1
To become a seeker in intention is admirable as the
first step but it is only the first one. To qualify as a seeker in fact is the
second. What are the required qualifications?
2
Philosophy expects nothing from its votaries that is
beyond their power to give. Hence it makes different demands on different
people, graduating its ethic and instruction, its injunctions and duties, its
precepts and counsels, to their strengths capacities and circumstances. But
nevertheless it sacrifices nothing of enduring value, for at the same time it
reminds them not to forget the final ideal, the ultimate end toward which all
their lesser efforts are moving. Thus it accommodates itself to those who want
an easier and longer route, making itself accessible to ordinary people, yet it
does not separate itself from the rarer souls who are so circumstanced and so
formed by nature as to gladly give themselves to the shortest and hardest route.
3
Just as a physically immature baby could not take a
half-mile walk, however much it wished or even willed to do so, so a spiritually
immature man could not take in the higher philosophy, however much he wished or
willed it. The intuition and intelligence, the character and capacity needed for
this latter purpose must be present in him, and used, before the teachings can
really reach him.
4
If philosophy hides its truth from mental
unreadiness and its votaries from social persecution, it is, nevertheless,
always ready when it is needed by any sincere seeker who has evolved to the
requisite degree. If he has got enough religious prejudice and mystical
superstition out of his mind to be free to think for himself, if he has lifted
his character somewhat above the common weaknesses, if his sense of values is
such that the Truth appears desirable above all things, then philosophy is the
only thing to which he can turn for guidance and enlightenment - and philosophy
will surely welcome him.
5
To learn is to receive knowledge; but he who seeks
to learn this Truth which is both behind and beyond all other truths must come
with his mind, his heart, his body, and his will. With his mind because his
thought must be pushed to its deepest measure. With his heart because his love
is demanded more than he now knows. With his body because it is to be the temple
of the holy spirit. And with his will because he may not stop this enterprise
until he is through.
6
He has to learn discrimination if he wishes to
become a philosopher. This is not merely that moral quality which separates
right from wrong for the religious man, but that psychological act which
separates the perceiver from the objects of his perception, the experiencer from
the objects of his experience, in its elementary operation. Although it will
have to reunite them again in its later operation on a higher plane, as the
unenlightened man unites them on a lower one, that plane cannot be reached
abidingly by jumping, only by climbing.
7
The acceptance of such a teaching as philosophy
implies an unusual degree of intelligence - which is not the same as education
or even intellect, although it may include these things. For the recognition
that there is a world of being beyond that registered by the five senses, a
world of consciousness not limited to that reported by the thinking ego, a
divine soul hidden within that ego itself, a superior power involving us all in
its cosmic order - such a recognition can come only to those with unusual
intelligence. Faith is good but not enough, for one day it may change through
circumstances or be confused through lack of knowledge. Such intelligence is
best for it includes and guides faith but goes farther than it.
8
Philosophical intelligence combines the intellectual
faculty with the intuitive.
9
Without pure philosophy, there is no possibility of
ascending the higher peaks of truth. In the highest esoteric school of Asia no
one is admitted before first having been taken through a course of the
essentials of this subject. In this school there is no progress without the full
use of intelligence and sharpened reason. The lack of this quality has helped to
contribute to the downfall of organized mystical movements known to us all.
10
The study of philosophy educates the mind in deep
thinking. It must be approached in the spirit of scientific detachment.
11
Something of the impersonality and detachment of
the mathematician are necessary to the beginning philosopher.
12
He is to be concerned solely with the reality,
with that which Is, and not with the presentation of it which others have
invented.
13
At this stage he is finished with compromises: he
can accept nothing less - and wants nothing else - than the pure Truth.
14
Unless men possess the right intuitional calibre,
they cannot grasp this teaching, for it stands at an altitude beyond the reach
of the gross and the materialistic.
15
The courage to become independent of his own past
beliefs is needed. The strength to set aside the patterns of thought imposed on
his mind by long habit is required. These qualities may not necessarily have to
come into action but they must be there.
16
The hysteric, the neurotic, or the paranoic is
unready for philosophy's guidance, unfit for mysticism's meditation. It is
useless for such a one to apply as a candidate for initiation. Let him get rid
of his self-centered mania first.
17
Philosophy demands the purity and experience of a
sage, not the purity and ignorance of a child.
18
Philosophy does not compete with any religion, any
mystical or metaphysical system, for it does not consider itself as existing on
the same level as any of them. It can only be grasped by those who bring the
necessary intuitive, mystical, intellectual, moral, and devotional
qualifications to it, and it can only be appreciated by those who can grasp it.
19
Philosophy is for those who demand the ultimate,
who are satisfied with nothing less and who have enough discernment to
discriminate between it and its many substitutes.
20
Those only will appreciate this point of view who
have awakened to the need of penetrating through illusion to reality and who
understand how important this is to humanity's future.
21
Philosophy calls for some leisure to study it and
for some capacity to understand what is being studied. It is not enough to be an
amateur in philosophy: one must become an expert.
22
The first lessons of the higher philosophy cannot
be usefully taught to those who have not learned the last lessons of religion.
But for those who have gone a little way into mysticism or metaphysics, such
instruction need not be deferred.
23
People of all religious faiths can come to the
study of philosophy. They will not be able to keep their faith after such study,
however, without profoundly deepening it. Nor will they be able to keep with it
the enthusiastic arrogance or intolerant ignorance which accompanies so much
sectarianism.
24
Oriental wisdom enjoins in general withholding
truth from the unready, and in particular from those who do not want or seek it,
from inebriated or agitated persons, from those in whom lust or greed, wrath or
impatience predominates, and, understandably, from lunatics.
25
Philosophy gains recruits only from those whose
values are so lofty that they regard the finding of truth a satisfying end in
itself, and whose minds are so tolerant that they make their search for it in
the widespread field of comparative and universal cultures.
26
The independent mind, which seeks all the facts
and not merely some of them, which does its own thinking about those facts, is
naturally better suited to philosophy than the dependent mind, which accepts
without demur inherited creeds and established sects.
27
His intellectual integrity must be such that even
if his search for truth ends in ideas which upset much of what he has hitherto
accepted, he will not flinch from making the change.
28
Swedenborg: "Without the utmost devotion to the
Supreme Being, the Origin of all things, no one can be a complete and truly
erudite philosopher. Veneration for the Infinite Being can never be separated
from philosophy."
29
Philosophy is for those who can think closely and
who are willing to abide by the results of their thinking. It is not for those
who settle everything by the evidence of their senses. That is why it has never
been a necessity to those who must see reality with their eyes and touch it with
their hands, as it has been to those who were content to know with their minds.
30
In the study of modern science, in all laboratory
analysis or examination of natural phenomena, great stress is laid upon the
necessity for strict impersonality and freedom from every trace of wishful
thinking, personal emotion, and prejudice. This is of equal necessity to the
student of philosophy.
31
He is ready to learn philosophy when he is ready
to strip himself of all prejudice, or at least to allow philosophy itself to do
this to him.
32
Uninformed seekers have to learn various lessons
before they find their way to this path, to philosophy. They are attracted to
ancient ideas and outworked methods of which only a portion really suit today's
humanity. What has happened to the races and to the globe on which they dwell
has affected their character and mind, their tendencies, capacities, and
faculties. Those who look back nostalgically to teachings and texts, lands and
names so honoured - and quite worthily too - do not know or understand this. The
fact that there are certain basic eternal truths is certainly irrefragable. That
Mind always was, is, and will be, is one of them. That the human soul is linked
with it (through the World-Mind) is another. But the methods by which this link
may be vivified and the men who are to use them and the circumstances under
which they live have all been modified.
33
After he has had the courage, freedom,
intelligence, aspiration, and discrimination to work through all the cults -
especially the personality-worship cults - and creeds, persistently, calmly, and
survived the temptation of idolatry, he may be fitter to revere the noble
impersonal Godhead.
34
If you wish to know the Truth, you must accept its
disconcerting revelations along with the pleasant ones. You must be willing to
practise inner detachment from everything and everyone as well as to enjoy the
beautiful moments of rapture.
35
If people come to mysticism with unbalanced or
diseased minds, as a number certainly do, and if they permeate their mystical
acquisitions with their own defects, they cannot do the same to philosophy. For
the end result would be either that they flee from it on deeper acquaintance or
that its demands and disciplines would begin to permeate them. This in turn
would equilibrate or heal their minds.
36
Those who belong by natural affinity to this
teaching stay with it. All others eventually find their proper level elsewhere.
37
I took the trouble of looking up the meaning given
to the Sanskrit word shraddha, which is one of the six subsidiary
qualifications required of the aspirant to the knowledge of higher Vedantic
philosophy. Here are the results: (1) Monier Williams' massive Sanskrit
dictionary laconically defines it as to have "trust"; (2) Govindananda, in his
work the Ratna-Prabha, defines it as meaning "a respectful trust in all
higher things"; (3) Venkatramiah, in his version of the Aitareyopanishad,
says it means "faith in the Vedantic verities as inculcated by the preceptor";
(4) Vasudeva, the ascetic, gives its significance as "the strong faith in the
words of one's teacher," in his Meditations; (5) Professor Girindra N.
Mallik, M.A., defines it as "faith in the contents of the scriptures." But what
is the esoteric and therefore the truest meaning of shraddha? My own
interpretation is: "that faith in the existence of truth, that determination to
get at truth, come what may, which would make one a hero even in the face of
God's wrath."
38
He who would become a philosopher must keep away
from partisanship, must cultivate an independent state of mind so as to be free
to receive ideas from any source. In this way he can really learn what others
have thought or found long ago or in his own epoch, whether they lived in the
East or West. Such detachment is not easy to acquire or to maintain without
self-discipline.
39
His attitude should be: "Take the truth, whether
or not it be useful to practical life. Take it for its own sake, disinterestedly
and enthusiastically, whether it be close to personal needs or far from them."
40
It needs for its study an enlarged outlook and
gives in return a still larger one. This is true philosophy, universal,
wide-horizoned, inclusive, and reconciliatory.
41
It needs some courage to face facts as they are
and the world as it really is, but this is better than harbouring illusions
which are going to be relentlessly and painfully dispelled.
42
There is another side to this demand that an
aspirant be at the stage where he has been prepared for, and is ready to imbibe,
the higher truth. The demand must not be pushed to the extent that those who
have not had any opportunity for such prior preparation will be shut out
altogether. Something can and ought to be given them to the utmost possible
degree.
43
Few persons are at the required level of full
intellectual, intuitive, moral, and metaphysical development for philosophy but
many persons are capable of benefitting by its practical applications.
44
If some of its tenets are admittedly unfamiliar
and provocative, this is not to say that they are outside the reach of anyone
with moderate capacity who will approach them with a will to understand.
45
The mind which has not yet been properly prepared
by the philosophical discipline to receive truth directly through intuition,
must meanwhile receive it indirectly through faith and reason.
46
Philosophy is not for him whose mind is so riddled
with race prejudice as to think nothing good can come out of Asia, or whose own
attitude is so steeped in violent bias as to judge people solely by their
appearance, or whose ideas are lit only by his own little guttering candle of
limited experience.
47
It does not admit the popular delusion that every
member of the human race is fit to pass proper judgement on any issue merely by
consulting his opinion or feeling about it - much less about religion and
mysticism.
48
The hidden teaching is only for those who prefer
to travel freely on a road rather than crawl slavishly in a rut. Only the strong
can submit to this mental isolation.
49
It is comforting only to the few who are prepared
to part with their egoism, their pride, their sensuality, and their inertia for
the sake of truth.
50
Error will creep into his finite apprehension of
the infinite truth if he has not previously made himself ready, pure, balanced,
and mature.
51
If only because philosophy was not there for
anyone to pick up casually if he wished, but only there for anyone who could
think and intuit, its possible adherents were well limited in number. Such a man
would inevitably think and intuit himself more and more into its great teachings
to the degree that he wished to seek truth and was able to abandon ego.
52
Philosophy is primarily for the fairly advanced
mentality; for the person who is familiar with the chief spiritual conceptions
and practices; for the aspirant who is experienced and mature.
53
Only one who has spent his life in religious,
mystical, and philosophic investigations can appreciate the universal, the
timeless, and the placeless character of this teaching.
54
No man who has totally failed to use his
intuitional faculty will have the capacity to receive philosophy.
55
Every child must pass through a proper training in
elementary and intermediate mathematics before the principles of higher calculus
can be explained to it. So those who wish to grasp the advanced portion of
philosophy must likewise prepare the mind and heart, the will and character.
56
A high level of general education is a distinct
advantage for those who would take up such a study, but it is not an absolute
essential.
