1
Philosophy clears away all the unnecessary mystery
from mysticism, while preserving a proper attitude of awe and reverence to
whatever is worthy of it.
2
Whereas not a few mystics in the past have been
gullible votaries of superstition also, philosophical mystics seek to be
entirely free of it. They want their mysticism to be worthy of a rational man.
3
The difference between the two is that one is
partially inspired whereas the other is fully inspired.
4
It is not enough to measure the grade of a mystic by
his emotional feelings. We must also concern ourselves with his egolessness, his
intellectual expression, his aesthetic sensitivity, and his effective
practicality. These things make up the difference between an infantile mysticism
and a philosophical mysticism.
5
There is this important difference of approach
between the would-be mystic and the would-be philosopher. The first is often
actuated by emotional conflicts or frustrations for which he seeks some kind of
compensation. The second is motivated by a deep love of truth for its own sake.
6
There is much more under judgement here than a
merely verbal distinction. The matter is not so simple but far more complex than
it seems. For philosophical mysticism introduces some new principles into
mysticism which make a profound difference in results and values.
7
Whereas mysticism alone acquaints a man with his
true Self, philosophical mysticism does this and also acquaints him with his
connection with universal life. It not only tells him of the great laws of
evolution and compensation, but also affiliates him with the great soul of the
world.
8
All yoga and mystic methods, as well as certain
religious practices, although of the highest value as preliminary disciplines,
are not the ultimate ends in themselves. If one has sufficient sharpness of mind
- that is, sustained concentration on abstract themes - and sufficient freedom
from any kind of egoistic preconception whatever, one can instantly grasp the
truth and realize it. But who has that? Hence, these various methods of
developing ourselves, these yogas, have been prescribed to assist us. Their
practice takes a long time, it is true, but the actual realization is a matter
of a moment. Nor can it ever be lost again, as can the feeling-ecstasies of the
mystics. All these doctrines have their place for people of different degrees of
understanding, and it is our duty not to destroy the faith of those who cling to
them. But for those who want the highest Truth, and who are prepared to part
with their illusions for its sake, there is only "the straight and narrow way,
and few there be that find it." It is narrow only because the ego must be left
outside the gate; it is straight because it goes direct to the final truth.
9
The mystic may get his union with the higher self as
the reward for his reverent devotion to it. But its light will shine down only
into those parts of his being which were themselves active in the search for
union. Although the union may be a permanent one, its consummation may still be
only a partial one. If his intellect, for example, was inactive before the
event, it will be unillumined after the event. This is why many mystics have
attained their goal without a search for truth before it or a full knowledge of
truth after it. The simple love for spiritual being brought them to it through
their sheer intensity of ardour earning the divine Grace. He only gets the
complete light, however, who is completely fitted for it with the whole of his
being. If he is only partially fit, because only a part of his psyche has worked
for the goal, then the utmost result will be a partial but permanent union with
the soul, or else it will be marred by the inability to keep the union for
longer than temporary periods.
10
The philosophic mystic seeks to rise from what is
sense-tied to what is sense-free, from the appearance of reality to the pure
reality itself. The perceptual symbols and optical phenomena which are so often
labelled "mystical" are, therefore, a degree less sensuous to him than their
physical counterparts. They are helps at first on the upward way, but they
become hindrances in the end. To live permanently in the midst of a psychic
mirage, however pleasant or dazzling it seems at the time, is not going to help
his true advancement in this path. He should be warned by their appearance not
to dally too long with them, but to pass them by unheeded and seek the true
insight ahead. This rule is pushed to such an extent in the highest mystical
circles of Tibet that the lama-student who has emerged from his novitiate is
even warned against accepting as the goal the visions of an enveloping universal
light - which is the supreme clairvoyant vision possible for man - and told that
this is merely a test of his fixed purpose and a trap for his metaphysical
knowledge. He is warned that they will pass as they come. They are useful as
steps to the Truth, but they are not the permanent realization of
truth itself. Those who are babes just emerging from the wood of ignorance may
see the mystic light in a temporary clairvoyant vision, but those who are
grown adults will know it always as the principle of pure consciousness
which makes all vision, whether clairvoyant or physiological, possible. The
divine reality being the ultimate and undisclosed basis of all existences, if we
externalize it in spectacular visions and phenomenal experiences, we miss its
pure being and mix it up with mere appearance. Thus the very experiences which
are considered signs of favourable progress in meditation on the mystic's path
become signs of hindrance on the philosopher's path.
11
Another difference between a Philosopher and a
Mystic is the following: the Mystic may be illiterate, uneducated,
simple-minded, but yet may attain the Overself. Thus he finds his Inner Peace.
It is easier for him because he is less intellectual, hence has fewer thoughts
to give up and to still. But Nature does not absolve him from finishing his
further development. He has still to complete his horizontal growth as well as
balance it. He has obtained depth of illumination but not breadth of experience
where the undeveloped state of faculties which prevents his light from being
perfect may be fully developed. This can happen either by returning to earth
again or continuing in other spheres of existence; he does all this inside
his peace instead of, as with ordinary man, outside it. When his growth is
complete, he becomes a philosopher.
12
He who has attained illumination, but not
philosophic illumination, must come back to earth for further improvement of
those faculties whose undeveloped state prevents the light from being perfect.
13
The need of predetermining at the beginning of the
path whether to be a philosopher or a mystic arises only for the particular
reincarnation where attainment is made. Thereafter, whether on this earth or
another, the need of fulfilling the philosophic evolution will be impressed on
him by Nature.
14
It will be noticed that some of the meditation
exercises given in The Wisdom of the Overself concern the re-education of
character and involve the use of mental images and logical thoughts. The aim of
ordinary yoga being to suppress such images and thoughts, it is clear that the
philosophic yoga does not limit itself to such aims. It certainly includes and
uses them when and where necessary, as in some of the other exercises, but it
does not make them its ultimate ones. On the other hand, the images and thoughts
which it uses are not quite the ordinary kind. Brought into being within the
atmosphere of detached contemplation or intense concentration as they are,
inspired at certain moments by the light and power of the Overself and directed
towards the purest impersonal goal as they should be, they do not interfere with
the philosophic student's quest, but, on the contrary, actually advance it
further.
15
Whatever creative abilities he possesses will, in
the end, be vivified and not nullified by the effects of philosophic experience.
This is not always the case with mystical experience. Here is another important
difference between the two.
16
"Mystical philosophy" is a better term than
"philosophical mysticism."
17
Philosophy constructively trains the mystic in
securing a correct transmission of his supernormal experience through his normal
mentality.
18
The relativity of all man's earthly experience is
a limitation which is carried into the realm of his mystical experience too. But
here he has the advantage that he may escape from it under certain conditions.
The demand for an absolute authoritative and unvarying spiritual truth can then
be satisfied.
19
The fantasies which are often produced by
beginners as the valued fruits of their meditation will be regarded with
repugnance when they have shifted their standpoint to a higher plane. When they
follow the philosophic discipline, visions and messages which are the result of
an intoxicated imagination or luxuriant fancy will then no longer be able to
impose upon them and pretend to be other than what they really are. The
temptation to implant our egoistic motives and to project our human feelings
into the interpretations of these phenomena is so strong that only the curb of
such a discipline can save us. All the psychic experiences are the ephemeral and
accidental by-products of the mystical path, not abiding and essential results.
They are signs of a passage through the imaginative part of the inner being.
When students are so fortunate as to enter the truest deepest part of being,
such experiences will vanish forever or for a time. Hence they are not to be
regarded as worthwhile in themselves. The philosopher like the mystic may and
often does see visions, but unlike him he also sees through them. He possesses
true vision and does not merely experience a vision. But it takes time and
experience to separate what elements are essential and what are merely
incidental, what is enduring from what is transient, and the interpretation
built up out of the original experiences from the experience itself.
20
No mystic experience is continuous and permanent.
All mystic experiences come to man in broken fragments. It is therefore the task
of philosophy to turn them into a coherent and systematic correlation with the
rest of man's experience. And it can do this successfully only by examining
mysticism with as much criticism as sympathy; it should neither take
trance-reports at their face value nor dismiss them as being of less importance
than ordinary sense reports.
21
What has come so accidentally may likewise depart
accidentally. What he has stumbled into he may also stumble out of. Therefore
the philosophic mystic tries to remove as much of the unconsciousness of the
whole process as he can by making use of the intelligence to complete it even
as, paradoxically, he begs for Grace at the same time and for the same purpose.
22
Were the glorious realization of the Overself
devoid of any feeling, then the realization itself would be a palpable
absurdity. It would not be worth having. The grand insight into reality is
certainly not stripped of fervent delight and is surely not an arid intellectual
concept. It is rightly saturated with exalted emotion but it is not this emotion
alone. The beatific feeling of what is real is quite compatible with precise
knowledge of what is real; there is no contradiction between them. Indeed they
must coexist. Nay, there is a point on the philosophic path where they even run
into each other. Such a point marks the beginning of a stable wisdom which will
not be the victim of merciless alternation between the ebb and the flow of a
rapturous emotionalism but will know that it dwells in timelessness here and
now; therefore it will not be subject to such fluctuations of mood. Better than
the exuberant upsurges and emotional depressions of the mystical temperament is
the mental evenness which is without rise or fall and which should be the aim of
the far-seeing students. The fitful flashes of enlightenment pertaining to the
mystic stage are replaced by a steady light only when the philosophic stage is
reached and passed through. The philosophic aim is to overcome the difference
between sporadic intuitions and steady knowledge, between spasmodic ecstasies
and controlled perception, and thus achieve a permanent state of enlightenment,
abiding unshakeably and at all times in the Overself.
23
To view the inferior mystical experiences or the
ratiocinative metaphysical findings otherwise than as passing phases, to set
them up as finally representative of reality in the one case or of truth in the
other, is to place them on a level to which they do not properly belong. Those
who fall into the second error do so because they ascribe excessive importance
to the thinking faculty. The mystic is too attached to one faculty, as the
metaphysician is to the other, and neither can conduct a human being beyond the
bounds of his enchained ego to that region where Being alone reigns. It is not
that the mystic does not enter into contact with the Overself. He does. But his
experience of the Overself is limited to glimpses which are partial, because he
finds the Overself only within himself, not in the world outside. It is
temporary because he has to take it when it comes at its own sweet will or when
he can find it in meditation. It is a glimpse because it tells him about his own
"I" but not about the "Not-I." On the other hand, the sage finds reality in the
world without as his own self, at all times and not at special occasions, and
wholly rather than in glimpses. The mystic's light comes in glimpses, but the
sage's is perennial. Whereas the first is like a flickering unsteady and uneven
flame, the second is like a lamp that never goes out. Whereas the mystic comes
into awareness of the Overself through feeling alone, the sage comes into it
through knowledge plus feeling. Hence, the superiority of his realization.
The average mystic is devoid of sufficient critical sense. He delights in preventing his intellect from being active in such a definite direction. He has yet to learn that philosophical discipline has a steadying influence on the vagaries of mystical emotion, opinion, fancy, and experience. He refuses to judge the goal he has set up as to whether it be indeed man's ultimate goal. Consequently he is unable to apply correct standards whereby his own achievements or his own aspirations may be measured. Having shut himself up in a little heaven of his own, he does not attempt to distinguish it from other heavens or to discover if it be heaven indeed. He clings as stubbornly to his self-righteousness as does the religionist whom he criticizes for clinging to his dogma. He does not comprehend that he has transferred to himself that narrowness of outlook which he condemns in the materialistic. His position would be preposterous were it not so perilous.
Mysticism must not rest so smugly satisfied with its own obscurity that it refuses even to make the effort to come out into the light of critical self-examination, clear self-determination, and rational self-understanding. To complain helplessly that it cannot explain itself, to sit admiringly before its own self-proclaimed impalpability, or to stand aristocratically in the rarefied air of its own indefinability - as it usually does - is to fall into a kind of subtle quackery. Magnificent eulogy is no substitute for needed explanation.(P)
24
The crucial point of our criticism must not be
missed. Our words are directed against the belief which equates the criterion of
truth with the unchecked and unpurified feeling of it - however mystical it be.
We do not demand that feeling itself shall be ignored, or that its contribution
- which is most important - toward truth shall be despised. Our criticism is not
directed against emotion, but against that unbalanced attitude which sets up
emotion almost as a religion in itself. We ask only that the reaction of
personal feeling shall not be set up as the sole and sufficient standard
of what is or is not reality and truth. When we speak of the unsatisfactory
validity of feeling as providing sufficient proof by itself of having
experienced the Overself, we mean primarily, of course, the kind of passionate
feeling which throws the mystic into transports of joy, and secondarily, any
strong emotion which sweeps him off his feet into refusal to analyse his
experience coldly and scientifically. Three points may be here noted. First,
mere feeling alone may easily be egoistic and distort the truth or be inflamed
and exaggerate it or put forward a wanted fancy in place of an unwanted fact.
Second, there is here no means of attaining certainty. Its validity, being only
personal, is only as acceptable as are the offerings of poets and artists who
can also talk in terms of psychological, but not metaphysical, reality. For
instance, the mystic may gaze at and see what he thinks to be reality,
but someone else may not think it to be so. Third, the path of the philosophical
objection to appraising feeling alone as a criterion of truth and of our
insistence on checking its intimations with critical reasoning may be put in the
briefest way by an analogy. We feel that the earth is stable and
motionless, but we know that it traces a curve of movement in space. We
feel that it is fixed in the firmament, but we know that the whole
heliocentric system has its own motion in space. The reader should ponder upon
the implications of these facts. Are not the annals of mysticism stained by many
instances of megalomaniacs who falsely set themselves up as messiahs merely
because they felt that God had commissioned them to do so? This is why
the philosopher is concerned not only with the emotional effects of inner
experience, as is the mystic, but also with the truth about these
effects.(P)
25
I have not swung overnight into the criticism of
yoga but rather have gradually matured into criticism of wrong weighings on the
scale of yoga. Yoga is as profoundly necessary to my own life as before. Only I
want it at its very best and do not want to mistake its intermediate stage for
its final one.
26
I realize that this explanation alters the
statement in The Quest of the Overself materially and I must explain that
that book was written, like most of my earlier books, for those who have not yet
reached the level of philosophy but are seeking peace through mysticism. The
quest of truth is another and higher matter for which mysticism and yoga are
preparatory stages.
27
"By whatever form a man worships Me, in that form
I reveal Myself to him," is the gist of a statement made by Krishna in the
Bhagavad Gita. This is his way of saying what philosophy teaches, that
the idea of God which a Man holds is not necessarily altered when he has a
Glimpse or feels an inspiration, since these occur on the mystical level. Only
philosophic enlightenment gives the double experience of raising man to the
higher consciousness and correcting his intellectual idea of God at the same
time.
28
The mystically inclined who glory in their
anti-rationality and impracticality may play the part of intellectual babes and
worldly boobs if they wish to do so. But the philosophically inclined, realizing
that they live in an era where the evil forces against which they must struggle
have reached unparalleled intensity and revealed the most diabolic cunning,
realize that they cannot afford such a luxury. They will consequently foster all
the practical shrewdness, the critical intelligence, observance, and alertness
they can summon up.
