549 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
549 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
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| File Name : AURAKILN.ASC | Online Date : 11/18/95 |
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| Contributed by : Anonymous | Dir Category : BIOLOGY |
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| From : KeelyNet BBS | DataLine : (214) 324-3501 |
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| KeelyNet * PO BOX 870716 * Mesquite, Texas * USA * 75187 |
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| A FREE Alternative Sciences BBS sponsored by Vanguard Sciences |
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| InterNet email keelynet@ix.netcom.com (Jerry Decker) |
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| Files also available at Bill Beaty's http://www.eskimo.com/~billb |
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The following file was sent in anonymously because of the Masonic links. It
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deals with aura viewing techniques which rely on sensitizing the eye by
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looking through dicyanin coated 'Kilner Screens'.
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THE HUMAN AURA: F.J. REBMAN.
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AMERICAN FREEMASON, NOVEMBER 1912
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THE Fellow Craft, by virtue of the degree he holds, is permitted to extend
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his research into the hidden mysteries of nature and science; in fact he is
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expected to make the liberal arts and sciences his study, that he may the
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better be enabled to discharge his duty as a Mason and estimate the wonderful
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works of the Almighty. To the majority of Masons this has no practical
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meaning and is passed over simply as an empty phrase of the ritual. I fear me
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much that even the question of: "What and Who is God?" very rarely, if ever
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enters the mind of the Speculative Mason. And yet it is an interesting
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question, even though there is no likelihood that it ever will be answered by
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mortal man. That is, perhaps, the reason why it appeals to so few.
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If it were not for the discovery every day, so to speak, of new mysteries,
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laws and conditions in nature by scientists, inventors and other searchers
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for truth, God the Creator and Great Architect of the Universe would soon be
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forgotten altogether. Even as it is, small credit is given to Him, praise and
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admiration generally being bestowed upon the cleverness and ingenuity of man's
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mind, which, after all is only a faint reflection (in part) of the infinite
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wisdom of the Almighty.
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We know so little of the marvellous mechanism of the Universe that, when by
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chance a new discovery is made we are astounded, indeed, but only for a little
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while. The interest taken in it soon fades away, wonderment ceases and the
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discovery passes into every day life as a matter of fact which requires no
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further thought or consideration.
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Take, for instance, the electrical spark. But a few years ago its powers,
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although known to man to be of enormous value, lay unharnessed and unused.
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Today science has put a bridle on this energy and has forced it into service
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for locomotion, lighting, picture motion, for transmission of sound and of
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messages by wire as well as by ethereal waves, etc. It is even made to reveal
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the framework of man's body and his internal organs by means of the Roentgen
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ray.
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I remember well how, in the earlier period of the nineties, when Professor
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Roentgen had made his wonderful discovery, even scientists scoffed at the
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idea. The possibility of seeing and even photographing the bones of the
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living body was ridiculed. It was in February, 1895, that the X-rays were
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found. In April of that same year I published in London the first number of
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the Archives of Skiagraphy, now the Archives of the Roentgen Ray.
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In order to meet the charge that the photographs (radiograms) obtained by the
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aid of Crook's tube, were genuine and not faked, I had the original negative
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glass plates mounted on wood-blocks and used them, instead of half-tones, for
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printing the illustrations by a process then known as "colotype." Doubting
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persons were thus enabled to examine the prints as well as the negatives for
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any traces of faking or "retouching." In this manner, definite proof was given
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to the world of the reality of X-ray technic. Doubts soon disappeared and
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Roentgenology has become an important branch of physical science and is today
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a powerful adjuvant to modern surgery.
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And so it is with every discovery. Mankind is forever in the dark as to the
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wonderful mysteries contained in nature, until a fortunate fellow-being finds
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and points out something new and startling, and successfully brings it to the
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attention of the masses. We require a guiding hand in all our doings.
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This refers to the life of the individual as well as to that of nations and
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the world at large. Our whole life is a continuous course of object lessons,
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a progressive school, as it were. We are forever learning new things, that
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is, we absorb knowledge from what we see, hear, read or otherwise experience.
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We hold fast in our mind that which appeals to our taste or to our capacity of
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understanding, and make it a part of our knowledge. Things which we are
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unable to grasp we pass by, perhaps with wonderment, or we laugh at them or
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consider them a joke or sheer nonsense.
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Take, for instance, the claim advanced by certain individuals, -
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"clairvoyants," - that they are able to see an aura around the human body.