57
It is for all classes, all types of mind, and all
kinds of character. It is for the simple as well as the astute, the sinful as
well as the good. But alas! personal histories show that it is the astute and
the good who mostly accept philosophy. The others who need it because they too
are human beings accept it less frequently.
58
Those who prefer the pleasant to the true will
naturally fear to enter the kingdom of philosophy.
59
Only those who can follow philosophy wherever it
leads them and practice its tenets with unflinching courage will ever become
philosophers. It is not enough to affirm principles; they must also be applied
and given tangible form.
60
Those who are cultivated, educated, and
intelligent enough to appreciate what philosophy offers them may yet be blinded
by prejudice or selfishness or be too stupefied from gorging the passions to do
so.
61
Sensitive and introspective minds will more
quickly find their way to these truths than dull and extroverted ones.
62
If he is to reach this pure well of truth, its
water untainted by bias or prejudice, he will do best by keeping independent.
63
Both a properly disciplined body and a
philosophically-strengthened mind should be our reliance.
64
One should seek for knowledge of the Higher Laws
governing life, for true purity of character, and for humility if he wishes to
reach the Highest Truth.
65
Seekers who are not satisfied with conventional
doctrines or mystical experiences must be willing to do some difficult but
profitable reasoning.
66
The truth cannot be found by those who cannot
protect themselves against deception, and especially self-deception.
67
Philosophy carries good tidings to the human race,
but they will be regarded as "good" only by those members of the race who are
able and willing to take an impersonal and impartial view of things.
68
Not everyone is ready for the truth when it comes
to him.
69
The kind of mind which likes to keep everything
neatly labelled (good or bad) and everyone neatly classified (atheist, believer,
Christian, Hindu) will be somewhat puzzled, slightly uneasy, and partly derisory
when confronted by philosophy or philosophers.
70
One who is ripe to receive truth will respond to
its presentation at once, convinced that it must be so.
71
One who is ready will feel the power in these
written truths and will follow their injunctions obediently.
72
That everyone and anyone should be taught
philosophy is an unreasonable demand. Only those who consciously seek truth and
deliberately practise self-discipline are entitled to such teaching.
73
Truth is a many-sided unity. It cannot be found by
a narrow single-track mind. To take a fragment of truth and call it all of the
truth, to stand on one point of view and ignore all other points entirely, is
easier for lazy minds. But this is not philosophical. This is why some kind of
preparatory self-training to broaden and deepen oneself mentally is required by
philosophy and why it cannot be handed over on a plate.
74
That some restraint and discipline are needed is
implied by the very notion of a quest for higher goals. That some portion must
be set by the teaching itself but another must be self-imposed arises out of the
balanced, sensible nature of philosophy. It has no place for fanaticism or
tyranny.
75
Without requiring the ambition for sainthood, it
does require the capacity to recognize the need of a discipline and the
willingness to undergo it.
76
Truth already exists within man. He has to bring
it from the centre to the circumference of his consciousness. If it is hidden
from his view, that is only because he has not looked deep enough or has not
cleared away the obstructions to his view. Those obstructions are entirely
within his lower self, and may be removed by practice of the philosophic
discipline.
77
He has first to find out what it is that keeps him
from the higher self. And, this known, he will see the need and value of the
philosophic discipline as a means of eliminating these obstacles.
78
Philosophy requires every acolyte to submit to a
self-imposed discipline. That he shall not knowingly cherish an untruth in his
feeling is the first and easier requirement; that he shall not unknowingly
cherish an untruth in his thinking is the second and harder.
79
This path is a master stroke. This method of
destroying the illusion of the self by means of the intellectual function which
is its primary activity stands supreme and almost alone. That very function
automatically ceases when directed upon itself in the way that is herein taught.
And with its cessation, the self is dissolved, appropriated by the Universal.
80
The most striking point in this simple technique
is that he uses the very ego itself - for so long indicated by all mystics as
the greatest enemy on the Path - as the means of divine attainment. These words
may sound like pure paradox, but they happen to be true. The strength of his
enemy is drawn upon for his help, while that which was the supreme hindrance
transforms into a pathway to the goal.
81
The ability to discriminate between appearance and
reality, between the false "I" and the true "I," is developed by subjecting the
reports of the senses to the criticism of the intellect, by checking emotion
with reason, by standing aside from all of these faculties with the intuition,
and by diving deeper and deeper into one's essence in meditation.
82
The enigmatic questions which have long haunted
the human mind and will long continue to haunt it and which will rise insistent
in the mind of the aspirant are: What is he to seek? How is he to gain the
objects of his search? What are the prospects of the fulfilment of such an
aspiration and the hindrances likely to attend it? The answers to them are a
gradual revealing which follows on the heels of the cultivation of certain
attitudes to truth and to persons and
things. "What is he to seek?" He should seek reality and the knowledge of it which is truth. This is the ideal which is set before him. This is to realize his spiritual nature and thus achieve his higher destiny. Because truth is so subtle and so hard to find, his search after it should be well guided, his knowledge of it properly tested, and his adventures in meditation morally and intellectually safeguarded. Truer ideas are needed; nobler standards are called for. Such ideals, truthfully formed, deeply held, and wholeheartedly applied, can only benefit man and not hurt him. He who has been given a glimpse of the Ideal will not be able to lie always asleep in the sensual. The finer part of his nature will revolt against it again and again.
The Ideal serves more than one useful purpose. It is not only a peak to whose summit he tries to raise himself by slow degrees. It is also a focus for meditation exercises, a guide for practical conduct in certain situations, and a compass to give general direction to his trend of thought, feeling, and doing. It causes the aspirant to feel that he has been led through varying events to the new path which now opens up before him, that a spiritual meaning must be given to the period of his life just closed. The sequence of events and the accumulation of experience will force him to face his problems in the end. If he can do this honestly, analyse them intelligently, and intuit them adequately, he may acquire a valuable new point of view.
"How is he to gain the objects of his search?" The truth-seeker will begin to turn inward in quest of unity with his own soul and outward in quest of unity with mankind. Life is the guide that is bringing him home to himself and to kindlier relation to his fellows. Life itself teaches and disciplines towards these great ends. The following of the integral philosophic quest, with life as the guide and teacher, will involve the re-education of moral character - which is done in part by constant reflection and special meditations on the one hand and discipline of the senses on the other, and in part by prayer, aspiration, and worship. In addition, if a man cultivates the habit of barring entrance to negative thoughts and of instantly throwing weakening ones out of his mind, his character will strengthen itself more quickly. The outcome will be certain relationships to oneself, to others, and to situations and things.
The ascent toward truth proceeds by steps. If at first the merits of a particular teaching or teacher impress the emotions unduly, it is also likely that a more critical study of the one and a more thorough experience of the other will show up unsuspected defects. The philosophic student tries to avoid undergoing these unpleasant changes by getting a balanced view of the pros and cons from the start. He ought not to be so swept off his feet by the great admiration felt for a genius or a doctrine that he has no clear perception of the former's defects or the latter's faults. He must maintain balance not only in the face of lower emotions but also of nobler ones.
83
All human knowledge is conditioned by the fact of
human relativity. Human nature, human intellect, and human egoism impose their
limitations not only in material experience but also in mystical experience.
Statements of divine truth made by mortal men should be read in the light of the
fact that they are subject to such relativity. None is infallible, none
eternally authoritative. Such seems to be the unhopeful situation. Is there then
no way of disengaging the human agency from the divine message which manifests
through it? The answer is that this way does exist and that its method is an
intellectual as well as emotional purification, a moral and practical
discipline, an intuitional and mystical preparation, and above all an
elimination of the personal reference carried on incessantly through a long
period.
84
Philosophy can be understood only by the actual
process of philosophizing, by passing through the whole course of emotional and
mental discipline which philosophy involves.
85
The student should seek clear ideas and warm
feelings in his spiritual studies and devotional aspirations.
86
The pure revelation comes only to those who can
bring themselves at the bidding of truth to sacrifice ruthlessly their previous
beliefs, if necessary. All others get a partial or mixed revelation.
87
The goal is to obtain a higher consciousness which
flashes across the mind with blinding light. All his effort, all his training is
really for this.
88
The philosophic training will show its result in
his capacity to separate the actual operation of the Overself in him from any
admixture by his own personal thoughts, feelings, and expectations.
89
The thing that passes for illumination with most
mystics is generally a mixture of genuine mystical experience with an
interpretation of it furnished by the intellect, the emotions, tradition,
education, teachers, suggestion, and so on. The medium through which the
experience is brought down into conscious communication or understanding often
interferes with it and reshapes it. The philosophic discipline, with its
self-criticizing, keen rationality and its ego-subordination, purification, and
illumination, is intended to prevent this interference from happening.
90
The advanced section of the philosophic discipline
represents an endeavour to reduce the number and thickness of these coloured
windows through which the mystic receives revelations and delivers messages. But
this is only its first endeavour. In the end, it strives to force him from them
altogether, to rescue his illumination from everything that might limit its pure
transparent universality.
91
Is it not possible to free mystical reception from
these egoistic interferences, misrepresentations, exaggerations, distortions,
and falsifications? Yes, it is possible. With the philosophic discipline the
mystic may discipline his ego, train his feelings, guide his intellect, and
check his intuition so that the truth breaks into space and time through his
human personality in faultless purity.
92
Man's imperfect nature must be rendered utterly
passive, its distorting interference utterly eliminated, before the divine truth
can manifest itself in all its authoritative purity.
93
He will train himself to distinguish between the
fancies of the ego and the certainties of the Soul. And it is one purpose of the
philosophic discipline to assist him to do so. For the rest he must depend on
self-critical observation and careful checking of results.
94
The knowledge of self which philosophy can give is
unique. But it can be got only by turning the whole of the psyche's force
inwards in steady penetration and sustained meditation. The hidden doors of our
mental being must be opened, the delicate sources of our emotional being must be
traced, the gossamer thread of our deepest consciousness must be followed. All
this calls for the exercise of will, the effort of concentration, the refinement
of attention, and surrender to patience.
95
It is impossible for any aspirant to attain the
full and equilibrated illumination if he does not have this preliminary
preparation of the philosophic discipline. He can get results, he can get
striking experiences, but the supreme result is beyond his own powers of
receptivity.
96
Philosophy imposes a severe mental discipline upon
those who would pursue its truths.
97
He who knows and feels the divine power in his
inmost being will be set free in the most literal sense of the word from
anxieties and cares. He who has not yet arrived at this stage but is on the way
to it can approach the same desirable result by the intensity of his faith in
that being. But such a one must really have the faith and not merely say so. The
proof that he possesses it would lie in the measure with which he refuses to
accept negative thoughts, fearful thoughts, despondent thoughts. In the measure
that he does not fail in his faith and hence in his thinking, in that measure,
the higher power will not fail to support him in his hour of need. This is why
Jesus told his disciples, "Take no anxious thought for the morrow." In the case
of the adept, having given up the ego, there is no one left to take care of him,
so the higher Self does so for him. In the case of the believer, although he has
not yet given up the ego, nevertheless, he is trying to do so, and his
unfaltering trust in the higher Self is rewarded proportionately in the same
way. In both cases the biblical phrase, "The Lord will provide," is not merely a
pious hope but a practical fact.(P)
98
The philosophic discipline shows us how we are to
treat ourselves. The philosophic morality teaches us how we are to treat others.
It provides both abstract principle for theory and concrete rules for conduct.
99
He may make use of adverse periods to test the
worth of philosophy and the merit of its teaching, instead of letting them
become a source of depression.
100
The inexperienced and the unbalanced may measure
spiritual progress in terms of emotional ecstasy or meditational vision, but the
mature and wise will measure it in terms of character - its nobility, its
rounded development, and its purity.
101
The philosophic training will help him to stop
inserting the ego into his experience and to cease imposing its bias on his
reading of it.
102
Philosophy begins its instruction to the
neophyte by the startling assertion that neither he nor any other candidate is
ready or qualified to receive truth. It declares that this qualification, this
readiness, must first be developed in the candidate himself. This work of
development is called the philosophic discipline. He should study himself and
examine his experiences in the most critical light. Alibis, pretenses, and
excuses should be mercilessly rejected. The dice of doubtful cases should be
loaded against it, and he should begin with the premise that he is either faulty
in judgement or guilty in conduct.
103
Those who want philosophy without accepting its
discipline get only a fragment of it.
104
The philosopher's research is a disinterested
one. There is no particular body of doctrines which he sets out to support, no
religious institution whose power or prestige he seeks to increase. He
deliberately controls his predilections, trains his thoughts, and disciplines
his feelings so as to make himself capable of that intellectual detachment which
is a necessary prerequisite to getting at the truth.
