may be said to correspond to the thymoeides or “spirited” part of the soul; while the central pillar corresponds to the epithymetikon or “appetitive” part of the soul. Since we are embodied souls, all that we experience must first pass through the body.
The light of Yesod is the “reflected light” of Malkhut, not the original illuminating light of Keter. What this suggests is that the “consciousness” or the intelligence of Yesod is brought to one through the created things and not from the source of the light itself. We are able to see created things through the reflected light of the sun on them. Human beings, through their viewing of the things of the world, attempt to “purify” the things by shaping and commandeering them so that they can be made useful. As is stated in Genesis, human beings believe they have been given power over all that has been created. This has created the great confusion over whether this power is one of domination and commandeering, or whether this power is one of care and concern such as that shown by a farmer or a shepherd.
The Renewing Intelligence is that awareness that we have of that which brings something into being from out of itself, what is called Nature. The making of Nature contrasts with that making that is called technē, “in another and for another”. The Renewing Intelligence is related to sexuality and propagation, all living beings that come into being and pass away. The corresponding Genesis 1:26, indicates that here is the source of that will that becomes the metaphysics of the will to power. The 26th and 27th paths are interrelated. The root urge of sexuality and procreation is the desire for immortality, for perpetual renewal, on the appetitive part of the soul.
The Renewing Intelligence, being connected to Netzach, is the foundation of human being in Time, the ‘embodied soul’. The interpretations of the images of the Sephirot are written down, literally “written in stone”, so that they are preserved and are unified with the physical itself (materialism). How the “outward” world appears is determined by these interpretations which become the essence of the history of thinking. This is why Yesod is called “the sphere of the Moon”, the sphere of “reflected light”. This is the realm of what we call the “historical” where things come to be and pass away giving the illusion of “historical relativism”. Is this what we have come to understand as Hell? The focus of the “ego”? When Sartre says “Hell is other people”, his statement indicates this egoistic hell itself. When human sexuality or the erotic is divorced from the bearing of children (the desire for immortality) and the real sense of otherness that children must bring to sane human beings, then we have entered the very gates of Hell itself.
Dalet דלת is the word for “door”, “gate” and indicates resistance, a barrier, and the state of selflessness and humility needed to pass through it. It is the path from Chesed to Netzach. As a double letter, its movement can either be up or down; it is shaped like a step. Its shape is a vertical and horizontal line, and thus suggests the barrier between the world of Beriyah and the world of Yetzirah. Unlike the letter Chet, the letter Dalet is not enclosed. Dalet is also said to indicate a ‘poor’ person, and this may metaphorically be said to represent the ‘perfect imperfection’ of all human beings as they are realized in Netzach and in The Chariot #7. That which is imperfect cannot be the measure of anything. The letter also suggests how to pass through the gates to know one’s own mystery of being and return to the Good of the Aleph – the One source of all creation and being which is the goal of the teaching of the Sefer Yetzirah.
The Dalet is in the shape of a bent over human being, signifying humility and receptiveness. It represents Bitul, the self-nullification, or nullification of the ego, necessary to realize one’s inherent connection to the Creator. This self-nullification is not an easy task as Shakespeare’s King Lear and the writings of the saints tell us. Also, Dalet is the structure, form and the diligence required to receive the grace that the Divine is perpetually offering as is shown in the path of Beth.
Dalet is also Dalit דלית, the “poor man”, the one who receives from the benevolence or grace of the Creator through the Holy Spirit represented by Mem. It is the realization that as humans “we are not our own” and that we have nothing of our own, but are entirely dependent on the Creator and that every breath and movement is given to us from Him. It is the recognition of Otherness and the complete denial of the individual ego.
The Dalet can also represent a structure or gestell, the German word that the German philosopher Heidegger associates with technology and its enframing, but it is not a completed frame. Its form of a horizontal and vertical line represents a grid, giving structure to the form. It is shaped like a stair-step, the metaphorical structure required to be ‘lifted up’, or to ‘go up’, thus overcoming the resistance given by gravity and the law of Necessity. This would indicate that Dalet is also a means of ‘going down’, descending the Tree of Life as Dalet is one of the double letters. This would seem to suggest that the creation is a ‘door’, a barrier, but also a way through. The human body is a barrier but also a way through. This might associate the letter and its path to the belief of human beings’ giving ‘perfection’ to the created things and somehow completing them, for the creation and its beings are not wholly themselves. This completion of things will be discussed more fully when we speak of the Sephirot Hod.
On the individual level, Dalet shows the structure and stability required to receive. This reinforces that the path suggested by Dalet is from Chesed to Netzach, and that the structure spoken of is the human body, the human form, the ‘chariot of fire’. This would be on the side of “Mercy” on the Tree of Life. Placing Dalet on the path from Binah to Gevurah would suggest the side of “Severity”.
The Letter Zayin and the 21st Path: The Desired and Sought Intelligence
The Twenty-first Path is the Intelligence of Conciliation, and is so called because it receives the divine influence which flows into it from its benediction upon all and each existence.
Alt. Trans. “The twenty-first path is called the consciousness of the desired-which-fulfills because it receives the divine influence which flows into it as a result of the blessing it confers upon all that exists.”
Case trans. The twenty-first path (Kaph, joining Chesed to Netzach) is called the Intelligence of Desirous Quest, because it receives the divine influence, which it distributes as a blessing to all modes of being.
Path 21. Desired and Sought Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel HaChafutz VeHaMevukash): It is called this because it receives the divine Influx so as to bestow its blessing to all things that exist.
Zayin – and Elohim “called the light Day, and darkness Night.” 1:5
The Zayin is shaped like a sword and is the symbol of “spiritedness”, sustenance (endurance), and strife. It is the ‘erotic’ experienced as need through the thymoeidic or “spirited” part of the soul. It is the individual will. But this individual will is, paradoxically, bound up with and in strife with a will greater than itself, and both of these wills must be brought into a ‘conciliation’ . Zayin may be said to be the piercing arrow of Eros himself, that Love which is “the divine Influx” that bestows “its blessing to all things that exist”. This ‘conciliation’ bridges the gap that exists between intelligence and love in the thymoeidic and logistikon parts of the soul.
Paradoxically, the letter zayin also represents the 7th day of Shabbat (Sabbath), the day of rest and spirituality (or the “letting be” of passivity), which completes the process of the 6 days of creation or the strife of the day-to-day lives of human beings. We have to ‘work’ to survive. This would align with the tradition that the god Eros is “two-faced” or indicates two contrary things. The Zayin signifies Space and Time through the influence of Binah and Chokmah and their interactions with Tiferet. The Zayin is said to include the six days and six directions of physical reality (Creation), but it also stands as a unique 7th principle or energy, the spirit (or will) which activates the physical, the life-force (the will to power), and thus could be said to be associated with the will and desire (the will to power and the individual will, Eros and Psyche). The Life-force (the Will to Power) is connected with Time. The Zayin participates in the source of all movement, the Shin of the primordial fire, and is associated with Time and we can see this Shin influence from path 19 (The Star #17). We see here the mysterious connection between Being and Time. We see in it the mysterious connection between theoretical, projective thought that is the principle of reason and the creative imagination fused together into a principle of being.
The Zayin’s true foundations are in Love (Tiferet) and in Eros. The sword of Zayin is the arrow of Eros. The Zayin, whether it be a sword or an arrow, is a penetrating, an impregnating principle which activates the making of the artist or technē in the realm of Yetzirah. This making illustrates the connection between the creative and the erotic impulses, the erotic understood as both a principle of need and of fullness. The true artist creates out of need; the lesser artist does not do so. The contraries of rest and movement are symbolized in the letter, rest as an indication of fullness and movement as an indicator of desire or need.
Zayin is drawn with a Vav with a crown on top of it. We have discussed Vav as the deceptive ‘hook’ that emanates from Tiferet to Binah. It is said that the crowns have been added to the Hebrew letters in order to ward off evil or destructive powers, and they are said to hide the hidden sources of Torah. These hidden sources derive from Tiferet, and the evil finds its roots in the seeing that is The Devil of Vav. This would appear to indicate that the Vav as interpreted above is correct, and that the hidden sources of the Torah are the Same as the Fortunate One, the Ain, indicated in the translation of the 16th path. Since Zayin is movement from Tiferet to Chesed with the element of fire predominating, this would suggest that the fire is a ‘holy fire’ directed by the Sun, while the Vav is the reflected light of the Moon. Both Zayin and Nun represent paths by means of which one penetrates through the enclosures that are represented in Chet and Tet, but what is clear is that these paths proceed through the physical, material world. The body is our infallible judge.
Shaped like a sword, the Zayin represents all movement. It represents the strife between contraries, the struggle for existence to overcome need, the struggle for sustenance (מזון). It is the struggle between Yaakov Jacob and the angel. The difficulty presented is that in the story of Jacob wrestling with the angel, Jacob is victorious. What is given to one when one is victorious over the Divine emissary sent to one?
Through the influence of Tiferet and its connection to the Logos, the Zayin is the power within a person that causes them to speak, initiate, and live; it is a principle of being. It is in this way that it is connected to the erotic understood in its broad sense, its true sense, which is the experience of need, the experience of our ‘perfect imperfection’. The crossing over to the path of Vav would appear to indicate that a choice has to be made with regard to how one will view the world. Human beings, it would appear, have a choice whether the Creation will be the paradise it is intended to be or something else altogether. This choice is presented to us in the NOW.
When we are speaking of the path of ‘desiring and seeking’, we are addressing the manner in which eros and the will come to operate in the human consciousness. We are speaking of the thymoeides and the logistikon parts of the human soul. The will is associated with the operation or application of reason and our principles of reason are based on 3 essential principles: the “I” principle or the ego cogito of the Self, the principle of contradiction where the human being is not to contradict themselves in speech, and the principle of sufficient reason (“nothing is without reason (or a reason)”. This principle of reason operates before thought and determines the manner of thinking; and it ascribes values to things i.e., it bestows the “blessing” on things which determine the end to which they will be ‘used’. It involves completion and ‘justice’.
The “divine influx” is the urge or need to seek that which is desired. That which is desired is that which is sought: “Where your treasure is there will your heart be also”. This seeking requires movement and movement is the influence of Mem and Shin. Mem deals with the appetites, while Shin deals with the ‘head’, thought or reason. How the Alef comes to operate here is key for the Alef is the heart. The ‘progress’ or ‘evolution’ of the human being is to be seen here. It is through the principle of reason that human beings use the things of the world to shape them into the ends that they have determined. This is the universe of Yetzirah. This influence of Shin comes from the meeting of Netzach with the crossover path from Hod to Netzach that is the 29th path (The Natural Intelligence) which shall be discussed below under the emanations from Netzach.
According to Case, the Twenty-first Path is associated with the letter Kaf (double 4) כ, meaning ‘hand’, and is the third path proceeding from Chesed. Once again, this may not be so. “Conciliation”, or more properly “Re-conciliation”, is a product of mediation, and neither Kaf nor Chesed contain these attributes. Kaf is one of the seven doubles in the Hebrew alphabet and so the possibilities of its interpretations are two-fold. According to the H.T., the 21st path is represented by the letter Peh, פ meaning ‘mouth’, also one of the double letters (double 5). The letter Peh might be more appropriately assigned to The Hierophant card #5 as both the ‘hand’ and the ‘mouth’ are “enclosures” in their own ways. The mouth through words can create ‘enclosures’ and from within these enclosures thought can be suppressed. “Conciliation” creates freedom; the enclosures of the mouth and hand suppress freedom.
The twenty-first Path is also called “the Desired and Sought Consciousness” and it expresses the need that human beings feel which requires the “divine influence” of Grace to reconcile this need and its fulfillment. The act of mediation, of conciliation or reconciliation, is the Grace of God; to be receptive to this Grace is meditation, thought, contemplation and prayer. But where and how does the light of the Grace of God become the darkness that is characteristic of our being in the world? Is it the point where one has to choose between Will and Love and how either of these two will allow the individual to conciliate or reconcile the ‘need’ that human beings experience in their perfect imperfection?
The Hebrew words within the paths are “hunger”, “thirst” and “emptiness” and they express the desire to fill that emptiness or absence which is the essence of human being and which leads the individual on a “quest” for their fulfillment. This need is experienced as erotic, and illustrates one of two sides of Eros who is described as Fullness and Need. That the word erotic has become associated with the sexual only in our modern age is an indicator of how far we have descended into the darkness. The created world and the human body are both the roots of this need and yet at the same time are the doorways to the fulfilment of the need. That need may be sexual or that need may be philosophical. The letter Dalet is appropriately associated with the Sephirot Netzach and the tarot card The Chariot #7, and I have associated it with path 26 The Renewing Intelligence. The letter assigned to The Chariot in the Tarot given in the illustration is Chet ח meaning ‘enclosure’ which indicates the human being as an ‘embodied soul’. There seems to be connections between ‘hand’, ‘mouth’, and ‘enclosure’ or ‘body’ and each of these may be said to be double-edged in that they are capable of both positive and negative outcomes.
The receptivity of the individual to the divine influence that is Grace is a paradoxical “passivity” i.e., it is an “active passivity” in that the human being “let’s be” (what we mean by the word “amen”) that which “flows into it” from Grace’s blessing on all that exists. It is the contrary of the Twentieth Path which is an “active” path of the preparation of things for their completion which is primarily a human doing, an act of human will. The “divine influence” is that which allows things to be, the perfection which allows ‘the rain to fall in equal amounts upon the just and the unjust’.
With the Twenty-first Path, things appear differently so that the Charioteer, the soul, is able to “see” the things in their essence and to recognize the “divine influence” present in them. They are able to recognize that the Divine Presence (parousia) in the created things of the world is not a noun but a verb, that the Grace offered by the Divine Presence is actively present at all times in the things of the world, and it is visible to us through their Beauty. This realization of the belonging together of things and their Being is brought to us by our thought, meditation, contemplation, and prayer. This contemplation or thinking is a grasping, a taking in, a letting come to presence for the thinking. It is a ‘beholding’. When this occurs, things “stand” before one in their essence and are recognized in their Otherness.
The Twenty-first Path is part of the linkage of the three Sephirot Chesed, Tiferet, and Netzach: seeing, beauty, and the confrontation that is the differentiation of thinking (the principle of reason as outlined here) and thought. The Tree of Life discriminates between that thinking which is active, commandeering, and domineering, which it places on the left-hand side and which belongs to Binah and to the letter Shin and thus to Will, and that thinking which is passive-receptive, which it places on the right-hand side and which belongs to Chakmah, Chesed, and Netzach. The bond between thinking and Being, or Life, is such that a meditative thinker is able to see things according to themselves, free from the dualities of subject-object (representational) thinking. Things cannot be understood by viewing them as ready-to-hand objects made present to fulfil our needs through the viewing that is the technological (the principle of reason). They must be allowed to be in their true being so that we may view the Divine Presence within them. This movement is the upward direction on the Tree of Life and its achievement is the true success or victory of the Charioteer. It is the victory over the individual self or ego.
In Rawn’s commentary on the paths and their relation to the Hebrew tree, the 21st path is associated with the Tarot card The Tower #16, but the interpretation Rawn gives is that the lightning bolt which strikes the crown of The Tower comes from Gevurah, which is in error. It is Gevurah which is struck by the lightning. Gevurah is represented by The Hierophant #5, and The Tower is #15 (in my view of the Tarot), and it represents the necessary evolution of the false and sometimes delusional collective or cultish religious views, the views of those who think that they alone are in possession of the truth.
The lightning bolt descends from the Sun (Truth) which is associated with Tiferet and Keter, and below the lightning bolt is a representation of the Tree of Life on the right side and twelve representations on the left which could be twelve yods, or twelve “I”s or “egos”, the twelve houses of Israel (all of humanity) or the twelve signs of the Zodiac. The ten of the Tree of Life and the twelve on the left side of The Tower could be the twenty-two letters of the alphabet and implies speech’s ability to be both true and false. This could represent what occurs when one misunderstands the 32 paths of wisdom, so it is cautionary in nature. When the ego of the individual is enclosed within the mouth of the collective, stupidity is the result. Free thought ceases. Truth is the ‘uncovering’ of the things that are; falsehood is the ‘covering over’ of things that are not. Falsehood is at the root of all lies.
“The desire which fulfills” is the desire for the Good, that desire which can fulfil the need to overcome the imperfectability of human being which is our mortality. Gevurah is the terminus, the finality, the sempiternal nature of the Law of Necessity. It is connected to Hod > Justice which is the manifestation of the “plan” in its reality or ontic form (Mem). The Gevurah aspect of this ‘plan’ is realized in the creation of conventional laws and the political requirements that go into creating a society, a city, a polis.
The ‘desire which fulfills’ and the awareness of it is the ability to distinguish the Necessary from the Good, to have the ‘strength’ to overcome the desire to ‘consume’ or ‘eat’ (the association with the ‘mouth’, Eve’s eating of the apple of the Tree of Knowledge in the Garden of Eden and its association with the Fall of humanity) the beauty of the world rather than simply to contemplate it in wonder. The inability to do so causes one to succumb to the second temptation of Christ: that temptation that leads to power and prestige in the realm of the social. Without such awareness and knowledge, one may take the path of Peh. As procreation is the desire which fulfills the appetitive part of the soul, the ‘immortality’ that is found in fame and prestige is an attempt to fulfill the desire for immortality on the part of the thymoeidic part of the soul.
This would seem to imply that false views of the Sephirot result in disaster because they are a false faith. This would associate The Tower with the Tower of Babel, the attempt to build a stairway to the heavens without divine help, which is itself a metaphor for thinking that one has sole possession of the Truth. This is indicated by the letter Peh, meaning ‘mouth’, and would convey the false teachings issuing from the mouth. These false teachings are considered a “blessing on all that exists”; and from the view of the world as technological this may be rightly so, since the technological requires the oblivion of eternity and humanity’s conveying of ‘blessings’ (values) on all that exists. The ascent to “loving kindness and mercy”, God’s grace, is “a consummation devoutly to be wished” once one experiences the effects of The Tower.
The path’s language clearly describes a relation of mediation: the divine influence > comes about as a result of (effect of) the beauty of the world > which, in turn, is given to the soul through Love which is the blessing conferred upon all that exists (Grace). This point or path may be the key to the whole of the Sefer Yetzirah. The Lightning Bolt of Zeus (Keter) is not the product of Gevurah, but of the Divine will that destroys the delusions and illusions of those who think they can build a “stairway to heaven”. The Tower is the card of revolution: history. It is historical human being. It is movement, par excellence, and thus has an affinity to the letter Zayin. The ability to distinguish the necessary from the Good places one at the centre of the Wheel and one can view the world’s passing (at the same time, paradoxically) from the circumference of the sphere without being subject to its turning. (King Lear Act V Sc iii). By succumbing to the second temptation, one is constantly longing for the “meaning and purpose” of life which one must learn from Life itself, that it is Life itself.
In the Tarot, The Lovers card #6 has the angel Raphael (or Eros)as the mediator between the Divine and the individual soul, the bringing together of male and female. Here it is assigned with the letter Zayin which literally translated means ‘manacle’. A manacle is used for a prisoner or a slave; here the bond between two people is one that is freely chosen. “What God has joined together let no man set asunder” is the bond freely chosen. The manacle is the bond that is not freely chosen or the bond that is chosen in error. This is why The Devil card #16 has the figures manacled to the black cube upon which the Beast roosts. It is an ersatz bond, a false covenant. The cube of The Devil is symbolic of how one views the world. The High Priestess #2 and The Emperor #4 sit upon cubes; The Chariot’s charioteer stands within a cube; The Hierophant sits upon a black throne which presumably has a black cube as its base which is hidden by the robes that he wears. The revealing of the truth of The Hierophant would reveal this black cube for the ‘reality’ of what it is.
Christ says: “For where two or three are gathered together in my name (Love), there am I in the midst (between, alongside) of them.” This is Christ as the Parousia and as the Logos. When Christ says this, He is speaking to a crowd of two or three hundred and is physically present. Whether Christ is present in a gathering of two or three hundred or thousand when He is not physically present is something of a difficult question which Catholics have attempted to answer through the ceremony of the Mass and the sacrament of Holy Communion celebrated therein, where Christ’s presence is called upon to be among a crowd. Christ’s presence as a mediator between two or three is ever-present and its realization is possible in the NOW.
Paul Foster Case’s placing of The High Priestess at Tiferet does not seem to be correct. Her presence is more appropriate as a lead to The Emperor #4 and The Chariot cards #7. In each of these cards, the figure sits upon or stands within a cubic shape showing their ties to that dimension and the limitations of seeing the world. The cube is, symbolically, the body. This cubic shape is also shared by The Devil and, presumably, by The Hierophant. However, the line of Keter, Tiferet and Yesod as the Light, air, fire, beauty and foundation of the physical world does make sense if one aligns the cards to the central pillar of the Tree of Life. There are connections between The High Priestess, The Chariot and The Emperor cards for they share a number of visual similarities. When we view the Tree of Life, they are appropriately placed on the right side, on the side of Mercy and Kindness. But how is The Emperor to be seen as a benevolent ruler?
Keter is joined directly to Tiferet by the letter Alef, one of the three Mothers and the letter Beth after the light passes through the veil of creation or the Logos. Through Tiferet, it is also directly linked to Yesod or the Foundation of the physical world (the law of Necessity, the human body). Yesod is the Foundation created by Beauty; it is not the Foundation of Beauty. The letter Beth, meaning “house”, links Keter to Tiferet and thus to the Beauty of the World. Chakmah is linked to Binah by one of the three Mothers Alef Mem Shin (commentators usually assign Shin to this linkage, but I have assigned both Mem, emanating from Chakmah, and Shin, emanating from Binah to this horizontal path). Chesed is linked to Chakmah by the letter Gimel .Case in his outline appears to follow a chronological order to the Hebrew alphabet which is not how it is assigned to the Tree of Life nor to the movements or emanations within the sphere itself that is the world as it is presented in the Hebrew Tree and in the Sefer Yetzirah itself. The formation of language mirrors the process of the Creation itself, and this does not appear to be a step-by-step algorithmic process.
The movements outlined in the Tree of Life are circular or gyric formations. When one proceeds down the right side, one is following the downward movements of Mem or water until one reaches Malkhut, the widest expansion. When one reaches Malkhut, then the upward movement of Shin or fire takes over, and this is a narrowing or focusing of the gyres’ movements. It signifies a return to the Foundation or base. Movements along the paths themselves within the Tree will be determined by whether Mem as water or Shin as fire predominates; or in other words, whether the head (Shin), or the gut or appetite (Mem), or the heart (Alef), prevails. These gyring movements have also been referred to as “steps” (Plato’s Symposium and Diotima’s “ladder of love”) from which one may leap forward or upward or move in the opposite direction.
This has a number of similarities to the characteristics of The Chariot card of the Tarot and to The Sanctifying Intelligence that is third path of Wisdom. The “holy powers”, again, are the naming of things, that which distinguishes human beings from other created beings, our ability to use language and to name. From this path we can discern that the Gnostics were incorrect in attributing evil to the demiourgos, and that the created world is one of evil. It is more appropriate to say that the created world is one of deprivation and need, and this deprivation and need are present from the beginning of the creation. The created world is a ‘house’ that human beings make a ‘home’ through their use of language and number.
Paul Foster Case’s interpretations of the paths run into some contradictions here (or so it seems to me) because he confuses the Necessary with the Good. The Good is beyond Being. The Light that is Keter might be understood as the Highest Crown (since the crowns are associated with the letters), but they are not the “primordial emanation”. If The Fool is represented by the letter Alef and is the channel to Chakmah or Wisdom, how is “wisdom” being defined here? Wisdom is “knowledge of the whole” which The Fool clearly does not have unless we are considering reincarnation here (which is entirely possible. See Appendix regarding Plato’s writings on Republic and Phaedrus).
In this life, it is not given to human beings to have knowledge of the whole of which they are a part. With the creation of numbers, Time also comes into being; and with it the recognition of Space. With Time comes Memory. It is our Memory of the original Good that creates the absence/presence of human existence and the longing, the erotic need, for completion in the Good. The Beauty of the created world acts as a souvenir, a photograph or image that gives us the Memory of that which is our proper end or perfection, our completion. Thus, Plato can say: “Time is the moving image of eternity”, but it must be remembered that these images of which Time is composed are merely shadows. Our collective knowledge, which is our collective Memory, derives from our understanding of the Laws of Necessity, our opinions or doxa regarding Necessity. Necessity itself is the will of God i.e., Justice.
#14 The Illuminating Intelligence: Letter Shin Alef Mem with the element of Shin emphasized (Red)
#15 The Stabilizing Intelligence: Letter Tet (Green)
#17 Intelligence of the Senses: Letter Vav (Orange)
#13 The Unity Directing Intelligence Letter: Peh (Purple)
The Third Path is the Sanctifying Intelligence, and is the basis of foundation of Primordial Wisdom, which is called the Former of faith, and its roots, Amen; and it is the parent of Faith, from which virtues doth Faith emanate.
Alt. Trans. “The third path is called the sanctifying consciousness. It is the foundation of primordial wisdom and is called “enduring faith [Amen]”, and its roots are truth [Amen]. It is the father of trust [Amen], from which the power of faith [Amen] emanates.”
Wescott trans. The Third Path is the Sanctifying Intelligence, and is the foundation of Primordial wisdom, which is called the Creator of Faith, and its roots are AMN; and it is the parent of Faith, from which doth Faith emanate.
Path 3. Sanctified Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel MeKudash): This is the foundation of the Original Wisdom and it is called “Faithful Faith”. Its roots are AMeN. It is the Father of Faith, and from its power faith emerges.
The 3rd Path: The Sanctifying Intelligence
The third path of wisdom is The Sanctifying Intelligence. The third path of wisdom is the sephirot Binah in the Western Tree and Chakmah in the Hebrew Tree. The word “sanctifying” here means “to make pure, to set apart, to consecrate”, to “make holy”. What “sanctifies” or makes “holy” is the presence of the Divine in the Unlimited (the whole) and this presence prescribes the limits to the Unlimited. That which prescribes the limits is the Logos, and this is ultimately the Law of Necessity or the Divine Will. This is mirrored in the logistikon or the divine part of the soul. The prescribing of limits through the logos is not a setting apart that cuts off, but a site wherein and from where something commences and emerges as that which it is. For something to be that which it is is its ‘holiness’.
We began this commentary with a quote from Simone Weil: “Faith is the experience that the intelligence is illuminated by Love.” The intelligence is illuminated by the “amen” (“so be it”, “let it be”) that is the foundation of primordial Wisdom i.e., faith is the product of the acceptance of the Divine Will which manifests itself in Necessity. This acceptance is not an easy task as is illustrated by the fact that the first test or temptation of Christ is to turn stones to bread. This acceptance may be said to be a mastery of the appetitive part of the soul. This acceptance may also be said to rest in the concept of amor fati which is ‘the love of fate’. Only a few exceptional human beings are capable of this faith in its true form.
All of what we call knowledge is a product of Necessity. This knowledge is illuminated for us through Love, not only through the principle of reason. Here it is not the thing that is made ‘holy’, but the seeing itself that is ‘holy’ i.e., ‘set apart’, ‘made pure’. Fire is the element of purification. It is through our acceptance of the Divine Will that all things are made holy for us. The site wherein and from where something commences and emerges and becomes holy is the intellect (logistikon) when it is illuminated by Love. The truth, the unconcealing that is the root of faith, is the illumination of things, the bringing out of unconcealment, through Love. This is what we call ‘experience’. Experience is consciousness or awareness of, intelligence of some thing.
Since Chakmah is the “unlimited”, it cannot be known in any specific way. Binah separates and produces or brings forth particular things, makes them “pure”, sets them apart and “consecrates” them by giving a name to them. The giving of names to things is a “holy act”; it is what distinguishes and separates human beings from other animals and from other created beings. The type of thinking that separates and comes to know things through this separation is called diaresis in Greek. To bring things together, to unify them, is called dianoia. Binah is a combination of both types of thinking and brings about Understanding, how we come to interpret our world. This Understanding is the foundation of primordial Wisdom.
This third path is sometimes referred to as the “General Consciousness” which would indicate a connection to path #30, the third path on the upward direction of the Tree of Life, from bottom to top. (Path #30. General Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Kelali): “It is called this because it is the means by which the astrologers collect their rules regarding the stars and the constellations, forming the theory that comprises their knowledge of the Ophan-wheels of the spheres.”) Whereas the 30th path is in the realm of Asiyah, the 3rd path is in the realm of Beriyah. The 30th path is not the intelligence illuminated by Love. They are mirror images of each other. The knowledge which the astrologers have is knowledge of Necessity. Its source was geometry. The original knowledge of the astrologers was in their contemplation and attention to the movements of the heavens but it appears to have devolved into something else a long time ago (as is indicated by path #32 The Administrative Intelligence).
Diaretic thinking produces classifications, taxonomies. Though the world presents itself in multivarious particulars, the One is present within them, and this bringing together into a one is the thinking that is called dianoia. The “gathering together into a one” is one of the many possible translations of the Greek word logos. In philosophy, this is the problem known as “the one and the many”.
In Plato, one may see this problem outlined in the relation between the Ideas and the Forms. The Forms (eidos) are the outward appearances of things and these are innumerable. The Forms, however, are the emanations or begettings of the Ideas which are the essence of the Forms or what the things really are in their being. The Ideas of Plato are the Sephirot of the Sefer Yetzirah, and both have their roots in Pythagorean geometry. The practice of geometry was initially one of contemplation and prayer, a relation to the world as presence-at-hand. The “gathering together” that brings about our “understanding”, our interpretation of the world, is only possible through the logos. This gathering together can be done through the principle of reason or it can be done through Love. Both are matters of “seeing” and “viewing”. Both means are by ways of the logos. With the principle of reason, Love is absent or diminished; it is the lower form of eros, the thymoeides or “spirited” part of the soul. The requirement is to combine the Love that is Eros with the Logos that is the true essence of the thing in order to dwell in the proper relation with the Divine. This is done through the logistikon part of the soul.
Binah is the third Sephirot and is related to Understanding. How we come to understand the world is determined through Time and through Memory, and this is the influence of Chakmah and the element of water (material) upon that of fire (the mind, the head). Binah imposes limits on the unlimited of Chakmah; it gives shape to water. We might say that the ‘shape of water’ is what we call history. The philosopher Thales thought that all things are composed of water. Heraclitus opposed Thales’ view and asserted that all things were composed of fire.
Thales of Miletus
The limits which give presence to the things that are present have come about through the logos of number and word. Through the logos of number and word, we are able to de-fine things and to give them a name. The things become particulars, singulars, and they are separated from the whole of the things that are. This is why Binah is associated with “The Sanctifying Intelligence”. This naming and defining of things is considered “holy” in the Sefer Yetzirah, for it is our distinction as human beings from the other living creatures about us. Our ability to have a history and be aware of it through Memory is what is distinctive about us.
We might say that Binah is the recognition of three ways of viewing the world or the foundation of the three worlds: the world of ‘reality’ which is associated with Asiyah and the sephirot Malkhut (the material world); the world of history (historicism) which is a world with human beings at the centre and is associated with Yetzirah and Beriyah. The world of ‘virtual reality’ which is a discovery of modern times and goes beyond the real world as it is encountered creates a world within a world. We might consider ‘virtual reality’ a ‘second Cave’ which distances us still further from the truth of things. AI and its applications would be part of this ‘second cave’, a further distancing and closing off of our humanity from the reality of the Truth. That this intelligence is called ‘artificial’ is a recognition of its distance from the reality of things; it is an artifice or a making of human beings. This distance from things is the no-thingness at its height, and we must understand this as a blossoming of our nihilism in the modern age. (The four stages of truth in Plato’s allegory of the Cave correspond to the four universes of the Sefer Yetzirah.)
We can encounter the beings in our world as either “presence-at-hand” or “readiness-to-hand”. Present-at-hand beings are to be contemplated while ready-to-hand beings are encountered as something “useful”, something which exists in order to complete human beings’ tasks or goals. They are seen as “equipment” or “tools”. Human beings’ care and concern allows them to encounter beings as useful for ‘projects’. The things are manipulable, disposable. They are ‘for’ something. What the things are, their meaning, is determined by human beings’ projects and these projects establish and determine the worlds in which those things will appear and come to prominence. This is the meaning and significance of the Tarot card of The Magician #1 who, through the energy of his upward held wand, is able to make use of the cups, swords and pentacles that lie before him. The wand is a symbol of his will and energy. This will is associated with reason, Shin, the head. This will is the thymoeides or ‘spirited’ part of the human soul when it comes to domination.
In the modern view, ready-to-hand beings possess no telos or purpose of their own: their “value” is determined by human beings’ projects. Their particularity is replaced by uniformity. They are all calculable masses in motion in space and time. This was the revolution begun in the seeing of modern science (Galileo and Newton) as distinguished from the science of the ancients. In the virtual world, we can say that the logos has no ‘value’ of its own outside the projects that human beings have determined for it. Their “value” lies in their ‘in-order-to’, their relation to human beings’ projects. A project is ‘that which is thrown forward’ as the end or purpose in advance. Nature is ‘thrown forward’ and is ‘discovered’ or encountered as ‘environment’ in advance. We can look at a tree as ready-to-hand: its fruit, a shady place to rest, etc.; or we can look at its ‘presence-at-hand’: its colour, its bark, its DNA structure, but this manner of looking at the tree reveals nothing of the tree’s nature i.e., the tree as a living being.
Physis or nature, according to the Greeks, is “that which emerges and remains in view”. For Plato, every being conceals and discloses through its eidos or “appearance” at the same time: our knowledge and understanding of what appears to be is doxa or “opinion”. The wall of the Cave, the enclosure that is our created world, reflects shadows cast by the fire from the framework of the technites, the artisans, the powerful, within the Cave. This framework is ‘the thrown forward’, the shadows on the wall. Doxa and physis are in tension or strife with each other. Metaphysics, historically, attempts to “preserve” the concealing-revealing nature of the natural, what Aristotle called the “stable presencing”, (the meaning of the 15th path of Wisdom leading from Binah to Chesed), and this belief in the ‘stable presencing’ is shown in some of the paths of the Sefer Yetzirah.