29
What they do not perceive is that inward
contemplation is only a technique, not an end in itself. The proper end of
contemplation is the attainment of a higher consciousness. That consciousness is
not, as they erroneously suppose, incommensurable with outward activity. But
contemplation, as a practical exercise, certainly is. Here, then, is where they
confuse a method with the goal of that method. It is perfectly possible to
sustain both the higher consciousness and physical and intellectual activity at
the same time. The latter need not necessarily imperil the former. Mystics who
complain that it does do so are really complaining that it imperils the formal
practice of contemplation - which is a different matter.
30
There are many who say that this attempt to unite
contemplation with activity is a self-contradictory one and foredoomed to
failure. Answer: with the narrow preparation of ordinary religious mysticism, it
certainly seems an impossible feat; but with the fuller preparation of
philosophic mysticism, it is a balance that can be learned in the same way that
a skilful tightrope walker learns his art, even though it seems just as
impossible at first.
31
Because the over-eager quest of mystical
experiences has been criticized in these books, it would be a mistake to believe
that the philosopher never has them because he has outgrown them. He may have
them. Their appearance is not improper and it is unlikely that anyone who
consistently meditates will not have a few or many. But whether he has them or
not, he is inwardly detached from them - free of them.
32
It is a great advance for him when he begins
really to seek truth instead of personal bliss alone, however mystical that may
be. Indeed, where there is true knowledge there is bliss, but Truth is not
limited to it. It is far wider than that.
33
In the Buddhist's deeper meditational training -
minutely described in the Abhidhamma collected and recorded by the
Buddha's disciples - it is noteworthy that ecstasies first, and bliss next,
cease about halfway along the path, to be succeeded by intense inner quiet for
the advanced and terminal stages. Yet the texts on yoga which go beyond this
halfway stage are few, and are studied by few. For it is at this point that
mysticism ends, and real philosophy begins.
34
Texts might prove misleading if studied alone;
they must be personally expounded by a competent teacher. Moreover, if but two
books, for instance, out of thirty, were taken alone they would give a one-sided
and inaccurate picture. But the book by Sri Krishna Prem, Yoga of the
Bhagavad Gita, can be quite helpful. The aim of The Hidden Teaching
Beyond Yoga is to prepare a basis, to create an atmosphere, but it does not
go farther than that. There is a lower mysticism and a higher mysticism and the
two are separated in time by the philosophic discipline. Nothing of the higher
mysticism has been revealed in The Hidden Teaching Beyond Yoga. That is
given in The Wisdom of the Overself together with several practices or
exercises which develop the supramystic insight hinted at as being the final
source of knowledge. Neither mysticism as ordinarily known - that is, the lower
mysticism and yoga - nor philosophy of a purely intellectual-rational kind can
ever lead to this goal. Nevertheless they are essential stages on the way
thereto. One must not make the mistake either of discarding meditation (as
recommended by Ashtavakra) and resorting only to ratiocination, or of despising
ratiocination (as ordinary mystics and yogis do) and trusting solely to
meditation. Both are needed. But both are only preliminary disciplines. Only the
supramystic exercises can lead to the final revelation and these were given to
the West for the first time in The Wisdom of the Overself. They were
formerly kept esoteric in every sense of the word, but times have changed.
35
Such misunderstandings as that reasoning alone
leads to realization, that it can replace meditation, and that metaphysics is
superior to mysticism could not possibly arise, as can be seen from the second
volume [The Wisdom of the Overself]. For in this final volume the old
gods are restored but placed in new shrines; it shows that the earlier
preparatory chapters were really leading up to it. These misconceptions are
likely to occur because in the first volume [The Hidden Teaching Beyond
Yoga] I deliberately criticized certain things in order to stress what, it
seemed to me, the time had come to stress. For I wanted to clear the ground of
all this debris, thus preparing the way for the higher mysticism unfolded in
The Wisdom of the Overself. The essential principles of mysticism and
yoga have remained intact but are explained from a new angle of approach, the
scientific-philosophic, so as to clarify the real issues. As the angle of
approach differs, so does what is seen appear differently too. I am fully
prepared to accept the blame for whatever mistakes I have made in the past, but
I consider it is more important to learn how they have constituted
stepping-stones to my present-day higher knowledge. I have been engaged in a
widespread mystical research for most of my lifetime, so that the conclusions
which I have formulated are at least worthy of consideration, if not more. I
consider it a sacred duty to free that which is so precious to me from the large
falsifications, extravagant claims, ancient distortions, and degraded doctrines
from which it is suffering. I cannot remain silent and indifferent while its
treasures are caricatured by the unscientific and unphilosophical or while its
truths are deformed and shamelessly cheapened by the egoistic, the
hyper-emotional, and the foolish. We must view this subject as a whole, not
merely in its bright or dark patches. This means that we must be bent on
realistically seeing both. Our morals must be tough enough to do so and exalted
enough to accept the consequences of facing unpleasant facts without losing a
far-sighted confidence in the essential worth of mysticism. For so far as I am
aware nobody within the ranks of the mystically minded capable of speaking with
sufficient authority has heretofore ventured to explain the existence amongst
them of large-scale gullibility, notorious charlatanry, and failure to
beneficially affect public life by frankly exposing the limitations, defects,
errors, and misunderstandings prevalent in mysticism itself in a scientific and
philosophic manner.
36
The philosopher enjoys a continuous inner peace.
He has no particular wish at any time to exchange it for the mystic's bliss
although through his capacity for meditation he may be able to do so.
37
The mystic touches the serenity and light of the
Overself but falls away from them soon. The philosopher does not merely touch
them but attains their fullness forever. The first is partial and provisional
whereas the second is final and complete.
38
Philosophy stands aligned with mysticism so far as
this aim of achieving the profoundest inward self-absorption through meditation
is in question, but it stands aloof from mysticism so far as rational, moral,
practical, and social issues are in question. A correct appraisal of mysticism
can only be formed by examining its ideology against the wider background of
philosophic doctrine.
39
The yogic viewpoint still embraces the phenomena
of causation, however refined.
40
Philosophy prescribes just enough meditation to
make its votaries mystically conscious but not enough to make them forget the
philosophic goal amidst its pleasures.
41
The philosophic goal when entering into mystical
experience of the higher kind or when viewing one's relation to anyone else or
to any situation, is to see the truth correctly and understand it rightly, to
add nothing to it out of personal associations or habitual tendencies.
42
The next point of difference is the active nature
of philosophic realization as compared to the passive nature of mystical
realization. This is the result of the holding-up of compassion as part of the
philosophic aspirant's ideal from the beginning to the end of his course.
43
The philosophic experience is a becalmed mystical
rapture.
44
The line of demarcation between the lower and the
higher mysticism is clearly shown. For the lower mystic has sublime experiences
and makes inspired utterances but does not understand profoundly, clearly, and
fully what these experiences are nor what these utterances mean. Neither his
attainments nor his knowledge has arrived at adequate self-consciousness. He is
in the position of poets like Tennyson, who confessed that his In
Memoriam, which was written to proclaim human immortality, was wiser than he
himself knew. (See Plato's The Apology of Socrates 7, regarding this.)
45
The end of philosophic seeking is not a fleeting
mystic ecstasy but a durable mystic consciousness inlaying every thought, word,
feeling, and deed.
46
That which the mystic feels is what the
metaphysician thinks. The philosopher knows and acts it, as
well as feels and thinks it.
47
So long as his attainment depends on a
contemplative stage which in its turn depends on inactivity and solitude, so
long will it be only a half-attainment.
48
A mysticism which does not take into account all
the chief functions which make a being human - will, feeling, reason, and
intuition - leaves some of his evolutionary possibilities undeveloped and cannot
give a finished result but only a partly finished one. It fails to do
justice to the glorious ideal set before him by the World-Idea.
49
He must continue to probe for himself into the
recesses of his own mind. This requires much patience. He is quite correct in
wanting to be aware of every step of the path and in refusing to move blindly.
On this path he needs to balance the claims of reason and feeling and to
understand accurately what it is that he is trying to do. He cannot go back to
the unconscious beliefs of spiritual childhood. This is the difference between
ordinary mysticism and philosophical mysticism.
50
The mystic is usually satisfied in enjoying this
inner stillness whereas the philosopher needs also to know where it emanates
from.
51
What the mystic seeks through love and
self-purification alone, the philosopher seeks through love and
self-purification and knowledge as well.
52
Philosophy offers the same meditational experience
as mysticism, but it carries this experience to a wider and deeper level and at
the same time integrates it with moral social and rational elements.
53
Philosophical mysticism keeps and contains all
that is best in ordinary mysticism but reinforces and balances it with reason,
culture, shrewdness, and practicality, expresses it through service or art.
54
When the mind withdraws from its creations
after understanding their mentalness and looks into itself, it
discovers the final truth. But when it does this prematurely - that is, before
such enquiry into the world's nature - it discovers a half-truth: the nature of
the "I."
55
The virtue of philosophic yoga is that it makes
reason an accomplice and not, as with the other yogas, an enemy of the quest of
spiritual realization.
56
The philosophical mystic has no use for such
vagueness and precariousness. He must know what he is about, must be
self-conscious and self-possessed. But all this on the intellectual level only.
He will be the personification of humility, the incarnation of self-surrender,
on the emotional level.
57
Mysticism requires the unreserved surrender of the
ego to the soul. From this quite correct requirement, unphilosophic mystics draw
the quite incorrect conclusions that the ego's faculty of reasoning and use of
will are to be banished from the domain of practical affairs. It should not, for
instance, provide for its worldly future, because God is to provide for it.
Belief in mysticism is no excuse for such illogical and inaccurate thinking,
much less for the paralysis of willing. The mystic may give himself unto the
soul and yet render unto thought and action that which is rightly theirs.
58
Both the technique of meditation and the study of
metaphysics must be brought into satisfactory adjustment.
59
Philosophical understanding can bloom within him
only after he has cultivated his metaphysical intelligence as well as his
mystical intuition.
60
How can science and mysticism meet when each uses
a different faculty, the one intellect and the other intuition? They can
meet by following two steps: first, by each one understanding its own and the
other's place, function, and limitation, and second, by amalgamating their
viewpoints, thus rising into the domain of philosophy.
61
Truth will not insult intelligence, although it
soars beyond intellect. Let the religionists talk nonsense, as they do at times;
but holiness is not incompatible with the use of brains, the acquisition of
knowledge, and the rational faculties.(P)
62
It is not enough to negate thinking; this may
yield a mental blank without content. We have also to transcend it. The first is
the way of ordinary yoga; the second is the way of philosophic yoga. In the
second way, therefore, we seek strenuously to carry thought to its most abstract
and rarefied point, to a critical culminating whereby its whole character
changes and it merges of its own accord in the higher source whence it arises.
If successful, this produces a pleasant, sometimes ecstatic state - but the
ecstasy is not our aim, as with ordinary mysticism. With us the reflection must
keep loyally to a loftier aim, that of dissolving the ego in its divine source.
The metaphysical thinking must work its way, first upwards to a more and more
abstract concept and second inwards to a more and more complete absorption from
the external world. The consequence is that when illumination results, whether
it comes in the form of a mystical trance, ecstasy, or intuition, its character
will be unquestionably different and immeasurably superior to that which comes
from the mere sterilization of the thinking process which is the method of
ordinary yoga.(P)
63
There is a little confusion in some minds as to
the precise differences between philosophic meditations and ordinary meditation.
The following note is intended to help clear up this matter. There are five
stages in the philosophic method. The first four of these stages cover the same
ground as those in traditional mysticism. It is in the last stage that a vital
difference appears. In stage one, the student learns to concentrate his
faculties, thoughts, and power of attention. He must fix beforehand any object
for his gaze, or any subject for his thoughts, or any theme for his feelings.
This provides a post, as it were, to which the horse of his mind can be tethered
and to which it can be made to return again and again each time it strays away.
In stage two, he must definitely drop the use of his bodily senses and external
objects, withdraw his attention entirely within himself and devote it
exclusively to considered thinking about and devotional aspiration to his
spiritual quest, making use only of an elevating idea or ideal as a tethering
post. In stage three, he is to reverse this method, for he is not to fix
beforehand any theme for thought, not even to predetermine the way in which his
contemplation shall develop itself. His conscious mind is to be thoroughly free
from any and every suggestion from the thinking self, even if it be of the
purest kind. For everything must here be left entirely to the higher power. In
stage four, the student unites completely with his higher self and its infinite
universality, drops all personal thinking, even all personal being. In stage
five, it might be said that he returns to the first two and recapitulates them,
for he reintroduces thinking and therefore ego. But there is a notable
difference. The thinking will be, first, illumined by the higher self's light,
and second, directed towards the understanding of Reality.
64
The use of metaphysical thinking as part of the
philosophic system is a feature which few yogis of the ordinary type are likely
to appreciate. This is both understandable and pardonable. They are thoroughly
imbued with the futility of a merely rational and intellectual approach to
reality, a futility which has also been felt and expressed in these pages. So
far there is agreement with them. But when they proceed to deduce that the only
way left is to crush reason and stop the working of intellect altogether, our
paths diverge. For what metaphysics admittedly cannot accomplish by itself may
be accomplished by a combination of metaphysics and mysticism far better than by
mysticism alone. The metaphysics of truth, which is here meant, however, must
never be confused with the many historical speculative systems which exist.(P)
65
The activity of analytic thinking has been banned
in most mystical schools. They regard it as an obstacle to the attainment of
spiritual consciousness. And ordinarily it is indeed so. For until the intellect
can lie perfectly still, such consciousness cannot make itself apparent. The
difficulty of making intellect quite passive is however an enormous one.
Consequently different concentration techniques have been devised to overcome
it. Nearly all of them involve the banishment of thinking and the cessation of
reasoning. The philosophical school uses any or all of them where advisable but
it also uses a technique peculiarly its own. It makes use of abstract concepts
which are concerned with the nature of the mind itself and which are furnished
by seers who have developed a deep insight into such nature. It permits the
student to work out these concepts in a rational way but leading to subtler and
subtler moods until they automatically vanish and thinking ceases as the
transcendental state is induced to come of itself. This method is particularly
suited either to those who have already got over the elementary difficulties of
concentration or to those who regard reasoning power as an asset to be conserved
rather than rejected. The conventional mystic, being the victim of external
suggestion, will cling to the traditional view of his own school, which usually
sees no good at all in reasoned thinking, and aver that spiritual attainment
through such a path is psychologically impossible. Never having been instructed
in it and never having tried it, he is not really in a position to judge.(P)
66
Continued and constant pondering over the ideas
presented herein is itself a part of the yoga of philosophical discernment. Such
reflection will as naturally lead the student towards realization of his goal as
will the companion and equally necessary activity of suppressing all ideas
altogether in mental quiet. This is because these ideas are not mere
speculations but are themselves the outcome of a translation from inner
experience. While such ideas as are here presented grow under the water of their
reflection and the sunshine of their love into fruitful branches of thought,
they gradually begin to foster intuition.(P)
67
The logical movement of intellect must come to a
dead stop before the threshold of reality. But we are not to bring about this
pause deliberately or in response to the bidding of some man or some doctrine.
