Poseidonis
Poseidonis is a mythical continent, the final remnant of Atlantis, a legendary island civilization described by Plato. In esoteric traditions, it represents a highly advanced, ancient culture that predates recorded history, often associated with profound wisdom and spiritual knowledge.
Where the word comes from
The term "Poseidonis" derives from Poseidon, the Greek god of the sea. Its association with Atlantis, famously described by Plato, links it to a sunken continent. The name evokes a connection to a powerful, primordial, and ultimately submerged civilization.
In depth
The last remnant of the great Atlantean Continent. Plato's island Atlantis is referred to as an equivalent term in Esoteric Philosophy. GLOSSARY 241 Postel, GuillautiK. A French adept, born in Normandy in 1.')10. His learning brought him to the notice of Francis I., who sent him to the Levant in search of occult MSS., where he was received into and initiated by an Eastern Fraternity. On his return to France he became famous. He was persecuted by the clergy and finally imprisoned by the Inquisition, but was released by his Eastern brothers from his dungeon. His Clavis Ahsconditorum, a key to things hidden and forgotten, is very celebrated. Pot-Amun. Said to be a Coptic term. The name of an Egyptian priest and hieropliant who lived under the earlier Ptolemies. Diogenes Laertius tells us that it signifies one consecrated to the "Amun", the god of wisdom and secret learning, such as were Hermes, Thoth, and Nebo of the Chaldees. This must be so, since in Chaldea the priests consecrated to Nebo also bore his name, being called the Nebo'im, or in some old Hebrew Kabbalistic works, "Abba Nebu". The priests generally^ took the names of their gods. Pot-Amun is credited with having been the first to teach Theosophy, or the outlines of the Secret WisdomReligion, to the uninitiated.
How different paths see it
What it means today
Poseidonis, in the lexicon of esoteric thought, is more than a mere geographical curiosity, a lost continent swallowed by the sea. It is a potent symbol, a psychic anchor tethered to the deepest currents of collective memory. Plato, in his dialogues Timaeus and Critias, offered the first Western whispers of Atlantis, a powerful island empire that ultimately succumbed to hubris and divine displeasure. Helena Blavatsky, in her monumental efforts to synthesize global spiritual traditions, invoked Poseidonis as the final, lingering vestige of this grand, submerged civilization.
This idea of a lost, hyper-advanced civilization speaks to a deep human yearning for a Golden Age, a time when humanity lived in greater harmony with cosmic principles. It echoes the archaeological and anthropological fascination with precursors, with the tantalizing possibility that our current understanding of history is incomplete, a mere surface ripple on the vast ocean of time. Mircea Eliade, in his studies of myth and religion, often pointed to the significance of primordial archetypes, and Poseidonis, as a remnant of a world imbued with potent, perhaps magical, knowledge, fits this mold. It represents a lost gnosis, a forgotten science of the soul that could, if rediscovered, offer profound insights into our own existence.
The very name, linked to Poseidon, the god of the sea, imbues it with a sense of primal power and mystery. The sea itself is a powerful symbol in mythology and psychology, representing the unconscious, the vast, untamed depths of the psyche. The submergence of Atlantis, and by extension Poseidonis, can be read as a metaphor for the repression of this primal wisdom, its descent into the collective unconscious. Carl Jung’s concept of the collective unconscious, with its archetypal imagery, finds resonance here. Poseidonis becomes a symbol of forgotten archetypes, of the submerged spiritual heritage that continues to influence humanity from the depths.
For the modern seeker, Poseidonis is not a destination to be physically found, but a conceptual space to be explored. It invites contemplation on the cyclical nature of civilizations, the rise and fall of empires, and the enduring human quest for knowledge and spiritual enlightenment. It reminds us that true progress may lie not only in technological advancement but in the rediscovery and integration of ancient wisdom, a wisdom that, like Poseidonis, may lie hidden, waiting to be brought to the surface. The allure of Poseidonis lies in its promise of a lost perfection, a forgotten path to understanding that continues to beckon from the silent, abyssal depths of human history and consciousness.
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