Thursday, April 9, 2020

The Universe


The Universe in Tarot

B.O.T.A deck
The Universe card or World card in Tarot presents us with a challenge. When we talk about the Universe, the Cosmos - just saying these words elevates our consciousness and we must think far beyond the business of our everyday lives. Have you ever experienced a night of looking at the dark sky filled with billions of stars? Try it sometime if you haven’t already. It can jolt you into another dimension. This card stimulates a cosmic question: It’s time to expand your thought beyond the world we live in. Think on this: We are riding on this earth, traveling in our galaxy among those everlasting stars. We are part of a universe that is so vast we can’t even begin to grasp its immensity. In Tarot, we can look at The Universe card from two perspectives: the outer - physical - and the inner - spiritual.

“The dancing figure in the picture is perfectly balanced in her position as the center
reflecting the self-knowing spirit.”
(Madonna Compton, Archetypes on the Tree of Life, Llewellyn, 1991)

The outer Physical
We need to think really big while contemplating the mind-expanding descriptions and theories by scientists about what our universe is and how it came into being. Is the universe infinite? Is it eternal? Does it have a beginning, and will it end? Einstein’s “Theory of Relativity” (1915) sets the tone for today’s understanding of the behavior of the universe. He said that gravity occurs from the warping of the smooth fabric of space-time. It’s all relative - but gravity keeps the planets spinning in orbit around their suns within the galaxies.  In the “Inflationary Universe Theory” and “String Theory,” developed by Andre Linde and Allen Guth in the 1980’s, they proposed that this is a self-reproducing inflationary universe, which may be part of many multi-universes. (See “A Beacon from the Big Bang,” Scientific American, October 2014, by Lawrence M. Krauss.)  “Quantum-loop Theory” proposes that gravity emerges in the exchange of tiny packets of energy called gravitons and some scientists are working to integrate these concepts into a Grand Unified Theory of the same fundamental forces at work.

“Already, the theory has forced us almost against our will, to confront the bizarre possibilities of parallel universes, wormholes and the 10th dimension.”
(Michio Kaku, “What Happened Before the Big Bang?” Astronomy Magazine, May 1996)

Theoretical physicist, Michio Kaku, states that: “In this picture, big bangs constantly take place, each representing a quantum fluctuation in the vacuum.” He talks about multiple bubble universes in which there are many self-replicating universes functioning like an inflating balloon expanding and growing exponentially with branching inflationary bubbles of many universes, each experiencing a “Big Bang.” How can we possibly comprehend anything that immense, and especially if they are, perhaps, moving on into infinity? He continues this discussion of the origin of the universe and even takes up the theological concepts of the Judeo-Christian Genesis (The Word), which describes a definite instance called Creation, and also the Hindu-Buddhist concept of “Nirvana,” which describes an endless universe that has no beginning in time and space. He says, “In this new picture, we can combine these two mythologies into one coherent picture: we have a constant Genesis or boiling of universe in an ocean of cosmic nothing or Nirvana.”

The symmetries of string theory suggest that time did not have a beginning
and will not have an end.”
(“The Myth of the Beginning of Time,” Gabriele Veneziano, Scientific American, May 2004)