It must come of its own accord as the final maturation of long and precise
reasoning and as the culmination of the intellectual and personal
discovery that the apprehension of mind as essence will come only when we
let go of the idea-forms it takes and direct our attention to it.(P)
68
This is the paradox: that both the capacity
to think deeply and the capacity to withdraw from thinking are needed to attain
this goal.(P)
69
The mistake of the mystics is to negate reasoning
prematurely. Only after reasoning has completed its own task to the
uttermost will it be psychologically right and philosophically fruitful to still
it in the mystic silence.(P)
70
He must seek in metaphysics for the secret of the
universe and in mysticism for the secret of his own self. This is a balanced
approach.
71
Philosophy is not hostile to yoga; the latter
leads to steadiness of mind; with this one can then exercise discrimination. The
combination of concentration and enquiry leads to fitful glimpses of truth.
These glimpses must then be stabilized by constant effort and remembrance
throughout the day until they become second nature.
72
The mystic who refuses to use his brains is
displaying not a virtue, as he believes, but a failing. Yet such a man has
become stereotyped in the thought of most people as a type of man possessed of a
flabby intellect. What they have not known is that there is another kind, the
philosophic mystic, who seeks to develop his brain-power alongside of his
mystical intuitions. Philosophy silences thought when it wants to feel inner
peace or enter spiritual ecstasy, but it stimulates thought when it wants to
understand this peace and that ecstasy.
73
The typically medieval mystical school of thought
taught the utter necessity of restricting the powers of will and intellect,
dissolving them in single-minded devotion to prayer, meditation, and ascetic
life. Philosophy teaches the contrary and urges the full development of these
powers but safeguards this development by, first, dedicating it to mystical
purposes and impersonal aims and, second, controlling it by mystical intuition.
74
Philosophy does not ask us, as mysticism does, to
stifle the intellect, but to illumine it. It demands effective thinking and not
mere daydreaming, intellectual self-discipline and not misty vagueness. Its
journey lies through meditation reinforced by reason.
75
The mystic is content to be carried away by his
feelings. The philosopher wants to understand both the nature of their movement
and the character of the destination.
76
The lower mystic uses his mystical experiences as
an alibi to justify his mental slothfulness. He knows nothing of that organized
systematic effort to answer every question and clear every doubt which the
higher mystic had to pass through before he attained the superior grade.
77
Metaphysics is a discipline in rationalization
while yoga is a discipline in detachment and concentration.
78
Our aim must be all-round development - a sane,
healthy, balanced life. Meditation is not enough, albeit essential in its place.
The cultivation of a sharp keen intelligence for philosophical reflection is
just as essential. The two must work hand in hand, with a perfect development of
each ideal as the goal. The kingdom of heaven is in the head as well as the
heart.
79
We can understand the attempt of metaphysics to
know the supreme reality and know the attempt of mysticism to feel in God's
presence. But the first depends on filling the mind with the subtlest thoughts
whereas the last depends partly on emptying the mind of thoughts.
80
If he thinks for himself and feels for others, he
will appreciate the superiority of the philosophic form of mysticism.
81
That keen rationality could and indeed should
accompany sensitive spirituality is both practical wisdom and evolutionary
necessity. A tendency to act the fool in worldly and intellectual matters is not
a sign of mystical strength, as some aver, but a sign of mystical weakness.
82
My final ancient authority that this combination
of yoga and vichara is essential is Buddha. He said: "The man
discreet, on virtue firmly set, in intellect and intuition trained. The man with
keen discrimination blessed may from this tangle liberate himself."
83
The student travels through the different stages
on the journey to supreme truth. But without competent guidance he may fall into
the error of mistaking one of the stages for the truth itself. He does not
usually understand that there is a graded series of developments, each one of
which looks like the truth itself, and that only after all these have been
passed through can he reach the glorious culminating goal.
84
There is only one truth, hence only one true
illumination. But there are various degrees of its reception.
85
The journey from preoccupation with the
intellectual forms of truth to living in the truth itself, is a long and arduous
one. Even the start is harder than it seems, for those very forms which have
been so helpful in the past must be increasingly regarded as traps and less and
less as guides.
86
Such an attainment as philosophy proposes cannot
be reached all at once. It must be approached through a series of preparatory
steps. They will be slow in pace at first, but quicker later and sudden towards
the end.
87
It is quite true that the attainment of this
higher consciousness is an attainment of wholeness, as some modern mystics
claim. For then only is the conscious ego forced to relinquish to the Overself
its hold upon the rest of the psyche. Nevertheless, when this is felt and said,
it must be stated that the pattern of wholeness is still not finished by its
first attainment, for that is only the first stage - albeit an immensely dynamic
and memorable one - of a process.
88
It is a long journey from the condition of seeker
to that of sage. But this is true only so far as we ascribe reality to time. To
those who know that our human existence is a movement through events, but that
the human being in its essence transcends all events and dwells in timelessness,
this journey may be considerably shortened or swiftly brought to its
destination. For that, the thorough understanding of philosophy and its
incessant application to oneself is required.
89
The truth may not always burst on its votary in a
sudden brief and total flash. It may also come so slowly that he will hardly
know its movement. But in both cases this progress will be measured by his
abandonment of a purely personal and self-centered attitude towards life.
90
For the ordinary mystic it is very very hard to
live in the world, in the way that ordinary men do, after he has experienced the
world around him as mere illusion and its activities as vain. Only the
philosophically trained mystic can find sufficient motive in his knowledge and
sufficient urge in his feeling to take part in these activities if needed or
desirable.
91
The same mystical experience which detaches others
from action inspires him to it. This difference of result springs from a
difference of approach.
92
If a man sinks in this contemplation without
bringing it into reciprocal balance with reason and compassion, he will soon
fall into a state in which, quite clearly, it will be difficult for him to
demand active usefulness from himself. He will set up immobility of thought and
body as his chief goal, indifference of feeling and desire as his ultimate
beatitude. The consequence of this disequilibrium may be gratifying to the man
himself, but cannot be gratifying to society also. Nevertheless, however high
such a mystic may soar like the skylark, he must then be faced by the problem of
reconciling the two existences. There are yogis who assert that the one blots
out the other. How then, we must ask them, if the man is no longer aware of any
other mind than the Divine Mind or any other life than God's life, can he be
aware of the personal business to which he is called and to which he does attend
from hour to hour?
93
To the fearful, uninstructed seeker everything
connected with a worldly life is a stop on his upward way. To the
philosophically enlightened student, it is actually a step on his upward way. He
redeems the earthly environment by thinking rightly about it, turns every
earthly deed into a sacrament because he views it under a divine light, and sees
a fellow pilgrim in the worst sinner.
94
The mystic must live a double existence, one
during meditation and the other during work. The philosopher is released from
such an awkward duality. He knows only one existence - the philosophic life. The
divine quality permeates his whole activity as much as it permeates his
meditative cessation from activity. Work too is worship for him.
95
There are three things man needs to know to make
him a spiritually educated man: the truth about himself, his world, and his God.
The mystic who thinks it is enough to know the first alone and to leave out the
last two, is satisfied to be half-educated.(P)
96
It is not enough to know the internal self as the
mystics know it. We must also know the real nature of the external world
before we can realize Truth. This means that one will see oneself in the All and
possess a perfect comprehension with the All.
97
Suffused with pious feeling as a man might be,
uplifted in heart and bettered in character as this may leave him, it is still
not enough to fulfil the higher purpose of his existence. He needs also to
understand what is the Idea behind his particular life, and all other lives.
98
The ecstatic feelings which come to the mystics
are emotional and personal albeit they pertain to the higher emotion and they
are a most exalted part of the personality. On the other hand, the feeling which
comes to the sage is not ecstatic but serene. It is not emotional and not
limited to the personality alone. The centre of the psychological gravity
differs in the two cases. Whereas the mystic revels in the ecstatic
comprehension of his interior "I," but is doomed to revel brokenly and
intermittently, the sage is concerned with what lies behind that "I" - that is,
the Universal Self, the realization of which does not depend upon meditation or
trance alone and therefore need not be broken when meditation or trance is
suspended.
99
Reality is to be found neither by thinking alone
nor by not thinking at all. This high path which opens to the philosophic
student is one of unwavering deeply abstract concentration of the mind in the
real, whether the mind be thinking or not thinking, and whether the individual
be acting or not acting.
100
If mysticism reveals the nature of man,
philosophy reveals the nature of the universe.
101
If he has started thinking in a philosophic
manner about his own life, he will have done enough. But if he seeks also to
wrest the universe's own secret from it, he will have done more.
102
The mystic seeks God by forsaking the world
physically or else by renouncing it emotionally. His happiest moment is when he
can withdraw from it intellectually so completely that it is lost from his
consciousness in an abnormal trance state, a rapturous ecstatic union with God
alone. The philosopher passes through all these stages, too, but does not stop
there. He follows an opposite movement too. He finds God in the world as well as
in himself.
103
The first great event full of wonder will be
this discovery of what is within himself; the second will be his discovery of
what is within the world. For within himself he will find the soul and within
the world he will find the working of God. He will discover that it is literal
fact that everything happens under the laws and forces of the Higher Power, and
that this is as true of human life as it is of plant life and animal life. He
will find that the infinite wisdom is, everywhere and everywhen, taking care of
every human being; that this includes himself and those who are near and dear to
him; and that therefore he has no need to worry weakly or despairingly over
them, for the experiences which they get are those which they need or earn. When
he is no longer anxious about himself, how can he be anxious about other people?
When he has committed his own life to God, what else can he do about other
people's lives than commit theirs to God also? He finds that everyone is here
not for the body's sake but for the soul's sake, and that this is the real
criterion wherewith to measure all happenings and all experiences. He will no
longer let himself be deceived by appearances, no longer let events rob him of
his inward peace. He will remain passive to the Higher Power, obedient to its
leading, and receptive to its prompting. It will carry him serenely and sustain
him adequately.
104
Is it possible to unite both ways, the active
life in the world outside and the quiet life in the stillness within, and find
no break, no essential difference, no falsification of the oft-stated idea, "God
is everywhere"? The answer is Yes! and has been tested in ancient and modern
experience. "What is the World?" gives the same reply as "Who am I?" Withdrawing
from the physical sense-world as the mystic does or going into physical action
with the senses engaged need not break the union, the awareness of divine
presence.
105
Of course it is quite true to say that the truth
is inside man, that he must search there. But it is also true that the truth is
outside man and in the cosmos itself because he is a part of it. Why be
one-sided and reject the second direction in favour of the first or reject the
first in favour of the second? Both are necessary to the full perception of
truth.
106
There are mystics who experience the Overself in
its glow of love and joy of freedom, but without receiving knowledge of the
cosmic laws, principles, and secrets. There are other mystics who are not
satisfied with the one alone but seek to unite and complete it with the other.
They are the philosophical mystics for whom the meaning of the self and the
meaning of the world have become two sides of the same coin.
107
To arrive at a simultaneous consciousness of
both states - the personal ego and the impersonal Overself - is possible, and
has been done intermittently by some people such as mystics and artists - or
permanently by philosophers.
108
The philosopher cannot set the spirit apart from
the body, nor the spiritual life from the worldly life - for him, they penetrate
one another.
109
The materialist sees plurality alone and sees
superficially. The mystic in his deepest contemplation sees Spirit (or Mind
alone) without seeing Plurality, and sees incompletely. The philosopher sees
both Mind and its manifold world-images as essentially the same and sees rightly
and fully.
110
What he knows and what he perceives will
harmonize with, illustrate, or complete one another.
111
The thinking of thoughts no longer veils
spiritual being from him. Instead it is now an activity which acts as a
transparent medium for that being.
112
Others may turn away in despair or disgust from
the harshness of the worldly scenes; he must gaze into and beyond them. Others
may ignore or escape from its uglinesses; he must take them up into his scheme
of things, and, taking, transcend them by philosophic knowledge.
113
Philosophy takes its votaries on a holy
pilgrimage from ordinary life in the physical senses through mystical life in
the sense-freed spirit to a divinized life back in the same senses.(P)
114
Just as the splendours of the setting sun bathed
in fiery, glowing colors may be profoundly appreciated despite one's awareness
of the fact that the sciences of life and optics explain these splendours in a
bald, prosaic, disenchanting way; just as an excellent dinner may be eaten with
keen enjoyment undisturbed by one's knowledge that the constituents of these
tempting dishes were really carbon, nitrogen, hydrogen, and so on, so the varied
factors which go to make up the picture of our universal existence may be seen
and experienced for what they are by the integrally developed man in their
material tangibility despite his deeper awareness of the overwhelming difference
between their single Basis and their manifold appearances.
115
The highest contribution which mysticism can
make is to afford its votaries glimpses of that grand substratum of the universe
which we may call the Overself. These glimpses reveal It in the pure unmanifest
non-physical essence that It ultimately is. They detach It from the things,
creatures, and thoughts which make up this world of ours, and show It as It is
in the beginning, before the world-dream made its appearance. Thus mysticism at
its farthest stretch, which is Nirvikalpa samadhi, enables man to bring about
the temporary disappearance of the world-dream and come into comprehension of
the Mind within which, and from which, the dream emerges. The mystic in very
truth conducts the funeral service of the physical world as he has hitherto
known it, which includes his own ego. But this is as far as mysticism can take
him. It is an illuminative and rare experience, but it is not the end. For the
next task which he must undertake if he is to advance is to relate his
experience of this world as real with his experience of the Overself as real.
And this he can do only by studying the world's own nature, laying bare its
mentalistic character and thus bringing it within the same circle as its source,
the Mind. If he succeeds in doing this and in establishing this relation
correctly, he will have finished his apprenticeship, ascended to the ultimate
truth, and become a philosopher. Thenceforward he will not deny the world but
accept it.
The metaphysician may also perform this task and obtain an intellectual understanding of himself, the world, and the Overself. And he has this advantage over the mystic, that his understanding becomes permanent whereas the mystic's rapt absorption must pass. But if he has not passed through the mystical exercises, it will remain as incomplete as a nut without a kernel. For these exercises, when led to their logical and successful issue in Nirvikalpa samadhi, provide the vivifying principle of experience which alone can make metaphysical tenets real.
From all this we may perceive why it is quite correct for the mystic to look undistractedly within for his goal, why he must shut out the distractions and attractions of earthly life in order to penetrate the sacred precinct, and why solitude, asceticism, meditation, trance, and emotion play the most important roles in his particular experience. What he is doing is right and proper at his stage but is not right and proper as the last stage. For in the end he must turn metaphysician, just as the metaphysician must turn mystic and just as both must turn philosopher - who is alone capable of infusing the thoughts of metaphysics and the feelings of mysticism into the actions of everyday practical life.(P)
116
This mysterious experience seems also to have
been known to Dionysius the Areopagite. It is definitely an experience
terminating the process of meditation, for the mystic can then go no higher and
no deeper. It is variously called "the Nought" in the West and nirvikalpa
samadhi in the East. Everything in the world vanishes and along with the
world goes the personal ego; nothing indeed is left except
Consciousness-in-Itself. If anything can burrow under the foundations of the ego
and unsettle its present and future stability, it is this awesome event. But,
because it is still an experience, it has a coming and a going. Although it is
forever after remembered, a memory is not the final settled condition open to
man - for that, philosophy must be brought in. Mysticism may remove the ego
temporarily after first lulling it, but philosophy understands the ego, puts it
in its place, its subservient place, so that the man remains always undeserted
by the pure consciousness.
