1
Although what Zen announces as "direct penetration
to Reality" is what matters most, is the Goal of goals, no man's achievement
will be any the worse, and each will certainly be all the better, at least as a
human living in a society of other humans, if, along with it, scholarship and
contemplation at depth, practical competence and metaphysical capacity,
sharpness of reasoning and sensitivity to intuition, coexist completely.
2
The higher perception then unites with the
intellectual function and the spiritual illumination does not cease despite the
activity of thoughts.
3
In this unique state, which belongs only to the
higher phases of mysticism, there is, at one and the same time, intense feeling
but also intense thought, divine love in the heart and inspired understanding in
the head, steel-hard strength in the will yet sublime surrender of it. The whole
self is engaged in this holy communion and not merely a part of it.
4
If this attainment of radiant, inward glory is rare,
it is not only because few consciously strive for it but also because few know
the law governing the attainment itself. And that is a twofold law of balance
and wholeness.
5
The goal of self-elimination which is held up before
us refers only to the animal and lower human selves. It certainly does not refer
to the annihilation of all self-consciousness. The higher individuality always
remains. But it is so different from the lower one that it does not make much
sense to discuss it in human language. Hence, those who have adequately
understood it write or talk little about its higher mysteries. If the end of all
existence were only a merger at best or annihilation at worst, it would be a
senseless and sorry scheme of things. It would be unworthy of the divine
intelligence and discreditable to the divine goodness. The consciousness
stripped of thought, which looks less attractive to you than the hazards of life
down here, is really a tremendous enlargement of what thought itself tries to
do. Spiritual advance is really from a Less to a More. There is nothing to fear
in it and nothing to lose by it - except by the standards and values of the
ignorant.(P)
6
A fuller life will recognize not only the
spirituality of man but also the individuality of man.
7
Resurrection - to die and live again - is a symbol.
It means to leave the ego and enter the Overself in full consciousness.
8
He will unite with the Divine first by completely
disappearing into it, then by discovering his higher individuality in it.
9
When the two selves become one, the inner conflict
vanishes. Peace, rich and unutterable, is his.
10
He has extended his consciousness to the Overself,
displaced the ego from its age-old tyranny, and become the full human he
intended to be.
11
We who honour philosophy so highly cannot afford
to be other than honest with ourselves. We have to acknowledge that the end of
all our striving is surrender. No human being can do other than this - an
utterly humble prostration, where we dissolve, lose the ego, lose ourselves -
the rest is paradox and mystery.
12
Whether this other world of being is something
into which he has advanced or into which he has retreated may be arguable. What
is not arguable is that it is a world which the unequipped or the undeveloped
cannot enter.
13
He may not rightly call himself a philosopher
before he has gathered up and combined every single qualification needed for the
title.
14
When he can speak out of a daily experience of the
Overself, when it is something actual and present to him as a reality and not a
mere theory, he may correctly call himself a philosopher.
15
Only when the Overself has illumined every side of
his personal being can he be said to have a complete illumination. Only then has
he attained the sagehood of philosophy.
16
It is out of such a splendid balance of utter
humility and noble self-reliance that the philosopher gets his wisdom and
strength. He is always kneeling metaphorically before the Divine in
self-surrendering renunciation and often actually in self-abasing prayer. Yet
side by side with this, he is always seeking to develop and apply his own
intellect and intuition, his own will and experience in life. And because they
are derived from such a balanced combination, this wisdom and strength are
beyond any that religion alone, or metaphysics alone, could give.
17
Spirituality achieves its finest flowering in the
individual who is emotionally adult, intellectually developed, and practically
experienced. Such a well-rounded and admirably balanced growth is always best.
18
The philosopher will be a karma yogi to the
extent that he will work incessantly for the service of humanity and work, too,
in a disinterested spirit. He will be a bhakti yogi to the extent that he
will seek lovingly to feel the constant presence of the Divine. He will be a
raja yogi to the extent that he will hold his mind free from the world
fetters but pinned to the holy task he has undertaken. He will be a gnana yogi
to the extent that he will apply his reflective and reasoning power to a
metaphysical understanding of the world.
