As Above, So Below — The Emerald Tablet's Most Misunderstood Axiom
As Above, So Below
Latin: Quod est superius est sicut quod inferius — from the Emerald Tablet of Hermes Trismegistus
The foundational axiom of Hermetic philosophy, encoding the Principle of Correspondence — the operational law that the macrocosm and microcosm mirror each other not as metaphor but as mechanism. What operates on one plane necessarily affects all planes. Not a passive observation. An instruction.
You have seen this phrase on tattoos, T-shirts, and motivational posts layered over galaxy backgrounds. You have probably nodded at it the way people nod at proverbs they have never interrogated. And that nod is exactly the problem — because everyone quotes the first half of the sentence and almost no one finishes it.
The full line from the Emerald Tablet reads: "That which is above is like that which is below, and that which is below is like that which is above, to accomplish the miracles of the One Thing."
That purpose clause changes the meaning of the entire axiom. Without it, you have a nice observation about patterns in the universe. With it, you have an operating instruction — a technology for working across planes of reality to produce specific results. The difference between a bumper sticker and an alchemical manual.
This post is not another line-by-line walk through the Tablet — if that is what you need, start with Emerald Tablet Decoded. This is about the single axiom that the entire Western esoteric tradition orbits: what it actually says, where it actually comes from, how it operates across three distinct planes, and what it asks you to do with your attention tonight.
What Does "As Above, So Below" Actually Mean?
Wisdom
"That which is above is like that which is below, and that which is below is like that which is above, to accomplish the miracles of the One Thing." — The Emerald Tablet, Line 2
Most people treat this axiom as a description. The universe has patterns. Big things look like small things. Galaxies spiral like hurricanes. Fair enough — but description is not the point.
The Tablet does not say the macrocosm and microcosm happen to resemble each other. It says they are structured alike for a specific operational purpose: to accomplish the miracles of the One Thing. The resemblance is not a curiosity. It is the mechanism by which transformation works across every scale of existence [emerald-tablet].
Think of it this way: if the pattern of your inner world mirrors the pattern of your outer world — not metaphorically but structurally — then changing one necessarily changes the other. That is not mysticism. That is engineering. The Hermetic principles are not poetry; they are the physics of consciousness, and Correspondence is the principle that makes the rest of them operational.
The Kybalion codified this as the second of the seven Hermetic principles: the Principle of Correspondence. But the Kybalion was published in 1908. The axiom it codified is at least twelve centuries older — and the version most people quote is already a distortion [kybalion].
The Lost Translation — Arabic Origins vs the Latin Distortion
The Emerald Tablet most Westerners know comes from the Latin Tabula Smaragdina, which entered European circulation around the twelfth century. But the earliest surviving version is Arabic, appearing in the Kitab Sirr al-Khaliqa (Book of the Secret of Creation), attributed to Balinas and dated to approximately the eighth century CE.
This matters because the Arabic and Latin versions do not say the same thing.
Insight
The Arabic text uses a construction closer to "what is above comes from what is below, and what is below comes from what is above." The Latin renders it as "what is above is like what is below." "Comes from" implies emanation — an actual causal link between planes. "Is like" implies analogy. The Arabic version is more radical.
Newton translated the Tablet from the Latin tradition, choosing the word "like" — analogy, not emanation. This softened the axiom.
But the Arabic lineage tells a harder story. The upper and lower planes do not merely resemble each other — they generate each other. The macrocosm produces the microcosm. The microcosm feeds back into the macrocosm. This is not analogy. This is a circuit.
For the practitioner, the Arabic reading changes everything. If the planes merely resemble each other, then correspondence is something you observe. If the planes generate each other, then correspondence is something you operate. The first version makes you a philosopher. The second makes you an alchemist. The Corpus Hermeticum supports the more radical reading — the universe is described not as a static mirror but as a living system where every part participates in generating the whole [corpus-hermeticum].
The Three Planes of Correspondence
If the axiom is an operating instruction, the next question is: operating across what? The Hermetic tradition maps Correspondence across three distinct planes, each with its own flavor of the mirror.
Macrocosm
The totality — cosmos, universal mind, divine order. The pattern at the largest scale.
Microcosm
The individual — your body, your psyche, your inner cosmos. The same pattern condensed into a single point.
The Physical Plane. This is the level most people recognize first. The atom mirrors the solar system. A fern's frond repeats its own shape at every scale. A river delta branches like the veins in your lungs. Nature is relentlessly self-similar, and fractal geometry has given us the mathematics to prove it. But recognizing patterns is the beginning of correspondence, not its purpose. The physical plane is where the axiom is easiest to see and hardest to use.
The Mental Plane. This is where correspondence becomes operational. Your inner state mirrors your outer circumstances — not as punishment or reward but as structural reflection. The argument repeating in your marriage is the same tension you never resolved with your father. Jung called this synchronicity, but "coincidence" understates it. The Hermetic model says these are the same pattern expressing itself at two scales simultaneously, and the moment you change the inner pattern — genuinely, not performatively — the outer pattern shifts. This is the plane where shadow work is not just therapy but alchemy.