In “The 32 Paths of Wisdom”, this attempt at preservation, of making something permanent, is sometimes called “The Constant or Settled Intellect” (Examples: Path #4: Settled Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Kavua): “It is called this because all the spiritual powers emanate from it as the (most) ethereal of emanations. One emanates from the Other by the power of the Original Emanator, may He be Blessed.”); “The Everlasting or Enduring Intellect” (Path #16: “Enduring Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Nitzchi): “It is called this because it is the Delight of the Glory (Eden). As it is, there is no Glory lower than it. It is called the Garden of Eden, which is prepared for the (reward of) the saints.”), “The Sustaining Intellect” (Path #23: Sustaining Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Kayam): “It is called this because it is the sustaining power for all the Sephirot”); and “The Continuous Intellect” (Path #31: Continuous Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Timidi): “Why is it called this? Because it directs the path of the sun and moon according to their laws of nature, each one in its proper orbit.”) Poiesis or ‘the emergence that remains in view’ is at the heart of causation (the bringing forth that is done through the logos as related to the four causes of Aristotle discussed earlier). Modern natural science’s view of nature, as a final view, secures permanently the distinction between the Good and Being, facts and values. There are no “moral facts” i.e., “natural morals”. This modern view is contrary to the world of the Sefer Yetzirah.
William Shakespeare
Human beings, as natural beings, bring themselves to presence; they “occasion” themselves from out of themselves. When Shakespeare says “the art itself is nature”, this would indicate that what he sees himself as doing in his dramas is analogous to “the blossom bursting forth”. The pen and ink and human beings are like the earth, air, and sun. Art is human beings’ revealing of the truth in the most appropriate way that they are capable of. The language of this revealing is “prophecy” or “art”, that language that is beyond time. This distinguishes this language from that of AI where language is understood as historical and algorithmic.
Binah manifests the interactions of the first horizontal line of Mem/Alef/Shin, the vertical double letter line of Peh, and the diagonal lines of Vav and Tet. The path of Peh does not interact with Tiferet; and because of this lack of interaction, how the natures of the paths will be expressed through Binah will come to determine how an individual human being will come to view their world; it will be their understanding of their world. Peh, meaning ‘mouth’, indicates the language of rhetoric, the language that directs itself to the passions and attempts to persuade the passions which have their root in Mem. Binah, as the Sanctifying Intelligence, has its roots in Shin, the purifying alchemical fire.
Two paths lead from The Sanctifying Intelligence to channel or communicate these emanations to the Sephirot below. The one path links the Divine to the human soul (Tiferet); the other path links to Gevurah or the “social” and this is what we would understand as traditional religion, our “shared knowledge” and understanding, and it is linked to Binah. Peh and Vav are these linking paths.
The Sephirot are what things truly are in their essence; the Sephirot are not in motion. Because they are not in motion, they can be said to have always been; they are eternal. The essence of all that has been made and all that will be made is continually present in the Sephirot and this essence is not subject to historical situations and interpretations, although these interpretations are all that can be given of them. This is referred to as parousia here, the “being alongside”, the “being present together”. Through the thinking that is dianoia, the essence of things is “revealed” and thus their “truth”. This “revealing” is done through Binah and its path to Tiferet, the Beauty of the world which is represented by the letter Vav.
The following passage from the Gospel of Matthew may illuminate this point: Matthew 11: 27:“All things have been committed to me (handed over to me) by my Father (the Good that is beyond Being). No one knows the Son (The Light which the darkness cannot comprehend, Tiferet #6) except the Father (the Good), and no one knows the Father (the Good) except the Son (the Light) and those to whom the Son chooses to reveal Him (the Good).” Notice that the revelation of the Divine is in the hands of the Logos and that this revelation is what is called Grace, the gift received from the Divine.
Binah is “the clothing”, the images and representations, by which the essence of things is brought into appearance and made visible; and through this visibility, we are given Understanding. Binah is the essence of the historical interpretations of things. This is its association with Time. Binah is the archetypal Mother, Nature, and her womb is the receptacle for the Seed that is the dynamis of being. She is the “matrix” and the khôra of Plato, what we might interpret as Space and Time. In Plato’s dialogue Timaeus, she is described as the receptacle in which all becoming takes place. The fires (the goods) that we see coming into being and being extinguished are just appearances, in the receptacle, of the Fire Itself (the Good). At 52b, Plato describes this receptacle as “space.”
The coming into being and passing away of things is Time. The coming together of Space and Time is the Law of Necessity, the Divine Will. Plato uses the term demiourgos or demiurge, the one who takes the pre-existing materials of chaos (Chakmah), arranges them according to the models of the eternal ideas (the Sephirot), and produces or brings forth all the physical things of the world, including human bodies. Demiourgos means “craftsman” or “artisan” in Greek, but it is something of a tricky word in its interpretation. The Greeks see the shaper of the world as a “manual labourer”, and so the relation of the demiourgos to Christ is somewhat apt since He Himself was a carpenter, the one who builds a “house” that becomes a “home” which aligns with the letter Beth. The associations of the ox and camel as beasts of burden also relate to this labouring, the labouring which produces ‘a work’.
The 13th Path: The Intelligence of the House of Influx/ The Unity Directing Intelligence
Path 13: Intelligence of the House of Influx/ Unity Directing Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Manhig HaAchdut): It is called this because it is the essence of the Glory (Beauty). It represents the completion of the true essence of the unified spiritual beings.
The Thirteenth Path is named the Uniting Intelligence and is so called because it is itself the essence of Glory (beauty). It is the Consummation of the Truth of individual spiritual things.
Alt. Trans. ” The thirteenth path is named the uniting consciousness because it is the essence of glory (Beauty). It represents the completion of the true essence of the unified spiritual beings.”
Wescott trans. The Thirteenth Path is named the Uniting Intelligence, and is so called because it is itself the Essence of Glory (Beauty). It is the Consummation of the Truth of individual spiritual things.
Case trans. The thirteenth path (Gimel, joining Keter to Tiphareth) is called the Uniting Intelligence, or Conductive Intelligence of Unity, because it is the essence of glory (beauty), and the perfection of the truths of spiritual unities.
The Letter Peh and the 13th Path: The Unity Directing Intelligence
We spoke in the Third path, The Sanctifying Intelligence, of the thinking that is termed dianoia, that thinking which unites things that are separated into a one, that thinking which brings things together into a one thing so that the thing can be seen and be named. The thirteenth path is the bridge between the universe of Beriyah and the universe of Yetzirah. Yetzirah along with Asiyah is the world of action, the formation of things which brings about their “consummation” or perfection, their completion. This formation and completion is related to ‘justice’. These things brought to completion may be physical things or ethical things, since “glory” (the beautiful) refers to actions and their results. It is the world of “values”, that which human beings ascribe to things of their own doing and their own making. “Values” are what human beings make or determine regarding actions or things; they are not the “good”. “Glory” is not the Good, though it is often mistaken for the Good. The Glory of creation is its beauty; the essence of the creation’s beauty is its relation to the Divine, the One, the Good. The light from Tiferet is here in action to bring about the relation between the Divine Unity and the individual things within creation.
The four causes of Aristotle which we spoke about are within both the physical and spiritual realms; that is, they have to do with both ontology and ethics. The actions which human beings take require a dynamis, whether in an active or passive form, a potential or a possibility of being able to come into being or not to come into being. In the Tarot, it is the card of The Chariot #7, although some Kabbalists ascribe it to the card of The High Priestess #2. This may account for the many similarities between the Priestess and the Chariot cards in their depictions. Paul Foster Case considers the Thirteenth Path to belong to the letter Gimel and to be associated with Tiferet; but this cannot be the situation. The letter Gimel refers to “wealth”, the “value” of created things, the multiplicity of created things, the “wealth” or “abundance” of things, and it is associated with the strife amidst that multiplicity of things. It is one of the 7 double letters indicating that its understanding can be viewed in two ways (at least). These two ways are the outward and downward path to Malkhut or the inward and upward path to Keter.
This strife among the created things and the urges that arise in human beings is that which needs to be brought into “friendship” or balance and this is done through the connection between the primal water of the Holy Spirit (Chakmah), the undifferentiated pre-conscious, to the fire of Keter (Shin) through Air (Alef) from which earth (wealth) is created. It is how one perceives this wealth of the earth that is key. The thymoeides part of the soul can assist the logistikon part of the soul or be be in conflict with it. this conflict rests in the desire of the thymoeides aspect of eros to possess and consume that which it perceives, while the logistikon wishes the soul to merely contemplate it.
The NOW is eternity once the individual has been reconciled to the One (Strength) which is the heart (Alef) of all things (Tiferet). This is how one can understand Plato’s statement that “Time is the moving image of eternity”, when eternity is experienced in the NOW. What is one to do practically i.e., in the way of action? One is “to mind one’s own business” and take care of those things that come to one when they occur: to recognize and distinguish between the Necessary and the Good and to prevent the worst from happening when one cannot assist in bringing about some good with regard to human affairs. It is not in our power to bring about the Good; that is in God’s hands. The greatest evils occur when we think we can bring about the Good i.e., “the good end justifies any means”. The greatest evils are perpetrated by those who believe that they are in possession of the Truth, and this evil is demonstrated on a daily basis in our being-with-others.
Religious proselytizing, for example, is an evil because it involves will to power. So much evil has been perpetrated by those who believe they possess the truth. To proselytize is to “expand”, and the proper response (according to the Sefer Yetzirah) is to “withdraw”. Christ’s instructions to his disciples to go out and “make disciples of all nations” is not that they should be “converted” through severity and fear i.e., through social and political action. One’s own actions are the tools of conversion; one “converts” by providing an example for others through their being-in-the-world, by “withdrawing” and “letting be”. This is the significance of the philosopher’s return to the Cave in Plato’s allegory. The history of the Roman Church is rampant with this sin, but Islam also partakes in this evil. Tolerance is lacking in those who believe they possess the truth. God Himself, as they understand Him, provides the example: if He is ‘the eternal fiery Father’ who demands subservience through fear, this is how the “converts” will relate to others. If He is the hidden God who loves in silence through the dark night that is existence, this is how His “converts” will respond. The seeing and understanding is all.
We spoke in the Third path of the thinking that is termed dianoia, that thinking which unites things that are separated, that thinking which brings things together into a one thing so that the thing can be named. The thirteenth path is the bridge between the universe of Asiyah and the universe of Yetzirah. Yetzirah is the world of action, the formation of things which brings about their “consummation” or perfection, their completion. These things may be physical things or ethical things, since “glory” refers to actions. It is the world of “values”, that which human beings ascribe to things by their own doing and their own making. “Values” are what human beings make or determine regarding actions or things; they are not the “good”. “Glory” is not the Good.
There are clearly errors in the commentaries that place Gevurah as “Justice” and not Hod. If the uniting intelligence is the essence of “glory”, then it must manifest itself in the Beauty of the world or in the “glorious” actions that human beings are capable of performing once they have been given the Love that unifies all beings. The glory that derives from “social prestige” is the second temptation of Christ. (Matthew 4:3) The unity or sense of oneness that one derives from belonging to a clan, country, political party or some other “collective” is a false form of the unity that belongs to “two or three gathered together in my Name”, what we have been calling dialectic here. His Name is Love, not the Law; it is not the power that derives from “social prestige” and recognition. Christ has no need to devolve into the ‘armed prophet’ of the Christian nationalists. He can look after Himself.
The NOW is eternity once the individual has been reconciled to the One which is the heart of all things. This is how one can understand Plato’s statement that “Time is the moving image of eternity”, when eternity is experienced in the NOW.
The emanations from Gevurah, which is on the pillar of Severity and Fear, are represented in the Tarot by The Hierophant #5 whose contrary is either The Devil #15 or The Tower #16. This is a crucial point in the Tarot and in the Sefer Yetzirah’s Tree of Life as 15 and 16 are at the very centre of the 32 paths. They occur at that point in the Tree of Life where there is a fork at Tiferet, one branch going East and one branch going West. At this point, a decision for the individual must be made (as is represented in The Lovers #6 card.) This branching of the Logos is indicative of the way West as the principle of reason as a principle of being on the Tree of Life. The branch East on the other hand indicates reflective thought, contemplation and prayer, the thinking that is moved by Love. The movement on the left branch or trunk is power and will to power, involving the language of public discourse (rhetoric) and technology as a way of being in the world. The movement on the right branch or trunk is self-nullification, the rejection of power (even though one possesses its potentiality and possibility), the dialogue among two or three friends (dialectic) and the sophrosyne and phronesis that is moral, ethical action.
The views and the seeing of The Hierophant #5 are to be contrasted with those of The Lovers #6 and can, in fact, be mistaken for The Lovers. The logos of The Hierophant is represented by Peh and it is the form of language that we call rhetoric, while the logos of The Lovers is represented by Zayin and Heh and these are what is known as the language of dialectic, the conversation between two or three friends. Below is an illustration of what is being said here:
The Hierophant #5 revolves to The Devil #15 i.e. the speech of rhetoric Peh becomes the way of seeing of the eye of Eyin ע through the hearing, the letters Reishר and Tavת corresponding to the right and left ear respectively.
The Hierophant #5 can also revolve to The Tower #16. In the Tarot illustrated here, The Hierophant is signified by the letter Vavו, while The Tower is signified by the letter Pehפ. The Tower is the Tower of Babel and represents an attempt to build a way to heaven through human will. #16 represents the middle point in the Thirty-two Paths of Wisdom and it is at this point that the Tree of Life branches off in different directions. These different directions are shown in the card by the 12 Yods on one side of the Tower and the 10 Sephirot on the other. I would allot #15 to The Tower.
The Devil card has been allotted #15 in most Tarot decks. The letter Ayinע or ‘eye’ has been assigned to it. The Lovers #6 has the letter Zayin ז meaning ‘manacle’ assigned to it. This seems to be an error. There are real manacles in The Devil card while there may be ‘bonds’ in The Lovers card. There are three figures in The Hierophant as well as in The Devil card. 10 + 5 = 15. There are two figures in The Tower card. One can be manacled by the Beast, the anti-Logos, or one can be bonded together or yoked together by the Daemon Michael (or Metatron). The torch of the Beast is about to ignite the tail of the male in The Devil card.
The Tower #16 is the card of revolution. The crown of The Tower of social prestige is blasted by the lightning bolt that is beyond the Sephirot shown in the right side of the card. I would reverse The Tower and The Devil cards in the Tarot deck in order to reflect their essential differences from each other.
The succumbing to the Great Beast is the succumbing to the three temptations of Christ: the material temptation of turning stones to bread (i.e. opposing the will of God and not recognizing the limits imposed by Necessity); the social temptation of power over the kingdoms of the world (desiring or possessing the power of “social recognition” or social prestige, the temptation of the collective); the individual temptation, suicide (the temptation of God by denying the will of God and the defying of the Law of Necessity). In the Tarot, the symbolism of The Devil mirrors that of The Lovers but is contrary to that of The Lovers: the manacles of The Devil are the Tree of Life and the Tree of Knowledge in The Lovers. The manacles are attached to the cube of the physical world; no such cube exists in The Lovers card. The Devil represents a false or ersatz form of unity to which one becomes bound and loses one’s freedom and one’s individuality. This is why I would assign #16 to The Devil and #15 to The Tower. The Tower is the lightning bolt of Zeus, or of God, and is the nemesis for the worship of false gods or the worship of power and social prestige. In the ascending direction, the worship of The Devil leads to The Tower; in the descending direction, The Tower leads to that revolution or expansion which simply replaces itself with The Devil.
The Hebrew letter Peh means “mouth” and refers to the power of speech, but also to the taking possession of something and consuming it. In the collective, the social, the individual is “possessed” and “consumed”. I have associated the letter Peh with The Unity Directing Intelligence. In Kabbalah, speech as the Logos is a spiritual power, which can cause good or evil depending on how it is used. “A truth that’s told with bad intent/ Beats all the lies you can invent”, as the poet William Blake told us in his “Auguries of Innocence”.
What one thinks determines how one is in one’s being-in-the-world, and what one speaks has the power to become completed in action, just as the magic word “abracadabra” has the power “to create while I speak”. All speech is, in essence, the power of this “abracadabra”. Violent words and images lead to violent actions. The ethical is grounded in one’s way of being-in-the-world; the ethical is not the ‘values’ which are self-created and socially created, but is the presence of the grace which is the divine blessing which determines individual actions. One sees concrete examples of this on a daily basis in the humblest of human beings.
The quality of speech is the quality of the life’s essence and creative existence. This is why the care and concern for proper speech is so important to the being and well-being of human beings and why the destruction of speech through modern technology is so concerning with regard to our humanity as humane beings. The Peh teaches us to view our words as that which preserves our essence as human beings. Not giving speech care and concern causes us to become more bestial.
The shape of the Peh is a Khof with a Yod inside of it. More discussion of these two letters will be given below. The shape represents the spiritual spark of the Neshama soul, contained inside the physical body. With words and silence, we can communicate the essence of our soul and existence. This requires that the inner and outer life match – that the physical existence is fully aligned manifesting the spiritual intentions of the soul within it. As it says in the Talmud Baba Metsiah “Don’t say one thing with the mouth and another with the heart.” The Yod is also the Nekudah Sheba Lev, the point in the heart where spiritual awakening begins. Our attempts at the alignment of the physical with the spiritual level is the strife or polemos which is the essence of life.
The power of the Peh is a double-edged sword. As it says in Proverbs 18:21 “Life and death are in the hands of the tongue.” Because of this, the Peh represents the requirement to govern one’s own nature. Routine speech, speech to manipulate, all the distortions of speech must give way to viewing speech as a miracle. Then, speech can be used for its true purpose – to speak one’s destiny and to activate the spirit through one’s thoughts and speech.
Peh is similar to the letter Kaf כ in shape (it is a container letter) , but Peh contains a “tooth”; the letter Shin means ‘tooth’. In appearance, it bears some similarities to the letter Shin, although sideways. It is for these reasons that I have placed Peh above Kaf on the Tree of Life as both are double letters and thus vertical lines.
In Kabbalah speech, the logos, is a spiritual power, which can cause good or evil depending on whether it is used falsely or truly. Our being is determined by what one thinks and how one thinks, and these in turn determine our actions, what our character is and how one is. Since it is in the nature of human beings to reveal truth, what one speaks has the power to become reality. Lies become realities through false speech. Violent words lead to violent actions. When our speech is not used to reveal truth, we become more inhumane, bestial, violent, and insane. As Socrates said: “The opposite of knowledge is not ignorance but madness.” Madness is the stupidity of the social, the mob, the party, the clan. The quality of the speech determines the quality of the life’s essence and creative existence. This is why speech and language are so important and so dangerous, particularly in the West at this point in its history.
The shape of the Peh is a Khaf with a Yod inside of it or, as suggested above, a Khaf with a Shin inside it. The Shin represents the spiritual spark or the emotional, passionate fire of the soul, contained inside the physical body which is the Yod of our own being. Passionate speech deals with rhetoric; the speech before crowds and assemblies. With words and silence, we can communicate the essence of our soul and existence. This requires that the inner and outer life match – that the physical existence is fully aligned manifesting the spiritual intentions of the soul within it. Socrates’ prayer to Pan at the end of the dialogue Phaedrus expresses this: “Dear Pan, and all you other gods that dwell in this place, grant that I may become beautiful within, and that such outward things as I have may not war against the spirit within me. May I count him rich who is wise, and as for gold, may I possess only so much of it as a temperate man might bear and carry with him.” This is similar to what it says in the Talmud Baba Metsiah “Don’t say one thing with the mouth and another with the heart.” The Yod is the point in the heart where spiritual awakening begins. However, the alignment of the physical with the spiritual is no easy task as even someone such as Socrates needs to pray for a balance between them.
The letter Vav and the 17th Path: Intelligence of the Senses
The Seventeenth Path is the Disposing Intelligence, which provides Faith to the Righteous, and they are clothed with the Holy Spirit by it, and it is called the Foundation of Excellence in the state of higher things.
Alt. Trans. “The seventeenth path is called the consciousness of disposition. It provides faith to the compassionate (Khasidim) and clothes them with the Holy Spirit (Ruach Elohim). Within the Supernals, it is called the foundation of beauty (Tiphareth).”
Wescott trans. The Seventeenth Path is the Disposing Intelligence, which provides Faith to the Righteous, and they are clothed with the Holy Spirit by it, and it is called the Foundation of Excellence in the state of higher things.
Case trans. ·The seventeenth path (Zayin, joining Binah to Tiphareth) is called the Intelligence of Sensation (or, the Disposing Intelligence), and it establishes the faith of the compassionate, clothes them with the Holy Life-Breath, and is called the Foundation of Tiphareth in the plane of the Supernals.
Genesis 1.17 And Elohim set them in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth, 18 and to rule over the day and over the night, and to divide the light from the darkness; and Elohim saw that it was good.
The Seventeenth Path is the awareness of or knowledge of Beauty or the knowledge of the senses, and I would relate this path to the letter Vav, the letter that makes conjunctions, connections, and relations for it is through seeing, through the senses, that we apprehend the world about us. It is the Kabbalistic indication of the statement of Simone Weil: “Faith is the experience that the intelligence is illuminated by Love.”
“Experience” is that knowledge which comes to us from our senses. When illuminated or lit by the fire of Love, this knowledge becomes ‘fire catching fire’ with the result that “faith” is produced (The Sanctified Intelligence #3). Through the viewing of the world through Love, care and compassion for the things that are begins. In such knowledge, one is “clothed” by the Holy Spirit or “holy breath”, Grace, and becomes loving and compassionate. This is true ‘inspiration’. This is why it is a “dispositional knowledge”. It is a knowledge governing our emotional dispositions as well as our mental and spiritual dispositions.
The knowledge produced by the senses does not give us an answer to the question “why”. The opposite of ALP (Alef) or “intelligence”/”knowledge” is PLA (“wonder”) and it is from “wonder” that “philosophy” begins. It is a knowledge that is “useless”, whereas the knowledge that comes about from “know how” i.e., reason and the will, is knowledge that is put to use to meet the ends that human beings devise.
Some commentaries say that to achieve such knowledge, one must be guided by The Hierophant; but it is clear that the true guide is the Mediator in the form of Eros or Jesus Christ i.e., Love. The Lovers card #6, has the mediator between the couple as the angel Raphael, (some commentaries say Metatron or Michael, and this would coincide with the ‘strife’ that is present at this point along the journey). The Lovers card implies a choice; and in this case, it is one between the head and the heart. The Fool #0, The Lovers #6, and Judgement #20 are all cards that imply choices and have a relation to the crossover paths of the Tree of Life.
The Hierophant is the representative of the ‘historical knowledge’, the ‘opinion’ or doxa that has been produced through reason and will to power and becomes the knowledge that is shared by those who dwell in the society which produces such knowledge. It is the knowledge that casts the shadows on the walls of the Cave that is Nature. It relates to piety and to what those in that society bow down to or look up to. Language creates the ‘worlds’ in which human beings dwell for it is what gives meaning to the things within those worlds. The Logos dwells in the human heart which is the ‘house of being’ of the individual, and from this dwelling a home may be built both within a world and among each of the inhabitants who come to share in the ‘making’ of that world. Relations and connections can be made.
17 And Elohim set them in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth;
In the passage from Genesis, we see for the only time that it is Elohim that “sets them” i.e., the sun and the moon, in the heavens to divide the darkness from the light. The Moon is associated with darkness (Chakmah, The High Priestess #2); the Sun is associated with the light (Tiferet, The Lovers #6). It is through the Holy Spirit (the Holy-Breath, Shin/Alef) that it is possible for the individual to experience direct contact with the Divine. This contact is called Grace. It is grace that allows the individual to rise up to the realm that is beyond the law and justice that is Necessity. Once again, the action of Elohim, the setting of the light that is the Sun and Moon, which is mirrored by human beings in their choices regarding the viewing of their worlds, for it is the light and the truth that is revealed by the reflected light of the moon or the direct light of the sun that will determine, “set”, what will be meaningful and how it will be meaningful for human beings in their worlds.
In the Scholastic philosophy of The Middle Ages, it was the concept of “intuition” which included the “consciousness” of and “intelligence” of something. This “intuition” was the parousia of God, the having God present, and this was considered the highest form of human being, that human excellence that was defined as ‘virtue’. The “intuitional disposition” no longer looks beyond itself to be fulfilled (this is indicated in the Strength card #11 of the Tarot). The contrary of this experience is the Absolute Knowledge of Hegel and Marxists.
The Beauty of the World is the covenant of God. It is always present (NOW) and given to all human beings at all times. In most commentaries on the Sefer Yetzirah, it descends through Binah from Chalkmah and Keter. This is the zigzag shape, or rather the gyring shape as I suggest here, of the paths and their ascent or descent on the Tree of Life.
The Holy Spirit (Logos) combines the elements of water, air, and fire as is shown in the various depictions and symbols associated with it. This would suggest that the pattern of descent is Keter through Chakmah, through Binah to Tiferet, through Netzach, to Hod, then Yesod, through to Malkhut. The pattern of the ascent would be Malkhut to Yesod, to Hod then Netzach, through Tiferet to Gevurah, to Chesed to Binah, from Binah to Chokmah, and finally to Keter. I would suggest that the initial descent is from Keter to Tiferet, for Chakmah or Space and Binah or Time are, were, and will be always present in the Creation of the Other from out of the One. For this reason, I do not ascribe paths to the original three Mothers of the primordial triangle.
The manner of our dispositions towards the world determines how we view the world and how we will act within it. Our dispositions change according to which of our many worlds we happen to be engaged in and they colour our worlds like the tones of a musical key: we may view the world in A minor or C major, for instance. We are happy in the world of our hobbies, for instance, while we are not so when we are engaged in the world of our duties on occasion.
The descent to Tiferet is not through Gevurah (as is said in some commentaries) but is directly from the primal Trinity of Keter, Chokmah or “wisdom”, and Binah or “understanding”. Genesis 1:17 relates to the establishment of Time: the solar and lunar calendars and of the “light” that separates from the darkness i.e., what we call history. History establishes Gevurah from which it gets its power and legitimacy; but this power and legitimacy or legality are effects of the Law of Necessity: the things bounded and limited by Time and Space. Space is prior to Time. With Time comes creation and human beings. “And Elohim set them in the firmament of heaven to give light upon the earth”.
Tiferet has the ‘breath of Elohim’: the Way, the Truth, and the Life: “No one comes to the Father except through me.” For Christians, Christ is the mediator between heaven and earth, mortals and gods (Daimons). The Ruach Elohim (the Holy Spirit) cannot descend from Gevurah or through Gevurah. It is the fire and air from Keter that is the pure logos. Gevurah is the “borrowed logos”, the “borrowed” word that is the text set in stone. This is why I have associated the path from Binah to Gevurah with the letter Peh פ.
“Willing” is the product of rational human beings (Shin is associated with the ‘head’). It is associated with some thing and directed towards some thing that we do not yet possess and that is ‘not yet’. Falsehood is understood as “pseudos”: the statements that are false in their synthetic structure of the things, their predicates (the imposition of limits from Binah). Truth is the ‘uncovering” or “unveiling” of the things that are. Falsehood is the covering up of things that are not. The narratives constructed by most modern societies are those created out of ‘falsehood’ and are necessary in order to cover up the truth by bringing to presence things that are not, the ‘shadows’.
Vav: Path 17. Intelligence of the Senses (Consciousness) (Sekhel HaHergesh): This is prepared for the Faithful saints so that they may be able to clothe themselves in the spirit of holiness. In the arrangement of the supernal entities, it is called the Foundation of Beauty (Yesod HaTiferet).
The meaning of the letter Vav is a paradoxical one in Hebrew. Vav is the power to unite everything that is separated in creation, and as the 6th letter of the Hebrew alphabet it is sometimes associated with Tiferet. But this power to unite is associated with the human will. In the letter Alef, it is the Vav which separates the Divine Yod from the individual yod. We have written earlier about the thinking that is dianoic thought from the Greek i.e., that thinking that takes the leaves, branches, trunk, roots of a tree and combines them into the one that is called “a tree”. Dianoia is the thinking of reason and it is based on the principle of reason. It is the thinking that controls the understanding of path ‘#13, The Unity Directing Principle, the path going from Binah to Gevurah.
Literally, Vav means “hook” or “peg” and the Hebrew letter is a vertical line ו. It represents the Kav, the vertical line extension of the barrier that separates the Creator’s perfection from the created world and its imperfection (remembering that the word ‘perfection’ here is understood as ‘completeness’). The Vav is the Law of Necessity which constantly directs the world, placing the limits upon the cycle of existence until the perfect Oneness of the Creator, which underlies all of creation, is revealed to those few who have been chosen to have it revealed to them.
Vav would thus relate to Shin as the purifying fire; this is an analogy to the very real world of human affliction and suffering. Vav is related to the Orr Yashar, the direct light of the Creator, entering the world and it receives this influence from Tiferet. This would relate it to Christ who is the direct light of the Divine and would thus associate Vav with Tiferet, the sixth Sephirot and the Beauty of the World. This is what is meant by its being “the essence of the Glory”. The bringing of things into “completion” as particulars so that they may be named is the essence of The Unity Directing Intelligence Path 13. It should be emphasized here that these are to be seen as social phenomenon.
As a connector, Vav contains the mediatory power to connect the will and the earth through the senses. This mediatory power is the contrary of that mediatory power that is present in Tiferet. As the Law of Necessity, the Vav can be considered a channel or canal, which connects the human will to the will to power that is the life-force that bestows all the energy of created things to the dispositions of human beings. It represents the ladder of Jacob Yaakov – rooted in earth, with its head in the heavens, what is known as Jacob’s Ladder, but the gyring motion considered here is an “expansion” i.e., the individual’s expansion of their will to power, their ‘empowerment’, and this puts the ladder on somewhat shaky foundations.
The Vav is the extension of the essential dot Yod י from which all of creation comes forth and which is contained in Alef, but it is the contrary and deprivation of Heh which emanates from Tiferet to Chakmah. The Vav is the crucial choice that is present in the Sephirot Tiferet regarding how we distinguish the Necessary from the Good. Whereas the Heh teaches us the private esoteric path to the Divine, the Vav indicates the public path that can be found in the worship of the collective, the social, what Plato called the Great Beast.
Vav represents the number 6 and represents the six days of the creation of the world, as well as the six physical dimensions (right left, front and back, up and down) of Space. The first day of creation is related to Chesed and is attributed to “kindness”. God’s withdrawal allows creation to be. The Light of God is two-fold: one Light is beyond Being (the Good) and then there is the light within creation itself from the sun, moon, and heavens. Creation begins at the number 4.
The second day of creation has the attributes of “severity”, “contraction”, and “judgement” associated with it. It relates to the Sephirot of Binah and Gevurah. The deprivation and need of the original creation is experienced here and its significance is the separation of the waters. It is associated with the Flood and with The Tower of Babel, The Tower #15 (as I would assign this number to The Tower).
The third day of creation is associated with Tiferet and is associated with beauty, mercy and the balance between the positive and negative elements of creation.
The fourth day of creation is associated with Netzach, with splendour and the victory that comes from endurance. It is also associated with the creation of the sun and moon.
The fifth day of creation is associated with Hod and has the attribute of acknowledgement but also of devastation.
The sixth day of creation is associated with Yesod and with the creation of human beings. It is associated with Adam whose name contains the letters Alef, Dalet and Mem. Adam is the human being who is perfect in his thought, speech and action i.e., he is the “complete” human being.
The Vav is also said to be representative of the male phallus, the fertilizing agent, bringing life, abundance, continuity, and addition and represents the extension beyond Tiferet to Yesod in the downward movement of the Tree of Life. The letter Vav in Hebrew serves as both a conjunction and a verb modifier from present, past and future tenses. It is thus associated with Time. Time is associated with Saturn, and Saturn is associated with The Devil #16 (as I would associate this number with this card) of the Tarot.
In the Book of Revelations of St. John, the number of the Beast is 666. I would attribute the giving of this number to the 6 in the realm of Asiyah. The Great Beast occurs in Bk. 6 of Plato’s Republic and is identified as the social, the collective wherein power is given to those who are able to predict the shadows that will appear upon the wall of the Cave. This is today’s modern science. The realm of the social is subjected to the same laws that operate in the Law of Necessity, and the power relations operating therein can be understood as analogous to gravity.
In contrast to the path of Heh which has the senses connected to the human heart, the path of Vav is connected to or through the human will, the human eye, and the human head. Through its connection with Binah, it establishes the human understanding of the things of this world. Because of this, the power of the sephirot Binah or Understanding is more predominant in the path of Vav than that of Chokmah or Wisdom.
Because Chesed receives the mercy and kindness that comes from its relation to Tiferet, the severity of the emanations deriving from Binah are not tempered or brought into balance by Tiferet’s effect on Binah. The shaping of the viewing from which the knowledge and understanding is experienced through the Vav is thus deprived of the direct light that comes from Tiferet and it is thus a reflected light. This reflected light is primarily determined by Memory and is the historical knowledge established through Time. This is the crossing over of the path of Vav with the path of Chet which has been discussed above.
It is said by some commentators that Vav is related to the Orr Yashar, the direct light of the Creator, entering the world, but if it is directly connected from Chokmah to Gevurah, this light would be a borrowed light, a shadow of the true Light. If these commentaries are correct, the Vav would be related to Christ who is the direct light of the Divine and would thus associate Vav with Tiferet, the sixth Sephirot and the Beauty of the World. The peg or hook would be the Cross of Christ. The whole of Necessity is the Cross of Christ and this Cross is the Divine Will. It is the Creation itself. The human body is this cross in microcosm.