19
From that moment when he understands human
problems with the wisdom of the Overself, his thinking will become illumined
from within, as it were. He will comprehend clearly the inner significance of
each problem that presents itself.
20
When brain and heart are inspired and united,
wisdom and love become perceptible.
21
In the philosopher, the sense of living in the
Overself is continuous and unbroken.
22
In observation a scientist, at heart a religious
devotee, in thought a metaphysician, in secret a mystic, and in public an
efficient honourable useful citizen - this is the kind of man philosophy
produces.(P)
23
His thoughts are guided by the Overself, his
emotions inspired by it, and his actions expressive of it. Thus his whole
personal life becomes a harmoniously and divinely integrated one.
24
He only is worthy of the name philosopher who not
only possesses a knowledge of mentalism, and understands it well, but who
reverently lets the higher power be ever present in, and work through, him.
Otherwise he is only a student of philosophy.
25
A man acts philosophically when wisdom and service
become the motive power behind his deeds. These are the two currents which must
flow through his external life.
26
He will be active and creative if the infinite
inspires him to that end, or he will repose in utter stillness if its direction
is to that one. In this rhythm he will live and through it achieve the dynamic
balance which philosophy prescribes. The movement from one end of the spiral to
the other will then be no change of being for him but only a change of focus.
27
The philosopher has as little use for artificial
professional sanctity as for morbid body-hating asceticism. Enlightenment must
become "natural" - a living fact of the whole being - and its possessor
inconspicuous. Neither the one nor the other is to be advertised publicly in any
way.
28
The philosopher is a religious devotee inasmuch as
he finds the Real sacred and holy. He is a respecter of science, one who tests
theory against fact, belief against observation. He is a lover of aesthetic
beauty, seeking its higher forms in nature, poetry, music, and other arts. He is
a metaphysician, transcending materialism by responding to intuitive
intelligence.
29
The true philosopher is conscious daily of the
blessed inward life of the Overself, indescribable in its serenity, loveliness,
strength, and sacredness. Keeping the mind in equilibrium, in a state of
equipoise which remains undistracted and undisturbed by external forces and
events, becomes perfectly natural in time, and is a state in which he continues
until death. It is not a monotonous condition as some might believe, but one of
such satisfaction that we can only faintly envisage it in comparison with our
material joys deprived of their emotional excitements.
30
He is a philosopher who realizes to the full, and
continually feels, the presence of divinity not only within himself but also
within the world.
31
His wisdom must be equal to calamity or
prosperity, the bad or the good - to all situations, in fact.
32
He has awakened from the dream of material
reality, dissipated the illusion of the I's personal consciousness.
33
He is a complete person who takes in the artist's
contribution to beauty, the scientist's contribution to facts, the
metaphysician's contribution to truth, the religionist's contribution to faith,
and the humanist's contribution to goodness.
34
Because he has now enlarged his thought of self to
include the Overself, it does not follow that he is therefore to disregard the
personality and neglect its needs.
35
Emotion may point to one road, reason to another,
and conscience to a third. Only in the matured philosopher does this trinity
become a unity, does this inner conflict come to an end.
36
Wisdom blooms like a flower in the soul of one who
follows this path.
37
The flower grows into a balanced and complete
entity. This is the way he is to grow. It is perfect in itself, and nothing need
be added to it. This is the ideal he is to realize.
38
In his practical life he will evidence a
compassionate heart but a clear head, a strong will but a sensitive intuition.
39
He is a scientist to the extent that he respects
fact, a metaphysician to the extent that he wants reality, a religionist to the
extent that he recognizes a higher power.
40
Although he dwells in the Eternal, he lets the
passing hour take from him what it needs. This is balance.
41
By starting to live from the core itself, we start
to live harmoniously, undivided and whole.
42
The true philosopher does not fall into the errors
of either ill-informed mystics or dogmatic materialists. The one glorifies
either the ancients or the Orientals as being all-wise, thus idealizing what he
has no experience of since it is so distant in time and space. The other
ridicules this attitude and glorifies the moderns or the Westerners instead.
