Ancient Egyptian .Similar concepts of soul travel appear in various other religious traditions. For example,
ancient Egyptian teachings present the soul (
ba) as having the ability to hover outside the physical body via the
ka, or subtle body. Modern Indians who have vouched for astral projection include
Paramahansa Yogananda who witnessed Swami Pranabananda doing a miracle through a possible astral projection. The Indian spiritual teacher
Meher Baba described one's use of astral projection: Astral projection is one of the
siddhis ('
magical powers') considered achievable by yoga practitioners through
self-disciplined practice. In the epic
Mahabharata,
Drona leaves his physical body to see if his son is alive.
Japanese In
Japanese mythology, an is a manifestation of the
soul of a living person separately from their body. Traditionally, if someone holds a sufficient grudge against another person, it is believed that a part or the whole of their soul can temporarily leave their body and appear before the target of their hate in order to curse or otherwise harm them, similar to an
evil eye. Souls are also believed to leave a living body when the body is extremely sick or comatose; but such are not malevolent.
Taoist Taoist
alchemical practice involves creation of an energy body by breathing meditations, drawing energy into a 'pearl' that is then circulated.
Judaic and Christian Carrington,
Muldoon, Peterson, and Williams say that the subtle body is attached to the physical body by means of a psychic
silver cord. is often cited in this respect: "Remember him—before the silver cord is severed, and the golden bowl is broken; before the pitcher is shattered at the spring, and the wheel broken at the well". Rabbi Nosson Scherman, however, contends that the context points to this being merely a metaphor, comparing the body to a machine, with the silver cord referring to the
spine. James Hankins argues that , "I know a man in Christ who fourteen years ago was caught up to the third heaven. Whether it was in the body or out of the body I do not know—God knows", refers to the astral planes.
Western esotericism According to the classical, medieval, renaissance
Hermeticism,
Neoplatonism, and later
Theosophist and
Rosicrucian thought, the 'astral body' is an intermediate
body of light linking the rational soul to the physical body while the astral plane is an intermediate world of light between Heaven and Earth, composed of the spheres of the planets and stars. These astral spheres were held to be populated by angels, demons, and spirits. In the Neoplatonism of
Plotinus, for example, the individual is a
microcosm ("small world") of the universe (the macrocosm or "great world"). "The rational soul...is akin to the great Soul of the World" while "the material universe, like the body, is made as a faded image of the Intelligible". Each succeeding plane of manifestation is causal to the next, a world-view known as
emanationism; "from the One proceeds Intellect, from Intellect Soul, and from Soul—in its lower phase, or that of Nature—the material universe". The idea of the astral figured prominently in the work of the nineteenth-century French occultist
Eliphas Levi, whence it was adopted and developed further by Theosophy, and used afterwards by other esoteric movements. The
subtle bodies, and their associated planes of existence, form an essential part of some esoteric systems that deal with astral phenomena. Often these bodies and their
planes of existence are depicted as a series of concentric circles or nested spheres, with a separate body traversing each realm. ==Terminology==