Law II:
The Law of Correspondence
As above, so below; as within, so without.
Essence of the Law
As above, so below; as within, so without. The patterns of the macrocosm echo within the microcosm, and the hidden architecture of the heavens is mirrored in the soul, the body, the temple, and the world.
Law Overview
The Law of Correspondence teaches that reality is woven through repeating patterns. The great and the small, the celestial and the earthly, the inward and the outward are not isolated kingdoms, but reflections of one intelligible order.
To the contemplative mind, a star, a seed, a human life, a sacred diagram, and an inner state may each reveal the same divine grammar at different scales. The magician, mystic, philosopher, and priest all study correspondences in order to read creation as a living scripture.
This law does not merely compare things by resemblance; it reveals that resemblance itself may be a sign of participation. What appears below may disclose what moves above. What appears without may reveal what lives within.
Historical, Civilizational, and Comparative Analysis
Ancient Roots
Hermetic Egypt
The Emerald Tablet, attributed to Hermes Trismegistus, preserves the classic formula of correspondence: “Whatever is below is similar to that which is above.” In this Hermetic vision, earthly forms are not severed from celestial realities; they are signatures of the same divine intelligence.
Sumeria
In ancient Sumer, cosmograms joined An, Heaven; Ki, Earth; and Kur, the Underworld. The cosmos was imagined as layered, relational, and ritually intelligible, with human life placed within a sacred vertical order.
China
Classical Chinese thought expresses correspondence through the Heaven–Earth–Human triad. In the Book of Rites, harmony arises when human conduct reflects the order of Heaven and Earth, making ritual a bridge between cosmic structure and social life.
Pagan Echoes
In pagan and magical practice, nature is read as a mirror of divine order. Stones, plants, planets, animals, seasons, and directions become living correspondences through which the practitioner learns to act in harmony with the pattern of the whole.
The Golden Verses of Pythagoras preserve the spirit of a cosmos governed by measure, purification, and sacred order. The magician’s mirror is therefore not merely an object of divination; it is an emblem of reality’s reflective structure.
Eastern Echoes
In the Avataṃsaka Sutra, the image of Indra’s Net reveals a universe in which each jewel reflects all others endlessly. Every part contains, reflects, and participates in the whole.
“Indra’s Net: each jewel reflects all others endlessly.”
Avataṃsaka Sutra
Esoteric Echoes
Christian Echoes
Christian prayer expresses correspondence as the alignment of earth with heaven. The human heart becomes a place where divine order may descend into conduct, community, and embodied life.
“Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven.”
Matthew 6:10
Notes on Usage, Application, and Practice
Study Natural Cycles
Contemplate Inner Attitudes
Align with the Greater Pattern
Heal by harmonizing the personal with the cosmic. Let thought, word, gesture, ritual, and action correspond to the highest order you can perceive.
Quotes and Key Statements
Hermetic: “Whatever is below is similar to that which is above.”
Sumerian: Cosmograms unite Heaven, Earth, and Underworld as one sacred order.
Chinese: Heaven, Earth, and Human form a triad of cosmic harmony.
Eastern: “Each jewel reflects all others endlessly.”
Christian: “Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven.”
Representative and Definitive Sources
Avataṃsaka Sutra, with the image of Indra’s Net
The Lord’s Prayer, King James Version
A classical Chinese source for ritual harmony between Heaven, Earth, and human order.
A central work of Jewish mysticism and a major source for symbolic correspondences within the divine emanations.
Contemplative Exercise
Choose one natural pattern: a spiral shell, a branching tree, the night sky, flowing water, or the rhythm of breath. Contemplate it until its outer form begins to reveal an inner teaching.
Ask: Where does this same pattern appear in my thoughts, relationships, work, and spiritual path? What is the macrocosm showing me through the microcosm?
Literature, Film, Music, and Cultural References
Literature
The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri
A cosmological ascent in which earthly states correspond to spiritual realities.
A recurring philosophical and esoteric motif expressing the mirror relation between human being and cosmos.
A mystical text rich with symbolic correspondences between scripture, cosmos, soul, and divine emanation.
Film
A dreamlike meditation on consciousness, perception, and mirrored layers of reality.
A cinematic reflection on cosmic scale, human love, and hidden structures connecting distant worlds.
Music
A lyrical meditation on enduring pattern, recurrence, and cosmic promise.
Coldplay, “A Sky Full of Stars”
A modern musical image of the beloved as celestial mirror.
Law II:
The Law of Correspondence
As above, so below. As within, so without. As the soul is ordered, the world becomes legible.