Rodney George Collin-Smith (26 April 1909 – 3 May 1956), known as Rodney Collin, was a British writer who focused on the area of spiritual development. His work was heavily influenced by his teacher P. D. Ouspensky and, through him, G. I. Gurdjieff and the thought system associated with them. His best known work, The Theory of Celestial Influence, is an ambitious attempt to unite astronomy, physics, chemistry, human physiology and world history with his own version of planetary influences.
Collin worked as a journalist for the Evening Standard and the Sunday Referee on the subject of art and travel. He met his future wife Janet Buckley in 1930 on a pilgrimage organised by the international Christian movement Toc H. Collin read Ouspensky's A New Model of the Universe for the first time the same year.
In 1935, Collin and Buckley attended several lectures given by Scottish author Maurice Nicoll in London. After meeting Ouspensky in September 1936, Collin reached an instant euphoria: he had found what he had been looking for in his extensive reading and travelling. Fellow Toc H member Robert de Ropp was likely a source for Collin's and Buckley's interest in the Work ideas. The influence of Ouspensky is indisputable; his and Collin's approaches seem inseparable.Collin, Rodney. The Theory of Conscious Harmony, introduction.
Collin studied the sequence of European civilizations, finding a pattern that would follow a planetary scale where the durations are 10 times longer than a human life. His sequence starts following that of Arnold J. Toynbee in A Study of History, but soon he changes some aspects, trying to follow his said pattern. Thus, his list begins with the Ancient Greece (with roots in the Ancient Egypt, which he considers the last one in the previous sequence), then the Ancient Rome, the Primitive Christians, the Monastic Christians, the Medieval Christians, the Renaissance and the Synthetic. He also quotes the influence of an extra-European civilization, the Arabic, upon the Medieval Christian civilization. The Theory of Celestial Influence, Penguin Books, 1997, chapter 16, "The Sequence of Civilizations"
Collin established a relation between Fourth Way schools and the origin and development of these civilizations. He says:
The conceptual foundations for this project are the Law of Three, arguably similar to the triad of Thesis, antithesis, synthesis of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, and the Law of Seven, the idea that the notes of the Western musical scale encode universal stages in essentially all developmental processes. Collin unites both of these schemata geometrically using the enneagram figure.His master, Peter Ouspensky, claimed to have heard from Gurdjieff that "the Enneagram is the symbol of perpetual motion." Furthermore, that people are different because they receive different planetary energies. This is in the book "Fragments of an Unknown Teaching." Collin was the first to unite these two ideas: perpetual motion (i.e., planets in the Solar System) and typology, presenting his Typological Enneagram, which divided all people in existence into 7 human types of essence, according to the greatest influence of the planet in question. This Enneagram precedes Ichazo's Enneagram, dating back to 1952, as published in Rodney Collin's book, "El Desarrollo de La Luz" ("The Development of Light").
In 1949, Rodney and Janet Collin purchased a plot of land in the mountains outside the city of Mexico City, where in 1951 the foundation was laid for the planetarium Tetecala, which in Aztec means "Stone House of God". This building occupied a central place in the work of Rodney and people close to him throughout the following years. There were theatrical performances of esoteric mysteries, as well as meetings of Rodney Collin's groups.
In the spring of 1954, a group including Collin, under the name of "The Unicorn Actors", gave twelve public performances of Henrik Ibsen's Per Gunnet ( Peer Gynt) for the residents of the town of Tlalpan. Collin played the role of Button Caster. He travelled to Europe and the Middle East in 1954 and 1955, the main purpose of which was to collect material and establish links with the esoteric schools of the past. During his visit to Rome in 1954 he was accepted into the Roman Catholic Church. Collin pondered this step for a long time. With the help of Catholicism, he wanted to attract more people interested in the esoteric side of Christianity into his work. The choice in favor of Catholicism was not accidental, given that it was the most popular religion in the countries of South America.
As a result of the distribution of books by Ediciones Sol in Latin America, Collin's groups began to appear in Peru, Chile, Argentina and Uruguay, and contacts were established in several other countries of the American continent. In January 1955, Rodney visited groups in Lima and Buenos Aires, and then went to Cusco and Machu Picchu to study the remains of ancient civilizations.
Collin's remains were placed in an old church wall in Cuzco. On a flat stone is written the prayer he wrote one month before he died:
A memorial plaque for Collin has been placed by the bell tower at the Plaza de Armas in Cusco.
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