1
Let us honour intelligence, and not insult it, for it
is as much from God as piety.
2
The intellect cannot lead us to infallible truth,
yes, but it can keep us from straying into roads that would lead us to utter
falsehood.
3
What was called "Reason" in The Hidden Teaching
Beyond Yoga and what was honoured as "Reason" by the Cambridge Platonists is
a mystical plus intellectual faculty and not merely an intellectual one. It is
not merely a coexistence but a fusion of the two capacities.
4
If we reverse the words of Descartes, whose thought
helped usher in the age of science, and proclaim, "I am, therefore I think" we
come nearer to the truth.
5
True intelligence is the working union of three
active faculties: concrete thinking, abstract thinking, and mystical intuition.
6
The intellect can only speak for the Overself after
the Glimpse has vanished and turned to a mere memory. That is to say, it is
really speaking for itself, for what it thinks about the Overself. It has
no really valid authority to speak.
7
The wisdom of God cannot be found by the intellect of
man.
8
The fragment of knowledge which the finite mind can
absorb and hold is so little that we must remain humble always.
9
He may recognize the truth with his intellect and yet
be unable to realize it with his consciousness.
10
The intellect ought to work only as a servant,
obeying intuitions orders in practical life or filling in details for
intuition's discoveries in the truth-seeking quest.
11
These competing tendencies of intuition and reason
may, however, be harmonized in a balanced personality. All mystics have not
advocated the paralysis of intellect - even Jacob Boehme wrote: "Human reason,
by being kept within its true bounds and regulated by a superior light, is only
made useful. Both the divine and natural life may in the soul subsist together
and be of mutual service each to the other."
12
We should not rightly expect such a deliberately
evoked intuition to act always as a substitute for reason. Its help is to be
sought only when reason is baffled. We must not on the plea of the superiority
of intuition desert our parallel duty of evolving reasoning power. We are
endowed with intelligence, with the faculty to reason things out, with the
ability to box the compass of our own life, and it is our task to use this most
common of all potential qualities a little more frequently than we appear to do
at the present time.
13
The greatest intellect is as nothing when compared
with the intelligence, the so-called subconscious mind, which directs the
involuntary functions of the body.
14
Intellect, reason, and intelligence are not
convertible terms in this teaching. The first is the lowest faculty of the trio,
the third is the highest, the second is the medial one. Intellect is logical
thinking based on a partial and prejudiced collection of facts. Reason is
logical thinking based on all available and impartially collected facts.
Intelligence is the fruit of a union between reason and intuition.(P)
15
The truth is not against intellect but above it,
not opposed to thought but beyond it.
16
None of these ultimate problems can be solved by
the intellect: those who imagine they do so, deceive themselves. And if they
communicate their specific solutions to disciples or followers they,
unintentionally perhaps, mislead them. Human thought can go so far but no
farther.
17
The "truth" which intellect can attain is a
perpetually moving one. Thinking can never arrive at a final conclusion that is
completely final, or at an absolutely true "truth."
18
Cerebral thought is an activity which, if it
dominates a person as it does with most people, prevents intuitions from deeper
levels of consciousness gaining entry. It also prevents other minds from
entering, thus barring hypnotic suggestion and telepathic transfer.
19
Ordinary thinking is wholly related to experience
connected with the five senses. It entirely misses the higher dimension which is
the content of such insight.
20
The same power which caused man to fashion a crude
wooden plough eventually enabled him to fashion a motor-driven plough. That
power was and is intelligence.
21
The power to discriminate between the false and the
true, to decide between the right and the wrong, to judge all the varied factors
which present themselves to the senses, is the power of intelligence.
22
Intuition is often the explosive climax of a long
slow process of hard thinking but whether it comes swiftly or slowly it must
always be ready to justify itself at the bar of reason, for the latter is our
only reliable guide to truth. Man may lay reason aside only when its fullest use
has led him to the point of transcending it. To ignore it before that moment is
to fall prey to extravagant fancies which are likely to lead the mind completely
astray.
23
He accepts all that mystical intuition can tell him
about his own and the universal being. But he sees that it will not be weakened,
it will only be supported checked and balanced if he listens also to what the
rational intellect can tell him.
24
Unless every question is seen in relation to the
Overself it is not seen rightly. Therefore, whatever answer is gained cannot be
the final one.
25
If man's intellect is subject to error and
illusion, how can it distinguish correctly the final Truth which is not subject
to error, and the absolute Reality which is not subject to illusion?
26
Life is an enigma to those who think, who have felt
the intellectual urge to probe its meaning and the emotional urge to find a
conscious relationship with it. Yet, if they pursue the attempt to satisfy these
yearnings, they do not get far. The theories and beliefs offered from different
sources too often contradict one another. Life continues to evade the deeper
questions.
27
The intellect, by its criticism and research, can
serve and supplement the intuition's work, can round and balance it; the service
need not nullify it. Such a collaboration ought to be encouraged, not excluded
as the more religious devotee in the past often excluded it.
28
Thinking about the Overself is inferior to
experiencing the Overself but in its own way and on its own level it is helpful.
29
Reason with a small "r" is the logical use of
thoughts: which is a mediate process; but with a capital "R" it is the
intelligent use of the understanding, which is a direct immediate thing:
intuition. Kant used it somewhat in this sense - but went only part of the way
into a semi-agnosticism, semi-knowledge of the truth. So the term got fixed into
its lesser meaning alone: the Kantian use of it is somewhat obsolete and best
not used by laymen.
30
The intelligence, as something more than intellect
alone, can be used to carry his thinking to the verge of an intuition which will
light up some of his understanding. But such a success requires certain
preconditions: a measure of equilibrium in his personality, a measure of
self-discipline in his character, intensive pondering on the truth.
31
There are no final conclusions in these matters. It
is better to accept the truth and let life remain inconclusive than delude
oneself. But this is not to support those who claim that the only truth is that
there is no Truth, or those who assent that all is mere opinion.