117
He comes by growth of knowledge and width of
views, by metaphysical evolution and emotional discipline, to a great calm. From
then on he neither seeks eagerly for incarnational experience nor aspires
loftily for liberation from it. Argument and discussion, meditation and
exercises and spiritual states, labels and categories, teachers and teachings
and quests are only for observation, not participation. Others may think he has
lapsed and shake their heads in sorrow or pity. This is not to be used as
counsel for beginners: if followed it could only hinder them. But to prevent
limited views, sectarianism, and fanaticism arising among them, as so often it
does, they can well be told occasionally that such a stage exists, and it may be
theirs when a patient development brings them to it.
118
The student who has reached this stage is forced
to adopt an uncompromising attitude if he is not to stagnate. He shuts up his
holiest books and puts them aside, turns away from the traditional instruction
of his teacher and flees from the sheltering society of hermitages or fellow
students into the rough hard materialistic society which he has hitherto
disdained. Henceforth he must look to nothing and nobody outside his own self
for final guidance or strength. That which he seeks must now be found within or
not at all. He perceives now that all techniques and teachers are like a
sundial, which indicates the presence of the sun and measures its relative
position, but if one does not at last turn away from the dial and look upward,
then one will never see or know the sun in itself. To use the dial for a time is
a help; to become preoccupied with it for all time is a hindrance. He is now
ready to enter the ultimate path. For there are two paths within the quest.
119
The need of going beyond the ordinary yogas if
he is to arrive at a deeper and purer truth, is a perception which will force
him to engage in further research as well as independent research.
120
All the processes of creation and dissolution
are true only from the scientific or practical standpoint but they disappear
when the student inquires deeply into them. It is a matter of getting right
understanding and then he sees they are mere thoughts or imaginations. A long
training in right - that is, philosophic - thinking is required before the mind
becomes habituated to such views. This is gnana yoga. After that he has
to practise a still higher kind of yoga which goes on in the midst of activity
and has nothing to do with meditation as ordinarily known. That ultimate path
gives realization. He gets glimpses first, lightning-flashes, which through
continued effort gradually become stabilized and finally merge into continuous
knowledge of truth.
121
The mystic will not care and may not be able to
do so but the philosopher has to learn the art of combining his inward
recognition of the Void with his outward activity amongst things without feeling
the slightest conflict between both. Such an art is admittedly difficult but it
can be learnt with time and patience and comprehension. Thus he will feel inward
unity everywhere in this world of wonderful variety, just as he will experience
all the countless mutations of experience as being present in the very midst of
this unity.(P)
122
What science calls the "critical temperature,"
that is, the temperature when a substance shares both the liquid and gaseous
states, is symbolic of what philosophical mysticism calls the "philosophic
experience," that is, when a man's consciousness shares both the external world
of the five senses and the internal world of the empty soul. The ordinary mystic
or yogi is unable to hold the two states simultaneously and, quite often, even
unwilling to do so, because of the false opposition he has been taught to set up
between them.(P)
123
The life of sense and thought veils the life of
the soul from the non-mystical extroverted person. The rapture of ecstatic
trance veils the external world from the mystical person. Neither man's
condition is full, perfect, and complete. The mystic's is higher, but he needs
to advance still farther to a continuous balanced state where the activity of
sense and thought does not veil the external world from him, but where both are
felt as different phases of one divine reality and seen as the same experience
from two different points of view. Such is the philosophic achievement. Although
it contains the ordinary state it is not limited to it, and although it
experiences mystical union it does not need to enter into an abnormal condition
like trance to do so. Thus whether the physical world and the thinking intellect
reveal or conceal this reality depends upon whether or not the philosophic
insight is brought to bear upon them.
124
The Infinite cannot be set against the finite as
though they were a pair of opposites. Only things which are on the same level
can be opposed to one another. These are not. The Infinite includes and contains
within itself all possible finites. The practical import of this truth is that
Mind cannot only be experienced in the Void but also in the world. The Reality
is not only to be discovered as it is but also beneath its phenomenal disguises.
125
The philosopher is satisfied with a noble peace
and does not run after mystical ecstasies. Whereas other paths often depend upon
an emotionalism that perishes with the disappearance of the primal momentum that
inspired it, or which dissolves with the dissolution of the first enthusiastic
ecstasies themselves, here there is a deeper and more dependable process. What
must be emphasized is that most mystical aspirants have an initial or occasional
ecstasy, and they are so stirred by the event that they naturally want to enjoy
it permanently. This is because they live under the common error that a
successful and perfect mystic is one who has succeeded in stabilizing ecstasy.
That the mystic is content to rest on the level of feeling alone, without making
his feeling self-reflective as well, partly accounts for such an error. It also
arises because of incompetent teachers or shallow teaching, leading them to
strive to perform what is impracticable and to yearn to attain what is
impossible. Our warning is that this is not possible, and that however long a
mystic may enjoy these "spiritual sweets," they will assuredly come to an end
one day. The stern logic of facts calls for stress on this point. Too often he
believes that this is the goal, and that he has nothing more about which to
trouble himself. Indeed, he would regard any further exertions as a sacrilegious
denial of the peace, as a degrading descent from the exaltation of this divine
union. He longs for nothing more than the good fortune of being undisturbed by
the world and of being able to spend the rest of his life in solitary devotion
to his inward ecstasy. For the philosophic mystic, however, this is not the
terminus but only the starting point of a further path. What philosophy says is
that this is only a preliminary mystical state, however remarkable and blissful
it be. There is a more matured state - that of gnosis - beyond it. If the
student experiences paroxysms of ecstasy at a certain stage of his inner course,
he may enjoy them for a time, but let him not look forward to enjoying them for
all time. The true goal lies beyond them, and he should not forget that
all-important fact. He will not find final salvation in the mystical experience
of ecstasy, but he will find an excellent and essential step towards salvation
therein. He who would regard rapturous mystical emotion as being the same as
absolute transcendental insight is mistaken. Such a mistake is pardonable. So
abrupt and striking is the contrast with his ordinary state that he concludes
that this condition of hyper-emotional bliss is the condition in which he is
able to experience reality. He surrenders himself to the bliss, the emotional
joy which he experiences, well satisfied that he has found God or his soul. But
his excited feelings about reality are not the same as the serene experience of
reality itself. This is what a mystic finds difficult to comprehend. Yet, un til
he does comprehend it, he will not make any genuine progress beyond this
stage.(P)
126
We may welcome and appreciate the radiant
ecstasy of the mystic's triumph, but we ought not to appraise it at other than
its proper worth. If we become so completely satisfied with it that we seek no
higher goal, then our very satisfaction closes the door to the possibility of
realizing the Overself. Only the sage - that is, the master of philosophy, to
which metaphysics is but a necessary stage - can appreciate the calm which comes
with mystical bliss. The peace which mysticism yields is genuine, but fitful,
for it can only thrive in an atmosphere of constant exaltation. And when each
exaltation intermittently passes - as it must - our mystic is left very flat. It
is philosophy alone that exists in the very antithesis of such an atmosphere of
comings and goings; therefore, it alone yields permanent peace. The yogi
may shut his eyes and pass his time in pleasant meditations, but for large
chunks of his day he will be forced to open them again and attend to physical
matters. Then the world will confront him, pressing for a place in his scheme of
things, and demand rational interpretation. He has got to explain this
antithesis between self and not-self, between "I" and the world.
127
The yogi who achieves the capacity to be without
thoughts for a certain period of time is still the victim of time, unless he has
sought to understand its meaning, its nature, and above all what lies behind it.
This latter is a philosophic work. If it is used to support yoga or if yoga is
used to prepare the way for it, a proper relationship is established; otherwise
we may have the spectacle of Swamis who come to the West after lengthy
meditations and begin to betray signs of erratic conduct - signs which I do not
need to describe.
128
Philosophy brings the knowledge of the "I" as it
really is (in the deepest sense) into the consciousness of a man. Mysticism does
the same. How could anything higher be realized by any human, concerning things
human, than what is taught in both these fields? Then what more does philosophy
offer? It offers a fuller result and completes the work by including the world.
129
It is here that the vital difference between the
Ultimate and yogic paths becomes apparent. Ramana Maharshi took the stand which
nearly all yogis take: that is, we need have nothing to do with the affairs of
the world which we have renounced. Let us sit quietly and enjoy our inner peace.
But on the ultimate path the goal is quite different. We begin after
having passed through yoga, and having found peace. Then we seek truth. The
latter when found reveals that the Overself is present in all men - nay, all
creatures - as their ultimate being. We not only know this but FEEL it. So we
cannot remain indifferent to the lives of others. Therefore - and now is
revealed a great secret - when we attain liberation from the endless-turning
wheel of reincarnation, we voluntarily return again and again to earth solely to
help others, mitigate suffering, and reduce ignorance. So long as one creature
lives in ignorance and pain, so long a true adept MUST return to earth. But this
applies only to the adepts in WISDOM. The adept in yoga does not want to return
to earth again, does not feel for others, and is happy in enjoying his exalted
peace. He is quite entitled to this because he has worked for it. But he has not
attained Truth, which is a higher stage. There is a tremendous difference in the
goal we seek. The yogi's aim is a sublime selfishness; the true adept's is a
burning desire to serve humanity. The successful yogi dwells in great peace and
that suffices for him. Nevertheless yoga is an essential stage through which all
must pass, for mind must be controlled, sharpened, and purified and peace must
be attained before he is fit to undertake the great inquiry into what is Truth.
130
Through yoga or meditation, one arrives at
mind-control. Then he takes his sharpened, concentrated mind and applies it to
the understanding of the world. Thus he discovers that the world of matter is
ultimately space and that all material forms are merely ideas in his mind. He
discovers, also, that his inmost self is one with this space, because it is
formless. Then does he perceive the unity of all life, and only then has he
found Truth - the whole truth. All this must be discovered by experience, not by
intellectual theory, and here his power to control thoughts becomes
important...first to make the mind absolutely still, then to use this
exceedingly sharpened mind to survey and penetrate the truth of things. That is
why neither mysticism nor yoga can lead directly to Truth. They are only
preparations for the higher path that does lead to Truth.
131
It is the duty of an advanced mystic who wishes
to attain greater heights for himself and be of greater service to others to try
earnestly to graduate to the ultimate path. This does not demand that he give up
any of his mystical practices or beliefs, but merely that he amplify and
supplement them. He must first develop the trinity of head, heart, and hand, or
reason, intuition, and action, and then bring them all into proper balance. If
in addition he is inspired by the ideal of service, he will attract to himself
the unseen help of those who are also dedicated to such service.
132
The hidden teaching starts and finishes with
experience. Every man must begin his mental life as a seeker by noting the fact
that he is conscious of an external environment. He will proceed in time to
discover that it is an ordered one, that Nature is the manifestation of an
orderly Mind. He discovers in the end that consciousness of this Mind becomes
the profoundest fact of his internal experience.(P)
133
The first step is to discover that there is a
Presence, a Power, a Life, a Mind, Being, unique, not made or begot, without
shape, unseen and unheard, everywhere and always the same. The second step is to
discover its relationship to the universe and to oneself.(P)
134
Two things have to be learned in this quest. The
first is the art of mind-stilling, of emptying consciousness of every thought
and form whatsoever. This is mysticism or Yoga. The disciple's ascent should not
stop at the contemplation of anything that has shape or history, name or
habitation, however powerfully helpful this may have formerly been to the ascent
itself. Only in the mysterious void of Pure Spirit, in the undifferentiated
Mind, lies his last goal as a mystic. The second is to grasp the essential
nature of the ego and of the universe and to obtain direct perception that both
are nothing but a series of ideas which unfold themselves within our minds. This
is the metaphysics of Truth. The combination of these two activities brings
about the realization of his true Being as the ever beautiful and eternally
beneficent Overself. This is philosophy.(P)
135
In the ordinary state, man is conscious of
himself as a personal thinking and physical entity. In the mystical trance-like
state, he loses this consciousness and is aware of the Divine alone. In the
philosophic state, he returns to the ordinary consciousness but without letting
go of the diviner one.
136
Whenever I have used the term "the centre of his
being," I have referred to a state of meditation, to an experience which is felt
at a certain stage. The very art of meditation is a drawing inwards and the
finer, the more delicate, the subtler this indrawing becomes, the closer it is
to this central point of consciousness. But from the point of view of
philosophy, meditation and its experiences are not the ultimate goal - although
they may help in preparing one for that goal. In that goal there is no kind of
centre to be felt nor any circumference either - one is without being localized
anywhere with reference to the body, one is both in the body and in the
Overself. There is then no contradiction between the two.(P)
137
The body belongs to our field of consciousness,
but we need not limit ourselves solely to it. We can for example bring into
experience higher mental states where the body and the memory of it play only a
little part. This indeed is one of the purposes of yoga, but it is not
necessarily a purpose of philosophy. The philosopher is content to let the body
be there, provided he can bring it alongside and within his other consciousness
of the Overself.
138
Many complain that they are unable in meditation
successfully to bring their active thoughts to an end. In the ancient Indian art
of yoga, this cessation - called nirvikalpa samadhi in Sanskrit - is
placed as the highest stage to be reached by the practitioner. This situation
must be viewed from two separate and distinct standpoints: from that of yoga and
from that of philosophy. Would-be philosophers seek to become established in
that insight into Reality which is called Truth. Intuitive feeling is a higher
manifestation of man's faculties. So long as the feeling itself remains
unobstructed by illusions, and - after incessant reflection, inquiry, study,
remembrance, reverence, aspiration, training of thought, and purification - a
man finds the insight dawning in his mind, he may not need to practise
meditation. He may do so and he will feel the satisfaction and tranquillity
which comes from it. Those who become sufficiently proficient in yoga, even if
they achieve the complete cessation of thoughts, should still take up the
pursuit of understanding and insight. If they are content with their attainment,
they can remain for years enjoying the bliss, the tranquillity, the peace of a
meditational state; but this does not mean knowledge in its fullest meaning.
139
The notion, uncritically learned and sedulously
taught by several Hindu sects, including a modern one which is actively
proselytizing the West, that a criterion for whether a man has attained the
highest state is his ability to remain constantly immersed in the trance, is not
endorsed by philosophy. These sects, being of a religio-mystic order, have yet
to reach a higher standpoint.
140
The philosopher rejects the demand either to
accept the world or to renounce it. For him this is unrealistic. He does neither
of these things. Only those who are much too ignorant of the real nature of the
world can concern themselves with such a demand.
141
The yogi seeks release from the chains of
rebirth as his objective. The philosopher knows that this result will follow
automatically as a by-product of his own objective - the Real.
142
Carrying in himself whatever he has found in
study and meditation and prayer, he returns to the world to gain experience of
life and to apply in practice what he has learned.
143
The knowledge got from metaphysics, the
intuitive peace gained from meditation, must now be accompanied by practical
work done wisely and altruistically in the world to express both. The student
must evoke the strength to descend into this sharply contrasting activity. The
quest is not a single-track but rather a triple-track affair. He must travel
along it with his intelligence, his intuition, and his deeds. "All speak of the
Open Path, only rare ones enter the complex path," wrote Shah Latif, the
eighteenth-century Sufi poet. When rational thought and mystical feeling and
self-alienated action are thus integrated into one, when life becomes a sincere
and successful whole, it becomes philosophic. It may be that such a combination
of qualities has been rare in the past, but it is certain that it will be
necessary in the future. The world will need men and women as leaders who have
their roots deep down in the life of the divine self but who have their
intellects very much alert, their hands very much alive, and their hearts very
much expanded.
