We may begin by asking what this philosophy offers us. It offers those who
pursue it to the end a deep understanding of the world and a satisfying
explanation of the significance of human experience. It offers them the power to
penetrate appearances and to discover the genuinely real from the mere
appearance of reality; it offers satisfaction of that desire which everyone,
everywhere, holds somewhere in his heart - the desire to be free.
TOWARD DEFINING PHILOSOPHY
1
The old Oriental idea is to be lost in the
Infinite. The new Occidental ideal is to be in tune with the Infinite.
2
Neither the psychoanalyst nor even the religionist
seeks that full purification and total transformation of the human being which
philosophy alone seeks and alone achieves. All other paths - including the
mystical ones - seek to effect a particular purpose or a partial one: only this
is informed enough and willing enough to fulfil the complete purpose for which
man has been put on earth by the World-Mind and surrender absolutely to it. If
the philosopher has any desire at all, it is to know, understand, and co-operate
with the infinitely intelligent and perfectly efficient World-Idea.
3
It is a transcendental idea that the mind gets hold
of and knows. It is a gathering of clear supra-mental perceptions. It is the
higher reason, the discriminating understanding. It penetrates the whole being
and remains. Thus it becomes naturalized and continues the natural consciousness
of the man.
4
It is not only a right intellectual attitude towards
life. It is also an exalted emotional experience of life. Nor is it only an
occasional attitude and an intermittent experience. It is sustained through the
day and throughout the year.
5
Philosophy is an explanation of life and a
distillation of its highest knowledge. Consequently it includes metaphysics. But
it is not identical with metaphysics, being far greater.
6
The complaint has been made not seldom that the
Indian version of this quest is too largely a process of dehumanization. I must
leave it to the public propagandists of Indian teachings to give their own
defense in this matter. But the philosophic attitude seeks a balanced wisdom, a
removal of negative, ignoble, sensualist, narrow-minded, unpractical, and
fanatical traits from character and action. Beyond that it welcomes the fine
flowering of human culture, the refinement of human living, and the enchantment
of human quality.
7
There are two sets of critics who match themselves
against philosophy. There are the hard materialists, on the one hand, and the
imperfect mystics, on the other. The first are guided by reason but limited to
sense-experience; the second are guided by intuition but limited to
meditation-experience. Both are incomplete. Both are opposed to each other as
well as to philosophy, which understands, appreciates, and accepts both as
expressing necessary but partial views which should be included in a fuller and
more integral view.
8
Philosophy overcomes the mystic's fear of worldly
life and the worldling's fear of mystical life by bringing them together and
reconciling their demands under the transforming light of a new synthesis.
9
Ours is a complete synthesis of mysticism,
metaphysics, science, religion, ethics, and action. It offers a higher and wider
objective than the earlier yogas.
10
Because its concepts are not merely the
productions of a mechanical logic but the inspirations of a living soul, they
are powerfully creative, dynamically stimulative. In philosophy, art consummates
itself.
11
There is nothing spectacular in philosophy.
Reasoned thought pitched at the highest level and directed inwards upon itself
is one of its chief features.
12
Yoga is primarily the method and result of
meditation. Philosophy accepts and uses this method and incorporates its
results. But it does not stop there. It adds two further practices, metaphysical
reasoning and wise action, and one further effort - the mystical insight into,
and distinction of, the ego. Therefore we are justified in saying that the
hidden teaching does go beyond yoga.
13
The battle to secure mental stillness must first
be fought and won before the battle of the ego can be brought to an end. For it
is only in that deep state wherein all other thoughts are put to rest that the
single thought of "I" as ego can be isolated, faced, fought until its strength
is pitilessly squeezed out and destroyed at last. The attainment of this inner
stillness is yoga; this conquest of the ego in it and after it is philosophy.
14
Philosophy is not satisfied with a merely
intellectual reflection of the truth, as in a mirror, but seeks direct vision of
the truth.
15
Its evaluation of mankind is neither
materialistically contemptuous nor mystically rosy. It sees the bright permanent
essence along with the dark passing form.
16
Philosophy offers a manner of living which is a
natural part of, and outgrowth from, its cosmically derived principles.
17
The practice of philosophy is an essential part of
it and consists not only in applying its principles and its wisdom to everyday
active living, but also in realizing the divine presence deep, deep within the
heart where it abides in tremendous stillness.(P)
18
People sometimes ask me to what religion I belong
or to what school of yoga I adhere. If I answer them, which is not often, I tell
them: "To none and to all!" If such a paradox annoys them, I try to soften their
wrath by adding that I am a student of philosophy. During my journeys to the
heavenly realm of infinite eternal and absolute existence, I did not once
discover any labels marked Christian, Hindu, Catholic, Protestant, Zen, Shin,
Platonist, Hegelian, and so on, any more than I discovered labels marked
Englishman, American, or Hottentot. All such ascriptions would contradict the
very nature of the ascriptionless existence. All sectarian differences are
merely intellectual ones. They have no place in that level which is deeper than
intellectual function. They divide men into hostile groups only because they are
pseudo-spiritual. He who has tasted of the pure Spirit's own freedom will be
unwilling to submit himself to the restrictions of cult and creed. Therefore I
could not conscientiously affix a label to my own outlook or to the teaching
about this existence which I have embraced. In my secret heart I separate myself
from nobody, just as this teaching itself excludes no other in its perfect
comprehension. Because I had to call it by some name as soon as I began to write
about it, I called it philosophy because this is too wide and too general a name
to become the property of any single sect. In doing so I merely returned to its
ancient and noble meaning among the Greeks who, in the Eleusinian Mysteries,
designated the spiritual truth learnt at initiation into them as "philosophy"
and the initiate himself as "philosopher" or lover of wisdom.
Now genuine wisdom, being in its highest phase the fruit of a transcendental insight, is sublimely dateless and unchangeable. Yet its mode of expression is necessarily dated and may therefore change. Perhaps this pioneering attempt to fill the term "philosophy" with a content which combines ancient tradition with modern innovation will help the few who are sick of intellectual intolerances that masquerade as spiritual insight. Perhaps it may free such broader souls from the need of adopting a separative standpoint with all the frictions, prejudices, egotisms, and hatreds which go with it, and afford them an intellectual basis for practising a profound compassion for all alike. It is as natural for those reared on limited conceptions of life to limit their faith and loyalty to a particular group or a particular area of this planet as it is natural for those reared on philosophic truth to widen their vision and service into world-comprehension and world-fellowship. The philosopher's larger and nobler vision refuses to establish a separate group consciousness for himself and for those who think as he does. Hence he refuses to establish a new cult, a new association, or a new label. To him the oneness of mankind is a fact and not a fable. He is always conscious of the fact that he is a citizen of the world-community. While acknowledging the place and need of lesser loyalties for unphilosophical persons, he cannot outrage truth by confining his own self solely to such loyalties.
Why this eagerness to separate ourselves from the rest of mankind and collect into a sect, to wear a new label that proclaims difference and division? The more we believe in the oneness of life, the less we ought to herd ourselves behind barriers. To add a new cult to the existing list is to multiply the causes of human division and thence of human strife. Let those of us who can do so be done with this seeking of ever-new disunity, this fostering of ever-fresh prejudices, and let those who cannot do so keep it at least as an ideal - however remote and however far-off its attainment may seem - for after all it is ultimate direction and not immediate position that matters most. The democratic abolishment of class status and exclusive groups, which will be a distinctive feature of the coming age, should also show itself in the circles of mystical and philosophic students. If they have any superiority over others, let them display it by a superiority of conduct grounded in a diviner consciousness. Nevertheless, with all the best will in the world to refrain from starting a new group, the distinctive character of their conduct and the unique character of their outlook will, of themselves, mark out the followers of such teaching. Therefore whatever metaphysical unity with others may be perceived and whatever inward willingness to identify interests with them may be felt, some kind of practical indication of its goal and outward particularization of its path will necessarily and inescapably arise of their own accord. And I do not know of any better or broader name with which to mark those who pursue this quest than to say that they are students of philosophy.(P)
19
We may generally distinguish three different views
of the world. The first is that which comes easily and naturally and it depends
on five-sense experience alone. It may be called materialism, and may take
various shapes. The second is religious in its elementary state, depending on
faith, and mystical in its higher stage, depending on intuition and
transcendental experience. The third is scientific in its elementary state,
depending on concrete reason, and metaphysical in its higher state, depending on
abstract reason. Although these are the views generally held amongst men, they
do not exhaust the possibilities of human intelligence. There is a fourth
possible view which declares that none of the others can stand alone and that if
we cling to any one of them alone to the detriment of the others we merely limit
the truth. This view is the philosophic. It declares that truth may be arrived
at by combining all the other views which yield only partial truths into the
balanced unity of whole truth, and unfolding the faculty of insight which
penetrates into hidden reality.(P)
20
The worth of religion's contribution toward human
life is admitted. The transcendent character of mysticism's goal is admired. The
offering of metaphysics is respected. The necessity of disinterested practical
service is accepted. The attitude which is attracted by one and repelled by the
other is defective and incomplete. The coming age will require their synthesis.
But these things, however good, are not enough. For there is need of adding to
them another and still farther milestone on mankind's great march. And this is
philosophy - that which harmoniously brings all these together and then
transcends them.
21
Science suppresses the subject of experience and
studies the object. Mysticism suppresses the object of experience and studies
the subject. Philosophy suppresses nothing, studies both subject and object;
indeed it embraces the study of all experience.(P)
22
It is perhaps the amplitude and symmetry of the
philosophic approach which make it so completely satisfying. For this is the
only approach which honours reason and appreciates beauty, cultivates intuition
and respects mystical experience, fosters reverence and teaches true prayer,
enjoins action and promotes morality. It is the spiritual life fully grown.(P)
23
The esoteric meaning of the star is "Philosophic
Man," that is, one who has travelled the complete fivefold path and brought its
results into proper balance. This path consists of religious veneration,
mystical meditation, rational reflection, moral re-education, and altruistic
service. The esoteric meaning of the circle, when situated within the very
centre of the star, is the Divine Overself-atom within the human heart.(P)
24
Philosophy refuses to compromise with truth; hence
it refuses to place itself at the point of view which attempts to comprehend the
Infinite with finite equipment.
25
The basis of philosophic living is simply this:
the higher self feels nothing but the good, the true, and the beautiful; we are
its projections and are to become its reflections. Why then should we not, here
and now, discipline ourselves until we also feel only the same?
26
Philosophy is not a matter of theory alone. It is
also a matter of conduct. It imposes responsibilities on the conscience and
restraints on the will.
27
It accepts and endorses the modern method, that
is, the inductive method as applied to facts which are universally verifiable,
the way of cautious approach, the insistence on a habit of calm examination, the
passion for clear truth and ascertained fact rather than mere opinion and
personal emotionalism: in short, a scrupulously honest rigorous outlook and an
impersonal attitude of mind more than anything else.
28
To separate the essential truth from its
accidental overlay, the permanent fact from the personal dream, the full insight
from its temperamental colouring - this is one task of philosophy.
29
The purpose of philosophy is to expel illusion
from the mind and correct error. Truth will then appear of itself.
30
On Spinoza's Doctrine
(a) Spinoza taught that God was the whole of things in the universe. This brought him into the category of Pantheist. Philosophy says this is true, but only part of the truth. For God is not only immanent in the universe but also transcends it. God still would be God even if there were no universe.
(b) He declared that the unknown reality was Substance. Philosophy says this is only an attribute of Reality and as such still not the ultimate itself, no more than the quality of fragrance is the flower itself.
(c) He believed in Causality as science did in the nineteenth century, and as all must do who do not comprehend the final truth that Reality is nondual, and hence leaves no room for the duality of a cause and an effect.
(d) Spinoza's pantheism made him declare that everything is God. This is the theological outlook. The philosophical one declares that everything is a manifestation of One Infinite Reality. For if the ego also is God, then who is God?
(e) Spinoza's teaching that God has two attributes, Mind and Matter, that reality has two aspects, mind and body, made him a dualist. Philosophy knows only one reality - Mind. It admits causality only for the immediate and practical purposes of the illusory world.
(f) His teaching on how to live so as to fulfil the proper purpose of life is identical with philosophy's teaching. He saw that man so far must become wholly free inwardly and as free as possible outwardly. This is to be achieved by self-mastery, by overcoming desires, subjugating passions, and simplifying existence. This brings true happiness.
31
Philosophy is not only a body of doctrines to be
believed because they cannot be found except by higher revelation, but also a
way of life to be practised and a discipline of thought to be followed.
32
It is a grave error to regard philosophy as being
identical with metaphysics. It is quite true that every philosopher is also a
metaphysician but he is not a metaphysician only. He is also a mystic, a
religionist, an activist.
33
It is the essential office of philosophy to
declare the supreme worth of truth.
34
It is a doctrine inspired by divinity, founded on
truth, and applied to life.
35
Every man has his own abstract view of his
relation to the universe. In most cases it is either an unconscious or
half-conscious one. But still it is there. To the extent that he seeks to make
it a fully conscious and completely true one, he becomes a philosopher.
36
It is significant that in Sanskrit the term which
stands for philosophy is also given the meaning of "insight." Hence an Indian
philosopher was someone who not merely knew about things, like a
metaphysician or scientist, but who had an insight into them.
37
It is the method of philosophy to direct each
student, to show him the way, but at the same time to warn him that no one can
travel the way for him.
38
Here is realism of an uncommon kind, for it
mingles the spiritual and material, the ultimate and material realities.
39
The philosophy of truth is universal in outlook,
all-comprehensive in scope. Consequently it makes no claim to displace any
religion or to supersede any mystical or metaphysical system.
40
Philosophy interprets, after due reflection, the
whole of the data supplied by the sciences. It generalizes and synthesizes the
results of scientific observation and experiment.
41
It is not only a metaphysical doctrine to satisfy
the reason in its acutest questionings; it is also a religious power to sustain
the ego in its darkest hours.
42
Philosophy is the higher culture of life. To be
philosophic is to live more fully.
43
Philosophy is at one and the same time a doctrine,
a practice, and a realization.
44
Philosophy sets out to decipher the meaning of
life. But it asks first if there be a meaning. It does not dogmatize, does not
start with initial assumptions.
45
Philosophy is not a set of doctrines so much as an
attitude of mind.
46
Here is a teaching which the intellect may accept
and the conscience may approve. Here are complex ideas which will need time for
the modern man to work them out in his own way; here are germinal conceptions
whose full significances may at first remain unrecognized, but will disclose
themselves as gradually as trees disclose themselves out of seeds.
47
The philosophic conception of spirituality is not
of a state to be reached in the world beyond death or in an Oriental ashram or
Occidental cloister beyond active life, but of a state to be reached here and
now and within.
48
It is the first operation of philosophic training
to instill doubt, to free the mind of all those numerous suggestions and
distortions imposed on it by others since childhood and maintained by its own
slavish acceptance, total unawareness, or natural incapacity.
49
We call ourselves students of philosophy because
we cannot take any name derived from a human teacher. We are not followers of
this man or that man exclusively, but of the inner light.
50
It is comprehensive enough to suit the modern
taste, especially the modern Western taste which, while appreciating the
simplicity and purity of a life like the best Indian yogi's - its freedom from
desires and its indifference to possessions - nevertheless feels that it cannot
and should not deny its own inclinations toward a fuller, more comfortable, and
more artistic external life. Such a complete ideal, uniting the seeming
opposites of contemplation and activity and combining apparently incongruous
items like self-discipline and susceptibility to beauty, is more attractive and
better justified to us. Without undue asceticism and without undue abnegation of
the world, it yet inculcates the following of virtue and the pursuit of wisdom
not less ardently than does the Indian ideal.
51
It is so all-comprehensive that it can be taken as
far from the realities of ordinary living as the human mind can soar or brought
as close to them as the human heart may desire.
52
Philosophy adjusts its spiritual help to suit the
needs of those it seeks to help. It is religious with the religious believers,
metaphysical with the metaphysical-minded, mystical with the mystically
experienced, practical with the active. But with those who can appreciate its
own breadth and integrality, it is all these things and more at one and the same
time.
53
It is a life that is moral and rational,
contemplative and active, in the truest and consequently the least conventional
sense of these terms.
54
It is a knowledge achieved first in the state of
contemplation and then confirmed by the process of reasoning, or vice versa.
Thus the result is the same.
55
Certain truths are immovably fundamental to all
worthy systems of mysticism and tremendously important to all mankind: there
exists a supreme reality beyond the awareness of sense or intellect; there
exists a soul in man which is rooted in this reality; the higher purpose of
human life is to establish full consciousness of and communion with this soul; a
good life increases happinesses and attracts rewards, but wrong-doing increases
misery and attracts retribution.
56
Philosophy never ceases to affirm that the soul
exists and that human consciousness can be raised to embrace it.
57
This - the recognition of the Soul's factuality -
is the only doctrine to which every man may commit himself, whatever his other
beliefs.