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How few people have taken this claim seriously!
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Occultists, theosophists, profess to possess this power also. It comes to
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them by virtue of faith in their religious cult and tenets. We shrug our
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shoulders, perhaps pity the "poor deluded creatures," and dismiss the subject
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from further thought.
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But now comes Dr. Walter Kilner, of London, and tells us that the human body
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is surrounded by an atmosphere, just like the earth and the other heavenly
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bodies which we call stars, and just like everything else in nature that has a
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body, whether animate or inanimate. And he tells us that everybody can see
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it, and that it is not necessary to be a clairvoyant, or an occultist, or a
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theosophist to perceive it. All we have to do is to use certain mechanical
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means, or, let us say, certain chemical screens or filters, such as he has
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devised, follow his instructions, and the hitherto invisible will be revealed
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to our corporeal eye.
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In fact we shall find that to see this aura or atmosphere is simply a matter
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of training our visual organs to adapt themselves to certain wave-lengths of
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light which lie beyond the ultra-violet rays and for that reason have thus far
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escaped the notice of the people at large, being only apparent to a few
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(clairvoyant, if you wish to use the expression) persons whose eyes are
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constructed by nature so as to be able to accommodate themselves to these
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vibrations.
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Dr. Kilner's book reminds me of the man who, whilst walking along the street
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suddenly espies an airship sailing through the sky. He stands still, gazes up
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into space and watches the progress of the aeronaut. Soon a crowd gathers
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around him and all are craning their necks in the direction in which he is
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looking. You happen to join the throng and ask: "What is to be seen?" "An
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airship," says the small boy. "Where? I cannot see it." "Just look a little
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to the right of the top of that flagstaff on the hotel over yonder." You stare
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for a moment or two, and - there it is for certain. Your eyes have found the
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proper accommodation.
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Dr. Kilner says: Look through this little glass filter for the space of 30 to
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45 seconds and then look at that person in front of you and the aura will
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become visible to your eyes. If you are quick of perception, you will find
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it. If you are slow, it will take some time and require more practical
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instruction, but you are pretty sure to discover it.
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Now, what is the aura or the atmosphere of the human body? What does it
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consist of? What does it look like? What it is, and of what it consists, we
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are as yet not in a position to say. The study of this phenomenon is still
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too young to enable us to give a definition of it. We do not pretend to know
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whence or how this auric force emanates from the body. All we know at present
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is that it exists and we can give a description of it.
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The aura appears like a subtle haze that surrounds the whole human frame. It
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varies in size, density and colour in each individual, and is also influenced
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by the physical condition of its owner, that is to say by health and disease,
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by normal and abnormal conditions, and also by the degree of mental
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development.
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In bright (mentally) and healthy persons the aura is of a bluish tint, very
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much like the vapour that rises from a burning cigarette lying on an ash-tray.
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In the majority of cases, however, it is rather gray than blue, and in dull
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people of the white race it has a muddy, grayish tint. In the coloured races
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it is more of a chocolate colour.
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We can judge of the mentality of a person by the colour of the aura. The
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higher the development of the mental faculties and the more brilliant the
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psychical qualities, the closer approaches the colour of the aura to the blue
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of the ether in the sky. Perhaps as "auralogy" develops and our knowledge of
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this force becomes more definite, the study of the aura will be employed as an
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aid in diagnosing character, mental endowments, and thus fitness for certain
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positions in the business world. Why not?
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In India and other oriental countries, where the occult has been the theme of
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study for centuries, the aura has always played an important rate. These
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Eastern people have cultivated the human mind in a different direction from
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the Caucasian races, who have ever striven to turn more to the practical,
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materialistic side of life. See how far the hypnotic power has been developed
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in India, where even the common street fakir can exercise a power over the
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visual organs of his audience without direct control of each individual, a
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power which is not as yet understood by the western peoples.
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But they, on the other hand, cannot comprehend our development of the physical
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powers of nature for practical use, such as steam and electricity. They
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cannot understand the transmission of the voice over the telephone, or that of
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light over the wire, or the workings of the telegraph or the Marconi
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instruments. But, then, how many white men are there who understand any of
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these mysteries? We simply accept as facts what by practical demonstration we
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perceive to exist, and trouble little or nothing about the mechanical
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construction.