The Spiritual Plane. Here, correspondence reaches its deepest expression: the individual is not merely similar to the cosmos — the individual is the cosmos, condensed. The Corpus Hermeticum calls the human being a "second cosmos" — a complete instance of the whole, operating at a different resolution. This is the basis of theurgy: if you are the entire macrocosm condensed, then the work you do on yourself is participation in the transformation of reality itself. That is what the Tablet means by "the miracles of the One Thing" [divine-pymander].
Each plane is not a metaphor for the others. Each is a distinct operational layer where correspondence functions according to its own rules. The practitioner who understands this works all three simultaneously — and that is the difference between reading about alchemy and performing the Great Work.
Correspondence Across Traditions — The Universal Pattern
If the axiom were uniquely Hermetic, you might dismiss it as one tradition's speculation. But the same structural insight surfaces independently in nearly every major contemplative lineage — which is either a remarkable coincidence or evidence that the pattern is real.
Hermetic. The Emerald Tablet and the seven Hermetic principles formalize correspondence as the second law of reality. The operator works across planes by understanding that the same pattern governs all of them.
Kabbalistic. The Tree of Life maps correspondence explicitly. The ten Sephiroth exist in four worlds simultaneously, and each Sephirah on one level corresponds to its counterpart on every other level. The Kabbalist navigates between worlds by understanding which pattern on one plane activates which pattern on another.
Vedantic. The Sanskrit axiom Yatha pinde tatha brahmande — "As is the body, so is the cosmic body" — predates the Emerald Tablet by centuries. In the Upanishadic tradition, Atman (the individual self) is not merely connected to Brahman (the universal self) — it is Brahman. Not analogy. Identity.
Buddhist. Indra's Net describes a cosmic web where every node contains a jewel reflecting every other jewel. Change one and the reflection shifts across the entire web — correspondence as interdependent co-arising.
Gnostic. The divine spark within each person is not a fragment of something distant. It is the Pleroma itself — the fullness of divine reality — condensed into a single point of awareness. The work of gnosis is recognizing that the spark is the totality. When you do the work of transmutation on the spark within you, you are performing the Great Work on the Pleroma itself.
The convergence across traditions is not an argument from authority. It is an invitation to test. If these independent lineages all describe the same structure, the question is whether your own direct experience confirms it. That is what gnosis means — knowing from the inside, not from the bibliography.
Why "As Below, So Above" Is the Part Everyone Forgets
Read the axiom again, carefully. It does not only say that the above mirrors the below. It says that the below mirrors the above. The direction runs both ways.
Almost all popular treatments focus on the descending direction: the cosmos patterns your life, the stars influence your psyche, the divine blueprint shapes the material world. This is the passive reading — interesting but ultimately disempowering, because all you can do is observe.
The ascending direction is the part the alchemists cared about. "As below, so above" means that what happens here — in your body, in your psyche, in the dense material plane — propagates upward. Your inner work does not just change you. It changes the pattern at every scale above you. This is the radical claim of theurgy: that the embodied human being is not merely a passive reflector of cosmic order but an active participant in shaping it.
Line 8 of the Tablet encodes this explicitly: "It ascends from the Earth to the Heaven, and again descends to the Earth, and receives the power of the superiors and the inferiors." This is circulation, not one-way flow. The refined substance rises, touches the highest plane, returns to the lowest, and integrates the power of both. Each cycle deepens the transmutation. Each pass through the circuit refines further.
This is the alchemical operation of Solve et Coagula in its fullest expression. Solve — dissolve the fixed, let it ascend, spiritualize it. Coagula — condense the volatile, bring it back down, embody it. The ascending and descending movements are not separate operations. They are one continuous circulation, and the axiom "As above, so below; as below, so above" is the formula that describes the circuit.
Here is what this means in practice: your work on the calcination of your own ego, the dissolution of your own rigidity, the separation of your authentic self from your conditioning — this is not self-help. This is participation in the transformation of reality. Every tradition that teaches this axiom agrees: the embodied human who does the work consciously is completing the circuit that the cosmos requires.
And if that sounds grandiose, notice where the resistance lands. The ego would prefer to be small — because small means not responsible. The axiom says you are the microcosm through which the macrocosm refines itself. The question is whether you are willing to act as if it were true, and then watch what happens.
The Correspondence Diagnostic — Tonight's Practice
This is not a meditation. It is a diagnostic instrument for reading the correspondence between your inner and outer worlds in real time. Three checkpoints across a single day.
Morning Scan (2 minutes, upon waking). Before you check your phone, before you speak to anyone — sit for two minutes and notice your inner weather. Not what you think about it. Just what is present. Tension? Heaviness? Clarity? Dread? Name the dominant quality in a single word. Write it down.
Midday Check (1 minute, at any natural pause). Around the middle of your day, pause and ask one question: What in my outer world today mirrors the quality I named this morning? You are not looking for dramatic synchronicities. You are looking for the structural rhyme — the argument that matches the tension, the unexpected ease that matches the clarity, the stagnation that matches the heaviness. When you find the rhyme, do not try to fix it. Just notice it. Notice that the inner quality and the outer event share a shape.