105
The philosophic discipline aims to shock the
aspirant out of the complacency with which he views himself into a more critical
view. He may feel chagrin and mortification at what he sees.
106
Philosophic life in our sense is not a matter of
reading practical maxims. It is giving assent in action and offering
wholehearted belief in feeling to the best values, goals, and purposes.
107
The philosopher develops the principal sides of
his human nature, that is, his intelligence by reasoning, his knowledge by
study, his piety by devotions, his mystical intuitiveness by meditation, and his
wisdom by association with those more evolved than himself.
108
The first aim therefore is to know Truth as it
is and not merely as it is to us.
109
Its aim is to produce a man who shall be humanly
mature and spiritually secure, who shall be flesh and mind put to the service of
spirit.
110
The study of philosophy must be no desultory
pursuit; it must follow a consecutive and sequential course if its principles
are to be mastered and its problems solved.
111
Thought, feeling, and will are the three sides
of a human being which must find their respective functions in this quest.
Thought must be directed to the discrimination of truth from error, reality from
appearance. Feeling must be elevated in loving devotion towards the Overself.
Will must be turned towards wise action and altruistic service. And all three
must move in effective unison and mutual balance.
112
He should always remember that the mere reading
about philosophy will not make him a philosopher. Nor will even the thinking
about philosophy itself transform him into one. Both these activities are
certainly necessary but they need one more to complete them. And that is the
practice of philosophy in conduct, the expression of it in daily living.
113
Meditation, rightly done, is indispensable to
the philosophic quest, but it must be accompanied by other practices or
endeavours which are not less indispensable to the success of this quest.
114
Meditation must predominate in the beginner's
stage. It is the most important effort then required of him. But the other
requirements need not therefore be neglected. It will not only be greatly to his
advantage to develop metaphysical reasoning and wise action, but the combination
of all three will yield results far in advance of those which their separate and
subsequent development could possibly yield.
115
Only he who lives from moment to moment by the
clear light of its teaching, by the deepest faith in its tenets, and by the
ardent feeling of its worth is a true disciple of philosophy.
116
Three tasks are required of him for this
integral culture. The four elements of the psyche are to be purified, developed,
and balanced.
117
Everyone in some way, blindly or consciously,
slavishly or independently, wrongly or correctly, necessarily and always
believes in a particular decipherment of the enigma of life. But only he who has
brought the best mental equipment to bear upon it is likely to make the best
decipherment. And only the philosophical discipline gives this.
118
The cravings of the senses are to be brought
under control. The soul is to be their master; the mind is no longer to be their
slave.
119
An external asceticism of a sensible kind is
also called for. If, on the specious advice of those who say repression is
worse, he yields to sexual passion every time it solicits him, he makes harder
the internal battle against it. For temptation is not removed by yielding to it
if the removal is merely temporary, and the recurrence is certain and swift.
120
He has to reject the appeal of sensuous things
for a time and retreat from their pursuit. This is intended to free him from
their tyranny over him.
121
The disinclination to start practising
meditation and the inability to sustain it for long when started are due in part
to the mind's strong habit of being preoccupied with worldly matters or being
attached to personal desires. This is why the study of wholly abstract
metaphysical and impersonal topics is part of the Philosophic Path.
122
A sense of sacredness should enter his
philosophical studies if they are to bear more fruit.
123
Some essentials are: purification of character,
discipline of emotion, ennoblement of motive, practice of meditation, study of
the metaphysics of truth, elevation of conduct, and a constant heartfelt
aspiration towards the Divine. Prayer, too, of the right kind, is helpful
because ego-humbling. And the right kind is the philosophic kind.
124
The various branches of philosophical study and
practice include the preparatory stages of the ascetic life and then the further
fuller stages of being, thinking, feeling, meditating, intuiting, and
discriminating. There are two levels of reference: the Absolute and the
Relative, equivalent to the Metaphysical and the Physical-Practical, the Reality
and the Appearance.
125
In one's search for the Higher Self, it is
necessary to cultivate impersonality and objectivity along with reason, emotion,
and balance. These should always be present in one's analyses of experiences,
since inaccurate conclusions would be reached without them.
126
The striving for impersonality is uncommon;
however approved in theory, actual practice is unpleasant and unwilling.
127
The earnest seeker who has already achieved a
certain degree of awareness and understanding has the beginnings of what may be
a splendid opportunity to make phenomenal progress in his present incarnation.
But everything in this world must be paid for; the greatest treasures are
attained only at the greatest cost. The aspirant must now embark on a do-or-die
endeavour to lift his character onto a higher plane altogether; to purify his
motives; and to be prepared to sacrifice all worldly objects first inwardly and,
finally, outwardly - if called upon to do so. The spiritual returns are
correspondingly great, however. They are: serenity, understanding, liberation,
satisfaction, and the delight of perpetual communion with the divine Overself -
while being always in Its blissful Presence.
There must also be the dedication to service. Here, more often than not, the spiritual returns are a terrible sadness which must be borne alone and unshared.
Such is the philosophic life - the only conceivable way of life for many, now, and for many more, later on - forever motivated and sustained by the unchanging living Reality, Mind.
128
The mental tendencies which he has brought over
from previous births, the effects of physical heredity and environment, the
influence of society, and the suggestions of education - all of these have to be
disciplined and purified, if he is to acquire truth without unconsciously
deforming it.
129
This discipline frees his mentality from the
tendency to place merely temporary and local influences above the truly
universal and eternal elements. Thus, it clears a pathway for the real
revelations.
130
Another of the practical applications of
philosophy is the injunction to waste nothing. The usefulness of anything is
entirely a matter of relativity. That which is useless to you in a certain
connection may become useful in a different connection or at a later time.
Again, it may still be useless even when considered under these two aspects but
yet it may be most useful to another person. Therefore if there is some thing
you don't want to keep, give it away to someone who needs it. Don't throw it
away and destroy it. You are only a steward. If you take a purely personal
standpoint or if you live merely for the present moment, such counsel may make
no appeal to you. If, however, you have risen to the philosophic and universal
standpoint and consider everything not merely relative to your own ego but also
to the All, then you will see your responsibility in this matter. This does not
mean you are to become miserly. On the contrary you are to become generous. For
in the last counting everything belongs to Mother Nature. We are only her
stewards and our task is to use her possessions wisely and co-operatively.
131
Philosophy tells us that it is the business of
everybody, nations as well as individuals, to look behind their sufferings and
thus ascertain the causes of which these sufferings are merely effects. If men
wish to start a better and happier life, it is needful that they should
understand the lessons of their own past. If this happier existence is to be a
reality, it cannot come about unless they break inwardly and outwardly with this
past.
132
A fully ripened mind comes more easily and more
naturally into the truth. The labours of reflective thought joined to the
stillness of suspended thought, the emotion of reverential worship balanced by
the independence of self-reliance, are only different aspects of the process of
ripening: there are others. The large outlook which follows minimizes the ego
and pushes out blocks. Slowly or suddenly the Spirit is let in, fills, and takes
over. Consciousness literally comes into its own - itself.
133
A brave insistence on facing his inarguable
prejudgements will be required of him.
134
The philosophic ethics must be applied not only
in his well-studied understanding but also in the depths of his personal
relations.
135
The old idea was that a spiritually minded
person should sport a long beard, indulge in ascetic self-denials, and be
portentously solemn. The new idea is that he should keep his
spiritual-mindedness but be more human, more like one of ourselves.
136
Philosophic training tries to produce in its
votaries a lofty personal character and a wide social outlook. It shames narrow
attitudes and releases beneficent feelings.
137
We must see things in their proper proportions.
This is why the philosophic student must consider all available aspects of a
situation, all sides of a question, and both the past causes and future outcome
of an event.
138
There is a danger to his pilgrimage towards
truth if he lets a fixed and finalized statement of it become dominant. It is
the danger of arrested growth, or spiritual constriction.
139
The conflict with himself, with ill will and
evil will, with false thought and mistaken thought, can end only when the quest
itself ends.
140
Since most people come to the same subject with
personal preconceptions, they leave with different conclusions! Only those who
have undergone the purifying discipline of philosophy are likely to have the
same conclusions.
141
This further implies the eliminating of all
prejudices and the purging of all preconceptions from one's outlook. The mind
must be open, not attached unduly to anything, not the victim of contemporary
external influences, but ever ready to enquire.
142
He must not be afraid to disparage his own past
thought and work, values and techniques, if need be.
143
"The Buddhist discipline or exercise
(yoga) as is told by the Buddha consists of two parts, philosophical and
practical. The philosophical discipline is to train the mind to absolute
idealism and see that the world is Mind, and that there is in reality no
becoming such as birth and death, and that no external things really exist;
while the practical side is to attain an inner perception by means of supreme
wisdom. To be great in the exercise that makes up Bodhisattvahood
(mahayagayogin) one has to be an expert in four things (three of which
are intellectual and the last one practical): 1) to perceive clearly that this
visible world is no more than Mind itself; 2) to abandon the notion that birth,
abiding, and passing-away really took place; 3) to look into the nature of
things external and realize that they have no reality (abhava); 4) to
train oneself towards the realization of the truth in the inmost consciousness
by means of supreme wisdom." - Suzuki's Lankavatara Sutra Studies
144
There are truths in the philosophic doctrine
which man's heart cannot easily, or at first, accept. This is because they are
distasteful. Only after sufficient education by teacher, study, life, or
reflection can he bring himself to believe what he does not like.
145
The history of religious and mystical ideas
should be investigated and studied from an impartial independent standpoint,
without bias for, or prejudice against, with enough critical ability to sift
facts from opinion yet with enough sympathetic interest in the subject to
collect materials widely from time and place. This is not work for a dried-up
pedantic scholar without inner experience of his own, nor for a gullible
excitable enthusiast, nor for a self-limited committed scientist, nor for a
tradition-bound, excessively past-worshipping, anti-modern,
religio-scholar-mystic. With this work should be conjoined a comparative study
of those ideas, which requires not only historical talent and learning but
deeper inner knowledge, advanced and personal experience, and skill in
communicating the higher yields of intellect, feeling, mystical intuition - in
short, some philosophical equipment. There would be no place in such teaching
for rigid dogma, no division into "official" monopolized truth and unenlightened
unblessed invention, certainly no denunciation of heresy.
146
Ignoramuses and blockheads find it easy and
pleasant to criticize the backwardness and darkness of the Middle Ages and the
periods of antiquity. Such criticism gives them the feeling of being on a
superior plane altogether, of having truth where these earlier, and consequently
unluckier, forebears had error.
I personally do not take such a silly attitude. I criticize the past without denying its possession of spiritual treasures. The modern student should revere the teachers and study the teachings of antiquity. He will honour the lives and treasure the words of Jesus and Buddha, Krishna and Confucius, Muhammed, Plato, and Plotinus alike. But he should not confine himself to any single one of them alone nor limit himself within any single traditional fold. He must also lift himself out of the past into the present. He must reserve his principal thought, time, and strength for living teachers and contemporary teaching.
147
To be unattached is also to be unattached
intellectually, to take up no intellectual position as against all the others
and to refuse partisanship, sectarianism, group joining, one-sidedness, and
exclusion of all other ideas and teachings. By refusing to join a sect the
candidate for philosophy refuses to put himself in the position which regards
all those outside the sect as being the unchosen race.
148
Dr. Johnson understood the philosophical
attitude rightly when he said that we have both to enjoy life and to endure
life.
149
The great sacrifice which every aspirant is
called on to make is the sacrifice of that ignorance which separates him from
his Divine Source. This ignorance cannot be removed by the intellect alone,
however, or by Yoga alone.
150
The pleasant and painful vicissitudes of human
life are common to all, but a correct viewpoint regarding them is not. So the
philosophical discipline aims to provide it.
151
He must come on this quest not for a few years
but for all his life.
152
It is necessary for the student to make a
combined effort of will, analytic reflection, prayer, and study to understand
and dissolve the obstacles created by the ego.
153
It is vital to see clearly the difference
between teachings that spring from and serve only the ego, and those that spring
from and lead to the Overself.
154
There are no initiatory rites, no disciplinary
rules and vows.
155
If you ask what reality is, in philosophy's
view, the answer must be consciousness. If you further ask what man's work in
this life is, the answer must be to become conscious of consciousness as such.
But because, ordinarily, consciousness never discloses itself to him but only
its varying states, he can accomplish this work only by adopting extraordinary
means. He will have to steel his feelings and still his mind. In short, he will
have to deny himself.
156
Plutarch pointed out that if anybody could
easily fulfil the injunction "Know thyself," it would not have been considered a
divine precept.