58
Here is no new cult seeking followers, no new
church pleading for members. Philosophy is the wisdom of Life itself. Whether
people study it now or neglect it will not affect its eventual destiny.
59
Philosophy affirms, not on the basis of
theoretical speculation but on that of direct experience, that every human being
has a divine soul from which it draws life, consciousness, and intelligence.
60
The teaching is comprised of three parts: (a) the
truth-principles, (b) the meditation methods, (c) the mystical experiences.
61
Genuine philosophy is a living force actively at
work in molding the character and modifying the destiny of its votaries.
62
Here in philosophy he will find thought become
mature, mysticism become lucid and sane, everything in his life put into balance
and proportion. Here all that is bizarre and eccentric, unrealistic and
exaggerated has no footing.
63
Philosophy is Greek in that it rejects extremes
and seeks a balance of all man's parts, but Indian in that it venerates the
transcendental.
64
The Greek quest for an ideal which combined
balance with serenity is itself combined in philosophy with the quest for truth
and reality.
65
The philosophic ideal is not merely an
intellectual one, but also a mystical one, not merely practical, but also
emotional. It develops harmonies and balances all these different qualities.
66
In affirming the reality and supremacy of Mind,
philosophy lays down both its first and its last principle.
67
To observe physical things or events with
scientific accuracy yet think about them on a deeper metaphysical level, to feel
in a human way yet without falling victim to the obscuration and distortion of
human passion and emotion, to benefit by only the best in art and culture, to
withdraw from thoughts into the still transcendental intuition of being itself,
and finally to put into one's life in the everyday world the calm balanced
result.
68
This is philosophy which opens the way to bigger
thoughts, wider minds, and finer ideals; which makes the quest for truth an
inner adventure and a religious duty; and which finally points to a supernal
divine stillness as the place where the revelation must be made.
69
Why is philosophy the love of wisdom? Because as
such it leads to a quest for what is Timeless, the Universal, the True, the
Real, the Enduring Peace-Bestowing Satisfaction: that is, the Absolute which
alone is free from all relativities.
70
The notion that a man requires no special
schooling in philosophy is a nonsensical and superficial one. For philosophy
tries to do in complete consciousness and in complete thoroughness what the
unphilosophical are always doing in an unsystematic casual and unconscious way.
It seeks to impart a proper understanding of the meaning of the world so that
those who have to live in this world may live aright, successfully, and more
happily.
71
The Buddhist looks forward mainly to the cessation
of suffering, the Vedantin mainly to the attainment of bliss. The philosopher
looks to both.
72
Metaphysical curiosity is not enough for
philosophy. It needs to know, not merely to speculate. It also needs the
holy uplifts of real religion.
73
Philosophy has its discipline as well as its
holiness, its metaphysical abstractions as well as its practical sages. By its
very definition it cannot be one-sided and lack balance. Its reactions are
emotional as well as intellectual but both exist in equilibrium and harmony. It
is not only a way of thinking but also of living.
74
Philosophy does not affirm its facts arbitrarily
or dogmatically. They are put forward, as they are found by the human
mind when at last its development is capable of comprehending the subtlest of
all truths, in orderly, rigorous, logical form.
75
Our doctrine provides a scientific case for
ethics, for compassion, for service.
76
Philosophy is scientific in that it must deal with
facts, not with pious hopes or idle theories.
77
Philosophy usually prefers a balanced position
between extreme conventional views. But it prefers its own unconventional view
to the others most of all.
78
The popular view merely looks at life; the
philosophic view looks into life.
79
The central point of our program rests, however,
on the firm foundation of the ultimate wisdom - hitherto kept in a hidden school
for the privileged few but now to be made available for all whose ethical
outlook and mental capacity can grasp it.
80
Philosophy does not deal in unverified assertions
or mere opinions. If it accepts revelations as part of its teaching, it does so
only because the revealers have proven themselves to be utterly reliable, only
because they have gone through the most strenuous mental emotional and moral
discipline. Much of its teaching, however, may be put to the test of evidence
and reasoning, and this test is not only welcomed but required.
81
More than a thousand years ago, Theon of Smyrna
wrote: "It may be said that philosophy is the initiation into and tradition of
real and true Mysteries." And he mentioned that this initiation begins with
purification but ends with felicity.
82
Here in philosophy man's noblest aspirations
receive their highest fulfilment. Here his searching after truth achieves
satisfying finality.
83
Philosophy is at one and the same time a religious
cult, a metaphysical system, a mystical technique, a moral discipline, and a
practical guide.
84
Philosophy puts in definite form ideas which meet
the subconscious need of some and sets down clearly ideals which express the
fine but vague aspirations of others.
85
This is the gospel of inspired action, of dynamic
philosophy, of rational religion, of balanced mysticism.
86
Note the similarity to Jesus' "Seek ye first the
kingdom of heaven and all these things shall be added" in The Wisdom of Solomon:
"I preferred Wisdom before sceptres and thrones, and esteemed riches nothing in
comparison with her . . . All good things together came to me with her, and
innumerable riches in her hands.... she was the mother of them. If riches be a
possession to be desired in this life, what is richer than wisdom that worketh
all things?" The quest of philosophic wisdom is also the quest of the kingdom of
heaven.
87
Philosophy not only gives its votaries a doctrine
to study but also a method of worship, not only a way of life but also a
technique of meditation.
88
The teaching which philosophy offers deals with
matters of permanent rather than topical interest. The counsel which philosophy
gives deals with the general course of human life rather than with particular
personal vicissitudes.
89
Philosophy is both a tradition of knowledge and an
achievement in experience.
90
It prefers individual advancement to the illusion
of gregarious advancement. It sees the home as not less holy than the ashram.
91
What is the ultimate explanation of this universe
wherein we dwell? What are the final concepts of its meaning which transcend all
previous concepts and render them imperfect? It is the business of a philosopher
to find out these things.
92
Even after a man's religious faith has fallen to
pieces and he stands for a while in doubt and confusion, there will inevitably
arise within him the need of finding a fresh intelligible picture of the
universe, for he cannot rest satisfied with a merely negative attitude toward
life. And he will have to construct it out of the findings of scientific
materialism, if nothing better comes to his hand. This mind will necessarily try
to make sense of the universe and to harmonize its seeming contradictions into a
logical unity.
93
It is not quite the same to go in search of a
faith to believe in as to go in search of a truth to understand. Philosophy,
however, unites the two endeavours.
94
Philosophy rests upon the basis of intuitive
perception and mystical insight.
95
The philosophic view is not only attractive to
reason and appealing to emotion, it is also fortifying to conscience. It
provides indeed the best dynamic for a nobler life.
96
It is to be judged not only as a metaphysical
system but also as a moral influence.
97
Just because philosophy's statements are so
definite, this should not be misconstrued as being dogmatic.
98
We are not constructing a closed and rigid system
of philosophy but rather revealing an attitude of mind which can lead to truth.
99
Contrary to conventional beliefs, philosophy does
no harm to whatever is worth retaining. It makes religion truly religious,
rationalism more rational, and mysticism soundly mystical. It takes away their
follies, true, but it leaves their facts untouched.
100
Dharma = moral living.
101
Galen, the celebrated Greek physician and
thinker, saw this point. Although not a Christian himself, he praised the early
Christians of his time (second century) because, "Day and night they strive that
their deeds may be commendable and that they may contribute to the welfare of
humanity; therefore each one of them is virtually a philosopher, for these
people have attained unto that which is the essence and purport of
philosophy...even though they may be illiterate."
102
Because philosophy provides a view of life's
landscape from the mountaintop, it provides the truest fullest view.
103
It is not concerned with theories that might be,
but with things that incontestably are.
104
Against the barrenness of materialistic denial,
it offers the urgently needed values and explains the practices of meditation,
intuition, and aspiration.
105
Philosophy is the quest grown up, equipped with
maturity and judgement and balance.
106
It cannot be easily classified for it is at once
a doctrine requiring some faith, a teaching needing some study, a morality for
obedience, and a technique for practice.
107
It is a doctrine which is alive with ethical
feeling, rich with metaphysical truth, rare in its freedom from religious and
racial prejudice, the solvent of many problems.
108
Calmness and balance are the most admired
virtues in the philosophic code. The first is developed to the extent of
becoming superb self-composure, the second until it integrates utter opposites.
109
Plato wrote that philosophy is a kind of death.
He meant that the desires and interests, the matters and activities of the outer
world must be surrendered in a certain way and at certain times. This is to be
done invisibly and secretly in the deepest part of the soul. It is there to
become an abiding condition, a permanent attitude, a total withdrawal from what
a man normally lives for: thus he dies to the world. It is also to be done
differently at specially reserved times by the process of extremely deep
meditation. Consciousness is reversed from things and thoughts to its own pure
Self.
110
Others besides Plato have compared philosophy to
the art of dying while yet still living. In Buddha's case it meant dying to all
desires which sought satisfaction in the outer world, renouncing that world in
order to enter the monastic world of monks and nuns. In the philosopher's case
this is not a necessary outcome, although it was a perfectly logical conclusion
for the Buddha to make. The philosopher seeks to free himself as much as
possible from worldly chains, but the essence of his achievement is more
positive than merely leaving the worldly life.
111
Such a teaching has been called pessimistic. We
answer: how can it be so when it teaches the way to the ending of all sorrow,
the way to the achievement of all serenity? Where is the pessimism in denouncing
the baser joys for the sake of receiving the better ones? The teaching would be
pessimistic if it saw no hope at all for humanity and if it denied the worth of
all satisfaction, but, on the contrary, it offers an immeasurable hope and shows
the way to transmute lower into higher satisfactions.
112
It is the philosopher's desire to think
authentically, to push aside prejudice and bias in order to get at the solid
facts.
113
Will philosophy ever become, like religion, a
social force? The answer is that it is already a social force since everybody
has some kind of outlook upon life, however primitive it be - it is only that
his philosophy is unconscious. We who study it, deliberately, try consciously to
become philosophers.
114
Philosophy cannot be limited to being some
metaphysical system, or an ethical code, or a kind of logical enquiry, or
somebody's opinions about this and that: it must give a whole overview, a fruit
of enlightenment.
115
If this teaching is less dramatic than others,
it is also safer. If results take longer to appear, they are also certain and
lasting.
116
The advantages of pursuing the path of Gnana
Yoga, of an enquiry into Self, are manifold. It starts from the standpoint to
which we are accustomed, by taking self as we find it. It does not start
from some divine Brahman whose existence is initially known to but one man in
millions (since it is to be apprehended only in Samadhi). The enquiry
into Self, moreover, accepts this world as real, and does not ask us to go
against every attribute of common sense. It permits our minds to work along
their natural lines of thinking. It follows the method most suitable to our
Western scientific minds - that is, it works from the known to the unknown.
117
It is a study which imparts gratifying
significance to the universe and consoling harmony to its phenomena. It is a
study which restores religious faith because it demonstrates that the forces
behind our human existence are not blind and unconscious but intelligent and
benign.
118
Philosophy constitutes the supreme keystone of
all man's evolutionary building. The way to it is the predestined path to which
he must ultimately come when he has exhausted all other cultural roads, all
personal hopes, all worldly guides. It is the acme of his higher culture and the
last lap of his ethical ascension. Its statuesque intellectual grandeur is akin
to that of Himalaya. And as that mighty range mingles hard brown granite with
soft white snow, so does this unique system mingle hard rational thinking with
sensitive mystical meditation.
119
These ideas do not stand alone - not that it
really matters even if they did, provided they are true ideas. But we can bring
to them the support of high-grade minds, perceptive metaphysicians, fine poets,
contemplative mystics who lived in the beatitude of divine union, and even a few
top-ranking nuclear physicists and Astronomers-Royal.
120
It begins with the statement that the men of
today are not completed beings.
121
The world has yet to discover that the teaching
of this philosophy is the most brilliant of all intellectual systems, the most
religious of all religious paths, the most mystical of all mystical techniques.
122
Philosophy can smilingly await its hour, for all
roads lead to it, none away from it. Life is a mystery. Mystery provokes
inquiry. Inquiry leads eventually to discovery. Discovery, by stimulating
thought upon itself and by evoking intuition about itself, can end only in
philosophy.
123
The teaching is thus both an inheritance from
the past and a precursor of the future.
124
If you ask what is philosophy, the answer must
begin with what it is not. It is not about guesses and speculations, not about
beliefs produced by human wishes nor superstitions produced by human traditions.
125
Anyone may become a college professor of
philosophy without becoming a mystic, but to become a philosopher he must also
become a mystic.
126
The academic teaching of philosophy is a
necessary part of educational effort but it is mainly metaphysical and logical,
an intellectual effort without soul, without intuitive feeling, and a collection
of varying human opinions, speculations, and theories. To become fully worthy of
its title it must remake men, awaken their higher possibilities, show also the
need and practice of non-thought.
127
It may be asked why I insist on using the word
"philosophy" as a self-sufficient name without prefixing it by some descriptive
term or person's name when it has held different meanings in different
centuries, or been associated with different points of view ranging from the
most materialistic to the most spiritualist. The question is well asked,
although the answer may not be quite satisfactory. I do so because I want to
restore this word to its ancient dignity. I want it used for the highest kind of
insight into the Truth of things, which means into the Truth of the unique
Reality. I want the philosopher to be equated with the sage, the man who not
only knows this Truth, has this insight, and experiences this Reality in
meditation, but also, although in a modified form, in action amid the world's
turmoil.(P)
128
Viewed from the standpoint of the house in which
we all have to live - that is, the body - Advaita Vedanta seems to deal only in
ultimate abstractions - however admirable and lofty its outlook. The body is
there and its actuality and factuality must be noted and, more, accepted. This
is why I do not give any other label to the ideas put into my later books than
the generic name philosophy. I do not call it Indian philosophy since there are
ideas in the books which do not belong to India at all. I do not identify it
with any particular land, race, religion, or teacher from the ancient past or
the modern present. Philosophy cannot be limited only to abstract ideas. It
includes those ideas but it also includes other things. Its original Greek
meaning, "love of wisdom," concerns the whole of man, and not only his abstract
thoughts, intellect, feelings, body, or relation to the world around him. It
concerns his entire life: his contacts with other people, the morality which
guides him in dealing with them, and finally his attitude towards himself.
Philosophy must be universal in its scope; therefore, it may embrace ideas which
originate not only in India or in America or in Europe, but in every other
period of civilization. Not all ideas are philosophical, but only those which
are true, useful, in harmony with the World-Idea, and able to survive the test
of practice and applicability.(P)
129
There is a kind of understanding combined with
feeling which is not a common one here in the West, indeed uncommon enough to
seem more discoverable and less puzzling in the Asiatic regions. It is puzzling
for four reasons. One is that it cannot be attributed to the intellect alone,
nor to the emotional nature alone. Another is that it provides an experience so
difficult to describe that it is preferable not to discuss it at all. A third is
that although the most reverent it is not allied to religion. A fourth point is
that it is outside any precise labelling as for instance a metaphysics or cult
which could really belong to it. Yet it is neither anything new or old. It is
nameless. But because there is only one way to deal with it honestly - the way
of utter silence, speechless when in contact with other humans, perfectly still
when in the secrecy of a closed room - we may renew the Pythagorean appellation
of "philosophy" for it is truly the love of wisdom-knowledge.(P)
130
I regret to state that most academic people
mistake the history of philosophy for the study of philosophy.
131
The term philosophy we reserve for the
philosophy of truth, which is the harmonious and balanced union of all
these elements in their perfected state. We shall not here use this term for the
academic wordplay, the sterile jugglery of technical terms, the toying with
unreal and distant issues which so often passes for philosophy. This integrality
is more in accord with the ancient and essential meaning of the word, derived as
it is from the Greek sophia (wisdom or ultimate knowledge) and
philos (love).
132
I have avoided the risk of starting a new
movement or founding a new church only by taking the risk of causing confusion
among those belonging to the old movements, the old churches. For by my giving
so broad a name as "philosophy" to this teaching, a name to which they are
already accustomed and with which they are already familiar, they will take it
to be a harmless barren intellectual playing with ideas remote from us in
history time relevance and usefulness. They will fear no rivalry from it and
will mostly ignore it and thus leave others, who can appreciate its timeliness,
to work at it in peace.
133
If the name "Philosophy" has been wrongly
attached to the productions of merely intellectual guesswork, we have every
right to restore it to its proper use.
134
Do not confuse the quibbling over phrases and
the hair-splitting over words with philosophy. It is nothing of the sort. Their
concern with non-problems is entirely outside its own province.
135
The simple name "philosophy" is an old one and
it is enough for this teaching. Mentalism is its metaphysical branch, mental
quiet is its mystical practice, and the Overself is the ultimate Consciousness
of man.
136
The appalling modern misuse of this ancient
term, calling anybody's whim, opinion, speculation, guess, or fancy his
"philosophy," is reprehensible.