32
Intuition speaks with its own authority but what
does it lose if it has the support of argument?
33
When intellect comes to understand that its own
existence implies a superior existence which is its origin, it has served its
highest function. When it accepts the fact of intuition and serves it by laying
itself down in stilled prostration, there is born Intelligence. Then alone does
truth appear and peace bless us.
34
Intellect obstructs the light of the Overself.
35
The intellect, which so usefully serves the purpose
of analysis or exposition, discussion or explanation, is useless for the
purposes of acquaintance with, or comprehension of, the essence of things,
creatures, life, or mind. It is not capable of "touching the Untouchable," to
use an expression borrowed from the most ancient and, at one time, the most
secret Asiatic philosophy.
36
Human thinking can only lead to, and produce,
another thought, or series of thoughts. It cannot get beyond itself, cannot rise
to any object that is not of the nature of a thought.
37
The intellect is incompetent to solve the mystery
of man by itself. But in the absence of a properly developed intuition it can
render certain useful services to protect and guide the seeker. If it is not to
be relied on altogether, it is nevertheless not to be abandoned altogether.
38
Colin Wilson: "All thought chases its own tail"
seems to be Lao Tzu's meaning in his line "going far means returning."
39
To evoke thoughts, make mental images, or gather
words about the Overself is to remain just as much outside it and inside the ego
as ever.
40
Commentaries upon truth and expositions of it are
not identical with truth.
41
It must never be forgotten that such intellectual
conceptions of Reality are mere photographs taken by the camera of imagination
or diagrams drawn by the reason. They are not the object itself.
42
What the intellect is unable to grasp is truer than
what it can. That part of man - the intuition - which operates in this sphere
brings the truth-seeker to a satisfaction that is more intense. Why? Because it
withdraws him from the illusions and errors to which the intellect, however
sharply formed, is necessarily subject. However, the intellect can help by
submitting, and serve by formulating into suitable words what the intuition
reveals to it.
43
The dangers of developed intellect are pride and
complacency, over-analysis and over-criticism.
44
The untrained and uneducated mind necessarily has
shallow views. But the academically trained and educated mind may still have
distorted prejudiced or narrow views, even though they are deeper and better
informed. Only a free philosophy, based on insight, uninfluenced by social
pressures, can produce truly reasonable minds.
45
He must develop and nurture all the powers of
intellect, but without its pride, arrogance, or conceit.
46
The intellect can quite expertly give its support
to any position the ego desires it to take up. It can become instrumental in the
search for truth only as it becomes freed from egoism.
47
The danger that intellect will rule over mankind is
as catastrophic in the end as has been the danger of emotion and passion ruling
over mankind.
48
There is a dead intellectuality which, although
quite unable to penetrate to the mystical heart of things, yet carries itself
with an arrogant air of supercilious self-assurance!
49
He must know that so long as various complexes sway
the mind it is not possible to take a detached impartial view of any situation
to which those complexes have reference. Therefore, one aspect of such a
situation will be seen, but not another, and any decision taken, any action
called for, will be unbalanced and unwise.
50
The gluttony of the intellect is as hard to curb as
the gluttony of the stomach, and often much harder because less recognized for
what it is.
51
The ordinary intellect submits to the rule of
passion, self-interest, desire, appetite, custom, and appearances; hence the
knowledge it obtains may easily be illusory and is always undermined by doubt.
The purified reflective intellect disregards the pull of these forces and tries
to see things as they really are. Hence its knowledge is stamped with greater
certainty.
52
Every man who is capable of thinking in a
disinterested manner - and therefore capable of thinking truthfully - must come
to this realization. It is a most unfortunate fact, however, that such
disinterested thought is extremely rare, that men are prone to wishful thinking,
to mental outlooks more or less strongly coloured by their personal desires,
prejudices, and social positions.
53
The pompous public figure who mounts the highest
stilts of oratorical eloquence is not necessarily one whit wiser than the humble
adept who seldom brushes the air with words and who prefers depth of thought to
dissipations in speech.
54
When the intellect has produced its sharp pointed
criticisms and the voice or pen has formulated its logical emphatic sentences,
in the end, in old age, or after many a lifetime, the man will have to drop his
arrogance and submit humbly to the higher power within.
55
If there is a string of mistaken judgements running
through a man's life, even though he believed them to be accurately reasoned
when he passed them, be sure that one end of it is being pulled by his own
faults and deficiencies.
56
We have seen in certain lands the results of
intellectual activity when placed at the service of materialism greed and
sensuality. Its worst phases are then made manifest, especially its craftiness
and lack of conscience, its trickery and dishonesty.
57
Men who are unable to create, criticize. Thus the
work they do hangs upon the work of other men.
58
The possession of half a dozen imposing university
degrees may just as easily hinder a man's approach to philosophy as help it. It
will do so if it generates emotional pride and intellectual self-conceit, if it
makes him sceptical of intuitions and antithetic to prayer, if it prevents him
from approaching the Overself with humility and love so that he cannot weep at
his estrangement from it.
59
A smug and conceited mind may become spiritually
inert.
60
The pontifical self-important formality of such
statements is intended to create an impression. It does. But we must penetrate
their surface. Then we find there is some hollowness beneath them.
61
When malice and egotism get into a mental picture,
reliability goes out of it.
62
Cleverness may be admired but cunning is
reprehensible.
63
When the mind is hazed and feeling glamoured,
reason and judgement are at their feeblest.
64
But with stronger thinking power there comes also
intellectual pride and egoistic conceit. He must offset them by humbling himself
deliberately before the higher self. He must not hesitate to pray daily to it,
on bended knees and with clasped hands, begging for its grace, offering the
little ego as a willing sacrifice and asking for guidance in his darkness.(P)
65
It is true that no man can arrive at the truth
about God through his own thinking, which is merely the ego thinking. But it is
also true that through keen, close, and sustained reflection he can arrive at
the truth which perceives the ego's limitations, the intellect's limitations,
and thereby know the time has come to suspend such efforts to stop and to
surrender in mystical meditation to the non-thought side of his being.