157
Its searching and searing truth will draw out
all his vanity and leave him feeling quite hollow inside.
158
If he makes worship a preparation for
meditation, and if he accompanies investigation of the inspired texts by
application of the knowledge gleaned; if he joins purification of his body to
purification of his mind; he may expect to gain a balanced state of illumination
in return for this balanced approach.
159
No single path will suffice. All must intertwine
with each other, help each other, balance and regulate each other. It is the
totalized and equalized effort which counts most.
160
Life asks from him something more than spiritual
aspiration, more than prayer, more than meditation. He needs to offer all these,
but he must also be intelligent and practical, kind, and controlled.
161
Wisdom lies in combining the three chief yogas,
not in separating them. For instance, low vitality does not promote high
intelligence but rather hinders it, hence some physical disciplines are as
needful as mental ones. The three yoga groups are not only not antagonistic to
each other but actually complementary. Whoever ignores any single one can make
only one-sided progress.
162
A path which requires so much from the traveller
will inevitably be a slower path than the religious and mystical ways. But it
will also be a surer one.
163
These critics of philosophy should closely
question themselves whether the real reason for their dislike of it is that it
humiliates them into secretly acknowledging their lack of the courage to follow
the philosophic Quest.
164
His special need is to unite intellectual
breadth and emotional balance with this inner attainment.
165
We have deeply felt the force of Epictetus'
outcry: "Show me a man modelled after the doctrines that are ever upon his lips.
So help me, Heaven; I long to see one Stoic!" It is not less easy to preach than
to practise in our own time. But here is the acid test which will reveal what is
and what is not pure gold. On the basis of such a test, mankind seems to cry in
vain for a single Illuminate.
166
It is possible by depth of thought or by
persevering over the years to so impregnate the mind with these implacable
truths that it automatically reacts philosophically to its varied experiences
and situations.
167
These truths must become so vivid in his mind
that he cannot help acting upon them.
168
The promises of religion are mild efforts to
console weaker people, but the rewards of philosophy are truths that have to be
heroically borne.
169
The basis of this philosophic discipline is a
well-developed reason, a sound character, and a cultivated mystical intuition.
170
Not by harsh outrages on the body but by the
simple growth of higher value through deeper penetration of the truth, is the
philosophic way. "The purity which cometh from knowledge is the best." says the
Mahabharata.
171
In the end he should seek to gain confirmation
of the teaching and practical knowledge of its working by firsthand personal
experience. This achievement is possible, but at the cost of living out in
action what he learns in thought.
172
The practice of philosophy is not easy, but it
is the only way to gain its advantages. When it takes firm root in day-to-day
life, experience, behaviour, and activity, its truth is tested and survives,
solidly confirmed.
173
We must examine current concepts of the world
with the greatest care, and then have the courage to accept all the consequences
of such examination. We must question life in the profoundest possible manner,
never hesitating to probe deeper and deeper, and truth will come when the answer
comes.
174
The quadrangle of religious devotion,
metaphysical study, mystical meditation, and inspired action makes the tool for
philosophic work.
175
His is no narrow one-sided quest. All through
life he will be seeking wisdom for his mind, goodwill for his heart, and health
for his body.
176
Although it is necessary to differentiate these
lines of approach to the Overself in the study stage of growth, it would be
wrong at any time to regard them as being mutually exclusive. Actually
metaphysics and mysticism must, at the last, meet and intermingle. From the
first the sensible student will perceive this and use each, in turn as well as
together, to broaden his outlook and balance and understanding.
177
Philosophy attends to each side of this
five-sided creature man and thus gives him a training that is broad enough to
meet life's demand.
178
He has to take the subtle thoughts of
philosophy, the deep emotions of religion, the sensible practicality of
modernism, and the whisperings of his own intuition to form a composite
systematic credo.
179
If he is to take on the label of philosopher, he
will try to bear his troubles with fortitude and endeavour to keep hold of the
great eternal truths in support of it.
180
The way is long and hard. It involves developing
all the different sides of the personality. Prayer and meditation lead to the
cultivation of intuition and aspiration - and these, at the same time, must be
accompanied by the strengthening of will, plus study and reflection. All efforts
should be made side by side, so to speak, to lead to a balanced psyche - the
philosophic ideal.
181
The philosophic approach to a problem is first
to look at it and then to look away from it.
182
In the turmoil of daily events it is easy to
lose philosophic perspective. He should not let this happen but instead strive
constantly to gain such a perspective.
183
Without this discipline they will be unable to
distinguish the authentic communion with an inspiring source from their own
personal thoughts and feelings.
184
The ego is so bound up with the thoughts his
mind produces and his intuition yields, with the experience his meditation
practice and prayerful worship invoke, that it is most essential for him to
undergo a course of purificatory discipline to obtain ego-free results.
185
How successfully he perceives the truth will
depend partly on how successfully he overcomes the limitations and escapes the
associations of his own personality.
186
It is, in a sense, one long experience of
becoming impervious to desires, ambitions, and, last of all, even to aspirations
for growth. It is a dying to the lesser, personal self as one awakens and
surrenders to the greater Over-Self.
187
He divides into two persons, the onlooker and
the player, a feat beyond ordinary capacity and possible only when the
philosophic quest has trained mind and re-educated feeling.
188
If, as some think, the philosophic way of life
is a hard one, it still remains the right one. All other ways are mere
compromises, just concessions to human weakness.
189
The philosophically minded student thinks
clearly in advance of the probable consequences - both good and bad - of a
contemplated line of action. For he does not want to walk blindly or negligently
or rashly.
190
The slow gradual enlightenment of views will
finish his development.
191
First he believes in it vaguely, then he
understands it precisely, next he practises it daily, and in the end he becomes
one with it utterly.
192
A time comes when the seeker is so thoroughly
penetrated with philosophic ideals that the higher life will become the everyday
life.
193
The initiation into wisdom - if it is to be
lasting - is not suddenly given by any master; it is slowly grown by the
experiences and reflection of life. Thought is gradually converted into habit,
and habit is gradually merged into high character. The philosophic attitude, if
it is to be genuine, will pass into the student's nerves and move his muscles.
194
If he cannot by his natural power achieve this,
he can at least prepare himself for it and await the grant of grace.
195
When the principle of true development is
understood, it will be seen that no side of human nature is really hostile to
any of the others and that all sides are complementary partners.
196
The philosophic goal is to be spiritually aware
in all parts of the psyche, with the complete life as the final result. To give
one's life a philosophical basis is to give it the quality of impregnable
stability. To give one's knowledge a philosophical foundation is to give it the
quality of intellectual soundness. To confine attention exclusively to some
particular aspect of truth, ignoring the other aspects which balance or complete
it, can only lead to a misleading result. That the approach is different but the
goal is the same may be quite true of all ordinary systems of religion and
mysticism. It is not quite true of philosophy. Here the approach is many-sided
while the goal is integral.
197
It is not enough to clear the egoistic,
passional, and emotional colourings from the psyche. If he sees the truth from a
very limited point of view, he will still fail to receive or transmit it
rightly. Therefore the psyche's different sides must be fully developed: his
thinking capacity, intuitional receptivity, emotional sensitivity, and active
will must themselves be brought to an adequate degree before his view of truth
will be adequate enough.
198
Each part of the human psyche fulfils a separate
and necessary function. None is a substitute for or a rival to any of the
others; it does not displace but only complements them. Each has its own special
work which could not be done by them. A full view of truth calls for a full
technique. Only philosophy provides for it.
199
For he has to regenerate the whole of his
nature, and not merely one side of it, if he is not only to perceive the whole
truth but also to perceive it unspoiled and undisturbed.
200
The path is fourfold and not threefold. For it
consists of (1) the development of intelligence through both concrete and
abstract reasoning, (2) the development of mystical consciousness through
cultivation of intuition and practice of meditation, (3) the re-education of
moral character, (4) practical service.
201
The fourfold path calls for action, intuition,
devotion, and knowledge.
202
He should seek to develop on all four sides of
his nature - the intellectual, the emotional, the practical, and the
intuitional. The entire endeavour should be directed towards discovering his
weaknesses of character and remedying them, strengthening his capacity to think
abstractly and metaphysically, refining and ennobling his feelings, disciplining
and understanding his passions, cultivating and responding to his intuitions.
Thus the philosophic quest is an integral one. It aims at a total illumination
of the mind and transformation of the character.
203
Philosophy demands so complete a training only
because it offers so perfect a goal.
204
The smoothly rounded symmetry of this fourfold
development makes not only for the fullest acceptance of truth but also for the
maturest kind of living. Because philosophy considers and improves the human
personality as a whole, it is nothing less than inspired practicality. There is
indeed no new situation which it cannot meet and negotiate for the best, no old
one for which it has failed to offer guidance and in which it has failed to give
support.
205
In leading men toward a higher life and a truer
world view, it is as justifiable to cajole their feelings as it is to convince
their reason; it is as right to stimulate in them the warm aspiration of a
mystical devotee as it is to harden the cold precision of a metaphysical
scholar; it is as needful to inspire them to compassionate service as it is to
exalt their moral outlook. All these are needed for an adequate result. All
these qualities are a necessity for a fuller and better-poised life. Each
supplements the others and supplies what they, by reason of their own nature and
limitations, cannot supply. All these separate things can take an aspirant some
way along the quest, but none will take him all the way. Most efforts are aimed
only at one or the other, for they often contradict each other, whereas
philosophy not only aims at all together but also seeks to achieve something
more. For on the one hand it seeks to unfold the transcendent faculty of insight
and on the other it seeks to test all its teachings against the opposition of
actual experience in the active world.
206
If the change in character and outlook,
understanding and conduct is to be a deep and lasting one, then it will have to
proceed out of all sides of a man's nature, out of his thinking and feeling,
experience and intuition, study and belief - which means that it must proceed
out of the knowledge and practice of philosophy. His change must be based on
rational ideas as well as emotional movements, on practical results as well as
theoretical formulations, on the experiences of other men as well as his own.
207
We have to bring the cosmic experience to the
living human organism as a whole, not merely to just a part of it. For
man is a unity and can fulfil his higher purpose only as he does so with all his
being and does not try to separate it into parts.
208
He not only has to receive this illumination in
all the parts of his being rather than any one part, but also to receive it
equally. It is the obstruction arising in the undeveloped or unpurified parts
which is the further cause of his inability to sustain the illumination.
209
It may surprise people to learn that wholeness
is a spiritual quality, that all parts of the man must receive and share in the
light.
210
We must bring our whole personality to this
quest and not merely a part of it. All sides are valuable to each other, hence
all are needed by ourselves and all must be embraced. The rich fullness of
philosophic life appreciates beauty, aspires to knowledge, activates the will,
is suffused by feeling, and cultivates intuition. All these activities -
emotional, mental, physical, mystical, metaphysical, and ethical - are to be
inseparably consolidated in one and the same character. There must be a total
response of our total nature to this call from the Overself. For it is not
something which can penetrate our reasoning alone, for example, and leave the
rest of our being cold. The quest cannot be limited to any single way alone. It
must be wide enough and comprehensive enough to enable us to throw all the
forces of our being into such a supreme enterprise. How far is this generous
ideal from the narrow ideal of asceticism!
211
That man is truly civilized who has unfolded the
possibilities of his physical nature and his spiritual nature both, who has
refined his feelings and tastes and developed his thought and intelligence, who
rejects the sterility of ascetic living standards based on poverty but welcomes
those of aesthetic and functional value based on beauty and comfort.
212
That the goal is nothing short of completeness
is what so few understand or want, for it demands more from them than the goal
of merely experiencing pleasant feelings. It demands the whole man.
213
Make wholeness a theme for your thoughts and
meditations, a focus for your studies and aspirations.
214
When all parts of his psyche concur in an
attitude, when each function or faculty is coordinated with the others in the
reception and deliverance of truth, then there will be harmony and unity within
his inner being and outer life.
215
Yes, we need to know the truth, to discover what
is in the world around us and in life within us, but we also need to feel
and intuit it by experience. This coming-together makes for its realization.
216
The four sides of the pyramid of being -
thinking, feeling, doing, and intuiting - must be drawn together, properly
developed, and held together in proper balance. The inclination to fragment the
self is the inclination to follow the easiest path, not the needed path. The
whole person needs both developing and balancing; part of it cannot be left
safely in neglect while the other part is intensively cultivated.