137
I insisted on giving the word "philosophy" its
original Greek meaning even though it has been manhandled by this time to mean
all sorts of different things from science to religion to opinion.
138
There are questions which people often ask: Is
philosophy socially desirable? Has it any practical usefulness? How will it help
me? Where is the time for it, anyway? Such questions would not be asked
if the definition of philosophy had been understood, for they betray the
questioner's confusion of it with metaphysics.
139
We do not narrow the meaning of this expressive
term down to the merely academic and theoretical. We cling to its ancient
significance and declare that there is no other study whose rewards are so great
as those of philosophy. But it is to be studied not only from ponderous books,
but also from pulsating experience.
140
Philosophy cannot be taught by lectures alone:
life in the larger sense is also its classroom. Its best teachers come without
prepared notes, without programmed courses, but with the catalytic power to
inspire ideas and deeds.
141
It was implicit in the word itself, and well
understood by the Greeks who used it, that the term "philosophy" referred not to
worldly wisdom - in the sense that the Jesuit Baltasar Gracian used it - but to
divine wisdom.
142
If some part of what is here comprised under the
term "philosophy" is also discussed in the academic institutions, so much the
better for them, but it is certainly not the most important part. Nor is the
general attitude, the spirit behind it all, the same. Logic and linguistics have
their place, but making use of them merely to get lost in words, in empty
abstractions and futile hunts for non-existent meanings, is pseudo-serious
delusion.
143
Philosophy does not set out to please people but
to guide them; not to be commercially successful but to be ethically successful;
not to dispense with truth for the sake of holding followers but to dispense
with followers for the sake of holding truth.
144
Philosophy occupies an unassailable position,
which can endure and survive all the intellectual emotional and practical
changes likely to happen in a man's life.
145
The philosophy of cosmic existence, of which
human existence is merely a part, cannot change with, or depend on, changing
human opinions. It is and must be eternal, the same with ancient peoples as with
those yet to be born, independent of individuals who come and go. The intellect
cannot deliver itself of such a philosophy.
146
There is nothing new here. It is an old truth
and teaching. They are unchangeable, immutable. They do not vary with time.
147
It has the oldest tradition behind it which
culture can offer yet it is ever fresh and new because it lives in the NOW:
timeless.
148
Those who strive hard to penetrate the core of
life's mystery will find their fullest result in philosophy.
149
Philosophy is unique. It alone offers a point of
view which includes all other points of view, and yet transcends them. It alone
is able to say that it both has a position and has no position. It alone is
without particular interest in attacking other positions, yet is able, if
necessary, sturdily to defend its own!
150
Although philosophy propounds statements of
universal laws and eternal truths, nevertheless each man draws from its study
highly personal application and gains from its practices markedly individual
fulfilment. Although it is the only Idea which can ever bring men together in
harmony and unity, nevertheless it becomes unique for every fresh adherent. And
although it transcends all limitations imposed by intellect emotion form and
egoism, nevertheless it inspires the poet, teaches the thinker, gives vistas to
the artist, guides the executive, and solaces the labourer.(P)
151
Most people look for labels, affix them or
accept them, and then are forced to stand up for all the ideas bearing the label
they identify themselves with. They limit their search for Truth as soon as they
join a group. They must then accept untruths along with truths. Philosophy, as
we use the term, cannot be limited to any single set teaching, for it is
universal. It approaches the truth universally, free from prejudices,
exclusions, and labels.
152
Philosophy refuses to regard itself in an
exclusive sense. It admits all labelled points of view. But it refuses to limit
itself to any of them. For they deal with apparent truth. The point of view
which deals with real truth is really no point of view at all.
153
The would-be philosopher should not feel bound
by labels, categories, and other fences which people want to put on others
simply because they themselves live quite willingly surrounded by such fences
and cannot understand someone who refuses to do so. Philosophy is a path which
ends in the pathless - a way to the inner freedom which comes with truth.
154
It would be difficult to put philosophy into any
category of its own for it has links with everything and with nothing, with
particular religions and with no religion at all, with particular metaphysical
systems and with none, with the different theologies and creeds, and so on; it
has no organization and no one founder or apostle.
155
Philosophy competes with no teaching, religion,
system. It stands by itself, unique.
156
Philosophy is not any man's personal possession.
It is itself impersonal.
157
Such is the incontrovertible character of the
philosophy of truth that it will always survive, however many civilizations rise
and vanish, for both prolonged experience and sustained reflection always lead
to and confirm it in the end.
158
Such teaching can never be useless and
consequently can never disappear.
159
It is good and sensible to seek improvement of
one's work. It is idealistic and noble to seek improvement of one's self. It is
best of all to admire, know, practise, and realize Philosophy.
160
One of the first fruits of philosophy is perhaps
the balanced understanding which it yields. In no other way can men arrive at so
truthful, so fair, and so just a view of life, or indeed of anything upon which
they place their thinking mind. And this splendid result could not come about if
the philosophic quest did not bring the whole man of thought and feeling, of
intuition and will, into activity in a harmonious and well-integrated way. Thus
wholeness is holiness in the truest sense.
161
Why should we trouble our heads with
philosophical study? Why is it not enough to practice goodwill towards men? The
answer to the second question is that the feeling of goodwill may vanish at the
first bitter experience of being injured by other men. It will not suffice to
depend on feeling alone; one must also get thoroughly and rationally convinced
that goodwill is necessary under all circumstances, and not only for the benefit
of others, but even for our own.
162
Whoever understands philosophy truly will find
it basically important not only in his thought but also in his career. He will
find all crucial decisions will be influenced by what he has learned from
philosophy or made by how it has shaped his character.
163
It provides him with a standpoint wherefrom to
measure the correctness or error, truth or falsity, breadth or limitation of the
views, theories, and statements presented to him by others. Like a keen cold
wind it blows away the mists of superstition and foolishness. The ordinary
aspirant is not capable of distinguishing between a sound doctrine and a
fallacious one, between a competent teacher and an incompetent one or a
self-seeking teacher and a selfless one, between the correct course to pursue in
meditation and the incorrect one. The discipline will give him the education
which will enable him to make such critical distinctions. It summons all these
to the bar of severe scrutiny. It puts thought on its farthest stretch because
it starts where science leaves off. It shows up the defects of an improper and
unbalanced outlook. It stresses the need of making reason a governing wheel to
control emotional adventures. It warns the mystic who would rightly extinguish
the tyranny of intellect to develop it at some time or other, because he who
would become divine must also fulfil himself as a man. It counsels him to
balance the mind-stilling methods used in meditation with the mind-sharpening
discipline of metaphysics and science.
164
Philosophy tells us how to live whereas
the ego-mentality only tells us how to appear as if we were really living.
165
To be an intellectually conscious philosopher
offers advantages in every way. For our conduct of life flows naturally out of
our understanding of life. If the second is faulty, incomplete, or wrong, the
first will be so too! For the appraisal of men and the values of things which
determine this conduct are themselves determined by our understanding. Sound
principles and correct theory afford the best guarantee that when action is
taken it will be rightly taken. It is then possible to understand clearly what
is being done and why it is being done. Therefore studies in the metaphysics of
truth are not wasting time. It is here that the soundness of the philosophic
attitude and the quality of its metaphysical knowledge save us on many occasions
from falling into grave blunders.
166
Such studies as my books deal with may seem
profitless to those unacquainted with their practical value. More than five
thousand years ago the most famous of Indian sages pointed out: "Even a little
of this yoga practice saves from great dangers." Quite clearly he did not refer
to the common yoga but to the philosophic one, for the utter inability of most
Indian yogis to save their own country is obvious to every critical observer.
167
The acquirement of spiritual wisdom does not
necessarily prevent the disciple from making worldly mistakes; but because it
develops the qualities which will prevent them, and because it takes to heart
the lessons of experience, humbly and receptively, it does reduce the frequency
of those mistakes.
168
The practice of philosophy tends to
reduce the number of one's perplexities and to quieten the questioning mind
itself. It keeps the thoughts well-balanced and the feelings clean.
169
He who will let these ideas take lodgement in
his mind will find that as he penetrates farther and farther into the great
hinterland of philosophy, getting to know it better and better, his appreciation
of it and devotion to it will grow proportionately.
170
Philosophy explains life, guides man, and - by
removing his misunderstanding about his own identity - redeems him.
171
The man who becomes thoroughly imbued with
philosophical ideas finds his mind liberated and his feelings liberalized.
172
Not only does philosophical study inform the
mind, it also elevates the mind.
173
The quest has three aspects: metaphysical,
meditational, and morally active. It is the metaphysician's business to think
this thing called life through to its farthest end. It is the mystic's business
to intuit the peaceful desireless state of thoughtlessness. But this quest
cannot be conducted in compartments; rather must it be conducted as we have to
live, that is, integrally. Hence it is the philosopher's business to bring the
metaphysician's bloodless conclusions and the mystic's serene intuition into
intimate relation with practical human obligations and flesh-and-blood
activities. Both ancient mystical-metaphysical wisdom and modern scientific
practicality form the two halves of a complete and comprehensive human culture.
Both are required by a man who wants to be fully educated; one without the help
of the other will be lame. This may well be why wise Emerson confessed, "I have
not yet seen a man!" Consequently, he who has passed through all the different
disciplines will be a valuable member of society. For meditation will have
calmed his temperament and disciplined his character; the metaphysics of truth
will have sharpened his intelligence, protected him against error, and balanced
his outlook; the philosophic ethos will have purified his motives and promoted
his altruism, whilst the philosophic insight will have made him forever aware
that he is an inhabitant of the country of the Overself. He will have touched
life at its principal points yet will have permitted himself to be cramped and
confined by none.(P)
174
The sincere, who are honestly desirous of
discovering Truth at whatever cost, will be helped within their limitations; the
insincere, who seek to support their petty prejudices rather than to follow
Truth, will have their hearts read and their hollowness exposed.(P)
175
He who has sufficiently purified his character,
controlled his senses, developed his reason, and unfolded his intuition is
always ready to meet what comes and to meet it aright. He need not fear the
future. Time is on his side. For he has stopped adding bad karma to his account
and every fresh year adds good karma instead. And even where he must still bear
the workings of the old adverse karma, he will still remain serene because he
understands with Epictetus that "There is only one thing for which God has sent
me into the world, and that is to perfect my nature in all sorts of virtue or
strength; and there is nothing that I cannot use for that purpose." He knows
that each experience which comes to him is what he most needs at the time, even
though it be what he likes least. He needs it because it is in part nothing else
than his own past thinking, feeling, and doing come back to confront him to
enable him to see and study their results in a plain, concrete, unmistakable
form. He makes use of every situation to help his ultimate aims, even though it
may hinder his immediate ones. Such serenity in the face of adversity must not
be mistaken for supine fatalism or a lethargic acceptance of every untoward
event as God's will. For although he will seek to understand why it has happened
to him and master the lesson behind it, he will also seek to master the event
itself and not be content to endure it helplessly. Thus, when all happenings
become serviceable to him and when he knows that his own reaction to them will
be dictated by wisdom and virtue, the future can no more frighten him than the
present can intimidate him. He cannot go amiss whatever happens. For he knows
too, whether it be a defeat or a sorrow in the world's eyes, whether it be a
triumph or a joy, the experience will leave him better, wiser, and stronger than
it found him, more prepared for the next one to come. The philosophic student
knows that he is here to face, understand, and master precisely those events,
conditions, and situations which others wish to flee and evade, that to make a
detour around life's obstacles and to escape meeting its problems is, in the
end, unprofitable. He knows that his wisdom must arise out of the fullness and
not out of the poverty of experience and that it is no use non-cooperatively
shirking the world's struggle, for it is largely through such struggle that he
can bring forth his own latent resources. Philosophy does not refuse to face
life, however tragic or however frightful it may be, and uses such experiences
to profit its own higher purpose.(P)
176
The mastery of philosophy will produce a supreme
self-confidence within him throughout his dealings with life. The man who knows
nothing of philosophy will declare that it has nothing to do with practical
affairs and that it will not help you to rise in your chosen career, for
instance. He is wrong. Philosophy gives its votary a thoroughly scientific and
practical outlook whilst it enables him to solve his problems unemotionally and
by the clear light of reason. He will, however, be under certain ethical
limitations from which other men are exempt, for he takes the game of living as
a sacred trust and not as a means for personal aggrandizement at the expense of
others.(P)
177
Those who would assign philosophy the role of a
leisurely pastime for a few people who have nothing better to do, are greatly
mistaken. Philosophy, correctly understood, involves living as well as being.
Its value is not merely intellectual, not merely to stimulate thought, but also
to guide action. Its ideas and ideals are not left suspended in mid-air, as it
were, unable to come down to earth in practical and practicable forms. It can be
put to the test in daily living. It can be applied to all personal and social
problems without exception. It shows us how to achieve a balanced existence in
an unbalanced society. It is truth made workable. The study of and practice of
philosophy are particularly valuable to men and women who follow certain
professions, such as physicians, lawyers, and teachers, or who hold a certain
social status, such as business executives, political administrators, and
leaders of organizations. Those who have been placed by character or destiny or
by both where their authority touches the lives of numerous others, or where
their influence affects the minds of many more, who occupy positions of
responsibility or superior status, will find in its principles that which will
enable them to direct others wisely and in a manner conducive to the ultimate
happiness of all. In the end it can only justify its name if it dynamically
inspires its votaries to a wise altruistic and untiring activity, both in
self-development and in social development.(P)
178
If philosophy begins with doubt and wonder, it
ends by taking away whatever doubts are left in the mind and converting the
wonder into holy reverence.
179
It precisely states and positively affirms the
spiritual destiny which awaits man.
180
A time eventually comes when this inner life
blooms vigorously and richly within him, when the revelatory whispers of truth
are heard clearly and unequivocally, when the joy of liberation from desires and
passions shines constantly in his heart, and when deepest reverence suffuses his
whole world outlook.
181
What is the worth of the philosophic attainment?
Perhaps one of the best answers would be: suppose all men and women possessed
it, what would civilized society be like then? It would certainly be freer of
its present defects and fuller of realized virtues. War would be unknown,
destitution would vanish; peace, knowledge, beauty, joy, and goodness would
flourish.
182
Because one thought minted from the mind of a
man who has searched long and far for truth is worth a thousand from the mind of
one who has never searched for it at all, it would be time well spent to take up
a few of these ideas. Each of them thus becomes a diamond with which to scratch
the glass of ignorance.
183
Whoever wishes to endure life rather than enjoy
it, to walk with saints or fly with angels, must look elsewhere. But whoever
wishes to become an inspired, intelligent, brave, and good human being must look
to philosophy. For it will make him acquainted with his divine soul, endow him
with the power of right reasoning, fortify him against the chagrins and reverses
of life, train him never to be hurtful and always to be helpful, and teach him
the knowledge of true values.
184
Philosophy is a way of thought not merely for
scholars but for everyone who wants to understand truth. It is a way of life not
merely for monks but for everyone who is engaged in the world's activity. It
offers the best in doctrine, the wisest in conduct.
185
Philosophy teaches men to trust and use their
own powers, inspires them to develop the infinite possibilities latent within
them. This is true self-reliance.
186
However subtle its doctrines may be, they are so
solidly based and so all-comprehensive that the man who has once made them his
own has gained a light for the rest of his lifetime.
187
The primary use of philosophy is not to console
the suffering and give refuge to the unhappy. Religion can do that. People ought
not come to it because they are tired of life and joyless. They should come
because it can inspire their life and because they appreciate the beauty of its
silent contemplations, the truth of its sublime ideas.
188
The aim of philosophy is not to desert activity
but to inspire and illumine it, not to neglect meditation but to bring back its
gains of peace and power to transform external life, not to give up reason but
to warm and round it out by devotion. Only the neurotic, the dissociated, and
the ignorant do otherwise. The wiser ones, better balanced, will let them
actively collaborate with one another.
189
It is not a study which fulfils the expectation
of personal profit in some form with which other studies are begun. It offers
the truth for its own sake: because it is what it is, not for the rewards it
does indirectly bring.
190
When a man who has developed an unwavering will
and a concentrated mind, a serene contemplativeness and a magnificent dynamism,
sets out to remake his external life for the better, surely he will accomplish
not less but more than the man who has failed to develop these things.
191
The philosophic procedure leads not only to
perpetual inner peace for the man himself but also to spontaneous action for
humanity.
192
It teaches patience, confers wisdom, and
instills magnanimity. It brings the human creature to full maturity. It
liberates him from the conventional attitude of so many persons which covers,
through real fear and supposed necessity, what they really are.
193
The immediate effects of this ascent in
consciousness to the Overself are wide and varied. Torn emotions are healed and
base ones purified. A flaccid will is brought to adamantine strength.
194
The divine character of his inmost being will
become plain to him, and that not as a matter of wishful thinking or suggested
belief but as firsthand personal experience.
195
Philosophy imposes charity - in Saint Paul's
sense - on the heart, and bestows clarity - in Spinoza's sense - on the mind.