66
Idea is not the ultimate reality, it is only a
manifestation of something which is its ultimate reality. The latter seems to be
an abstraction. Intellectually it must be so because it is beyond the power of
finite, human mentality to conceive it. But it may not be beyond the power of a
higher faculty lying latent within us to have the experience of this reality -
at least for a time. It is not known how to verify whether this is so or not
unless the intellect humbly realizes its own limitations and voluntarily
abnegates itself at a certain stage. In most cases this is done prematurely,
hence the self-deceptions and hallucinations which are rife in mystical circles,
but in the philosophical mystic's case it would come only after the fullest use
of critical thought and analytic reasoning. This is the proper moment for such a
suicidal act. For in the end he will be brought to such an abrupt turn. Perhaps
Jesus' statement, "Except ye become as little children ye shall in no wise enter
the kingdom of heaven," is appropriate here, if understood as an invitation not
to foolishness but to surrender of all human pride.
67
If you are trying to grasp the great Mystery do not
make the mistake of unwittingly holding on to the intellect while doing so.
68
When he has climbed to the peak of a series of
abstract thoughts, they may end abruptly and the higher faculty of intuition may
then become active.
69
The philosophic mystic seeks to stimulate thinking
to its highest degree until finally it turns round on itself and examines the
very nature of the ego - of the personal mind. Both practices lead in the end to
the same result, the stoppage of thinking.
70
Is it not strange that the most intense, the most
active pursuit of thought leads to human knowledge, whereas the complete
cessation of thought leads to divine knowledge!
71
Thinking achieves its highest object when it leads
to its own rest and the mind transcends all thoughts.
72
Where intellectual knowledge puffs up a man,
insight humbles him, has indeed the very opposite effect.
73
For the intellectual type, the essence of his need
is to see that he is not his thoughts, that they are but projections
thrown up out of consciousness. He is that consciousness, the very
knowing principle itself.
74
A time comes when the searching intellect humbly
recognizes at last that it can never recognize pure Spirit, but only its ideas,
opinions, fancies, and imaginations about Spirit. If it follows this up to the
fullest consequence and ceases all its theological or metaphysical or occult
studies, it lays itself open to be penetrated by the intuition.
75
The work done by original deeply penetrative
thinking can go far, can uncover much not yet known; but it cannot solve the
mystery of the thinker himself, unless it renounces its right to do so and lets
the diviner Self take over in utter silence.(P)
76
The same intellectual quality which obstructs the
inner path or blinds the inner eyes of so many sceptical people actually helps
the path of less egocentric persons. The intellect is not to be condemned. But
its presumptuousness in arrogating supreme, unchecked, and unbalanced control of
a man, is to be condemned.
77
The mind will go on having doubts and asking
questions, making problems for itself and creating illusions, as it has always
done in the past. That is, it will do so until it attains Truth, or abides in
the Stillness.
78
He need not abandon rigorously logical thinking
because he is cultivating mystically intuitive feeling. But he should know its
limitations.
79
He must not depend on lesser faculties alone - good
though they are in their place - when a higher faculty exists, when the
intuition shines out of its certitude. Not the impure, ego-warped, narrowed,
emotion-swayed and intellect-dried thing which serves so many; not man dictating
to God but more humbled before God. A seeker must become free from fanaticism
before the eyes can see. Let no one impose suggestion's power nor authoritarian
rule; rather should the mind empty itself until Pure Consciousness is there.
80
Weak minds which perceive the defects of logic,
instead of rising above it into reason, fall below it into instinct or impulse.
81
The silent mind receives spiritual guidance and
allows grace to approach; the thinking mind deals with the world and attends to
its activities.
82
Only when the intellect, after admiring its own
massive historical achievement, will turn upon itself and perceive how puny is
that by contrast with the still-awaited answer to the question, What am I? -
only then will the possibility of higher forces coming to its aid be realizable.
83
Krishnamurti: "Into crowded minds no revelation is
possible. In the stillness of the mind, that admits, 'I do not know,'
illumination is more apt to be achieved."
84
In telling us where knowledge must end and mystery
must begin, in being forced to describe the Absolute by telling us what it is
not and then confessing that it can go no farther, the intellect surrenders to
its limitations and acquires that quality of humility which is an essential
condition for receiving grace.
85
Correctly used, its limitations understood, its
emotional and egotistic biases discounted, intellect may enable a man to think
properly. It can then have a liberating effect; otherwise it is likely to have a
corrupting one.
86
The limitations of intellect must be recognized,
for then only will a man be ready to try the philosophic techniques whereby
words are used to rise above words, thoughts directed so that he may extract
himself from all thoughts.
87
To develop intellect and then to know when to drop
it, is to become its master. It then fulfils its proper purpose and serves man
instead of dominating - and therefore unbalancing - him.
88
The last act of human intellect, when it reaches
its highest level, is to recognize its own limitations and surrender its own
authority. But the surrender is not to be made to another human intellect! It is
to be made to the intuition.
89
It is not that he is called upon to reject all his
own knowledge and refuse the offerings of his intelligence. But since he is
striving to enter a state where the stillness precludes all questions and all
answers, all mental concepts and mental images, he must make a beginning where
the way to it is possible.
90
If you try to make Mind a topic for analysis,
worship, or discussion, it is no longer the unseen uncomprehended Mystery but a
projection, whereupon it is at once objectified and becomes an idea-structure.
Such an act falsifies it. You honour it more truly if you stay silent in voice,
still in thought.
91
With so much education and information, so many
particular pieces and fragments to keep together and carry in his mind, how is
it possible for anybody to keep it really peaceful?
