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differences between occultism and mysticism through a detailed analysis of the Bhagavad Gita. It characterizes occult phenomena as an extension of the scientific method into super-physical realms, where practitioners use psychic powers like precognition to observe events from expanded scales of time. Using Arjuna’s terrifying vision of the cosmic form as a primary example, the author explains that while occultism reveals the structural "how" of the universe, it often results in fear because it lacks spiritual depth. True understanding, according to the source, requires a mystical background where the distinction between the observer and the observed vanishes. Ultimately, the discourse warns that acquiring supernatural perception without enlightenment is dangerous and meaningless, as only a non-dual perspective provides the necessary purpose for such knowledge.
By Sumitjeedifferences between occultism and mysticism through a detailed analysis of the Bhagavad Gita. It characterizes occult phenomena as an extension of the scientific method into super-physical realms, where practitioners use psychic powers like precognition to observe events from expanded scales of time. Using Arjuna’s terrifying vision of the cosmic form as a primary example, the author explains that while occultism reveals the structural "how" of the universe, it often results in fear because it lacks spiritual depth. True understanding, according to the source, requires a mystical background where the distinction between the observer and the observed vanishes. Ultimately, the discourse warns that acquiring supernatural perception without enlightenment is dangerous and meaningless, as only a non-dual perspective provides the necessary purpose for such knowledge.