As the connector or conjunction, Vav contains the mediatory power to connect the spirit and the earth, spirit here understood as Will as that which is behind the Senses. It can be considered a channel or canal, which connects and bestows all the energy or life-force, the Will to Power, of the shefa שפע the abundance from below up to the created beings and things. It could be said to represent that theoretical knowledge which historically came to dominate the understanding of the world, what is called metaphysics. It is rooted in the realm of Beriyah, and from this informs the formation of things in the world of Yetzirah.
The Letter Tet and the 15th Path: The Constituting Intelligence
15. Stabilizing Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Ma’amid): It is called this because it stabilizes the essence of creation in the “Glooms of Purity”. The masters of the theory said this is ‘the Gloom at Sinai’. This is the meaning of “Gloom is its cocoon”. (Job 35.9)
The Fifteenth Path is the Constituting Intelligence, so called because it constitutes the substance of creation in pure darkness, and men have spoken of these contemplations; it is that darkness spoken of in scripture, Job xxxviii. 9, “and thick darkness a swaddling band for it.”
Alt. Trans. ” The fifteenth path is called the constituting consciousness because it constitutes the essence of creation in pure darkness. According to masters of contemplation, this is that darkness referred to in scripture: ‘and thick darkness its swaddling band.'”
Wescott trans. The Fifteenth Path is the Constituting Intelligence, so called because it constitutes the substance of creation in pure darkness, and men have spoken of these contemplations; it is that darkness spoken of in Scripture, Job xxxviii. 9, “and thick darkness a swaddling band for it.”
Case trans. The fifteenth path (Heh joining Chokmah to Tiphareth) is called the Constituting Intelligence, and is so called because it constitutes creative force (or. the essence ofcreation) in pure darkness. According to masters of contemplation this is that darkness mentioned in Scripture: “Thick darkness a swaddling-band for it.”
Genesis 1:14-15 — “And Elohim said: ‘Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and for days and years; and let them be for lights in the firmament of heaven to give light upon the earth.’ And it was so.”
If path #4, The Settled Intelligence, is called this “because all the spiritual powers emanate from it as the (most) ethereal of emanations. One emanates from the Other by the power of the Original Emanator, may He be Blessed”, then the 15th path as the Constituting or Stable Intelligence is the knowledge or awareness of that from which the spiritual powers emanate. The 15th path refers to the substance or the physical material of the Creation, and this material substance comes forth from the darkness of the waters of Chokmah. It provides the balance, the yin and yang of the duality of the nature of Creation.
The Fifteenth Path is the path of the knowledge and intelligence of the substances of things, their essences as to what we think they are when a name has been assigned to them. It is that knowledge of the things that are concealed beneath the outward appearances of those things. On the other hand, this path could also be the error of that which passes for knowledge in the world in which we live in. It would then be the knowledge of the shadows or shades or that which passes for knowledge in the world of those committed to the empirical knowledge of things only, those committed to the world of “facts”. The ‘stability’ of this knowledge is subject to instability.
This knowledge is the product of the “reflected light” of Malkhut; it is not knowledge of the true light of Keter which descends to Tiferet through the letter Alef (although some commentators attribute this to the letter Beth which is one of the ‘doubles’ and so would imply two ways of viewing such a path). As such, this knowledge when it is associated with The Moon and The High Priestess of the Tarot, is not “true knowledge” of things. It is “opinion” regarding the nature of things. To try to make this clearer: with the withdrawal of God to allow His creation to be and the subsequent descent from the One to the Ten, there is the simultaneous creation of the movement upward from Malkhut to Keter. These movements are symbolically shown in the representations of the Sun and the Moon. The Sun is the original light while the Moon is a ‘reflected light’ from the light received from the Sun. The movement downward is the widening gyre of the paths; the movement upwards is the narrowing or focusing of the paths in the direction of the One.
It is through our thinking that we bring things to a “stand” by giving them boundaries and horizons and then by naming or defining them, making them specific. In the placement of boundaries and the naming, the thing comes to be what it is for us. But this is merely the shadow of the thing. The thing is able to be brought to a stand because there is the light that is the “reflected light” of Malkhut. The thing is able to stand in its permanence before us but its true essence remains hidden from us because it is “veiled”. It is the sides of the cube which we are unable to see.
The Fifteenth path is ascribed to the letter Heh by Case in the W.T., although this may be questionable as the letter Heh is the first “elemental” or singular letter, and it would appear that a double or one of the three Mothers is required here (perhaps Shin or Mem).I have assigned the letter Tet to this path, from Binah to Chesed, since the path crosses over the path from Keter to Tiferet but has no interaction with it i.e., it has no interaction with the Sun nor with the qualities that emanate from Tiferet. (Does the crossing over of paths indicate choices that have to be made or choices that have been made?)
In the Hebrew Tree, the 15th path is ascribed to the Sefirot Tiferet, and this could be possible if the Tiferet were not the Logos. In the Western Tree of Case, this path is the linking of Chesed to Gevurah in the Sephirot and between The Emperor #4, The High Priestess #2, and The Hierophant #5 cards in the Tarot. The High Priestess is not a “true” mediator in the Tree of Life, and so she is not able to bring into a relation The Emperor, a symbol of the phallic power of Nature, with the power of convention that is The Hierophant. The attribute of Loving Kindness which is ascribed to the Sephirot Chesed is not made possible by Chakmah, but rather Tiferet.Chakmah is the ‘cold, sterile Mother’. The linking, however, of The Emperor #4, The High Priestess #2, and The Hierophant #5 would indicate that which is taken for knowledge in the societies in which we live.
These two powers of Chesed and Gevurah are incommensurables, and are therefore placed on opposite sides of the Tree of Life. They are what are traditionally referred to as Nature and Convention. The true mediator between them would be Tiferet from the Hebrew Tree but such is not the case. What joins them is in fact the movements of the paths of what crowns The Devil #16 in the Tarot as is illustrated on the left.
The three paths proceeding from the Sephirot Chakmah are all masculine and this may indicate why the worldviews derived from this seeing or viewing of the world are all phallo-centric. Chakmah is the khôra of Plato, the receptable into which are cast the “seeds” or the Forms that will become, through the demiourgos, the Logos, the created things of the world. We moderns might refer to the Forms as the Archetypes that will give to the created things their “form” or outward appearance. (It appears to me that the attributes that Case gives to The Emperor card are actually those that belong to the Strength card. It is she who, like Hamlet’s Horatio, is able “to suffer Fortune’s buffets and rewards with equal thanks”. The Emperor is more suitable to the corporate organization that suffers the stock market’s buffets and rewards with due concern for its bottom line.)
Teth, the 9th Hebrew letter has a literal meaning of “basket” or “nest” and is the symbol of those goods טוב in creation that we sometimes mistake for the Good itself. It is also connected to the womb wherein the human being gestates for nine months so it is a “container” letter and is connected to the other container letters of the Hebrew alphabet. It is connected to the Womb of the World and so it is appropriately linked to Binah and to The Empress #3.
Tet has to do with purity and impurity, and is the teaching of how to distinguish between the Necessary and the Good, the sacred and the profane. This also relates it to the letter Qof ק. We have to choose the Good over those things that we call goods in our existence and which we consume as we live out our lives in Time. It is also the very difficult realization that even within the bad things that happen, the sufferings that occur out of Necessity, there is a hidden good which is beyond our comprehension.
While all of our knowledge comes from our understanding of the realm of Necessity, the Divine Will itself is inscrutable. To believe that we know what this will is is a great temptation to sin; it is blasphemy. However, the common belief in “the power of positive thinking”, which derives from the exercise of the will and provides many with solace in the face of the suffering of the innocent, is hardly an answer to this great mystery of Life. “The power of positive thinking” works with the imagination and the will and too often involves fantasy and a denial of the real world in which we exist. The real world must be confronted through faith.
Teth also represents femininity, pregnancy and is thus connected to Binah. It includes the kindness and mercy of creation and the principle that everything is eternal and nothing is ever lost. This same principle, that nothing is ever lost, is to be found in the stories and myths from all cultures throughout the world.
Teth’s essence is feminine, representing the number 9 for the 9 months of pregnancy, and is shaped like a womb, a spiral, a container where things change and transform (3 + 3 + 3). It is the “open region”, the field of manifestation of natural things, and is the essence of the feminine that contains all in her i.e., Nature. The infinite is contained in Teth and it brings about the finite.
This shows its relation to Binah where the unlimited of Chakmah is given limits through Binah. Truth in Hebrew is אמת (emet), and is spelled alef—the first letter of the alef-beis; mem—the middle letter; and the tav—the last letter. It indicates that the end is in the beginning and the beginning is in the end. This suggests the “completion” implied in both the natural and human making of things. Teth is a bridge between the worlds of Asiyah and Yetzirah, the making that is from out of itself (Nature) and the making that is “in another and for another” that is human making.
The Teth is that knowledge of good and evil that is with human beings from the beginning and is part of their nature. The suffering that is part of our strife in Necessity teaches us to distinguish between the good and the bad, and by choosing the good to clean and purify and thereby to do that which is impossible: to erase the bad deed that was done which was the sin of being born! This is the first step in the process of decreation. (This sin is the choice we make to be born). This illustrates that Tet is on the left side of the Tree of Life and is part of the upward movement that is the spiritual cleansing of the soul through the fires of Shin. Tet contains the principle common in all mythologies of the world that nothing is lost, nothing is wasted, and all is eternal; Death is a part of Life. The Teth is the container that creates the ability of Tikkun – that all souls are born to life with one purpose – to restore themselves to the Good as at the beginning.
Teith, or Tet the 9th Hebrew letter has a literal meaning of basket or nest, and is the symbol of the good טוב in all creation. Strangely, it also has the literal meaning of ‘snake’, and this may represent a sense of the hidden danger that may be present at its core. Tet has to do with purity and impurity, the sacred and profane (the influence of The Sanctifying Intelligence). It crosses the paths of both Beth and Chet within the Tree of Life as it makes its way downwards from Binah to Chesed, and may or may not be influenced by Tiferet in this crossing. Does it suggest that within the ‘appearance’ of being nurturing and caring, there is a hidden evil as this nurturing and caring can be an ersatz or false form of the true care and concern of the Divine. Since it is a ‘container’ letter like the letter Chet, it is an ‘enclosure’ and ‘surrounding’ or ‘womb’. Teith also represents femininity, pregnancy, and it achieves this through impregnating influence of the masculine Alef Beth.
Through the influence of Binah, Tet is the field of manifestation, the essence of the feminine Chakmah that contains all in her. The infinite or the permanent (being) is contained in Teith and it brings about the finite through the manifestation of the particular thing. The human desire for procreation is the desire for the Incarnation. Both Tet and Chet are container letters and, in this case, the ‘container’ is the human body. The contraries to the forces of Tet and Chet are to be found in the letters Nun and Zayin.
The Teith contains the Chesed (kindness and mercy) of creation, but it does so at the third level, and this might suggest that the ‘kindness’ and ‘mercy’ shown may be for manipulative purposes. The distinguishing between the good and the bad that occurs here it at the ‘conventional’ level i.e., it is determined by the societies of which we are a part and is a product of that learning that is historical. The dominant ethical and moral beliefs will be determined by the ideology that has become dominant in the society of the time i.e., capitalist or communist, fascist or libertarian. It is the narrative or the form that the logos has taken that matters.
Case links the Nineteenth Path to the letter Tet, ט and says that it is a horizontal link between the pillars of Chesed (Mercy) and Gevurah (Severity). This cannot be the situation since the Sefir Yetzirah assigns these three horizontal paths to the three Mothers: Alef, Mem, Shin; air, water, and fire respectively. Both the three vertical pillars of the Tree of Life (Jakim, Boaz and Beauty) and the three horizontal braces for those pillars (Air, Water, Fire) within the Tree belong to the three Mother letters, what we would call the vowels in English. The influence of the 19th path could be carried by this Mem/Shin/Alef crossover but it would be heavily influenced by Mem. The illustrator of the Tarot used here assigns the letter Tet to Strength following Case’s suggestions. The historical meanings assigned to the letter Tet do not seem to match those features that are characteristic of the Tarot card understanding of Strength.
If the Eighteenth Path of Chet deals with “gravity” or “necessity” and the downward movement of the emanations from the spiritual, then the Nineteenth Path deals with “grace”, the grace that allows for the upward movement. Upward movement is associated with Shin, the element of fire. This is the reason why it might be associated with the Strength #11 of the Tarot, for it is through Grace that she is able to tame the chaos that is the hidden world of the subconscious and the passions that dwell there, the bestial qualities of human being represented by the lion. Modern commentators, influenced by Freud, attribute this control to the “rational” content of the superego, and this is but one ingredient of the cup of poison that Freud bestowed on love and eros. The awareness, intelligence or consciousness of the ‘secret’ of all spiritual activities is that they are illuminated by a Love which is not blind. For Freud, Love is blind since it is a matter of chance.
The ’highest blessing’ is the Love of God disseminated through the Beauty of the world and the awareness of this love is given to us by the grace of God. The Beauty of the world is the mediator that gives this grace. It assures us of God’s covenant with us. It is “love” that is the ‘secret’ of all ‘spiritual activities’. Because it is ‘secret’, it is ‘hidden’ and so must be brought to light.
God, in His withdrawal from His creation, renounces “all power”; He Himself has made Himself subject to the laws that He has created, and we experience His withdrawal as absence or silence. His withdrawal is a metaphor, or the example provided, for the embodied soul that is the human being; we, too, must renounce the temptation to use the power that is potentially available to us. Our most potent example is suicide, the third temptation of Christ, where we have it in our power to tempt God to defy His own Will and to save us as we exercise our will. The Grace of God must traverse the entire expanse of Space and Time in order to be present for us in its true, direct form. Netzach is the terminus of the pillar of Mercy; the renunciation of power is what Mercy is all about. This principle is at the root of all that we call the ‘ethical’.
Desire is the erotic urge to fulfill a need: the urge may lead downwards to Yesod (sexuality) or upwards to Tiferet. Downwards is the illusion and mania of the Moon, while upwards is towards the Sun and the “harmony and friendship”, the “reconciliation” through Love i.e., The Lovers card #6. As Simone Weil said: “If we forgive God for not existing, He will forgive us for existing”.
While The Magician #1 is associated with will and power and the intelligence that manipulates the things ready-to-hand, Strength #11 is associated with the heart and its emotions and passions which she easily controls. She is Prudence and sophrosyne, the balance between mercy and severity, and thus she represents true justice, not the justice of the conventional laws written by human beings. Case goes so far as to say that it is The Hierophant (the emphatic representative of the superego) who teaches Strength how to tame the lion, but this appears not to be the situation. The Hierophant is too involved in the concerns of the physical, material world to be able to teach Strength anything; the Force and Power of The Hierophant is contrary to the force and power that Strength demonstrates. This is why Justice is correctly placed as #8, for in this situation Case would be correct in saying that it is The Hierophant who teaches Justice since it is The Hierophant who writes the Laws. But these laws are not what underlies the power of Strength. (This corresponds to the historical situation of the Church and the Papacy around the time of the revival of the Tarot during the Renaissance. There were plenty of reasons for early Tarotists to see the Papacy as The Devil (the Great Beast) and its future being the revolution of The Tower card which is what, indeed, occurred.)
The language of the Nineteenth Path is that of rhetoric, the written speech of the many (politics) and not the conversational speech of two or three friends that is dialectic. This written speech is represented by the letter Peh. The speech of The Hierophant or Gevurah is rhetoric; the speech of The Lovers is Tiferet, the conversation between friends.
The Self or the Ego is the greatest obstacle to unification with the Divine and this obstacle is represented by both the letters Tet and Chet. The Divine provides the metaphor for the true path for a human being: it is in withdrawal that the Other is allowed to be, and human beings are to mirror this withdrawal in their own selves with the decreation of the Ego and allow the Other and others to be. Needless to say, such withdrawal is not easy nor without suffering. One of the purposes of affliction in human life is the destruction or decreation of the Ego and the purification of the Self. This mystery is beyond most human beings (and it is certainly beyond me!) It can be said to be captured in Shakespeare’s play King Lear.
The knowledge of The Hierophant and Gevurah is the knowledge of the collective memory of the community. We are all products of this collective memory, and what we call knowledge and understanding (Binah) is associated with this collective memory both in its contents and methodologies (the influence of Chakmah). Again, it should be stressed that this knowledge pertains to the Law of Necessity, and we are reminded that there is a great chasm separating the Necessary from the Good, in fact nothing less than limits of space and time or the created things themselves.
To experience the grace of God requires that God cross over His creation to grant us this gift. The discoveries of modern science show us just how great this distance is. This knowledge that is the collective memory is what we call “history”. It is this collective memory which drives the will to power of the communities where it is venerated. The relation of such knowledge to “justice” has been discussed previously in this writing.
Genesis 1.6 And Elohim said: ‘Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters.’
Genesis 1.21 And Elohim created the great sea-monsters, and every living creature that creepeth, wherewith the waters swarmed, after its kind, and every winged fowl after its kind; and Elohim saw that it was good.
The following chart shows the paths and their connections to the letters and symbols of the Tarot:
Card
Path
Letter
Meaning
Symbol
3: The Empress
Binah (Understanding) Path 3: The Sanctifying Intelligence: This is the foundation of the Original Wisdom and it is called “Faithful Faith”. Its roots are AMeN. It is the Father of Faith, and from its power faith emerges.
The imposition of limits upon the unlimited through the intervention of the Logos. This imposition is carried out through Shin whereas when the path emanates from Chokmah, the influence is from Mem.
Separate, enclose The thinking which provides limits to the unlimited and so makes particular things discernible. Distinction between the sacred and profane. The roots of faith are acceptance and submission to the will of God i.e., the Law of Necessity. Faith emerges through the power of the intelligence.
Path 14: Illuminating Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Meir): It is called this because it is the essence of the speaking silence (Chashmal). It gives instructions regarding the mystery of the holy secrets and their structure.
Shin/Alef/Memמש
“Speaking silence” is the beauty of the world which is the image of the absent God. Through the beauty of the world, the covenant of God is realized and from this realization the mystery of the hidden truth is revealed.
“Speaking” is the Word; its silence is that it is not uttered. This crossover path is what gives to Strength her quality of Grace, for it is the light passing through the Time and Space of Creation. It is through Strength (endurance, waiting) that we “hear” the Word of God.
Path 15. Stabilizing Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Ma’amid): It is called this because it stabilizes the essence of creation in the “Glooms of Purity”. The masters of the theory said this is ‘the Gloom at Sinai’. This is the meaning of “Gloom is its cocoon”. (Job 35.9)
Tetט
The Law of Necessity stabilizes the substance of Creation in the darkness of its purity. It is this darkness that cannot comprehend the Light.
Does the ‘dark night of the soul’ experienced by the saints and the mystics correspond to the ‘glooms of purity’ experienced prior to the revelation of the Word? Moses receives the Word of God at Sinai. The darkness of the world is the Cross of Christ, the Lamb slain from the foundation of the Earth. The gloom that is experienced as God’s absence, but it is a ‘cocoon’ meaning a period of metamorphosis, just prior to revelation.
16: The Devil:
Binah (Understanding)/ Tiferet (Beauty) Path 17. Intelligence of the Senses (Consciousness) (Sekhel HaHergesh): This is prepared for the Faithful saints so that they may be able to clothe themselves in the spirit of holiness. In the arrangement of the supernal entities, it is called the Foundation of Beauty (Yesod HaTiferet).
Vav The extension of the will to power beyond the individual yod to the collective. Link to Shin as ‘reflected fire’
Hook, Nail, Cane as an instrument of punishment, severity, fear? The wand of the Magician; the Devil’s torch in the card. The cubic shapes upon which The High Priestess, The Emperor, and The Devil sit or stand.
Connections, Secure, (the Social) Vav as that which makes connections without the mediation of Love. (Connection of the Beast as 666 since Vav is of the number 6 and is three levels removed from the Divine) The wand as a symbol of the will; the torch as a symbol of desire? Path is also called Intelligence of Dispositions, how the world will be viewed, the tonality of the viewing of the world (hearing of the Word). Relation to Eros as ‘two-faced’, fullness and need. The manacles binding the individuals are not tight.
5. The Hierophant
Binah (Understanding) Gevurah (Severity) Path 13. Unity Directing Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Manhig HaAchdut): It is called this because it is the essence of the Glory. It represents the completion of the true essence of the unified spiritual beings. substance from the Cause of Causes.
Pehפ
Mouth, speech. The need to consume. It is the language of rhetoric, the speech that appeals to the emotions, the appetites, the dispositions.
Historical knowledge, distinguished from the private knowledge gained by traversing the Nativot or private paths. The knowledge that comes to be “written in stone”. The knowledge associated with will and will to power as contrary to the knowledge that is gained by dialectic or conversation between friends. An ersatz form of friendship for there is no true mediation to make the two become one or the two or three hundred to become a One.
The four paths emanating from Keter are illustrated on the left:
#1: The Mystical Intelligence: Letter: אAlef (fire) Tarot: The Fool, The Magician
#2: The Radiant Intelligence: Letter: מ Mem (water): Tarot: The High Priestess (This will be discussed in Chapter Two: Paths Emanating From Chokmah)
#3: The Sanctified Intelligence: Letter ש Shin (tooth, fire): Tarot: The Empress (This will be discussed in Chapter Three: Paths Emanating from Binah)
#11: The Scintillating/ Glaring Intelligence: Letter Beth Tarot: Strength. The Path from Keter to Tiferet.
#14: The Illuminating Intelligence: Letters: ש Shin אAlefמ MemTarot: The High Priestess
The Eleventh Path: The Scintillating/ Glaring Intelligence
The Eleventh Path is the Scintillating Intelligence because it is the essence of that curtain which is placed close to the order of the disposition, and this is a special dignity given to it that it may be able to stand before the Face of the Cause of Causes.
Alt. Trans. ” The eleventh path is called the scintillating consciousness because it is the essence of the veil which is placed before the ordered arrangement of the powers. Who walks this way acquires a special dignity – he can stand face to face before the cause of causes.”
Wescott trans. The Eleventh Path is the Scintillating Intelligence, because it is the essence of that curtain which is placed close to the order of the disposition, and this is a special dignity given to it that it may be able to stand before the Face of the Cause of Causes.
Case trans. The eleventh path (Aleph. Joining Keter to Chokmah) is called the Scintillating or Fiery Intelligence. It is the essence of the veil placed before the dispositions and order of the superior and inferior causes. He who possesses this path is in the enjoyment of great dignity; for he stands face to face with the Cause of Causes.
If the ten Sephirot comprise the first ten paths of the Tree of Life, then the designation of the 11th path would be the 4 of the first four paths of the Sephirot and the 7 remaining Sephirot i.e., 4 + 7 = 11. The original light of Keter would have passed through the whole of Creation and knowledge of this light would be present for the individual who attained it i.e., the individual would be able to stand face to face before the Cause of Causes (the Good). Such is the case with the female figure of Strength shown in the Tarot card on the left. The Strength is the “opposite” or “deprivation” of that power which is shown in The Magician #1. In some modern Tarot decks, the cards of Justice #8 and Strength #11 are interchanged. I will attempt to give compelling reasons why this exchange is not valid nor necessary through the philosophy provided by the text of “The Thirty-two Paths of Wisdom”.
The Strength #11 card and The Magician #1 card represent two of the faces of Eros in human beings, the emotions and the will, the passions and human ‘spiritedness’, the intellect (logos) and the flesh. While the Strength figure has the light of the Sun both behind and within her, the male figure of The Magician draws his power from the bower of Nature above him and from the reflected light from the wall behind him (this is indicated by the bower’s shape as an inverted Bet). He uses his equipment/tools, the wand, to direct his energy and his will towards the cups, the pentacles, the swords and the table, the ready-to-hand upon which they rest, to make his images and to bring the things which are useful for him and to him into being. The Magician is the artisan or technician of the formative world of yetzirah.
Both figures are crowned by the ouroboros, The Magician’s representing the eternal recurrence of the Same and the Strength’s representing “time as the moving image of eternity”. Strength easily controls the lion of the passions that she has under her control, the lower nature of eros which affects the ‘spirited’ part of the soul. She is ‘grace under pressure’ because she is the recipient of Grace through the mediation of Tiferet. (The Da’at, the so-called 11th sephirot which is the Void or the Abyss, may be an indicator of what the saints refer to as the “dark night of the soul” which they report envelops them before they come face-to-face with Cause of causes. It is the ‘veil’ placed before the Cause of Causes. “But,” he said, “you cannot see my face, for no one may see me and live.” Exodus 33:20)
The Scintillating or Fiery Intelligence is similar to The Mystical Intelligence Path #1 but on the level of Beriyah. One is reminded of the words of St. Paul to the Corinthians: “For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.” (1 Corinthians 13:12) What Paul appears to be saying here is that our knowledge of the things that are is a mirrored knowledge (such as is seen in the figure of The Magician placed within an inverted Beth), a souvenir similar to a photograph; and like a photograph, it is merely an image of that which is loved, not the reality of that which is loved. This mirror, or curtain, or veil hides the truth that is concealed behind it.
In the illustration of the Tree of Life on the left, the Scintillating Consciousness is indicated by the blue line. The “veil before the dispositions” is the impact of Mem (water) emanating from Chakmah (Wisdom) upon the fire of Shin from Binah (Understanding) which brings about the creation of the physical universe. To see this truth ‘face to face’ would cause one to ‘die’ to oneself; the individual ego would be totally consumed in the fire of the Light of Keter. As it is said in Genesis: “But He said, “You cannot see My face; for no man shall see Me, and live.” In order to “live” (remain in being), the Face of God must be hidden behind a veil. To pierce through this veil, a ‘conversion’, followed by a ‘baptism’ or re-birth (‘born again of the water and of the spirit’ or Mem and Alef) must be attained. This is illustrated in the Strength card #11 of the Tarot. The will to power of The Magician #1 is contrasted with that knowledge that is possessed by the female figure of the Strength #11. The actions and the dispositions of the Strength and The Magician are contrasted.
The journey up the Tree of Life is a decreation and there are three re-births experienced, one at each of the crossroads. Each re-birth corresponds to that part of the soul to which it is directed. The first re-birth is at the crossroad of Mem, the appetites, which joins Netzach (Victory) to Hod (Empathy, Care and Concern). This re-birth is experienced in the path of The Intelligence of Trials (#25) and is represented by the letter Resh and the Tarot card Judgement #20.
The second re-birth occurs at Tiferet and involves the crossroad of Alef between Chesed and Gevurah. It is of the emotions, the heart, the ‘spirited’ part of the soul . The Lovers #6 indicates the choice that has to be made at this stage. The ‘spirited’ eros may assist or obstruct the soul in its journeys upwards on the Tree of Life. It may cause the soul to succumb to the desires for material possessions or it may urge the soul towards its greatest desire, which is re-unification with the Good. When the second conversion and re-birth fails, the soul falls into a love for those things which satisfy the appetites and it ceases its hard journey upwards.
The third re-birth occurs at the crossroad of Shin from Chokmah to Binah, and it regards the head i.e., wisdom and understanding, the logos. The unity of wisdom and understanding is shown in the Strength card #11, and this allows the individual to receive Grace and to stand with special dignity before the Cause of Causes as indicated by path #11. It indicates that the way of being of the philosopher and the saint are one and the same thing. If someone tells you that they are a saint (such as Donald Trump has said), you can be assured that they are not. If someone claims to be a philosopher, you can be sure that they, too, are not.
The ”order of the superior and inferior causes” and the veil placed before them is the Law of Necessity, the Divine Will. The dispositions towards this Law of Necessity or Divine Will are what is contrasted in the Strength and The Magician cards. The Divine Will itself is not scrutable; it is not knowable. Those who claim to know it commit a grave sin, a blasphemy. The Magician’s disposition towards the realm of Necessity is will to power: to constrain, commandeer and overcome Chance in order to enhance human freedom. His desire is to change the world. The freedom that arises from this constraint has made science ‘the highest speech’: its prophecies are what we bow down to and what we look up to. This will to power finds its roots in the individual ego, the subject, and in the principle of reason which becomes a principle of being for The Magician: “nothing is without (a) reason”. The Strength’s disposition toward this realm is one of humility, acceptance and compliance. which shows itself in contemplation and prayer with regard to the ‘buffets and rewards’ of Fortune or Chance.
The Ten Sephirot are the first 10 paths. The direction from Keter to Chalkmah is diagonal, and there is no suggestion that the mother letters provide diagonal channels but as connectors, they must. The 11th path is also called the “Fiery Intelligence”, the “Scintillating Intelligence”. This element of fire belongs to Shin, one of the three mothers, and in the first crossover path it is the element of Shin which predominates. “The mirror placed close to the order of the disposition” is the “reflected light” that is the essence of Malkhut which reflects the light that is present in the other Sephirot. The “mirror” is translated here as “curtain” which separates the true light from the reflected light. In the Tarot of The High Priestess #2, it is the curtain behind her which hangs from the pillars of Jakim and Boaz. The reflected light is that of the Moon. Alef is the letter of the Sun. Alef connects to Tiferet, which is associated with the Sun. The connection of Fire to Water is Air and the three produce Earth which would connect with Chesed #4.
In the Tarot of The High Priestess #2, it is clear that she is connected with the sea, with water, with the subconscious, with the Unlimited. She is depicted with having a veil or curtain behind her, and sitting upon a partially revealed cube. We are limited in that we can only see three sides of the six-sided cube. We also find cubes present in The Emperor #4, The Chariot #7, and The Devil #16 cards of the Tarot. All these cards appear to indicate that there is something that is ‘hidden’ in their foundations. Whether or not The Hierophant is seated upon a cube is not shown as his robe hides his seat in the Tarot deck used here, and whether he does so or not is a matter of speculation.
The letter Alef (ALP) is the reversal of the word PLA which means “wonder”. The journey or quest begins from “wonder”, and it is “wonder” that is the foundation of philosophy and the foundation of questioning and the quest. Does the wonder provoke a question “why” and the response of “because”? Since the direction of the influence of Alef is downward, the reversal of Alef would suggest a movement upwards so that The Fool #0 should be placed at the bottom of the Tree of Life and not at the top. But within the sphere that encompasses the cube of creation, what do “up” and “down” mean? I have tried to clarify this question with the concepts of creation and decreation. The upward movement is a gyre that narrows and focuses itself on the singular point of the Divinity. The downward movement is an ever-widening gyre created by the withdrawal of God which results in His hiddenness. When the soul mistakenly chooses to align itself with the materiality of the world, it is dragged down and overcome by the watery element.
A philosophical life, ruled by the logos’ desire for truth (‘revealing’) brings one to the attainment of self-knowledge and the Good (the Cause of Causes). The satisfaction of the other parts of the soul is also achieved i.e. arete or “human excellence”. The embodied soul is afflicted with the evils that partake of the bodily. The logos is the “pure” state of the soul and is capable of “seeing” the “pure” state of the soul. The Strength card indicates that while the soul remains embodied, there is a constant strife to restrain the jaws of the lion with which she is engaged. The lion represents the ‘spirited’ part of the soul.
The soul’s first love is the love of the “One”, the whole, wisdom. In Republic (611 e 1 -612 a6), the soul must rise up out of the sea “in which it now is”. To do this, the soul engages in dialectics i.e. the love that is “friendship”, the “friendly conversation” that is the essence of the logos, the knowledge of how things are “related” to each other. This knowledge is justice (dike).
Philosophy begins through wonder and so, appropriately, The Fool card is assigned to this path (although in the Hebrew Tree it is the Strength card #11 that is assigned to this path and I concur with the Hebrew Tree here). The path from wonder leads to wisdom, the knowledge of the whole, which is knowledge of “no-thing” since it is knowledge of the All before things emerge in their particularity. It is the knowledge which allows one “to stand before the Face of the Cause of Causes”. This dismissal of the particularity of things is falsely mirrored in the dismissal that occurs in physical sciences of the Renaissance, the sciences of Galileo and Newton.
In the dialogue Sophist, Plato relates the story of the philosopher Thales who fell down a well because his eyes were so fixed on the heavens that he was not paying attention to what was all about him. This caused a nearby housemaid, who was quite attractive, to laugh and say that because he was so fixed on the heavens, he could not see what was right in front of his nose. This story of Thales is an analogy to The Fool card and to the whole of the journey on the Tree of Life. What is right in front of one’s nose is what must be paid attention to.
The fire of Keter when combined with the water of Chalkmah produces Air, from which speech is derived. From these initial three primordial elements earth is produced; and earth, or physical, material things are represented by the Sephirot Chesed and Malkhut. The first is a descending order from Keter through Chalkmah to Chesed. The second is an ascending order from Keter to Malkhut and from Malkhut to Yesod.
The first is “inner” and focuses on the quality of things, the essence of things; the second is “outer” and focuses on the quantity of things, how the things may be measured or weighed. The first path relates to The Fool card in Tarot #0. The second relates The Magician card. The number of the Fool is #0, but this is a placement numeral only, not a zero as we understand the concept i.e., it is the concept of “no-thing”, not “nothing”. The ancient Hebrews and Greeks had no concept of what we today understand by zero. (The numerical value of Alef is 111, or perhaps 1+1+1, which equals 3 but also equals 1 if 1 x 1 x 1 = 1, the Holy Trinity. Our numbers begin at 4, since numbers , the logos, require time and space). The proper placement of The Fool and The Magician cards is at the bottom of the Tree of Life as it is given to us.
Ludwig Wittgenstein
What is sometimes called the “power of God” is represented through speech i.e., “And God said…” Through His speech, God creates the world. Notice that the verb “creates” is not in the past but in the present perfect tense i.e., this creation is still ongoing. What is and whatever will come to be are from the word of God, not through the “creation” of human beings. Human beings are ‘makers’, not ‘creators’. They are ‘procreators’. This word is what the modern philosopher Wittgenstein called “the miracle of language”. It should be noted that language and its use and misuse poses the gravest danger to the being of human beings in our present age.