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In like manner as the instruments and mechanical contrivances just mentioned
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have become accessories to and paraphernalia of modern business, will, no
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doubt, the aura be employed by progressive man for his convenience and
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necessities. If, in the early Christian era, the aura was perceived in holy
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persons and depicted as a halo surrounding the head of the saint, or even the
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whole body, as may be observed in many pictures of Christ, so the aura of the
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human body may yet become the distinguishing badge of the wearer. In
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criminology it should play an important part for pointing out mental defects
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and moral inferiority.
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The size of the aura is governed by sex and age as well as by physical
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conditions of the body.
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In boys, immature girls and in the adult male, its area hardly ever extends
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beyond a distance of 3 to 4 inches from the frame. In woman it may be traced
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to 24 or 30 inches. Woman enjoys a higher psychical development, and that, no
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doubt, accounts for the superiority of her aura. As in size, so also in tint
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the female aura excels.
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Cold, heat, perspiration, air-waves, such as drafts or gusts of wind, do not
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seem to influence the aura in any manner or form. The faint luminosity
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surrounding the body is as steady as the cold light of the moon. I have
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observed the aura in the same person when the body was simply streaming with
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perspiration in a hot room, and again when the skin was cold as marble, but
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there was no difference either in the size, colour or appearance of the aura.
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In some persons the aura is intersected by peculiar radiations streaming from
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certain portions of the body. They appear like sheaves or bundles of light
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issuing from the body into space like the faint rays of a searchlight visible
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at a great distance on the horizon. I call to mind a particular instance.
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When giving a demonstration before several medical men, one of the doctors
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present said to me:
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"This is the second time I have come to a demonstration and, although I
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have seen much of what you are pointing out, I still have grave doubts as
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to the actual existence of the aura. I cannot as yet make up my mind to
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accept it as a physiological fact. I am still tempted to place what I
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have seen in the category of optical illusions produced by the use of the
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coloured screens. But if you can answer me one question to my
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satisfaction, I will capitulate and dismiss the feeling of uncertainty."
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I said: "Ask the question."
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Doctor. "Have you noticed anything unusual in the aura of this person?
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Answer. "Yes, I have observed a band of light about two inches in width."
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Doctor. "So have I. Indicate its location."
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Answer. "It emanates from the right hip to the middle of the right forearm."
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(The subject was standing in front of us in a darkened room before a
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black background with arms akimbo upon the hips. Of course the model
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was stripped.)
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Doctor. "That settles it. I have been watching this phenomenon for quite a
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while (and he pointed it out with his finger to the other observers,
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who then noticed it also.) But why have you not drawn our attention
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to it before?"
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Answer. "I was waiting for you to find it yourselves. What I am anxious to
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avoid is to be charged with resorting to suggestion, - hypnotic
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suggestion."
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Doctor: "Well, I can trust my eyes now after this demonstration. The aura
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is a concrete fact. There is no illusion about it. I have observed
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it also in a black cat walking about a room which I had covered with
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black all around and in which I could not see the cat itself at all,
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but I could follow the aura moving about distinctly. However, I was
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inclined to attribute it to electricity rather than to any other
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force. Now I am certain it was the aura."
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Let me say here that the aura is not a luminous body in itself. You cannot
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see the aura in an absolutely dark room. But it is capable of illumination.
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A certain amount of light must be admitted. It is best to filter the light
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into the room through a very dark blue or green blind in the window, or a dark
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blue or green mantle over a Welsbach gas lamp or an electrical bulb.
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After a little practice I have found it just as easy to see the aura in broad
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daylight, however, as in a specially prepared room, and I have taught others
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to do the same.
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According to Dr. Kilner's instructions the observation room should be arranged
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as follows:
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(1) A room with one window only, pointing to the north if possible, is
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preferable, so as to admit light from one direction only.
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(2) A double roller-blind made of very dark blue or green material, such as
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is commonly employed for roller-blinds. These blinds should be so
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arranged that one pulls down from the top and the other pulls up from the
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sill of the window. They should overlap each other all the way, thus
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allowing of absolute control and regulation of light.
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(3) A dead black background 7 feet high and 6 feet in width. I have found
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black flannelette the most serviceable material for this purpose. It
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reflects no light and is cheap in the bargain.
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THE HUMAN AURA: F.J. REBMAN.
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Concluded from November issue.
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AMERICAN FREEMASON, DECEMBER 1912
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AT the beginning of the observation the lower blind is pulled up about half
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way, or more, leaving a clear line of sky above. The subject to be examined
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is now placed in front of the black background, which must be opposite to the
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window about 8 or 10 feet away.