196
The worth of philosophy must be estimated not
only by its intellectual truth or personal usefulness or social service alone,
but by all three. Its unique merit lies not only in its transcendental reach but
also in its balanced integrality.
197
Only at the end of a course in these studies can
their intellectual, ethical, and practical importance to mankind be adequately
assessed. If they do no more than rationally establish without reliance on any
supernatural revelation the existence of a Deific Principle and thus confirm the
profoundest yearnings of the human heart; if they do no more than dispel the
current orthodox errors and unorthodox illusions about the Supreme Mind and
reveal a new and truer way of thinking about it; if they provide a proper basis
for the belief that death cannot really touch us; if they trace out the secret
significance of all the struggle and sorrow in this life and proffer the hope of
a new and better one here and now, they will surely have done enough. But the
world view which is developed here can do very much more than that. For the
theoretical worth of man, the personal happiness of his existence, and the
practical contribution of his citizenship depend partly upon his discovery of a
world conception which not only satisfies his own head and heart alike, but also
serves the social interest.
198
Action should be soundly based so as to render
the chance of failure as necessarily impossible as human capacity can render it.
This means it should be based on philosophical principles. The mental mastery of
these principles will help to give a right direction to the whole of one's life,
just as the correct focusing of a camera will help to ensure satisfactory
results in the finished photograph. Every man has worked out the basic ideas by
which he lives but only the philosophic man has worked them out consciously.
Because of the soundness and impartiality and penetrativeness of its approach,
his judgements in the most perplexing matters of practical conduct will
therefore be more reliable than those passed by so-called practical men
themselves.
199
Such teaching arouses man to knowledge of his
relationship to the divine, gives solace to his heart and peace to his mind.
200
Each person who brings more truth and goodness,
more consciousness and balance into his own small circle, brings it into the
whole world at the same time. A single individual may be helpless in the face of
global events, but the echoes of the echoes of his inspired words and deeds,
presence and thoughts, may be heard far from him in place and time.
201
The man who boasts that he can manage very well
in life without studying philosophy, forgets that to possess no philosophy
merely means to possess bad philosophy. For it merely means that like an animal
he holds an unexamined, unanalysed, and uncriticized view of life. The need of
philosophical study is simply the need of understanding our existence.
202
Philosophy ennobles human character and
dignifies human personality.
203
But if there is nothing weakly sentimental in
philosophy, it kindles the most delicate feeling and the deepest felicity that
its votary could ever have as a human being.
204
The philosophic discipline balances a man's mind
and stabilizes his feelings. It enhances his sense of values to the point of
fastidiousness in responding to the world around him. For him life is full of
interest, meaning, and benefit.
205
With more understanding of life, there
comes more interest in life.
206
It may be shattering to the preconceptions and
misconceptions of those who believe that Enlightenment is only for the
dreamer and the escapist to hear it affirmed that this is not so, that it is
equally attainable by the person who is at home in the world and by the lover of
beautiful forms, sounds, and colours. But clearly such a person would need to be
exceptionally well balanced or he would soon lose his way. This is another
reason why philosophy holds the quality of balance in such high estimation.
207
Even the glimpse is so dazzling that it can
never be forgotten and will tend gradually to reorientate the whole life.
Henceforth this new element with all the immense assurance it conveys will
characterize his inner life. Thus his outward life becomes a consecrated one. He
feels safely held by a power higher than his own. He becomes strong enough to
meet life face to face, not suborned by its hardships any more than by its
happinesses. "The life of that person is beautiful and blessed who has properly
and adequately known the Mind which exists within the mind," says an old text,
The Yoga of the Sage Vasistha. The quest is not a coldly intellectual
affair nor a vaguely dream-life one. He who has adequately comprehended its
significance is stirred to his innermost depths with a devotion to it, a
reverence for the Real which spreads outward and in time comes to animate both
his feelings and his activities. If the Supreme escapes all definition, it does
not escape life.
208
The undivided mind, the single vision, the
unified life - these are final offerings of philosophical activity.
209
The first awakening to intellectual and artistic
values in a young person is an important event, as the first awakening at
puberty to sex is a dynamic one. But the first awakening to the vision of what
philosophy has to offer transcends them all.
210
If philosophy gives a man nothing more than a
loftier conception of himself than he otherwise would have, it would still be a
worthwhile study. Yet it is not a conception which makes self-conceit, vanity,
and pride grow bigger. On the contrary, it is more likely to be accompanied by a
sacred humility.
211
Philosophy has brought refinement to art, truth
to metaphysics, a higher level to science, nobility to ethics, and wisdom to
living.
212
The philosopher cannot expect to be entirely
exempt from disabilities which the whole race suffers. But he can expect to be
exempt from avoidable sufferings caused by egoism, unruly passions, lack of
will, and lack of foresight. He finds the universe is good and friendly and
trustworthy but this is true only because he has established harmony with the
Mind behind it. All others who live in discord with it will have to suffer until
they learn to amend their ways and eradicate within themselves the causes of
this discord. Inevitably Nature will hurt them and Fortune oppose them until
they do.
213
To have no other goals than physical
excellencies, however good and necessary these may be, keeps a man less than he
could become. Even to set intellectual and artistic goals is still not enough,
however admirable they may be. All these can find their place if they are
crowned by the highest excellence of all, which is the spiritual.
214
Do not ask philosophy to tell you how to make a
success of your career or business but only how to make a success of yourself.
It is possible that the first will follow as a consequence of the second, but it
is not inevitable. Therefore do not believe, as certain American cults have led
their followers to believe, that prosperity is the necessary accompaniment of
spirituality.
215
It is one of philosophy's best services to show
its votaries that there is a higher relation between men and the earth and a
hidden connection between them and the Infinite Power.
216
It is the duty of philosophy to supply
principles, not to work out programs. But whoever has thoroughly grasped those
principles should be able to apply them in most imaginable situations, although
the success of his application will depend upon the extent of his equipment and
the quality of his knowledge of the technical factors involved in them.
217
Philosophy is not for the entertainment of idle
lives but for the enrichment of eager ones.
218
Philosophy bears the most distinctive and most
significant mission in the contemporary world. It brings a great light to the
service of mankind and confers a joyful blessing on those who accept it. Yet few
perceive this.
219
It brings the everyday events of life into a
broader perspective. This calms fears, quietens nerves, and creates detachment.
220
Philosophy can help us to attach correct values
in our activities as a human being, both physical and cultural. It can provide
the base for a code of conduct which will discipline yet benefit us and
certainly not harm others.
221
To pass on this philosophical knowledge is as
necessary as to pass on essential forms of agricultural or industrial knowledge.
222
Philosophy sees the whole route and therefore
can correctly point out the next step forward to those who are still groping
their way along it.
223
Only when there will be genuine inner
acceptance of these ideas will there also be an outer expression of them in
spontaneous activity.
224
Philosophy brings a man to serenity, it is often
said. But it also brings him to the capacity for gentle laughter, for the
humanist power of enjoying life.
225
Philosophy cannot give any man complete
happiness, because it cannot make him completely oblivious of every tragedy
which is happening around him. But it can give him the greatest possible
happiness that life on this earth can yield. And this will not have the
fragility and transiency of every other kind but will rest upon a rocklike,
lasting base.
226
When a man sticks to unshakeable principles and
abides by unalterable ethics, he derives an inner strength which not only is
protective but also makes him feel secure.
227
If philosophy disciplines his desires, it also
consoles his sufferings. If it chastens him in rapture, it also sustains him in
frustration.
228
As he grows in wisdom, he automatically gains in
strength.
229
A mind freed from its weaknesses and illuminated
by the Overself, a life guided from within and ruled by truth - these are some
of the rewards the quest offers him.
230
Such a life, purged of grossness, freed from
littleness and stripped of low desires, honest in action and truthful in
thought, will expel many useless fears.
231
One of the first fruits of this obedience to
philosophic ideals will be his liberation from that narrow provincialism of
outlook which fosters national prejudice and harbours racial hatred.
232
It guides him toward intellectual integrity; it
encourages him in emotional purity; it elevates him into moral tranquillity.
233
Another consequence of this study and these
practices will be such self-command, such serenity in the midst of adversity,
such unruffled poise amidst outward disturbances, so sure a centre for ethical
life, that the unusual contour of his character might well be envied by lesser
men.
234
There is a deep joy in this growing perception
of life's larger meaning, a profound comfort in the ever increasing knowledge of
its beneficent purpose.
235
That satisfaction which fate so often denies man
in the outer world, he may find through philosophic effort in the inner world.
236
The power of philosophy begins to show itself
when it begins to vibrate in us as a new inner life.
237
Whoever has confirmed through a lifetime the
truth of philosophy, felt its power and obeyed its counsel, will know its worth.
238
In its tenets he can find confirmation of his
loftiest feelings.
239
In their enthusiasm, the younger advocates and
eager defenders of this doctrine may outrun their facts, but that does not
invalidate the doctrine itself.
240
No one who sincerely and intelligently follows
philosophy for even a few years could fail to become a better man as a direct
result. If anyone does fail to do so, be sure he is unintelligent even if
sincere, or insincere even if intelligent, that he has followed only his own
ego-prompted imagination and miscalled it philosophy.
241
It teaches us to profess and inspires us to
practise the noblest of ideals.
242
It teaches us what to do in the dilemmas of
conscience wherever they arise in the art of living.
243
We need these truths to fortify us against
ourselves and to nerve us against our enemies within.
244
It is of great value alike to those who are
practising self-help and self-improvement techniques as to those who are
striving to develop a more spiritual life.
245
Our reward arises in an exaltation of soul.
246
Its wisdom born out of marmoreal calm, its moral
code enframed in gracious compassion, philosophy stands peerless above all other
offerings.
247
Coleridge: "It is folly to think of making the
many, philosophers.... But the existence of a true philosophy, or the power and
habit of contemplating particulars in the unity and mirror of the idea - this in
the rulers and teachers of a nation is indispensable to a sound state of
religion in all classes."
248
Because the philosophical approach to the soul
is the most comprehensive of all, it is the best of all. For it alone satisfies
the needs of the whole man and does not starve any of them. Other ways may suit
the primitive or even medieval type of seeker but they will not suit the modern,
with his complex nature and richer experience, so well as the philosophical one.
Indeed all these others converge in it in the end.
249
The achievements of true philosophy are
immensely inspiring. They break down limitations which would otherwise seem
insuperable.
250
The worth of this teaching does not depend upon
the numbers of people who espouse it. The weaker the response which it receives
from the world in general, the stronger should be the effort put forth by the
few, if they really believe in it, to keep it alive.
251
Philosophy, with its balanced scheme of living,
its recognition of both higher and lower needs, its enrichment and not negation
of human existence, has more to offer us than anything else.
252
The philosophic movement is a loose and free
one. Its strength cannot be measured by numbers or institutions, for externality
and rigidity are out of harmony with its teaching and character. Yet,
unorganized and unadvertised though it be, it is not less vital and not less
significant than more visible movements.
253
Those who are impressed by numbers, who
associate the bigness of a movement with the truth or worth of its teachings,
will fail to understand that the smallness of philosophy's following is entirely
disproportionate to its quality, its truth, and its worth.
254
Does it matter so much that they are numerically
small if they are spiritually great? Is it not better to be with God in a tiny
group than to be with pseudo-God in a large majority?
255
This system is not a hobby for the diversion of
tea-table gossips; on the contrary, it constitutes a completely adequate answer
to the problem of living. It is more relevant to life than anything else
imaginable. It satisfies the spiritual hunger of our times.
256
Philosophy alone has the most to offer the man
of thought and feeling and action, for its truths are final, its ethics
unsurpassable and its wisdom impeccable, its serenity unique.
257
Philosophy provides a standard of human
excellence.
258
He will find in philosophy a support which is
enduring, because its first principles can never change.
259
Its strength will carry him through every
crisis, whether it be a personal or a national one. Its wisdom will guide him in
every situation and vindicate itself later in the result.
260
If philosophy has commanded the allegiance of
brilliant minds and noble characters, it is because no other teaching could suit
their natures and meet their needs so well.
261
Here, in philosophy, he has at last reached what
is fundamental and essential for the understanding of life's general purposes
and for the proper conduct of his personal ones.
262
The sense of liberation which comes with the
advent of philosophy derives not only from its manifold theoretical and
practical merits but also from the release it confers from the narrow
particularism of attitude which besets most men. One is no longer a religionist
only, a mystic only, an ascetic only, a metaphysician only but, within
reasonable limits, all these and more. There is a wholeness of outlook, a
wholesomeness of feeling which is even greater than their mere sum.
263
In philosophy a man can find everything he needs
for his spiritual guidance throughout life. His religious, mystical,
metaphysical, and ethical requirements are all provided for. If he faithfully
follows its teaching, no other system will ever attract him again.
264
Philosophy can become effective in society only
after it has become effective in the individual.
265
When our eyes have been opened to the true
meaning of man, when we know that this is not to be found in his transient
personality but in his enduring essence, life will possess a quality it never
had before.
266
The adept who is an adept in truth and not
merely in yoga can and will prove to be a thoroughly practical man of the world.
I have some friends who, while not being so far advanced as such adeptship, have
nevertheless progressed to some degree on its path, and in every case they
occupy positions requiring expert administrative capacity in business or
professional worlds, and they possess adequate knowledge and ability to deal
with concrete problems of life and affairs.
267
Whoever thinks wills and acts by the light of,
and in harmony with, these truths attains goodness free from mere
sentimentality, wisdom unmarred by intellectual arrogance, and strength purified
from low egoism.
268
The inner life made worthwhile, made beautiful
wise and virtuous, the consequence is an outer life made worthwhile.
269
These teachings do in the end help one to live
more effectively and even more successfully, but this can only happen after they
have been fully studied and comprehended. But that is a process which takes
quite a long time.
270
When wisdom comes into a man's mind, wasted
effort goes out of his life. For when he understands men and events, he
understands how to put himself into a proper relation to them.
271
The man who can combine the serenity and
concentration of the yogi with the practicality and activity of a worldling is
the man this world needs.
272
Even if such a man fails to win successes in the
business or professional arena, he will grandly win his own self-respect.
273
Whoever truly catches the spirit of philosophy
in his heart will find his creative intelligence stirred up to new expressions,
his aesthetic feelings refined to new appreciations, and his moral purposes
tuned to new resolutions.
274
The worth of what he has learned and practised
will show itself in his adjustments to adverse situations, equally as in his
reactions to joyous ones.
275
If philosophy cannot show a way out of any
particular distress, it can show how to refresh the heart's endurance of it and
renew the mind's facing towards it.
276
If a man can accept the teachings of philosophy
but cannot bring himself to obey the precepts of philosophy, let him stop at
this point. Let him shut himself up inside both the necessary and imagined
limitations of his character and his circumstances. Even such a theoretical
knowledge will not be devoid of value. It constitutes a first step.
277
We may get more wisdom from a single
philosophical maxim than from whole pages of prolix, diffused, and long-winded
writings.
278
Those who want to disentangle the meaning of
dark mysterious symbolisms, such as those of the Hindu tantrik texts and the
European medieval alchemists, and who have the years to spend on such
time-wasting procedures, will not find the less obscure and more direct
statements of philosophy to their taste. But it is certain that they will be
able to extract from those chaotic masses of unintelligible verbiage nothing
more, and nothing more valuable, than what they can find ready to understand
with tremendously less effort and time in the modern philosophical writings.
279
The great virtue of expressing propositions in
the clearest possible terms is that it helps to expose in all their nakedness
both the errors and the truths thus stated. When a philosopher enters a public
forum and elucidates the controversial issues in politics, economics, or ethics,
he helps both sides to see what is sound and what is weak in their positions.
Thus he helps them more truly than by taking sides himself.
280
These truths, being everlasting and world-wide,
give us shelter in periods of violent storm, provide us with refuge in times of
distress, and protect us with prudence in years of smiling fortune.
281
When foundational principles are wrong,
practical errors will not only remain but go on multiplying themselves.
282
There is nothing in life to which philosophy
cannot be related nor the philosophic attitude applied. It is in critical
moments that he will display the fruits of his philosophic progress as
unsuspected power and unexpected initiative, as unruffled calm and unwavering
fortitude.
283
The harsh critic who rejects philosophy finds it
nothing more than a bundle of words. But the sincere practitioner of many years
experience finds it life-giving and soul-refreshing.
284
A teaching which helps men and women to meet
adversity with courage, opposition with serenity, and temptation with insight
can surely render a real service to the modern world.
285
Philosophy teaches its votaries to aspire
towards the best that is in them.
286
Those who know nothing, or next to nothing, of
true philosophy brush the mention of it aside as "fantastic" or dismiss the
results of its mystic practices as being "beyond the range of credibility." It
is just as logical to brush aside the best in religion and dismiss the best in
art.