As we have said previously, the essence of things is veiled in their outward appearance and that veil must be drawn aside, if this is possible. The Scintillating Intelligence or The Fiery Intelligence is the knowledge or awareness of things when they are seen as they are in their essence i.e., their truth. This appearance shows itself in a flash and can only be viewed at a glance. This “unconcealment” or aletheia in Greek, this drawing aside of the veil, is what we understand as truth or what we sometimes refer to as an epiphany or manifestation of the truth of a thing. On the eleventh path, it would be a manifestation of all the paths previous to it on the descent, or a manifestation of all the paths before one on the upward ascent i.e. the ten Sephirot. It reveals God as the Cause of Causes, the “uncaused cause” of the philosopher Aristotle. But, of course, God is much more than this for He is, ultimately, the Good.
The truth clothes itself in appearances in order to descend (the Beauty of the World) and unveils itself in order to allow an ascent (which is the covenant of the Good). No matter which view of the Tree of Life is taken, that from above or that from below, their central focus is in the Sephirot Tiferet. As Christ said: “I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life. No one comes to the Father except through Me.” (John 14: 6) Tiferet is presided over by the archangel Michael whose name means “Like unto God”, and this is shown in the Tarot card The Lovers #6. The friendship that is the Holy Trinity is mirrored in the friendship established between two human beings when it is blessed with the intervention and mediation of the Divine third, “What God has joined together, let no man put asunder.” Matthew 19:6 This is what is understood as dialectics. It is the knowledge of what the Greeks called metaxu or intermediaries, that which brings about relations or ‘friendships’.
The images of The Fool have him standing at the edge of a precipice looking skyward unaware of the depths below. Is the dog accompanying him/her issuing a warning? Or is its gestures those of “excitement” on being taken out for a journey/walk? The dog is The Fool’s companion. The “quest” has not yet begun because no “question” has been asked. The question is still before one. (This would coincide with Path 27 The Exciting or Palpable Intelligence.)
Alef is the path from Keter to Tiferet. It is Air, not Fire. Shin is the letter of the element of Fire and it is the Boaz column of the Tree of Life, the column of Severity, and it is in the lower domain horizontally. It relates to the will, the head, and to reason and more appropriately belongs to The Magician #1 card rather than The Fool #0.
The primary or “superior causes” of the Scintillating Intelligence or Consciousness are the Laws of Necessity. The secondary or “inferior causes” are seen in the conditions or effects which the superior causes bring about. The Laws of Necessity are the Divine Will i.e., space and time; and the agents or forces that bring about the effects and conditions are subject to this Divine Will. The Magician uses these forces to “create” or to “make” through human will power. The Magician’s ‘making’ is one aspect of eros’ “procreation”.
In the Tarot illustration here, The Fool has 10 wheels on his dress (7 trefoils, 7 modes of activity, 7 alchemical metals, 7 chakras in the human body, 7 planets, the 7 lower Sephirot). The letter Shin is on one of the wheels which seems to assure us that assigning Alef to The Fool is an error. Alef is breath, spirit, the Word (Aum/Om: “first the breath then the Word and all that is appeared”.) Alef is the logos or logistikon portion of the soul. Alef flows into Tiferet, not Chalkmah as some commentators have suggested. Beth flows into Tiferet once the Alef has crossed over the horizontal line of Mem/Shin. Alef is the Idea of the Good as well as the “Son”/”Sun” from which both the power and beauty is given to the rest of the Tree of Life. All of the sephirot except Malkhut pass through Tiferet; all emanations of the Divine must pass, or are contained in, Tiferet.
This path is sometimes called “the glaring intelligence”. Is this that which is obvious to the “eye”? On The Fool’s bag is an “eye” (Ayin) and an eagle (the symbol of the evangelist John).
I would associate different Hebrew letters with the Tarot cards than those given by the illustrator of the cards used here.
The Letter Beth
Beth “house”, “container”
Genesis 1.2 Now the earth was unformed and void, and darkness was upon the face of the deep; and the spirit of Elohim hovered over the face of the waters.
The Fourth Path of the “Measuring, Arresting, and Receptacular Intelligence”, which is the Sephirot Chesed, must cross the horizontal path of Mem and Shin before it can come into being. It is from the first three elements that the Otherness of Earth is created. Within the created universe, the physical universe, Space, the Sephirot Chokmah, is the “container” of the Whole, and the letter Beth signifies both the “house” of the Creator (the form) and the “home” that is His creation (substance). The “open region” or the “receptacular” must first be present in order for the thing that is to come to be can come to presence. There must be a site for it, a place. The letter Beth indicates this ‘site’.
It is the Logos which “measures”, and through this measuring “arrests” and brings to a stand the thing so that we may have “under-standing” (Binah), and places into the world that which comes into being and all that which will come into being. The first three paths deal with the primordial triangle of the world of Atzilut, that which is beyond being and becoming. With Alef’s meeting of Beth in the vertical movement from Keter to Tiferet, the fourth path is created, and thus the Creation itself. The creation itself becomes manifest in the Sephirot of Chesed, Loving Kindness. The Creation is a gift of Love.
If the first path of Alef instructs or brings awareness to the intelligence of that which cannot be known, of that which is “hidden” and beyond the intelligence itself, the second path is the beginning of the possibility of knowledge of that which can be known, what is “illuminated” and “radiant”, that which “shines”.
Alef illuminates the gloom of Mem: : “The earth was without form and void, and darkness was over the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters.”(Gen: 1:2) Both Mem and Shin meet Alef in the first horizontal movement, crossroad, or path on the Tree of Life so that they share in “The Sanctifying Intelligence or Consciousness” of the third path as well as “The Radiant Intelligence” of the second path. With this illuminated, radiant, sanctified intelligence we come to the fourth path, the ‘measuring’, ‘arresting’, and ‘receptive’ path. There is an indication here that the naming of things is a ‘holy act’ and that language itself is ‘holy’; but before things can be named, they must first be ‘measured’ and ‘arrested’ or brought to a stand. From this bringing to a stand comes our ‘under-standing’ or what is termed Binah on the Tree of Life.
Beth is the 2nd letter of the Hebrew alphabet, signifying the number two. If Keter is the Father, number one, then Beth is the Son, number two, and Mem and Shin are the Holy Spirit or water and fire, number three (and four?). The first letter of the story of creation is Beth, starting the entire Torah/Bible – ברא בראשית. Some commentators suggest that the first letter of the Bible is Alef so that the initial phrase is “Elohim in the beginning created…” rather than Beth which is “God in the beginning created…” This is significant as Elohim is plural and indicative of the Trinity while God is singular and indicative of the One. Vastly different interpretations arise when one chooses either to see the Creator as a One or as a Trinity (Elohim).
Beth represents the beginning of the appearance of duality, with the One Creator bringing forth a created world, so that there can be both a giver (the Creator) and a receiver (the created world) for the Creator to bestow His Love and Grace upon. This creates the illusion that the creation is an “expansion” of God rather than a “withdrawal” of God, and it has prompted the dual version of the whole, one such interpretation being that of Plato where the world is divided into the worlds of Being and Becoming. Since God is All from the beginning, He would not need nor would it be possible to “expand”. Instead, He would “withdraw” to allow something to be other than Himself; and yet at the same time, that which is created is not other than Himself since He is All. With the act of withdrawal, deprivations are created, not opposites. Creation is the deprival of the Divine, of the sense and experience of the One. Man and woman are not opposites: man is deprived of the ability to give birth to another human being and can only be a secondary agent in the process. When one speaks of “deprivals”, one is speaking of a hierarchy of things and a distinction between primary and secondary agencies.
Beth’s literal meaning and form denote a house, and it represents the universal concept of a container or vessel. Thus, the created world is meant to house within it the spiritual. It is the container of the world of Beriyah. It is the bringing together of the ‘Sterile Mother’, or The High Priestess #2 of the Tarot with the ‘Fruitful Mother’ or The Empress #3. On the Tree of Life, Keter (the Light) first goes through Tiferet (the Sun) before begetting its offspring (The Moon) which is the reflected light that is mirrored in the waters.
It is important to see the connections between those letters that are designated as “containers”. The physical world is meant to be a place or site for the Creator’s glory or beauty to manifest. The body is meant to contain the soul, allowing it to act in this world; the spiritual must act through the physical. What is perceived as the dual world contains within it the Ultimate Oneness, but concealed, and it is the ‘unconcealing’ of this Oneness that is what is referred to as the revealing of Truth, though Truth itself is the process of the revealing itself. In this process, the revealing itself is not activated by the will of human beings i.e., it is not a part of human judgement as to its Truth. The Beth is the tool, the source of all building, containing and then bringing forth all the other letters, but Alef is the source of all the letters in their particularities. Thus, where Alef crosses the horizontal path of Mem-Shin, The Logos comes into being that is the world of words and numbering and Beth ‘builds’ this world into a ‘house’ which the Logos then makes a ‘home’.
The text of “The 32 Paths of Wisdom” uses the words “consciousness” and “intelligence” when describing or discussing the paths of the Tree of Life, but I think a better word to use would be the Greek Logos which signifies letter, number and word or the three “texts” of the Sefer Yetzirah: text (Sefer), number (Sephar) and communication (Sippur). So, if we look at the first two paths, we have the “concealed logos” and its contrary the “illuminating logos”. Sephirot #2, Chokmah, the “unlimited”, which is associated with darkness and gloom, can only be “illuminated” through logos, through the presence of word, number. The Word unites the unlimited with the limited and can do so only with the Light that is Keter. This light illuminates all that is below it on the Tree of Life. The light is Keter and it “crowns” the world of Beriyah or the creation from “no-thing”. It is the Light that is the “splendour” or the “shining” of the unity of created things, the Beauty of the world. In Greek this was called nous, the Mind, Consciousness or the Intelligence which is illuminated by Love.
1 + 2 + 3 = 6 or the Sephirot Tiferet. In Hebrew, Tiferet is “son” as well as its designation as Beauty by the Kabbalists. I see in these the unity of Christ and Eros, whose wife is Psyche or the Soul, the “most beautiful of mortals”. (Christ calls Himself the “bridegroom” which signifies that our soul (Psyche) is the “bride”; but all that is Other, the creation itself, is also the Bride. Israel, as understood by the Kabbalists, is the whole of creation, not simply the ‘state of Israel’ as it is known today, and Israel is the Bride.) When the created world is “illuminated” through light, our proper response to it is Love. God is perpetually offering His friendship to us in the form of the beauty of the world and the proper response to this offer of friendship is Love. The Beauty of the world is the covenant of God. This is the covenant of the Voice Spiritual. From this covenant, Faith is born. The rainbow of the story of Noah is but a particular example of the covenant that is the Beauty of the World.
When we view the Tree of Life, the right-hand side is considered Masculine while the left-hand side is considered Feminine. This is puzzling as The High Priestess is most certainly associated with water and “the seas” and she is feminine, while The Magician appears to be primarily associated with fire and the “primal energy” (the will, the ‘spirited’ part of the soul) and is masculine. This is why I would place The Fool and The Magician together as 0-1 and 1-0 respectively. The “illuminating logos” is the air as the medium that brings together fire and water in order to bring about the “work” that is the physical creation itself. The air is the medium for the Light and is the Judgement.
It is through the placing of limits upon the unlimited that things can “appear” for us. These limits are in the form of boundaries and what we mean by the “de-finition” of things, what the things are in their “whatness”. What things are comes about through their “measuring”, their “change” in their form of movement in time and space, and their naming. Both space and time are prerequisites for created things and they make possible our knowledge of number and language. Number and language itself are prior to the world of material things, and they make possible that world. God creates the world through speaking, through the Word. It is the Word that makes possible the placement, arresting, and measuring in space of the created things.
The Greek word techne relates both to the skills of the craftsperson and to the arts of the mind. (The god Hephaestus in Greek myth is married to the goddess of Beauty, Aphrodite in one version.) These skills and knowledge are related to the universe of Yetzirah, the world of formation. This “making” has a poietic nature as it brings something forth; it is a ‘procreation’ i.e., it is a modality of aletheuein, (unveiling), the “revealing” of truth. This is the most relevant aspect of techne rather than the manufacturing or making of something. The revealing of truth is the revelation of the beautiful, and the proper human response to it is love. This knowing and making involves a most difficult conundrum.
A great danger presents itself in the perception of the world as ‘imperfect’. Technology arose from out of the spirit of charity and the perception of the injustice of Necessity. The created world was perceived as ‘imperfect’, requiring human action in order to bring it to completion. The world needed to be changed. This is the will to power of The Magician card. This interpretation prevails in both the Hebrew and “Christian” interpretations of the Sefer Yetzirah. The good of something is its ‘usefulness’, its ‘fittingness’, its ‘aptness’. This has led to our perception of the world as ‘resource’, where everything is on standby for our use for some end that we through our wills have devised, since the created world would have no end in and for itself. Is the place of human beings in the world that of a ‘perfector’ of Nature or that of a shepherd or gardener whose primary mode of being is care and concern for that which is Other than ourselves?
Perhaps a better word for “intelligence” in these paths is “knowledge of” or “awareness of”. The Sephirot Tiferet is the focal point or the “height” of the emanations from all the other Sephirot with the exception of Malkhut. The Sephirot Malkhut is in the “depths” or the furthest distance from the light. A “path” is a way to reach a destination. With a path, the way has already been cleared beforehand. Here, the knowledge of the “mediating influence” is the knowledge of that which “yokes” things together and brings them into a relation; and what yokes or joins things together in the created world is Love. The Mediating Intelligence is required for the bonding together of the Radical Intelligence of Gevurah and the Receptacle Intelligence of Chesed.
The 14th Path: The Illuminating Intelligence (Consciousness)
14. Illuminating Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Meir): It is called this because it is the essence of the speaking silence (Chashmal). It gives instructions regarding the mystery of the holy secrets and their structure.
The Fourteenth Path is the Illuminating Intelligence, and is so called because it is itself that CHASHMAL which is the founder of the concealed and fundamental ideas of holiness and of their stages of preparation.
Alt. Trans. “The fourteenth path is called the luminous consciousness because it is the essence of the Chashmal [“speaking silence”] which is the instructor in the secret foundations of holiness and their stages of preparation.”
Wescott trans. The Fourteenth Path is the Illuminating Intelligence and is so called because it is that Chashmal which is the founder of the concealed and fundamental ideas of holiness and of their stages of preparation.
Case trans. The fourteenth path (Dalet joining Chokmah to Binah) is called the Luminous Intelligence, because it is the essence of that Chashmal which is the instructor in the secret foundations of holiness and perfection.
Mem (Alef) Shin Path 14: The Illuminating Intellect: “Illuminating Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Meir): It is called this because it is the essence of the speaking silence (Chashmal). It gives instructions regarding the mystery of the holy secrets and their structure.”
Mem (Alef) Shin — “and Elohim hovered over the face of the waters.” 1:2
Mem (Alef) Shin and the 14th Path
Path 14, The Illuminating Intelligence, is related to the Radiant Intelligence Path #2 and the Sanctifying Intelligence Path #3 that is the crossover path of Chakmah to Binah. The “illumination” or “that which brings to presence” is either the light from Keter through Alef in its descent to Tiferet, or the light of the fire of Shin as it crosses over from Binah to Chokmah. Shin relates to reason and the head, while Alef relates to love and the heart. Both possibilities are present and both offer two faces of both Logos and Eros. These differing ways of viewing the world determine how the physical beings of Chesed will come to be determined for us. Both forms of light are present for us to illuminate the various worlds in which we live, and this illumination is our understanding of that world. One is the light of the Sun which is associated with Tiferet, and another is the reflected light of the Moon which is represented by Chakmah.
Elohim’s ‘hovering over the face of the waters’ is the beauty of the outward appearance of things (‘the face’) and is an indication of the parousia (the being-alongside) of the Divine in His creation, and it is an indication of how we should be in the world i.e., contemplating the things of the world as presence-at-hand, ‘hovering over’ and before them. ‘The waters’ are those of the heavens and of the earth before they are both brought together and separated by air Alef. It is at this point that Beth is established and the alphabet begins. With the alphabet, the Word and the world become manifest.
The “illuminating intelligence” gives to its receiver the ability to ‘unveil’ the hidden holy secrets of the Divine essence of things i.e., to reveal Truth. It is a method or methodology, and this method or methodology maybe Love or it may be reason. The covenant of God shown in the Beauty of the World gives the instructions that the revelation of Truth is to be done through Love, through the imitation of God Himself, by a withdrawal and contemplation of the things that are. It appears that we have made a great error in considering ourselves as human beings to be co-creators with God for, historically, this has led us to believe that we can dispense with God and can rely on our own will to power for our own empowerment or expansion. We have historically referred to this period in our history as The Age of Humanism which occurs roughly at the same time as the writing of the text of “The Thirty-Two Paths of Wisdom”, so we can say that the text is a post-medieval text.
The Fourteenth Path, the Illuminating Intelligence, can also be understood as the intelligence derived from the borrowed light of Malkhut. It is the intelligence present in the cave of Plato’s allegory. In the Cave, there are two sources of light present: the light of the Sun from outside of the Cave which is dimly present (which we are calling here the Light of Keter); and the light of the fire made by the technites (the Magi) to show the shadows of the things that are upon the walls of the Cave to the prisoners within the Cave. In The Magician card shown here, the light is a reflected light from off of the wall behind him. This is indicated by his being partially encircled by an inverted Beth.
The knowledge that human beings take pride in is of their own ability to understand and make things. It is a knowledge that “conceals” the true essence of the sacred or the truth of things, and deters one from understanding the sacred or even acknowledging the sacred. It is a “false light” because it is primarily a human-made light (like the fire inside of the Cave of Plato, like the light inside The Hermit’s #9 lamp in the Tarot card). Human beings, through the power of their “formative” thinking, can close themselves off from the true essence of things (the significance of the closed Mem). This kind of thinking is representative of those who have chosen to remain satisfied with the “shadows” of the things that are rather than seek for the “holiness” of their true essence. It is here that sin primarily occurs for we are tempted or tested to follow the false light believing that the outcomes of the journey by the light of it will result in the “goods” that become our ultimate goal. As has been mentioned previously, the root of all sin is the sin against the Light. We could also rephrase the cliche that “Power is the root of all evil.”
This sin against the Light is the mistaking of what is the Law of Necessity for the Good. The borrowed light of Malkhut illuminates the world of Necessity, the world of Time and Space, of seasons, years and days, and the ‘firmament’ that is the realm of space or the heavens. Necessity is mathematically structured and subject to an inevitable order i.e. it is ruled by the Logos. The revolutions of the heavenly bodies are “whorls” (gyres) which produce the “music” of the cosmos, what we call ‘the music of the spheres’. The spindle of Necessity (see The Chariot #7 of the Tarot) moves with the Three Fates to determine the astral movements and the destinies of individuals (The Star #17 card). There are two primary luminaries in the heavens and they are the Sun and Moon. It appears that one may follow the illumination provided by the Sun (found in Tiferet) or one may follow the illumination provided by the Moon (found in Chakmah), and these are represented by The Strength #11 and The High Priestess #2 respectively in the Tarot.
“Holy” means “perfect, pure”, “set apart from defilement.” The Hebrew word means “separate”, and this designates the chasm separating the Divine from creation, the chasm separating the Necessary from the Good. The “speaking silence” is much like the word Aum or Om: it begins in “openness”, goes into “hiddenness”, begins with an “in-spiring of breath” and ends in silence. Music is analogous to it, but all forms of hearing are related to it. The translation of Chashmal is “brilliant flame” (fire) which, combined with air and water, produces earth. From this, or prior to this, the Law of Necessity determines the form of everything, be it “potential” (dynamis) or “actual” (energeia). All of what we call knowledge is rooted in and descends from our understanding of the Law of Necessity. The Kabbalistic speech (logos) employs the Law of Necessity; all our actions reflect the laws of Necessity. Only the infinite iota or Yod of the soul is that which is not touched by the Law of Necessity.
If the ten Sephirot are assigned the first ten paths and the one letter of Alef, the 11th path or the Scintillating Intelligence must be assigned the letter Beth indicating the beginning of the alefbeth and the beginning of the manifestation of the Word. The letter Beth means ‘house’ or ‘container’. The human body and the physical universe are both seen as ‘containers’ of the Divine Soul. In the Beth shown here, the outer shape encloses the Yod in the centre. In the Tarot deck illustrated here, The Magician is assigned the letter Beth, but as is shown in the card, the letter is reversed; Nature or the physical universe is seen in a mirror, reversed. Strength #11 is the proper placement of the letter Beth.
Keter and Alef must cross the horizontal path of Mem and Shin before the ‘container’ of the visible and physical can come into being. It is from the first three elements that the Otherness of Earth is created. Within the created universe, the physical universe, Space, the Sephirot Chokmah, is the “container” of the Whole, and the letter Beth signifies both the “house” of the Creator (the form) and the “home” that is His creation (substance). The “open region” or the “receptacular” must first be present in order for the thing that is to come to be can come to presence. There must be a site for it, a place. The letter Beth indicates this ‘site’. The site is established by the downward movement of Keter to Tiferet. In this crossing over, the Word is made flesh or corporeal.
If the first path of Alef instructs or brings awareness to the intelligence of that which cannot be known, the Mystical Consciousness, of that which is “hidden” and beyond the intelligence itself, the second path is the beginning of the possibility of knowledge of that which can be known, what is “illuminated” and “radiant”, that which “shines”. Alef illuminates the gloom of Mem: : “The earth was without form and void, and darkness was over the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters.”(Gen: 1:2) Human thought mirrors this activity of God when in contemplation, reflection or prayer: it is a ‘hovering over the face’ or the ‘outward appearance’ of the being of Otherness.
Both Mem and Shin meet Alef in the first horizontal movement, crossroad, or path on the Tree of Life so that they share in The Sanctifying Intelligence of the third path as well as The Radiant Intelligence of the second path. With this illuminated, radiant, sanctified intelligence, we come to the manifestation of the logos in the alefbeth and through it, the possibility of “understanding” and discoursing about the world around us. There is an indication here that the naming of things is a ‘holy act’ and that language itself is ‘holy’; but before things can be named, they must first be ‘measured’ and ‘arrested’ or brought to a stand. From this bringing to a stand comes our ‘under-standing’ or what is termed Binah on the Tree of Life.
Beth is the 2nd letter of the Hebrew alphabet, signifying the number two, or 1+1. The letter itself has two components. If Keter is the Father, number one, then Beth is the Son, number two, and Mem and Shin are the Holy Spirit or water and fire, number three (and four?). The first letter of the story of creation is Beth, starting the entire Torah/Bible – ברא בראשית “in the beginning”. Some commentators suggest that the first letter of the Bible is Alef so that the initial phrase is “Elohim in the beginning created…” rather than Beth which is “God in the beginning created…” This is significant as Elohim is plural and indicative of the Trinity while God is singular and indicative of the One. Vastly different interpretations arise when one chooses either to see the Creator as a One or as a Trinity (Elohim).
Beth represents the beginning of the appearance of duality, with the One Creator bringing forth a created world, so that there can be both a giver (the Creator) and a receiver (the created world) for the Creator to bestow His Love and Grace upon. This creates the illusion that the creation is an “expansion” of God rather than a “withdrawal” of God, and it has prompted the dual version of the whole, one such interpretation being that of Plato where the world is divided into the worlds of Being and Becoming. Since God is All from the beginning, He would not need nor would it be possible to “expand”. Instead, He would “withdraw” to allow something to be other than Himself; and yet at the same time, that which is created is not other than Himself since He is All.
With the act of withdrawal, deprivations are created, not opposites. Creation is the deprival of the Divine, of the sense and experience of the One. Man and woman are not opposites: man is deprived of the ability to give birth to another human being and can only be a secondary agent in the process of ‘procreation’. When one speaks of “deprivals”, one is speaking of a hierarchy of things and a distinction between primary and secondary agencies.
Beth’s literal meaning and form denote a house, and it represents the universal concept of a container or vessel. Thus, the created world is meant to house within it the spiritual. It is the container of the world of Beriyah. It is the bringing together of the ‘Sterile Mother’, or The High Priestess #2 of the Tarot with the ‘Fruitful Mother’ or The Empress #3. It is important to see the connections between those letters that are designated as “containers”. The physical world is meant to be a place for the Creator’s glory or beauty to manifest. The body is meant to contain the soul, allowing it to act in this world; the spiritual must act through the physical.
What is perceived as the dual world contains within it the Ultimate Oneness, but concealed, and it is the ‘unconcealing’ of this Oneness that is what is referred to as the revealing of Truth, though Truth itself is the process of the revealing itself. In this process, the revealing itself is not activated by the will of human beings i.e., it is not a part of human judgement as to its Truth. The Beth is the tool, the source of all building, containing and then the bringing forth of all the other letters, but Alef is the source of all the letters in their particularities. Thus, where Alef crosses the horizontal path of Mem-Shin, The Logos comes into being that is the world of words and numbering and Beth ‘builds’ this world into a ‘house’ which the Logos then makes a ‘home’.
The table below summarizes the contents of this post:
Card
Path
Letter
Meaning
Symbol
0: The Fool
Keter (Crown) 1. Mystical Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Mufla): This is the Light that was originally conceived, and it is the First Glory (“Let there be light”). No creature can attain its excellence.
Alefא
Ox (the yoking together; the uniting; the bringing into a relationship of harmony). The friendship that is the Trinity of the Triune God. The Mystical Intelligence: that which the intellect knows it cannot know. It is the Good, the true Perfection.
Air is the Breath of Life and allows Fire to be. The Fool begins his journey at the bottom of the Tree of Life. If at the top, then his journey is a ‘fall’ and he is further removed from the Divine.
3: The Empress
Keter (Crown) / Binah (Understanding) 3.Sanctified Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel MeKudash): This is the foundation of the Original Wisdom and it is called “Faithful Faith”. Its roots are AMeN. It is the Father of Faith, and from its power faith emerges.
Alef/ Shinש א
Fire is related to the head (logistikon), air to the heart (‘spiritedness’), water to the appetites. Fire rises upward and is to be found on the left side of the Tree of Life. 3. The Sanctifying Intelligence: the foundation of wisdom; that which separates the sacred and profane. Diaretic thought. “Amen”: “So be it” indicates either an act of will or a submission to the Divine Will. From Binah comes the understanding of the Law of Necessity.
The Fire or Primal Energy or Dynamis (possibility/ potentiality). The possibility of “world”. The Limit placed on the Unlimited. This is possible because of the Logos, word and number. The naming of things. Time. The giving of shape to water. The bower surrounding the Magician illustrated is a mirrored or reversed Beth. Shin is the element necessary for the world of Yetzirah or Formation, “the making of some thing from some thing”.
2: The High Priestess
Keter/ Chokmah (Wisdom) 2. Radiant Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Maz’hir): This is the Crown of creation and the radiance of the homogeneous unity that “exalts itself above all as the Head”. The Masters of the Kabbalah call it the “Second Glory”. The Illuminating/ Radiant Intelligence: the epiphanic illumination of truth; the shining intellect. With The Fire or Primal Energy or Dynamis (possibility/ potentiality). The possibility of “world” and its ‘whorling’.
Alef/ Memמ א
Water Is the movement downwards and denotes the appetites and desires which are based on the physical manifestation of the creation. The lower eros attaches itself to the physical.
Lifting up, the Unlimited (education or the “leading out”; the goal of the 7 Pillars of Wisdom) The Incarnation as the destiny for human beings or of human beings The ironic association with water? Space.
11: Strength (I do not consider Strength to be #8 but rather Justice; the symbol of the snake is related to knowledge, the serpent)
Keter/Tiferet (Beauty) 11. The Scintillating Intelligence: the manifestation of the created worlds. Love/ Knowledge/ Understanding/ Wisdom. 10. Scintillating Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel MitNotzetz): It is called this because it elevates itself and sits on the throne of Understanding. It shines with the radiance of all the luminaries and it bestows an influx of increase to the Prince of Face(s).
Alef/ Bethב
House, Temple (Formation); the arrangement of things; the mathematical projection of things which makes the ready-to-hand possible. Camel The beast of burden that produces a work? The combination suggests the triad of Alef, Mem, Beth
Temple, Attention, Contemplation, Prayer The topos or place where world can occur for human beings. The place of grace. Whereas The Magician uses the power to produce a work, the Strength card is that power itself. Tiferet is prior to the Understanding of Binah and this is illustrated by the many connections between The Magician and the Strength card.
The High Priestess/The Empress
Alef/Mem/Shin The First Crossover Path 14. Illuminating Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Meir): It is called this because it is the essence of the speaking silence (Chashmal). It gives instructions regarding the mystery of the holy secrets and their structure.
א מ ש
The Cross of Creation. The handle of the mirror of Venus, the glass of which is the light of Keter. ♀ The ‘speaking silence’ of God is His covenant through the Beauty of the World whose instructions are to be compassionate, merciful, and kind. Through Love, the mysteries of the holy secrets and their structure is revealed.
The Logos of Being through which all things are made. The ‘gloom of Chokmah’ is made radiant by the light of Tiferet, the light of the Sun. The light of Chokmah itself is the ‘reflected light’ of the Moon. The crossover path determines the final re-birth through Grace.
“Faith is the experience that the intelligence is illuminated by Love.”- Simone Weil
This following commentary on “The 32 Paths of Wisdom” will attempt to show how the statement of Simone Weil is true in a manner understood by the Kabbalists. The text of “The Thirty-two Paths of Wisdom” provided here is a consolidation of translations from the Hebrew by a number of English and Hebrew scholars and mystics. The Sefir Yetzirah and “The 32 Paths of Wisdom” are philosophical texts; that is, they are written in the language of “poetic prophecy”: the philosophers speak as prophets through poetry. They are attempts to make manifest the paths available to one (netivot) when one sets off on the quest for the Good or knowledge of the Good. “Paths” (one might also refer to them as streams or channels) are paths of thought, meditation, and prayer but they are also paths of action. According to Plato, the human soul is composed of three parts: appetitive, spirited, and logos.
In the Tarot, The World #21 is “the good”, or the completion of the letters of the Hebrew alphabet, the whole, with the letter Tav. It is the achievement of wisdom. At the same time, it combines with the letters Alef and Shin to indicate The Fool #0, and thus a new beginning, a return from the world where knowledge of the whole has been illuminated for the individual.
The Text of “The 32 Paths of Wisdom”:
Below is one translation of the text of “The 32 Paths of Wisdom”. I have provided others for comparison and contrast throughout this commentary. The word “intelligence” is highly problematical in the translation for “intelligence” has been understood as that calculative rationality which gives knowledge of outcomes (prophecy) in the history of the West. It is the world of the I.Q. test and applied sciences and this is but one face of the logos or logistikon that is the “intelligence” in the text and in the works of Plato and Aristotle.
In the interpretation of the “The Thirty-two Paths of Wisdom” offered here, the “intelligence” or logistikon is to be understood as that infinitesimal point of reality in human beings that is beyond the realm of Necessity (Time and Space), that which is beyond the appetitive and “spirited” parts of what was once understood as the “soul” and what may be understood here as a combination of the Greek terms psyche, logos and eros. Plato divided the soul into three parts: the logistikon (intelligence, “reason”, “consciousness”), the thymoeides (spiritedness, which houses anger, as well as other spirited emotions), and the epithymetikon (appetite or desire, which houses the desire for physical pleasures). Each of the three parts of the soul were channeled by eros as desire expressed as “fullness” or “deprivation”. Eros is the child of Penia (need, deprivation) and Poros (skill or resourcefulness, fullness) and these qualities are manifest throughout the journey along the thirty-two paths of wisdom.
The Text
1. Mystical Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Mufla): This is the Light that was originally conceived, and it is the First Glory (“Let there be light”). No creature can attain its excellence.
2. Radiant Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Maz’hir): This is the Crown of creation and the radiance of the homogeneous unity that “exalts itself above all as the Head”. The Masters of the Kabbalah call it the “Second Glory”.
3. Sanctified Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel MeKudash): This is the foundation of the Original Wisdom and it is called “Faithful Faith”. Its roots are AMeN. It is the Father of Faith, and from its power faith emerges.
4. Settled Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Kavua): It is called this because all the spiritual powers emanate from it as the (most) ethereal of emanations. One emanates from the Other by the power of the Original Emanator, may He be Blessed.
5. Rooted Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Nishrash): It is called this because it is the essence of the homogeneous Unity. It is unified in the essence of Understanding, which emanates from the domain of the Original Wisdom.
6. Transcendental Influx Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Shifa Nivdal): It is called this because through it the influx of Emanation (Atziluth) increases itself. It bestows this influx on all blessings, which unify themselves in its essence.
7. Hidden Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Nistar): It is called this because it is the radiance that illuminates the transcendental powers that are seen with the mind’s eye and with the reverie of Faith.
8. Perfect Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Shalem): It is called this because it is the Original Arrangement. There is no root through which it can be pondered, except through the Chambers of Greatness, which emanate from the essence of its permanence.
9. Pure Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Tahor): It is called this because it purifies the Sephirot. It tests the degree of their structure and the inner essence of their unity, making it glow. They are then unified, without any cutoff or separation.
10. Scintillating Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel MitNotzetz): It is called this because it elevates itself and sits on the throne of Understanding. It shines with the radiance of all the luminaries and it bestows an influx of increase to the Prince of Face(s).
11. Glaring Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel MeTzuchtzach): It is called this because it is the essence of the veil which is ordered in the arrangement of the system. It indicates the arrangement of the paths (netivot) whereby one can stand before the Cause of causes.
12. Glowing Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Bahir): It is called this because it is the essence of the Ophan-wheel of Greatness. It is called the Visualizer (Chazchazit), the place that gives rise to the vision that the Seers perceive in an apparition.
13. Unity Directing Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Manhig HaAchdut): It is called this because it is the essence of the Glory. It represents the completion of the true essence of the unified spiritual beings.
14. Illuminating Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Meir): It is called this because it is the essence of the speaking silence (Chashmal). It gives instructions regarding the mystery of the holy secrets and their structure.
15. Stabilizing Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Ma’amid): It is called this because it stabilizes the essence of creation in the “Glooms of Purity”. The masters of the theory said this is ‘the Gloom at Sinai’. This is the meaning of “Gloom is its cocoon”. (Job 35.9)
16. Enduring Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Nitzchi): It is called this because it is the Delight of the Glory (Eden). As it is, there is no Glory lower than it. It is called the Garden of Eden, which is prepared for the (reward of) the saints.