144
He has next to submit himself so completely to
this experience that its inner light becomes his outer life.
145
It must not be thought that this is a mode of
living which is half in the world and half out of it. Rather is it a mode which
knows no difference between the world and the Spirit - all is of one piece.
146
It is a natural self-control which comes into
play without any willed effort, spontaneously and easily. It is one consequence
of achieving the third stage of philosophic questing, completing and applying to
active everyday living the fruits of the second stage, contemplation. Ego and
animal fall far back in the human to where they belong.
147
Nature is guiding us toward a progressive
self-enlargement, not, as some think, toward self-attenuation.
148
Life is not a matter of meditation methods
exclusively. Their study and practice is necessary, but let them be put in their
proper place. Both mystical union and metaphysical understanding are necessary
steps on this quest, because it is only from them that the student can mount to
the still higher grade of universal being represented by the sage. For we not
only need psychological exercises to train the inner being, but also
psychological exercises to train the point of view. But the student must not
stay in mysticism as he must not stay in metaphysics. In both cases he should
take all that they have to give him but struggle through and come out on the
other side. For the mysticism of emotion is not the shrine where Isis dwells but
only the vestibule to the shrine, and the metaphysician who can only see in
reason the supreme faculty of man has not reflected enough. Let him go farther
and he shall find that its own supreme achievement is to point beyond itself to
that principle or Mind whence it takes its rise. Mysticism needs the check of
philosophic discipline. Metaphysics needs the vivification of mystical
meditation. Both must bear fruit in inspired action or they are but half-born.
In no other way than through acts can they rise to the lofty status of facts.
The realization of what man is here for is the realization of a fused and unified life wherein all the elements of action, feeling, and thought are vigorously present. It is not, contrary to the belief of mystics, a condition of profound entrancement alone, nor, contrary to the reasonings of metaphysicians, a condition of intellectual clarity alone, and still less, contrary to the opinions of theologians, a condition of complete faith in God alone. We are here to live, which means to think, feel, and act also. We have not only to curb thought in meditation, but also to whip it in reflection. We have not only to control emotion in self-discipline, but also to release it in laughter, relaxation, affection, and pleasure. We have not only to perceive the transiency and illusion of material existence, but also to work, serve, strive, and move strenuously, and thus justify physical existence. We have to learn that when we look at what we really are we stand alone in the awed solitude of the Overself, but when we look at where we now are we see not isolated individuals but members of a thronging human community. The hallmark of a living man, therefore, ought to be an integral and inseparable activity of heart, head, and hand, itself occurring within the mysterious stillness and silence of its inspirer, the Overself.
The mistake of the lower mystic is when he would set up a final goal in meditation itself, when he would stop at the "letting-go" of the external world which is quite properly an essential process of mysticism, and when he would let his reasoning faculty fall into a permanent stupor merely because it is right to do so during the moments of mental quiet. When, however, he learns to understand that the antinomy of meditation and action belongs only to an intermediate stage of this quest, when he comes later to the comprehension that detachment from the world is only to be sought to enable him to move with perfect freedom amid the things of the world and not to flee them, and when he perceives at long last that the reason itself is God-given to safeguard his journey and later to bring his realization into self-consciousness - then he shall have travelled from the second to the third degree in this freemasonry of ultimate wisdom. For that which had earlier hindered his advance now helps it; such is the paradox which he must unravel if he would elevate himself from the satisfactions of mysticism to the perceptions of philosophy. If his meditations once estranged him from the world, now they bring him closer to it! If formerly he could find God only within himself, now he can find nothing else that is not God! He has advanced from the chrysalis-state of X to the butterfly state of Y.
If there be any worth in this teaching, such lies in its equal appeal to experience and to reason. For that inward beatitude which it finally brings is superior to any other that mundane man has felt and, bereft of all violent emotion itself though it be, paradoxically casts all violent emotions of joy in the shade. When we comprehend that this teaching establishes as fact what the subtlest reasoning points to in theory, reveals in man's own life the presence of that Overself which reflection discovers as from a remote distance, we know that here at long last is something fit for a modern man. The agitations of the heart and the troublings of the head take their dying breaths.(P)
149
The term "insight" has a special application in
philosophy. Its results are stamped with a certitude beyond mere belief, better
than logical demonstration, superior to limited sense observation.
150
Philosophy seeks not only to know what is best
in life but also to love it. It wants to feel as well as think. The truth, being
above the common forms of these functions, can be grasped only by a higher
function that includes, fuses, and transcends them at one and the same time -
insight. In human life at its present stage of development, the nearest activity
to this one is the activity of intuition. From its uncommon and infrequent
visitations, we may gather some faint echo of what this wonderful insight is.(P)
151
Intuition knows earthly truth without the
intervention of reasoning, while insight knows divine truth in the same direct
way.
152
"Intuition" had come to lose its pristine value
for me. I cast about for a better one and found it in "insight." This term I
assigned to the highest knowing-faculty of sages and was thus able to treat the
term "intuition" as something inferior which was sometimes amazingly correct but
not infrequently hopelessly wrong in its guidance, reports, or premonition. I
further endeavoured to state what the old Asiatic sages had long ago stated,
that it was possible to unfold a faculty of direct insight into the nature of
the Overself, into the supreme reality of the universe, that this was the
highest kind of intuition possible to man, and that it did not concern itself
with lesser revelations, such as giving the name of a horse likely to win
tomorrow's race, a revelation which the kind of intuition we hear so much about
is sometimes able to do.(P)
153
There is an irreducible Principle of Being
behind all other beings, an Unconditioned Power behind all lesser and limited
powers, a final Reality which was never born or put together. Call it what you
will, you can neither define nor describe it adequately: men do not perceive it
because they do not have the necessary faculty for perceiving it, for that is a
faculty which has nothing to do with the affairs of their little ego and its
little world. But they can awaken this insight, nurture it, develop it.
154
But if the Ultimate is forever beyond human
grasp, some suggestion about its nature is not beyond the grasp of human
intuition. He who has developed himself sufficiently to receive unhindered such
a suggestion is a man of insight.
155
All metaphysical study and all mystical
exercises are but preparations for this flash of reality across the sky of
consciousness which is here termed insight. The latter is therefore the most
important experience which awaits a human being on this earth. If metaphysics or
mysticism is regarded as an end in itself and not as a preliminary, then its
follower misses what lies at the core of one's life.
156
Insight may apparently be born suddenly, but it
is really the culminating stage of a long previous development.
157
It flashes forth out of the darkness and
must be seen. Whereas a book containing new and tremendous revelations of
truth may be read but its meanings not seen because not understood, here, on the
contrary, to see is to understand. Why? Because it is also to be.
158
Such is the overwhelming certitude of
philosophic insight that it does not need any other support to justify its truth
for itself. Its possessor may, if he wishes, for the sake of others, put in such
a support when attempting to communicate with them in words: but for himself it
is not at all necessary. It is in a class entirely by itself and leaves the
possessor with such awe, such a feeling of homage to its reality and truth, that
he will be loath to mention it in any ordinary gathering of men.
159
Reason moves continuously around the idea of the
Overself whereas insight enters it directly.
160
In The Hidden Teaching Beyond Yoga I most
unfortunately gave the impression that the higher truth was only to be got as an
understanding - in contrast with the mystic's realization, which was only an
experience. Within a few weeks of its publication I wrote and issued an
"Appendix" to clear up this matter and had it incorporated in the printed text
in all further editions. Moreover, in the sequel, The Wisdom of the
Overself I returned again to the same point, explaining again that the
philosophic insight is a fusion of both knowledge and realization, understanding
and experience.
161
Insight is the flower of reason and not its
negation.(p. 277)
162
Insight can only supervene when thinking
consideration has finished its work and relinquished its effort in favour of an
ultramystical process.
163
When the form-making activity of the mind is
brought to a standstill by the combined twofold process of yoga and enquiry,
insight into the mind itself can then be obtained, but not before.
164
What the intellect formulates as opinion,
belief, or observation arises out of its own movement in thinking. What the
insight experiences as being arises out of the intellect's utter stillness so
that it permits itself to be replaced by the higher faculty which alone can know
reality.
165
The intellect is not able to get this kind of
knowledge, not able to gain access to this higher dimension. But what is denied
to it is granted to another of man's faculties - insight. True, this is still
only a latent one in nearly all men. But it is there and, with the Overself's
grace, can be unfolded.
166
Insight is not a work of the logical reason. Yet
the keenest reasoning is present in it. It is not merely a movement of the
emotions. Yet the heart element is equally present in it.
167
The philosopher's insight is not only sublime,
like every other mystic's: it is also precise.
168
It is not enough to attain knowledge of the
soul; any mystic may do that. It is necessary to attain clear knowledge.
Only the philosophic mystic may do that. This emphasis on clarity is important.
It implies a removal of all the obstructions in feeling, the complexes in mind,
and obfuscations in ego which prevent it. When this is done, the aspirant
beholds truth as it really is.(P)
169
Insight into truth comes from a region which
metaphysics cannot enter. Nevertheless his insight should be able to square with
the reason and appeal to the heart.
170
He who possesses insight does not have to use
arguments and reach conclusions. The truth is there, self-evident, inside
himself as himself, for his inner being has become one with it.(P)
171
Insight possesses for the sage the highest
degree of that instantaneous certainty of their own existence possessed by other
men.
172
The ordinary metaphysician can form no precise
and impeccable idea of truth without the guidance of the philosopher's insight,
or if he does it is purely a speculative one. Such insight remains the highest
norm, the final criterion, open to mankind.
173
Because the philosophic experience is the
supreme human experience, it explains and makes understandable all the others.
174
We need not be afraid of deserting reason when
it has finally fulfilled its lofty office. For the insight for which we exchange
it is not really opposed to it but implements it. That which reason describes as
the indefinable and infinite pure nondual mind is actualized by insight.
175
It is out of the interplay of meditation,
metaphysics, and altruistic action that insight is unfolded. No single element
will alone suffice: the conjunction of all three is needed and then only can
insight emerge. We cannot in the end escape from this complexity of life. The
metaphysician who has not balanced his overmuch thinking with richer feeling,
the yogi who has not brought his contemplative tendency into better equilibrium
with altruistic action, suffers eventually from psychic ill health and external
failures. For he is only one-third or one-half alive.
176
When this knowledge becomes a fusion of thought
and feeling, intuition and meditation, it bursts out as insight. This is
extremely clear, finally established, and certainly balanced. When adjusted to
everyday living it is naturalized. There is then no higher satisfaction for the
self, no nobler ethic which stays inside wisdom, and no more religious way to
worship God. In profiting himself he profits humanity also. For what has
happened in his mind will and must affect other minds too.
177
If a man is to rise to the philosophic insight,
he will find it through intellect and feeling, intelligence and intuition,
mystical experience and deep penetration into consciousness - his own and the
world's.
178
Such a revolutionary acquisition as insight must
necessarily prove to be in a man's life can only be developed by overcoming all
the tremendous force of habitual wrong thinking, by neutralizing all the
tremendous weight of habitual wrong feeling, and by counteracting all the
tremendous strength of habitual wrong-doing. In short, the familiar personal "I"
must have the ground cut from under its feet. This is done by the threefold
discipline. The combined threefold technique consists of metaphysical
reflection, mystical meditation, and constant remembrance in the midst of
disinterested active service. The full use and balanced exercise of every
function is needful. Although these three elements have here been isolated one
by one for the purpose of clearer intellectual study, it must be remembered that
in actual life the student should not attempt to isolate them. Such a division
is an artificial one. He who takes for his province this whole business of
truth-seeking and gains this rounded all-comprehensive view will no longer be so
one-sided as to set up a particular path as being the only way to salvation. On
the contrary, he will see that salvation is an integral matter. It can no more
be attained by mere meditation alone, for example, than by mere impersonal
activity alone; it can no more be reached by evading the lessons of everyday
external living than by evading the suppression of such externality which
meditation requires. Whereas metaphysics seeks to lift us up to the
superphysical idea by thinking, whereas meditation seeks to lift us up by
intuition, whereas ethics seeks to raise us to it by practical goodness, art
seeks to do the same by feeling and appreciating beauty. Philosophy in its
wonderful breadth and balance embraces and synthesizes all four and finally adds
their coping stone, insight.(P)
179
Right conduct, right meditation, right
metaphysics are all essential to the birth of the truest insight and are all
involved in realization. They must all pervade and perfectly balance each other.
180
These three efforts - to develop, to balance,
and to fuse the qualities - once achieved and perfected, yield insight.
181
When a certain balance of forces is achieved,
something happens that can only be properly called "the birth of insight."
182
In the illumination that spontaneously follows
the balance that is reached when completeness of development itself is reached,
man finds his real love, his most intense gratification.
183
Philosophy must critically absorb the categories
of metaphysics, mysticism, and practicality. For it understands that in the
quest of truth the co-operation of all three will not only be helpful and
profitable to each other but is also necessary to itself. For only after such
absorption, only after it has travelled through them all can it attain what is
beyond them all. The decisive point of this quest is reached after the
co-operation between all three activities attains such a pitch that they become
fused into a single all-comprehensive one which itself differs from them in
character and qualities. For the whole truth which is then revealed is not
merely a composite one. It not only absorbs them all but transcends them all.
When water is born out of the union of oxygen and hydrogen, we may say neither
that it is the same as the simple sum-total of both nor that it is entirely
different from both. It possesses properties which they in themselves do not at
all possess. We may only say that it includes and yet transcends them. When
philosophic insight is born out of the union of intellectual reasoning, mystical
feeling, and altruistic doing, we may say neither that it is only the
totalization of these three things nor that it is utterly remote from them. It
comprehends them all and yet itself extends far beyond them into a higher order
of being. It is not only that the philosopher synthesizes these triple
functions, that in one and the same instant his intellect understands the world,
his heart feels a tender sympathy towards it, and his will is moved to action
for the triumph of good, but also that he is continuously conscious of that
infinite reality which, in its purity, no thinking, no emotion, and no action
can ever touch.(P)
184
Insight is a function of the entire psyche and
not of any single part of it.
185
Insight is not merely the result of wedding
intuition with reason, although this is an essential prerequisite to its birth,
but actually something that arises of its own accord through the operation of a
higher power. Such an operation is called Grace and religious devotees or
practising mystics do get an experience of its lower phases.
186
The ordinary mystical insight is also a
transcendental one but there is this difference, that it is not pure, it is
always mixed up with an emotion or a thought. Philosophical insight is utterly
pure.
187
The "natural" philosophic attainment gives
insight as a continuity whereas meditation gives it as an interruption. More,
its attitudes are so relaxed, its operations so effortless, its outlook so
carefree, that those who have to work hard to get the temporary enlightenment
know that nothing else in life has the same importance, the same value.
188
Where we speak either metaphysically or
meditationally of the experience of pure consciousness, we mean consciousness
uncoloured by the ego.
189
Insight reveals the goodness, beauty, power, and
stillness of the Inner Reality whence this world of turmoil and strife has
emerged, and which cannot be dragged down to that world. However, the ordinary
faculties of thought, feeling, and acting can be so profoundly affected by the
experience of attaining insight that they will then see all problems in a
different light. Thus, practical help follows indirectly in this, as well as in
other ways.