92
Paradox transcends ordinary familiar experience and
baffles ordinary logical thinking. Its leap can be made only by intuition, if he
lets it function, or by faith if he can trust the sages' teaching.
93
Even the intellectual theory is worth studying
despite the intellect's limitations. It acts as a set of red signals pointing
out both dangers and deceptions, wrong ways and pitfalls.
94
The intellect which changes hour by hour has no
existence in the absolute sense. And it surely does not represent the ultimate
possibility of experience. Thus, one can stop its movement for a time through
profound meditation and be then aware of a deeper level of mind whence all these
intellectual changes spring up but which is itself relatively unchanging. How to
know whether this deeper level is worthy to be called enduring reality is a
question that is beyond most mystics.
95
Humanity is discovering that it cannot solve its
old problems in the old way - the logical thing to do is to try a new way. In an
age of materialistic intellect and materialistic religion such as ours, that new
way must consist of turning towards a spiritualized intellect and a
spiritualized religion. The first step for the intellect to take is humility;
the first step for the religious feeling to take is obedience. The intellect
must sink down in the self-abasement of constant prayer to the Higher Power; the
religious feeling must obey sincerely and honestly the admonitions given it by
the great prophets. The intellect must no longer go on deceiving itself and the
religious feeling must no longer go on deceiving God.
96
The intellect has to become baffled and exhausted
by its own activity in search of the Overself, must despairingly know that it
has no possible chance of ever knowing the truth by its own self-defeating
procedures, must realize that it is running round and round in a circle, and
must finally abandon the effort altogether. At this very point a great
opportunity awaits the seeker, but it is also here that so many go off at a
tangent and miss their chance. Either they label the quest futile and illusory,
losing further interest, or they take shelter in a hierarchical religious
organization which imposes dogmas and demands complete submission to its
authoritarian rule.
97
The intellect can never stop asking questions. It
has millions always in reserve. But in the end there is only one important
question. So why not ask it in the beginning and save this long circular detour?
98
When logic fails, men often betake themselves to
occult, mystic, and even primitive paths.
99
If the end is to sublimate thinking altogether, why
go on collecting more and more thoughts from teachers and traditions - all
outside one's self?
100
How haughty the intellect may become! It does not
understand that there is an invisible circle around it labelled "Pass Not!"
101
Some intellectuals have too many questions, give
up in the end and turn agnostic or join the Catholic Church or, like Hume, spend
the rest of their years shallowly.
102
Unless intellectual thinking understands its own
limitations and therefore knows when to stop its own activity, it will not lead
man to truth but mislead him. But if and when it is willing to deny itself at
the correct time, it will allow intuitive thinking to be born and that will lead
him still nearer to the goal.
103
The same man at different times of his life may
hold different views. It is unrealistic to demand that everyone should be
consistent throughout the course of a lifetime.
104
The intellect is only the totality of transient
thoughts; it is not a separate and self-existent thinker.
105
The telephone operator in a business who
attempted to manage all the departments of that business independently of the
chief executive would be a usurper. The intellect is the telephone operator of
our psyche and undertakes more than it is really capable of when it undertakes
to decry the Soul.
106
The intellect's desire for total explanations of
the universe is impossible to satisfy, save with self-deception.
107
The intellect produces thoughts without
weariness. It looks for change instead of looking inside itself for its
originator.
108
To start with the data and come to the
conclusions, joining the two by a series of logical steps, is the way of
ratiocinating intellect. But we need to guard against inaccuracy of thought and
speech as well as against narrowness of mind and feeling.
109
Kant saw how the mind forms its ideas under
definitely limited conditions, and how it cannot help but do so, and that these
ideas are merely the best it can produce under those conditions, not at all the
truest ones.
110
We make the mistake of looking for a
philosophical system that will confirm our preconceived beliefs and views.
111
How few are really and sincerely seeking to
establish truth; how many seek rather to establish victory. They can point out
the errors in other people's conclusions, opinions, and beliefs, but are blind
to the errors in their own.
112
"Against stupidity the gods themselves strive
unvictorious." - Schiller.
113
There is a simplicity which is too much like
stupidity to be worth cultivating,
114
Neither tries to take in the other party's case
but each presents only his own. Neither is willing to listen or believe the
other side has any case at all. So reason never really gets a chance, only
ego-centered self-interest. Each is far removed from any real wish to find the
truth as it really is, objectively.
115
To limit one's ideas to those of the environment
in which he happens to be born is a common fault.
116
Many aspirants fail to realize that they move
mostly in the realm of their own personal ideas, and not necessarily in the
realm of utter truth.
117
The intellect is endlessly curious, ever wanting
to know; this is why its activity is hard to still.
118
Intellectual acumen is useful on this quest, but
alone it is quite insufficient.
119
If thoughts and ideas are removed, what is left
of the intellect? What is it if not the aggregate of all these mental
activities?
120
A doctrine comes into being through
theorizing by intellect or activity by feeling, that is, it is an opinion or a
belief. An item of knowledge, for example scientific knowledge, is
neither.
121
The intellect has to receive truth before it can
be satisfied. And it requires that truth to be presented by giving reasons and
using logic, if it is to be acceptable.
122
The work of the intellect in tracing causes to
effects, in analysing situations and substances, in forming theories and making
studies, and even in synthesizing the results of all these operations is still a
limited one.
123
Let no one mistake intellectual understanding for
the wholeness of knowing, rather let it be to him a spur and a help to reach
deeper within himself to the Overself in full surrender.
124
The situation may be summed up thus: If the
activity of thinking is directed towards external objects and inspired by the
desire to attain or retain them, it binds a man to his spiritual ignorance. If
however it is directed towards God or his divine soul and is inspired by the
desire to attain it, then it leads him to spiritual intuitions.
125
To understand intellectually is good but to
glimpse intuitively is better. Best of all is not merely to look at truth but to
enter into it.