287
When philosophy applies its full wisdom to any
question of human conduct, faith, or purpose, it immediately separates itself
from other approaches because they are partisan, limited, partial, and in
bondage to the ego.
288
To bring a well-informed and well-educated mind
to bear upon all questions, to keep feeling in proper balance with reasoning, to
deny the ego its insatiable demand for rulership - this gives a man poise, frees
him from lamentable prejudice, and imparts perspective to his conclusions.
289
The contact with philosophy leaves him in time
elevated in feeling, stimulated in ideas, and cultivated in aesthetic taste.
290
Philosophy engages the entire being and should
develop a balanced, useful, happy, and wise individual who has attained inner
poise.
291
If someone were to compile a list of the famous
ones who found in philosophy the truth they could find nowhere else, the names
would stretch from the Far East to the Far West, from pre-Greek antiquity to
postwar modernity.
292
To those who can see, this is the truest way of
improving humanity, for it treats both first causes and final effects.
293
The first feeling is one of astonishment that
such a large area of knowledge and experience should exist among us humans and
yet be almost unknown to most of us.
294
The living proof of these benefits will be
himself, possibly on the surface but surely inside himself.
295
If philosophy can provide us with correct
principles for thought and behaviour it has done enough; but of course it can do
very much more, for it can help to find explanations of our own existence and
the universal existence.
296
It is the difference between living on the
instinctual level of animals and on the celestial one of the Enlightened Minds.
297
We may call that ideal worth following which
brings people closer to knowing the truth about life, which offers them what is
real, not illusory, which improves and refines character, and which can be
tested by practicable action.
298
In the end all students will become philosophers
in the ancient sense of this term - that is, "lovers of wisdom" - and therefore
not only feel the Divine but also understand it. Not only this, but they will be
able to help others to attain like understanding and be desirous of doing so.
The greater their knowledge, the greater their power to help others. Moreover,
knowledge of how the Divine works is a safeguard against the pitfalls,
pseudo-teachers, and evil ones, for they can then be perceived instantly.
Philosophers will not then be deceived by face values. Jesus said, "Be ye
harmless as doves but shrewd as serpents."
299
It is at the critical moments of life that
philosophy proves its worth, but only to the degree to which it has previously
been followed and applied.
300
He who has ascended to these higher levels of
being, reflects the changed point of view in all his personal relationships.
Resentment collapses, forgiveness arises.
301
If he applies philosophy as much to himself as
to his situations, he will be always in command of them.
302
By following the philosophic life, he will be
spared some of the troubles and trials of human life, but he cannot expect to be
spared all of them. He may even get new ones, but in that case there will be
adequate compensations.
303
How many persons have told me that it was the
help and support got from these philosophic ideas, truths, and principles which
enabled them to endure periods of public terror or private distress without
nervous breakdown!
304
The knowledge of philosophy takes the bitterness
out of tragedy and the frustration out of adversity.
305
He should not only seek the highest quality of
consciousness within himself and try to realize it constantly, but also seek the
highest quality of his life in the world - so as to have a fit channel through
which to express this realization.
306
Philosophy reduces a man's emotional tensions
and increases his mental tolerances. In this sense it is quite serviceable to
human beings, but of course it does far more than that.
307
It is in the hour of tribulation that the
practice of philosophy proves its worth. In every human life there are critical
situations when external resources and loving consolation are simply not enough
to meet the emotional need. It is then that we must draw on inner resources and
tap our spiritual reserves.
308
The larger outlook resulting from these studies,
the long horizon of ever-developing stages which it puts before us, tends to
reduce the haste and strain of day-to-day living. It relaxes and stabilizes the
human disposition.
309
I recall the experience of shipwreck which
happened to me in the Red Sea many years ago when I was travelling on a 5,000
ton cargo steamer which happened to be the only ship sailing at around that time
from a certain port. Our ship was smashed in two during the darkness of the
night by another steamer four times as large. It rammed us, crushed and broke
our steamer into two halves. We sank because we were carrying a cargo heavier
than the ship was designed for which consisted of uranium-rich sand, black sand.
Luckily the process of sinking took some time, enough to let the few passengers
(only a dozen of us) get off safely in a small boat. What I wish to say about
this little episode is that when I became aware of what had happened a great
calm descended on me together with a great faith and a great patience, and I had
to laugh at my travelling companion, a Portuguese bishop who shared the cabin
with me. He was highly excited, waved his arms and muttered his prayers. I take
this as an illustration of the contrast between the value of philosophy and the
value of dogmatic religion.
310
The more he understands life, the more contented
he will become.
311
When he is led by metaphysical studies and
mystical experiences to realize the vastness and tracklessness of what still
lies before the human adventure, he becomes not terrified, as Pascal was, but
awed and humbled.
312
Philosophy alone can show a way out of the
dilemmas in which science, religion, metaphysics, politics, and economics have
unnecessarily involved themselves. But it can do this only if one is prepared
either to undergo the philosophic discipline, which creates the correct insight
into these dilemmas, or else to accept the findings of those who have already
undergone it.
313
No price can be put on what it means to a man to
be in possession of an entirely trustworthy system of principles, laws, and
truths for the understanding and conduct of life. No situation exists in which
he cannot make use of them to his advantage.
314
When the philosopher enters the arena of public
affairs with his calm unbiased judgement, his contributions towards the public
good have a lasting value commensurate with his freedom from the small personal
incentives which actuate the work of those who have not achieved the philosophic
attitude of mind.
315
The social value of philosophy is its
ennoblement of human relations.
316
The study of philosophy will free men from
extreme attitudes, and especially from violent fanaticisms. It can show them
that other points of view may have their place too.
317
The philosopher's capacity for historical
anticipations is not only the consequence of his broad impartiality, profound
penetration, and patient acquisition of all the essential facts, but primarily
it is the consequence of his ability to discern the working of karmic causes and
effects.
318
It is not likely that the limited little human
mind can understand the cosmos. But philosophy can give us clues which make all
the difference between blundering in utter blackness and groping in twilight.
319
It develops into a wisdom that is never
priggish, a goodwill that is never sentimental.
320
Such a teaching could not turn a man into a
fanciful visionary - as the world, confusing philosophical mysticism with the
wild aberrations that it mostly knows, may think - but only into a valuable
citizen.
321
When a man or woman comes into fuller awareness
of the True Self he arrives at the same time at the discovery of his true work,
together with the capacity to perform it. Such an individual usually has innate
ability - but the development of this ability depends upon his struggles to
achieve it. Also, its sphere of activity may not necessarily be what he at first
believes. In this case, disappointments and frustrations will arise to serve as
indications that he has yet to find the right road. The appearance of talents
and capacities can be hastened if one acquires better balance.
322
All this said, we may now say that in this
bewildering world and its bewildering activities there is a place for each man
and if he has not found it, it is primarily because he has not found himself.
323
We must hold to the value of wisdom, which gives
to man so much dignity and goodness, so much honour and usefulness, but we must
hold to it above all because it is part of that goal which God has set before us
for attainment on this earth.
324
"God hath not created anything better than
wisdom," wrote Muhammed. Also the prophet declared that his followers would be
rewarded ultimately, not according to their performance of prayer, fasting,
charity, or pilgrimage, but only according to the degree of their wisdom.
325
PRACTICAL PHILOSOPHY
Definitions
Bradley defined philosophy as the finding of bad reasons for what one believes by instinct but Aldous Huxley has endeavoured to improve on this. He says, "finding bad reasons for what one believes for other bad reasons - that's philosophy."
In India, popular ignorance gradually identified philosophy with those monks and anchorites who had fled from the world and its woes to monasteries or mountains.
It was once the fashion of many people to sneer at philosophy and to regard philosophers as a ridiculous compound of foolishness and fatuity, but time has begun to change all that.
The notion that there is something futile about philosophy is quite correct when applied to what passes under that name very often, but quite incorrect when applied to genuine philosophy; and it is genuine philosophy which is here presented.
The value of knowing truth lies in its potency for making clear the art of fine living. A philosophy which is not strong enough to vivify personal life is no more than a dry dusty intellectualism, and when philosophy becomes a mode of intellectual wrestling, contributing little or nothing to action, it falls rightly into neglect. Its proper business is to rescue man from mechanical and unintelligent activity and put him on the path to a deliberately wise existence. It should be an insurance against making ethical errors or undertaking stupid enterprises, and its study is the premium to be paid for this valuable insurance.
Here then is a teaching, very old and very wise, which summarizes all human knowledge, actual and possible, and which shows man how best to shape his personal and practical life. I am not its originator. I can but try to re-present it to a troubled, broken, and blinded world which waits for this knowledge in modern form, as a benighted traveller waits for the dawn.
This philosophy rightly understood and rightly used will make men who make history. It calls for people who are ready and able to raise it above the status of a tea table topic, and to devote to its study and practice not merely an occasional free evening, but their whole lives; who will not only understand these great truths intellectually, but feel their transforming power in their hearts, and courageously live them in everyday life. For whoever masters this philosophy will soon feel its invigorating influence in every sphere of his activity, and in its light he will walk life's ways with calm assurance.
The Need
Once I stood on the wide pavement of Broadway. All around flashed and reflashed the electric advertising signs of "The Great White Way." A ragged young man bearing a bundle of newspapers came up to me, thrust a paper close to my face, and shouted raucously, "Man and woman shot." The never ending roar of motor traffic dinned in my ears. Crowds of people pressed by me: expectant faces intent on snatching an evening's pleasure, tired faces eager to get home after a day's toil, painted faces striving to retain a semblance of beauty, hard ominous faces emerging from New York's underworld with sinister intent. There was the stir of exultant activity. I looked around at the crowd which jostled me, and peered questioningly into the faces which moved like a cinema film before my eyes. Which one seemed to express the attainment of inward happiness? Which one revealed a serene detachment from its destructive environment? I turned away, sadly disappointed in my quest. Nearly all had been suborned by the temptations that form such an alluring accompaniment to modern existence. They did not understand that the transitory is true but trivial, the eternal is true and great. They did not understand that baronets cannot escape broken hearts, nor millionaires the miseries of disappointment. They did not know that once a man has taken measure of the suffering which is inherent in life, the wrinkled demon of reflection will pursue him into the very haunts of revelry. He may view with pleasure a hundred happy figures dancing in gay abandon, when lo! its sneer sounds abruptly in his ear, "and even these are but dream figures dancing towards their silent graves." And so they wander through the years alternating between the red flames of passion and the grey coolness of calculation, until the little candles of their lives have guttered out.
They who think that the purpose of human incarnation is to increase pleasures and accumulate property have learned nothing from the instability of life and insecurity of possessions which have marked the period now passing.
The greatest evils of our age are not in its outward materialism but in its inward ignorance, and not in its practical inventiveness but in its mental unbalance.
When we mistake transient sense gratifications for true happiness we suffer later for our error. When we fail to discriminate between what is perishable in our lives and what is truly enduring we rely upon illusory values. The future tempts or torments us; the past keeps us half-buried in its memories; while the truth which could lift us into a region that liberates us from all temporal tyrannies is disdained. Yet peace, sublime and ego-free, can exist for us only when we learn to live, as it were, upon the pinpoint of a moment where all hopes for the future are not allowed to imprison us, and where equally all memories of the past are merely held and do not hold us.
We attain peace, as Buddha pointed out, when we are free from all desires.
Inspired Action
Inspired action is the means of reconciliation between seclusion and society, the service of the noisy crowd with the silence of lofty thought. Spirituality ceases to be a monopoly of the cloister, comes out of the confinement of church, temple, monastery, or mosque, and walks in the marketplace among busy men.
For philosophy teaches us that there is no sharp division between the world of surrounding things and the world of internal aspirations, that both are of the same ultimate essence of mind. Therefore the philosopher will despise nothing because it is supposed to be material, just as he will discard nothing because it is supposed to be anti-spiritual. He has glimpsed the great mystery of all existence, and knows that all things are within and participate in the Overself. Philosophy is identical with action and not with inertia. To make it anything less is to abuse words, for as the "love of wisdom" it must include the application of wisdom.
"Love cannot be idle," says Ruysbroeck.
"I preach you the truth, O monks, for deliverance and not for keeping idle," says Buddha.
The hidden teaching affirms that the universal manifested existence is a Becoming, a change from one condition to another. It is absurd to suggest that a truly spiritual life must be a static one. A static human existence is impossible, and whoever seeks it seeks in vain.
Life in the active world is simply expression, and the divine life can be lived everywhere.
No defense need be made to the fanatics who decry and denounce our desire to get some comfort and convenience from the earth's resources. Western civilization, so condemned by Oriental critics, possesses much that is admirable, despite its obvious faults.
Man is not called upon to renounce his great discoveries and works, but to renounce selfish usage of them.
There can be no salvation in the attitude of mind which denounces the West as wicked and material Occidentalism and upholds an ascetic disdain of material things.
The God Who is to be found within ourselves must also exist equally outside ourselves in the phenomenal universe, else how would He be Infinite?
No, we must rebut the accusation of materialism as stupid, and point out that a better name would be realism. Life in activity is as real as life in repose; expression is no less divine than meditation; and they who have discovered the divinity within themselves will forthwith recognize it throughout the universe.
The Balanced Life
We need to achieve a balanced life with a wise alternation between action and repose, work and meditation, being positive and being passive.
Only the philosopher has the orientation of outlook which enables a man to take his political, social, and economic bearings correctly.
It may not be often that the floors of city offices are trodden by the feet of those who also wander in the caves of mystic contemplation; nor the hubbub of the stock exchange heard by those who also hear the sweet silence of the inner self. The combination in one personality of the two opposite characteristics of meditation and action may be infrequent, but there are those who have achieved it, and who realize that work is not only to make a living, but a life.
When there are more such men and women in towns and cities, when they walk in the hard metropolitan streets and the busy bartering places revealing a serene state of mind which is held and maintained no less among crowds than in solitary places, the soulless character of so much of modern life will be redeemed. The philosophy of inspired action of such persons brings blessings on mankind. Such persons have accepted their lot in worldly life and seek to do their duty; they turn occasion into opportunity and bring the sense of sublimity into their prosaic hours. Their own diviner peace and spiritual poise is blessing to their neighbours like fresh dew on a parched land.
Another name for inspired action is unselfish work. The spiritual man will work no less hard than the average man; his work will be done well, with understanding, calmly, with detachment. His aspiration is towards Perfection, the Supreme Divinity, and this attitude will be seen in all his work, even in the meanest task. He works without the fever of ambition or greed, and he does not allow any pains or pleasures, difficulties or problems to move him from the ideal he has set before him. With calm and equable spirit he does his best. More he cannot do.
A man who is attuned to cosmic harmonies cannot fail to express harmony in all his worldly activities.
This is a quest to be undertaken by those who have suffered and smiled and are still ardently alive, not for those heavy humourless persons who are ascetically dead. Therefore let those of us who are condemned to toil for our daily bread not forget to toil for the spiritual Bread of Life. The notion that a spiritual man may not work vigorously in the world of business and industry is as nonsensical as the notion that a man who can compose perfect music may not eat a hearty dinner.
There is nothing to prevent the sage from being a successful businessman, and nothing wrong in practical activities, for the simple reason that he will not cease being a sage nor lose himself in his activities, and he will remain rooted in Reality amid the world of thoughts and things.
Voltaire wrote of Marlborough that he had a calmness in the midst of tumult and danger "which is the greatest gift of nature for command." Thus even a soldier can derive great benefit from yoga.
Daily meditation will overcome the materializing effect of constant contact with worldly influences, by bringing together the inner and outer selves in communion with each other: one giving strength and light to the other, and the latter expressing this inspiration in active life.
We are able to live a complete and creative existence only after we have arrived at a true attitude towards life through spiritual unfoldment. Only then can we walk the world's ways in safety.
In the end we may learn whether our feelings were wise or deceptive, our thinking sound or unsound, by the experience which comes from our consequent acts. Dreamers, escapists, and ascetics who shy away from activity deprive themselves of this valuable test.
We shall find we must have the strength to say "No" to a thing before we have the inner right to take it. We must learn how to renounce a thing before we can possess it.
We must learn to remain ultramystically aware always, even while we are externally occupied with any matter in hand. Our work will not suffer, but be all the better for the poised emotion and peaceful mind which this brings.
326
Philosophy combines a lofty idealism with an
intense practicality.
327
This teaching can be understood only by those
who try to live it: all others merely think they understand it. Only
those who have incorporated it in their lives for a number of years can know how
intensely practical philosophy is.
328
The practicality of the philosophical quest is
something few men discover until they are far advanced on the quest. If the
dreamers, the fanatics, the visionaries, the lethargic, the feckless, and the
failures seem to be the ones most vocal about the quest, that is merely because
they are hardly on the quest at all but only stand around its entrance.
329
Practical philosophy is the art of living so as
to fulfil life's higher purpose.
330
It is a grave mistake to regard these matters as
having no more than a theoretical interest, to be played with or not according
to one's taste. Whoever finds the answers to the questions, whoever knows what
man really is, what his prenatal and post-mortem destinies are, what his highest
good is, will necessarily find that his practical everyday living is much
affected by them.
