For much
For most of my life I have valued history. I appreciate careful scholarship, original languages, archaeology, textual criticism, and the painstaking work of historians. We owe a great debt to those who have dedicated their lives to separating fact from fiction. Their work has corrected many long-held assumptions and has helped us understand the historical context of ancient texts in ways previous generations could not. I have no desire to dismiss scholarship or to pretend that evidence does not matter. It does. But I have increasingly come to believe that history is only one way of approaching truth, especially when we venture into the realm of spirituality. There is another faculty that human beings possess which, while often dismissed by modern academia, has guided sages, mystics, prophets, and philosophers throughout history. That faculty is intuition. In my own journey, I have come to trust intuitive resonance as much as, and often more than, historical reconstruction.
The reason is simple. Historical inquiry can only evaluate
what is accessible through historical methods. It can examine manuscripts,
compare texts, analyze vocabulary, date documents, and excavate ruins. Those
are invaluable tools. Yet history cannot measure transcendence. It cannot place
mystical experience under a microscope. It cannot determine whether a person
genuinely encountered the Divine or merely believed they did. The historian, by
necessity, brackets out the supernatural because it lies outside the
discipline's methods. That is not a criticism of historians; it is simply a
recognition of the limits of historical inquiry. But if history has limits,
then we should not expect it to answer questions that extend beyond those
limits.
This becomes evident when we examine many of the great
spiritual figures of history. Jesus, Pythagoras, Hermes Trismegistus, Laozi,
Moses, and countless others all stand beneath the shadow of historical
uncertainty. Modern scholarship frequently questions the traditional accounts
surrounding them. Miracles become legends. Divine encounters become literary
embellishments. Ancient wisdom becomes later invention. The more extraordinary
the claim, the greater the skepticism. Sometimes that skepticism is entirely
justified. Sometimes it protects us from gullibility. Yet it also raises an
important question. If every spiritual tradition is filtered through a
methodology that cannot affirm spiritual experience, should we be surprised
when the conclusions consistently minimize or reinterpret the mystical?
The discussion surrounding The Kybalion illustrates
this perfectly. Many critics dismiss it as nothing more than another New
Thought book written by William Walker Atkinson and packaged as
"Hermetic" to increase sales. There is certainly evidence that
Atkinson was deeply influenced by New Thought. There is also compelling
evidence that he was probably the principal author. Those are reasonable
historical conclusions. But the leap from authorship to motive is another
matter entirely. To claim that he merely adopted the Hermetic label as a
marketing strategy is speculation unless evidence can be produced to support
that assertion. We know he was a prolific writer who published dozens of books
under multiple pseudonyms. We know he earned his living through writing and
publishing. What we do not know is what genuinely motivated him when he wrote The
Kybalion. History can tell us many things, but it cannot read a man's
heart.
Ironically, history itself teaches us humility. Scholars
have often revised their conclusions in light of new discoveries. Isaac
Casaubon famously argued that the Corpus Hermeticum was not an ancient
Egyptian revelation but a product of the early centuries of the Common Era. In
many respects he was correct. Yet subsequent discoveries, particularly the Nag
Hammadi library, painted a much richer and more complex picture of the spiritual
world from which the Hermetic writings emerged. The point is not that
scholarship is unreliable. Quite the opposite. Good scholarship continually
corrects itself. That should remind us to hold our conclusions with a measure
of humility rather than certainty.
There are also instances where popular assumptions obscure
the deeper reality. Many people assume that the famous phrase "As above,
so below" appears in the Corpus Hermeticum. It does not. It comes
from the Emerald Tablet. Yet the principle itself permeates the Hermetic
writings. The exact words may be absent, but the underlying idea of
correspondence between the divine, the cosmos, and humanity is woven throughout
the Hermetic tradition. Sometimes truth is found not merely in isolated
quotations but in the pattern that emerges from the whole.
This is where intuition enters the conversation. By
intuition, I do not mean emotional preference or wishful thinking. I mean that
deep inner recognition that something rings true before one can fully explain
why. It is the resonance that has guided philosophers toward discovery,
scientists toward hypotheses, artists toward masterpieces, and mystics toward
God. Intuition is not the enemy of reason. Rather, reason often follows where
intuition first points. Nearly every great intellectual breakthrough began as
an insight that could not yet be fully demonstrated.
Throughout history, humanity has recognized this faculty.
Plato spoke of recollection. The Hermetists spoke of gnosis. Christians spoke
of the witness of the Spirit. Quakers referred to the Inner Light. The Taoists
trusted effortless alignment with the Tao. Across cultures and centuries, there
has been a remarkable consistency in the belief that truth is not merely
accumulated through external evidence but awakened from within. Modern culture
has largely forgotten this, placing almost exclusive confidence in analytical
reasoning while relegating intuition to the realm of subjectivity. I believe
that is an impoverished view of human knowing.
When I read the Corpus Hermeticum, the Kybalion,
the teachings of Jesus, the Gospel of Thomas, the Tao Te Ching, or the writings
of the Christian mystics, I am certainly interested in what historians have to
say. Their insights enrich my understanding. But I also ask another question:
Does this resonate with the deepest intuition of reality? Does it illuminate
rather than obscure? Does it bring coherence where there was fragmentation?
Does it awaken something that feels timeless rather than merely fashionable?
These are not historical questions. They are existential ones.
This does not mean intuition is infallible. It must be
tempered by reason, humility, dialogue, and experience. It should never become
an excuse for believing whatever we wish to believe. But neither should
historical scholarship become the sole arbiter of spiritual truth. History can
tell us when a text was probably written. It cannot tell us whether the wisdom
contained within it is true. It can estimate who likely wrote a book. It cannot
determine whether that book carries genuine spiritual insight. Those are
different kinds of questions requiring different kinds of knowing.
Ultimately, I have come to believe that the deepest truths
are recognized rather than merely proven. Historical evidence is invaluable
because it grounds us in reality. Intuitive resonance is indispensable because
it opens us to realities that history alone cannot measure. If forced to choose
between the two, I would choose intuition—not because I reject evidence, but
because I believe consciousness itself is the primary instrument through which
truth is encountered. History informs the mind. Intuition awakens the soul. And
when the two converge, we stand on the threshold of wisdom.