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The observer stands close up to the window and gazes for one-half to three-
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quarters of a minute (30-45 seconds)-not more-through the dark green glass
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filter which contains a solution of dicyanin (a certain coal-tar preparation)
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into the bright light of the sky, pulls down the upper blind over the lower
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until the room is well darkened and turns toward the subject.
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Care must be had not to allow any white light rays to enter the eyes whilst
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darkening the room. This can be easily avoided by keeping the dark filter in
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front of the eyes until the upper blind has been pulled down.
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Now put away the dark filter and gaze through the light green filter at the
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body in front of the black background about 8 feet away. After a few seconds
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the observer will notice that the body has lost the sharp definition of
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outlines.
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It seems to gradually melt away into space. The outstretched hand looks as if
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it were covered with a large glove, like that of a catcher in a baseball game.
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The interstices between the outstretched fingers show a cloudy effect, faintly
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luminous. This becomes more strongly pronounced when the hand is slowly moved
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upward and downward.
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If now both hands are moved upwards and the finger-tips made to rest upon the
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top of the head (both arms should be bare) two triangular spaces between the
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head and the forearms and the shoulders and upper arms will be formed. These
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spaces will have the appearance as if they were filled with a slightly
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luminous, smoky haze or atmosphere. This is the aura. It can also be
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observed around the outer edge of the arms, especially around the elbows.
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The light green filter may be dispensed with altogether after it has been used
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for about three minutes. The eyes in the majority of the cases are by that
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time sufficiently sensitized to receive the impressions of the short light
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waves which radiate from the aura. Moreover, they are then thoroughly
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accustomed to the darkened room and the surroundings. Many people do not
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require the light dicyanin screen at all.
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I take occasion here to warn the observer not to use the green glass filters,
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especially the dark green, longer or more often than I have indicated above.
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The object in using them is to partially and temporarily paralyse the rods and
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cones of the retina. An unduly prolonged sensitization disturbs the vision
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almost completely for the time being, and small or no results at all will be
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obtained by over-sensitization.
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Should the observer find that he has transgressed this rule, let him rest his
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eyes upon the black background for quite a while, but without straining them.
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Gradually the optic nerves will tone down again to normal conditions.
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If you are not successful in your first attempt, do not become disheartened;
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rest the eyes for at least 30 minutes before you resort again to the use of
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the dark green filter.
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Failure, in the majority of the cases, is due to over-exertion and to
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straining of the visual organs; also to excitement and to expectation of
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seeing lustrous emanations of light proceeding from the body.
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Do not look for searchlights or fireworks. The aura is only a hazy film that
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surrounds the body, not unlike the nebulae in certain constellations of stars,
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for instance in Orion; only more modified, more rarefied, fainter.
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The following procedure will act as a good path-finder. Let the subject
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stretch out a hand with fingers spread apart as far as possible. Now let
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another person with hand extended in a similar fashion, put the finger-tips
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close to the tips of the opposing hand and withdraw them slowly to a distance
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of from 5 to 8 inches in a horizontal direction, returning them again in the
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same slow, measured manner, but repeatedly. The fingers of the two hands will
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appear as if elongated, as if the hands were pulling molasses candy.
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You can do this with your own hands, by standing with your back towards the
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light and withdrawing and approaching the out-stretched spread fingers of the
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two hands. The fingers draw out like candles until the limit of the
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overlapping auras of the opposing fingers is reached, when the connecting
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lines suddenly snap off like India rubber bands. One can almost hear it.
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These sheaves of light may be drawn from the elbow, the nose, the chin, the
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ears, etc. I call this experiment the first regular step in the observation
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of the aura. I have seen rays drawn out from the elbow to the length of 24
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inches before they snapped off, in the presence of a dozen of observers
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who simultaneously breathed a long-drawn "Ah" when the snap came. When once
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the eye reacts to this phenomenon, the rest of the observation becomes easy.
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Other requisites for successful observations are an open mind, freedom from
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prejudice and avoidance of over-anxiety and of nervous anticipation of
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pyrotechnics.
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One sensitization of the eyes lasts from two to four weeks. I have used the
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dark green filter but very seldom and then only for 5 to 10 seconds, and have
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had people come to a second demonstration two weeks after the first, quite
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able to see the aura distinctly even in broad daylight, without having
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recourse to either the dark or light green filter between times.
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To me it seem to be a matter of education of the sense of vision rather than
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of a sensitization of the retinal region."