331
The notion that illumination must turn a man
into a mere dreamer, unfit for practical life and incapable of coping with
practical situations, is true only when it is of an imperfect kind, or when the
man is not properly prepared to receive it, or when it is too short to be full
yet deep enough to unsettle him. Illumination in the philosophic sense, however,
need not deprive a man of the capacity for energetic action, although it will
deprive him of the feeling of hurried action. He will do his necessary work in
the world, not with slovenly weakness but with quiet calm.
332
Wisdom begins only when you apply in practice
what you absorb in theory.
333
He must use the teaching in his daily life to
know its practical value and to prove its practical truth. As he progresses he
will discover that the more he uses it, the more he gains in power and strength.
334
It is uncommon to find an individual who, in a
single personality, combines a highly spiritual outlook with a truly practical
character. He who succeeds in effecting this combination is rare, but he is the
type that the coming age needs and demands. For he can prove and demonstrate
convincingly to all the world that loftiness of philosophic ethics will not be a
weakness in practical life. On the contrary, because it is informed by knowledge
and based upon wisdom, it will be a source of strength.
335
The effect of his studies and meditations will
slowly but surely reveal itself in his life. His world outlook will sparkle with
vitality, his speech will form itself with precision, his deeds will be wise and
more virtuous. For philosophy, unlike metaphysics, is not only a theory to be
learned from books but even more an integral way of life to be practised in
society.
336
The common misconception that philosophy bears
no practical relation to ordinary life is due to ignorance. The proper
understanding of philosophy would greatly reduce human sin and suffering, would
discipline brutal men and selfish women, would dissolve fanatical strife and
creedal conflict, would inspire us to put into concrete shape the loftiest
ideals of our imagination, would bring a beautiful solace to offset the
disappointments bred in homes, offices, fields, and factories. These are
tangible things and refute the allegation that the philosopher shuts his eyes to
the harassments and activities of common life. The misconception has arisen,
however, because so many misguided theologians and so many fantastic dreamers
have passed themselves off as philosophers.
337
Philosophy will show a man how to find his
better self, will lead him to cultivate intuition, will guide him to acquire
sounder values and stronger will, will train him in right thinking and wise
reflection, and, lastly, will give him correct standards of ethical rightness or
wrongness. If its theoretical pursuit is so satisfying that it can be an end and
a reward in itself, its practical application to current living is immeasurably
useful, valuable, and helpful.
338
It is not that truth has to be made practical,
for it is the most practical thing which exists. It is that men have to become
better instructed in it, as well as in the higher laws which reflect it, and
then live out what they have learned.
339
It is quite proper to seek personal advantage
even when embracing a religious cult or a spiritual teaching. If men thought
they would get nothing at all from it, few would ever embrace one. But this is
not the spirit in which to embrace philosophy. That is to be sought in utter
purity of motive, because truth is to be sought for its own sake, whether its
face is ugly or pleasant. Nevertheless, personal advantages accrue. Philosophy
teaches how to be well and live well, how to avoid misery and attract happiness,
how to bear suffering and achieve peace of mind. Its values and results are as
related to practical living as anything could be, but eyes are needed to see
them.
340
Not to escape life, but to articulate it, is
philosophy's practical goal. Not to take the aspirant out of circulation, but to
give him something worth doing is philosophy's sensible ideal.(P)
341
If leadership and guidance, inspiration and
light are ever to come to humanity from mystical circles during this colossal
upheaval, be sure that they will come only from those who have wedded head to
heart and contemplation to practical service.
342
It is a false ethic which would tell us that
material things are valueless, that worldly prosperity is worthless. Philosophy
is full of common sense along with its rare uncommon sense. Therefore it teaches
giving the proper value to material things, appraising worldly prosperity
properly by pointing out that inward quality and inner life must support it for
genuine happiness.
343
The philosopher may walk unfalteringly and
surefootedly because he sees reality and understands the truth of life.
344
To bring the divine presence into the midst of
one's work and one's work continually into the divine presence - this is an
inspired and worthwhile active life.
345
There is a direct relation between the abstract
concepts of metaphysics and the concrete problems of individuals, between the
ultimate principles of the one and the immediate needs of the other. But most
people are too short-sighted to observe this relation, too blurred mentally to
comprehend. They regard metaphysical truth as a dispensable luxury, or a leisure
hour hobby, without which they can get along quite well if called upon to do so.
On the contrary, it is basic for character, foundational for behaviour,
solutional for problems, and prophylactic for troubles. If at first it seems
intangible, in the end it becomes invaluable. Yes, Philosophy is tremendously
practical but only those who know it from the inside, who have felt its power in
trying circumstances and followed its guidance in perplexing ones, know this. In
good and bad periods, through long spells of ordinary routine and sudden turning
points at critical times, it shows its practical benefits, its everyday
applicability. Its ability to steady the emotions during times of perplexing
crisis and to quieten the nerves in places of distracting noises proved itself
during the war.
346
The time has gone when the philosophic and the
practical, the religious and the realistic, the spiritual and the material are
to be regarded as being mutually antagonistic; today we must regard them as
working to a common end and purpose, as reconcilable in ultimate unity. Thus our
actions should come to be visible emblems of the invisible inner life in which
we must take our roots.
347
Philosophy says he has to bring his scheming
mind, his rational mind, his concrete mind to bear upon solutions to his
practical problems; but he must work them out under the inspiration of the soul,
else they are solutions that solve little.
348
Those same capacities, applied to worldly
careers, professions, or businesses, are more likely to bring a man success than
failure. We often hear that philosophy is useless to hungry men or poor men.
This is false. For the quality of intelligence and character developed by it is
higher than the average and therefore its possessor will know better how to rid
himself of hunger or poverty than will the possessor of an inferior quality of
intelligence and character.
349
How shall I act rightly and wisely? This is the
problem which faces every man. Hence philosophy not only teaches a way of
thought but also a way of action. This is inevitably so because, unlike
mysticism, it is concerned not merely with a segment of life but with the whole
of it. There is something defective about a teaching if it forgets the ultimate
purpose for which it itself exists, if it leaves its followers in the air, and
therefore cannot be successfully applied in practical action. We may understand
the value of our intellectual formulations only when they are put to the test in
actual practice. In putting an idea, a theory, or a doctrine to the practical
test or in bringing a way of living into practical operation, we enable it to
reveal its truth or falsity, its scope or limitations, its merits or demerits. A
doctrine must be tested not only by its intellectual soundness but also by its
practical results. The first test can be instantly applied but the second only
after a certain time has elapsed. Thus the good is separated from the bad, the
right is distinguished from the wrong, the true is divided from the false,
either by intelligence in the sphere of abstract ideas or by time in the sphere
of spatial things. The first shoots of wheat and weeds cannot be distinguished
by ordinary sight or knowledge, but give them time to grow up to maturity and
everybody can distinguish them. The barrenness or fruitfulness of any teaching
is in the end inexorably ascertained by applying the test of historical results,
that is, the test of time.
350
Nothing could be more practical than applied
philosophy. The student will find his will strengthened by its definite
affirmations, so that he will bring a bolder heart to the troubles and duties of
everyday living. He will find his feelings less disturbed by the evil in other
men's characters and deeds. He will find his thoughts inspired by its
declaration of the benevolent purpose and supreme intelligence behind his life.
351
The philosophic way is neither to live a
crippled ascetic life out of touch with the times nor to give itself up totally
to the foolishness of the times.
352
When knowledge is worked out in action,
reflected in attitude, and formed in the entire life, then only does it become
real.
353
Even as the narrow ascetic seeks to deny life,
so the more tolerant philosopher seeks to affirm it. It is true that the
materialist does the same, but he does it in ignorance of what life really is,
and he does it for the benefit of the little fragment of his own personality
alone. The philosopher, on the contrary, works in the light of higher knowledge
and works for the benefit of the All.
354
When these thoughts pass down from his head to
his heart and from his heart to his will, only then will he really be a student
of philosophy. The heart must be opened to them, the will must be directed by
them. With that his life will change, at first little by little, into a blessed
one.
355
It is not enough to convert thoughts into deeds.
The latter must also be done in the right place and at the right time, if they
are to achieve their object.
356
The effects of the discipline show themselves in
his handling of worldly affairs, in his swift resourcefulness during urgent
situations, his calm balance during critical ones, and his practical wisdom
during puzzling ones.
357
Philosophy demands that we actualize our ideals.
Wisdom must flower in deeds that accord with it or it is not wisdom. Action is
the decisive factor, the acid test of all mystical, metaphysical, and religious
pretensions to a superior ethic. Therefore the ethical values, such as
compassion and integrity, which arise from the interior experience of
metaphysical and mystical meditation must also be upheld in the exterior
space-time world.
358
The practical contact of life will supply a test
of the worth of his dominant ideas, a means of verifying the truth of his
holiest beliefs, and an indicator of the grade or strength of his moral
character.
359
He does not and cannot separate life from
philosophy. Those who assert that it is a study for mere dreamers are wrong.
360
The artist, working through the medium of
imagination - whether he imagines scenes or sounds - creates a beautiful piece.
The philosopher, working through the same medium but seeking self-improvement,
creates a beautiful life.
361
Being a philosopher is being alive, not denying
life. Philosophy is bought at a price, nothing less than a man's whole life,
which is to be directed thereafter by a blend of intuition, intellect, and
revelation. If therefore anything is thrown away, it can only be because it is
not worth keeping.
362
Although it is far better to read philosophy
than to ignore it altogether, it is immeasurably better to feel the emotional
urge and inner drive which are needed to bring about its application to
day-by-day living. If they are lacking but the wish for them is present, two
things can be done that will help to attract them. First, begin to pray to the
higher power for such a grace. Second, establish contact, fellowship, or
discipleship with those who are themselves impregnated with such resolve,
fervour, and deep yearning.
363
Although philosophy is eminently practical, it
does not, like materialism, lose itself wholly in such practicality. It does not
throw away its fine intuitions, noble dreams, and wise thoughts while planting
its feet firmly on earth. Rather does it seek to hold a reconciling balance
between its dreams and its deeds, between the inner life and the outer world.
364
The philosopher is a practical man. He
understands quite well - as much as any materialist - that he has to live out
this physical life to which he was born in the physical world of which he is a
part. Therefore, although it is metaphysically graded as being like a dream, it
must be dealt with properly, adequately, efficiently, and attentively.
365
Philosophy must have an interest for men of
flesh and blood, must be of service to those who live in a practical ordinary
world, must have bridges to religion and art and science, must not be isolated
from lesser forms of inquiry even though it seeks the higher ones.
366
If it were not in closest contact with the facts
of human life, it could not be philosophy. But the real reason why it is charged
by critics with promoting dreaminess and with being unpractical is that they are
interested only in some of the facts whereas philosophy is interested in all of
them.
367
His basic values may become firmer and more
positive as his understanding of philosophy becomes fuller. They support him
during the difficult periods of adjustment to the world in which he has to live
and work. They guide him ethically and protect his character.
368
The ascetic who wants to keep his life "simple"
does not want the "burden" of possessions. The hedonist sees no burden in them,
but rather beauty and comfort. He welcomes them. The philosopher, able to absorb
both views, reconciles and accepts them, for he recognizes the play of Yin and
Yang through all life, including his own.
369
By pointing out the way of development
immediately ahead of the aspirant, as well as the goal remotely distant,
philosophy shows its practicality.
370
The materialist says he can enjoy peace of mind
only if all his material needs and satisfactions are obtained. The idealist says
he is indifferent to such material things because peace of mind can only follow
spiritual satisfaction. The one is stating a quarter of the truth, the other
three-quarters, because both are looking at different aspects of life. Neither
one is looking at the whole of life. This requires man to secure a varying
minimum of money, clothes, shelter, food, fuel, and so on, whoever he is and
whatever his outlook. His inner needs will still have to be met, but these
depend on his evolutionary stage as to their nature and quality.
371
Philosophy does not approve of deterioration in
the quality of human welfare and its justification in the name of so-called
spirituality.
372
The philosophic mode of life coheres with the
metaphysical system behind it. The one is a practical expression of the thorough
thinking of the other. The confidence which fills the first harmonizes with the
certitude which stamps the second.
373
The philosophical life is a simple life, partly
because it seeks to escape unnecessary anxieties, partly because it wants to
save time and energy for what seems more desirable.
374
Those who regard it as a disincarnate entity
hovering in the air have not understood philosophy. It does not separate action
from thought, conduct from consciousness, nor society from self. But neither
does it commit the materialist error of making action, conduct, and society end
in themselves, any more than it commits the mystical error of making ecstasy,
feeling, and visions end in themselves.
375
It is an ironic fact that the philosophic way of
living, far from being suitable for dreamers, misfits, and escapists only, is in
the long view the most practical way of all ways of living.
376
Philosophy is intensely practical; yet, because
it is also well balanced, it judges neither by results alone nor by intention
alone, but by both.
377
This teaching recognizes that Mind is the
primary element in life, but it recognizes also the contributions of the
physical and the intellectual. Its aim is to enable the student to maintain all
effort in correct proportionate balance.
378
The last test of what intellect, intuition, or
feeling offers as the truth must be provided by the will. In the realm of
doing, we discover its rightness or wrongness.
379
It is not enough to grasp spiritual realization
intellectually. We have to embody it physically.
380
Pragmatism is of the adolescent stage of mental
development. It is crude realism directed towards utility and satisfaction only.
Its weakness lies in its acceptance of satisfaction and utility as the test of
truth. Each man may have a different definition of what satisfies and is most
useful, hence contradictions arise. Pragmatism can see truth only in the fruits
of effort, which is only partially correct. Philosophy also sees truth in its
fruits of practice, but it tests theories also. Pragmatism only tests practice.
It deals only with one aspect of philosophy, what man can do; it forgets to take
the world as it is. The world is forever changing, partly due to Nature and
partly due to man. The two aspects taken together form the basis of
philosophical thought and study. In favouring the one aspect only, pragmatism is
one-sided and imperfect philosophically.
381
It does not agree with either the fools who are
infatuated with worldly life or the fanatics who condemn it, but finds a
reasonable equilibrium of attitude between them.
382
We may hopefully expect to find, and we shall
not be disappointed, that the noble principles of philosophy are visible in the
noble results of philosophy.
383
Is it a merely theoretic, vaguely academic
matter? No! For those who rule states or pass laws are guided in their actions
and decisions by their outlook on life generally as by their ability to rule
themselves. This is most often half-conscious or instinctual. Philosophy brings
both the lower and the higher sources into clear consciousness.
384
Power will tread on the heels of knowledge only
if we apply it.
385
If its disciples fail to put philosophy into
practice, their failure does not invalidate its truth nor derogate its worth but
does show that they are only half-disciples.
386
The only education worth the name is that which
prepares a pupil for life, that which teaches him how to live.
387
It is here, in a simple, common situation that
one finds oneself, that philosophy has its place, just as much as in the
profoundest movement of thought.
388
Only those who know some of the secret laws of
the universe know that this is not a teaching for mere dreamers and
irresponsible escapists. They know that the ultimate peace, safety, and health
of a people depend on the extent to which the principles of living under these
laws are understood.
389
The man who faithfully obeys the injunctions and
practices the regimes of philosophy can never be a failure, whatever the world
says. Nor can he be unemployed, for he understands that his real employer is the
Overself and that the work he is doing will not end while life does not end.
390
Even a limited amount of the practice of
philosophy produces disproportionately larger gains.
391
He believes, intuits, perhaps even knows that
the Real, the True, the Good, and the Beautiful are the best things in life and
the most worth seeking, that their quest will lead him through mystical regions
and ethereal experience. But that is no excuse for deserting critical judgement
and practical sense.
392
Philosophy affects the whole of life: not only
thought but also action, not only consciousness but also diet.
393
The philosopher knows just as well as anyone
else the importance of money. He does not, like the ascetic, take a vow of
poverty nor, like the fanatic, decry its power to bring happiness. But neither
does he give it the value which the materialist gives it. He is balanced.
394
The need is for a combination of practical
self-interest with idealistic soul-interest.
395
With wisdom in temptation and fortitude in
tribulation, guided by noble principles rather than by momentary impulses, he
will expound the nature of philosophic ethics by the nature of his everyday
living.
396
Practical life will benefit in every way if the
inner life is inspired by philosophy. There is no danger of the man becoming a
vain futile dreamer or of his brain becoming deranged. Look for such dangers in
the cults, psychic and occult, not here. The philosopher may sit on his
mountaintop if he elects to, but he will not consider that this is the best way
to live, the ideal. It may serve a special and temporary purpose, or satisfy his
temperament, but he will be just as ready to descend into the valleys and cities
if the Overself bids him.