The inner Spiritual
It’s important to realize that we are part of the big picture; first, as a group of animated beings dwelling on earth and then consider it in Tarot concepts. If we are eternally bound to a spiritual manifestation of the Cosmic Universe now we move from the realm of physics to metaphysics. Because this Tarot card seems to have religious connotations, it’s necessary to think about its spiritual meaning. Here, we should explore the mysteries of our being and substance of our own life-breath. What makes us alive, have consciousness, and mobility? Yes, some of it can be explained in the mechanistic manner of determinism but so much can’t be explained. So, we must deal in suppositions. This is where Rupert Sheldrake, with his theory of “Morphic Resonance,” gets in so much trouble with other scientists who claim he is being pseudoscientific. He says: “Morphic
The egg
resonance is a process whereby self-organizing systems inherit a memory from previous similar systems.”
(A New Science of Life, Icon Books, 2009) This gets right to the question of what is “aliveness”? Where does life come from? Sheldrake is exploring the unknown facets of our being, including our spiritual life, memory and mental processes. Here, we enter the realm of religious thought and mysticism, the inner sanctum, where we can consider our oneness with the purpose of the Universe. Is there some sort of an organizing Mind managing everything? Are all beings connected in some way through a compilation of shared morphic memories/DNA, etc.? Think about the circumstances whereupon life begins: the flower, pollen, a seed; the egg and the sperm, cell-division, microbes, and so on. What is taking place that initiates reproduction, birth, growth and formation of
Or the chicken
living beings? Who can explain the essence of the fact that most organisms are alive and grow? What is the primal cause?  In Tarot, we can think of it in terms of a Motherhood Principle, the formator of life, and a Fatherhood Principle, the motivator of life in ever-present action. Why does a living plant pop out of a tiny seed when you put it in the ground? Somehow, it is predetermined to sprout and grow. Can we see what spark is inside the egg that brings forth a living thing? What is the meaning of what we are seeing? 
Leonardo Da Vinci noticed this in his botanical studies in the 15th century: “The eye, which is called the window of the Soul, is the principal means by which the central sense can most completely and abundantly appreciate the infinite works of nature…” 
                                                                     (The Notebooks of Leonardo DaVinci, Ed by Jean Paul Richter, Dover 1970.)
DaVinci sketch of acorns

“Mother Earth. The Creatrix. She presents that which endures throughout time. The source … she is the structure or foundation out of which you came and to which you return.”
(Vickie Noble, MotherPeace Tarot, HarperCollins, 1983)

The blissful dancer in The Universe card of Tarot of Cosmic consciousness represents the adventure into the unknown of inner space and Cosmic Awareness. She has been transformed into a radiant spiritual rainbow-body portrayed in the seven colors of a prism. She passes through a zero-shaped threshold the womb of the divine Motherhood of creation. 

Freedom from the ego-centered selfhood has been achieved in the absence of mortal self-awareness. She is indicative of a way out of the endless “mind-rehearsing” of daily goings on. This card signifies rising above the trivia and rumination of self-aggrandizement or self-pity. There are no more boring, endless scenarios of me - me - me this, and me that.  In some approaches, you could think of it as a resurrection. It is a time of transcendence and rejoicing in your understanding of what life on earth is all about. You have passed the tests that your experiences have allocated.
The Universe TOCC

This brings up a subject a lot of people celebrate this time of the year Easter. We hear about the Resurrection and Ascension of the man, Jesus, after he is crucified. Then he reappears to his disciples in a mysterious way afterward. What is meant by this? We must ask: Is there a spiritual universe beyond our comprehension? This Cosmos been called “Heaven’s Reign” or “God’s Reign” in biblical descriptions. Garry Wills in his book, What Jesus Meant, says, “It is true Jesus appeared in numinous form, hard to interpret his body was not the earthly body anymore but one both outside time and space and affecting time and space.” (Penguin Group, 2006) In St. Pauls’ letter to the Corinthians, Paul considers the meaning of the Resurrection (See 1Cor. 15:12–50). Here, we must grasp the unfathomable and think about the question of immortality. Do we continue to exist even after what seems like death, which has terminated our bodies? The dancer of older Tarot decks characterizes a newfound freedom and joy that suggests this is something we really need to think about.

So, upon receiving this card in a reading, here are some questions to ponder: Ask how you see yourself in this picture; if you have completed what you set out to do. In many ways, The Universe card of Tarot signifies the creative potential of our own resurrection from the daily grind. Here is a chance to celebrate the freedom and sense of accomplishment gained by hard work and the hope of making our lives better in some small way. Are all your efforts leading to mastery of yourself physically and emotionally? How are you doing in surmounting the many difficulties you have encountered in living your life. Have you found goodness, peace and prosperity, and shared it with loved ones? Have you achieved Cosmic Awareness?

References:
“Beyond Einstein”, Scientific American September 2004

“The Once and Future Cosmos,” Scientific American 2002