The philosophic goal is to be spiritually aware in all parts of the psyche, with the complete life as the final result. The aspirant must engage the whole of his person in the work of self-illumination, and not merely a part of it. If only a piece of it is active in this work, only a piece can get illumined or inspired. Even meditation itself - so important for the awakening of intuition - is only a part, and a limited part, of the Quest. Wholeness must be the ideal, if the whole of the Overself's light is to be brought forth and shone down into every day's living, thinking, feeling, and being. Anything less yields a lesser result. And if the whole is not held properly, is unbalanced, it yields a distorted result.
217
The teaching that the Quest cannot and should
not be separated from life in the world is a sound one. Therefore, it is part of
philosophy and is not some eccentric enterprise to be undertaken by those who
wish to escape from the world, or who, being unable to escape, consider
themselves as belonging to a class apart from others in their environment -
superior to them, different from them, and holier than them. They also come to
consider the Quest as an artificial system of living, devoid of spontaneity and
naturalness - something to be laboured at by making themselves abnormal and
inhuman. One of the consequences of this attitude is that they tend to overlook
their everyday responsibilities and thus get into difficulties. Philosophy has
consistently opposed this tendency. Unfortunately, in the reaction from it,
there has arisen a fresh confusion in the minds of another group of students who
do not understand the beautiful and adequate balance which true philosophy
advocates. These students, swayed by such teachers as Krishnamurti, become so
enthused by the notion of making spiritual progress through learning from
experiences and action alone that they follow Krishnamurti's advice and throw
away prayer, meditation, and moral striving, as well as study under personal
teachers. This limits them to a one-sided progress and therefore an unbalanced
one. Total truth can only be got by a total approach; as Light on the
Path points out, each of these forms of approach is but one of the steps and
all steps are needed to reach the goal.
The whole of his being must be involved in the effort if the whole of truth is to be found. Otherwise the result will be emotional alone, or intellectual alone, or adulterated with egoistic ideas and feelings.
218
It is not enough to be a philosopher because the
mind sees the teaching is true; the heart also must be engaged in the matter and
love it. Nor are these two enough. The whole person must be lifted up also into
it and himself experience the truth.
219
It enters into the fullness of philosophy only
when it is felt in the heart, understood in the mind, intuited in the soul,
absorbed by the stillness, and actualized in the world.
220
Body and mind depend upon one another, act upon
one another. The dualism which would separate them entirely, which would even
put them against each other as antagonists, is erroneous. The biological view of
man, the psychological view, and the spiritual view of man are complementary.
221
It is not enough to be a good person. One must
also be a wise person. It is insufficient to be self-disciplined. One should
also be self-illumined.
222
We must be able to reason remorselessly without
becoming imprisoned in reason, because we must do justice to every part of our
being; but only as a part of the whole must we do justice to the intellect.
223
Those who assert that inner spiritual change can
come only from outer physical change and those who assert the opposite are both
alike - extremists and fanatics. The two procedures are needed together and
should accompany each other.
224
He will be able to manifest more of the Divine
when he is developed to the point of being complete in himself than when he is
not.
225
There is no other way for man to grow in his
fullness than the way which covers the whole of human life and uses the whole of
human faculty. There is no other way to make himself fit for the next stage of
evolution, which will make him more than man.
226
The foolish man acts at random; the intellectual
man plays off his reasons against each other and so may find his power to decide
paralysed; the emotional man rejects every guide except personal feeling; the
philosophic man uses reason, feeling, and intuition alike.
227
All sides of the psyche are so intertwined that
only an integral development will be enough. A balanced mind cannot be got
unless the ethic of renunciation has been accepted, for instance, for the
vicissitudes of fortune bring disturbing emotions in their wake.
228
Not a one-sided, not even a many-sided, but only
an all-sided progress will suit philosophy.
229
When the light of truth enters it will then
shine into all parts of his being, not into the intellect alone. It thus becomes
a living power, not merely something to be talked or written about.
230
The extraordinary completeness of philosophy,
the fusion and equilibrium of being and doing, thinking and feeling, introverted
stillness and extroverted living, egolessness and egoity, make it rare and
precious.
231
Thus, striving and studying, praying and
willing, meditating and aspiring, he uses all the self to reach to the All-Self.
232
The logical mind can take him only part of the
way. The imaginative mind can take him where the other cannot. If he leaves out
either the first or the second, he will suffer loss.
233
If we are to come to truth at all, we must come
to it with all our being, not with a half or a quarter of our being.
234
If he is to be made whole, his everyday
personality must put itself into perfect harmony with, and under the rule of,
his super-personal Overself.
235
It may not be possible for many persons to
achieve such wholeness altogether, but as far as it is possible it should
certainly be sought.
236
Specialization in the search after knowledge
leads inevitably to an unbalanced picture of the whole. The expert usually knows
more about one single thing but less about everything else. He loses the art of
putting all these bits of knowledge together in a just and undistorted way.
237
Religion adores God from a distance, mysticism
feels God's ray within itself, metaphysics knows the certitude of God's
existence only in the intellect. Philosophy alone makes a many-sided approach to
God.
238
An idealism which is sincere but naïve and a
detachment which is earnest but frigid are not enough.
239
His mind cannot easily take hold of the
many-sidedness of truth in its entirety. Yet only by so doing can he bring its
seeming contradictions together and reconcile them.
240
The whole self must seek truth if the whole
truth is to be found.
241
No one faculty of human nature is the whole of
it. The body's wills, the heart's feeling, the intellect's reasoning, and the
soul's intuiting must all be considered and brought into play.
242
If the inner life is cultivated in part of one's
being only, the illumination when it comes will light that part only. But if the
intellect worships as well as thinks and if the emotions move with it, both
develop together in wholeness.
243
A total effort to purify all areas is needed if
there is to be a total removal of the blockages, the compulsions, the
distortions and the superstitions rather than a temporary suppression of them.
244
The satisfaction of one part of his nature may
be sufficient for him but it is not sufficient for Life. Sooner or later in this
or in another birth, he will have to nurture what has been neglected.
245
Philosophy is not limited to work in meditation,
although that is perhaps its most notable dramatic form. It is also applied in
the area of everyday living routines and relationships. It is also active in
work on character, emotions, and attitudes. It takes in the body and its diet.
246
To recognize that the paths down which the ego
has led him are illusory is admirable and necessary, but it is only a first
step. It will not stop him from continuing to go down them unless he has
acquired something more than his merely intellectual knowledge. Other things are
equally indispensable to complete his approach.
247
What the Chinese vividly call "walking on both
legs" - that is, joining and using two or more of our faculties instead of a
single one - avoids narrow-mindedness and leads to better results.
248
If the truth is sought for with every faculty of
a man's being, its illumination when found will enter every faculty too.
249
If he brings only a part of his ego into the
Quest, then only a part of it will become enlightened and only a part of his
activities will show the effects of enlightenment.
250
If active intelligence will stop him from making
one kind of blunder, active intuition will save him from a different kind. He
cannot afford to neglect any part of his psyche. There must be an integral and
total development of it.
251
We must find truth with our intellect and feel
it with our emotion, surrender to it with our intuition and apply it with our
will.
252
If the illumination is to complete itself, it
must be passed through the intellect as well as the emotions, the will as well
as the imagination, until it lives in every part of his being.
253
So many seekers find a little calm from their
meditation, but quite soon when they are back in the world's turmoil they lose
it again. This is inevitable if they depend on the short meditations alone,
which is as much as most Westerners can perform. If, however, they would support
these attempts with the cultivation of the higher knowledge which philosophy
offers they would be less likely to lose those calm moods.
254
One must not be premature in demanding final
union with the Overself. That comes only after years of all-round development.
One must first prepare himself inwardly to receive it; only then may he expect
the ultimate union. This preparation affects the whole personality - intellect,
emotion, will, and intuition.
255
Because his whole nature is involved in the
search for truth, it is his whole nature that in the end finds and receives it.
Consequently he gains a certitude, a surety that is complete, unshakeable, and
stable.
256
Plato's teaching that the three great ideals of
truth virtue and beauty are reflected down to and through all levels of
existence - however obscured and diminished and feebler they become with each
descent - is one of the grandest offerings of the Western world.
257
When devotion stands on knowledge, it stands on
a rock which nothing and nobody can move, nor hardships weaken.
258
We may yield intellectual assent and yet remain
emotionally unconvinced, just as we may yield emotional assent and yet remain
intellectually unconvinced. Philosophy harmonizes both these sides of our nature
and thus dissolves the disharmony.
259
The ardour of his devotion and the fervour of
his aspiration will not be lessened because he has begun to get rid of his
metaphysical poverty and social sterility. On the contrary, they will be
supported by the one effort and confirmed by the other.
260
Faith may carry a man through crises but faith
plus knowledge will carry him all the better.
261
His loyalty to the teaching must penetrate
through all the levels of thought and feeling and faith.
262
The work of self-integration is the taking up of
the whole physical and emotional and intellectual nature into the intuitive
higher one.
263
The proper way to solve his problems is to bring
to bear upon them not only all that his own experience and reason and other
persons' counsel and knowledge can command, but also all the intuitive leading
he can obtain from an ego-freed heart and a thought-quieted mind. This is the
total approach to them.
264
A balanced development will not stimulate the
intellect and starve the feelings, nor do the opposite. It will give the
intuition the highest place, making it the ruler of reason, the check on
emotion.
265
The thinking, feeling and willing faculties of
human nature have to be developed and refined before they can give some measure
of the higher satisfaction and happiness - but by themselves and left to their
competing selves they cannot give the full measure and perfect quality of these
twin rewards. They need to be integrated to be brought harmoniously together,
put in their proper place and ruled by another faculty operating on a level
above them. Such a one is the intuition.
266
It is needful on the philosophic path that he
understand as well as feel. But if now he begins to try to understand this
wonderful consciousness with his thinking intellect alone, he will necessarily
limit it. The effort to comprehend which he is called upon to make must
therefore be much more an intuitive one.
267
Thus, and thus alone, can a man become entire
and integrated, using all his nature and all his being for the most desired and
desirable end.
268
To isolate some detail and make it a whole unto
itself is always imprudent but it would be much less so in this case if it were
the intuition.
269
The principle of balance is one of the most
important of philosophic principles.(P)
270
Balance has a unique place, for it is not only
needed as a qualification to be cultivated but also as a regulator of all the
other qualifications. This is because it is an effect of which the activity of
intuition is a cause. Thoughts, feelings, and actions which are in alignment
with intuitive direction are balanced in nature, whereas those which are not are
unbalanced ones. In the universe we find balance present with the same
uniqueness attached to it. For not only does it appear there as the Law of
Recompense to balance all actions with reactions but also as the Moral Law in
the human entity to balance his right deeds with satisfying results and his
wrong ones with painful results.
271
The philosophic life is essentially a balanced
one. Therefore it is condemned by extreme Western materialists, who would
extrovert human energies for sensuous ends, and by extreme Eastern mystics, who
would introvert them for supersensuous ends. It does not arrive at its balance
by compromising these two views but by combining them.
272
All that is needful to a man's happiness must
come from both these sources - the spiritual and the physical - from the
ability to rest in the still centre, in the developed intellectual and aesthetic
natures, in the good health and vigour of the body.
273
In the world of today there are signs of mental
disorder and emotional upset everywhere. In the world of mystic and occult
studies there are similar signs, although of a different kind. In the postbag of
a writer whose subject borders the fringe of these subjects there is also ample
evidence for the existence of such maladies. People should first free themselves
to a sufficient extent and recover their sanity before they get immersed in
ideas which will only aggravate this malady. When we come to the world of
students of philosophy, insanity disappears - because it is a subject which
regards the sage, the fully developed philosopher, as the sanest of men because
he is the best balanced of men. We may perhaps find a percentage of dreamers
among them, as the metaphysical flights and subtle analyses which it calls for
may lift them a little too high above practical concerns; but philosophy is
automatically self-adjusting and soon brings them down again to these concerns,
whereas the other subjects, the mystic and the occult, leave them up there in
hazy clouds where, if they are not careful, they may lose their bearings.
274
The quest does not stop with yoga. We have also
to achieve a wise balance between feeling for inner peace and thinking for
ultimate truth. Reason must be cultivated because we have not only to feel the
presence of God but also to discern true from false gods - that is, true from
false ideas of God.
275
Clear thinking has nothing to fear from a warm
heart, so long as the two co-operate but do not melt into one another, so long
as they walk hand in hand and do not tumble over each other, for so long can we
call upon their help with equal freedom. Our personal problems cannot be solved
by slushy sentiments alone; but neither can they be satisfactorily adjusted by
steely logic alone; we need a balanced wisdom in dealing with them. Only such a
wisdom can best explain these problems and explode our delusions about them.
276
The reasoned thoughts of man must be confronted
by the delicate feelings of man, balanced and mingled to produce a better person
than either alone would produce.