126
When you are going through the intellectual
analysis you must think as sharply as possible. You have to hack your way
through these woods by the sharpness of your thinking. This is where the clarity
of thoughts and their formulation into exact phraseology is so necessary. You
must not be vague and hazy about ideas; you must penetrate them with clear
understanding. It is only later when you have reached the meditation stage that
this activity is put into abeyance, because then the effort is to still thought.
127
Thus we see how reason, so far from being
despised as "anti-spiritual," has actually led us, when allowed to complete its
work and not stopped by materialist intolerance, to the profound spiritual truth
of our being. What we have next to do is to realize this truth through
ultramystic exercises.
128
Nevertheless, the endeavour to grasp what is
beyond its reach is not a wasted one, for it carries the intellect to the very
limits of its own being and then invokes its higher counterpart to come to the
rescue.
129
First there must be intellectual understanding of
the truth of his real being, then he can advance to the practices which lead to
its realization.
130
He should always try to distinguish between
knowledge which is acquired by the intellect and spiritual intuition which is
bestowed by spirit.
131
Where ordinary thinking cannot penetrate, holy
thinking can.
132
There are certain deep questions which a
developed intellect will have to ask but which cannot be answered in the
intellect's own language.
133
The intellect's finest function is to point the
way to this actual living awareness of the Overself that is beyond itself. This
it does on the upward path. But it has a further function to perform after that
awareness has been successfully gained. That is to translate that experience
into its own terms, and hence into ordinarily comprehensible ones, both for its
own and other people's benefit.(P)
134
Reasoned thinking may contribute in two ways to
the service of mystical intuition and mystical experience. First and commonest
is a negative way. It can provide safeguards and checks against their errors,
exaggerations, vagaries, and extravagances. Second and rarest is a positive and
creative way. It can lead the aspirant to its highest pitch of abstract working
and then invite its own displacement by a higher power.(P)
135
Like the two sides of the same coin, so it is
that a thing thought of is thought of always by comparison with something not
itself, that all our thinking is therefore always and necessarily dualistic, and
that it cannot hope to grasp Oneness correctly. Hence the logical completion of
these thoughts demands that it must give up the struggle, commit voluntary
suicide, and let Oneness itself speak to it out of the Silence. But this
must not be done prematurely or the voice which shall come will be the voice of
our own personal feelings, not of That out of which feeling itself arises.
Thinking must first fulfil, and fulfil to the utmost, its own special office of
bringing man to reflective self-awareness, before it may rightly vacate its
seat. And this means that it must first put itself on the widest possible
stretch of abstract consideration about its own self. That is, it must attempt a
metaphysical job and then be done with it. This is what the average mystic
rarely comprehends. He is rightly eager to slay his refractory thoughts, but he
is wrongly eager to slay them before they have served him effectively on
his quest.(P)
136
These studies do indeed open up the loftier
faculties of human intelligence, faculties which bring us to the very borderland
of insight.
137
To learn that Reality is beyond the intellect's
capacity to know it is to learn something about it. To learn what it is not may
seem useless to some people but that does prepare the mind, as well as the way,
for the positive knowledge of it through insight.
138
A reality which is not conceivable by human
thought because it transcends thought itself, therefore it is also not
describable. But what thought can do is to establish what IT is not, and even
more important that IT is.
139
It is by its pondering over these very
contradictions paradoxes and puzzles of an intellectually scientific view of the
world that the intellect itself is unconsciously led first to engender and
ultimately to accept a mystically intuitive view of the world.
140
Why must we always try to arrive at formal
conclusions. Why not let ideas work of themselves in the subconscious?
141
This philosophy does not come within the range of
any recognized system. This is because it refutes all standpoints including
those which it adopts itself temporarily as a means of leading the student
higher. And when no other view is left for examination and attack it says,
"Truth itself is beyond thought and speech, but the way to it embraces them."
Reality itself is beyond touch and ideation but the way to it can be pointed
out. You must eliminate from the definitions of both truth and reality
everything which might mislead you to regard concepts as the final goal. Just as
a man may use one thorn to pick another from his flesh and then throw both away,
so you must use right concepts to remove erroneous ones. Finally you must
discard them all.
142
Because critical, rational thinking has to be
transcended during certain phases of this quest, we should not overvalue it. But
let us not therefore fall into the opposite error and undervalue it. Even if it
could no nothing more than keep us from stumbling, it would be worthwhile. But
it can do much more than that.
143
When intuition quietly confirms what intellect
argues, when it gives a deeper sanction to reasoned conclusions, we come closer
to the truth of the matter.
144
The intellect has its own limitations but it can
lead a man - if properly guided by correct thinking or by hearing and reflecting
upon words of those who have already written them - to the very verge of the
limitations where a single leap into passivity will dispel darkness and bring
light.
145
Among those masters who taught the tenet of three
levels of understanding was the brilliant intellectual and mystic
thirteenth-century medieval Ibn al-Arabi, of Spain, who was honoured by the
title "Teacher of the Age." He described them as (1) ordinary intellectual
acquisition of information; (2) temporary emotional conditions, mental glimpses,
and mystical experiences of unusual uplift; (3) permanent perception of the
Real.
146
We must beware of falling into unreason at any
point on this path. For it is reason that leads up to insight even though it is
incapable of reaching beyond itself.
147
It is not that reason must be abandoned and all
its values thrown aside, but that reason itself now points to the intuition
which transcends it. "My work was good, and it was well done," says reason, "but
to take you farther, into a sphere that is not properly mine, where an entirely
different faculty must bear you, would be imposture."
148
The intellect cannot know its source but it can
explain why it cannot know. More, it can go farther and tell us that
there is a source and that it is transcendent, wrapped in eternal stillness.