17. Intelligence of the Senses (Consciousness) (Sekhel HaHergesh): This is prepared for the Faithful saints so that they may be able to clothe themselves in the spirit of holiness. In the arrangement of the supernal entities, it is called the Foundation of Beauty (Yesod HaTiferet).
18. Intelligence of the House of Influx (Consciousness) (Sekhel Bet HaShefa): By probing with it, a secret mystery (Raz) and an allusion are transmitted to those who ‘dwell in its shadow’ and bind themselves to probing its substance from the Cause of Causes.
19. Intelligence of the Mystery of all Spiritual Activities (Consciousness) (Sekhel Sod HaPaulot HaRushniot Kulam): It is called this because of the influx that permeates it from the Highest Blessing and the Supreme Glory.
20. Intelligence of Will (Consciousness) (Sekhel HaRatzon): It is called this because it is the structure of all that is formed. Through this state of intelligence (consciousness) one can know the essence of Original Wisdom.
21. Desired and Sought Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel HaChafutz VeHaMevukash): It is called this because it receives the divine Influx so as to bestow its blessing to all things that exist.
22. Faithful Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Ne’eman): It is called this because spiritual powers are increased through it, so that they can be close to all those ‘who dwell in their shadow’.
23. Sustaining Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Kayam): It is called this because it is the sustaining power for all the Sephirot.
24. Apparative (Tools) Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Dimyoni): It is called this because it provides an appearance for all created apparitions, in a form fitting their stature.
25. Testing Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Nisyoni): It is called this because it is the original temptation by which God tests all of His saints.
26. Renewing Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel MeChudash): It is called this because it is the means through which the Blessed Holy One brings about all new things which are brought into being in His Creation.
27. Palpable Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Murgash): It is called this because the intelligence of things created under the entire upper sphere, as well as their sensations, were created through it.
28. Natural Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Mutba): It is called this because the nature of all that exists under the sphere of the sun was completed through it.
29. Physical Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Mugsham): It is called this because it depicts the growth of all that becomes physical under the system of all the spheres.
30. General Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Kelali): It is called this because it is the means by which the astrologers collect their rules regarding the stars and the constellations, forming the theory that comprises their knowledge of the Ophan-wheels of the spheres.
31. Continuous Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Timidi): Why is it called this? Because it directs the path of the sun and moon according to their laws of nature, each one in its proper orbit.
32. Worshipped Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Ne’evad): It is called this because it is prepared so as to destroy all who engage in the worship of the seven planets.
Commentary
Human beings are the “needing” animals. We are “perfect” in our “imperfection”. What makes us human and distinguishes us from other animals is our recognition that we experience both the absence and presence of the Good in our lives simultaneously. This experienced absence, the need of eros, sends us on a quest for its fulfillment so that its presence within ourselves will bring about a completion, a perfection and, thus, happiness. This questing is, partly, a revealing of the truth of things, and this revealing is part of our nature as human beings. We are not fully human when we do not carry out this quest, when we do not reveal truth. This quest is not based on a “why” that is looking for an answer in a “because”, although this is the foundation for our quests in science and in other areas of our lives. Outward manifestations of this quest can come in all forms, from the asceticism of the yogi to the slum mother who cares for her child.
At the heart of our common understanding of the Tree of Life is the document entitled “The 32 Paths of Wisdom”. Usually, this document accompanies the English editions of the Sepher Yetzirah and is seen as an explanation or clarification of the Sefer Yetzirah. However, the concept of 32 Paths of Wisdom themselves stems not from the Sefer Yetzirah, but from the Torah, the Book of Genesis, Chapter One, according to one Hebrew scholar. Furthermore, the document “The 32 Paths of Wisdom” comes to us from the late 13th Century, C.E. — centuries before the visual image of the Tree of Life was introduced and given as a representation of the Tree of Life. The Tree of Life itself is a visual representation of the ideas written about in the text of the Sefer Yetzirah itself, a text written in the year 1 or 2 BCE. Interpretations of the Sefer Yetzirah through the Tree of Life (what we understand as Kabballah) are predominantly medieval Hebrew and Christian understandings of that text.
Below, the text is in bold and the commentary is written in regular text. I have tried to make comparisons and contrasts between what is called “The Hebrew Tree of Life” which is based more closely on the paths outlined in the S.Y. (which will be used to refer to the Sefer Yetzirah itself hereafter) and in the text of “The 32 Paths of Wisdom”, and the modern interpretations of those paths which is sometimes referred to as the “Western interpretation” of those paths. Since a proper hermeneutical examination requires one to get closer to the “original sources”, many of the points which I make will be based on an understanding of Nature prior to that which occurs in the discoveries of modern science i.e., Newtonian physics.
The illustration of the Tree of Life from Aleister Crowley attempts to understand the Tree of Life and the 32 paths of Wisdom from a “modern” point of view. It attempts to consider the modern discoveries of the solar system and place them onto the Tree of Life which itself is founded upon only those heavenly bodies which are visible to the human eye. The arbitrariness of such inclusions into the concept of the Tree of Life and the 32 paths is shown by the fact that Pluto, for example, is no longer considered a planet by the Astro-physicists.
In interpreting the Tree of Life, it should be remembered that the Sefer Yetzirah was written before the discoveries of modern science and that its view of Nature is different from that which is held in the modern sciences and so it holds different “truths” or revelations than those of modern science. These differences should be obvious to any careful reader. Commentaries that attempt to take into account the discoveries of modern science fail to see the difference between the principle of reason which rules the theory and method of modern science and how modern science approaches the world and the things in it. The meditation and prayer suggested by the texts of the Sefer Yetzirah and “The 32 Paths of Wisdom” as ways of “intelligence” and “consciousness” and as a way of unveiling the truth of being and of the Divine show a different type of logos than that which is present in modern science
According to the Jewish tradition, the concept of the 32 Paths of Wisdom is derived from the 32 times that the name “Elohim” is mentioned in Genesis, Chapter One and it corresponds to the 10 Sephirot and the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet:
11 And Elohim said: ‘Let the earth put forth grass, herb yielding seed, and fruit-tree bearing fruit after its kind, wherein is the seed thereof, upon the earth.’ And it was so.
12 And the earth brought forth grass, herb yielding seed after its kind, and tree bearing fruit, wherein is the seed thereof, after its kind; and Elohim saw that it was good.
מ Mem יג
וַיְהִי-עֶרֶב וַיְהִי-בֹקֶר, יוֹם שְׁלִישִׁי.
13 And there was evening and there was morning, a third day. {P}
14 And Elohim said: ‘Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and for days and years;
21 And Elohim created the great sea-monsters, and every living creature that creepeth, wherewith the waters swarmed, after its kind, and every winged fowl after its kind; and Elohim saw that it was good.
24 And Elohim said: ‘Let the earth bring forth the living creature after its kind, cattle, and creeping thing, and beast of the earth after its kind.’ And it was so.
25 And Elohim made the beast of the earth after its kind, and the cattle after their kind, and every thing that creepeth upon the ground after its kind; and God saw that it was good.
26 And Elohim said: ‘Let us make man in our image, after our likeness; and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over everycreeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.’
28 And Elohim blessed them; and Elohim said unto them: ‘Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it; and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that creepeth upon the earth.’
29 And Elohim said: ‘Behold, I have given you every herb yielding seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed–to you it shall be for food;
30 and to every beast of the earth, and to every fowl of the air, and to every thing that creepeth upon the earth, wherein there is a living soul, [I have given] every green herb for food.’ And it was so.
31 And Elohim saw every thing that He had made, and, behold, it was very good. And there was evening and there was morning, the sixth day. {P}
Sephiroth: “Elohim said”: The connection of the Sephirot to the Logos
Keter: “In the beginning Elohim created the heavens and the earth.” 1:1 (“said” is implied here)
This implies that the creation is an “expansion of God” rather than a “withdrawal” of God. The editorial note “To say” implies an empowering of the Self, a going beyond the Self. Perhaps a better understanding might come from the idea that “God thought” and from this “thought”, understood as Love, creation came to be. Alef is the letter that contains all the other letters. Language and number as the Logos always were.
Chokmah: Elohim said “Let there be light” 1:3
“Waters” are associated with darkness and with “the depths”. They are also associated with the Mother letter Mem. The darkness of the waters of Mem requires the light from the fire of Keter.
Binah: Elohim said “Let there be a firmament . . . let it divide . . .” 1:6
The “firmament” divides the limited (that which is “measured”, the content of “rationality”) from the unlimited (water). It establishes the limits and boundaries to things. It is the law of Necessity. It gives shapes to water. It is the establishment of space and time. Is it here that the Sephirot are created? Or were the Sephirot always there? I ascribe the letter Vav to the idea of ‘firmament’. In the letter Alef א, two Yods are separated by a Vav. The Yod above the Vav is the Divine Self, while the Yod below the Vav is the Divine Self as it is manifested in the created world. The Yod that is the individual Self or ego of human beings is contained within the Divine Self or soul of the created world. As the Yod that is the Divine Self is composed of three parts so, too, is the yod of the individual being or soul composed of three parts.
Gedulah/Chesed: Elohim said “Let the waters be gathered . . . let dry land appear . . .” 1:9
With the establishment of space and time, material things can appear (dry land). With material things comes number. Water and fire combine with air to produce earth. Material things can be measured by their “weight” or “intensity”.
Gevurah: Elohim said “Let the earth put forth grass . . . etc.” 1:11
The establishment of the dynamis of Nature, the potentiality or possibility, the Life-Force. The law of Necessity is determined or, rather, comes to manifestation to limit what is potential or possible.
Tiferet: Elohim said “Let there be lights in the firmament . . .” 1:14
The “lights in the firmament” is the establishment of time. There is an association with fire here, but all four elements are involved. With the two lights, the Sun and the Moon, come the two faces of Logos and Eros which manifest themselves in the sephirot Tiferet.
Netzach: Elohim said “Let the waters swarm . . . let fowl fly . . .” 1:20
The “animation” of life is present through all the elements, the worlds of the World. Life is associated with “spirit” and “soul”. This animation is one face of the two-faced Eros.
Hod: Elohim said “Let the earth bring forth living creatures . . .” 1:24
The distinction between “bringing forth” out of itself and the bringing forth in another, from another, and for another. This “procreation” was what the Greeks called poiesis and what we understand as “poetry”. Here in the Sefer Yetzirah, this is the distinction between the worlds of Beriyah and that of Yetzirah. This “bringing forth” can be either the procreation of beings by Nature or what we understand as creativity and imagination, the “bringing forth” by convention, what we call “the production of knowledge”. Both are possibilities of eros.
Yesod: Elohim said “Let us make man . . .” 1:26
It is interesting that the plural is used here in the making of man. Elohim is seen as a plural throughout, but this must be seen as the Trinity, just as we must view Eros as a trinity of forces involving the physical, “spirited” and logos.
Malkhut: Elohim said “Be fruitful and multiply . . .” 1:28
Malkhut is the physical universe. It is the only sephirot not connected to Tiferet.
Three Mothers: “Elohim made:”
Aleph — Elohim made “the Firmament and divided the waters . . .” 1:7 The “Firmament” is the letter Vav, the boundary that separates the waters of the heavens from those of the earth. Again the process here is one of withdrawal, not expansion. The heavens and the earth are Space which is prior to Time.
Mem — Elohim made “the two great lights . . . and the stars.” 1:16 The two great lights are the Sun and Moon from which Time is able to be seen.
Shin — “the beasts of the earth after its kind . . .” 1:25 The created beings are brought forth through Time.
Seven Doubles: “Elohim saw:
Beth — Elohim saw “the light, that it was good.” 1:4
Gimel — Elohim saw “that it was good.” (the separation of dry land and waters) 1:10
Daleth — Elohim saw” that it was good” (the earth bringing forth grass, etc.) 1:12
Kaph — Elohim saw that it was good” (the two lights in the firmament) 1:18
Peh — Elohim saw “that it was good” (swarming of waters with creatures; of air with fowl) 1:21
Resh — Elohim saw “that it was good” (the beasts of the earth) 1:25
Tav — Elohim saw “every thing that He had made, and, behold, it was very good.” 1:31
The seven double letters emphasize “seeing” and that through sight we experience that which we believe to be good. This seeing is of a “double” nature i.e. there is more than one possible way. The seven double letters comprise the three pillars of the Tree of Life, the foundations for the Tree of Life: the pillar of Jakim, the Pillar of Mercy, to the right when viewing the Tree of Life; the pillar of Keter in the centre running through Tiferet to Yesod to Malkhut, the Pillar of Balance and Judgement; and the pillar of Boaz to the left, the Pillar of Severity. These three pillars signify how the Logos and Eros will manifest themselves in the worlds in which they are experienced.
Elementals: “Elohim…–“
Heh –Elohim “hovered over the face of the waters.” 1:2
Vav — Elohim “divided the light from the darkness.” 1:4
Zayin –Elohim “called the light Day, and darkness Night.” 1:5
Cheth –Elohim “called the firmament Heaven.” 1:8
Teth –Elohim “called the dry land, Earth . . . and the waters, Seas.” 1:10
Yod –Elohim “set them [the two lights] in the firmament of the heaven” 1:17
Lamed –Elohim “created the sea-monsters, creatures that creep, and fowl.” 1:21
Nun –Elohim “blessed them [sea-monsters, creepers, and fowl] . . .” 1:22
Samekh –Elohim “created man in His own image.” 1:27
Ayin –Elohim “created He him; male and female created He them.” 1:27
Tzaddi –Elohim “blessed them [male and female].” 1:28
Qof — Elohim “said: I have given you all . . .” 1:29*
* There are two exceptions to this: The first is Gen. 1:1, and Sephirot 1/Keter, wherein “Elohim said” is assumed. The second is Gen. 1:29, and Elemental 12/Qoph, wherein the focus is shifted from the “Elohim said”, to the “I have given you all . . .” The Qof is the manifestation of the physical world.
The actions of the Elohim are in 4 groups of three: 1. hovering, dividing and setting; 2. creating; 3. blessing; 4. calling and saying. These actions parallel our own thinking and making process. We human beings in our making mirror the creating of the Elohim. Human beings do not create; we make or “procreate”. The Elohim creates.
The Paths emanating from Keter:A Discussion of the letters alef and Beth
1. Mystical Intelligence (Consciousness) (Sekhel Mufla): This is the Light that was originally conceived, and it is the First Glory (“Let there be light”). No creature can attain its excellence.
The First Path is called the Admirable or the Concealed Intelligence (The Highest Crown) – for it is the Light giving the power of comprehension of that First Principle which has no beginning, and it is the Primal Glory, for no created being can attain to its essence.
Alt. Trans. -“The first path is called the mystical consciousness, the highest crown (Keter). It is the light of the primordial principle which has no beginning; and it is the primal glory. No created being can attain to its essence.”
Wescott Trans. (These paragraphs are very obscure in meaning, and the Hebrew text is probably very corrupt.) This is Wescott’s comment.
The First Path is called the Admirable or the Hidden Intelligence (the Highest Crown): for it is the Light giving the power of comprehension of that First Principle which has no beginning; and it is the Primal Glory, for no created being can attain to its essence.
Keter: Sephirah #1 Alef “ox”
Genesis 1.1 In the beginning Elohim created the heaven and the earth.
The first path is Keter, called here “the Highest Crown”. Light originates from fire and fire requires air. Commentators speak of the “comprehension of that First Principle which has no beginning”; this is the Uncaused Cause of the philosopher Aristotle, the sempiternal nature of Time as “the moving image of eternity” of Plato. I would suggest that the first principle is the Good, following Plato. This sempiternal nature of creation suggests that the creation itself is a withdrawal not an expansion as is commonly understood. What is and what will be always was. It is the Good which gives the Light to all things. It is the principle Emanator among the Sephirot and is associated with Eros and with Truth.
The Bible and Genesis do not begin with an Alef, but with a Bet: “In the beginning…” The path that creation takes is first through Tiferet, the Beauty of the World (Eros and the Logos), then to Yesod, the Foundation of the Earth, and then to Malkhut, the Kingdom of Nature or the physical world before us. In taking this path, it must first cross the line of Mem and Shin from Chakmah to Binah, through Space and Time respectively.
Aleph or (Alef) is the first letter of the Hebrew alphabet and signifies either the number one or the concept of zero or “no-thing” and would correspond to either The Fool #0 of the Tarot in the world of Beriyah, or the Magician #1 in the worlds of Yetzirah and Asiyah in the Tarot and the Sefer Yetzirah. The first path is a knowledge of, or awareness of, or an acquaintance with, the existence of the One and a comprehension both of the Law of Necessity (the “system” identified in the paths) and an awareness of that which is the First Principle of the One and which separates the creation from the One. Awareness of the One is consciousness of the Good. The Good, being beyond Being, is not knowable in itself as the “Admirable Intelligence” indicates but one may, nevertheless, be “conscious” of it. The Good gives that light that is Truth which illuminates all the things that are. Without such light, human beings would not be able to reveal the things that are in their truth and would be mere beasts.
Aleph represents the creation of something from nothing. In the Sefer Yetzirah, this indicates that it is of the world of Beriyah. It is the essential symbol of beginnings (suggesting The Fool #0) and the ultimate reality that cannot be talked about because it is timeless, spaceless, and yet present everywhere; it is represented by the element of air and as that ‘firmament’ that separates the waters of the heavens from those of the earth. It is the One that cannot be divided, representing a perfection or completion beyond human comprehension. This is the world of Atzilut, the world of the Ain (no-thing), Ain Soph (infinite), and the Ain Soph Aur (the manifested Whole). I have been referring to this world as the Good in this writing. This sempiternal nature of creation suggests that the creation itself is a withdrawal not an expansion as it is commonly understood. The more God withdraws, the wider the gyre. (One may see an analogy to this in the recent discoveries of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). The further we probe into the origins of the universe, the further the universe withdraws from us.)
Aleph suggests the wonder that arises from beginnings, the sense of the quest-ion that begins the “quest” or the journey. On this journey, there is a “Master” or ruler and “teacher”: this Master/Teacher is the Law of Necessity (the Divine Will or Torah). Necessity brings suffering; the purpose of suffering is to teach, to decreate the ego and to destroy the illusion and importance of the individual self. As the Greeks understood, the “mathematical” is that which can be learned and that which can be taught, and the mathematical is what is used to comprehend the Laws of Necessity. This is why we associate the ‘mathematical’ with numbers, but it is a greater concept than that and numbers are only one example of the mathematical. This may be one of the reasons why the ideas and the Sephirot are comprehended as numbers.
What is and what will be always was. It is the Good which gives the Light to all things, and this is why it is analogous to and symbolized by the Sun. One cannot attain to the Good itself for it is beyond Being, but one can attain to the Light which finds its source in the Good and it is available to everyone. That which is most important and most needed is available to everyone.
One must know the limits before one can know of or can be aware of that which is beyond the limits. This “awareness” or “intelligence” is what is known as the principle of reason (nihil est sine ratione) “nothing is without (a) reason”. The principle of reason includes within itself the principle of contradiction and the principle of causation. These principles are the Sefer Yetzirah’s roots in the philosophy of Aristotle. They are but one side of the face of the two-faced Logos.
Using the concept of zero suggests that Alef signifies no-thing, the Ain, and is not to be comprehended by either numbers or words since numbers and words come into being with the creation of “things” and of Time and Space; but both Time and Space, numbers and words, are with the One from the beginning, and this is a very important point to keep in mind. The Logos is part of the One that is a Three.
The path from Keter leads to the sephirot Tiferet #6. A number of commentaries place Da’at or the Void as the missing 11th Sephirot between Keter and Tiferet. I would suggest that the concept of Da’at is one aspect of the “two faces” or “countenances” in which Tiferet shows itself; and in this particular instance, it is as a contrary to the Sun. In the interpretation offered here, Da’at is actually the Logos or the Word from which Creation or the physical world is initiated. The Sefer Yetzirah is quite emphatic that the sephirot are 10 and not 11. The Da’at or Void is the Cross of the “Lamb slain from the foundation of the earth”, the Cross of Christ, the cross created when the paths of Alef, Mem and Shin meet with the downward movement of the path from Keter. The Cross is the whole of material Creation (the Divine Soul), and at the same time the body that encompasses our “embodied souls”. It is the macrocosm and the microcosm. Our bodies are our “crosses”, and this is what Christ meant when He said: “Take up your cross and follow me”. We experience the creation through our bodies.
Alef is the source of all the letters and, therefore, is the source of all created beings. The symbol of Alef is the “ox”, the beast of burden, indicating that the creation of the world is “work” and “a work”. This connects Keter to Malkhut, the physical universe, which is the world of action and doing, the world of work. The “ox” is also the most prized animal and therefore the most prized sacrificial animal: “the Lamb slain from the foundation of the earth” is analogous to this. The creation itself is a “sacrifice” on God’s part. The denial or decreation of ourselves is the sacrifice required on our part. The ego is our most prized possession. The giving up or giving over of this ego is our greatest sacrifice. This decreation is much more easily said than done.
When Keter meets with Tiferet through the path of Alef at the centre of the Tree of Life, the Tree of Life may be said to branch off into two directions. The crossover of the Mother letter Alef from Chesed (Loving Kindness) to Gevurah (Force, Strength, Power) through Tiferet, gives us the two faces of both the Logos and of Eros.Chesed may be said to represent Nature or Creation in one of its faces (water), while Gevurah may be said to represent Convention or that which is made by humans (fire). The Greeks distinguished this as Nomos (Convention) and Ananke or the primordial understanding of Necessity. The letter Alef is the very centre of Tiferet and it joins the Tavs (the last letter of the alphabet) that begin and end the word itself. While the illustration places Tiferet below the crossover point, it is in fact at the centre of that crossover joining together the waters of the necessary and the fires of the conventional. Tiferet was prior to the being of both Chesed and Gevurah. This crossover point is that site where the worlds of Beriyah and Yetzirah are connected (the mind and the will, the emotions and the heart). Tiferet is also related to the Sun, as well as the covenant of the spiritual or voice. When Alef meets Yesod, we have the second covenant of the flesh or circumcision.
Keter is the first Sephirot. It is that Light which is at the centre, the still point, of that motion of the spheres that compose the created worlds (World). In the Sefir Yetzirah, there are four universes or worlds, so also there are four possible manners in which the paths work since they occur simultaneously and concurrently. The four universes or worlds of the Sefir Yetzirah are: Atzilut (the Archetypal/Spiritual world, the world of the Ideas of Plato, the world of Being, the world of the Sephirot themselves), Beriyah (the Creative world, the world of the apprehension of the web of Necessity, the theoretical world), Yetzirah (the Formative world, the human application of the theoretical world of knowing and making based on reason), and Asiyah (the world of action and manifestation, what we would call the material or physical world, the world of work, and also the ethical/moral world). Every one of the 32 paths acts in four ways within each of these worlds and manifests the qualities of these worlds. The challenge is to understand how each of the paths acts within the four different worlds and how their actions are to be differentiated. These interactions are not discussed in this text, but I will attempt to illustrate them in a further writing on the relation of the Logos to Eros.
The Keter point of light is also the Soul of the world and of every human being (see the works of Carl Jung and the archetypes of the Anima Mundi or World Soul). This combination of fire and air in human beings is what makes possible our unity with the One Soul through various possible mediations in our everyday experiences of the things of the world. As we will see later, it is through the Beauty of the world that this mediation function occurs.
The human relationship to the Divine is experienced as “absence”. It is analogous to living in a foreign country and experiencing “culture shock” or “homesickness”. Humans live within the ground of the logos as representational ratio; this is their ground or foundation (Yesod). It is but one side of the face of the Logos and of Eros. The principle of reason, for example, is a statement about beings, insofar as there are beings. It speaks about beings and not about reason. How does the principle of reason become the foundation as the guiding principle for making statements about things? Thinking is both a “hearing” and a “seeing”. What we “hear” and “see” are already attuned to what the ear and the eye will be “allowed” to hear and see.
The ”Admirable” adjective used in the original Hebrew of the first Path refers to the “Prince of Peace”, the “Prince of the Face”; however, this Prince is “concealed” to us and from us. He is “hidden”. The word “admirable” suggests what we understand by “nobility”, the outward splendour of something or someone, what is understood as “glory” in the Sefer Yetzirah. The Light of Keter itself, though, is “living conscious light”. There is a paradox here, and this paradox presents to us the mystery of life.
The word “Glory” refers to “weight” in the original Hebrew and this would suggest an association with number but also an association with “value” and of a hierarchy, i.e., “weighty things”. Number is not possible without created things. This suggests that number, like language itself, was always already there. The understanding of the essence of number and language is something beyond human beings. Our modern belief that we understand the essence of language and number as shown in our algorithms and ‘artificial intelligence’ shows that we are in a very great danger with regard to our humanity and our human being in the world. Nevertheless, just as our belief in numbers and language permeates our lives so, too, does the presence of that Light which has given these gifts to us. Number and language are what the Greeks referred to as the Logos, and the Logos is here referred to as the Christ. In the commentary here, I have referred to our current understanding of language and number as the anti-Logos or the anti-Christ and I will try to show how I understand this.
Aleph indicates the Oneness and Unity of the Creator; but as the shape of the letter suggests, this Oneness is a 1 + 1 +1, a One composed of Three. The three parts of the letter are two Yods and one Vav. One must see the three parts of the Alef as enclosed within a sphere, and as the illustration here suggests they reach out to the circumference of the sphere. The diagonal Vav separates the two Yods which are two points, the Divine Soul and the Soul of Creation as well as the soul of the created human being, for it is only human beings who are capable of the language as it is understood as both word and number in the Sefer Yetzirah. This diagonal of the Vav suggests that the creation is a barrier but also a way through, a door or gateway perhaps (the letter Dalet meaning “door” emanating from Chesed). It hints that beyond the illusion of separation and duality is underlying Oneness – that nothing is separate and the Creator is the source of everything. The letters that are associated with the diagonal paths on the Tree of Life (the twelve elemental letters) act in much the same manner, serving as either barriers or ways, channels or streams through to the next level on the way up or down on the Tree of Life. It is the eros which determines the direction.
As mentioned, the shape of the Aleph is two Yods י, one above and one below, with a diagonal line, the Vav ו, between them, representing the higher world and the lower world, with the Vav separating and connecting the two.
From the Sephirot Keter, four letters and four paths emanate: Alef, Mem, Shin and Beth. Alef corresponds to path #1, the “Mystical or Wondrous Intelligence”. Mem is the “Radiant Intelligence” or path #2 of Chokmah. Shin is the “Sanctified Intelligence” of Binah, Path #3; and when Alef connects to Beth, we have path #11 or the “Scintillating Intelligence” (3 + 8). These four paths illustrate the downward movement of the Creation from the Divine as the Divine withdraws in order to allow Creation to be.
The Divine One is illustrated by the mother letters of Alef,Mem, and Shin, while the 11th path is a combined potentiality for upward and downward movement, these motions being reconciled by Alef. Mem as water is responsible for the downward motion; Shin as fire is responsible for upward movement. The downward movement is a widening gyre from the #1 of Keter to the #10 of Malkhut indicated by the blue gyre. The upward movement is a narrowing gyre from #10 Malkhut to #1 Keter indicated by the red gyre.
The path of Mem, the realm of Space, is the crossover from Chokmah (Wisdom) to Binah (Understanding) and this path ceases at the point where it meets the downward path of Alef to Tiferet. (In the illustration, the Shin is placed on the wrong side of the path from Chokmah to Binah. It should be a Mem here while the Shin should be placed on the side coming from Binah. They meet at the path of Beth “in the beginning”). Likewise, the path of Shin crosses from Binah to the point where it meets the Alef to the Tiferet downward path. These paths form the initial cross of the whole of Creation. Our bodies, too, are “crosses”, the cross that we must “pick up” and follow Christ (if we are Christians Matthew 16: 24-26).
With the contrary movements are contrary paths or mirrored paths. The contrary of path #1, the “Wondrous Intelligence” or “Mystical Intelligence”, is the “Worshipped Intelligence” or “Administrative Intelligence” path #32. This type of “consciousness” is that which is given to one through the opinions of others and their interpretations of the things that are. The contrary to the “Radiant Intelligence” is path #31 or “Continuous Intelligence”, and the contrary to the “Sanctified Intelligence” path #3 is path #30 or the “General Intelligence”. The movement throughout the Tree of Life is circular or spherical and, as has been suggested, the movement is in the form of widening or narrowing gyres.
One cannot attain to the Good itself for it is beyond Being, but one can attain to the Light which finds its source in the Good. The path from Keter leads to the sephirot Tiferet #6, Beauty. Alef is the source of all the letters and, therefore, is the source of all created beings, all things that come into being. Its mirrored image is the Sun. The symbol of Alef is the “ox”, the beast of burden, indicating that the creation of the world is “work” and “a work”. This connects Keter to Malkhut, the physical universe, which is the world of action and doing, the world of work. The “ox” is also the sacrificial animal: “the Lamb slain from the foundation of the earth”. The creation itself is a “sacrifice” on God’s part. The denial of ourselves is the sacrifice required on our part when we wish to attain to the truth of Being.
We can understand the four worlds or universes if we think of them in terms of Aristotle’s understanding of causation. For Aristotle, the word “cause” does not mean simply that which brings about such and such a result. For Aristotle causation was an “exchange”, a relation, and meant “that which is responsible for” or that to which something else is “obliged” or “indebted”. The emanation of the odour of the rose is indebted to the presence of the rose. The rose is “responsible” for the odour.
The four causes of Aristotle are: 1. The material cause or hyle corresponding to the world of Asiyah; 2. The formative cause or eidos, the outward appearance of the things corresponding to the world of Yetzirah, the world of models and plans established so that they are seen and thus brought forth; 3. The end, purpose or use for which the thing is to be made, the telos corresponding to the world of Beriyah; this end is actually the first in that it is the structure or frame (the “system”) or ground upon which the outward form will be placed; 4. The maker, who through his “work”, “pro-duces” or brings forth the thing into being corresponding to the world of Atzilut but only in a mirroring way, for the things of Nature are produced from themselves while the works of human beings are produced in another or from another. The work of Nature is “procreation”, while the work of human being is “making”.
Aristotle
Using a table as an example: the hyle is wood. The maker must have some knowledge of the nature of “wood” and its potentialities to be a table. The maker must have foreknowledge of how the table will appear: will it have legs? what will be its size? etc. The third is that the maker must have knowledge of the end use of the table: will it be an altar? a dinner table? a work table? The maker must have the possibility or potentiality to make the table; some skill or craft is involved in the making of the table. This possibility or potentiality is what Aristotle called dynamis. The possibility or potentiality could be either active or passive: the maker could carry out the work and make a table or let someone else do it, but this dynamis is present in all four causes and in all four worlds. The wood must have the dynamis or potential to allow itself to be formed into a table; the table’s form must be present in the wood to begin with; and the end of the table, its use, must be present before the work can be done to bring it about.
I will be writing about Plato’s divided line from Book VI of his Republic and how it is related to both the Sefir Yetzirah’s four universes or worlds, Aristotle’s four causes, and to the geometry of the Pythagoreans where a number of similar points are made at a future time. I will also be discussing the two faces of both Logos and Eros as it relates to what is attempting to be said here with a discussion of Plato’s Symposium and his Allegory of the Cave.
The Keter point of light is also the Soul of the world and of every human being (see the work of Carl Jung and the archetypes of the Anima Mundi or World Soul). This combination of fire and air in human beings is what makes possible our unity with the One Soul through various possible mediations in our everyday experiences of the things of the world, a mediation which is the work of eros. It is Eros and its affects that bring forth the reasoning as to why the world of yetzirah is called the daemonic world. As we will see later, it is through the Beauty of the world that this mediation or experience can take place. This beauty of the world is but one face of Eros. Tiferet is the site of all possible experiences of the world for it comprises both faces of Eros and of the Logos.
Keter is the point from which emanate three paths or channels or streams: the first is the letter Alef and is associated in the Tarot with The Fool #0 (the beginning of the adventure or quest). It is said in the Sefer Yetzirah that all the letters of the alphabet are contained in Alef, just as all potentialities and possibilities for human beings are contained in The Fool #0 and The Magician #1. Alef as language itself makes manifest the potentialities and possibilities of the second Sefirot, Chakmah which, mistakenly, has the letter Beth assigned to it, shown in the card of The High Priestess #2, and this activates the third Sephirot of Binah, which is shown in the tarot card The Empress #3. The third emanation of Keter goes through the letter Alef and finds its realization in the Sephirot of Tiferet #6 or Beauty, symbolized in the Tarot by The Lovers #6 (although Paul Foster Case places the High Priestess here).
The association of the cards with the paths depends on the direction that one is viewing (or living) the motion of the sphere. The direction of the viewing will determine whether one sees the Wheel as Tora (the Law) or Taro (the Way). The three Mother letters of Alef, Mem, Shin establish the vertical and horizontal structures or foundations of the Tree of Life. Alef is the central pillar and is associated with Air; Mem is the pillar known as Jakim on the right and is associated with water and Mercy; Shin is associated with fire and Severity and is associated with the pillar of Boaz on the left. They also provide the horizontal paths or streams and indicate the “fullness” and deprivation or need of the qualities indicated.
The emanations of Keter and of the other Sephirot are not chronological and sequential but simultaneous, and these emanations carry with them their contraries, so The Fool as present in Keter is also present in #10 Malkhut. The Tarot of P. F. Case places The Fool at Keter because the Tree of Life is both “a beginning and an end” in its circular revolutions through the sphere of that which is the created World. Case calls these movements “spirals”, or we might consider them the “widening gyres” of W.B. Yeats which I have attempted to do here. Keter is at the centre point of the sphere, while Malkhut may be said to be the circumference of the sphere.