397
What did it mean to the American destiny and to
the human channel through which that destiny was being formulated in the last
century that the most illumined mind in the country, Ralph Waldo Emerson, twice
talked to Abraham Lincoln in the White House at Washington during a dark year of
the Civil War? What did it mean to Lincoln that the one man in America who could
do so brought him a spiritual gift of hope, light, and fortitude? It is
significant that a few months after Emerson's visit, Abraham Lincoln issued the
preliminary proclamation of the Emancipation of the Slaves, an act which made
the fighting of the war to the bitter end inevitable. To Emerson the war was an
inescapable crusade. It was something holy in its resolve to remove the foulness
of slavery from the land. Therefore he firmly opposed any end to the war which
would not achieve this goal, or, in his own words, "Any peace restoring the old
rottenness."
Philosophy aims at producing a group of men and women trained in mind control, accustomed to subordinate immediate interests to ultimate ends, sincerely desirous of serving humanity in fundamental ways, and possessed of philosophic knowledge which will make them valuable citizens. They will have balanced characters, based on refined feeling and exercised reason. It will be their constant endeavour to maintain a clear and definite outlook on the personal and public issues of the moment. Philosophy does not sit in helpless passivity when confronted with the spectacle of hustling cities and busy factories. Its supreme value to mankind lies in the solid ground it affords for a life devoted to the unremitting service of humanity.
In the magazine Lucifer, H.P. Blavatsky says, "If the voice of the mysteries has become silent for many ages in the West, if Eleusis, Memphis, Antium, Delphi have long ago been made the tombs of a science once as colossal in the West as it is yet in the East, there are successors now being prepared for them. We are in 1887 and the nineteenth century is close to its death. The twentieth century has strange developments in store for humanity."
The time has come to develop the knowledge and extend the understanding of a teaching which few know and fewer still understand. Occupied principally, as it is, with matters of eternal rather than ephemeral life, it finds today a larger opportunity for service than it could have found at any earlier period in consequence of the evolutionary forces which have been working on man's history, ideas, attitudes, communications, and productions. It is the most important knowledge which any human being could study.
398
There is no such thing as a merely theoretical
philosopher. If anyone is not a practising philosopher, he has not understood
correctly nor theorized properly.
399
Neither mysticism nor metaphysics is sufficient
by itself. We need not only the union of what is best in both, but also the
disinterested driving force of moral activity. Only when our metaphysical
understanding and meditational exercises begin to interpret themselves in active
life do we begin to justify both. The Word must become flesh. It is not enough
to accumulate knowledge. We must also apply it. We must act as well as meditate.
We cannot afford like the ascetical hermit to exclude the world. Philosophy,
which quite definitely has an activist outlook, demands that intuition and
intelligence be harmoniously conjoined, and that this united couple be
compassionately inserted into social life. Like the heat and light in a flame,
so thought and action are united in philosophy. It does not lead to a dreamy
quietism, but to a virile activity. Philosophic thought fulfils itself in
philosophic action. This is so and this must be so because mentalism affirms
that the two are really one. Thus the quest begins by a mystical turning
inwards, but it ends by a philosophic returning outwards.
400
This is the final test. Philosophy works.
Whatever you do, wherever you go, it can be put to practical use. It cannot be
isolated from life, for it is always intimate with life.
401
It is quite true that the full preparation for,
and practice of, mysticism takes us away from life in the world. But its work
need not stop there. The very same forces which activate it can later become the
inspiration of a new life in the world, the foundation of an effective
practicality.
402
Philosophy leaves the physical plane only to
return to it, lets go of activities only to take them up again. For the physical
world is as much its proper concern as any other. Everything is reverenced,
every act turned into a religious rite.
403
Worldly life, which is either a trap or a
hindrance to the unphilosophical, is a school of instruction and an avenue of
service to the philosophical.
404
The self and the world are linked closely
together: to understand the resulting combination both must be studied, and side
by side. Otherwise the end of the road is half-truth, not the full truth.
405
Faced with the mystery of his own existence, man
finally finds an answer in religion or mysticism. If he adds the mystery of the
world's existence, he must look for his complete answer in philosophy.
406
The immature spirituality and incomplete
enlightenment which sneers at life in the world and idolizes life in the
monastery, which furthermore confuses defeat in the external struggle for
existence with triumph in the internal struggle for God, is unphilosophical. We
may strive for a place in society and the gains that go with it as strenuously
and as determinedly as any ambitious man, so long as we remember to keep our
earthly ambitions subordinate to our celestial ones, so long as we do not forget
to strive also for a more abiding inner status and rustless wealth. We may aim
at effective accomplishment and successful outcome of the work we are doing,
whether it be banking or bricklaying. There is no harm in that and God will not
hold it against us in the higher reckoning. The harm begins when we lose our
sense of proportion and let the success itself become a supreme value of life,
when we become blind to anything higher and insensitive to anything nobler, when
we disregard ethical laws and social responsibilities in our thirst to attain
it, when we are broken in spirit by failure and weakened in fibre by
disappointment.
407
The philosophic aspirant is not asked, like the
yogic aspirant, to quit the world. But he is asked to quit the world view which
has kept him spiritually ignorant. Hence, outwardly he may live as full a life
as he pleases if only inwardly he will live according to the higher laws of
philosophic knowledge and ethics.
408
We are sent to this world to learn its useful
lessons, and were we to succeed in blotting out consciousness of what is going
on around us in it, we would merely be blotting out an opportunity to learn
them. This is what happens if trance is prematurely achieved.
409
Let the metaphysical dreamers assert that the
body is nothing, the world unimportant or even non-existent. To the philosopher
both are significant, meaningful, and life in them purposive. Are they not, in
the end, devices to extract the divinity within us?
410
The situations which develop from day to day
afford a field for enquiry, analysis, reflection, intuition, and ultimate
understanding in themselves, quite apart from the application of principles
already learned.
411
However far from philosophy these matters and
events seem to be, in reality they illustrate or exemplify some part of the
teaching.
412
The philosopher seeks to live in his century. He
is not so immersed in the ideas of antique centuries that he is unable to
interest himself in the ideas of his own.
413
It would be a mistake to believe that the
philosophic attitude does exclusively seek to enter into the world's life any
more than it seeks to escape from that life. It uses and includes each of these
movements but it does so only at the right time.
414
The practice of philosophy does not preclude one
from living normally in the world, from marrying and begetting children, from
acquiring possessions and dwelling in comfort, or from building a successful
business or professional career. It does not regard the normal human life as
inferior and illusory, nor the abnormal ascetic life as high and holy. It takes
both in its stride and looks on both as correct in their own places because both
are needed there, but it seeks to achieve at the earliest moment a sane balance
which shall free the individual from the tyranny of both.
415
Philosophy does not ask the mystically minded to
give up their mysticism but to expand it, to take a realistic view of the world
situation and to adjust themselves to the century in which they live.
416
If he can combine and balance a practical
attitude towards the world with a transcendental detachment from the world, he
will fulfil man's higher purpose.
417
The rules which are laid down for monks should
not be confused with the codes for non-monks. The latter need a realistic
respect for financial values counterbalanced by an idealistic indifference to
them. This makes necessary the finding of equilibrium between the two poles, a
kind of inner bicycle riding.
418
Philosophy does not want to escape life but to
fulfil it.
419
The ascetic aspirant seeks salvation from
the world. The philosophic one seeks salvation in the world.
420
The world will not be overcome by running away
from it nor by shutting our eyes to it, but by comprehending its significance
and bringing it into co-operative, side-by-side association with our spiritual
quest.
421
The worldly side of things must be included with
the spiritual side, related to it, balanced by it, purified through it. This is
the sane view of philosophy.
422
Mystical practice, religious devotion, and
metaphysical reflection are not, with him, an escape from unpleasant and
inconvenient facts or awkward and difficult situations, but contributions toward
the proper and effectual way of dealing with them.
423
Not by moving further and further away from
reality, blindly and obstinately, can the seeker discover truth. He must face
the facts of common life before he can unveil those of the uncommon life.
424
The refusal to be realistic, the persistent
looking aside from facts as they are, the being naïve under the delusion of
having faith - this is not spirituality; it is simply mental adolescence.
425
The message for our times is: "The day of
professional spirituality is past. It has bred religious hypocrisy and mystical
futility. The day of a spiritualized mundane existence is here. We are to live
in the world but not be of it. We are to set aside an hour a day for meditation
and reflection but to attend to all other duties the rest of the day. Thus we
shall have the chance which ascetics and monks lack, of translating spiritual
ideas into spiritual deeds. The attraction toward the divine need not mean
repulsion from the world. There is room in human life for both the heavenly and
the earthly. To deepen knowledge and increase beauty, to spread compassion and
to uplift man - this is our work today."
426
True spirituality for this age is to be found
outside the cloister. Character is to find its needed testing ground in
the world. Contemplation is to be practised as a preface or an epilogue to the
day's work.
427
The orientation of modern spirituality, under
the changed conditions of today, is not towards retreat from the world but
towards a spiritualizing effort in the world.
428
The philosophic student cultivates correct
attitudes towards life, fortune, men, and events until they are built into his
character. In this way he is practising philosophy all the time, not merely
during his reading hours.
429
The varied character of daily experience and the
confirmation of summed-up total experience ought to enrich his understanding of
philosophy as well as provide opportunities to apply it constantly.
430
To say that the inner activity of mystical life
is quite compatible with the outer activity of worldly life is to deceive
oneself. The mystic may - and in these times usually must - come to terms with
the world, but it is not his inner guidance that bids him arrive at this
compromise. It is outer compulsion that bids him do so.
431
We moderns have to learn how to pursue truth and
practise meditation, how to worship God and overcome ego while in the very midst
of active affairs, for no other way is open to us.
432
One man may find his way to the Overself by
guardedly living in the world whereas another may find it through turning his
back on the world. But before the first can complete his search he will have to
retire temporarily and occasionally from the world, and before the second man
can do the same he will have to test his inner life by temporary and occasional
returns to the world.
433
It is one of the contributions of philosophy
that it elevates useful work to the status of a component of spiritual activity,
instead of degrading it, as mysticism does, as being detrimental to such
activity. Hence, insofar as the philosophic student is striving to carry out his
daily task honestly, efficiently, perfectly, and in the spirit of service, he is
improving his own character for philosophic purposes too.
434
The philosophic student will not make the
mistake of using the quest as an excuse for inefficiency when attending to
duties. There is nothing spiritual in being a muddler. The performance of
worldly duties in a dreamy, casual, uninterested, and slovenly manner is often
self-excused by the mystically minded because they feel superior to such duties.
This arises out of the false opposition which they set up between Matter and
Spirit. Such an attitude is not the philosophical one. The mystic is supposed to
be apathetic in worldly matters, if he is to be a good mystic. The philosophical
student, on the contrary, keeps what is most worthwhile in mysticism and yet
manages to keep alert in worldly matters too. If he has understood the teaching
and trained himself aright, his practical work will be better done and not worse
because he has taken to this quest. He knows it is perfectly possible to balance
mystical tendencies with a robust efficiency. He will put as much thought and
heart into his work as it demands.(P)
435
Religion's prayer and mystical meditation can
be, and are, used to forget grinding troubles and escape hard duties. The peace
of mind thus felt is pleasant, but not of lasting benefit. For the meaning of
the trouble or duty is missed, and its place in the man's development, lost.
Philosophy, while not disdaining the use of prayer and meditation, does not
allow them to become escapist and obscure the need of practical attitudes also.
436
During the moments of meditation he will find
the wonderful possibility of what he can become, but during the hours of action
he will find the wonderful opportunity of realizing it.
437
But life must not end in meditation or else it
will become extremely, if not entirely, self-centered. Meditation itself must
bear fruit in active expressions.
438
Henry Suso acquired a reputation for mystical
wisdom and ascetic piety when he remained secluded inside a monastery for twenty
years. He lost it in less than half that time when he emerged to live and act in
the outside world. For there was the testing-ground which measured his real
achievement, as well as the evil forces which would destroy such a man's good
work.
439
The effectiveness of action is raised immensely
when it is inspired by mystical means. The fruitlessness of meditation is
widened immensely when it is kept aloof from action.
440
It is not only in meditation's deep well that
the divine has to be found, but also in the daily routine. It has to be
naturalized.
441
In the end, the art of life can only be learned
by living. Reverie and meditations, thinking and study, mystical raptures and
inner visions are only means to this end, not the end in itself.
442
To think out an ideal, a way of conduct, is only
a part of the battle a man will have to fight with himself over himself. The
other part is to do it. Only when the ideal is applied in action does it
become wholly realized. This is why the monk's existence is not enough, any more
than the worldling's is enough. We need the world of action and experience to
draw out our latent resources, to give us the chance to develop in the whole of
our being and not merely in thought alone.
443
Philosophy does not seek to displace religion
but to deepen it.
444
Religion is not the final utterance of the Holy
Ghost. That privilege belongs to philosophy.
445
Philosophy includes religion but not "a"
religion. It is universal, not sectarian.
446
If religion is man's first gesture toward the
Infinite Being, philosophy is his full commitment toward it.
447
Philosophy seeks to bring him into full
consciousness of what religion only partly prepares him for.
448
In religion man gropes in the dark night for his
higher self. In mysticism he moves less haltingly toward it in the breaking
dawn. In philosophy he walks straight to its realization under the high noon.
449
Let him keep everything that religion has given
him, provided it be real religion and not the pretense of it, but let him also
seek everything that mysticism and philosophy can offer him. He cannot come to
the second except through the first, nor to the third except through the second.
If he combines them, greater reward will come to him.
450
Our personal concern is not with exoteric
religions, which are all without exception in their period of decay and
dissolution; it is with esoteric knowledge, the knowledge which was possessed by
Jesus, Buddha, and Krishna alike and secretly taught to their closest disciples.
451
Philosophy is religion, is mysticism, but only
when they have come to maturity. It has been reached by the best minds of the
other two and by the best minds among the sceptics and atheists, but again only
on their attaining maturity.
452
Any account of the philosophic life which left
the impression that it had no place for religious veneration and personal prayer
would be misleading. Practical philosophy calls for the regular pursuit of
devotional exercises just as much as it calls for the regular pursuit of
mystical ones. The four genuflections and associated prayers are the means to
this. To neglect the duty of daily worship on the plea that one has risen above
it is an excuse which is manufactured by the lower self to perpetuate its own
sovereignty. The higher philosophic experiences are not open to the man who is
too proud to go down on bent knees in humble reverence or spiritual pleading.
The student's religious fervours and exercises will not be rendered obsolete and
consequently rejected, but they will be assimilated to and made use of in the
larger philosophic life. Philosophy would indeed be foolish if it were to kick
away the ladders of religion and mysticism by which people may ascend to it.
Just as food can never displace drink for the sustenance of a healthy body, so
meditation can never displace prayer for the sustenance of a healthy spiritual
life, any more than study can displace meditation. Worship and prayer are
essential philosophic duties.
453
We must retain as philosophers whatever
worthwhile things we possessed as religious believers. We must retain the
principles even if we will have to vary the forms of religious worship, prayer,
devotion, aspiration, and communion.
454
The faith in and the practice of reverential
worship into which he was initiated by religion must not be dropped. It is
required by philosophy also. Only, he is to correct, purify, and refine it. He
is to worship the divine presence in his heart, not some distant remote being,
and he is to do so more by an act of concentrated thought and unwavering feeling
than by resort to external indirect and physical methods. With the philosopher,
as with the devotee, the habit of prayer is a daily one. But whereas he prays
with light and heat, the other prays with heat alone. The heart finds in such
worship a means of pouring out its deepest feelings of devotion, reverence,
humility, and communion before its divine source. Thus we see that philosophy
does not annul religious worship, but purifies and preserves what is best in it.
It does annul the superstitions, exploitations, and futilities connected with
conventional religious worship. In the end philosophy brings the seeker back to
religion but not to a religion: to the reverence for a supreme power
which he had discarded when he discarded the superstitions which had entwined
themselves around it. Philosophy is naturally religious and inevitably mystical.
Hence it keeps intact and does not break to pieces that which it receives from
religion and yoga. It will, of course, receive only their sound fruits, not
their bad ones. Philosophic endeavour does not, for instance, disdain religious
worship and humble prayer merely because its higher elements transcend them.
They are indeed part of such endeavour. But they are not, as with religionists,
the whole of it. The mystic must not give up being religious merely because he
has become a mystic. In the same way, the philosopher must not give up being
both mystical and religious merely because he has become a philosopher. It is
vitally important to know this. Philosophy does not supersede religion but keeps
it and enlarges it.(P)
455
Just as science and religion meet and must meet
in metaphysical philosophy, so religion and theology meet in mystical
philosophy.
456
If it be true that the hidden teaching
effectually reconciles religion science mysticism and philosophy, it does so in
the only way in which they can be reconciled, by dropping them into their proper
places and not by placing them all on an equal level. For it treats religion as
an infant; mysticism, science, and metaphysics as youths; and philosophy alone
as an adult.