149
Man's self is not his thoughts but the
consciousness which makes those thoughts possible. He stands in somewhat
the same relation to them that they stand to the body: he uses them and
partially expresses himself through them.
150
No thought can assume a clear and distinct form
in the mind of a man until he has pinned it to a picture if it be concrete, or
to words if it be abstract.
151
During the time that anyone is engaged in the
activity of thinking, he is not in himself but in the thoughts.
152
No idea can give us full and lasting support, for
after all it is only a thought; but a true idea can give us much help over many
years. But only being established in Being can support us in every way and all
the time.
153
We cannot underestimate the importance of the
leading ideas which direct and control a man's thinking. Man possesses creative
power. He may pour his molten imagination into new molds, then solidify it, and
through sheer intensity of will give birth to his own brain-child.
154
The mind can be put to a high or a base purpose.
It can be a friend or a devil at your side.
155
If intellect were an undesirable faculty to use
and thinking were part of the evil in us, then this assertion should not itself
be supported by any argument for that would be illogical and inconsistent -
since it involves the use of thinking!
156
Most of us move from one standpoint to another,
whether it be a lower or a higher one, because our feelings have moved there.
The intellect merely records and justifies such a movement and does not
originate it.(P)
157
When you utter the words "I know" you inevitably
imply a duality of a thinker and his thought, of subject and object.
158
Only those thoughts are true for such a man as
can lodge comfortably with the other thoughts already reposing in his mind!
159
We ordinarily know any object while we are both
separate and distant from it.
160
Dynamite reposes in moral neutrality. The use
that is made of it determines its goodness or badness. In the same way, reason
and thought are spiritually neutral. They hinder or help the inner life only
according to the way they are used, the roads which they take, and the aims
which they set for themselves.
161
My criticism in earlier books of intellect as an
unsatisfactory guide to truth, and of intellectualism as yielding a lot of
contradictory opinions, was misunderstood. It was directed against intellect,
not reason: I differentiate between both. Intellect uses logical method, reason
uses a higher one. Theological philosophy is based on logic. Scientific
philosophy is based on reason. I uphold rationalism against intellectualism, the
thinking power in man against the classifying power, the mind which evaluates
thoughts against the mind which merely collects and describes them.
162
So long as these two faculties of human mind -
reason and imagination - are surrenderd to its animal side, so long will they
prevent the real human being from being born.
163
The victories of reason are the only enduring
ones.
164
When we abdicate reason for unquestioning belief,
when we sign away our birthright of private judgement to another man, we part
with a precious possession.
165
Reason is active in the developed man. He cannot
stop it from demanding a cause for an effect.
166
I took this use of the term "Reason" from
Aristotle, who made it higher than ordinary intellect, as well as creative,
spiritual, eternal, and undying.
167
The faculty of discrimination which we are to use
in the pursuit of truth is not the intellect but the true Reason, which itself
judges the intellect and rejects or confirms what it says. The Indian sages call
it Buddhi and have even assigned to Buddhiyoga a status not a bit
lower than that given to the other yoga paths.
168
The conclusions to which reason comes can only
have obligatory force upon the reason itself, not necessarily upon the whole
integral being of man. We are finally to decide the problems of life by the
integration of all our human nature and not merely by the judgement of a
particular part of it. To make life a matter only of rational concepts about it
is to reduce it, is to make a cold abstraction from it, and thus to fall into
the fallacy of taking the part for the whole. Metaphysical concepts may fully
satisfy the demands of reason but this does not mean that they will therefore
satisfy the demands of the totality of our being. They satisfy reason because
they are the products of reason itself. But man is more than a reasoning being.
His integral structure demands the feeling and the fact as well as the thought.
Hence it demands the experience of nonduality as well as the concept of it, the
feeling as well as the idea of it. So long as he knows it only with a limited
part of his being, only as empty of emotional content and divorced from physical
experience, so long will it remain incompletely known, half-seized as it were.
It is at this crucial point that the seeker must realize the limitations of
metaphysics and be ready to put aside as having fulfilled its particular purpose
that which he has hitherto valued as a truth-path.(P)
169
It is impossible for the modern mind to encounter
such experiences without seeking their explanation. And therefore it is of
little practical use for a master to tell his followers not to trouble their
heads about the reason why such things happen or not to ask questions about the
meanings and purposes of the world.
170
My use of the term "reason," although with a
capital "R" in The Hidden Teaching Beyond Yoga, seems to have been
misunderstood by several persons. This forced me to add an appendix to the
chapters in order to clear the matter in their mind. Reasoning, in its highest
sense, transcends mere logic and welcomes the alliance of meditation; out of
their union comes wisdom, peace, balance, and so, blessing. There is a
translation from the Sanskrit of the Katha Upanishad made by Professor
Mishra of the University of Barcelona, published with a preface by Suresh
Radhakrishnan, President to India, who was then lecturing at Oxford University.
In this translation there are two verses which use the term. Here is the first:
The man whose chariot is driven by reason holding well the reins of his mind,
reaches the end of his journey, the Supreme Pervading Spirit. And the other
verse is: Beyond the senses is the mind, and beyond mind is reason.... Beyond
reason is the great Self.
171
We may reject reason's ideas about Divinity but
in the end it is reason we have to rely on to support the ideas which authority,
tradition, emotion, or faith put forward.
172
The agnostic, even the atheist, is a believer,
too. Only he has more faith in the validity of reason than in the validity of
intuition. Yet it is only the reason's own vanity that asserts that its
validity is a higher one.
173
Just as we ought not misuse emotion, so we ought
not misuse reason. We may use reason to justify an intuition, provided we use it
faithfully and not to flatter our prejudices or prepossessions. We shall then be
as ready to examine critically searchingly and impartially our own conclusions
as those of an opponent.
174
Reason properly used will critically examine an
emotion which is leading one astray, whereas improperly used it will
uncritically defend such an emotion. It will not hesitate to puncture the ego's
inflated complacency in the first case whereas it will support this complacency
in the second one.