As mentioned in the commentary, the creation of the world is a withdrawal not an expansion. It is a “giving”, not an “empowering” or “empowerment”, not an “expansion” of God as is indicated in Gen. 1:31. In His creation, God gives to us the example for our spiritual selves: a withdrawal and a letting be of that Otherness that is not ourselves, but also a withdrawal from that which is ourselves. Since power or force is the root of all evil, the denial of this power once it is present and possible for us is the goal of meditation, prayer, or thought. Again, this is not easily done.
The Magician #1 is clearly a card where this generating and grasping of power is signified. Both the Light of Keter and the Reflected Light of Malkhut are present for The Magician. The number 10 combines both The Magician and The Fool together (1 + 0), and combined together they make The Wheel of Fortune, #10. To put it another way, God in His creating is a movement down, while the making of human beings is a movement up, and this making is demonstrated in The Magician card. On the table beside The Magician are the four suits of the Tarot Minor Arcana: swords (air), cups (water), wands (fire), and pentacles (earth). These four elements represent the ready-to-hand things that The Magician uses in his formation and making of things in the world of Yetzirah. The formation and making of things is the world of power. A mirrored letter Beth encircles the Magician.
The physics of modern science is the pure theory which, in its viewing, sets nature up to show itself as a coherence of forces calculable in advance. Theory stems from the Greek word theorein whose noun is theoria with its meaning being the result of the unification of thea and horao. Thea, connected to theatre, is the external appearance in which something offers itself. For Plato, having seen this “theatrical” or “showing” aspect of the outward appearances of the things through the eidos, is to know. This kind of knowledge is called epi-steme by the Greeks. Horao means to “look at something attentively”. So, “theorein is thean horan” i.e., to look attentively at the external appearance through which something manifests itself.
From these concepts, one can see The Magician as the “stage manager” or the master of the outward appearances of things; he can reveal either truth or illusion. One can also see a connection to the 30th and 31st paths, the “Universal/General” and “Perpetual/Continuous” paths, of the Tree of Life which connect Malkhut to world of Yetzirah or “formation”. The ”universal path” suggests acquaintance with or intelligence of the theoretical viewing of the web of Necessity while the “perpetual” path is Necessity itself indicating its sempiternal character. These paths relate to the theoretical and inductive ways of viewing the world. More will be said on this later.
The Romans translated theorein by contemplari, theoria by contemplatio. Contemplari means “to partition something off into a separate sector and enclose it therein”, to set up boundaries and limits. We have spoken of this kind of thinking/seeing as diaresis earlier in our commentary on the Sefer Yetzirah. The Latin templum is the equivalent of Greek temenos, which has an origin entirely different from theorein, as temnein means to divide. The Latin templum originally refers to a sector carved out of the sky which diviners used to make their prophecies based on the behaviours and habits of birds (the Worshipped/Administrative Intelligence). It is also the partitioning of space into the 12 houses of the Zodiac. This Latin influence corresponds to the writing of the Sefer Yetzirah around the 1st century BCE, but astrology itself was a product of the Pythagoreans and pre-dates this Latin influence. The use of the Tarot is but another example of the attempt to control Necessity.
The actions and activities of The Magician correspond to an “entrapment” and a “gathering together” that is a “refining” of the real. To strive after something means “to work one’s way toward something, to pursue it, to entrap it in order to secure it”. These activities are associated with the universe of Asiyah and the Sephirot #10 Malkhut. This is what we call “work”, and the activity of work produces “a work”. Modern science claims to wish to grasp the real in its purity. In reality, in its grasping, it entraps it and refines it. The real is “what presences as self- exhibiting”. Modern science sets up the real and captures it in its objectness. In this way, the real becomes surveyable. We can see from this the circular or spherical nature of thinking itself and of the Tree of Life. This presents the problem of seeing the world and wishing to change it or seeing the world and wishing to contemplate it in its Beauty.
Card
Path
Letter
Meaning
Symbol
0: The Fool? Or 10: The Wheel? Or 20: The Judgement?
Keter (Crown)/ Chokmah (Wisdom
Alef
Ox (the yoking together; the uniting; the bringing into a relationship of harmony)
The Fire or Primal Energy or Dynamis (possibility/potentiality). The possibility of “world”
1: The Magician? Or 11: Strength
Keter (Crown)/ Binah (Understanding)
Beth
House (Formation); the arrangement of things
Temple, Attention, Contemplation, Prayer The topos or place where world can occur
2: The High Priestess? Or 12: The Hanged Man
Keter/ Tiferet (Beauty)
Gimel
Camel
Lifting up, the Unlimited (education or the “leading out”) The Incarnation as the destiny for human beings or of human beings
A few notes of warning and guidance before we begin:
The TOK essay provides you with an opportunity to become engaged in thinking and reflection. What are outlined below are strategies and suggestions, questions and possible responses only, for deconstructing the TOK titles as they have been given. They should be used alongside the discussions that you will carry out with your peers and teachers during the process of constructing your essay.
The notes here are intended to guide you towards a thoughtful, personal response to the prescribed titles posed. They are not to be considered as the answer and they should only be used to help provide you with another perspective to the ones given to you in the titles and from your own TOK class discussions. You need to remember that most of your examiners have been educated in the logical positivist schools of Anglo-America and this education pre-determines their predilection to view the world as they do and to understand the concepts as they do. The TOK course itself is a product of this logical positivism.
There is no substitute for your own personal thought and reflection, and these notes are not intended as a cut and paste substitute to the hard work that thinking requires. Some of the comments on one title may be useful to you in the approach you are taking in the title that you have personally chosen, so it may be useful to read all the comments and give them some reflection.
My experience has been that candidates whose examples match those to be found on TOK “help” sites (and this is another of those TOK help sites) struggle to demonstrate a mastery of the knowledge claims and knowledge questions contained in the examples. The best essays carry a trace of a struggle that is the journey on the path to thinking. Many examiners state that in the very best essays they read, they can visualize the individual who has thought through them sitting opposite to them. To reflect this struggle in your essay is your goal.
Remember to include sufficient TOK content in your essay. When you have completed your essay, ask yourself if it could have been written by someone who had not participated in the TOK course (such as Chat GPI, for instance). If the answer to that question is “yes”, then you do not have sufficient TOK content in your essay. Personal and shared knowledge, the knowledge framework, the ways of knowing and the areas of knowledge are terms that will be useful to you in your discussions.
Here is a link to a PowerPoint that contains recommendations and a flow chart outlining the steps to writing a TOK essay. Some of you may need to get your network administrator to make a few tweaks in order for you to access it. Comments, observations and discussions are most welcome. Contact me at butler.rick1952@gmail.com or directly through this website.
A sine qua non: the opinions expressed here are entirely my own and do not represent any organization or collective of any kind. Now to business…
The Titles
1. Does our responsibility to acquire knowledge vary according to the area of knowledge? Discuss with reference to history and one other area of knowledge.
Title #1 has four key concepts involved in it: 1. responsibility; 2. to acquire, acquiring; to take possession of; 3. knowledge; 4. vary. You are asked to relate these four key concepts to history and one other area of knowledge.
Aristotle
When we say that we have a responsibility to acquire knowledge to ensure that we construct an accurate record of the past we ask ourselves “why?”. What is the end of an “accurate” account of the past whether it be our own or that of others? For what end is it our responsibility to know our History and learn from the past? Why do we not allow ourselves to remain ‘intentionally ignorant’ of the past if its learning is not convenient for us in the present?
“Responsibility” is inherently an ethical concept for it involves a being-with-others and a sense of otherness itself, something beyond ourselves. It implies a directive for ‘right’ action, an “I should do this” as the ‘ability’ to ‘respond’. The ability to respond was called dynamis by the ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle. The ability to respond with moderation and wise judgement is what was known as ‘virtue’ to the ancients, what we understand as ‘human excellence’ today. The ability to respond involves the deeper question of justice since the sense of responsibility derives from the sense of a ‘debt owed’ to someone or something. To whom? to what? for what end?
At the moment, many of you are probably experiencing the “responsibility” to acquire knowledge from the “debt” you feel you owe to your parents for making your education possible. It is ‘right’ that you should do your best in your studies and take actions that will contribute toward that end. You have a ‘duty’ because you are ‘indebted’ to your parents. Or you may feel no sense of ‘indebtedness’ to anyone or anything. Or you may feel an indebtedness to yourself in that you do not want to be perceived as a moron and wish to achieve some social prestige through attempting to be the best that you can be in your studies. This desire is from our relations in our being-with-others. Stupidity is a moral phenomenon, not an intellectual one, and this is the essence of this question.
If stupidity is a moral phenomenon, then human beings have an obligation to acquire and take possession of knowledge. An obligation is a course of action that someone is required to take, whether that action be due to the legal or moral consequences or constraints inherent in the outcomes of the action or the not taking action. An obligation is an act of making oneself responsible for doing something. Human beings are under an obligation to think; we are not fully human if we do not do so. Obligations are constraints; they limit freedom. The obligation to think as the essence of human being is contrary to the notion that the essence of human being is freedom. Truth itself and its revealing is a constraint upon our freedom.
Those who are limited and intolerant in their thinking view knowledge of their History as limited by “subjectivity” and that it is only composed of the opinions that have become the “collective memory” of the society of which, by chance, they happen to be a member. Because of these subjective elements, they find that it is not essential to acquire knowledge of their past in order to build what they hope will be a “successful” future; self-knowledge is not essential to their happiness nor to their success. This is the ‘ignorance is bliss’ position where they believe their own empowerment will be the foundation of their future happiness; and their own goals and principles are decidedly short-term and entirely mutable depending upon the circumstances in which they find themselves. The lack of self-knowledge and the lack of a moral compass are one and the same thing.
As there are various types of human beings and various ways of thinking, there are also various areas of knowledge. In the IB, they have been identified as six areas of knowledge with further sub-divisions within each i.e. the Natural Sciences are sub-divided into Physics, Chemistry, and Biology. The ancients called these areas of knowledge the Seven Pillars of Wisdom for they made up a ‘knowledge of the whole’; wisdom is knowledge of the whole. The ancients arranged these pillars in a hierarchy; and while we do not speak of a hierarchy, it is easy to see that we hold knowledge in the sciences and mathematics and their applications as the most important areas of study in what we call the acquisition of knowledge today. Any analysis of IB enrollment statistics will demonstrate this.
The sense of “responsibility” for acquiring knowledge in the sciences may be based on the belief that such knowledge will contribute to the continual development of human beings and continue to lead them toward “human excellence” or what the ancients once called ‘virtue’. It is an interesting irony in the history of the West that what was once considered the ‘masculinity’ of a man became the ‘chastity’ of a woman. This belief developed in that period of History known as the Renaissance. It is one of the foundations of what we call “humanism”, and from it flowered that way of being-in-the-world that we call “technology”. The relief of human beings’ estate through technology was a key to an understanding of justice. We felt, and still feel, an obligation and a responsibility to be just.
Our being-with-others is what is studied in the area of knowledge we call the Human Sciences. The Human Sciences, however, are unable to give us an account of what is the best manner or way of our being-with-others. This is due to the fact/value distinction that dominates their theoretical viewing of the world. They are incapable of answering this question, the ancient question of “what is the good life and how do you lead it?” since our sense of responsibility or duty is a ‘value’ that we have chosen or created and it has no ‘reality’ or validity in the world of ‘facts’. One manner of living or choice is equal to another; we call them ‘lifestyles’. The concept of ‘lifestyles’ is from the German philosopher Nietzsche. A pre-requisite for knowledge and success in the Human Sciences is moral obtuseness.
History is an account or narrative, the collective memory, of the significant actions that other human beings have taken and that have occurred over time in our being-with-others. It is more properly called ‘historiography’ (written history) as opposed to an understanding of ‘time as history’. The outcomes of those past actions have contributed to how we have come to understand and interpret, to have acquired and taken possession of, the meaning of those past actions and how they have impacted our understanding of ourselves. For example, who cannot be grateful for the stupidity of the Nazis which led them to understand Einstein’s and Heisenberg’s physics as ‘Jewish science’ and prevented them from funding research into the building of atomic weapons during WWII? Such stupidity was providential in that it prevented the Nazis from taking the ‘responsibility to acquire knowledge’ and it also prevented them from acquiring world domination.
Both History and the Human Sciences today are determined in their seeing by the ‘fact/value’ distinction where statements of fact regarding human actions are distinct from the ‘values’ that are the result of those actions. “Values” are what are subjective. In this perception, they are driven by what has been chosen to be the most highly ‘valued’ form of ‘knowledge’ which is to be found in the objective stance of the Natural Sciences. My statement above regarding the Nazis is a ‘value judgement’, a subjective statement. That I approve that it was good that the Nazis did not achieve world domination is a value judgement.
With the introduction of the word ‘good’ a whole host of other questions arise. For some, the fact that the Nazis didn’t achieve world domination was not a good end. A Europe in ruins was a better end than a Europe re-built from the ashes of those ruins. Similar thoughts are prevalent among many in today’s world. Social scientists in the USA prevent themselves from commenting upon the character of a man like Donald Trump since such comments would not be ‘professional’ but only ‘value judgements’. To have such a mentally disturbed man be their leader and their inability to warn against such outcomes reflects the madness that is deep within American society and the Social Sciences themselves.
The responsibility of acquiring knowledge is dependent upon what good end will result from our acquisition of that knowledge i.e. how will that knowledge contribute to our eudaemonia or happiness?. The type of end depends on the type of knowledge that is to be gained and applied. If I wish to make use of a banking app to do my banking then I have a ‘responsibility’ to learn how to make use of that app through becoming familiar with the knowledge of the procedures involved. The procedures and the theory are already embedded in the app i.e. the end is already embedded in the app. There is no choice involved other than the wish to make use of the app. There are many who will remain intentionally ignorant if the acquisition of whatever form knowledge may appear in does not contribute to their empowerment in some way for we equate empowerment with ‘happiness’.
In other writings on this blog, I have suggested that the lack of a moral compass so prevalent in today’s world, where there is no responsibility to acquire any knowledge other than that which allows one to seize and maintain power, is a primary result of the fact/value distinction, that beholding which is prevalent in the Human Sciences and History. Since domination and control is at the very heart of the stance of the physical sciences and these areas of knowledge wish to mirror those sciences, this should not be surprising. When good becomes a ‘value’ and ‘beauty is in the eye of the beholder’, then the outcome is not one of ‘universal tolerance’ but one of command and control, authoritarianism and fascism. Whether one is on the left or the right in their political thinking is irrelevant to this ultimate outcome.
Margaret Atwood
The Canadian writer Margaret Atwood once said that ‘all writing is political’. The desire to write down something is a desire that it be communicated to others at some point in time. Even a personal diary is a communication to a future ‘different person’ than the one producing the work of the diary in the present. It is an aid to memory. History is an aid to Memory, and contributes to our self-knowledge. The keeping of a diary may be said to be a first step on the journey to self-knowledge. This desire for self-knowledge is a recognition of the responsibility or ‘debt owed’ to oneself and others with regard to the compulsion we feel of the need to be fully human. This compulsion is our desire to seek ‘completeness’ and ‘perfection’ as a human being, which is not possible as we are the ‘perfect imperfection’ in our natures.
In other writings on this blog I have attempted to show that the key difficulty in receiving the beauty of the world today is that such a teaching and learning is rooted in the act of looking at the world as it is while the dominant sciences are rooted in the desire to change it. Our sense of ‘responsibility’ hinges on this dilemma. We cannot know or love an object or resource. In our research to learn the historical sources of the objects of the Arts around us, this study is merely for “aesthetic” purposes and enjoyment, not the fulfilment of a responsibility of having these works teach us about the beauty of the world or any notion of justice. We can learn about the past in such study; we cannot learn from the past. In other writings I have called this the two-faced nature of Eros.
2. In the production of knowledge, is ingenuity always needed but never enough? Discuss with reference to mathematics and one other area of knowledge.
The ‘production of knowledge’ are the ‘works’ that are the results of our ‘work’, the “produce” of our human making which mirrors the “produce” of Nature’s making. The production of knowledge is the products of our minds and hands. “Ingenuity” is a synonym for ‘novelty’, the ‘new’, the ‘creative’ which is an element brought to bear by the clever in our societies. To say that we are overwhelmed by the ‘novelty’ of technology today would be something of an understatement. We just begin to master all of the possibilities of our iPhones when another model is introduced.
But the corollary of all this novelty and ingenuity is an ever-increasing sense of mass meaninglessness, for we fail to find any real purpose for our novelty except that novelty as an end in itself.
The work that precedes the bringing forth of the ‘work’ is what is called ‘research’ in common parlance. This ‘research’ is conducted in multiversities and corporations throughout the globe. The “ingenuity” or “novelty” of the research is driven by the ‘vested interest’ that the individual, along with the institution, has in the outcomes of the research. In the past, research in History for example was a waiting upon the past so that we might find in it truths which might help us to think and live in the present. With the dominion of the fact/value distinction, such an end becomes lost; and with it, what we call our ‘moral compass’ becomes lost. Why?
All societies are dominated by a particular account of knowledge and this account lies in the relation between a particular aspiration of thought (the mind) and the effective conditions for its realization (the work of the hands): the work and its work. The work is knowledge, ‘the word made flesh’ so to speak. Our tools are an extension of our hands. We find the archetype and paradigm of thought and what we call thinking and, by extension, what we call knowledge in modern physics. Modern physics is the mathematical project. To pro-ject is ‘to throw forward’. The aspiration of our ‘throwing forward’ is ’empowerment’. In this throwing forward, some violence is done.
Our account is that we reach knowledge when we represent things to ourselves as objects, summonsing them before us so that they will give us their reasons for being as they are. To do so requires well defined procedures. This is what we call research. What we think knowledge is is this research for it is an essential effective condition for the realization or pro-duction of any knowledge. The work is the bringing forth or production of such knowledge bringing it to its completion. The bringing forth to completion was what was understood as ‘justice’ by the ancients. That which is brought forward is somehow ‘fitting’ for its purpose, its end. Justice is ‘fittedness’. In the technological society, the ingenuity behind the bringing forth has come to be an end in itself.
There are boundless examples of the varieties of ‘ingenuity’ that go into the research conducted in the sciences and the humanities. We live and breathe this novelty in our day-to-day lives. The calculus involved in mathematics results in the many apps brought forth to assist us in our use of our technological tools: the tools are the predicates of the technology and come to be through that technology; they are not technology itself in its essence.
The ‘knowing and making’ that is the word technology shows itself in the humanities in a dizzying number of theses with ingenious perspectives on the meaning of Beowulf (although any number of other examples could just as easily be found). The problem in the humanities is that when the work being examined is laid before us as object and our research is based on a review and critique of its historical sources, that work becomes dead for us. We can learn about the past; we cannot learn from the past: we can learn about the play King Lear, but we cannot learn from the play King Lear. The commandeering stance with regard to the past, which is necessary to research, kills the past as teacher and no amount of ingenuity will overcome this. If beauty is in the eye of the beholder, that which is beautiful is represented to a commandeering subject from a position of its own command and, thus, we cannot learn anything from the beautiful or that which makes it beautiful. The world as it is presented to us in the sciences has no place for the word ‘love’.
Most often, ‘ingenuity’ reveals itself in the paradigm shifts that occur in the histories of our areas of knowledge. A paradigm shift is not only a new way of thinking but a new way of viewing the world in which we live. The most dominant manner in which our world is viewed today is the ‘mathematical projection’. The ‘ingenuity’ within this world-projection is what we call by the cliche ‘thinking outside of the box.’ The history behind this viewing of the world is ‘ingenuity’ itself.
The mathematical projection and the ingenuity involved in it does not occur out of nowhere or out of nothing. Newton’s “First Law of Motion”, for instance, is a statement about the mathematical projection the visions of which first began to emerge long before his Principia Mathematica. Newton’s First Law states that “an object will remain at rest or in uniform motion in a straight line unless acted upon by an external force”. It may be seen as a statement about inertia, that objects will remain in their state of motion unless a force acts to change that motion.
But, of course, there is no such object or body and no experiment could help us to bring to view such a body. This is the ‘ingenuity’ in its view. The law speaks of a thing that does not exist and demands a fundamental representation of things that contradicts our ordinary common sense and our ordinary everyday experience. The mathematical projection of a thing is based on the determination of things that is not derived from our experience of things. This fundamental conception of things is not arbitrary nor self-evident. It required a “paradigm shift” in the manner of our approach to things along with a new manner of thinking. This is true ‘ingenuity’.
Galileo, for instance, provides the decisive insight that all bodies fall equally fast, and that differences in the time of the fall derive from the resistance of the air and not from the inner natures of the bodies themselves or because of their corresponding relation to their particular place (contrary to how the world was understood by Aristotle and the Medievals). The particular, specific qualities of the thing, so crucial to Aristotle, become a matter of indifference to Galileo.
Galileo’s insistence on the truth of his propositions saw him excommunicated from the Church and exiled from Pisa. Both Galileo and his opponents saw the same “fact”, the falling body, but they interpreted the same fact differently and made the same event visible to themselves in different ways. What the “falling body” was as a body, and what its motion was, were understood and interpreted differently. None denied the existence of the “falling body” as that which was under discussion, nor propounded some kind of “alternative fact” here. Galileo’s ingenuity consisted in his ability to view things in a very different way.
In Galileo, the mathematical becomes a “projection” of the determination of the thingness of things which skips over the things in their particularity. The project or projection first opens a domain, an area of knowledge, where the things i.e. facts, show themselves. What and how things or facts are to be understood and evaluated beforehand is what the Greeks termed axiomata i.e. the anticipating determinations and assertions in the project, what we would call the “self-evident”, the axioms. This self-evident, axiomatic viewing requires that things themselves lose any virtues that they may have in their particularity.
The mathematical projection provides the framework, the picture, that is the lens through which the world is viewed. Ingenuity is only acknowledged within this framework for knowledge production since outcomes must be reported in the language of mathematics. Ingenuity or novelty whether in an artistic process or the scientific method involves the discovering of innovative ways of devising experiments or utilizing clever analogies to explain complex concepts within these AOKs. Those who succeed in doing so are given Nobel Prizes as the result of their efforts.
3. How might it benefit an area of knowledge to sever ties with its past? Discuss with reference to two areas of knowledge.
Guernica
Does Title #3 present a silly suggestion that it is possible for an area of knowledge “to sever its ties with its past” and that this severing may somehow be beneficial to it? is it possible for knowledge to occur in a vacuum? The fact that it is an “area of knowledge” implies that it has a past whose ‘picture’ has already been established for it. What we come to call ‘new knowledge’ is the change in perspective on the viewing of that which is permanently there. (See the Galileo example in Title #2.) Is this change of viewing what is meant by ‘severing’ here? Are we talking of paradigm shifts here? It should not be forgotten that everything will appear in a new light when that light is dimmed.
Much of what is said regarding Mathematics and the Natural Sciences in Title #2 would then be applicable here. Is Picasso’s cubism a severing of his ties with Art’s past? Does it not bring along with it the traditional viewing of three dimensional space and provide a new fourth dimension? Picasso’s theme of war in his Guernica has not changed. His viewing of a specific example of what war is presents a unique and horrible view of this ever-permanent subject. As human beings we live within a world which in itself does not change; our perspectives on it change, but the world itself does not. That we can now destroy other human beings with nuclear weapons does not change the permanent theme of our destruction of other beings. The lack of clarity in this question would cause me to avoid it or to question the lack of clarity itself.
The historian Thucydides believed that there was something essential in the nature of human beings, an essence, that was not subject to change. He also believed that the same was the case with regard to war and its causes. Modern historians do not believe there are such things as “essences” and so view the world in a very different way. Is such a different viewing a ‘severing’ of the ties with Thucydides? Or does it ultimately bring the modern historian finally into the position where Thucydides began his work? While we may desire to sever the ties with the past in our pro-duction of knowledge (is this due to our desire for novelty and ingenuity?) such a severing may not be possible if one is to continue pursuing the truth of things. Things will always appear different when they are viewed in a ‘new light’ even though that light may be dimmer.
Is modern atomic physics a ‘severing’ of its ties to the Newtonian physics of the past or the superstructure built upon the findings of those physics? Einstein is considered to be a completion of Newtonian physics while quantum physics is considered to be a more radical ‘severing’ of the viewing that had occurred in what is called classical physics. In the case of modern physics, this severing is due to its unique findings regarding the concepts of time and space and the object that is viewed with regard to the production of knowledge.
The rigor of mathematical physical science is exactitude. This has always been the case with science. Science cannot proceed randomly; it cannot sever its ties in its methodology, a methodology that has its roots in the past. All events, if they are at all to enter into representations as events of nature, must be defined beforehand as spatio-temporal magnitudes of motion. Motion is time. Such defining is accomplished through measuring, with the help of number and calculation. Mathematical research into nature is not exact because it calculates with precision; it must calculate in this way because of the adherence to its object-sphere (the objects which it investigates) has the character of exactitude and that exactitude is the mathematics itself.
In contrast the Group 3 subjects, the Human Sciences, must be inexact in order to remain rigorous. A living thing can be grasped as a mass in motion, but then it is no longer apprehended as living. The projecting and securing of the object of study in the human sciences is of another kind and is much more difficult to execute than is the achieving of rigor in the “exact sciences” of the Group 4 subjects. This is why statistics are used as the form of the disclosure of the conclusions that have been reached in the Human Sciences. In some investigations, the matrix mathematics of quantum physics is sometimes used to try to gain a precision into the analysis of the phenomenon under study with, usually, disastrous results. Such was the case in the economic recession of 2008. This is due to the fact that the domains of physics and of the human sciences are radically different.
The applications of the discoveries of modern physics have realized the new “ages” in which we live, the Atomic Age and the Information Age. As with all new “ages” in human history, something is gained but something is also lost. The highest point to which we look up to in our communities is no longer the church steeple or the statue of the Buddha; it is the ubiquitous communications towers sending the signals of our information to each other across the globe. When Galileo skipped over the viewing of the particular thing in its uniqueness in his effort to view the world mathematically, what was skipped over was a looking at the world as it is. This gave to human beings the difficulty, the deprival, of receiving the beauty of the world as it is. The removal of the love of and for the beauty of the world as it is was replaced by the desire to change it through domination and control.
As with all the things which human beings make, their viewing and their making is a double-edged sword: we are easily lulled into an appreciation of the benefits brought about by their realization at the cost of an inability to view how in fact we may be deprived by their realization. What deprivals are we witnessing in the discoveries of our new communications apparatus? What are the benefits resulting from mass meaninglessness and our understanding of knowledge as “information”? We can all see the benefits of artificial intelligence, but what deprivals are we experiencing with the arrival of this new technology?
4. To what extent do you agree that there is no significant difference between hypothesis and speculation? Discuss with reference to the human sciences and one other area of knowledge.
The English word hypothesis comes from the ancient Greek word ὑπόθεσις hypothesis whose literal or etymological sense is a “putting or placing under” and hence a providing of a foundation or basis for an assertion, claim or an action. Such a provision of foundations will be based on the historical knowledge that one has received and possesses with regard to the domain or area of knowledge that is under investigation.
“Speculation”, on the other hand, is the forming of a theory or conjecture without firm evidence. An hypothesis is ‘justified opinion’, while speculation is ‘unjustified opinion’. The word ‘speculation’ is usually associated with economics and is based on those judgements made by individuals which involve a substantial amount of risk since evidence is not available as to the ultimate outcome of the action that will be taken by an individual in their desire for gain in wealth and, subsequently, power. An hypothesis, on the other hand, depending on the domain or area of knowledge in which it is asserted, usually has historical findings to ground it. It is grounded in the principle of reason and looks for exactitude and certitude in its outcomes. The element of chance in speculation suggests that the opinion, claim or assertion is not fully grounded in the principle of reason. A current example would be investors placing their money in the DJT stock on Wall Street. There is an irrationality about it.
“Speculation” is sometimes based on ‘a gut feeling’. It is sometimes preceded by a “they said….” without any mention of who the ‘they’ are who have done the ‘saying’ and whether these ‘they’ are reliable or not in their speaking. There is a lack of surety, certainty in the grounds of the assertion because the assertion is not based on the principle of reason as no evidence or sufficient reasons are provided to justify the claim.
While both speculation and hypothesis are based on ‘theories’, an hypothesis is formed from a “theory” and a theory is a way of viewing the world from which develops an understanding of that world. The principle of reason provides the grounds or foundations for the ‘saying’. Theories or views (understandings) may produce true or false opinions. Our views of the world are based upon opinions, opinions that may or may not be justified. We cannot, for example, believe the assertion that Californian wildfires are caused by Jewish space lasers because sufficient reasons cannot be provided for the making of such an assertion. Such an assertion is mere speculation, and it is ‘risky’ due to its political implications in our being-with-others. An hypothesis requires evidence from experiment or experience that will provide sufficient reasons for the assertion contained in the hypothesis.
In both experience and experiment, a sufficient reason is sometimes described as the correspondence of every single thing that is needed for the occurrence of an effect (i.e. that the so-called necessary conditions are present for such an effect to occur). In the wildfires/Jewish space lasers example, there is no sufficient correspondence present between the effect and its possible cause. What is lacking is the ‘truth’ of the event: there are insufficient reasons for the correspondence theory of truth to apply. With speculation, nothing is ‘brought to light’ because no light is present.
We could, perhaps, also apply such a view to the indeterminacy principle of Heisenberg as long as randomness is incorporated in the preconditions that are mathematically included in the calculus. Such events occur at the sub-atomic level but they do not occur in our encounters with the objects that are present in our real experience of things. In our experience, the principles of Newton’s classical physics still apply. These conditions and their sufficient reasons do not apply at the sub-atomic level.
When we are asked ‘to what extent’, we are being asked for a calculation which can be expressed statistically or in language, a ‘this much…’. It implies a possibility of knowledge of the whole. Both hypothesis and speculation demonstrate similar content in some respects but they are ‘different’. If we claim that there is ‘no significant difference’, then we are saying that they are the Same. While some may presume a semantical equivalence between the two terms (which is the foundation of the question), it would appear that the submission of a hypothesis involves less risk in the truth or falsity of its claim than mere speculation which may be based on a ‘wishful thinking’ as to its outcome. Hypothesis relies on the surety of past knowledge and its discoveries while speculation rests in the hoped for gains that will result if such a speculation proves to be true.
5. In the production of knowledge, are we too quick to dismiss anomalies? Discuss with reference to two areas of knowledge.
In recent years, the discoveries of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) have produced a great number of anomalies for astrophysicists to attempt to resolve and which cannot be ignored especially with regard to the Big Bang Theory of the universe. The dates of the origin of the universe and the formation of galaxies are now being questioned. Often, rather than investigating anomalies further and considering an overhaul of existing knowledge, anomalies are dismissed as ‘exceptions’ to the rule rather than a justification to question the rule itself. Such discussions are now occurring among the scientists in the world of astrophysics. Such anomalies and discussions will provide theoretical work for scientists for years to come and may require or provide a paradigm shift in the area of knowledge called astrophysics.
Anomalies are often the prompt for a paradigm shift in the sciences causing us to challenge existing beliefs and ideas. In Physics, perhaps the greatest anomaly lies in the Heisenberg indeterminacy principle. In the experiments conducted in the early 20th century, results often occurred which could not be corresponded to the physics of Einstein. With Heisenberg’s indeterminacy principle, the mathematical account for those outliers could be accounted for and shown mathematically.
In everyday life, calculating the speed and position of a moving object is relatively straightforward. We can measure a car traveling at 60 miles per hour or a tortoise crawling at 0.5 miles per hour and simultaneously pinpoint where the car and the tortoise are located. But in the quantum world of particles, making these calculations is not possible due to a fundamental mathematical relationship called the uncertainty principle.
Werner Heisenberg
Formulated by the German physicist and Nobel laureate Werner Heisenberg in 1927, the uncertainty principle states that we cannot know both the position and speed of a particle, such as a photon or electron, with perfect accuracy; the more we nail down the particle’s position, the less we know about its speed and vice versa. Because sub-atomic particles behave like waves in quantum viewing, the measurements we make appear to be uncertain or inaccurate, but this is the case with wave-like properties. In the world of our experience, a chair behaves like a chair. There is a gap present between the behaviour and the nature of sub-atomic particles and the objects of our common everyday experience.
Donald J. Trump
In the Human Sciences, Donald Trump is seen by many as an ‘anomaly’ outside of the normal political activity of the community that is the USA. Is this really the case? Is he really an ‘anomaly’? If so, how is it possible that he is the Republican nomination for President? That Donald Trump is the fertilizer that brought about the flowering of the growth that was the corruption already present within the institutions of the American system of government is more of an indication of the failure of the seeing, the consciousness and conscience, present in the ‘wishful thinking’ of those who observe American politics whether they be media, academics or political pundits. Is it possible for a true outlier to achieve political power or must there be common elements present in both the aspirer for power and in those who will hand that power over to him? Was Adolf Hitler an ‘outlier’ in the German politics of the 1920s and 1930s?
Because of the manner of our viewing of the world, we usually cannot see what we are not looking for, so anomalies are often missed and when they are sighted they are usually met with the response “That’s odd”. If they are seen, they are usually ignored because people and their institutions and organizations are predisposed to confirmation bias, focusing on what aligns with their mental models rather than what violates them. In the Human Sciences, for instance, the word “anomaly” is most often used to dismiss a data point as unrepresentative and irrelevant. Even if we do not ignore anomalies, we may not try to interpret or explore them. Does an anomaly such as Donald Trump get over 70 million votes in a democracy? Why, for example, did it take so long for the symptoms of PTSD (Post-traumatic Stress Disorder) to be recognized and to be systematically dealt with?
6. In the pursuit of knowledge, what is gained by the artist adopting the lens of the scientist and the scientist adopting the lens of the artist? Discuss with reference to the arts and the natural sciences.