277
Even our understanding of balance has to be
corrected. It is not, for philosophic purposes, the mean point between two
extremes but the compensatory union of two qualities or elements that need one
another.(P)
278
The required condition of balance as the price
of illumination refers also to correcting the lopsidedness of letting the
conscious ego direct the whole man while resisting the super-conscious spiritual
forces. In other words, balance is demanded between the intellect which seeks
deliberate control of the psyche and the intuition which must be invited by
passivity and allowed to manifest in spontaneity. When a man has trained himself
to turn equally from the desire to possess to the aspiration to being possessed,
when he can pass from the solely personal attitude to the one beyond it, when
the will to manage his being and his life for himself and by himself is
compensated by the willingness to let himself and his life be quiescent, then
his being and his life are worked upon by higher forces. This is the kind of
balance and completeness which the philosophic discipline must lead to so that
the philosophic illumination may give him his second birth.(P)
279
The basis of the universe is its equilibrium.
Only so can the planets revolve in harmony and without collision. The man who
would likewise put himself in tune with Nature, God, must establish equilibrium
as the basis of his own nature.(P)
280
It is most important to get rid of an unbalanced
condition. Most people are in such a condition although few know it. For
example, intellectuality without spirituality is human paralysis. Spirituality
without intellectuality is mental paralysis. No man should submit to such
suicidal conditions. All men should seek and achieve integrality. To be wrapped
up in a single side of life or to be overactive in a single direction ends by
making a man mildly insane in the true and not technical sense of this word. The
remedy is to tone down here and build up there, to cultivate the neglected
sides, and especially to cultivate the opposite side. Admittedly, it is
extremely difficult for most of us, circumstanced as we usually are, to achieve
a perfect development and equal balance of all the sides. But this is no excuse
for accepting conditions completely as they are and making no effort at all to
remedy them. The difficulty for many aspirants in attaining such an admirably
balanced character lies in their tendency to be obsessed by a particular
technique which they followed in former births but which cannot by itself meet
the very different conditions of today. We must counterbalance the habit of
living only in a part of our being. When we have become harmoniously balanced in
the philosophic sense, heart and head will work together to answer the same
question, the unhurrying sense of eternity and the pressing urge of the hour
will combine to make decisions as wise as they are practical, and the
transcendental intuitions will suggest or confirm the workings of reason. In
this completed integral life, thought and action, devotion and knowledge do not
wrestle against each other but become one. Such is the triune quest of
intelligence, aspiration, and action.(P)
281
It is not only balance inside the ego itself
that is to be sought, not only between reason and emotion, thought and action,
but also and much more important, outside the ego: between it and the
Overself.(P)
282
But it is not enough that all these varied
elements of his being should be harmonized and balanced. It is also needful that
they should be balanced upon a spiritual centre of gravity.
283
A well-balanced person is not necessarily one
who takes the measured midpoint between two extremes but one who lets
himself be taken over by the inner calm. The needed adjustment is then made by
itself. Although this avoids his falling into lopsided acts or exaggerated
views, a merely moderate character is not the best result. More important is the
surrender to the higher power which is implicit in the whole process of
becoming truly balanced.(P)
284
Balance is the perfect control and mutual
harmony of thought, feeling, and action.
285
Sanctity needs the balance of sanity.
286
Greece's greatest contribution to the quest was
the idea of Balance. Those who lack it, lack the proper capacity to receive
truth as it is. And among them those who are narrow and fanatical, who
make a special claim to supremacy for their way, cult, or doctrine, end
by becoming the victims of their own exaggeration. A single glimpse is announced
as a permanent illumination; a perception of metaphysical truth is announced as
total illumination.
287
What most modern seekers need is to attain
equilibrium in themselves and to achieve harmony in their lives. From the first,
they will be able to enjoy inner peace; from the second, outer peace.
288
There are two poles in all activity. To get a
true picture of life both must be recognized, and neither denied. But since
these poles are opposite extremes, it is an unfortunate human tendency precisely
to deny one or the other.
289
To avoid this imbalance, look for both poles in
each case and establish them. Do not be satisfied with a one-sided view which
excludes all others, nor with sectarian smugness which knows only one way to
live rightly - its own.
290
Little minds are dismayed or baffled by this
truth. They would like the universe to bear a single face, and life to have a
single direction. But then the growth for which they are here would not be
possible. Larger minds are given enough vision to reconcile the contradictions
and to write the opposites. They see life whole, not in fragments.
291
The fanatics, the extremists, the exclusivists,
and the intolerant never find truth. This is in part because they persistently
reject the pole which opposes the one on which they have taken their stand. They
refuse to see that it is needed to do justice, to complete the picture, and to
explain the tension between both. It is needed to give a deeper and clearer view
of their own experience. This is why philosophy teaches the need and value of
achieving balance between opposites.
292
How shall a person balance himself? The word
means a lot more than its seeming simplicity suggests. He can start by not
letting any one part of himself carry the whole person away, off his feet. But
balance is not only a matter of making nature and character, activity and
living, better proportioned. It is also a matter of mental calm, by whose light
proper values may be seen and each thing put where it ought to be. The
philosopher's body-consciousness, for instance, is part of his whole
consciousness and now no longer fills all the space. It is where it belongs, in
its own place.
293
He should cultivate those aspects of his psyche
which need further stature and he should deliberately neglect those which have
already been over-cultivated. In this way he will bring about a better
equilibrium, a sounder harmony within his own being.
294
The virtue of this balanced approach shows
itself in every department of the Quest. For instance, in the relationship
between disciple and master, he will avoid the one-sided emphasis upon the
latter's personality which certain circles in the Orient and Occident foster
through their own immaturity.
295
One of the chief symbols of this law of balance
is the cross.
296
A man is able to balance a pair of scales if he
holds them at their centre. He is able to balance the various human functions if
he finds his true centre. From that point he can see where one has been
neglected and where another has been overused. From that source he can get the
strength and guidance to make the necessary adjustments.
297
He ought not to become so saturated with his
metaphysical studies or so strained by his mystical contemplations that
everything else, and especially everything human, has lost interest for him.
When this happens, when he is no longer capable of enjoying himself, or
relaxing, his mental equilibrium is upset.
298
Wisdom requires balance and hence the wise man
rejects extremes and reconciles opposites.
299
The philosopher seeks to attain a proper
equilibrium which will enable him to move within the world of turmoil, conflict,
egocentric men, and materialistic aims and yet keep in continuous contact with
the consciousness of his Overself.
300
In the sense of proportion, balance, and measure
we find a gift from philosophy, as also a path to philosophy.
301
If a seeker lacks sufficient practical
experience, he must learn to "do" more and to "dream" less; if he is highly
intuitive and idealistic, he must learn also to be physically active and
constructive in a down-to-earth fashion.
302
I have often insisted on the need of keeping the
personality to a well-balanced form. This insistence arises principally out of
the nature of true philosophy itself. It must be lived. But it also arises out
of the need for self-protection against the perils which oppose the quest:
internally, the wanderings of fancy into hallucination and the self-engrossment
which breeds neuroticism; externally, the negative passions and blind
materialism of a deteriorating society.
303
A metaphysical truth ought not be treated in a
dry arid manner as if it stood quite alone, apart from its connections with the
rest of philosophy. If the devotional, the active, and the aesthetic sides are
left out from the wholeness, the union with these other aspects, metaphysics can
easily become lifeless and monotonous. Philosophy lives in the heart no less
than in the head, in its glorious beauty no less than in its sturdy support for
the life of action.
304
Buddhism is a religion founded on
disillusionment with life. But philosophy, being more than a religion, cannot
rest solidly balanced on such a slender foundation. If with Buddhism it sees the
ugliness, the transiency, and the suffering in life, it also sees the beauty in
Nature and art, the Eternal behind life and the satisfaction in it. Why should
philosophy pretend to see no bright places because it can see the dark ones? Why
should it deny the thrill of music in human existence because it can hear the
wail of misery? This is why it is as quietly happy as it is gravely resigned.
305
It is common enough to see aspirants become
one-sided and, to this extent, unbalanced. Because they are attracted or helped
by some particular way - a special method, attribute, teaching, or doctrine -
this is no reason to ignore all the others or to make it the central pivot on
which the whole of life rests. Light ought to broaden his outlook, not narrow
it.
306
Half-right, half-wrong, many theories and
judgements need to be paired in order to compensate and balance one another.
307
In the Masonry of ancient times, the initiate
was given the symbol of two pillars in his course of instruction. The meaning
was that a true balance should sustain his progress.
308
Another reason for the great importance of
achieving a balanced personality is that the dangers of neuroticism, inertia,
fantasy, and psychism are thereby avoided.
309
It is rare to find a man whose mind is evenly
balanced, rarer still to find one whose mind and life are so.
310
In a wisely balanced life, neither contemplation
nor activity will be auxiliary to the other. Each will be useful, even
necessary, to the other.
311
It is laudable to practise optimism to a
justifiable degree, but it is reprehensible to practise it to an absurd degree.
Balance is needed.
312
The unbalanced genius is not to be admired for
his unbalance but in spite of it.
313
It is natural that the endeavour to follow this
ideal of Balance will spill over into his judgements and opinions. He will want
to see all sides of a matter, and especially all the weaknesses in his own
views, all the sound points in opponent's views.
314
Balance requires the businessman to live for
something more that his office. It requires the artist to live for something
more than his studio. Both may be giving a useful service to many people. Still
this is not enough. They need also to serve the ideal of their own higher
integration.
315
To achieve proper balance it may be necessary to
over-emphasize some particular attribute, quality, or capacity.
316
A balance may be established between opposites
or between complements.
317
Man not only needs intelligence to find his way
to the truth, he needs balanced intelligence.
318
To attain balance is good but not enough; to
sustain it is also called for.
319
This principle of Balance operates throughout
the universe. The growth of plant and animal forms is balanced by their decay,
their life by their death. If this principle failed to operate for only fifty
years, the seas would be packed with fish to such an extent that their waters
would spill over and flood most lands, submerging their cities.
320
Few have symmetrical faces; few stand equally
upon both feet.
321
To gain better balance he needs also the virtues
opposite to his own virtues.
322
When the imbalanced person becomes a
nonconformist, he becomes an extreme nonconformist. If he does the right thing,
he usually does it in the wrong way.
323
It is not easy to cultivate sensitivity without
cultivating softness at the same time.
324
Balance is always needed. A good stretched too
far may become an evil, virtue grown unbalanced may become a vice, a truth
pushed to extremes may become a grotesque parody of itself.
325
A well-balanced, well-developed man will
habitually function in all parts of his being, regularly draw on all his
resources, and live in harmony with his whole psyche.
326
In our time even more than in other times, world
history has produced political, religious, racial, economic, and other kinds of
fanatics, some of them quite frenzied ones. But no philosophic fanatic has been
produced. For how could the balance, the discipline, the intelligence, and the
impartiality so often and so rightly inculcated by philosophy ever let that
happen?
327
Humour can be used to restore a lost sense of
proportion or to show up a deplorable lapse from sanity.
328
Some have been pushed off balance by certain
happenings in their lives but most were born with the tendency, which was either
latent, and needed time to show itself, or patent, and was displayed from
childhood.
329
The body's senses, if unexamined, unanalysed,
and left uncontrolled, lead him into an animalized existence. But understood and
ruled by reason with aspiration, they serve him.
330
The pleasures of life may be taken - he need not
become morose and gloomy - but balance and discipline are needed to take them
wisely.
331
When there is no collision between intellect and
emotion, or between intuition and egoism, or between imagination and will, it
may be said that one's inner harmony has been fully attained.
332
He may well study in different schools of
thought and experiment with different views of life. But this is advisable only
if he takes care to do so with a balanced approach, tempering enthusiasms with
analysis, acceptances with discrimination, acclamations with criticisms.
333
Let us welcome the offerings of art and culture,
of applied intellect and civilized living, without hostility or belittlement,
even while remembering the mocking futility of an existence which does not go
beyond them to the deeper values of the Overself.
334
The cases of Krishnamurti and D.H. Lawrence are
very illustrative of the need and value of balance. Here are two men of
unquestioned genius and independent thought who have influenced the currents of
their time. Krishnamurti aroused people to the fact that they were really
captives and invited them to leave their cages. Lawrence denied the conventional
denial of sex. What both these men had to say was important, and needed to be
said. But Krishnamurti was so rigidly uncompromising and Lawrence so
passionately rebellious that their very necessary contributions have themselves
become fresh sources of misunderstanding. What is sound in their teaching is a
part of philosophy, and quite acceptable: but the exaggeration and over-emphasis
which accompany it are not. They are the consequences of the teachers'
temperamental imbalance. Again and again seekers after truth have been
counselled to practise the art of bringing together and balancing the different
elements of their nature, the different factors of the quest, the different
demands of everyday living. Philosophy is able to give us peace because it
incorporates this art.
