FUNDAMENTALS

 

BELIEFS A — Z

INSPIRATION

 

ENCYCLOPEDIA



Life Energy Beliefs
A

Life Force Ideas Around the World


Here are the A entries of life energy beliefs around the world and from antiquity to the present. An edited and expanded version of this Life Energy A to Z is published in my book Life Energy Encyclopedia.

A

 


Actinic force see odic force.


Acupressure is manual pressure treatment of the acupuncture points and meridians, intended to stimulate and correct the qi flow. See also acupuncture.


Acupuncture doll.
Acupuncture doll.


Acupuncture (in Chinese zhenjiu) is a Chinese method, possibly originating already in the stone age, where needles are used to stimulate energy points and their meridians in the body, in order to stimulate and correct the qi flow and thereby cure the patient. The oldest text mentioning acupuncture is Huangdi Neijing (Medical Classic of the Yellow Emperor) from around 500-200 BC. Acupuncture is traditionally used against a number of diseases, and to ease pain. A similar method of treatment is moxibustion (zhongguo), the burning of dried leaves from the moxa plant (wormwood) on acupuncture points. See also acupressure.


Air has always been a subject of much symbolic thought, because of its intangible nature, and its importance to our survival. Many concepts of a life force are based on conceptions of the air, and often the term used for the life force is similar or synonymous to the word for air, such as in the Chinese qi, the Hebrew ruach, or the Latin spiritus (see these words). It is one of the four Greek elements: air, earth, water, and fire – but not one of the Chinese five: metal, wood, water, fire, and earth. See breath and oxygen.


Aither see quintessence.


Akasha/akasa is the Hindu concept for ether (sometimes translated 'space'), which among other things carries sound. It is not a qi synonym, which in Indian is prana (see that word). Theosophy uses the word akasha for its theory on astral light (see that word).


Akashic records see astral light.


Akwalu ('a kind of light') is a concept among the Akawaio indians in Guyana, for a spiritual quality in people. Its counterpart is akwalupo ('without light'). The word akwa means light, shine, life, and is used to describe spirituality.


Alam al-mithal is Arabic for the world of ideas (see this concept).


The alchemist. Woodcut by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, 1553.
The alchemist. Woodcut by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, 1553.


alchemy ('the chemistry', where the definite article 'al' is of Arabic origin) was, except for research into chemistry, mainly during the late Middle Ages and the Renaissance also a complex teaching about the order and internal truth about matter. Alchemists tried to transform common metals into gold, but also saw this as a symbol for human strife for completion. See also archaeus and telesma.


Frederick Mathias Alexander

Alexander technique is a massage technique developed by the Australian actor Frederick Mathias Alexander (1869-1955), where among other things neck massage is used to open for energy to flow through the spine and up to the head, which leads to improved posture, movement, thought, breathing, and speech.


Ambiroa see andriamanitra.


Amma see mulungu.


Ludwig von Bertalanffy

Anamorphosis is a distorted image that is seen correctly in a different form of viewing. Ludwig von Bertalanffy (1901-1972) used it for his theory from around 1928 about nature's inherent strife for increasingly complex forms – especially in biological bodies. He took both the term and its use from the biologist Richard Woltereck (1877-1944). Although Bertalanffy saw energy flows in this, anamorphosis is far from the idea of a life energy.


Anamorphosis by Hans Holbein the Younger, 1533.
Anamorphosis by Hans Holbein the Younger, 1533. The strange object by the floor becomes a skull when seen in a certain angle (below). See Anamorphosis.

Anamorphosis by Hans Holbein the Younger, 1533. Detail.


Andriamanitra is a concept in Madagascar for a deceased ruler who has become regarded as divine. The Christians of this culture also use this name for the Biblical god. It is sometimes mentioned as a synonym to qi, which is misleading. The human spirit is called avelo or ambiroa. See also hasina.


Angin see semangat.


Ani are evil spirits according to the people on the Pacific island Ponape. It is far from the idea about alife energy such as qi, although sometimes mentioned as a synonym to it.


Anima see soul.


Anima mundi see world soul.


Luigi Galvani

Animal electricity is a theory by the Italian physiologist Luigi Galvani (1737-98). In the 1780s he observed how electric impulses created muscle spasms in frogs, and drew the conclusion that there was a particular electricity within living creatures. He saw it as a liquid flowing from the brain. Thereby he was a precursor to electrophysiology, the role of electricity in living organisms. The word galvanization is from his name. See also electricity.


Galvani's laboratory and frog experiment.
Galvani's laboratory and frog experiment. See Animal electricity.


Animal gravitation see animal magnetism.


Franz Anton Mesmer

Animal magnetism is a concept used by the Swiss physician Franz Anton Mesmer (1734-1815), who treated his patients with magnetism from specifically designed tubs. He developed his theory when he was in his forties, after earlier speculations about animal gravitation, where he supposed the celestial bodies to influence people's health. He has given his name to mesmerism, which nowadays refers to hypnosis. His theories about magnetism don't come that close to the concept qi, especially since the former is a power outside the body, and outside the control of the will. See also magnetism and electricity.


Mesmer's tub.
Mesmer's tub.