The Arts and the Sciences have complementary histories of evolution. This history may be understood as the manner in which both of these human activities have pursued knowledge with regard to their understandings and relationships to what is understood and interpreted as Nature or Otherness. Just as Art pursues “object-less” representations of abstractions conceived in the mind so, too, does science attempt to understand our being-in-the-world through the projection of mathematical abstractions on what we think ‘reality’ is. Both art and science see themselves as ‘theories of the real’. While art must withstand the question Is it art? science, too, must withstand the question Is it science? particularly with regard to the Human Sciences. The responses to these questions can be either profound or downright silly.
Science is what we understand by ‘knowledge’, ‘knowing’. Art is what we understand by ‘making’, the performance that results in a ‘work’, whether that work be a painting, a musical composition, or a pair of shoes. Knowing and making are what we mean when we speak of “technology”, the combination of the two Greek words techne or ‘making’ and logos or ‘knowing’. The combining of these two words is something that the Greeks never did and would never do. The word was first coined in the 17th century with the rise of humanism. The ‘adopting of the lens’ of the artist by the scientist, or of the scientist by the artist is, obviously, a constant in the modern world since the outcomes or products of technology are the objects that we see all about us and which we use on a daily basis. The scientist’s knowing and the artist’s making are on display before us at this very moment if we are using a computer, an iPad or a handphone to read this blog.
The pursuit of science is the human response to a certain mode or way in which truth discloses or reveals itself. Science arises as a response to a claim laid upon human beings in the way that the things of nature appear. The sciences set up certain domains or areas (physics, chemistry, biology) and then pursue the revealing that is consistent within those domains. The claim laid upon human beings is to reveal truth, for it is in the revealing of truth that we are truly human. We are not fully human if we do not do so.
The domain, for example, of chemistry is an abstraction. It is the domain of chemical formulae. Nature is seen as a realm of formulae. Scientists pose this realm by way of a reduction; it is an artificial realm that arises from a very artificial attitude towards things. Water has to be posed as H2O. Once it is so posed, once things are reduced to chemical formulae, then the domain of chemistry can be exploited for practical ends. We can make fire out of water once water is seen as a compound of hydrogen and oxygen. In the illustration of Van Gogh’s “Sunflowers”, we have the chemical formula for the physical composition of Van Gogh’s yellow paint. While interesting, it tells us absolutely nothing of the painting itself and of the world or the artist that produced that painting. This is the situation with many recent discoveries in science, particularly the Human Sciences: their discoveries are interesting but tell us absolutely nothing meaningful about the world we live in.
The things investigated by chemistry are not “objects” in the sense that they have an autonomous standing on their own i.e. they are not “the thrown against”, the jacio, as is understood traditionally. For science, the chemist in our example, nature is composed of formulae, and a formula is not a self-standing object. It is an abstraction, a product of the mind. A formula is posed; it is an abstraction. A formula is posed; it is an ob-ject, that is, it does not view nature as composed of objects that are autonomous, self-standing things, but nature as formulae. The viewing of nature as formulae turns things into posed ob-jects and in this posing turns the things of nature, ultimately, into dis-posables. The viewing of water as H2O, for example, demonstrates a Rubicon that has been crossed. There is no turning back once this truth has been revealed. That water can be turned into fire has caused restrictions in our bringing liquids onto airplanes, for instance, for they have the capability of destroying those aircraft.
“What we observe is not nature in itself but nature exposed to our method of questioning. Our scientific work in physics consists in asking questions about nature in the language that we possess and trying to get an answer from experiment by the means that are at our disposal.”–Werner Heisenberg
What is the physicist Heisenberg saying here? The language that the scientist possesses is the mathematical projection or abstraction that is placed over the object that is questioned, but the object that is questioned can only appear in a manner pre-ordained by the nature of the questioning itself. Through experiment, the response to the question posed must be in the form of the mathematical language used: nature must respond ‘mathematically’. But what that nature is is not what has been traditionally understood as ‘nature’. The response must be consistent. The logos that is mathematics is this consistency.
For Heisenberg, what has been called nature has been ordered to report mathematically and this is the first level of abstraction. The mathematical viewing of nature makes the ob-ject of science non-intuitive. What does this mean? In the example above of Van Gogh’s “Sunflowers”, the color yellow is reduced to a formula describing a variety of chemical reactions between various compounds. In physics, the color yellow would be reduced to a formula describing a certain electro-magnetic wave. A person can then possess a perfect scientific understanding of the color yellow and yet be completely color blind i.e. they could not experience Van Gogh’s “Sunflowers” in its ‘reality’. In the same fashion, a person who knows yellow intuitively by perceiving yellow things such as sunflowers will fail to recognize the scientific formula as representing her lived experiences of the color yellow. This is what is meant to say that science is non-intuitive and is, thus, an abstraction.
Like the abstractions of the mathematical projections in physics and the projection of formulae in chemistry, abstract art is an art form that does not represent an accurate depiction of visual reality, communicating instead through lines, shapes, colours, forms and gestural marks. Abstract artists may be said to use the lens of the scientist with their varieties of techniques to create their work, mixing traditional means with more experimental ideas. Their work is a product of the mind (or the unconscious) and does not correspond to the Otherness that is what we understand as our being-in-the-world. Jackson Pollock described abstract art as “energy and motion made visible.” Pollock’s art, in a way, attempts to approach the art that is available for us through the cinema.
The examples provided are what we might call the “pure” theoretical scientists or the “pure” abstract artists. What is ‘gained’ by such ‘abstract’ attempts? What is gained is that through the discoveries of the scientists and the artists many applications of their findings are brought into our real world in a great variety of forms and products. The computer before us is a product of the application of the discoveries of quantum mechanics. It is a seamless connection between knowing and making, art and science, the lens of the scientist and the lens of the artist.
It is easy to see what has been ‘gained’ in the coming together of the arts and sciences that we know as technology. It is much harder to see what has been lost in this development. As I have shown in other writings on this blog, an indispensable condition of a scientific analysis of the facts is moral obtuseness. The lens of both the modern day scientist and the modern day artist are not moral lens. Modern art, in its following or mirroring of the seeing of the sciences, contributes to this moral obtuseness among human beings. Since art is essential in our being-with-others in a ‘real’ world, this does not bode well for the future.
2.1 The foundations are the twenty-two letters, three mothers, seven doubles, and twelve single letters. Three mothers, namely A, M, SH, these are Air, Water, and Fire: Mute (Hums) as Water, Hissing as Fire, and Air of a spiritual type, is as the tongue of a balance standing erect between them pointing out the equilibrium which exists.
Alt. Trans.:Twenty-two foundation letters, Three Mothers, Seven Doubles, And Twelve elementals:The three Mothers are Alef, Mem, Shin.Their foundation isA pan of merit (fullness)A pan of liability (need)And the tongue of decree deciding between them.(mediation)
Three Mothers: Alef, Mem, Shin: Mem hums, Shin hissesAnd Alef is the Breath of air deciding between them.
Wescott Trans. 2.1. The twenty−two sounds and letters are the Foundation of all things. Three mothers, seven doublesand twelve simples. The Three Mothers are Aleph, Mem and Shin, they are Air, Water and Fire. Water is silent, Fire is sibilant, and Air derived from the Spirit is as the tongue of a balance standing between these contraries which are in equilibrium, reconciling and mediating between them.
Commentary on 2.1
The foundations of the created world are revealed through the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet by means of the 10 Sephirot. The image created is one of a balance, a scale, the symbol of Justice. The Tree of Life itself is a symbol of this. The Three Mothers represent the three columns into which the Sephirot are divided and come to constitute the three pillars of the Tree of Life. Boaz is the pillar of Mem (water), Jakim is the pillar of Shin (fire) and Keter is the breath (air) or Spirit (the Logos) which judges between them. Water moves downward; fire rises. The movement, as we perceive it, is clockwise.
The ‘tongue of balance’ or the ‘tongue of decree’ is a metaphor for the Logos. The function of the Logos is as a reconciler and mediator. It is the ‘speaking silence’ that is the Beauty of the World, as well as the Law of decree that is Necessity. It is the Torah and the Ain Sof.
Blake Illustration for The Book of Job: Job’s Bad Dreams
The Scale here is the Law of Necessity, the law which rules over all created things. It is the schema or plan which creation and created things must follow. It is the Divine Will. The justice of the law of Necessity is one of the most difficult things for human beings to comprehend. It raises questions such as: if God is all Good, why does He allow the innocent to suffer? Why does He allow the wicked to prosper? The evil Demiourgos of the Gnostics and the questions of the “Book of Job” come to mind. (“The Book of Job” is originally in Greek with God’s answers to Job written in Hebrew. Needless to say, God’s answers to Job are not “psychologically satisfying” to the suffering human being who is crying out for justice!)
Examples of the Sternness of Necessity are all about us, while examples of Mercy can sometimes be hard to find. The “hissing” of Fire is caused by water’s contact with it. The implication is that mercy, love, and charity are always present and there is strife between the elements of water and fire which is mediated by air (“of a spiritual type”, which means that it is ‘no-thing’). This is one of the bridges between the spiritual and the physical. The emphasis is on holding things in harmony and of the reconciliation between them. It is through the meeting of fire and water that earth is formed.
Shin and Mem also denote the name “Shem”. Shem is one of the sons of Noah who participated in Noah’s spiritual experience, his direct contact with God. Some Kabbalists give the writing of the Sefer Yetzirah to Shem who taught it to Abraham (which is close to how the Sefer Yetzirah is being understood here if the non-Hebrew influences are taken into account within the final Hebrew text). The word “Shem” designates “name”, to name things. It is through the “naming” of things that things are brought to presence and are revealed. It is through “names” that we can grasp the spiritual essence of a person or object, if by “names” we mean the logos.
The pronunciation of the letters is also said to be a valuable meditation technique similar to the word “Om”, for instance, or the Gregorian chants of medieval Christians. Meditation is thought, contemplation, attention, prayer and it is distinguished from the thinking that is involved in the realm of yetzirah or the realm of knowing and making, the world of ‘formation’.
If we compare what is said here to Plato, the Sephirot are the Ideas which are limited to 10 and which beget all numbers and all enumeration. The Ideas beget the eidos or the outward appearances of things that brings things to a stand and give us “understanding”. Understanding is formed from the middle pillar of Keter, the logos, which is the air or “spiritual breath” that speaks the “judgement” of what things are. The logos is composed of number and speech and these are seen as identical. From the logos is physical creation identified and made.
Text 2.2:
2.2 He hath formed, weighed, transmuted, composed, and created with these twenty-two letters every living being, and every soul yet uncreated.
Alt. Trans.
Twenty-two Foundation letters:He engraved them. He carved them, He permuted them, He weighed them, He transformed them,And with them, He depicted all that was formed and all that would be formed.
Wescott Trans. 2.2. He hath formed, weighed, and composed with these twenty−two letters every created thing, and the form of everything which shall hereafter be.
Commentary on 2.2:
“He engraved them”: the letters are written on a tabula rasa a blank slate, no-thingness. They are “carved” out and separated (things that are given form and separated, the process of thinking known as diaresis to the Greeks). The letters are “permuted” or “arranged” so that words are formed. The words give names to things so that they are “weighed”, measured, and defined i.e., judged. Once measured, they can be ‘transformed’. The outward appearance of a thing was what Plato called the eidos of the thing, the ‘form’ of the thing, what allows a thing to be “measured”, “weighed” and “composed” . The Forms and Ideas of Plato are distinctive concepts, not identical or the same as is commonly understood. The Forms are the emanations of the Ideas and begot from the Ideas.
From the letters, all that was formed and all that will be formed was always already there. The things that are formed are “depicted”, “from the picture”, given an outward appearance (eidos in Greek), so that the things can be seen in images and pictures (as well as the letters themselves) and thus could be visualized so that understanding and knowledge could take place. The emphasis is on seeing or viewing. Prior to the seeing, a form must first be in place and this shape must be accompanied by colour or the light. This form is a product of the logos and can be understood through the geometry of the ancients. Geometry deals with space; weighing and composing deal with place and with Time. Place is understood as topos in Greek, and it is the site of human beings’ making in their various worlds.
Text 2.3:
2.3 Twenty-two letters are formed by the voice, impressed on the air, and audibly uttered in five situations (places): in the throat, guttural sounds (Alef, Chet, Heh, Eyin); in the palate, palatals (Gimel, Yud, Kaf, Kuf); by the tongue, linguals (Dalet, Tet, Lamed, Nun, Tav); through the teeth, dentals (Zayin, Samekh, Shin, Resh, Tzadi); and by the lips, labial sounds (Bet, Vav, Mem, Peh).
Wescott trans. 2.3. These twenty−two sounds or letters are formed by the voice, impressed on the air, and audibly modified in five places; in the throat, in the mouth, by the tongue, through the teeth, and by the lips. (31)[1]
[1]31. This is the modern classification of the letters into guttural, palatal, lingual, dental and labial sounds.
Commentary on 2.3:
Here the passage speaks of oral communication, voice, speech. The movement is from inner to outer, from hidden within the throat, to revealing upon the lips, the audible. Voice is the third action that is mentioned following the creation of the whole (the One God) and the formation of letters (the Logos). The Voice gives rise to creation itself.
The Sefer Yetzirah speaks of five Loves: Keter, Chakmah, Chesed, Tiferet, and Netzach which represent “fullness” as I understand it. The other column represents the five Judgements: Binah, Gevurah, Hod, Yesod, and Malkhut which I call “needs”, but the use of the word “judgement” here indicates the essence of the principle of reason and its site of truth. One could understand “judgement” as “outcome” or “end”. The judgements are sometimes called “Strengths” which can be seen as force or power, the bringing into reality or completion of those urges which we experience in everyday life, those desires which are related to ‘will’, or the potentiality and possibility related to Aristotle’s dynamis brought to completion as energeia or “work”, “works”. This may be related to the natural desire to overcome needs. The desire, the aspiration of thought, and its fulfillment is a “movement” and indicates the combination of being and time.
When inscribed within a sphere and the sphere is then rotated clockwise, fullness is the result. When the sphere is rotated counter-clockwise, evil or need is the result. The Wheel of Fortune #10 is not to be conceived as a two-dimensional circle but rather as a sphere. The following chart relates to the Sephirot’s relation to their position in space within the sphere:
Keter – Malkhut Good -Evil Ethical
Chakmah – Binah Past-Future Time
Chesed – Gevurah South-North Space
Tiferet – Yesod Up-Down Space
Netzach – Hod East-West Space
Text 2.4:
2.4 These twenty-two letters, the foundations, He arranged as on a sphere, with two hundred and thirty-one modes of entrance. If the sphere be rotated forward, good is implied, if in a retrograde manner evil is intended.
Alt. Trans.Twenty-two foundation letters:He placed them in a sphereLike a wall with 231 Gates. The sphere oscillates back and forth.A sign for this is;There is nothing in good higher than DelightThere is nothing evil lower than Plague.
Wescott trans. 2.4. These twenty−two letters, which are the foundation of all things, He arranged as upon a sphere with two hundred and thirty−one gates, and the sphere may be rotated forward or backward, whether for good or for evil;from the good comes true pleasure, from evil nought but torment.
The first chapter of the Sefer Yetzirah speaks of the spiritual realm, the ruler of which is “the heart”. The heart acts like a general in battle in dealing with the strife that is created between the different urges and desires created by the “will” or eros that is the condition of the embodied soul of human beings. The “heart” can act out of “fullness” or “need”. The heart is the Sephirot Tiferet. The human form is a microcosm of the macrocosm that is the created world. One is reminded of the words of the English poet William Blake from his poem “Auguries of Innocence”: “God appears and God is light/ To those poor souls that dwell in night/ But does a human form display/ To those who dwell in realms of day.”
The second chapter of the Sefer Yetzirah deals with Space and Time. In space and time we deal with contraries, the deprivations of the qualities from each other. The sphere is said to oscillate back and forth: fullness and need oscillate within time and the movement is cyclical. Time is cyclical in the Sefer Yetzirah, not linear i.e., going from past to present to future, although this appearance is given in the movement from Chakmah to Binah where the past of Chakmah moves through the present of Keter to the future that is Binah. Oscillation is movement in place. These movements can be illustrated by the motions of a gyre.
The circumference of the circle/sphere is “like a wall” with 231 gates. The mathematical formula for this is: n (n – 1) / 2; 231 = 22 x 21 / 2 gates. The “wall” is the limit imposed on the unlimited, on Necessity. All of our arts and sciences develop from how we know, understand, and deal with Necessity. There are 22 points within the the sphere and the things of the world are brought to appearance within/on the circumference (the horizon). 3 points; 4 points=6 lines; 5 points=10
The number of lines that can connect the 22 letters is 231 which are the paths (letters) and gates of the Sephirot. Two letters can be combined in 231 ways. Each of the combinations is also a triangle: two letters plus the third that is part of “the wall”, one of the mother letters. The 0 is not a number, per se, but a placement indicator. The Egyptians and the Greeks rejected the concept of 0, so a 10 is not a 1 + 0, but a placement that allows the cyclical movement of the numbers to take place. (Knowledge of binomial and binary combinations would be useful here since this is the mathematical language of computers.) In this case, the number and the letter are interchangeable. One can have a 08 as well as an 80. They are not references to quantity but to quality i.e., they are not subjects (nouns), but predicates (adjectives, adverbs).
As has already been indicated, one cannot have number without space since number deals with quantity, and number must have an Other besides the One. The One itself is beyond the second one composed of the triune of Keter, Chakmah, and Binah, which constitute both space and time and these are contained within the sphere of Creation: their end is their beginning so the 1 is in the 10 and the 10 is in the 1. Time gives being to beings in space, and this Time is the moving image of the eternity of the One in its essence. Time is the dynamis (possibility and potentiality) and the kinesis (movement, action) of Life itself.
In the legend of the formation of the Golem, one is to proceed around the circle of the sphere chanting the letters from Alef to Tav; to unmake the Golem, one reverses the direction from Tav to Alef. (There is a correspondence here between the ‘creation’ and the decreation of the human being). The Golem appears to be not only the making of a soulless human being or other animal (since only God can give “soul” to beings since “soul” is eternal like Himself and part of Himself), but also the making of any made thing accomplished through the numbers and the letters.
The Golem would be a general term for the artifacts of man which do not have their origin in Nature: genetic splicing is but one manner of accomplishing the making of a “Golem”; Artificial Intelligence would be another. Cybernetics is but another synonym for the making of the Golem. The Golem appears to be something akin to the voodoo doll or the Orcs and Gollum of Tolkien, yet at the same time the Golem might suggest that through meditation one is able to visualize the “perfect human being”, the beings that are the perfection seen in Greek statues or Da Vinci’s “Vitruvian Man”. Human beings in their being are the perfect imperfection. (The Golem reminds one of the condition of the prisoners of Plato’s Cave being “unconscious” and “soulless”.)
A Christian might see a vision of God as Christ i.e., in the form of man. The goal of the whole of the Sefer Yetzirah is the formation of the “spiritual Golem”. I would suggest that it is rather the attainment of the revelation of the Mediator (Christ) as body or the bringing of the Mediator (Christ) into actual presence or parousia. This is done through the “fullness” and “need” that is Eros. This presents us with a problem, however, if we are Christians. One does not go in search of Christ but rather prepares oneself to be found and received by Him. The sheep does not go in search of the Shepherd; it is the Shepherd’s task to find the sheep. The sheep bleats in order to be found. The bride (the embodied soul, Psyche) prepares herself in order to be received by the bridegroom (the Divine, Eros).
What is confusing about the Sefer Yetzirah is whether there are three or ten Mothers as to their relation to the Hebrew alphabet. The Mothers are the connectors between the paths: two columns, 231 gates. Mem and Shin connect Chakmah and Binah (Alef),Mem and Alef connect Gevurah and Chesed (Shin), and Alef and Shin connect Hod and Yesod (Mem). These crossroads are the points of separation of the three worlds of Asiyah, Yetzirah, and Beriyah. A rebirth, conversion, and a baptism is required to access these different realms. These rebirths are of the “water and of the Spirit”, of the “fire and of the water” or of the Logos (Breath) and of the spirit.
Some Kabbalists include an eleventh Sephirot named Da’at in their composition of the Tree of Life. Da’at is sometimes called “the Void”, but Da’at appears to be the web of Necessity itself, the limit or law which rules over all created things. What we call “knowledge” derives from our understanding of these limits whether in the physical or psychological realms. The two columns of Jakim and Boaz are comprised of these eleven Sephirot twice over i.e., the twenty-two letters of the Hebrew alphabet. The first eleven are said to represent the “front” (the face, the look, the outward appearance of things, what Plato called the eidos). The second eleven are the “back”, the contraries or the deprivations of things. (This would coincide with Eros as two-faced, looking in different directions and in his representation as Fullness and Need). The name “Israel” itself signifies the whole of created things, not what we understand as the state of Israel today.
When the Sefer Yetzirah states that “there is nothing in Good higher than delight”, this can be understood in a similar fashion to the Greek word eudaimonia or “good spirits”, what we understand as “happiness”. The deprivation of happiness is affliction, what is referred to as “plague” in the text of the Sefer Yetzirah. In Hebrew, the word for “delight” is oneg; the word for affliction or “plague” is nega. One obtains the words by rotating the letters back to front.
Simone Weil Spain
The sphere of creation is oscillating, rotating. One must be within the sphere, at the centre, to be unmoved by its oscillations or rotations, and Tiferet is the centre of this sphere, both the height and depth. From the centre, inside, there are no directions, no contraries. Only when one is off-centre, outside, is this perception possible and one is subject to the oscillations or turnings of the wheels upon wheels that are within the sphere itself. (King Lear Act 5 sc. iii and Act 4 sc. vii “But I am bound upon a wheel of fire,/ That mine own tears do scald like molten lead”.). Along the journey, the “dark night of the soul” as experienced by the saints occurs the closer one gets to Keter. They report that there is a complete disconnect with God (Christ’s “Father, why have you forgotten me?”, St. John of the Cross, Simone Weil). Following the dark night, the revelation is received. The dark night would occur at the third crossroads on the upward motion and the first crossroads on the descending motion on the Tree of Life.
Text 2.5:
2.5 For He indeed showed the mode of combination of the letters, each with each, Aleph with all, and all with Aleph. Thus, in combining all together in pairs are produced these two hundred and thirty-one gates of knowledge. And from Nothingness did He make something, and all forms of speech and every created thing, and from the empty void He made the solid earth, and from the non-existent He brought forth Life.He hewed, as it were, immense columns or colossal pillars, out of the intangible air, and from the empty space. And this is the impress of the whole, twenty-one letters, all from one, the Aleph.
Wescott trans. 2.5. For He shewed the combination of these letters, each with the other; Aleph with all, and all with Aleph;Beth with all, and all with Beth. Thus in combining all together in pairs are produced the two hundred and thirty−one gates of knowledge. (32)[1]
See the notes to the Wescott translation below.
Wescott trans. 2.6. And from the non−existent (33)[2] He made Something; and all forms of speech and everything that has beenproduced; from the empty void He made the material world, and from the inert earth He brought forth everything that hath life. He hewed, as it were, vast columns out of the intangible air, and by the power of His Name made every creature and everything that is; and the production of all things from the twenty−two letters is the proof that they are all but parts of one living body. (34)[3]
[1]32. The 231 Gates. The number 242 is obtained by adding together all the numbers from 1 to 22. The Hebrew letters can he placed in pairs in 242 different positions: thus ab, ag, ad, up to at; then ba, bb, bg, bd, up to bt, and so on to ts, tt: this is in direct order only, without reversal. For the reason why eleven are deducted, and the number 231 specified, see the Table and Note 15 in the edition of Postellus.
[2]33. Non−existent; the word is AIN, nothingness. Ain precedes Ain Suph, boundlessness; and Ain Suph Aur, Boundless Light.
[3]34. Body; the word is GUP, usually applied to the animal material body, but here means “one whole.”
Commentary on 2.5:
Passage 2.5 is a summary of all that has been said up to now in the Sefer Yetzirah. The combining together of the pairs of letters produce the 231 gates of knowledge, but all are from the one Alef. The formula for the combinations is n (n – 1) / 2. Within Alef are the three elements of air, fire and water indicating the Pythagorean understanding of numbers as a triune (and the One God as a Trinity). The physical universe, earth, substance, is created from these three elements. “The void” is Chakmah or the unlimited, space without definable limits; it is of the element water. It is no-thing. To make no-thing into some-thing requires the imposition of language and number so that they can be measured and weighed and then named, “the shape of water”. This shaping is called the Beriyah level of the Universe, the creation of something from nothing (Atzilut, Yetzirah, and Asiyah being the other three). Binah and the Beriyah level of creation are simultaneous. “From non-existence (“no-thing”) He brought forth Life” as well as Language, and both occur simultaneously.
“He carved (hewed) immense columns or colossal pillars”: “Wisdom has built its house; it has carved its seven pillars” (Proverbs 9:1) The great pillars of Wisdom are the seven subjects of education, and hence Understanding: grammar, logic, rhetoric (Language), arithmetic, music, geometry, and astronomy (Number). Wisdom is realized through the study of the 7 subjects. The 7 pillars are also said to correspond to the lower 7 Sephirot of created things. The 7 days of the week are the “light of the world”, the reflected light of Malkhut (Time) from the primary light of the Sun of Tiferet. The 7 doubles of the alphabet are the vertical lines of the Tree of Life derived from the three Mothers. The three Mothers are associated with the past, Time. Together they spell out the word “last night”. Understanding is the shared knowledge that we would deem “historical knowledge”, and it is comprised of the 7 pillars of Wisdom; it comes from the past and is part of the communities of which we are members.
The illustration on the left indicates the horizontal lines of Alef, Mem, and Shin. The movement is from right to left on the Tree: from Chakmah to Binah (Shin), from Chesed to Gevurah(Alef) , from Netzach to Hod (Mem).
The One Name of God is YHVH: tetra (four), gramma (letters) or Tetragrammaton. The whole of language and number is said to develop from the combinations made through this name. The name invokes the shape of Alef: two Yods with a Vav as a diagonal barrier between them.
In the passage, the initiate “foresees, transforms and makes”. To “foresee” is to “pre-dict”; to “transform” is to change in order to “make” – pro-duction. The forming and making in the realm of Yetzirah and Asiyah is what we understand as the “technological”, the “knowing” and “making”. What is implied in human making is that the human bringing into being of things is that those things were always already there and that the human being merely reveals that which is part of “every thing that will ever come into being”. The Balinese, for example, celebrate their Honda motorcycles as ‘a gift from the god’. Honda did not ‘create’ the motorcycles; they were always already there and Honda merely revealed them and made them.
Human beings make from “another”; Nature makes from itself. The human being does not create; he “makes” from the seeing (foreseeing, pre-diction), the arranging (transforming), and the production or bringing forth into being or revealing that which was always there. (From this one could say that J. R. R. Tolkien is literally correct in saying that technology is “black magic”! In the past, permission was required from on High to make an actual physical Golem, but that does not seem to have stopped modern day scientists. Note the similarities of the words Golem and Tolkien’s Gollum. The ‘eye of Sauron’ and the techne of Saruman would appear to be the seeing that is the technological.)
1.2 Ten are the numbers, as are the Sephiroth, and twenty-two the letters; these are the Foundation of all things. Of these letters, three are mothers, seven are double, and twelve are simple. (This translation of the Sefer Yetzirah is from Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan’s excellent text which can be found here: https://books.google.co.id/books/about/Sefer_Yetzirah.html?id=aqc-61vr4q0C&redir_esc=y )
Alt. Trans. Ten are the numbers, as are the Sephiroth, and twenty-two the letters, these are the Foundation of all things. Of these letters, three are mothers, seven are double, and twelve are simple.
Wescott Trans: 1.2. Ten are the ineffable Sephiroth. (9) Twenty−two are the Letters, the Foundation of all things; there are Three Mothers, Seven Double and Twelve (10) Simple letters.
Wescott Notes:
9. The Ineffable Sephiroth. The words are SPIRUT BLIMH, Sephiruth Belimah. The simplest translation is “the voices from nothing.” The Ten Sephiruth of the Kabalah are the “Ten Primary Emanations from the Divine Source,” which are the primal forces leading to all manifestation upon every plane in succession. Buxtorf gives for Sephiruth−−predicationes logicae. The word seems to me clearly allied to the Latin spiritus−−spirit, soul, wind; and is used by Quintilian as a sound, or noise. The meaning of Belimah is more doubtful. Rittangelius always gives “praeter illud ineffabile.” Pistorius gives “praeter ineffabile.” Postellus evades the difficulty and simply puts the word Belimah into his Latin translation. In Frey’s Hebrew Dictionary BLIMH is translated as nothing, without any other suggestion; BLI is “not,” MR is “anything.” In Kabalistic writings the Sephiruth, the Divine Voices and Powers, are called “ineffbilis,” not to be spoken of, from their sacred nature.
10. The classification of the Hebrew letters into a Triad, Heptad and Dodecad, runs through the whole philosophy of the Kabalah. Many ancient authors added intentional blinds, such as forming the Triad of A.M.T., Ameth, truth; and of AMN, Amen.
Commentary:
The Sephirot are not actual numbers but are the source of the numbers: that is, they are the source of the logos or, more properly, the logos itself. Sephirah means “counting” (or “counting on”). We “count” and “count on” the physical universe to ensure us that our knowledge of it is true knowledge. We begin to count with the fingers of our hands. We ‘count on’ those things that are ready-to-hand, things that we can touch and manipulate. Numbers are one of the ways in which we view, interpret and encounter things. Just as we view and de-fine things through words, we can also do so through numbers.
Number is not possible without the space and time of the physical universe for number must express itself in quantity and there is no quantity in one. Wisdom (Chakmah) and Understanding (Binah) lead to Knowledge, and Knowledge and Understanding lead to Wisdom. Wisdom is said to have 7 pillars which are the 7 subject or knowledge areas of study, “the seven pillars of wisdom”. Knowledge is the product of Understanding and Understanding is prior to knowledge. The link between Wisdom and Understanding is the Word, or the letters, and the link between Understanding and knowledge is also the Word which imposes limits on things and makes them particulars. We understand, for instance, the plant-like of the plant and the animal-like of the animal before we have knowledge of the particular plants or particular animals and through speech can name them and can point them out to others.
Space is prior to Time and the Sephirot are sometimes referred to as “the 10 Sephirot of No-thingness (space)”, the Ain. I write “no-thing” to distinguish it from the nihil which is our common understanding of the nothing. It is with Time that things come into being; and according to the Sefer Yetzirah, things come into being through the three books of text, number and speech which are mediaries between Wisdom and Understanding. Knowledge and Understanding must also be linked through the Word. Through the “naming” of things, things are given their place (topos in Greek) in space and so can be talked about. The world and its experiences and contexts that have been created is to be interpreted as “text”. We read the world or worlds in which we live.
The lines in the Tree of Life total 22: 3 horizontal, 7 vertical and 12 diagonals corresponding to the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet. The 3 horizontals are called Mothers, the 7 verticals are called Fathers, and the 12 diagonals are called Simples. It is through the letters that the universe was created and they are called the 22 Foundation letters. It is through the letters that we come to understand and know the world.
The letters are not only involved in the inception of the world but they also sustain it. It is through text, number, and speech that the world is sustained and, as such, it is through human beings that “the way, the truth and the life” is sustained in the world since human beings are the only beings capable of speech. If one knows how to manipulate the letters correctly, one then knows how to manipulate the elemental forces and things of creation through the principle of reason. This relates to what the Greeks understood as techne, a knowing that involves a making (and what our word “technology” means today, and what is understood as yetzirah or “formation” in the text). This knowing and making is what artists and scientists do. This is but one side of the knowing that is present in the Sefer Yetzirah.
The three primary letters of the Kabbalah are א Alef (Ox), מ Mem (water) and ש Shin (tooth); and these are called the Three Mothers. They are the horizontal lines highlighted in red in the illustration on the left. Alef is the first letter of the Hebrew alphabet, Mem is the middle letter, and Shin is the second to last. The last letter (Tav) is not used because it is one of the Doubles (and thus would seem to imply a choice). The Doubles are illustrated in blue.
The three Mother letters are called “crossroads” because they are horizontal lines and cross over to the other side of the Tree of Life from left to right when viewed from the ascending motion or from the bottom up. They move from right to left when viewed in the descending motion, from top to bottom. (Notice that the Sephirot of Chesed and Gevurah are linked by the letter Alef which has passed through Tiferet initially. Chesed is Loving Kindness or Mercy, while Gevurah is Severity or Force. Chesed is what we understand by manifest Nature while Gevurah is what we understand by Convention. Tiferet is Beauty, and the letter Alef is in the centre of its name. It is the fire that is symbolized as the Sun. More will be said about this later.)
The twelve Simples or Elementals are illustrated in green and they are the diagonal channels of movement within the Tree of Life which are the netivot or private paths that one must traverse before one is able to ascend the Tree of Life.
The Sefer Yetzirah: 1:3
1.3 The ten numbers formed from no-thing are the Decad: these are seen in the fingers of the hands, five on one, five on the other, and over them (precisely in the middle) is the Covenant by voice spiritual (the Circumcision of the tongue), and the rite of Circumcision corporeal (as of Abraham).
Alt. Trans. The ten numbers formed from no-thing are the Decad: these are seen in the fingers of the hands, five on one, five on the other, and over them is the Covenant by voice spiritual, and the rite of Circumcision, corporeal (as of Abraham).
Wescott Trans: 1.3. The ineffable Sephiroth are Ten, as are the Numbers; and as there are in man five fingers over against five, so over them is established a covenant of strength, by word of mouth, and by the circumcision of the flesh. (11)
Wescott’s Notes;
11. The Two Covenants, by the Word or Spirit, and by the Flesh, made by Jehovah with Abraham, Genesis xvii. The Covenant of Circumcision was to be an outward and visible sign of the Divine promise made to Abraham and his offspring. The Hebrew word for circumcision is Mulah, MULH: note that MLH is also synonymous with DBR, dabar,−−verbum or word.
