Physical body – In new age philosophy, mysticism and religion
In some systems of mysticism, such as Theosophy, the physical body is understood as the last of several progressively denser "vehicles of consciousness". In Blavatskyian Theosophy it is called by the Vedantic name ''sthula sarira'' - "gross body" - and distinguished from the ''linga sarira'',.
In some systems of mysticism, such as Theosophy, the physical body is understood as the last of several progressively denser "vehicles of consciousness". In Blavatskyian Theosophy it is called by the Vedantic name ''sthula sarira'' - "gross body" - and distinguished from the ''linga sarira'', the "subtle body" or astral double. In C. W. Leadbeater and Alice Bailey, the physical body is distinguished from the etheric body, which serves as its "blueprint", and structures of the etheric body, such as chakras, are mirrored in the main glands and nerve ganglia of the physical body.
In some religions, and in some new age philosophies, a physical body is contrasted with the self, mind, spirit, soul, or astral projection, and sometimes with an heavenly body. It is ephemeral in time, not eternal. It may be what houses the spirit or soul, and it is what is left behind in an astral projection, or ascension into heaven. A physical body exists on earth, not in heaven, not in the [[astr anal
Adapted from the Wikipedia article Physical body, under the G. N. U. Free Documentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki
