Animatism (from anima, Latin for 'soul') is a concept used by the English social anthropologist Robert Ranulph Marett (1866-1943) for the belief in a supernatural force independent of a soul or will, like mana (see this word), which he studied in Melanesia. He also called it preanimism, because he believed – in opposition to Edward Tylor – that prehistoric people were too primitive to imagine a world with souls or spirits. See also animism and soul.


Edward Burnett Tylor

Animism (from anima, Latin for 'soul') is the theory that all animal life is created and filled by a soul of life force. The term was introduced by the German physician and chemist Georg Ernst Stahl (1660-1734). The English anthropologist Edward Burnett Tylor (1832-1917) used the word for a theory about the birth of religions, which he presented in 1871. Tylor thought that through sleep and dreams, primeval people had gotten the impression of a world soul, and the worship of that soul was the source of religion. See also animatism and soul.


Ankh

Ankh is the old Egyptian name for life or life spirit. The concept also included the idea of eternal life through this force. Its hieroglyph is a picture of one particular part of a sandal, because it is pronounced with the same consonant sound as ankh. See also sekhem.


Antigravity is a name for theories on isolating gravity, so that travel between celestial bodies can be done with minimal power. See also electrogravity. It has little to do with life energy concepts like qi, although it is sometimes mentioned as a synonym.


Anut is a concept from the island Kusaie (Kosrae) in Micronesia, which seems to refer to spirits and medial ability, but is not a synonym to qi and other life energy concept. The priesthood was called tomon anut.


Apana see prana.


Paracelsus

Archaeus was by the Neoplatonic Paracelsus (1493-1541) and the alchemists regarded as a ordering life-principle, similar to what Aristotle (384-322 BC) called entelechy (see this word). Arcaheus really means 'the oldest principle' or 'the oldest'. Paracelsus thought of archaeus as evenly spread in the human body, a spiritus vitae (life spirit) that nourished from spiritus mundi (world spirit). Paracelsus also spoke about mumia (see this word), a healing “balm” of the body, attached to the blood. See also spirit.


Arealoha is sometimes mentioned as a synonym to qi, and was introduced by Francis Nixon. But the concept she used was vivaxis (see this word).


Arunquiltha is a concept used by the Australian Aborigine. It is sometimes mentioned as a synonym to the life energy qi, but they seem rather to have used the term churinga (see this word).


Astral body is the expression for a part of the human being, which is supposed to be able to leave the body in astral projection or astral travel, where the mind senses places and perspectives far away from where the body is. The expression astral body is used among many movements within New Age, and occultism of the last centuries. See also astral light and life ether. It is comparable to the soul, since the personality is included in it, or follows on its travel.


Astral projection
Astral projection.


Helena P. Blavatsky

Astral light is the Theosophy concept for a cosmic ether of light, which is an ordering principle for the universe. The Theosophists also use the Indian term akasha (see this word). The concept may have been invented by Helena P. Blavatsky (1831-91), one of the founders of Theosophy. Theosophists also regard this ether as a kind of catalogue of everything that has happened, a complete history of the universe and all its creatures. They call this the akashic records.


Astral projection see astral body.


Astral travel see astral body.


Ata see atua.


Atua is the word for spirits or ghosts among the Maori on Easter Island. It is far from the concept of lif energy such as qi. Atua is also used about the traditional deities. Spirit is called ata. The Maori concept the closest to ideas about life energy is mana (see this word).


Emmanuel Swedenborg

Aura (Latin for air or wind, Greek for breeze – the meaning charisma or halo is of later origin) is frequently used within New Age. One example is Kirlian photography, where lights in different colors are said to radiate from living beings, varying in brilliance and proportions according to mood and health (see also HEF). The first claim to have documented such color radiation came from the London physician Walter Kilner (1847-1920) in 1911. He also introduced the term aura for this. Kirlian photography was commenced in 1939 by the Russian electrician Semyon Davidovich Kirlian (1900-1980). In Antique Greece, Aura was the goddess of the morning wind. Ideas about a body of light, and the light's effects on man, existed already with the Greek philosopher Pythagoras (c.582-500 f.Kr.), who also claimed that this energy could have a healing effect. The Swedish mystic Emmanuel Swedenborg (1688-1772) regarded each human being as surrounded by a spiritual sphere.


Kirlian photo of a hand
Kirlian photo of a hand. See Aura.


Autocracy see dynamis.


Avelo see andriamanitra.


Axé/asé/aché is a magical force behind all movement and change in the universe, according to African traditions in Brazil. This force is everywhere and can be handled with rituals. In the martial art capoeira, the term is used for energy developed through training.


Ayik is the name of a subterranean spirit that creates fear, in the African tribe Elgonyi. They call spirit and breath rono. The psychoanalyst C. G. Jung (1875-1961) studied the tribe in 1925 and wrote about ayik, which is sometimes mistakenly mentioned as a synonym to life energy such as qi, whereas rono seems to be quite similar.


Life Energy Beliefs from A to Z

A   B   C   D

E   F   G   H

I   J   K   L

M   N   O   P

Q   R   S   T

U   V   W   X

Y   Z





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