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Dr. Kilner states that the too free use of the dicyanin screens affects the
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eyes perceptibly. I found this to be the case when I first began to make
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observations. My eyes for days felt as if filled with onion fumes, causing
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them to smart and run with tears.
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But I am convinced that this was really due to eye strain, produced by gazing
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too eagerly and intently in a dark room at an object only faintly visible at a
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distance of about eight to nine feet. When I learned how to control my eyes
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with proper care, I experienced no further trouble.
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When the dark green filter is used too much - for one to two minutes or more,
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the power of vision becomes dimmed to such a degree that nothing but gray
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patches are visible in the darkness, and it becomes difficult to discern even
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the form of the subject under observation. The effect is practically the same
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as if gazing into the bright light of the sun itself.
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The aura can be divided into three distinct parts, viz:
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(1) The Etheric Double.
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(2) The Inner Aura.
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(3) The Outer Aura.
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Dr. Kilner says that for the want of a better expression he has borrowed the
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term of Etheric Double from Occultism, for this part of the aura.
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1. The Etheric Double consists of a faint dark grey, almost black envelope,
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which surrounds the whole frame. It appears like a crayon mark outlining
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the contour of the body when placed against a white or a background of a
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light tint. (The room in which I have given my demonstrations is stained
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with a light, soft-green, flat paint, which gives no reflection. This
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seems to give even better results than the white curtain recommended by Dr.
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Kilner.)
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It is best observed between the fingers, if spread out, and lies about one-
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eighth of an inch from the skin. Between it and the skin is a clear,
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transparent space. Another part of the body where it may be observed to
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advantage is along the shoulder and neck, particularly if the observer
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stands about three to four feet to the rear of the subject.
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In this region the line recedes as much as a quarter of an inch, that is to
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say the clear, transparent space between the dark line and the skin is
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about a quarter of an inch wide, sometimes more, sometimes less, as it
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varies in each individual.
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The thickness and consistency of the line also varies in individual cases
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from a thirty-second to a sixteenth of an inch. The cause of this
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difference will, no doubt, become apparent as our knowledge of the aura
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itself progresses.
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The consistency of the Etheric Double seems to be governed by the physical,
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hygienic condition of the body. I have seen it vary in the same individual
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at different times, although the aura itself was not affected. And again,
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I have seen persons who could widen or contract the space between the
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Etheric Double and the body at will by at least a sixteenth of an inch. The
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effect was very much the same as if puffing out and retracting the cheeks
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in slow movements.
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This Etheric Double, practically speaking, disappears; or, shall I say,
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cannot be distinguished, when the subject is placed in front of a dark
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background.
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2. The Inner Aura proceeds from the Etheric Double. It may be compared to a
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band of mist from 1 1-2 to 3 inches in width, which follows the contour of
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the body under normal conditions in an accurate outline. The width of this
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band depends on the individual, but may vary even in different parts of the
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body in the same individual. Its color, consistence and brightness are
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|
also individual properties.
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Dr. Kilner has evolved a regular system by which the Inner Aura can be used
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|
as a guiding symptom in diagnosing diseased or pathological conditions. It
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|
seems to reflect the physical state of the anatomy like a mirror, and
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|
internal disorders, such as incipient tumours, fibroids, etc., may be
|
|
discovered by reflex action in the Inner Aura. Of course, it goes without
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saying that it requires an experienced eye to find the flaws in the aura.
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|
But I will not go into details here, which interest principally the medical
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man. Dr. Kilner deals fully with the subsect in his book, which was
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primarily written for the medical profession.
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The beginner will find it a little difficult at first to find the Inner
|
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Aura and to distinguish it from the Outer Aura, of which I shall speak
|
|
anon. But if he will use the carmine screen, he may be greatly aided in
|
|
his efforts. There are two carmine screens in the outfit designed by Dr.
|
|
Kilner. One is rose-colored, the other a deep carmine. The former is used
|
|
in a semi-darkened room; the very deep one should be employed if there is a
|
|
strong flow of daylight from the window. The observer must stand with the
|
|
back to the window and the subject in front of a white background. Against
|
|
this background the aura will have a grayish tint. When peering through
|
|
the carmine screen the outlines of the Inner Aura will be sharply defined.
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|
|
|
If the model should extend one arm horizontally over the adjoining black
|
|
background and the other over the white background, the difference in the
|
|
appearance of the Inner Aura against the two backgrounds will be quite
|
|
startling.