457
Religion is man's quest of reality on its
elementary level. Metaphysics is the same quest on its lower-intermediate level,
and mysticism is the higher-intermediate one. In philosophy, the quest is
completed on the highest plane.
458
There is something beyond mysticism. Peace is
not the final goal of man. It is good but it is not enough. Just as religion
must finally find its culmination in mysticism, so mysticism must find it in
philosophy, and so metaphysics must find it in philosophic mysticism.
459
This is a special worth and admirable feature of
true philosophy, that it does not leave behind and supersede earlier spheres of
development but rather lets the later ones include and penetrate them. They are
all necessary.
460
Man's fundamental need of the quest is first
somewhat superficially assuaged by religion; growing stronger, it is next more
deeply satisfied by mysticism. But only when the precious waters of philosophy
are fully drunk is it finally and perfectly met.
461
Philosophy repudiates nothing in yoga, nothing
in religion, nothing in mysticism that is correct or necessary. How could it
when it draws its own lifeblood from the mystical intuition and the devotional
attitude? But it does complete them by introducing what is further
necessary and it does equilibrate them by shifts of emphasis and keeping
them in place.
462
To pass from religion to philosophy is not to
reject religion but rather to absorb its best elements and then integrate them
into higher ones.
463
Philosophy carries us upward from lower to
higher conceptions of the Deity.
464
We may understand how this movement from one
standpoint to another becomes possible when we remember that we begin to learn
astronomy on the assumption that the geocentric system - which is based on the
belief that the earth is the centre of our universe - is valid, for this renders
much easier the explanation of such unfamiliar themes as the poles, the equator,
and the ecliptic. Later however we are told that this standpoint is only
preliminary and that it was adopted for the sake of convenience in dealing with
beginners so as to render their studies easier. The heliocentric system - which
is based on the belief that the sun is the centre of our universe - is then put
forward as being valid and the other is dropped. The instructional method used
in the hidden teaching is similar. Here religion represents a preliminary
standpoint for beginners in the study of life. After its values have been
thoroughly absorbed, the latter gradually advance to the next standpoint, the
mystical. When the students have won the fruits of meditation and
reflection, they travel still further until they reach the third and final
standpoint of philosophy, which develops ultramystical insight and
practises disinterested activity. Thus each standpoint is a characteristic
feature of a certain stage of inner evolution.
465
Philosophy can understand, and sympathize with,
atheism as an expression of man's effort to free himself from superstition -
albeit a clumsy, groping, and dangerous effort. But its own practice leads it to
discover the godlike soul as man's real self, so it cannot help rejecting the
materialism which would deny that along with the denial of God.
466
The voice of philosophy is necessarily more
restrained, less shrill, than the voice of religion or cultism. But if this
makes it quieter and less heard by the crowd, it also makes it better heard by
the sensitive and more enduring in the result.
467
Where religion converts a man, philosophy
transforms him. Where religion affects a part of a man, philosophy affects the
whole.
468
Philosophy is not one teaching among many
others, to be chosen in rivalry amongst all. It is fundamentally different from
them in kind and nature.
469
Just as Religion is larger than the religions,
so is Philosophy larger than the philosophies.
470
Although philosophy is unique it is also
all-inclusive.
471
The philosophic outlook rises above all
sectarian controversy. It finds its own position not only by appreciating and
synthesizing what is solidly based in the rival sects but also by capping them
all with the keystone of nonduality.
472
The mystic who sees no utility and no purpose in
breaking his own tranquillity to descend into the suffering world and serve or
save its inhabitants, justifies his attitude by declaring that the sufferings
are illusory and the inhabitants non-existent! Where is the incentive to
altruistic action in this doctrine of nonduality, where the inspiration for art,
where the impetus to science? The answer may not be obvious but nevertheless it
lies enshrined in the very nature of these tenets.
473
It is not quite correct to state, as has been
done, that this teaching represents the essence of the Indian Vedanta
philosophy. Its sources have included it but they have also been many and
varied. And, in the doctrine of higher individuality, for instance, there is an
actual divergence between the two teachings.
474
Vedanta is superb, the most logical of all
metaphysics; but because it is a metaphysic and a mystique, it is for me
inconclusive. We need more a guide to how to live in the body and keep it well.
We need to gather up a synthesis of knowledge - a key to the World-Idea, a
practical guide to healthy living, a devotional and mystical system of prayer
and meditation. The philosopher is unable to follow the Vedantin in ignoring the
outer conditions of life to the extent that he does. Their proper handling is
ignored only by paying a proportionate price in trouble of some kind. Let the
Vedantin talk much and often of the non-existence of the body; you will find
that in one way or another, in illness or in lack, he cannot help being aware of
the body.
475
The thoughtful man is too much of a Buddhist to
limit himself to Advaita. But counter to that, the intuitive man is too much of
an Advaitin to limit himself to Buddhism. The wise man balances and blends the
two in philosophy.
476
The absolutist metaphysics of Subramanya Iyer in
the East and Lilian de Waters in the West declares only the One Reality; it
would reject the whole universe as non-existent and the whole human race along
with it. The dualist metaphysics declares that this Reality reveals and
manifests itself in the time-space finite world. The integral metaphysics of
philosophy says, however, that it is unwise and unbalanced to separate these two
solutions of the mystery of life and then to oppose one against the other. They
are to be fitted together, for only in such completeness can the full solution
be found. Dualism answers the intellect's questions and satisfies the heart's
yearnings but monism responds to the intuition's highest revelations. Both
standpoints are necessary, for man is both a thinking and a feeling being; it is
not enough to regard him only as an intuiting one. But this does not mean they
are all on the same level. What is silently revealed to us by inner stillness
must always be loftier than what is noisily told us by intellectual activity.
477
Philosophy does not dwell on the subject of
nonduality. There are metaphysicians aplenty who will discuss or teach it
for those who want to learn or listen. Philosophers neither support nor deny the
doctrine. Here they are closer to Buddhism than to Hinduism.
478
The Advaitin who declares that as such he has no
point of view, has already adopted one by calling himself an Advaitin and by
rejecting every other point of view as being dualistic. A human philosophy is
neither dualistic alone nor nondualistic alone. It perceives the connection
between the dream and the dreamer, the Real and the unreal, the consciousness
and the thought. It accepts Advaita, but refuses to stop with it; it accepts
duality, but refuses to remain limited to it; therefore it alone is free from a
dogmatic point of view. But in attempting to bring into harmony that which
forever is and that which is bound by time and space, it becomes a truly human
philosophy of Truth.
479
The comparative study of religion, mysticism,
and metaphysics, as they have appeared in different centuries and in different
parts of the world, will have a liberating effect on those who approach it in a
thoroughly scientific independent and prejudice-free spirit. A comparative view
of all the different spiritual cultures leads to a broader understanding of each
particular one.
480
Where others present one with a statement of an
issue or a description of a situation that is limited to a pair of opposites,
the philosopher will either reconcile them or look for the third factor.
481
It is the joyous duty of philosophy to bring
into systematic harmony the various views which mankind has held and will ever
hold, however conflicting they seem on the surface, by assigning the different
types to their proper levels and by providing a total view of the possible
heights and depths of human thought. Thus and thus alone the most opposite
tendencies of belief and the most striking contrasts of outlook are brought
within a single scheme. All become aspects, more or less limited, only. None
ever achieves metaphysical finality and need ever again be mistaken for the
whole truth. All become clear as organic phases of mankind's mental development.
Philosophy alone can bring logically opposite doctrines into harmonious relation
with each other by assigning them to their proper places under a single
sheltering canopy. Thus out of the medley of voices within us philosophy creates
a melody.(P)
482
Philosophy can be true to itself, to its highest
purpose and clearest perception, only by discarding all bias and prejudice,
narrowness and polemics, and accepting the visitations of grace through whatever
mode it chooses to manifest. Philosophy must and does welcome the old and
traditional but refuses to confine itself to that alone. It must and does greet
the new and original if the holy spirit is therein too. It cannot be tied by
time or place, group or race, celebrity or anonymity.
483
To attempt to construct a synthesis of truths
drawn from different quarters is laudable, although in the end it depends on the
judgement of the person making it. To attempt to mix the unmixable, to force oil
and water into unity, is a different matter.
484
Philosophy does not indulge in a superficial,
anaemic eclecticism but in a large and living synthesis. Thus, it wholeheartedly
advocates the study of Indian spiritual culture if made from an independent
standpoint and included in a comparative view, but it unhesitatingly refuses to
swallow wholesale the same study from a convert's standpoint and as the follower
of some guru.
485
There are fragments of this teaching to be found
in ancient Rome amongst the Stoics, in ancient Greece amongst the Platonists,
and in ancient India amongst the Buddhists. But they are fragments only. If you
want the complete system, you must go to philosophy.
486
The intimate association of Eastern thought with
Western culture, of ancient wisdom with modern knowledge, will give to each
element a new and broader meaning while blending and harmonizing all of them.
Philosophy combines in a truly catholic manner those elements of truth which are
present in all these teachings but without any of their errors, absurdities, and
archaic limitations.
487
The hidden philosophy is not something with
which mankind at large is acquainted today. Many fragments of it have certainly
found their way into the world, but the complete pattern of this philosophy has
not.
488
Philosophy promotes the fullest intellectual
independence, but not the freest intellectual anarchy. Therefore it adjures the
student at the same time to gather up the harvest of the whole world's best
thought from the earliest times to the latest.
489
The time has come to take in all the best of
these currents and rise above narrowing loyalties. Only by such a synthesis can
we arrive at Truth.
490
When this loftier standpoint is reached, these
different schools and techniques are seen not as contrary but as complementary
to one another.
491
The history of truth is an international one. It
is from and for all the peoples of the world.
492
Each science can only deal in a limited range of
facts. Philosophy takes up the results of all the separate sciences and puts
them together. Then it takes up the results of all the arts, all the religions,
all the yogas, and all the other branches of human activity. Finally it combines
the lot. None of these branches can authoritatively pronounce on the meaning of
universal existence, for this is beyond its sphere of reference. It may indeed
talk foolishly when it ventures to do so. This is why philosophy is unique.
493
Philosophy is unique in this respect: no other
teaching views life so broadly and yet so penetratingly.
494
Whereas most other forms of culture are mere
branches of it and consequently emphasize one particular aspect of life,
philosophy embraces its whole field.
495
Anything that concerns human life is grist for
the mill of philosophic reflection and action. For philosophy does not merely
concern itself with interpreting life but also with remolding it.
496
It is here that the beautiful balance of
philosophy rejects at one and the same time two opposing ways which appear in
the history of mysticism. The one would, through oversystematization and
burdensome detail, turn its methods into rigid frozen complicated mechanisms, as
if the inner being were a piece of engineering rather than a living thing to be
nourished and warmed. The other would, through vague foundations, the pretext of
freedom, and excessive individualism, turn its teachings into an anarchy of
conflicting ideas and personal phantasies or an arena for contending personal
ambitions.
497
Philosophy rises above sects and is therefore
free from sectarian dispute, friction, and hostility. It is naturally tolerant,
knowing that as men rise in cultural and moral development, their beliefs will
rise in truthfulness and nobility.
498
As broad an investigation as the records of
knowledge allow, and as deep a reflection upon the facts elucidated - this is
the aim of the serious philosopher. He will be careful to take all the facts and
all the evidence - so far as he can get them - into account, and not disregard
such portion of it as is distasteful to him, not neglect those findings which
are unknown to or unwanted by the kind of society in which he is brought up and
lives.
499
Philosophy is free. It is both for those who
seek an ideal or guidance from the leaders inside institutions and for those who
will have nothing to do with institutions.
500
There is no room for a fixed and finished
sectarianism here. The unfoldment of inner life must not be cramped into an
arrested form.
501
The philosopher cannot take a one-sided view. He
must stand on a higher level above such narrowness, and thus get a larger
picture. It may not be possible for humans to be totally unbiased but it is
possible to try to be fair and just. This requires an awareness of the
other aspects. It does not require the fusion of differences, the mixing of the
unmixable. They can be left where they are, each in its own place, contributing
what it alone can contribute. Each can be reconciled into acceptance of the
other's right to exist separately without invasion. A forced synthesis is
pseudo-unity.
502
If philosophy accepts all viewpoints as being
valid, it does not fall into the error of accepting them as being equally valid.
It says that they are progressively valid and rest on lower or higher levels.
503
It readily grants the utility of these
progressive stages at their time and in their place, but it rejects them as ends
in themselves. Philosophy recognizes only one end to be attained - the Real.
504
Philosophy recognizes the all-importance of
points of view. It knows that no results are tenable unless they are ultimate
ones - that is to say, unless they are got by adopting the ultimate point of
view.
505
Let the various insights and revelations out of
which the well-established faiths and teachings have grown flourish as they find
themselves, reformed and purified today if their needs so dictate, but why
attempt to mix them all together? What would the result be but a kind of stew?
If a synthesis is sought, say of the Buddhist and the Christian, let those who
like one have it. But for others does not diversity, as in a garden, give more
picturesque, interesting, and richer results?
506
Those who have not taken the precaution to study
other teachings, other ideas, other experiences, and other revelations, but only
the views of their own favoured teacher, may have learned the worst and not the
best. And those who know only their own religion, their own nation's history and
form of government may pay in some way or other for their ignorance. Comparative
study will be part of the education of a better world. It will not only bring
less prejudice and more tolerance, but also - what is more important - help to
establish truth.
507
Each seer gets hold of some facet of truth and
contributes that to the world-stock. Let us be tolerant.
508
None of these teachers tells, or seems able to
tell, the whole story. Each gives out all he can - a fragment of it. The hour is
at hand when they should be joined together, when a synthesis of truth should be
made from all of them.
509
Whoever advocates a particular view usually
produces plenty of evidence on its behalf but withholds some or all of the
evidence on behalf of opposing views. It is only the philosopher who tries to
get a complete picture of the situation from different sides. It needs more than
a little imaginative effort to understand the other and unfamiliar ways of
looking at a question. But the results are usually worthwhile.
510
We may fully sympathize with a standpoint and
yet we need not hesitate to utter certain criticisms of it. How else can a just
view be got?
511
It teaches men not to limit both the field and
the freedom of their search by limiting themselves to a single teaching or a
single teacher in the restricted and dependent tie of discipleship.
512
Physics, metaphysics, religion, and mysticism
must unite before each can speak truth, which is a unique whole and not a
particular fragment as they individually are.
513
But we shall not arrive at such a higher
standpoint unless we arrive at clear thought about the matter. One of the
trickiest obstacles in the way of correct thinking about these problems is the
partisan habit of propounding a dilemma which presents one with the choice
between two alternatives. Thus either one must accept materialism and
reject religion or vice versa. The proper course to be travelled will not
only lie between these two extremes but also take us into lands beyond them.
514
The Greek love of balance and sense of
proportion are incorporated in philosophy as much as the Roman-Stoic love of
self-mastery and sense of mental values.
515
Philosophical study welcomes lofty, wise, and
inspired ideas "from every side," from every religion, from every century. Such
width of outlook breeds tolerance, enlarges knowledge, promotes goodwill.
516
The dogmatism which vehemently asserts that only
in its particular sect or creed lies final salvation has nothing to do with
philosophy and is alien to the discovery of truth. This must be so, for the
philosopher seeks balance and uses counterbalance whenever necessary.
517
Details are significant, but only in their
relation to the whole, to the greater purpose of all life.
518
Philosophy criticizes any approach to truth
which arrogates to itself the privilege of being the only path to enlightenment.
For in practice philosophy makes use of any and every one needful. It is too
spontaneous to limit its efforts to purely ancient or merely Oriental forms.
519
By refusing to join philosophy to any built-up
structure, social or cultural organization, or particular group of people, this
approach keeps its own freedom and bestows that same freedom on those who study
it.
520
It is too time-wasting, muddling, negative, and
one-sided to look for error in every other doctrine and then magnify it
enormously. The atmosphere of criticism becomes habitual and leads to no
constructive result. It is better to gather the flowers of wisdom and the fruits
of peace.
521
The profit of a full and explicit picture of the
universe is immense. It provides the seeker with a safe course and a correct
destination. Otherwise his undirected efforts may spend themselves in a lifetime
of groping wandering and haphazard movements. The greatest advantage can come
only from a world-picture of the greatest completeness. Only with one that
presents all principal aspects of the human entity, and of its place in this
picture, can that entity understand how best to live out its incarnation.
522
We may try to take not a bird's-eye view of the
world but a God's-eye view of it.
523
The wisdom embedded in philosophy belongs to all
the ages, and not to any particular time.
524
As one reflects upon the majestic grandeur of
this teaching, its amplitude and height, one feels like a traveller who stands
for the first time at a vantage point of the Himalayas, where loftier and ever
loftier snowy summits fill the whole horizon to his left and right, as far as
his eyes can see.
525
Philosophy stretches itself out on all sides. It
is limited only by the limits of man's capacity to comprehend it.