190
Misunderstanding about the usefulness of insight
regarding mundane affairs is easily cleared. It is like bringing a printed page
before a lamp: the lamp's light is not concerned with the individual words, but
rather clarifies the whole of what appears on the page. Similarly, although
insight is not concerned with the lesser faculties, the illumination it provides
enables the latter to deal far more effectively with everyday affairs.
191
When contact between the light and the eye is
established, the resultant act of seeing is an instantaneous affair. When
contact between the Real and the insight is established, the resultant
enlargement of consciousness is equally immediate.
192
Thinking will come to an end, but not
consciousness.
193
His understanding becomes extraordinarily lucid,
as if a powerful light had been thrown upon the field of Consciousness.
194
It is all like a gigantic dream, with every
human inserting his own private dream inside the public one. A double spell has
to be broken before reality can be glimpsed - the spell which the world lays
upon us and that which self lays upon us. The man who has completely awakened
from this spell is the man who has gained complete insight. This faculty is
nothing other than such full wakefulness. It is immensely difficult to attain,
which is why so few of the dreamers ever wake up at all and why so many will not
even listen to the revelations of the awakened ones. However, Nature teaches us
here as elsewhere not to let patience break down. There is plenty of time in her
bag. Life is an evolutionary process. Men will begin to stir in their sleep
erratically but increasingly.
195
On the highest plane all insights are one.
196
See Chapter 55 of Lao Tzu where he defines
"insight"; also Chapter 16: "To know the Eternal is called Insight."
197
Even the Southern Buddhist Pali texts admit that
truth (Dharma) is attakkava-cara - that is, not attainable by
reason alone - but is finally reached by Samadhi - that is, right
insight.
198
A mystic experience is simply something which
comes and goes, whereas philosophic insight, once established in a man, cannot
possibly leave him. He understands the Truth and cannot lose this understanding
any more than an adult can lose his adulthood and become an infant.(P)
199
Because he has worked for his prize, because he
has undergone a patient and arduous training, and because he has taken every
step on the way with full comprehension and clear sight, his inspiration is not
here today and gone tomorrow but, when he acquires it, remains constant and is
permanently kept.
200
There are certain signs whereby the nature of
insight characterizes itself in its possessor's relations with his fellows.
Foremost among these are understanding and sympathy, a reverent regard for the
sanctity and needs of another's personal life. A man of insight will never utter
recriminatory words; he will be slow in judgement and swift to bless.
201
The signs of genuineness in true insight include
(a) conformity to facts of Nature and not merely logic of argumentation or
speculation, (b) clear direct understanding of what it sees, (c) freedom from
admixture of any kind of personal predilection, aversion, auto-suggestion or
motive, (d) indications that the seer has fully overcome his lower self.
202
No racial peculiarity, no geographical
limitation, no cultural bias can enter into such universality of insight.
203
The ever changing world-movement is suspended
and transcended in the mystical trance so that the mystic may perceive its
hidden changeless ground in the One Mind, whereas in the ultramystic insight its
activity is restored. For such insight easily penetrates it, and always sees
this ground without need to abolish the appearance. Consequently the philosopher
is aware that everyday activity is as much and as needful a field for him as
mystical passivity. Such expression, however, cannot be less than what he is
within himself through the possession of insight. Just as any man cannot express
himself as an ant, do what he may, simply because his human consciousness is too
large to be narrowed down to such a little field, so the philosopher cannot
separate his ultramystic insight from his moment-to-moment activity. In this
sense he has no option but to follow and practise the gospel of inspired
action.(P)
204
When, as recorded in the Potthapala
Sutra, the Buddha refused to answer the questions "Is the world eternal? Is
the world not eternal? Is the world finite? Is the world infinite?" he expressed
something more than mere contempt for the futility of the logical self-torture
of the intellect. For in his explanation of this refusal, he affirmed by
implication that philosophy stood on a higher rung than mysticism. He said:
"These questions are not calculated to profit, they are not concerned with the
Dharma, they do not redound to right conduct nor to detachment, nor to
purification from lusts, nor to quietude, nor to tranquillization of the heart,
nor to real knowledge, nor to the insight of the higher stages of the Path, nor
to Nirvana." Observe that these reasons are quite obviously placed in an
ascending order according to their importance, because they begin with external
conduct and end with Nirvana. And observe further that insight is not
only placed higher than peace but actually said to belong to the higher
stages of the Path. And observe finally that insight is placed only one stage
below Nirvana, to which in fact it leads.
205
This is the true insight, the permanent
illumination that neither comes nor goes but always is. While being
serious, where the event or situation requires it, he will not be solemn. For
behind this seriousness there is detachment. He cannot take the world of
Appearances as being Reality's final form. If he is a sharer in this world's
experiences, he is also a witness and especially a witness of his own ego - its
acts and desires, its thoughts and speech. And because he sees its littleness,
he keeps his sense of humour about all things concerning it, a touch of
lightness, a basic humility. Others may believe that he stands in the Great
Light, but he himself has no particular or ponderous self-importance.(P)
206
If insight is superior to information then the
philosopher has something to give mankind which the scientist cannot give.
207
The mystic who gives himself up to solitary
struggle to gain a solitary delight is beyond our criticism but also beyond our
praise.
208
Our ideal is not the yogi who has secured his
own nirvanic satisfaction; it is not the man who is so wrapped up in his own
peace as to be indifferent to the woes of others. It is the sage who is ready to
sacrifice his own leisure in order to assist others, enlighten others, assuage
the sorrows of others.
209
A spiritual exaltation which does not manifest
itself in the service of humanity exists for its possessor alone. Him alone do
we love who forsakes the seclusion of the solitary places wherein he attained
Nirvana and goes back among men to help his frailer brothers. He alone is worthy
of our regard who descends to exhort us towards the steps of the higher life and
to encourage us in our efforts to climb, who nerves us with his strength,
illumines us with his wisdom, and blesses us with his selfless Love.
210
He comes to the service of mankind by an
indirect route. For his primary service is to the Overself. But after he makes
this inward act of entire dedication to it, the Overself then bids him go forth
and work for the welfare of all beings.
211
To be able to contemplate the Overself as an
"other" is already an achievement of high order. But because it is, first, an
intermittent one, second, an incomplete one, and third, an imperfect one, it is
not yet the highest. In the latter there is final, permanent, and perfect
immersion in the Overself.
212
His last task is to re-enter the busy world and
dwell in it as focus for unworldly forces, to heal the suffering and guide the
blinded.
213
The philosopher will fall neither into the cold
unfeeling indifference of the recluse nor into the frothy effervescing fussiness
of the sentimentalist. He knows that the first attitude is generated by
excessive introversion, the second by excessive extroversion. His ideal being
the balance between them, he will attend properly to his own self-development
but, side by side with it, work helpfully for mankind.
214
He notes that other people's outer sufferings
are greater than his own, while their inner understanding of those sufferings is
less. He is both willing and ready to disturb his own bliss with their misery
and he will do this not in condescension but in compassion. Saint Paul,
following the master whom he never saw in the flesh but knew so well in the
spirit, put all other virtues beneath compassion. Are the few who try to be true
Christians, in this point at least, utterly wasting their time? For so say the
yogis who would abolish all effort in service and concentrate on
self-realization alone. Yet neither Jesus nor Paul was a mere sentimentalist.
They knew the power of compassion in dissolving the ego. It was thus a part of
their moral code. They knew, too, another reason why the disciple should
practise altruistic conduct and take up noble attitudes. With their help he may
bring one visitation of bad karma to an earlier end or even help to prevent the
manifestation of another visitation which would otherwise be inevitable.
215
Ancient spirituality thought that what was most
important was to cultivate individual soul. Modern materialism thinks it should
be social betterment. These two goals have usually been placed in opposition.
But modern spirituality refuses to accept such a false dilemma. Let us seek
both the cultivation of the soul, it declares, and the betterment of
social conditions. Why, when we open our eyes to the one need, should we shut
them to the other? Humanity's outer need does not justify the neglect of our own
inner need, nor this the neglect of the other. No amount of humanitarianism can
counterbalance the duty of devoting time and energy to spiritualizing our own
self also, but this ought not become so self-centered as to become a total and
exclusive devotion.
216
Philosophy offers a middle way between the
self-centered obsession with spiritual development and the self-exhausting
obsession with humanity's service.
217
The last marks of the ego's grip will linger on
him in various subtle forms. Perhaps the willingness to be saved himself while
leaving behind so many others entangled in illusion is the final mark to be
erased. But it is a mark which only philosophical mystics, not ordinary mystics,
are likely to be troubled with. Only a compassion of unparalleled depth and
immense impartiality will put anyone on such a course as voluntarily to remain
on liberation's threshold so as to help the unliberated.
218
When a man has been preoccupied with himself
throughout his lifetime, when he is intent solely on his personal salvation,
when he no longer thinks of other seekers' welfare because he is too engaged
with his own, the danger is that his spiritual attainment, when and if it comes,
will be kept for himself too. This is why Philosophy rejects the egocentric
ideal of the lower mysticism and why it trains its votaries from the very start
to work altruistically for humanity's enlightenment. No man is so low in the
evolutionary scale that he cannot help some other men with a rightly placed
word, cannot strike a flickering match in their darkness, cannot show the
example of a better life.
219
The difference between the mystic and the
philosopher is that although both are illumined by the same Overself, the
former's limitations and narrowness limit and narrow the expression and
communication of his state and his help. The philosopher, however, having
all-around development - for instance, having well developed his intellect and
activity - can explain to intellectual persons what they can understand, can
work among active persons as one of them, thus showing that attainment is no bar
to an intellectual disposition or a practical life. The mystic is often unable
to do this, but talks as a simple fool or lives as a hermit or monk. Although
this makes no difference to his enjoyment of the higher state, it makes a
difference to other persons when they come into contact with him. But these
differences merely belong to the surface, not to the inner core, where both
mystic and philosopher enjoy the same realization. Hence it is a matter of
choice, not necessity, which path is taken.
220
Philosophy may offer the mystic a better
understanding and a fuller transmission of his own occasional mystical
experience but it also faces him with a grimmer prospect when that becomes
permanently stabilized. For it enjoins him to abstain from final entry into the
last state, the utter mergence of all individuality in the great nothingness of
the All. He is to become the Saviour of those he has outstepped, to wait and
serve until they too are free from illusion and sin. Only an immense compassion
could provide enough force to keep him from crossing the threshold.
221
It would be a great misconception to believe
that this peace which he has found in his inner life is bought at the cost of a
selfish indifference towards everyone and everything in his outer life. The
contrary is the very truth. He attains the wisdom and obtains the power to do
more real good for humanity than those who are still walking in darkness and
weakness. If he is a philosopher, he will assuredly point out the way for others
to light and strength, and may even sacrifice his rebirth on a higher planet to
this purpose. He becomes a link between suffering humanity and serene divinity.
222
There is a fundamental difference between
mystical escapism and mystical altruism. In the first case, the man is
interested only in gaining his own self-realization and will be content to let
his endeavours stop there. In the second case, he has the same aim but also the
keen aspiration to make his achievement, when it materializes, available for the
service of mankind. And because such a profound aspiration cannot be banished
into cold-storage to await this materialization, he will even sacrifice part of
his time, money, and energy to doing what little he can to enlighten others
intellectually during the interval. Even if this meant doing nothing more than
making philosophical knowledge more easily accessible to ordinary men than it
has been in the past, this would be enough. But he can do much more than that.
Both types recognize the indispensable need of deliberately withdrawing from
society and isolating themselves from its activities to obtain the solitude
necessary to achieve intensity of concentration, to practise meditative
reflection upon life, and to study mystical and philosophical books. But whereas
the first would make the withdrawal a permanent, lifelong one, the second would
make it only a temporary and occasional one. And by "temporary" we mean any
period from a single day to several years. The first is a resident of the ivory
tower of escapism, the second merely its visitor. The first can find happiness
only in his solitariness and must draw himself out of humanity's disturbing life
to attain it. The second seeks a happiness that will hold firm in all places and
makes retirement from that life only a means to this end. Each is entitled to
travel his own path. But at such a time as the present, when the whole world is
being convulsed and the human soul agitated as never before, we personally
believe that it is better to follow the less selfish and more compassionate
one.(P)
223
It is good for an ascetic or monk to sit idle
and inactive whilst he contemplates the futility of a life devoted solely to
earthly strivings, but it is bad for him to spend the whole of a valuable
incarnation in such idleness and in such contemplation. For then he is fastening
his attention on a single aspect of existence and losing sight of all others. It
is good for a metaphysician to occupy himself with noting the logical
contradictions involved in the world's existence and in the reason's own
discoveries, but bad for him to waste a whole incarnation in fastening his
attention on a single aspect. It is good for the worldling to accumulate money
and enjoy the good things it can buy, marry a wife, and adorn his home with
comforts, but it is bad for him to waste his valuable incarnation without a
higher purpose and a loftier goal. Nor is this all. Mysticism, metaphysics, and
worldliness are useless unless they succeed in affording a man a basis of
altruistic ethics for everyday living. The average mystic does not see that his
lapse into loss of interest in the world around him, his indifference to
positive and practical service of mankind, in short his whole other-worldliness,
is not a virtue, as he believes, but a defect. Hermits who withdraw from the
troubled world to practise the simplicity, monks who retreat from the active
world to muse over the evanescence of things, defeatists who flee from their
failure in life, marriage, or business to the lethargy which they believe to be
peace, thereby evidence that they have not understood the higher purpose of
incarnation. It is to afford them the opportunity to realize in waking
consciousness their innermost nature. This cannot be done by turning their face
from the experiences of human existence, but by boldly confronting them and
mastering them. Nor can it be done by retreating into the joys of meditation.
The passionate ecstasies of lower mysticism, like the intellectual discoveries
of lower metaphysics, yield only the illusion of penetrating into reality. For
the world, as well as the "I," must be brought into the circles of meditation if
the whole truth is to be gained. The one-sided, monkish doctrine which indicts
the world's forms with transiency and illusiveness must be met and balanced by
the philosophic doctrine which reveals the world's essence as eternal and real.
