Known as the “Second Buddha” in Tibet, Padmasambhava was said to have traversed the bardo realms, conquered lower astral forces, and integrated both light and shadow to bring tantric teachings to the world. He embedded sacred knowledge (terma) into the land and consciousness of future disciples—an act of multi-dimensional co-creation that continues to awaken those called to his path.
Padmasambhava (Tibetan Buddhism)


A 12th-century mystic, composer, and visionary, Hildegard described visions of cosmic wheels, divine light, and celestial beings with astonishing symbolic and theological detail. Her artwork and music were infused with spiritual intelligence. She brought through a divine cosmology that merged science, nature, and spirit, functioning as a bridge between heavenly frequencies and human creativity.
Hildegard of Bingen (Christian Mysticism)
Hermes is the legendary founder of Hermetic philosophy—a synthesis of Egyptian, Greek, and esoteric wisdom. He said that he had ascended into higher realms and received divine teachings directly from cosmic intelligences, and he transmitted these teachings in texts like the Corpus Hermeticum. Hermes described the universe as a living mind and taught that humans could attain divine consciousness through purification and gnosis. His writings lay the foundation for the belief that "as above, so below"—the very essence of co-creation.
Hermes Trismegistus (Egyptian Greek Esoteric Tradition):


A biblical figure, Enoch, was said to have “walked with God” and ascended bodily into the heavens. His journeys through the celestial realms are detailed in apocryphal texts like the Book of Enoch. There, he encounters angelic beings, cosmic laws, and the structure of the spiritual universe. He is transformed into Metatron, an archangelic scribe, signifying the ultimate co-creator: a human who becomes a divine agent across dimensions.
Enoch
(Jewish Mysticism)

Throughout history, there have been individuals who could be seen as co-creator pioneers—those who lived on Earth while consciously accessing divine realms. These figures did not merely speak of God or the heavens abstractly; they entered these realms through inner experience and translated those experiences into teachings, sacred works, systems of knowledge, or spiritual service. They walked the path of the divine human before it became a collective possibility. Here are several archetypal and historical examples across traditions...

Co-Creator Pioneers Throughout History
An Enlightenment-era scientist and mystic, Swedenborg claimed to explore the heavens and hells during conscious states. He described spiritual laws, the nature of the soul, and the architecture of the afterlife with intricate precision. His descriptions of correspondences between earthly and spiritual forms laid the groundwork for a science of the spirit, echoing modern fourth-level cosmology.
Emmanuel Swedenborg (Christian Theosophy)

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A holy man of the Oglala Lakota, Black Elk received profound visions that linked the Earth, the spirit world, and his people's destiny. His “Great Vision” spoke of sacred hoops, divine beings, and the flowering tree of life. Through ceremony, storytelling, and healing, he acted as a bridge between worlds, shaping his tribe’s legacy and wider spiritual understandings of Indigenous cosmology.
Black Elk
(Lakota Spirituality)
A 20th-century Indian mystics developed the vision of integral evolution—that human beings could consciously evolve into divine beings by aligning with supramental consciousness. Their ashram was a co-creation laboratory, blending meditation, education, architecture, and group fields to invoke divine realities into the physical realm. Their teachings directly support the emergence of the sacred human.
Sri Aurobindo and The Mother
(Integral Yoga)
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Carl Jung
(Depth Psychology & Archetypal Integration)
Though not typically categorised as a mystic, Jung’s explorations into the collective unconscious, archetypes, and symbolic dreams positioned him as a forerunner of psychological co-creation. His Red Book is a record of inner journeys that mirror astral initiation. He gave the modern world a language for understanding how subjective symbols map divine truth—a cornerstone of fourth-level science.
In the lineage of co-creator pioneers is not only appropriate—it is essential. He is arguably the archetypal Divine Human, the living embodiment of co-creation in its fullest sense. Jesus did not merely teach about God; he lived as the bridge between the human and the divine, making the fourth-level reality tangible through his life, death, and resurrection. His teachings, miracles, and inner initiation reveal deep familiarity with the fourth-level reality, which he accessed not as an escape from the world but as a platform for divine expression and planetary service. Through prayer, fasting, solitude, and inner communion, Jesus demonstrated mastery of energetic laws—healing through touch, commanding nature through word, and transfiguring light through presence. His ability to perceive symbolic truths, communicate with spiritual beings, and channel divine will shows a complete alignment with the fourth level as a space of luminous co-creation.
Jesus Christ