335
Whenever religion becomes and remains an
obsessional activity, it is time to call a halt. The need of keeping mental
equilibrium is supreme with the philosophy of truth as it was with the
philosophy of Greece.
336
A well-balanced man cannot be thrown down. He
may be pushed about by circumstances but he will always keep, or return to, his
centre.
337
The best Greek minds rejected superstition and
refused to give metaphysics and religion and science any place beyond that which
was their due. They avoided the excessive religiosity of the Indian minds, which
Buddha tried to correct.
338
The Delphi Temple inscription carved on the wall
was not only, "Know Thyself," but continued, "Nothing in excess."
339
Our schools teach many subjects to the young to
prepare them for life, to train them for a career, to show them how to
discipline the mind, or merely to instill information. But none teaches them the
much-needed subject of balance. Where there is too much of one thing, or too
little of it, there is unbalance. Where certain attributes preponderate and
others are deficient, there is the same result. It is not only extremists and
fanatics who suffer from this trouble, but millions who pass as ordinary
citizens, for it takes widely different forms.
340
With this beautiful ideal of balance ever before
him, he will be able to avoid falling into anarchy's abyss, on one side, or
becoming a mere copy of his teacher, on the other.
341
The Ideal Balance may be impossible to attain
but we can get nearer to it and establish a useful working balance.
342
If it be asked why all this bother to
equilibrate the ego, why all this talk about the necessity of balance, the
answer is that what the Bhagavad Gita calls "evenness of mind" is an
inescapable precondition to the accurate reception of the philosophic
enlightenment.
343
All of Rudyard Kipling's famous poem If
is a preachment upon the virtues of balance.
344
When thought and feeling grow purer together,
when knowledge and aspiration wax stronger side by side, when idea and action
progress mutually, he will come to know this truth about the virtues and values
of balance by his own self-experience.
345
Impulsiveness can be a help toward moving more
quickly to the goal, but by itself, without the check and balance of intuitive
and rational development, it becomes fanaticism and is harmful.
346
Enthusiasm is a helpful emotion when new ideas
have to be put forward against inertia or opposition. But when it loses its
inner balance and proper measure, becomes incautious and exaggerated, then it
renders a disservice to its own cause.
347
He should realize the wisdom of setting up for
himself the ideal of a balanced, integral development. If he needs to develop
along other lines in order to balance up, the abstention from meditation for
periods will do him no harm.
348
The heart must feel the truth; the head
must know it; both activities must unite in equilibrium. Without such a
result there is only bubbling enthusiasm or dry studiousness but not philosophy.
349
It is also a matter of bringing the self into
equilibrium, first within its own little range and second with the larger
existence of the universal being.
350
It is important to bring about a measure of
balance within his own person: otherwise he finds only an incomplete or fanatic
or distorted truth. To avoid the first he must supply what is lacking. To remedy
the second he must withdraw into equipoise. To correct the third he must get
knowledge from a reliable source, be it man or book.
351
Pericles claimed, in the Funeral Oration, that
Athens had found a golden mean, a sober balance, in its institutions. And in
golden letters was inscribed on the temple at Delphi: "Nothing too much. The
modest Mean is best." Although the dictionary defines the Mean as "midway
between extremes" and although a good principle may defeat its own purpose if
carried too far, the philosophic Mean is only sometimes the midpoint; at other
times it is not. For where there is a deficiency on one side, or an
over-emphasis on the other, it may be necessary to move the point nearer or
farther, according to the situation.
352
It is an error to believe that finding a balance
between two extremes, Confucius' Golden Mean, is another form of compromising
with truth. Rather is it giving both units in the inescapable pairs of opposites
which constitute life, universe, and being, their proper due as determined by
the particular circumstances and time. The result is an interweaving of the two
rather than a forced unnatural division of them. But their proportions will
naturally vary in each case, in every situation, and not at all necessarily be
equal.
353
The proportion of development needed by each
part of his being will differ with every individual. Only a correct ratio will
lead to a correct balance of all the parts.
354
The philosopher seeks to make a balance between
the inner and outer life. But it would be a mistake to believe this means
fifty-fifty measure. Each individual must find his own measure.
355
Philosophic balance is not to be defined as the
middle point between two extremes, nor as the compromise of them. It is
determined on a higher level altogether, since it is determined and regulated by
the intuition.
356
Aristotle used the word "proportionate" when
advocating correct balance (his doctrine of the mean), by which he made clear
that balance is "relative to us": it is a variable depending on each individual.
357
Such balancing does not mean an equal measure of
each element; it means the necessary and sufficient measure.
358
What is often overlooked is that the middle way,
the point between extremes, varies in position with each person. It is not the
same for all.
359
Balance does not mean achieving equality between
pulls from different forces or between the activities of different faculties.
360
This is not to be mistaken for the static
balance of a lower level, of a neutral, middle-ground position. It is a dynamic
balance.
361
Balance is not reached by choosing a point
half-way between two opposite conditions, but by choosing one that is just
right, that accords to each condition just what the individual particularly
needs for his well-being and development.
362
To the question "What is the relative importance
of the constituents of the threefold path?" there can be no stereotyped answer.
Each man will find that one to be most important to him which he most lacks.
Whoever, for example, has practised little meditation in the past will probably
feel within himself - and feel rightly - that meditation is the most important
member of the tribe. But this will be true only for himself and not necessarily
for others. The improvement of concentration and the tranquillization of a
troubled mind are essential. He must have experience in yoga before he can have
expertness in philosophy, but if he wants to overdo it, if he becomes
excessively preoccupied with this single facet of life, then he is to that
extent unbalanced. The aim must always be to bring each element not only to
maturity, but also into balance with the other elements. Whatever is needful to
achieve these aims becomes important to an individual. He must not let one
member of the self walk too far ahead of the others without stepping back to
bring them up too. He must tread a middle path and keep away from extremes.
The philosopher cannot afford to take only a selfish or sectional view; he must take a balanced all-embracing one, if only because he knows that his duty towards truth calls for it. This is why the man who has no philosophic aim in life cannot achieve balance in life.
363
Balance cannot be reached if completeness has
not previously been reached.
364
The balanced life must be a balance of fullness,
not emptiness. The aspirant's day should contain earnest self-humbling prayer
and warm heartfelt devotion as well as calm contemplation and studious
reflection. The one should express the tearful anguish of unsatisfied
aspirations as the other should express the determined exercise of a mind intent
upon truth and reality.
365
All the different sides of his nature have to
find their equilibrium in this ultimate condition. Every part of him has to
finish its growth before that can fully happen.
366
Not only is he to integrate all his human
functions but he is also to do this on the highest level of their development.
Nor is he to stop there. He must equilibrate as well as integrate.
367
The inner equilibrium which, the Gita
says, is yoga's goal is not only a state of even-mindedness but also a state of
equalized development. It is a delicate state and cannot be retained if the yogi
is deficient in certain sides of his being.
368
As we traverse different ranges of experience so
we acquire different qualities, capacities, perceptions, and ideas, which all
contribute toward the ultimate end of balance, of perfecting our character and
developing our mentality.
369
It is a paradoxical demand: that we enrich our
individuality at the same time that we purify it.
370
The student's task does not end and cannot end
with metaphysical study alone, nor with ultra-mystical contemplation alone.
Action is also needed. Indeed, the illumination thus gained will of itself
eventually compel him to add this factor spontaneously by an inward compulsion,
if he has not already begun to do so by an external instruction. This is true of
all the qualifications which philosophy demands of the aspirant: mystical
feeling, metaphysical thinking, and altruistic action. Each of the trio, when a
certain ripe degree of its own development has been reached, will spontaneously
impel him to seek after whichever of the others he has neglected. For himself
this means that he can claim to understand a truth when he feels and knows it so
profoundly and acts up to it so faithfully that it has become a part of himself
- not before. There is then not merely understanding alone, not merely mystic
experience alone, but also a transformation of contemplation into action. Life
thereafter is not merely thought out in the truest way but also lived out in the
loftiest way.
371
With knowledge, wisdom, and understanding
developing in him along with devotion, aspiration, and reverence, and with the
two trends culminating in appropriate action, his quest will be properly
balanced, sane, and productive.
372
It is better, less hazardous, and more
gratifying to unfold the spiritual side of the psyche's different parts
simultaneously rather than successively.
373
No balance other than an illusory one can be
established in the individual if development has not been completed in the
individual.
374
The balance will establish itself automatically
when these elements are fully developed and these qualities are brought together
in our own consciousness.
375
The ideal is not to achieve this inner balance
with scanty materials but to achieve it with the amplest ones.
376
A proper balance between two needs must be found
by satisfying both, not by only partially satisfying each of them.
377
Only a great nature can take a great
illumination and not become unbalanced by it. That is why the full cultivation,
all-around development, and healthy equilibrium of the man is required in
Philosophy.
378
It seeks to give him a personality which is
richly developed and not ascetically starved, which is sensibly balanced and not
fantastically lopsided.
379
To hold the balance between these various
faculties, and not to exaggerate one at the cost of the others, is as difficult
as it is desirable.
380
The admirable balance of Chinese temperament
enabled it, until unsettled by the recent madness, to admire individuality,
originality, and at the same time to respect past genius and the achievement of
tradition.
381
The lines of evolution will not be fully worked
out by a partial entry into truth. Man must bring the full measure of his
wholeness into it. In this way he will not only completely realize himself as a
spiritual entity, but will also achieve harmony and balance within the
realization itself. Nothing less will satisfy his profoundest needs.
382
Philosophy seeks harmony. It brings thinking and
feeling not only into a working relationship with each other, but also into one
that helps, corrects, and completes the duty of the other.
383
It is of great importance to develop balance,
reason, and emotional awareness simultaneously. Exercises should include
intellectual analysis of oneself and one's experiences, increased efforts in
self-control and outward expression, and an intensified attitude of love and
loyalty.
384
He may keep out the ego's interference and yet
not reach the pure truth because he cannot keep out his evolutionary
insufficiency.
385
Those who talk or write truth, but do not live
it because they cannot, have glimpsed its meaning but not realized its power.
They have not the dynamic balance which follows when the will is raised to the
level of the intellect and the feelings. It is this balance which spontaneously
ignites mystic forces within us, and produces the state called "born again."
This is the second birth, which takes place in our consciousness as our first
took place in our flesh.(P)
386
The danger of a lopsided character is seen when
humility reverence and piety are largely absent whilst criticism logicality and
realism are largely present. The intellect then becomes imperiously proud,
arrogantly self-assured, and harshly intolerant. The consequence is that its
power to glean subtler truths rather than merely external data is largely
lost.(P)
387
The student must hold the picture of his
personal life as a whole. He must not see it only as it is at some particular
moment or period. If he can succeed in doing this, he will also succeed in
banishing the constant oscillation between over-depression on one side and
over-elation on the other, between being subjugated by the pain of today and by
the pleasure of tomorrow. He will have attained peace.
388
So long as he is living exclusively in one side
of his being, so long as there is no balance in him, what else can his view of
life be but an unbalanced one? Nor will the coming of illumination completely
set right and restore his balance. It will certainly initiate a movement which
will ultimately do this, but the interval between its initiation and its
consummation may be a whole lifetime.
389
The preliminary requisites to a lasting
illumination are development and balance. If part of his nature is still
undeveloped in relation to the finished goal and if all parts are off balance in
relation to one another, the illumination will go soon after it comes. This
balance of mind and life are essential.
390
If he does not understand that balance between
inner being and outer nature must be sought and found, he may find that
meditation or even abstract reflection may leave him inapt for the ordinary
affairs of men who have to live in activities of earning their livelihood or who
have to discharge their responsibilities to self, family, and community.
391
Without balance in the recipient there can be no
proper transmission or perfect reception of truth. The different parts of his
being will absorb and, in consequence, express it unequally. But, granted that
the development of these parts is sufficient, where equilibrium is accomplished,
there will be the best conditions for the experience of enlightenment to be
really what it should be.
392
The separatist spirit which would erect the
pediment of truth on the single pillar of yoga alone or of metaphysics alone
ends always in failure or, worse, in disaster. When each sphere of activity
whose integral union is needed for the successful completion of the structure
asserts its self-sufficiency, it begins to suffer what in the individual human
being is called an enlarged ego. The student of metaphysics who despises
mysticism and the student of mysticism who despises metaphysics will pay the
penalty of neurosis for this unhealthy and unbalanced state of his mental life.