There will then be no excuse for lethargy, defeatism, or escapism. A
metaphysical outlook often lacks the spark of vitality; a mystical outlook often
lacks the solidity of reasoned thought; and both often lack the urge to definite
action. The practical failures of metaphysics are traceable to the fact that it
does not involve the exercise of the will as much as it involves the exercise of
the intellect. The intellectual failures of metaphysics are due to the fact that
the men who taught it in the past knew nothing of science and those who teach it
in the pr esent know nothing of higher mystical meditation, whilst both have
usually had little experience of the hard facts of life outside their sheltered
circles. The failures of mysticism are due to the same causes, as well as others
we have often pointed out. Finally, the failure of metaphysicians to produce
practical fruit is partly due to the fact that they perceive ideas of
truth and not truth itself, as the failure of mystics is partly due to the fact
that they experience feelings of reality and not reality itself. The
successes and services of the sage, on the contrary, are due to the fact that he
perceives truth and experiences reality and not merely thoughts or feelings
about them.(P)
224
From all these studies, meditations, and actions
the student will little by little emerge an inwardly changed man. He comes to
the habitual contemplation of his co-partnership with the universe as a whole,
to the recognition that personal isolation is illusory, and thus takes the firm
steps on the ultimate path towards becoming a true philosopher. The realization
of the hidden unity of his own life with the life of the whole world manifests
finally in infinite compassion for all living things. Thus he learns to subdue
the personal will to the cosmic one, narrow selfish affection to the
wide-spreading desire for the common welfare. Compassion comes to full blossom
in his heart like a lotus flower in the sunshine. From this lofty standpoint, he
no longer regards mankind as being those whom he unselfishly serves but rather
as being those who give him the opportunity to serve. He will suddenly or slowly
experience an emotional exaltation culminating in an utter change of heart. Its
course will be marked by a profound reorientation of feeling toward his fellow
creatures. The fundamental egoism which in open or masked forms has hitherto
motivated him will be abandoned: the noble altruism which has hitherto seemed an
impracticable and impossible ideal, will become practicable and possible. For a
profound sympathy to all other beings will dwell in his heart. Never again will
it be possible for him wilfully to injure another; but on the contrary the
welfare of the All will become his concern. In Jesus' words he is "born again."
He will find his highest happiness, after seeking reality and truth, in seeking
the welfare of all other beings alongside of his own. The practical consequence
of this is that he will be inevitably led to incessant effort for their service
and enlightenment. He will not merely echo the divine will but will allow it
actively to work within him. And with the thought comes the power to do so, the
grace of the Overself to help him to achieve quickly what the Underself cannot
achieve. In the service of others he can partially forget his loss of trance-joy
and know that the liberated self which he had experienced in interior meditation
must be equated by the expanded self in altruistic action.(P)
225
The peace to which he has become heir is not
self-absorbed rest from old activities that he deserts, but a divine awareness
that subsists beneath new ones that he accepts.(P)
226
When he first attains to this clear vision, he
sees not only that which brings him great joy but also that which brings him
great sorrow. He sees men bewildered by life, pained by life, blinded by life.
He sees them wandering into wrong paths because there is no one to lead them
into right ones. He sees them praying for light but surrounded by darkness. In
that hour he makes a decision which will fundamentally affect the whole of his
life. Henceforth he will intercede for these others, devote himself to their
spiritual service.(P)
227
After the desire for the fullest overshadowing
by the Overself, which must always be primal, his second desire is to spread out
the peace, understanding, and compassion which now burn like a flame within him,
to propagate an inward state rather than an intellectual dogma, to bless and
enlighten those who seek their divine parent.(P)
228
Unfortunate is the traditional indifference
towards the practical world and self-absorption in personal peace. Such an
attitude is not the one taught by The Voice of Silence, which fitly
represents the school of true sages and which inculcates compassionate service
of mankind instead of self-centered isolation. The Tibetan doctrine is in this
respect superior to the Indian doctrine.
229
The fourth part of this fourfold quest, which
concerns moral and social tasks, ought not to be disregarded. It is only an
unintelligent mysticism that promotes smug self-centered idleness whereas a
philosophical mysticism inspires both useful and altruistic activity.
The condition of stolid indifference to humanity is not compatible with the condition of loving harmony with the divine soul of humanity. In Burke's eloquent phrase, it is "the offspring of cold hearts and muddy understandings." It indicates the attainment of an inferior stage of spirituality. How much nobler is the attainment of a true sage! He does not look haughtily down upon others from the cold pinnacle of his unworldly interests or disdainfully at their moral weaknesses. He does not stop with the self-engrossed type of mystic to wallow in smug peace. Jesus, for instance, did not disdain to descend from the Mount of Transfiguration to help the epileptic boy; that is, he did not disdain to interrupt contemplation for action. The philosophical type of mystic does not content himself with the non-cooperative ideal of personal salvation pursued by those interested in themselves alone and indifferent to mankind's darkness and misery. On the contrary, he takes on the supreme sacrifice of a continual reincarnation which shall be dedicated to human enlightenment. Only when he has done all he could for the service of suffering mankind, only when he has reached this stage, can he know true abiding peace. Then he truly can say, with Chuang Tzu: "Within my breast no sorrows can abide, I feel the Great World-Mind through me breathe." There is every reason why a man who accepts the gospel of inspired action should become a beneficent force in the world. Whatever role falls to him in the game of life, he will play it in a vital and significant way. More than ever before in its history, the world's need is for such active philosophers. It has little use for volitionally impotent visionaries. Their muddled ethos must share part of the responsibility for mysticism's failure to make more effective contributions towards helping mankind during their greatest crisis and most tragical times. W hen the world is in such a tremendous need of guidance hope comfort strength and truth during its hour of grave danger and terrible crisis, surely it is the course of a generous wisdom for the contemporary mystic not to seek his personal peace alone but to realize the importance of helping others to find theirs too? He should not seek to be detached monastically from the troubles of his country. On the contrary, he should seek to mitigate them, so far as it is within his power, by rendering wise helpful service.
What Winston Churchill once told the American nation, "The price of greatness is responsibility," is what may be said to the mystic. The Americans tried but could not escape getting embroiled again in European affairs, and the mystic may try but cannot escape his own duties to the rest of mankind. The esoteric explanation of this is the factuality of a deep inter-relation and primal oneness of the human race.
230
The philosophic man's care for his own welfare
does not make him insensitive to the welfare of others. His concern is not
concentrated on, and does not end with, himself. Rather he puts both claims into
sound balance and lets neither emotion nor self-interest run away with him.
231
Philosophy has never had a popular appeal and
philosophers have always been small in number, but this is not to say that they
have not affected the life of society and the trend of events. On the contrary,
the intellectual capacity and moral character of philosophers have naturally
made them members of the influential classes in their community, while the ideal
of service, constantly thought about and acted upon, has by the law and power of
recompense inevitably brought them into positions where there was opportunity to
express it.
232
The mystic's own attainment certainly helps
humanity but it helps only indirectly. The philosopher's, because it directly
sets itself to benefit humanity, does so more widely and more markedly.
233
This ideal of a spiritualized worldly life on
the part of an illuminate is held even where it might be thought the last place
to be found - in Buddhism. For of the three Goals it sets before men, the last
is that of the Bodhisattva. Linguistically, the term means one who is bent upon
wisdom but technically the term means one who is destined to become a Buddha.
Practically, it means one who stands on the very threshold, as it were, of
Nirvana, but refuses to enter because he wishes to remain behind and relieve
suffering humanity. This tremendous self-sacrifice indicates the tremendous
spirit of compassion which actuates him. "I cannot have pleasure while another
grieves and I have the power to help," said Gautama while yet a Bodhisattva. He
has all the capacities and qualities, all the mental and ethical advancement to
render him quite capable of swiftly attaining the Goal but prefers to use them
only as far as its threshold and no farther. Hence, we find that Bodhisattvas
are historically persons who practise pity, kindness, and charity to an
incredible extent, but do not forget to use discrimination at the same time. He
is soft-hearted but not a soft-hearted fool. Thus, he renounces the ego but he
does not renounce the world. He may marry, as Gautama when a Bodhisattva sought
to marry the princess Pabhavati (Jataka 531); he may live in luxury,
ease, and comfort and say, as the same Gautama-Bodhisattva said: "Infatuated,
bound and deeply stained am I with pleasures, fearful though they be, but I love
life and cannot them deny. Good works I undertake continually." (Jataka
378) With all this, however, he does not drop his wisdom but holds perpetually
to the meditation on the world's transience, suffering, and illusion but he does
not hold to it to such an extent that he would fully realize Nirvana; here
again, he pauses at its threshold. For he refuses to break his ties with common
humanity. Thus, he is reborn in the most diverse bodies, environments, and ranks
and undergoes the most varied vicissitudes, thus giving the benefit of his
altruistic presence on the most universal and large-hearted scale.
Consequently, if we meet him in the flesh, we meet a citizen of the world, a man utterly free from all racial, colour, or class prejudice. He is ready to live in the world, therefore, even as a worldly person. He loves knowledge and will not disdain it when it deals with the things of earth alone; nothing that is human is unfit for him to learn. He will foster brains, practicality, self-reliance, strength, resolution, perseverance. He considers his word sacred and unfailingly keeps a promise and throughout the entire course of his worldly life he never cherishes ill will to anyone, not even to enemies who have insulted, injured, betrayed, or burnt him with their hate. For he remembers that he is a Bodhisattva - one who intends loving-kindness to all.
234
If it be asked how it is possible for the
would-be philosopher to dictate in advance what attitude he is going to take
after his final attainment, if it be objected that decisions made before this
attainment may be discarded as unwise or unnecessary after it and that therefore
the philosophic procedure of resolving to devote the fruits of attainment to the
service of humanity is foolish, the answer is that these objections would be
quite correct if the philosopher accepted attainment to its fullest extent - but
he does not. He stops on the very threshold of it, and although bathed in its
light and glory, does not accept it.
235
That which sustains each individual mind is a
universal one. Therefore, that which is best for him in social and ethical
action must also fulfil the requirement of being what is best for all. Otherwise
it is incomplete.
236
If his earlier life has been self-centered, the
attainment of this stage will provide him with the opportunity to escape from
our miserable planet and to pass into a world of harmony, peace, and light,
although this escape cannot in the nature of things mature until his physical
body dies. But if his earlier life has been compassionate and altruistic in
ideal - however unsuccessful in practice - the attainment will provide him with
the power to implement this ideal, the strength to realize it in actuality. The
thought will then present itself to him, "How best can I serve mankind?" This
will lead him to seek for ways of helpfulness appropriate to his times,
environment, and circumstances. Naturally the knowledge that helping others
toward a similar enlightenment is the best service he can render them will
predominate, but he will understand that their physical existence cannot be
separated from their mental one and that it may sometimes be needful as a step
toward that ultimate purpose to take up a duty which seems to belong solely to
the external sphere of things.
237
Is it conceivable that just at the point in his
history when a man has achieved the highest possible degree of power, of
self-control, of wisdom, and of compassion - that is, when he has the greatest
value for serving humanity - he is to be withdrawn from circulation and stopped
from being helpful to those who most need him?
238
Those who engage in unselfish service are
temporarily loosened somewhat from the ego. This of course is true only to the
extent that the service is done with pure, and not with ulterior or mixed or
quite selfish, motives.
239
Has it any moral realization of its
responsibilities in the present world crisis? Can it say anything that is
worthwhile and that will help humanity? What vital contribution does it offer to
our generation? The answer to these questions is that philosophy is definitely
alive to contemporary needs and extremely desirous of serving creatively.
Although its votaries are primarily engaged upon spiritual studies, this does
not mean that they must have a blank mind about other problems. They realize
that their studies have an indirect bearing upon them too. However, the points
of view being different, the conclusions are inevitably different too. For
example, democracy says that public opinion should determine a government's
course. Philosophy says that wisdom and virtue should determine it. At times, of
course, the two coincide and then democracy is gloriously vindicated.
240
Those who have received its benefits will one
day have to repay its obligations. This they can do only in the way suited to
their individual circumstances. It is a duty laid upon them from within by no
one but themselves, but it is not less imperative than if it had been laid from
without, and by higher authorities.
241
He has no other course than paradoxically to
separate himself from mankind if he is to serve mankind in the most effectual
way - by living for it instead of being martyred by it.
242
The balanced view says that each individual has
a duty towards society in return for what society has done for him. His right to
draw something from society must be balanced by his duty to contribute something
to it. Everyone should contribute something to the world's activity and not live
parasitically on the labour of others. A genuine prestige should be attached to
labour. It should be as dishonourable to be idle and mystical as it should be to
be idle and rich. If anyone draws sustenance from society, he should help carry
on society's work.
243
If those of higher ideals and unselfish
character withdraw from society, leaving the world to be run by more
materialistic and selfish persons, then society will certainly degenerate and
thus bring karmic suffering upon itself. Wisdom, however, dictates the reverse
policy.
244
There is a common goal for all of us. In the end
nobody can attain redemption while his fellows remain still unredeemed.
245
The sage may invite co-operation in this work
not for their personal aggrandizement but for the philanthropic enlightenment of
the eager, questioning few.
246
The giving out of spiritual knowledge is best
kept on such holy ground that it is done for its own sake entirely, and it
should constitute its own reward.
247
If he gives his services to humanity, he does so
without pricing them - without thought of or request for any external reward.
248
He is not a psychoanalyst who charges a hundred
dollars an hour for consultations. He gives his services for nothing. Because he
wants to conduct his life of service on the highest possible plane, he accepts
no money for these consultations.
249
The mystic's error is to believe that his duty
toward God cancels his duty towards man. Philosophy corrects the error and
unites the two.
250
It is proper for the mystical novice to feel
apathetic and lethargic about his duties toward and intercourse with society. He
is trying to turn inwards and they would only disturb him. It is equally proper,
however, for the mystical adept, if he has developed on philosophic lines, to
feel led towards abundant activity and social service.
251
His ultimate aim is to enjoy the blessed
presence of the Overself in his heart. But it is not, as with inferior mystics,
to enjoy it alone. He ardently desires to share it with others.
252
The mystic feels he has accomplished his task
when he has accomplished this blessed reunion with the Overself. The philosopher
feels that it is not enough and that without ceasing to maintain this union, he
must spiritually guide the few who seek truth and materially serve the many who
do not.
253
When the better souls non-cooperatively stay out
of worldly business because they dislike it, or regard it as soiled, or are too
weak for it, they leave the field open to the worse ones.
254
If he serves a race, a nation, a class, or a
group, his service will not be for them as such - his outlook is too wide for
that - but as human beings.
255
The larger understanding and the greater
compassion of philosophy bid him act differently. They bid him seek his own
salvation, not outside of humanity's, but alongside of it.
256
He approaches men not as a beggar seeking help
but as a benefactor offering it.
257
Philosophic altruism is not to be
confused with its ordinary counterpart. Divinely inspired service is not the
same as humanitarian service. The moral motivation and supporting consciousness
are different. The sage practises the first, not the second.
258
If anyone can make a spiritual, aesthetic,
reasonable, and ethical contribution to mankind, he serves God too, even if he
belongs to no religion. For he is harmonizing himself with the World-Idea.
259
It must not be thought that a non-selfish
actively altruistic attitude in his dealing with other men is the chief
characteristic of the philosopher's practical life. If this were so then it
would only be a good human life but not a divinely human life. Humanitarianism
serves men whereas philosophy serves what is sacred in men.
260
Whoever wishes to attract people to philosophy
must start by supporting its preachings with the attractiveness of his own
personal example in day-to-day living. He must continue by practising love to
all and depending on the power of truth. He must end by praying for others in
secret and offering himself to the Divine as a pure instrument of service.
261
When the Higher Power leads a man to a position
produced by his constant aspiration to serve coupled with his personal
qualifications for it, the strength and wisdom he may need to fulfil it will
also be granted.
