[ a good series of comments and references editted...]
] Anybody who can find any practical use for this disreputable hodgepodge ] of ideas has my admiration. Somehow, the G.D. founders (the real ones, ] Mathers and Westcott, not the fictitious Frauline Sprengle of Germany) ] managed to make it all hang together, at least enough to capture the ] interest of a guy like Yeats, who was no fool. In fact, Yeats was asked ] to leave Madam Blavatsky's group ('Theosophists'

because he was given ] to making practical experiments... Later, he used much of the G.D. doctrine ] in his own system described in 'A Vision,' and said to have inspired or ] influenced dmuch of his later poetry. Despite this, a lot of the ] G.D. is the most outrageous claptrap and balderdash.
Hmmm. I think one must remember that the world has moved on by a hundred years so we all have greatly different insights to those that prevailed at the time. None-the-less, there were some remarkable insights quite apart from the inherent beauty of the initiatory system. I think there were some aspects of the GD sysnthesis which one could fairly question, some aspects which were built in which one wondersabout, but 'disreputable hodgepodge' and 'outrageous claptrap and balderdash' seem a bit bold. Did you have anything particular in mind?
] Questions: Is there anything of value in all this stuff? If so, what is it: ] esthetic, mythological, psychological, philisophical