Welcome aboard Godlike!
I agree with your assessment about the three stages/types of humanity. I see them as stages of spiritual development, i know some ancient Gnostics believed those born Hylic remained Hylic, but i strongly disagree. In fact, i can chart my own progress through all three levels, and in doing so i'll also reply to the OP.
For aboout half of my life (i'm 24 now) i was atheist, verging on anti-theist. This was my Hylic phase, i never thought about spiritual matters, in fact i considered them silly and a waste of time. At the age of five i disproved God to my own mind and that was that, no looking back until the age of fourteen.
At fourteen my father died and it sent a shock through my system, this shiock sent me out on a spiritual journey to find meaning in life, and death. I embraced a Kemetic form of religion and so entered the Psychical phase, i found great comfort in the Ancient Egyption idea of afterlife and in their Gods, for four years i was happy in my faith-alone state of being.
But then i went to university, there i discovered Buddhism and its concept of personal enlightenment, personal spirtuality. No reliance of non-self entities and the practice of meditation drew me in, but there was something that i felt was missing, for me Buddhism felt cold, soul-less. I reverted back to paganism and looked into Wicca since there was a reasonable number of neo-pagans attending my university.
After i left university and my Wiccan friends i found myself looking at what i was doing and what i believed in a different light, again i felt that something was wrong, something was missing. I entered into a state of spiritual flux, torn between Buddhism, Wicca, agnosticism and about a billion other spiritual paths and concepts.
I did a lot of research and eventually, while exploring "pagan" goddesses, i discovered Sophia.
She led me to further research Gnosticism, and i felt that i was home. It had the enlightenment and mystery of Buddhism alongside the grand mythologies and 'deities' of Wicca. And underneath it all there was this unknowable but all-encompassing, very unanthropomorphic God that offended none of my early-achieved logical conclusions.
I've been Gnostic for about two years now, not long, and during that time i've learnt a lot more and developed what i actually believe so that it is reasonably structured (i'm a scientist, i need structure
). It hasn't been easy, if you feel like reading the 2,000 odd posts i've made here you'll see i've had a wide variation in my belief, and still at times i am tempted to go back to the Psychical, anthropomorphic, comforting gods of my past, but so far i've stuck with Gnosticism, i love it.
I'd say at the moment i'm still in the transitional stage between Psychical and Pneumatic, but i can't really see myself ever going back.
Brother Jeremy, i wish i could be more like you, i try not to criticise people (even just in my own thoughts) for their literal views etc, but i'm no good at it. Hopefully with time i will devleop the patience and inner peace to accept people's beliefs without arguing with them.