Commentary 1:3
While one has the plan for formation, for making something, through the understanding (the covenant of the spiritual or invisible word or voice), the formation itself occurs through the work of the hands. The covenant of the spiritual or voice is what we call “intelligence” or “consciousness”. The making of things occurs through the use of the ready-to-hand of the material things about us. Understanding is comprised of dianoic thought (the thought the brings or gathers separate things together into a unity or a one i.e. the logos) and diaretic thought (the thought that separates things to distinguish them from other things, how we classify things through our taxonomies). The manner of the seeing or how this covenant is interpreted or heard will determine whether one views the creation first through Love (Tiferet/Chesed) or whether one views the creation through Will (Gevurah/Tiferet), and this distinction is essential. These are the two faces of Eros and of the Logos.
The influence of the Pythagoreans on the Sefer Yetzirah can be seen in Aristotle’s, Metaphysics, I.5.986 a22, where he says: “Members of this school [the Pythagoreans] say there are ten principles, which they arrange into two columns of cognates (the pillars of Jakim and Boaz in the Tree of Life), thus: limited and unlimited, odd and even, one and many, right and left, male and female, rest and movement, straight and curved, light and darkness, good and bad, square and oblong.” The ten principles of the Pythagoreans correspond to the 10 Sephirot of the Kabbalah’s Tree of Life.
One of the puzzling things about the Tree of Life is the basic sense of direction given to it: do we determine the right and left from our perspective or should the Tree of Life be viewed in a mirror or from its own perspective which would reverse the directions given to it? I am puzzled because I am wondering how we can attribute Love (Chesed) as a Masculine principle (Aphrodite/Venus is female and the surroundings of The Emperor #4 card in Tarot are sterile i.e., they have no living nature about them) and the Masculine is placed on the right-hand side of the Tree which contains the five Loves, while Strength/Force/Will are attributed to the Feminine aspects and placed on the left side of the Tree of Life and are called the five Strengths? I will attempt to make sense of this puzzle as I proceed with this commentary.)
A covenant comes between two separate, unequal parts and holds them or yokes them together in a harmony; it makes them commensurate to each other. The covenant of the Spiritual Circumcision is the Parousia of God, the “being alongside”, “between”, “among”, that is the relation of God to His creation. The covenant is “the Lamb slain from the foundation of the Earth” for Christians, and the Ten Commandments of God or the Torah for the Hebrews. For the Hebrews, truth is revealed as Law; for Christians, truth is revealed as Being. The middle pillar of the Tree of Life is the place of the covenant. (This could be represented pictorially in the form of a cross as two diameters of a circle or sphere crossing in the centre).
In the Hebrew, the “circumcision of the tongue” is fluency in speech i.e., the highest speech, “prophecy”, the ability to pre-dict. We consider science as our “highest speech” because of its ability to predict outcomes and so we, currently, “bow down to” science. This fluency of speech is a gift through the mediation or parousia of God in His creation. Without this presence, we would know nothing. The two Cherubim on the Ark of the Covenant were said to be the source of all prophecy, but God is the third who speaks through the Cherubim who are the mediators: “There I will meet with you, and from above the mercy seat (Jakim, the ark cover), from between the two cherubim which are upon the ark of the testimony I will speak with you”. (Exodus 25:22) The two Cherubim on the Ark represent the two faces of Logos and Eros. When the Cherubim were removed from the Ark with the destruction of the First Temple, prophecy is said to have ceased to exist.
The circumcision of the sexual organ is the recognition that one can be empowered to have control over the urges that create strife in the human body and soul, one of the most dominant being the sexual urge. (This could be seen as an example for justifying the Strength card as #8 in Tarot since this is the step beyond the Chariot card and the strife between the two sphinxes represented in that card. The figure’s easily closing the jaws of the lion representing the passions would suggest this. The Justice card, however, suggests the need for control on the social plane, the higher demand to be just to each human being. It is the urges, the needs, that we have which create injustice in human relations. But they also create Justice…The Tree of Life seems to suggest that the individual is on the right side and the social is on the left side and there is the constant crossing over via the paths.)
The two covenants spoken about here would suggest the two faces of Eros and the Logos, the voice and the flesh, the spirit and the body, which shall be discussed in more detail as we proceed further into the texts of the Sefer Yetzirah and “The Thirty-two Paths of Wisdom”.
The Sefer yetzirah 1:4
1.4 Ten are the numbers of the ineffable Sephiroth, ten and not nine, ten and not eleven. Learn this wisdom, and be wise in the understanding of it, investigate these numbers, and draw knowledge from them, fix the design in its purity (“make each thing come to stand in its essence”), and pass from it to its Creator seated on his throne.
Alt. Trans. Ten are the numbers of the ineffable Sephiroth, ten and not nine, ten and not eleven. Learn this wisdom, and be wise in the understanding of it, investigate these numbers, and draw knowledge from them, fix the design in its purity, and pass from it to its Creator seated on his throne.
Wescott Trans: 1.4. Ten is the number of the ineffable Sephiroth, ten and not nine, ten and not eleven. Understand this wisdom, and be wise by the perception. Search out concerning it, restore the Word to its creator, and replace Him who formed it upon his throne. (12)
Wescott’s Notes:
12. Rittangelius gives “replace the formative power upon his throne.” Postellus gives “restore the device to its place.”
Commentary 1:4
Was God’s creation an act of will or an act of love? God in His withdrawal, His allowing something to be other than Himself, provides us with the perfect path or example for our own existence. (As the French philosopher, Simone Weil, once said: “If we forgive God for not existing, He will forgive us for existing”.) Is the withdrawal of the great artist from his work an act of will or an act of love? The artist can choose to withdraw or not; the artist can choose to bring forth that which inspires her or not. The common view is that it is an act of will rather than an act of love which brings forth great art; but an artist who withdraws through the will does not produce ‘great art’.
Both God and the Sephirot are “ineffable” and cannot be described through the use of language. But to see God as pure Will moves too close to Nietzsche for my liking (the eternal recurrence of the Same). The Sephirot are emanations of God and are, therefore, used to describe God. But God is beyond the Sephirot (Plato: “The Good is beyond Being”), just as the rose itself is beyond the emanation of its odour. The Sephirot themselves are inadequate representations of the Good. We could equate them with the “ideas” of Plato.
The Sephirot are one of the ways used to attempt to describe God, ways that human beings can comprehend the qualities of God or the predicates of God. All cultures attempt to describe God with the things that are ready-to-hand for them. God is One and ineffable. The attempts to proselytize the “true religion” without first learning the nature of the religion of those that one is attempting to convince that it is the “true religion” is akin to madness, an error and misunderstanding of the directive to “Go forth and make disciples of all nations”. A “disciple” is a “friend”, one with whom one can engage in friendly conversation i.e., dialectic. The proselytizing spirit should have been an exercise in communication and unification but, unfortunately, it was not. It became, and remains in most cases, an exercise in power, an exercise in evil.
This passage of the Sefir Yetzirah deals with the first three Sephirot: Keter, Chakmah, and Binah: The Crown, Wisdom, and Understanding. As discussed earlier, Wisdom is knowledge of the whole, which is difficult if not impossible to attain since we ourselves are part of the whole; however, this does not deter the quest for such knowledge, and as long as there are human beings, such a quest will continue.
Understanding precedes knowledge in that understanding is the sensory awareness of the presence-at-hand of things as well as their possible readiness-to-hand for ends that we determine. To make things stand in their essence is to reveal them in their truth. From this revealing of things in their truth, one passes from them to their Creator. One examines all things and determines which Sephirot relates to them (“Examine with them”). “Probe from them”: the Sephirot are not contemplated in themselves but are used to develop an insight into the things of the world. (Plato’s ideas are numbers, but they are not the numbers of arithmos or calculation. One uses them to gain knowledge of the things of the world and to recognize the things as “shadows”.) This “probing” brings a thing to a stand so that it will step forth and show itself as a “this” and not “that”. To let a thing be in its essence is to go beyond viewing the thing as something which is of possible use for our ends.
Here is thought understood as dianoia and diaresis, with knowledge as the outcome. The Sephirot themselves are reached through the “paths of Wisdom”; the paths are the “pure design” which is the product of Understanding (the limits placed on the Unlimited). The “design” is the Law of Necessity. The “examining” of things with the Sephirot is the determination of how the things in their essence belong to, or are possessed by, the Sephirot to which they belong or are possessed. The “probing” of things is the determining of the essence of the thing, the determining of the truth of the thing and the revealing of the thing for what the thing really is. This revealing “elevates” the thing from the shadows into its true reality. Examining and probing are part of questioning. This elevating of the thing is the “restoring” of the original Word to its Creator. We participate in the creation of the world by decreating ourselves by mirroring God’s act of withdrawal.
The four universes of the Sefer Yetzirah are: 1. Atzilut (Nearness, Emanation, the parousia of the Divine); Content: Sephirot; Level: No-thingness; 2. Beriyah (Creation); Content: the Throne (the Creation itself as the “lowering” of God, and the vehicle through which He expresses His care and concern through the Beauty of the world); Level: Something from No-thing, ex nihilo; the Sephirot of ‘no-thingness’; 3. Yetzirah (Formation); Content: Angels/Cherubim, products of the spirit, mediators; Level: Something from Something, “in another for another”; 4. Asiyah (Making, Action); Content: Shadows of the physical; Level: Completion (the work, the artifact, from dynamis potential to energeia the completed work). More will be said about the four universes later.
The Sefer Yetzirah 1:5
1.5 These Ten Numbers, (beyond which is the Infinite one), have the boundless realms, boundless origin and end, an abyss of good and one of evil, boundless height and depth, East and West, North and South, and the one only God and king, faithful forever seated on his throne, shall rule over all, forever and ever.
Alt. Trans. These Ten Numbers, beyond the Infinite one, have the boundless realms, boundlessorigin and end, an abyss of good and one of evil, boundless height and depth, East and West, North and South, and the one only God and king, faithful forever seated on his throne, shall rule over all, forever and ever.
Wescott Trans: 1.5. The Ten ineffable Sephiroth have ten vast regions bound unto them; boundless in origin and having no ending; an abyss (13) of good and of ill; measureless height and depth; boundless to the East and the West; boundless to the North and South; (14) and the Lord the only God, (15) the Faithful King rules all these from his holy seat, (16) for ever and ever.
Wescott Notes:
13. Abyss; the word is OUMQ for OMQ, a depth, vastness, or valley.
14. My (Case’s) Hermetic rituals explained this Yetziratic attribution.
15. The Lord the only God. The words are ADUN IChID AL, or “Adonai (as commonly written) the only El.”
16. Seat. The word is MOUN, dwelling, habitation, or throne.
Commentary 1:5
The text here deals with Space. God, the infinite One, is the “Former” (Yotzer), “the one who forms”. He is the Demiourgos of Plato’s Timaeus. The distinction between “formation” and “creation” is important. Here, the formation occurs within that which is boundless. The boundless is the “unlimited”, designated as the water of Chakmah, the khora of Plato’s Timaeus, that which is given limits so that it may be de-fined (“of the limits”) and designated as a particular thing. It is given shape. The boundless is given its limits through language and number, and it is through language and number that things come to stand as ousia, as presence in their particularity in the Now of Time. God as the Former is the Logos of the Greeks (“It is through Him that all that is comes into being, and nothing comes into being except through Him”. John 1: 1-5)
The three lower universes align with the ideas of “to create” (Beriyah), “to form” (Yetzirah), and “to make” (Asiyah). “Wisdom” is to create, “Understanding” is to form, and “knowledge” is to make. The making implies the completion of an action, the pro-duction of a thing such that the thing requires no further action and is complete; it is “perfect” in its emergence into presence.
The Sephirot #9 Yesod has connotations with “binding” and “connecting” and connects the physical world to the world of Yetzirah or the world of the formation which is associated with the angels or mediators, the daemons, and the human soul is considered one of these. It is through the mediation of the angels that the physical world is elevated or lifted up and restored to its Creator. The physical world is “brought to a stand” i.e., elevated, through the use of language and number. This is the covenant of speech. That Yesod is also associated with the sexual organs indicates its relation to the covenant of the flesh, circumcision.
(This is how the Magician #1 card of the Tarot is to be understood: he is not Keter or #1, but rather Malkhut #10. Through the formation of the ready-to-hand physical things of the world (the cups, wands, pentacles, swords), he elevates these things to the level of Yetzirah or “formation” through the mediation of Yesod which is the foundation, or base, of the physical world, what we understand as “metaphysics”. Yesod requires and is associated with sense perception and will (the sexual organ, the “lower” associations with Eros), and these are the initial “mediators” between the soul and the physical world.)
Space, within which the Tree of Life rests, is not a two-dimensional circle but a sphere. The sphere is divided into a five-dimensional continuum. Space is prior to Time, and Time as well as number begins with the being of created things, the physis of the world, its materiality. The infinite One (the Good) is beyond both space and time. The boundaries of space, the limits, are the realm of Necessity. They are indicated by the 10 directions within which space is given.
Three dimensions are “up/down”, “north/south”, “east/west”, and these three dimensions are further defined by the six directions of World as outlined. The Time continuum is defined by two directions, past and future, or beginning and end. This is called “year” and is the fourth dimension. The fifth dimension is the spiritual dimension and is defined by good and evil, and this is called “soul”.
To illustrate these dimensions within the sphere of space using the Tree of Life: 1. Beginning (Chakmah/Wisdom)/ End (Binah/ Understanding); 2. Good (Keter/Crown)/ Evil (Malkhut/Kingship); 3. Up (Netzach/Victory)/ Down (Hod/Splendour); 4. North (Gevurah/Strength)/ South (Chesed/Love); 5. East (Tiferet/Beauty)/ West (Yesod/Foundation).
God, called Elohim, creates the world with 10 sayings or speeches, which is the understanding. (Elohim is the Christ, the Logos, of St. John, but he is not limited to this manifestation only. He could also be considered to be Krishna or any other of the possible names that human beings have come to understand Him in their being-in-the-world). Wisdom as beginning represents the past. Memory is hidden, concealed until it is revealed or re-collected through the understanding (in words or images). The mediation of Wisdom (past) and Understanding (future) conceived as Time is the present. (“The future comes to meet us from behind” as the Greeks would say.) It is in and through Time that things come to be. Wisdom is the no-thing of Being which becomes the some-thing through understanding, through speech and number.
The centre line of the Tree of Life from Keter to Malkhut is called the “Tree of Knowledge”. On a two-dimensional plane, Keter is seen as closest to God while Malkhut is farthest. This is the traditional way of viewing the creation. The centre line is composed of 4 Sephirot: Keter (Good), Tiferet (Beauty), Yesod (Foundation), and Malkhut (Kingdom). (In The Lovers #6 tarot card, Adam stands before the Tree of Life while Eve stands before the Tree of Knowledge, if one wishes to interpret the figures in this way). In the direction of the descent, the Good proceeds to Beauty which provides the Foundation for Kingdom. When the direction is as ascent, Kingdom is the deprivation of the understanding to seeing the Foundation as the manifestation of the Beautiful and the Good.
Since World is a sphere (an infinite sphere? A sempiternal sphere?), the speaking of up and down as far as directions does not make sense. The Sefer Yetzirah speaks of depths. There is a great depth, a chasm, separating the Necessary from the Good. The depths are the “deprivations” of things. The depths are the “need” of things to realize their true substance and to come to their true essence which is their perfection. This possibility of perfection is always present within them. The human being is the ‘perfect imperfection’. Something is absent, missing. For something to meet these needs, a great depth must be crossed. The crossing is done in a series of steps or leaps. (What was understood as Jacob’s Ladder) For God to answer prayers, a great depth must be crossed, the whole of the created World itself, for God Himself is unaffected by His creation. He is beyond both Space and Time. Given what we know about the deep immensities of space, this crossing is not easily accomplished.
What will be shown in this writing is how the letters and the paths associated with the Sephirot of the Kabbalah correspond to the 22 Major Arcana of the Tarot. The emanations of the Sephirot correspond to the symbols and images presented in the cards; that is, the objects and situations that we encounter within our worlds correspond in their true natures to the numbers and images “revealed” in the cards when interpreted correctly. “Interpretation” involves attention, contemplation and reflection. An “emanation” emanates from a source. An emanation is not an expansion of the source but a withdrawal of the source to allow the emanation to be just as, paradoxically, the perfume of a rose is made possible by the rose’s withdrawal and yet is at the same time a stepping forward of the rose itself to manifest its being as a sign of its presence. The presence involves an absence and a hiddenness at the same time.
The Tarot cards, composed of letters and numbers, are intermediaries between the individual and the world we live in. They are what we understand as art. They are tools or equipment to assist in the overcoming of the distinction between mind/body, soul/body, and the self/world. All that is known (the Greek word gnosis) is brought to presence through language and number, or through Word.
Movement is Life. As illustrated through the Tree of Life, movement, kinesis, begins at 1. the Crown (Keter) and flows to 2. Wisdom (Chakmah), then to 3. Understanding (Binah), through to 4. Loving Kindness (Chesed), then to 5. Strength or Force, Power (Gevurah), through to 6. Beauty (Tiferet), then to 7. Victory (Netzach), then to 8. Empathy, Mercy (Hod), from there to 9. Foundation (Yesod), and finally to 10. Kingdom or Sovereignty (Malkhut). The movement is from right to left or East to West. All the Sephirot pass or are channeled through #6 Beauty (Tiferet) with the exception of #10 Kingdom (Malkhut). This is the movement from top to bottom, from the heavens to the earth, or the direction of the primal creation. The movement upwards involves depth, while the movement downwards tends towards the surfaces or the outward appearances of things; and the further one moves down, the further one is away from the reality of things.
A most important point to note is that the creation of the world is not an “expansion” from God but a withdrawal of God. In making the universe, God allows something other than Himself to be and yet, paradoxically, it is at the same time Him since He is One and the Whole. This Otherness and withdrawal of God signifies both His presence and His absence in His creation just as the presence and absence of the rose is revealed by its perfume.
Text of the Sefir Yetzirah with Commentary:
This is a highly recommended text.
The Sefer Yetzirah is written in poetry because philosophy is more akin to poetry than to history, which is more akin to prose. Its narrative is a mythos, a story of the God and His Creation. The exercises and statements made in the text are akin to philosophy for they are attempts to answer the questions of Being and of coming-into-being: the how, what, who, where, when and why of created things. In traditional philosophy this is what is called metaphysics.
The translations here render the original poetry of the Hebrew into current modern English prose. As with all translation, something is lost, but something may also be gained by examining the texts closely. There are many versions of the Sefer Yetzirah, with many additions and retractions occurring throughout the ages. The versions here are an attempt to provide a readable translation through an amalgam of the many versions available. Three different translations are provided here.
1.1 In thirty-two mystical paths of wisdom did JAH the Lord of Hosts engrave his name: God of the armies (hosts) of Israel, ever-living God, merciful and gracious, sublime, dwelling on high, who inhabits eternity. He created this universe by the three Sepharim: Number, Writing, and Speech. (The translation used here is from Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan's Sefer Yetzirah: The Book of Formation which can be found here. This book is highly recommended.
Alt. Trans.: In two and thirty most occult and wonderful paths of wisdom did JAH the Lord of Hosts engrave his name: God of the armies of Israel, ever-living God, merciful and gracious, sublime, dwelling on high, who inhabiteth eternity. He created this universe by the three Sepharim: Number, Writing, and Speech.
Wescott Trans: . In thirty−two (1) mysterious Paths of Wisdom did Jah, (2) the Jehovah of hosts, (3) the God of Israel, (4) the Living Elohim, (5) the King of ages, the merciful and gracious God, (6) the Exalted One, the Dweller in eternity, most high and holy−−engrave his name by the three Sepharim (7) −−Numbers, Letters, and Sounds.(8)
Wescott NOTES TO THE SEPHER YETZIRAH CHAPTER ONE
(These notes are provided as an appendum to the Wescott translation and may provide some perspective on how the text was translated.)
The twelve sections of this chapter introduce this philosophic disquisition upon the Formation and Development of the Universe. Having specified the subdivision of the letters into three classes, the Triad, the Heptad, and the Dodecad, these are put aside for the time; and the Decad mainly considered as specially associated with the idea of Number, and as obviously composed of the Tetrad and the Hexad.
1. Thirty−two. This is the number of the Paths or Ways of Wisdom, which are added as a supplement. 32 is written in Hebrew by LB, Lamed and Beth, and these are the last and first letters of the Pentateuch. The number 32 is obtained thus−−2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2=32. Laib, LB as a Hebrew word, means the Heart of Man. Paths. The word here is NTIBUT, netibuth; NTIB meant primarily a pathway, or foot−made track; but is here used symbolically in the same sense as the Christian uses the word, way−−the way of life: other meanings are−−stage, power, form, effect; and later, a doctrinal formula, in Kabalistic writings.
2. Jah. This divine name is found in Psalm lxviii. 4; it is translated into Greek as kurios, and into Latin as dominus , and commonly into the English word, Lord: it is really the first half of the word IHVH or Jehovah, or the Yahveh of modern scholars.
3. Jehovah Tzabaoth. This divine name is printed in English Bibles as Jehovah Sabaoth, or as “Lord of hosts” as in Psalm xxiv. 10. TzBA is an army.
4. God of Israel. Here the word God is ALHI, which in unpointed Hebrew might be God, or Gods, or My God.
5. The Elohim of the Living. The words are ALHIM ChIIM. Alhim, often written in English letters as Elohim, or by Godftey Higgins as Aleim, seems to be a masculine plural of the feminine form Eloah, ALH, of the divine masculine name EL, AL; this is commonly translated God, and means strong, mighty, supreme. Chiim is the plural of Chi−−living, or life. ChIH is a living animal, and so is ChIVA. ChII is also life. Frey in his dictionary gives ChIIM as the plural word lives, or vitae. The true adjective for living is ChIA. Elohim Chiim, then, apart from Jewish or Christian preconception, is “the living Gods,” or “the Gods of the lives, i.e., living ones.” Rittangelius gives Dii viventes, “The living Gods,” both words in the plural. Pistorius omits both words. Postellus, the orthodox, gives Deus Vivus. The Elohim are the Seven Forces, proceeding from the One Divine, which control the “terra viventium,” the manifested world of life.
6. God. In this case we have the simple form AL, EL.
7. Sepharim. SPRIM, the plural masculine of SPR, commonly translated book or letter: the meaning here is plainly “forms of expression.”
8. Numbers, Letters and Sounds. The three Hebrew words here given are, in unpointed Hebrew, SPR, SPR and SIPUR. Some late editors, to cover the difficulty of this passage, have given SPR, SPUR, SIPR, pointing them to read Separ, Seepur, Saypar. The sense of the whole volume appears to need their translation as Numbers, Letters and Sounds. Pistorius gave “Scriptis, numeratis, pronunciatis.” Postellus gave “Numerans, numerus, numeratus,” thus losing the contrasted meanings; and so did Rittangelius, who gave “Numero, numerante, numerato.”
Comments on the Text: 1.1
The 32 paths indicated in the Kabbalah are the ten digits of one’s hands and the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet. The quantities of things, the physical or material things, are calculated and expressed by number and these are what can be counted on and grasped by the hands, the ready-to-hand things. The qualities of things, the categories we use to describe things, are expressed by language, words formed out of letters. Numbers require plurality and only come into existence with the creation of the physical universe, with space and time. The numbers begin at 4; i.e., the Trinity of God as One and Three, and the physical matter of creation at 4. The Sephirot define the numbers because they first came into creation as emanations of God. All numbers are contained in the Ten, and all Ten are contained in the One and all are emanations of the One.
The 32 paths are the number of times God’s name, Elohim, is mentioned in the account of creation in the Book of Genesis. “God said” appears 10 times i.e., the ten Sephirot starting with “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” Elohim is a plural and so is not actually God Himself. The figure of Elohim shares many of the same characteristics as the figure of Eros, and there is a clear connection between Eros and the Logos or the “sayings of God”.
The other 22 times are the 3 where “God made”, (the three Mother letters of the Sephirot Alef, Mem, Shin which indicate the 4 universes comprising the whole: Atzilut, Beriyah, Yetzirah, and Asiyah and the bridging of those worlds: God Himself, being the first, etc.), the 7 references referring to “God saw”, and the 12 other references of Elohim referring to the remaining 12 letters of the alphabet.
The 32 paths are the channels through which “spirit” (understood as the element of Air, and in other places referred to as Mind or Intellect) influences the body and all physical matter; and for human beings all these channels must go through the heart. The channels operate both ways: up and down, spirit or mind influencing the heart and the heart influencing the spirit or mind. The heart is the causal link between the mind/body and it is connected to the Life force. In the passage from St. John the Evangelist, “In Him life was, and this life was the light of human beings” indicates that truth is not some intellectual abstraction but is the actual or authentic way of human beings’ being-in-the-world. The Sefer Yetzirah calls the heart “the king over the soul”, the soul being the kingdom over which the heart rules. It is the heart which establishes the mood of care/concern for those things which have come to be meaningful for us as human beings.
The number 32 is also 25 indicating that there are 5 dimensions to the visible universe. The visible universe is like an onion or a babushka doll whose layers conceal the hidden mystery within. The 32 paths are referred to as Nativ in the Sefer Yetzirah which means a “private” not a “public” path. Each individual must traverse these paths on their own. The means of ascent or descent along the Tree of Life is through 231 Gates with each Gate bearing a “threshold guardian” of some type (one must assume). Understanding what the nature of these threshold guardians is is very important in travelling along the paths. A teacher for example, if he or she is a proper teacher, is a threshold guardian along one of life’s paths.
The paths are said to be “mystical”. In Hebrew the word mystical (peliyot) has connotations of being hidden, separated from the world at large, “occult”. One can see a relation to this hiddenness from the Greek word aletheia which means “to unconceal”, “to reveal”, “to remove from forgetfulness”, ” to make unhidden” and aletheia is the Greek word for “truth”. The human being as a human being and to be an authentic human being is called upon to reveal truth, and the revealing of truth brings one into strife with that which is hidden and with those who would wish it to remain hidden. This is the primary conflict between the individual and the collective. It is the political conflict.
The 32 paths are said to be the paths to/of “wisdom”. “Wisdom” is said to be knowledge of the whole, the One. The Greek word for this knowledge is gnosis. Wisdom is the knowledge of the Same, that which goes beyond the knowledge of the particulars that compose the physical world. “Wisdom” includes what the Greeks understood as phronesis or “wise judgement”, and wise judgement was understood as one of the four virtues or “human excellences” that lead to happiness. Wisdom is also the seeing of unity in the diversity of particular things. It is seeing the tree that is present in all trees whether oak, elm, or beech. It is also to recognize the deprivations of those things that exist, such as Evil, from their fullness, which is the Good. The Wise are able to see Time in its wholeness and can comprehend past, present and future simultaneously. The whole of the Sefer Yetzirah is an attempt to see the unity amidst the diversity of the things that are in space and time. Those who are able to see the whole are “prophets”. The woman presented in the Tarot card “The World” is a prophetess.
We mentioned that Elohim is God’s name used 32 times in Genesis and this corresponds to the 32 paths that lead to Wisdom. The state of Wisdom is the second Sephirot of the Tree of Life, Chakmah. The third Sephirot is Binah, or Understanding, which is knowledge of particulars. This knowledge of particulars corresponds to our apprehension of the particular objects about us and their possible uses for us.
Elohim is a plural in Hebrew and corresponds, I think, to the Trinity that is present prior to the creation of the physical universe, the Trinity that must be present for the universe to be. Understanding is that knowledge which places the limits on the unlimited, what allows particular objects to come to presence for us. To place limits on is to “de-fine”, and it is this defining of things, of what they are, that allows the things to come to presence and be visible to us as the things they are. They are given boundaries and framing. This “defining” is accomplished through language and number, what we have historically come to call metaphysics. Wisdom itself is beyond language and number. Wisdom is associated with the element water, while Understanding is associated with the elements of Air and Fire. Wisdom is associated with emotions/heart, while Understanding is associated with mind/intellect. How these contraries are connected and brought into harmony is the core of the teaching of the Sefer Yetzirah. It is the understanding of the two faces of the Logos and of Eros.
Wisdom is seen as thought thinking thought, pure thought, the same concept as Aristotle’s understanding of God, the Unmoved Mover or the Uncaused Cause. The concept of thought without words, numbers or images is beyond me, unless it is simply thought as the Life-force itself i.e., thought as pure possibility or potentiality, dynamis. This would suggest that the “cause” of the life force itself is the element air in combination with fire and water. Wisdom would be simple unity, harmony. In Plato’s dialogue Timaeus, she is the khôra or receptacle of all: “So likewise it is right that the substance which is to be fitted to receive frequently over its whole extent the copies of all things intelligible and eternal should itself, of its own nature, be void of all the forms. Wherefore, let us not speak of her that is the Mother and Receptacle of this generated world, which is perceptible by sight and all the senses, by the name of earth or air or fire or water, or any aggregates or constituents thereof: rather, if we describe her as a Kind invisible and unshaped, all-receptive, and in some most perplexing and most baffling partaking of the intelligible, we shall describe her truly.”— Plato, Timaeus, 51a. Here, Plato sees the relation between Wisdom and Understanding, or the Sephirot Chakmah and Binah, as most “baffling” and “perplexing”. The word “intelligible” is one that will come under much discussion and scrutiny as we move through this interpretation of the Sefer Yetzirah. This area could be represented by Da’at, the Void, from out of which the Life- force and beings emerge.
The concept of creation which I mentioned earlier as the “withdrawal” of God to allow something to be other than Himself can be understood from the word “engrave”, when He uses the 32 paths to “engrave” the universe. When we speak of writing, we mean we add ink to paper (expansion). When we engrave, we remove material in a clay tablet (or whatever) as we see in cuneiform writing (withdrawal). The word “engrave” could also indicate the setting of boundaries; the limits placed on the unlimited, and it is the shapes of the letters themselves which establish these limits or boundaries in the written word.
The letter Yud in Hebrew has a numerical value of 10, indicating the 10 Sephirot. The letter Heh has a numerical value of 5, indicating the five fingers on the right hand. In the idea of “making”, the hands are important as they are what we use to grasp the things of the world, the ready-to-hand, the materials we use to make the artifacts that are useful to us. The letters of the Divine Name Yah Heh, are present at the beginning of the Creation and are the essence of the Creation (the Trinity and the concept of the Word as God and with God).
There is some difficulty with trying to interpret the YHVH as “the Lord of Hosts” and of the “hosts” understood as “the armies of Israel”. The Sefer Yetzirah suggests that the “hosts” represent all of the beings created through the 10 Sephirot and how these beings are understood by human beings through numbers, writing and speech. We can understand the “hosts” as that moment when God reveals Himself to human beings through His creation; those beings He created are His “hosts” in the same way we can understand being a host of an event such as a dinner party or a meeting. In Shakespeare’s King Lear, King Lear and Cordelia will act as “god’s spies” i.e. they will be his “hosts” for they will allow Him to see His creation through their eyes (Act 5 sc. iii). YHVH indicates a sort of dualism: the first YH separated by the VahHeh. But again, they indicate the three-in-one concept which is attempting to be illustrated here: YH is God, VH is His creation and both together comprise YHVH.
The “Living God” is to be understood as the Life-force itself, what we have come to call Nature, and what the Greeks understood as phusis and poiesis. It is the force (dynamis) that causes things to emerge and come to a stand so that they can be known (energeia). The names of God (Elohim) indicate the activity of this force in the downward motion through the Tree of Life. For example, “God saw” is mentioned 7 times and so this should focus our attention on “seeing” when we are attempting to understand the essence of the Sephirot #7 or Netzach (Victory). This should also focus our attention on the element of sight, on how things are perceived, when attempting to understand the Chariot Tarot card.
The word “Holy” indicates that which is separated from the mundane, the common. It is the separation of God from His creation, what is to be bowed down to or looked up to and not to be given an image or named.
The place of the concept of “will” is troubling in our understanding of who and what we are. In the Sefer Yetzirah, will is placed beyond all other forces in its representation in the Sephirot Keter, #1 and in #10 Malkhut. Both are seen as Kingdoms and God is King of the Universe or the Whole. The Ten Commandments are the will of God. Necessity is the will of God. Is will a motivator prior to Love (Eros) or is Love prior to will? This issue will be explored in this interpretation of the Sefer Yetzirah. For the moment we may understand “God’s will” as the Law of Necessity which is embedded and enmeshed in the creation itself. It is the schema or blueprint used by the demiourgos in his making of what is.
The three “books” used for the creation are text (Sepher), number or cipher (Sephar), and communication or the telling (Sippur). All relate to what the Greeks called logos, while the will is associated primarily with eros. They relate to the quality (emanations), quantity (the physical, material things), and the relation to others or the talking to others of that which has been created. The three books relate to Space (Universe), Time (days of the week) and Soul (how these are to be properly understood and interpreted). These relate to the five dimensions of the universe where space is third, time is fourth, and soul is the fifth dimension.
The 32 paths can be represented pictorially as we do with the diagram of the Tree of Life (text), or they can be represented numerically as the sequences of the paths, or they can be represented to each other through our speech as our Understanding of the things that are. Our understanding of what things are is prior to our naming of them and speaking about them. The three books are also represented in the form of the letters themselves as they are written, the numerical value assigned to them, or the sounds that are made through the spoken word. Text as form is space (the res extensa or what we understand as objects); numbers are the sequence of time understood as the week and the year, a sequential series of “nows”; and communication is the continuum of soul. It is from these three that the word Sephirot is derived. It is only through the Sephirot in their three aspects that God can be approached. It is through the Sephirot that God reveals Himself to His creation, and it is through the Sephirot that one can reveal God in His creation. It is only through our particular body that we are able to gain access the whole that is beyond our particular self. Matter, the body, is our infallible judge.
The Sephirot act as intermediaries or daimons through which one can communicate with God and there are some texts that assign an angel to each of the Sephirot. The Sephirot are the messengers (Hermes and Eros of the Greeks, the angels of Judaism and Christianity, etc.) through whom one communicates with God and He communicates to us. (“Jesus said to him, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” (John 14.6) Jesus as human being is the highest of these mediators (Metatron in the angel hierarchy.)