112 For ancient man, for the Oriental, and in general for every being whose mind is still open or semi-open to the noncorporeal world, the wet path has offered and continues to offer more immediate possibilities—owing to a lesser dependence ot the deeper organic circuits on the control and fine tuning of the brain. On the other hand, in this case a supreme effort must be made if the accomplishment is to remain active and not fall into passive mystico-ecstatic states.4 In the dry path it is a matter, above all, of destroying by means of an appropriate, rigorous inner discipline, all the infections that the amalgam with the body has evoked and fixed in the subtler principles of life, and by means of which the body exercises its power over che superior nature. This requires asceticism and purification, but in an analogous spirit to that of a person who has carefully gathered all the necessary ingredients for a physical phenomenon to take place. Asceticism in this case is the equivalent of an exercise and a cechnique: chat is why certain rules of life are prescribed that if carefully observed, result indirectly (passing through §) in certain modifications in the subtle elements of the human being that are propicious or indispensable to the Works’
Thus, a hermetic master will not say that to feed an inclination, for example, toward concupiscence or hate is something "bad” (whoever wishes is free to do so), but that it is contradictory for a person to intend to indulge that freedom and at the same time aspire to anything that the direction of the energies set by greed or hate has made impossible.
And a hermetist will ask only that what is desired and the implications of that desire be well understood. Moreover, the full waking consciousness and the direct action of the ego are to be maintained in a clearly moral discipline, and when certain conditions and qualities of the Soul have been established and reduced to a habkus by virtue of constant practice, the corresponding modifications are transmitted from $ to Then, if the right path has been taken, one can better decide what is necessary as a favorable provision for the "separation." ^ 295