393
Without this balance of character he may lose
his wisdom while engaged in the very enterprise of desperately seeking to
improve it!
394
Those who, like Krishnamurti, will recognize
none but the highest level and have no use even for the steps leading up to it
become extremists and fanatics.
395
He who has heavily overbalanced his psyche,
whose capacity for critical thinking has been gorged with food while his
capacity for reverential worship has been starved to death, is to be pitied. For
the unhealthier his condition becomes, the healthier he actually believes
himself to be!
396
When a particular part of a man's being is
thrown out of balance, it is not only that part which is affected but the whole
man himself.
397
The value of achieving this delicate balance of
faith and reason, of fact and imagination, is shown by what happens to those
who, lacking it, put all their trust in predictions and make hopes for the
future depend wholly on them. They find themselves betrayed.
398
If his whole approach to truth is lopsided, his
discovery of truth will be disfigured.
399
When a single aspect of truth is allowed to
obscure or cover, displace or swallow all the other aspects of it, then its
balance - one of the most precious of its features - is lost.
400
An attitude of studied indifference to the
lesser matters of life simply because one takes the philosophic goal as being of
high importance may lead to serious neglect of practical affairs and everyday
living. The results could well be deplorable. Such an attitude is not acceptable
philosophically.
401
Whoever reaches this point and fails to
establish a good equilibrium between heaven and earth, will have to hang
suspended between them, no longer on earth but not at all near heaven.
402
Small minds or narrow ones give no validity or
little importance to any side of life or culture which does not interest them.
Thus they unbalance themselves.
403
Even though he may see the need of correcting
his imbalance, he may not be able to see how to achieve it. For the full and
correct recognition of his deficiencies may need outside help.
404
Too little intuiting and too much
intellectualizing create an unsymmetrical personality. Too little thinking and
too much feeling provide a dis-equilibrated equipment for truth-seeking. In both
cases, the man finds half-truths, one-sided truths, but not the grand, great
truth.
405
Unbalance leads to unsound judgements and
extremist decisions.
406
Whoever gets too much taken up with a single
aspect of a subject is liable to exaggerate its importance and upset his balance
of mind about it.
407
With an improper balance of these sides of his
being, the result of his efforts to communicate his revelation may be another of
those inspired insanities which make mystical literature an object of severe
criticism.
408
Only by accepting the existence of "the pairs of
opposites" in all phases of life, and hence in his spiritual life too, and by
establishing this connection in his thoughts, can he develop spiritually in a
healthy safe and successful way.
409
When we attain balance, it forces us to note the
presence of interconnected opposites in every case. It is only the unbalanced
who ignore, deny, neglect, or seek to escape from one or another of these
opposites. Proper consideration will try to bring them together, accepting the
tension between them as a necessary part of truth about the subject, the person,
the situation, or the event.
410
The balance needed by faith is understanding; by
peacefulness, energy; by intuition, reason; by feeling, intellect; by
aspiration, humility; and by zeal, discretion.(P)
411
Neither the Buddhistic emphasis on suffering nor
the hedonistic emphasis on joy is proper to a truly philosophical outlook. Both
have to be understood and accepted, since life compels us to experience both.(P)
412
Inner balance is not established by setting two
polar opposites against each other, as miserliness against extravagance, but by
combining two necessary qualities together such as bravery with caution.(P)
413
Man must seek and find the feminine side of his
dual nature; woman must seek and find the masculine. In this way a balanced
relation will be established, although the physical body will naturally
establish the dominant side.
414
By bringing into a fusion the masculine and
feminine temperaments within himself, he also fuses knowledge and feeling,
wisdom and reverence.
415
One of the first requisites is to cultivate a
sense of balance, a healthy poise between thinking and doing, believing and
doubting, feeling and reasoning, between the ideal and the actual.
416
When these two - the positive and negative
currents - come together, the electric lamp lights up of its own accord. When
these two - intellect and feeling - are properly coordinated, and the character
is both properly developed and purified, the Overself in a person begins to
shine of its own accord.
417
Let him remember that there are dangers in both
optimism and pessimism, that the proper course is to try to see things just as
they are, and that nothing in life is all black-shadowed or all rosy-hued.
418
If we seek to become philosophical it is not at
all necessary to lose practicality and ignore actuality. We ought to become
sufficiently equilibrated to create conditions, make things, and devise
arrangements which are visible here and serviceable now. This
should not stop us from mentally training ourselves to follow abstract ideas or
metaphysical systems by which lofty levels are attained.
419
The practical wisdom of keeping anchored to
earth must balance the spiritual wisdom of seeking flights above it.
420
The idealist should listen to the more
responsible cautious voice of practical experience, just as the practical man
should take some of the risks of idealism.
421
An independent research will necessarily be a
critical one, but the criticism must be balanced by sympathy or it will fail in
doing justice and judging accurately.
422
It is not enough for anyone to be a success in
integrity if he is a failure in judgement.
423
Here faith and knowledge counterbalance one
another, here a solid practicality in dealing with the world is redeemed by a
noble morality, here the secrets of meditation are made lucid while the
questions of intellect are satisfied.
424
Why must he oppose the pleasurable feelings of
the body to the pleasurable feelings of the mind, as if they must always be
enemies? Is it not saner to reconcile them in happy combination, to balance them
in reasonable proportion, to establish a Chinese "golden mean" between them?
425
Such a balance requires warmth in the heart as
well as coolness in the head.
426
Reason must walk side by side with emotion,
science with mysticism, compassion with self-interest, action with thought. This
balanced life and no other is the truly philosophic one.
427
Thinking and feeling must first balance one
another and then only may they, and should they, blend with one another.
428
They have a mutual service to render. Devotion
should guide reason and reason should guide devotion.
429
Thus reason and emotion no longer wrestle with
each other and no longer oppose one another as antinomies, but find abruptly a
point of common fulfilment.
430
Such is the all-round development of the human
psyche offered by philosophy. It balances mystical intuiting by logical
thinking, religious belief by critical reflection, idealistic devotion by
practical service.
431
The Balance required preceding enlightenment is
not only between intellect and emotion, thought and will, but also and mainly
between the lower and the higher wills, between ego's desires and Overself's
self-contentment.
432
When the two wills, higher and lower, are
brought into balance and perpetually held there, he has secured the necessary
conditions for enlightenment.
433
Our need is to achieve a balance between these
two demands of human nature, between useful activity and mental serenity.
434
He who wants society all the time is as
unbalanced as he who wants solitude all the time.
435
He has to become expert in keeping both feet
firmly on hard ground while keeping his head in this lofty pure atmosphere. This
is what sound balance means.
436
He who has gone deeply into himself without
abandoning his hold on external reality has kept the balance of his mind.
437
The need today is for harmonious balance between
the inner and the outer being, between divine spirit and earthly body, so that
the one faithfully reflects the other.
438
When he establishes an equilibrium between the
two poles of life, his inner experience fits into the outer, operates with it,
and does not contradict it.
439
This is the strength of philosophy, that if it
is analytical or critical on one side, it is synthetical or reconciliatory on
the other; if it is occupied with the highest possible metaphysical flights, it
is grounded on the most solid scientific facts and attentive to the most
practical of details; if intellect and feeling are in it, so are intuition and
inspiration.
440
A proper balance has no room either for stubborn
conservatism or for uncurbed iconoclasm - although, if circumstances are
extreme, it may use the one to offset the other.
441
He who can unite self-effort with dependence on
grace in a constant balance is able to gain peace. The key to success lies in
maintaining balance.
442
Just as in practical life we harmonize and
balance two opposing facts to arrive at adequate decisions, as, for instance,
between the need of prudence and the need of enterprise, so too in spiritual
life it is essential to reconcile apparent incompatibles.
443
Imaginative vision is to be checked by respect
for facts, balanced by meticulous reasoning.
444
When the wisdom of experience is married to the
drive of youth, tempering it but not paralysing it; when dreams are fulfilled in
actions and ideals are reflected in emotions; when intuition reigns over
intellect and guides will, man has achieved a worthy balance.
445
The active side of his personality must be
properly balanced by the passive side.
446
When they are at the point of just ripening into
middle age, the two opposing forces in man or in the universe achieve perfect
balance of their polarities.
447
We need this state balanced between mere faith
and prudent scrutiny.
448
What philosophy seeks - and what most "systems"
do not - is an all-around understanding and development, and an equilibrium
between the body and the higher individuality.
449
External activity may be likened to life at the
circumference of a wheel; internal meditation may be likened to life at the
centre of the wheel.
450
Stillness at the Centre, activity on the
circumference - this is equilibrium that is set by Nature (God) as the human
ideal.
451
We find that even so serene and enlightened a
mind as Emerson's was liable to fall into error like any other mystic's, except
that since his mind was unusually perspicuous and intelligent - bordering on the
philosophic - this liability was much smaller with him. He suffered from an
excess of optimism, which to that extent threw him out of balance at times. A
single yet striking instance occurs in his Lecture on War. "Trade, as all
men know, is the antagonist of war," he said. Yet it was the greed to secure a
larger share of the world's growing trade which led in the last hundred and
fifty years to several wars. "History is the record of the mitigation and
decline of war," he continued. How little its horror has been mitigated since
Emerson delivered that sentence in the year 1853, the slain civilian victims of
mass air-raids (30,000 in Rotterdam alone) silently inform us. "The art of war,
what with gunpowder and tactics, has made battles less murderous," he concluded.
The enormous destructiveness of modern weapons, and especially the fiendish
murderousness of atom bombs, flatly and fully contradict this statement. How
could so honest a thinker, so lovable a man as Emerson fail so grievously in
judgement? It was because his balance was not adequately and correctly
established.
452
What we have to do is to take only so much of
each important factor in life as is really necessary for a balanced life. We
must beware of taking too little or too much. Thus a man may have dinner every
day but should not live solely for the eating of dinners. So he may practise
mysticism but need not make it the sole element of his existence. He should live
not for mysticism alone but for the whole of life itself. He may be a practising
mystic but should not stop with that.
453
If allowed to absorb too much of his attention,
the fascination which mystical teachings and meditation have for the student
will render it very difficult for him to cope with the struggles of commonplace
existence. If this happens, he should deliberately drop his study of abstract
teachings, together with meditation exercises, and concentrate all of his
attention on personal matters - at least until he regains balance.
454
He who shuts himself up within the narrow
confines of religion alone, or mysticism alone, or metaphysics alone, shuts
himself off from the great stream of Life. The way must embrace many apparently
antithetical things yet it is really one. Hence the wise man will first evoke
within the self those diverse elements which are next to be coordinated into the
rounded entirety of a splendid harmony. Hence too it is foolishness for the
imprudent mystic to abandon his critical faculties on the threshold of his quest
and to scorn the guidance of reasoned knowledge; he wanders haphazard along a
path not without its dangers for it skirts at times the very edge of the
precipices of madness, delirium, deception, and error. For such scientific and
metaphysical knowledge acts as both pilot for the journey and check against its
dangers. Without it a man gropes alone and blindfolded through the
world-darkness. He does not know the proper meaning, place, and purpose of his
multiform experiences. He does not understand that the ecstasies, the visions,
and the devotions which have consumed his heart must later give place to the
calm, formless, and abstract insight of philosophy. And it was because
Ramakrishna was divinely led, in the deepest sense of the term, that he
eventually accepted this fact and submitted to the philosophical initiation at
the hands of Tota Puri and thus set out to make the ascent from being a
visionary to becoming a sage. The lesson of this is that man, like all else,
must be viewed in his entirety. Perhaps Hegel's greatest contribution was his
discovery of the Dialectical Principle. For it showed the imperative need of
surveying all around a matter and of understanding it in the fullness of
its entire being rather than in the narrowness of a single facet. Ignorance of
this important principle is one of the several factors responsible for the birth
of fanatical fads, crankish cults, and futile revolutions. In the application of
this principle, reason rises to its highest.
455
Wisdom lies in looking into and recognizing the
proper limits of both metaphysics and yoga and coordinating them harmoniously.
Each is essential and admirable within certain limits; each becomes a dangerous
drug beyond them, for then its strength becomes a weakness. We must welcome it
so long as it remains where it belongs; we must judge it harshly as soon as it
usurps another's place.
456
To obtain a balanced result it is necessary to
make a balanced approach and not to rely on a single kind of effort only. The
moral character must become involved in the quest of upliftment; the
intellectual faculty must work at the study, as well as reflect upon the lessons
of, life itself; the intuition must be unfolded by persistent daily practice of
meditation; and the everyday practical life must try to express the ideals
learned.