Evening Review (3 minutes, before sleep). Sit with the day and ask: If I had changed the inner quality this morning — genuinely shifted it, not suppressed it — would the outer event have unfolded differently? You cannot prove the answer. You are not meant to prove it. You are meant to develop the organ of perception that registers correspondence as a lived reality rather than a concept. Over days and weeks of this diagnostic, the pattern becomes unmistakable. You stop needing to believe in correspondence because you start seeing it operate.
The purpose is not to manifest better outcomes. The purpose is to develop the direct perception that the axiom describes — to see, from your own experience, that the inner and outer are not separate systems but one pattern at two scales. Once you see that clearly, the axiom stops being philosophy and becomes a tool you can use. And that is what the Emerald Tablet was designed for — not to be admired but to be operated.
FAQ
What is the original source of "As Above, So Below"?
The phrase originates from Line 2 of the Emerald Tablet, attributed to Hermes Trismegistus. The earliest surviving version appears in the eighth-century Arabic Kitab Sirr al-Khaliqa, attributed to Balinas. The Latin translation entered European circulation around the twelfth century, and The Kybalion codified it in 1908 as the Principle of Correspondence.
Is "As Above, So Below" the same as the Law of Attraction?
No. The Law of Attraction claims positive thinking attracts positive outcomes. The Hermetic Principle of Correspondence describes a structural mirroring between planes of reality — not wish fulfillment. Correspondence is bidirectional and operates whether you are aware of it or not. The Hermetic principles describe how reality is structured; the Law of Attraction cherry-picks one aspect and strips the difficulty from it.
How does "As Above, So Below" relate to alchemy?
Correspondence is the foundation that makes alchemy possible. Working on the inner plane — the calcination of ego, the dissolution of rigidity, the separation of the authentic from the conditioned — produces corresponding changes in the outer world. The axiom connects the art of transmutation to every scale of existence through a single operating principle.
What does "As Below, So Above" mean — the reverse direction?
The reverse is the ascending influence: what happens on the material plane propagates upward to affect the higher planes. This is the basis of theurgy and the reason the alchemists insisted on embodiment. The Emerald Tablet's Line 8 describes this circulation — the refined substance ascends to heaven, descends back to earth, and integrates the power of both realms. The ascending direction is where the practitioner becomes an active participant in cosmic transformation. This connects directly to Solve et Coagula — the dual operation of dissolving and reconstituting that drives the Great Work.
Terms in this Teaching
15 terms
- Esoteric Mastery
The second Hermetic Principle — "As above, so below; as below, so above" — stating that patterns repeat across all scales of existence, making the inn
Read full entry→ - Esoteric Mastery
A foundational Hermetic text attributed to Hermes Trismegistus, containing the famous axiom "As above, so below" and the condensed instructions for th
Read full entry→ - Gnostic Cosmology
Gnosis is direct, experiential knowledge of spiritual truth — not intellectual understanding or belief, but an immediate, unmediated knowing that bypa
Read full entry→ - Esoteric Mastery
The Magnum Opus of the alchemical and Hermetic tradition — the complete transformation of the practitioner's consciousness from base matter (ignorance
Read full entry→ - Esoteric Mastery
The legendary sage of antiquity — a syncretic fusion of the Greek god Hermes and the Egyptian god Thoth — credited as the author of the Hermetica, the
Read full entry→ - Esoteric Mastery
The seven universal laws governing all planes of existence — Mentalism, Correspondence, Vibration, Polarity, Rhythm, Cause and Effect, and Gender — co
Read full entry→ - Esoteric Mastery
The first and master Hermetic Principle stating that "The All is Mind; The Universe is Mental" — all reality exists first as thought in a universal co
Read full entry→ - Esoteric Mastery
The fourth Hermetic Principle stating that everything is dual, everything has poles, and opposites are identical in nature but differ in degree — heat
Read full entry→ - Practical Alchemy
The raw, unrefined starting material of the alchemical Great Work — in spiritual alchemy, the practitioner's own unconscious emotions, conditioned pat
Read full entry→ - Esoteric Mastery
The fifth and highest element in alchemical philosophy — the irreducible essence that remains when all impurities have been burned, dissolved, and dis
Read full entry→ - Practical Alchemy
The foundational formula of Western alchemy — "dissolve and coagulate." The dual operation of breaking down existing forms (solve) and reconstituting
Read full entry→ - Esoteric Mastery
A 1908 esoteric text published under the pseudonym "Three Initiates" that codifies the Seven Hermetic Principles — Mentalism, Correspondence, Vibratio
Read full entry→ - Esoteric Mastery
The practical art of creating change in the higher planes through disciplined work on the lower — literally "divine work." The third branch of Hermeti
Read full entry→ - Practical Alchemy
The deliberate conversion of low-frequency emotional energy — fear, anger, shame, guilt — into refined consciousness fuel through the conscious applic
Read full entry→ - Consciousness Frequencies
The fundamental principle that nothing rests — everything moves, everything vibrates — applied to consciousness: every thought, emotion, and state of
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