175
How often is reasoned judgement pushed aside by
mere physical appeal which obscures what is below the surface.
176
Common sense assists the triumph of reason over
sentimentality.
177
The faculty of reason also has two phases; the
lower is practical and reaches perfection in the scientist; the higher is
abstract and reaches perfection in the metaphysician.
178
If we bury our reason alive, so much the worse
for us. Its wraith will rise up one day and sneeer in revenge at our silly
errors and self-made troubles.
179
The utmost use of the reasoning faculties cannot
always provide for every factor in a situation. There are some which only
intuition can grasp - the karmic factor, for instance. This explains the
miscalculations of men who possess the most highly developed rationality but who
lack a counterbalancing development of intuition.
180
Expect no favourable opinion of spiritual truth
from a man who looks at life through the medium of the senses alone, whose
reason is enslaved by them, and whose intuition is effaced by them.
181
To depend on feeling as a guide to truth is to
depend on a truncated method which is inadequate to the task. The only complete
basis for our enquiry is feeling plus reason, the only results which possess
unquestionable validity are those achieved by feeling plus reason. The power of
intuition alone can enable us to discriminate between the real and the unreal
and it alone can eliminate all doubts by eliminating contradictions.
182
There is no reason why reason itself should not
be appeased.
183
This intellectual power is not to be allowed to
crush the heaven-born intuitional sense by its sheer weight but is to be fused
with it.
184
The intellect can present opinions - some very
plausible and logical, others very weighty and fact-supported. But only the
intuition can penetrate those layers after layer of spiritual experience which
reveal the truth about man's link with God.
185
If the intellect's workings are not warmed by the
heart's movements, it can only approach the reflected images of truth, not truth
itself.
186
The disputations which follow the activity of
intellect melt away in the harmonies which follow the upwelling of intuition.
187
The sin of the intellectual is when he allows
intellect to block intuitive feeling, to serve only the animal body or to
disregard the testimony of all those who, since early antiquity, have solved the
problem of being and experienced the mind at its best level. Such men may have
the finest brains, the greatest erudition, but themselves remain uncorrupted by
these possessions.
188
The intellect is not competent to establish the
existence of God, which only a higher faculty can know and consequently make any
valid assertions about. But neither is it competent to disprove the existence of
God since it can disprove only those finite matters which it can deal with: God,
being infinite, is outside its reach in every way.
189
The intellect cannot be used to ascertain the
ultimate truth without becoming involved at the end in inexplicable
contradictions. Some of them are: There is an ego - there is no ego. The world
is real - the world is unreal. Any idea or statement about fundamental being,
whether of man or cosmos, can be countered by its opposite.
190
The simple education of the intellect, whether as
a hoarding of information or a training in reasoning, becomes mere vanity if not
accompanied by the balancing cultivation of the intuition.
191
What we need is a third point of view which shall
fall into neither of these two extremes of emotional credulity or rational
scepticism, whilst reconciling what is sound in both. This exists in the
intuitive point of view.
192
There is always a risk that in taking a too
intellectual view of the universe and in practising a too methodical system of
yoga, the aspirant may get caught in the machinery of both intellect and method.
If he is unable to extricate himself then whatever benefit he derives from both
will always be on the lower plane. The transcendental insight which he seeks
will then be as elusive as ever.
193
If he seeks guidance concerning the correct
course to pursue, he can better get it from the still centre of his being than
from the restless chopping of his intellect.
194
It is better to be intelligent when he is
searching among ideas and doctrines than to be credulous - otherwise he may
mistake human absurdity for divine mystery - but he can be so only if intuitive
feeling is at work along with the reasoned thinking.
195
His own mind acts as a medium which interprets
each experience, event, object. Hence it colours necessarily if unwittingly or
even reshapes what is received by consciousness. And in the case of the Real,
the end result for him is a paradox. He cannot know It without transcending
himself. He cannot transcend himself without rising above the knower-and-known
duality.
196
Where intuitive feeling will guide him aright to
his best decisions, calculating intellect will not infrequently step in with
doubts or fears and rob him of them.
197
The contribution of intellect is indispensable.
But it is not enough. It leaves a most important part of the psyche - the
intuition - still untouched.
198
The danger of slipping into this overstress on
intellectual activity and not retaining the healthy balance between it and
intuitional activity, is large and real.
199
The intellect has so dominated the modern man
that his approach to these questions is first made through it. Yet the intellect
cannot provide the answers to them. They come, and can only come, through the
intuition.
200
When a difficult and important decision has to be
made, the mind can impartially take in both the pros and cons, can circle all
around the facts, yet in the end return baffled to where it started. Reason
exerts itself in vain and only exhausts itself in such a process. The next step
is to try outside advice, authority, or, if one can, intuition.
201
The intellect may be convinced and confess to the
truth but the faculty which actually recognizes it is the intuition. It is the
latter's light falling upon, and passing through, the intellect which really
certifies an idea to be true.
202
Semantic analysis and reasoned reflection help to
uncover the lesser errors, the little illusions. The intellect cannot go beyond
its own limitations, however; a higher faculty, insight, is needed to uncover
the larger errors, the major illusions.
203
The intellectual knowledge of the Truth is merely
its shadow and not the Truth itself. The Truth is a higher state of awareness
which leads you out of the little personal and physically materialistic everyday
life into a new world of being - the world of your higher self which transcends
these things. It is a real experience and not a mere speculation. It brings with
it the peace which passeth understanding of which Saint Paul spoke, frees you
from anxieties, fears, and all other negative ideas. It reveals to you that God,
in the sense of a Universal Intelligence and Universal Power, is actually the
basis of all existence.
204
Spiritual self-realization is the main thing.