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|
|
|
If the background should be arranged in wavy folds from the top downwards
|
|
and about three inches in width, the following experiment will prove of
|
|
interest. Let the subject move the arm at full length very slowly up and
|
|
down, direct your eye above the arm and follow the movement by gazing
|
|
steadily along one of the folds in the curtain. You will now find on
|
|
comparison that the fold disappears almost completely with the movement of
|
|
the arm to a distance of about three inches above or below the outline of
|
|
the arm. The deep recess in the fold naturally appears much blacker than
|
|
the outer ridge, but where the Inner Aura begins to intervene, this deeper
|
|
black becomes blurred; in fact almost obliterated. To make this experiment
|
|
the eye should have been practiced with observation for at least half an
|
|
hour, the room should be well lighted, and none of the glass filters should
|
|
be used. The naked eye will spot it at a distance of about five feet.
|
|
|
|
To the artist, painter and sculptor, the aura ought to offer a fascinating
|
|
phenomenon. I venture to say that its careful study must needs become a
|
|
great aid in pronouncing with the brush the rotundity of the body, more
|
|
than can now be observed in oil paintings generally, which to my eye at
|
|
least, appear as a rule, too flat. I have always missed in portraits a
|
|
certain something, which I have been unable to define, may I say the
|
|
stereoscopic effect, until I began my studies of the aura. The aura, it
|
|
seems to me, should supply this want.
|
|
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|
3. The Outer Aura is possibly only an emanation or effluvium of the Inner
|
|
Aura. It is a filmy extension which becomes extenuated until it is lost
|
|
into space, like smoke or haze. But it has the same colour as the Inner
|
|
Aura.
|
|
|
|
I have already mentioned that in boys, immature girls and in the adult male
|
|
the Outer Aura is scarcely visible and becomes a negligible quantity. In
|
|
the adult female it is worthy of notice. It surrounds the form like a
|
|
balloon of fairy haze, even to the extent of thirty inches.
|
|
|
|
The Aura cannot be seen through the clothing. At any rate the means at our
|
|
hands under present conditions are inadequate to assist our vision in
|
|
discovering it. That, perhaps, is an argument against the assumption that the
|
|
aura is an effluvium of heat or moisture proceeding from the skin, for if it
|
|
were it ought to be visible outside of the dress, since body-heat goes beyond
|
|
the textile covering, and so does moisture also.
|
|
|
|
It is much more likely that the auric force emanates from the nervous system,
|
|
for it assumes very peculiar and strongly marked shapes in persons afflicted
|
|
with nervous affections or with skin diseases. For instance in cases of
|
|
Hysteria the Inner Aura bulges out in the small of the back (the patient
|
|
standing sideways) to the extent of 5 to 6 inches and becomes a landmark in
|
|
diagnosis.
|
|
|
|
In Epileptic subjects it is almost entirely absent on the side of the head
|
|
which is affected. Unmistakeable diagnosis.
|
|
|
|
In Herpes Zoster the Inner Aura disappears completely over the spot where the
|
|
disease is located.
|
|
|
|
Whether the Inner and the Outer Aura are two forces differing from each other,
|
|
has not as yet been determined.
|
|
|
|
Certain it is, however, that the Inner Aura can be controlled by the will,
|
|
that is to say, that its size, denseness and colour can be influenced by the
|
|
will power of its owner. I have seen the colour changed from a bluish-gray
|
|
into a rosy, even a crimson tint, by an effort of the will, although only for
|
|
a short time.
|
|
|
|
Also rays of light can be shot out from any part of the body at will by almost
|
|
any individual. If, for instance, the subject should hold out the elbow and
|
|
the observer point a finger towards it at a distance of, say, sixteen inches,
|
|
no connecting rays will be visible between the finger and the elbow until an
|
|
effort of the will is made by one or both persons. The ray will then shoot
|
|
forward and continue till recalled.
|
|
|
|
This brief discussion is only a condensed resume of Dr. Kilner's teachings,
|
|
but I trust it conveys some idea of the importance of his findings. Aside
|
|
from its usefulness to the medical man, who can apply it with case and comfort
|
|
as a reliable means in diagnosing disease, it should prove of interest to the
|
|
Mason for the reasons stated above, and fascinate him who loves to explore
|
|
mysterious and hidden forces of nature.
|
|
|
|
I will end with saying that the same peculiar luminosity may be observed
|
|
around both the positive and negative poles of a horse-shoe magnet, if hung up
|
|
before a black background.
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