262
To understand the mysterious language of the
Silence, and to bring this understanding back into the world of forms through
work that shall express the creative vitality of the Spirit, is one way in which
you may serve mankind.(P)
263
The man who lives in the physical senses alone
reaches and affects those other men only whom he can come into contact with
physically. He is entirely limited by time and space. The man who lives in the
developed intellect or feelings also reaches and affects those other men who can
respond to his written or printed ideas or his artistic inspirations. He is
limited only partially by time and space. But the man who lives in the godlike
Overself within him is freed from time and space and uplifts all those who can
respond intuitively, even though they may never know him physically. For in the
spiritual world he cannot hide his light.(P)
264
It may be said that the world's supreme need is
exactly what the illumined man has found, therefore his duty is to give it to
the world. This is true, but it is equally true that the world is not ready for
it any more than he himself was ready for it before he underwent a long course
of purification, discipline, and training. Accepting these realities of the
situation, he feels no urge to spread his ideas, no impulse to organize a
following. However that does not mean that he does nothing at all; it only means
that he will help in the ways he deems to be most effective even if they are the
least publicized and the least apparent. He is not deaf to the call of duty but
he gives it a wider interpretation than those who are ignorant of the state and
powers which he enjoys.(P)
265
To wait until you have attained perfection means
that then you will be able to serve humanity perfectly. But can the imperfect do
nothing until then? No - they can help, only it will be imperfect help, limited
help, and mixed with some seeking.
266
Imagination could not grasp, even if sympathy
could sustain, all this planet's inescapable human misery and animal pain at
once. No man living could ever measure the one or alleviate the other. During
the 1940s, millions of men and women and beasts lived in torture or died in
agony, starved in famine or were liquidated in explosion. He must perforce
accept the quantitative limits which Nature, insulating his personality, sets
for him here or else set up his own. However distressed a man may be when
confronted by depressing national situations or by painful international
tragedies, knowing that he can do nothing about them, that they are beyond his
limited power as a single individual to influence, alter, or reshape, he will
have to let the responsibility for them rest on the proper shoulders and accept
the lesson in karma's working. He is not a second Atlas to bear the enormous
burden of the whole world's accumulated agony on his little shoulders.
Nevertheless, given a man who is at all sensitive enough to respond emotionally
to all the piled-up misery that lies around him, imaginative enough to recall it
even when he is isolated from it by good fortune, can such a one remain immured
in his own individuality and become impassive enough to live undistressed by the
woes of others, untouched by their cries? Hence although personally helpless in
such present matters, he can at least work patiently to improve future ones by
working to improve future humanity. He will seek to find a sensible balance
between the good manners of attending to his own spiritual business and the
compassionate duty of making his knowledge and experience available to others.
267
We must distinguish between those who have
attained to the true self through purely mystical methods and those who have
attained it through the broader philosophic ones. The first kind enjoy their
inward peace and freedom but they are often content to stop there. The second
kind likewise enjoy these things but are not content with a merely self-centered
acquisition. They seek out ways of embodying in their social surroundings and
stimulating in their human environment something of the perfect life which is
its hidden heart. Hence they teach and preach to others the way of upward
advancement which can lead them to share ultimately in this diviner life.
268
He will best meet those who come to him for help
of whatever kind, but especially of the spiritual kind - whether they approach
him in person or by letter - if he turns them over repeatedly to the Overself.
He need not do so vocally or publicly. It is enough if he does it mentally and
silently. For they come because they sense the current, however feeble, of Life
flowing through him. He must get himself out of its way, otherwise he will be
like a rock in its path. By instantly following this method of inwardly
referring the supplicants to the higher power, he will safeguard himself and
serve others more effectively.
269
It is not by overmuch fussy activity that we
necessarily serve others best. We may, if we have opened ourselves to divine
influences, become radiations of such influences. Merely by being faithful to
them, we become the best missionaries for them.
270
The idea that he has a fancy for writing down
his intuitions and inward experiences does not make him a whit greater than
another who wraps the veil of silence around his ideas, his intuitions or
experiences, which, though now unuttered, may yet dictate themselves through
other channels to generations unborn.
271
His personal destiny or spiritual dedication
will decide his future course - whether deliberately to remain obscure and avoid
the notice which excites opposition, or publicly to accept a mission and bring
inspiration to a particular kind of activity.
272
To come to a philosopher with expectations
gleaned from religio-mystic circles, and to find that he refuses to play up to
them, is to invite disappointment, perhaps even disillusionment. Yet, in being
himself, in rigidly holding to the best he knows, the philosopher has really
rendered the other a better service than if he had responded agreeably to
anticipations. The ego's incapacity to recognize this does not destroy the seed
that has been sown. Athens was handed truth by Socrates but handed him the cup
of poison in return. But who knows what minds picked up thirty years later ideas
he had left behind?
273
Spiritual work for the enlightenment of others
is more important than physical-plane charity. The particular form it should
take must naturally vary widely with different cases and different
circumstances. It is understood that such service is limited by the extent of
one's own development, the purity of one's motives, and the destiny of one's
present incarnation. When external limitations permit nothing more, it might be
done in the secrecy of one's own meditation chamber. It does not mean
proselytizing others. It is not necessarily talking or writing about spiritual
truths. It is a way of life and thought resulting from inward self-dedication
and compassionate wisdom.
274
Philosophy as a search for truth must and
does look at life as a whole, must and does take all human activities into its
perspective, instead of leaving them outside. It is only because the philosophic
teacher's human limitations prevent him from dealing with all things and compel
him to specialize in one thing that he economizes time and strength by serving
humanity as a spiritual educator rather than as a politician. Both services are
needed by humanity but one is infinitely more needed than the other. Save in the
exceptional cases where he feels charged by fate and duty to render some public
service in connection with them, he holds aloof from practical politics,
theoretical economics, religious controversy, and social questions. He knows
that the inner issue is really at stake behind all these others and this in turn
depends on the metaphysical world-view. To formulate such a correct world-view
and to guide men in the realization of their higher selves is then his chief and
only task.
He reserves his best thought and energy for the fundamental task of, on the one hand, unveiling hidden laws of life and imparting a knowledge which improves mankind morally, mentally, and mystically and, on the other hand, to improving his own self so as to be better able to help change human character, reduce its selfishness, and dissipate its materialism. The social usefulness of teaching philosophy is ultimately on a deeper level than the social usefulness of stimulating worldly reform. For here man is dealing with causes, but there with effects. The philosophical mystic's work is limited in area to this single domain, but it is very much deeper and therefore very much more important just because of that limitation.
275
No other work could measure up, in eventual
importance, to the work to which his life is dedicated, however insignificant
his part may seem to him at any time. "God regardeth the duty of proclaiming His
message as the most meritorious of all deeds," wrote the Persian prophet
Baha'u'llah. Once fully engaged in this endeavour, he will feel more and more
that he is part of a movement which is on the coming wave. Meanwhile, although
he is to do whatever he can wherever circumstances allow it, in the way of such
service, he is not to be over-anxious about results, on the one hand, nor
utterly indifferent, on the other. A calm spirit, a patient mind, must never be
deserted, yet a rejoicing heart over anyone that is guided to the Quest must
never be repressed. His task is one of the oldest in human history - to convince
men and women that it is worthwhile asking themselves: What are the ultimate
values of human life?
276
The right way to help someone is to sympathize
with the personal suffering, but to understand its inner necessity at the same
time.
277
Whoever by speech or by silence, by art or by
example, helps to improve mankind or increase knowledge of the higher truth,
renders the best service. No other charity or philanthropy equals this
upliftment of creatures struggling - unwittingly or deliberately - to a
purified, disciplined, and refined consciousness.
278
The noblest calling in life and the most useful
vocation is philosophical teaching.
279
The philosopher's work with others shines best
in a literary function. There he gives light and healing, calm and hope to the
many on their way who could never hope, owing to the lapse of time after his
death or the distance in space before it, to encounter him in a consultative
function.
280
He will not care to meddle in politics, for an
arena of strife, struggle, the clash of selfish interests, lies, and libels will
naturally be distasteful to him. But if destiny bids it, he will swallow his
reluctance.
281
Philosophy tells us to work for the welfare of
all men, but it does not tell us to work sentimentally, foolishly, unwisely,
emotionally, and impulsively. It does not mean that a rich man should instantly
give all his money to the poor; emotion may tell him to do so, but reason would
not. He must use reason to check even universal pity.
282
It is not the duty of a philosopher to solve
personal problems for others or to make decisions for them or to play the role
of a healer. Leaders of religio-mystical sects often claim to do so but he has
no such pretensions. Nor will he seek to attract disciples, making them more and
more dependent on him, and form organizations, as those leaders often do seek. A
clear distinction in thought and practice between these two departments is
necessary.
283
No philosopher of wide-ranging vision and
balanced mind dare claim to lead men into a permanent paradise. He knows that
all beings and things are subject to change - except changeless Being itself.
But he can claim to lead them into a supernal peace.
284
We need philosophers like Lord Haldane, whose
services in the defense, education, and politics of his country were immense.
285
He is to expound truth and exemplify goodness.
286
If there is a call to an apostolate from a pure
and deep source he will obey but if it originates in ego-serving shallower
levels he will merely ignore it.
287
If the individual finds that he is best suited
to help others through the medium of introducing them to meditation, then all
other forms of service, such as writing for the public press, not being his true
work, should be left to those who are specialists in that field.
288
So far as philosophy is to be saved from
becoming obliterated, it must become embodied in a remnant of persons who
understand, follow, and practise it, and it must also be recorded in writing for
posterity.
289
If he cannot show a shortcut out of the jungle
of contemporary spiritual bewilderment, he can contribute some valuable compass
readings which may help to form a better notion where the way out lies.
290
Do not believe that every first meeting with a
philosopher will necessarily enlighten you or even please you. The approach may
be made with bated breath - such is the picture an aspirant, and especially a
young one, often creates for himself - but the exit may be darkened with
disappointment.
291
He does not claim to be a walking encyclopaedia
nor ask for a halo of infallibility. There are many questions to which he does
not know the true answers. He is neither pontifically infallible nor deifically
omniscient. What the philosophical teacher seeks to establish are the basic
principles in which all true seeking must end.
292
Whoever attains this, the topmost peak of the
philosophic life, will naturally possess the capacity - rather the genius - to
help the internal evolutionary advance of mankind. Indeed, it will be the
principal and secret business of his life, whatever his external and
conventional business may be. Those who stood closest to Jesus were asked to
preach the gospel. Clearly therefore he conceived the spreading of truth to be
their primary task. That other tasks, such as feeding and clothing the poor, had
their own particular importance too, was acknowledged in his injunction to
other persons. But that such tasks were secondary ones is clear inference
from his instructions to the apostles. And in this critical passage of humanity
from a used-out standpoint to a newer one which confronts it today, such a
service is more than important. In his own humbler way and in a quiet
unobtrusive manner, remembering always that people will find the best account of
his beliefs in his deeds, even the neophyte who has still to climb the foothills
of philosophy can and must communicate so much of this knowledge as he finds men
may be ready for, but not an iota more. His task is not, like that of the
apostles, to convert them but to help them. He may be only a firefly with little
light to shed but he should desert the esotericism of former centuries and try
to enlighten others because he must understand the unique character of this
century and see the dangerous gaping abyss which surrounds its civilization.
Moreover he may take refuge in the words of Tripura, an archaic Sanskrit
text, which, if its archaic idiom be translated into modern accents, says: "An
intense student may be endowed with the slenderest of good qualities, but if he
can readily understand the truth - however theoretically - and expound it to
others, this act of exposition will help him to become himself imbued with these
ideas and his own mind will soak in their truth. This in the end will lead him
to actualize the Divinity within himself."(P)
293
If the statements of philosophers are to possess
meaning and value, they have to be related to the comprehension of men. This is
why the philosopher assumes the function of religious prophet with the masses,
dons the mantle of mystical leader or metaphysical teacher with the few, fills
the role of a sage with the rare individual.
294
He has become, by virtue of his inner
attainment, a responsible guardian of ancient truths. They are neither to be
hoarded in a miserly way nor propagated indiscriminately.
295
Because he believes that a higher power is in
very truth taking thought for men and taking care of the universe, he does not
seek excitedly to convert them but simply to state the fact of its existence.
296
It is not enough to give people only what they
are ready for, only to cater to unevolved mentalities. Some effort should also
be made to develop them.
297
It is not by making a person - be he disciple or
learner - subservient and dependent that we serve him best, but by helping him
to help himself, to develop himself.
298
The truth-charged words of a philosopher are not
for those who are neither seeking truth nor willing to accept it nor ready to
understand it.
299
Appreciation of these truths is the beginning of
the philosophic life. Application of them is the end.
300
Unless he puts his abstract principles into
concrete deeds, unless his highest thoughts are reflected in his lowliest acts,
the student is no philosopher. These teachings have not been easy to comprehend
in theory; they will certainly be still less easy to follow in practice.
Nevertheless these rarefied principles must be translated into terms of everyday
living. The skeleton must now be fleshed out and the warm living blood of action
must course around it. Hence the third path seeks to connect this knowledge with
the practical obligations of mundane existence and to associate these practices
with the social and personal responsibilities of men who lead active lives.
301
The reader has had most of this system now
presented to him. His work in following these difficult abstruse thoughts has
not been easy. Now he may face, if he wishes, an entirely fresh task, that of
bringing ultimate truth down from theory to practice. It has to be made
real to himself. It has to be fully and finally realized. Constant
recollection and constant practice are the only way to do this. When he comes to
this final frontier of all existence, he must bow his head in humble homage to
the fact that here neither yoga nor religion can venture across alone. Here the
man alone may pass who can live utterly and fully what he has thought in
metaphysics, what he has felt in religion, and what he has experienced in the
tense stillness of yoga.
302
The instruction which Moses received on Mount
Sinai, "See that thou makest all things according to the pattern showed thee in
the mount," is precisely the same as that which the initiate into
philosophic mysticism receives from his Overself after his loftiest
exaltation. That is, he is told to work out in the lower world, where good
incessantly struggles with evil and where men are plunged in darkness and
enslaved by animality, a pattern of applied truth, of divinity in action, of
altruistic spiritual service.
303
The discovery that our existence as well as the
world's existence is like that of a dream need not alarm us, need not cause us
to become impractical, inefficient, uninterested in life and half-hearted in
action. For as we should prefer a pleasant dream during sleep to a horrible
nightmare, so should we try to live this waking world dream of ours as
pleasantly, as profitably, and as successfully as possible. If these doctrines
cannot be made subservient to the ends of living, then they are metaphysical and
not philosophical. For the business of the metaphysician is to lose himself in
abstractions, but the business of the philosopher is to find himself in common
life.
304
That which he finds in deep eternity must be
worked out in day-to-day life.
305
When what he receives from within at the
intuitive level is transplanted without at the active level, it becomes
complete.
306
He is still short of the ideal if he lacks the
animating impulse which transfigures the thought into the deed.
307
There is a gratifying secret entwined with this
injunction to serve mankind. Whoever gives himself in such service will
inevitably receive a boomerang-like return one day when others will display a
readiness to serve him. For karma is a divine law which brings back to him
whatever he has given forth. The area and depth of his own service will mark the
area and depth of that which mankind will extend toward him. Only the form of it
will be different because this will depend both on prevailing circumstances and
his own subconscious or conscious desire. It may take only a mental or emotional
form. The moral of this is that the wise altruist loses nothing in the end by
his altruism, although the foolish altruist may lose much as the karmic
consequence of his foolishness.
308
A true power will inform the hands of those who
will act at the behest of the god within, whose daily admonishment to him is:
"Go out and live for the welfare of man the Light you find in the deep recesses
of your own heart."