Study of the teachings concerning cosmical evolution and the psychical evolution
of man are but intellectual accessories - things we may or may not take on our
journey, as we like. That part of man which reasons and speculates - mortal mind
- is not the part which can discover and verify the existence of God. We are not
necessarily helped or hindered on the divine path by taking up the lore of
science or by becoming versed in the ways of sophistry. Once we live out our
spiritual life in the heart, the rest sinks to second place.
205
What the Overself really is defies adequate
statement. For reason falters and fails before its mysterious Void. It dares not
claim a capacity beyond what it actually possesses. Thus the mystery of the
world is the mystery of a soluble riddle hidden within an insoluble enigma.
Nevertheless, we need not despair. For even if metaphysics is unable to explore
this mysterious territory, it is at least able to point out its location. That
is a definite gain. But that is not all. What reason cannot do can yet be done
by the faculty which towers transcendentally above it - insight.
206
Logical thinking about a proposed course can
never be equal to intuitive guidance about it. For the first is limited by the
ego's capacity and experience whereas the second transcends them.
207
The intellect cannot know itself; it must have an
object; but that which is behind it does know it. That Overself is the only
entity which can know itself, which fuses subject and object into one.
208
Although the intellect in us cannot grasp the
Real, cannot do more than think about what it is in relation to itself,
there is something else in us which can successfully do so. This is insight
which, unfortunately, few have cultivated although all have it.
209
It can only be translated into thinkable language
by a process which elaborates this instantaneous and simple experience into a
lengthy and complicated metaphysic. It is only through such insight that a man
may attain enduring wisdom, not through intellect.
210
Changes of view are inevitable so long as he has
not attained insight, which is marked by its sureness of itself, thus
contrasting with the intellects's doubts, hesitations, and waverings.
211
Only after reason matures to its fullest extent
can we look to the dawning of a perfect intuition, or "insight" as I prefer to
call it.
212
The belief that the unaided reason of man can
solve all his problems is merely an expression of reason's own arrogance. Unless
it co-operates with mystical insight, its best solutions of ultimate questions
will either be fictitious ones or contradictory ones.
213
At the end of all this work what does he get?
Does he touch reality? The answer is no. He simply gets one thought instead of
another, replaces an old thought by a new one. There is here a danger that the
replacement may be the exact opposite of the thought which it replaces - as if
he were substituting a correct concept for an erroneous one. But this still does
not bring him into reality, the knowledge of which is Truth. There is indeed
only one way out of this impasse and that is to recognize that the plane of
thoughts and concepts is not the plane which holds the real but must be
transcended. This realization is a kind of crisis which enables him to admit
that the way of the intellect is in the end a circular way leading from one
thought to another and that it must be transcended. But the thinking has led to
one useful result, though it is indeed a negative result: it has told him what
reality is not, and the use of thought has enabled him to destroy the belief
that thought is the way to the goal. This reminds one of Ramakrishna's
illustrative metaphor about the use of one thorn to remove another which had got
stuck in the finger. And so, this point reached, it is but one step further to
perceive that the consciousness which holds all thoughts is what he's really
seeking and not those projections from it which appear as concepts, ideas, and
thoughts. There, in this consciousness, he can come to peace: the peace of the
silent Mind, the transcendental Mind. Once he has become steeped deeply in this
realization, he perceives with full clarity that it is not the movement from one
set of beliefs or one set of ideas to a new one which is going to complete his
search but the redirection of attention to THAT which is behind all thoughts -
the reorientation of concentration to THAT which is in the gap between two
thoughts.
If this is done with perseverence and sustained with patience, Truth dawns upon him either slowly or swiftly and then stays with him forever and cannot be broken by any form of materialism in thinking, of dualism in belief, or personality cult in practice. He looks henceforth only to the infinitude of Being which is within him, within the cosmos, and has always been so. If indeed in meditation the world disappears, he does not need to go so far as the Advaitans and assert that there is no world! If in wide activity it reappears, he knows it is still a phenomenon, an appearance made by mind, issuing forth from mind, and the Ultimate Mind was there and is there now. Whatever form thoughts and concepts may take, he knows them for what they are and does not let go of That which is their ultimate origin. This is real knowledge, for it is practice, it is life and not a concept.
214
No single human faculty is alone adequate to the
search for truth. All must be used, including intuition, and finally crowned by
a new one - insight.
215
Men who have daily experience of a divine
presence will not waste their time arguing whether or not a divine power exists.
216
The absence of a universal consensus amongst
philosophers certainly does indicate the inability of intellect to arrive at
indisputable truth. But the only alternative which could be proposed - that of
an integral development of all sides of our nature, is superior, yet still not
enough. For the other sides - that is, feeling, mystical intuition, and mystical
experience - will also suffer from the same deficiencies. There is the same
possibility of endless contradiction here. One arrives, therefore, at the
conclusion that a new faculty is really needed wherewith to ascertain ultimate
Truth, one which, if it is attained, will function in precisely the same manner
in all persons. Such a faculty was, it is believed, used by sages like Krishna
and Buddha. It can be given the name of "insight." The purity of this insight
must necessarily be a consequence of the purity of the entire character and
mentality of the individual who has it. This applies not only in the moral
realm, but also in the intellectual and emotional realms of his being. For the
very tendencies of a virtuous nature which helped his progress in earlier stages
must now be discarded as much as those of a vicious nature. The very tendencies
of the intellect which brought him to his spiritual standpoint must also be
discarded. Only by this ruthless self-pruning can he respond quite impersonally
to reality and not falsify it. It is, presumably, the same as the divinization
of the human mind.
217
The gulf between intellectual revelation and
personal realization is greater than that between thought and action.
218
The depth of insight is not to be measured by the
length of intellect.
219
Thought bedims consciousness instead of
expressing it, coffins the universal Mind into the narrow ego. Man began to
think when he began to forget his Overself. However, the forces of evolution
will so work that one day he will learn to remember his divinity and yet use his
intellect at will without losing this remembrance.