Sort of a necro, but whatever.
So, initially, I just gave an "At least High 1-B" rating for the Spirits of the Lodges, since, while they indeed perceive the Universe as akin to a "story", this is because they lie outside of higher realities which function much like in verses such as The Dark Tower, where higher layers fully transcend the lower ones, but still function very much like normal Universes from their own perspective. Hence, I didn't really believe an 1-A rating would be appropriate for anyone who is not JUDY or The Fireman.
However, after reading some other portions of the books (mainly The Secret History of Twin Peaks), I believe there is a possibility that they can indeed be this high.
Firstly, we have to loop back on this statement in the Blog, made by
Doctor Jacoby after he experiences an alternate plane of reality while among a tribe in South America, who gives him weird drugs and medicines for him to see said plane:
When I opened my eyes, two things occured: I realized that I was no longer where I thought I had been, and at the same moment no longer knew who "I" was. My vision was both clouded and somehow enhanced, and at some level I registered that what I was "seeing" was not physically in front of me. I also knew that the "veil" of reality had been rent, split or torn away and that I was looking into a different and perhaps "deeper" dimension, one that either underlies ours or that coexists with it side by side, separated by the thinnest margin imaginable, one that our relatively primitive neurology prevents us from perceiving.
As I "looked" deeper--an inadequate description for a kind of seeing that involved all my senses, although not necessarily on the physical level--I realized there were living beings before me in this field of energy. As they drew closer to me, I realized that they could "see" me as well that my presence had drawn their interest. This alarmed me slightly, as I could not discern their intent. They might have been angelic or demonic, or perhaps hybrid creatures, and there were many of them moving towards me, tall and humanoid. I realized that their interest in me felt cold, reptilian, neutral but shading towards malevolence, lacking all compassion
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Here, the aforementioned plane is described as being perhaps "deeper" than the world inhabited by Humans. Something which is a bit too vague to warrant anything more than a higher degree of High 1-B. However, there is also this statement, made by the same guy towards the end of the book, where he briefly mentions the beliefs of the tribes which he interacted with:
A medicine man in Amazon would take them both at their word, believe the story at face vue and treat it accordingly. Possession. An entity. Why is that any less plausible or relevant than the safe, sanitized, pre-packaged bullshit of an armchair diagnosis made solely from the neck up? What is that but a shield hoisted to protect us from the unholy terror of glimpsing ourselves as we truly are: creatures of unknown origin, trapped in time, pinned to a hostile rock through indifferent and infinite space, clueless, inherently violent and condemned to death?
There is more to Laura's story than the facts. More than meets the eye or ear. A third rail lurks here in the shadows that's deadly to the touch. There's only one way to find it. The shamans I've worked with know how to pierce the veil and see beyond the membrane of our poorly perceived and shared "reality." (They'd use the term "illusion.") They've shown me, I've experienced these things with them, I've seen through the veil, and traveled the world in pursuit of that knowledge. Dedicated my life to this search, personally and profesionally.
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As seen here, he states that the shamans he worked with to perceive the aforementioned "deeper" reality also state that the Universe which living beings collectively inhabit and perceive is nothing but an illusion, with the act of ritualistically using drugs and substances being what allows them to pierce the veil of reality and glimpse at what lies beyond.
Drugs themselves have already been widely implied to be a way of connecting to the Lodges from the physical world in the series. Mainly in Season 3, where we are shown several scenes of a
drugged woma constantly shouting "one one nine" (as opposed to 911) at her son. When asked about that, Mark Frost even suggested that this is possibly because "the people who have one foot in the other world have a pronounced tendency to speak backwards." As seen in
this interview, which is an obvious reference to how the entities of the Black and White Lodges naturally speak backwards.
Alongside the fact that the physical world and the Lodges are the main, and insofar only, dualistic realms which are shown in the series (with them always being referred to as "the two worlds"), this makes it pretty clear that the alternate plane which Jacoby experienced in his visions was indeed part of the Lodges, and most likely the Black Lodge itself, given how he describes several malevolent, cold entities taking an interesting in him during his acid trip. Just in case people want to start questioning the validity of his statements' relation to the Lodges.
Coupled with the already accepted idea that the Spirits of the Lodges transcend the Universe (which itself is considered the High 1-B construct when taking into account the highball of their ratings), as well as the numerous pieces of evidence showing that the Black Lodge exists in a realm of nonexistence (with the Dutchman's Lodge being straight up referred as being "nowhere"), I am pretty sure their high-end can be 1-A.