43
The philosophical attitude will appear in balanced
judgements formed after clear and careful thought, in the harmonious way whereby
idealism is tempered by realism.
44
Every act will then be in harmony with his own
higher self. Wherever his attention may be focused and whatever the level on
which it may be engaged, he will never become sundered from his deep lodgement
in it. He will inwardly dwell in a hidden world of reality, truth, and love.
None of his deeds in this earthen world of falsehood and animosity will ever
violate his spiritual integrity.
45
Neither the life of action nor the life of reason
is able to satisfy him, nor even their combination, however good it be. He
comes, in time, to the last question and, with the finding of its answer, to the
life of intuition. Henceforth he is to be taught from within, led from within,
by something deeper than intellect, surer than intellect. Henceforth he is to do
what needs doing under the influx of a higher will than his merely personal one.
46
The trained philosophic mind can quickly discern
whether a statement of doctrine originates from the personal intellect, the
personal emotions, or the spiritual Overself.
47
The philosopher's self-control is naturally
achieved and durably settled. It hides no inner conflicts and leaves no harmful
effect behind.
48
When he has silenced his desires and stilled his
thoughts, when he has put his own will aside and his own ego down, he becomes a
free channel through which the Divine Mind may flow into his own consciousness.
No evil feelings can enter his heart, no evil thoughts can cross his mind, and
not even the new consequence of old wrong-doing can affect his serenity.
49
In the true philosopher the distance between the
thought of a right deed and the deed itself is nil. There is no inner conflict
in such a man, no wavering between the lower nature and the higher ordinance.
What he knows, he is. His wisdom has become welded into his moral outlook and
practical activity. There are no schizophrenic dissociations or unconscious
complexes. Righteousness is a profound instinct with him.
50
It is not that he sees beauty where others see
ugliness - on the contrary, he recognizes the place of ugliness and its
inevitability in this Yin-Yang existence - but that he sees all things,
including ugly things, as manifestations of divine Mind.
51
There is a charm which emanates from goodness, a
vigour which radiates from truth, and a peace which belongs to reality.
52
The philosopher does not hold any views. Views are
held by those who depend on the intellect or the emotions alone for their
judgements. His dependence is on the intuition, the voice of his higher self.
53
The philosopher lives in a great serene
equilibrium upon whose boundaries rage and envy, greed and frenzy beat in vain.
54
He is above moods, neither exuberant nor
restrained but always equable.
55
He combines the simple purity and direct honesty
of a child with the discretion and prudence of an adult.
56
Sanctity is deep within him but his conduct and
speech are never sanctimonious.
57
He will act according to the pressure of
circumstances and the necessity of upholding principles. At times he may be so
wrapped up in his own studies and meditations as to seem cut off from society
altogether. But at other times he may keep so busy in the world as to seem one
of its most eager members.
58
If such philosophy is lived by him, what he says
cannot be valueless. Out of the deep stillness within there will emerge genuine
truth, invisible substance, measured quality, or he will hold his peace and say
little or nothing.
59
His conduct shows a calmness which seems
invulnerable and a detachment which seems implacable.
60
In his mind he separates time and its trifles from
the Himalayan massiveness of the Eternal. If he is forced by conditions to plan
ahead for a few months or a few years, he never allows them to force him into
deserting this inner loyalty to the timeless Now.
61
The philosophic mind is a civilized one. It is
free from narrow prejudices, tolerant even when it disagrees, informed by wide
studies, calm and controlled even in the encounter with provocative untruth,
exaggeration, or fanaticism.
62
We would not expect an enlightened man to utter
careless statements.
63
The discovery of a philosophic truth is, in time
and as it is lived, a deeply felt thing even though its expression or
communication may be quiet and composed. The stoical side of the philosophic
character does not destroy the warmth of this feeling. It will be present in the
communication itself as freshness and originality, as if heart were speaking to
heart and, for those who need it, head to head.
64
A higher viewpoint will insert itself into
thoughts and decisions; it will show up faulty ideas and defective decisions for
the things that they are because it will show up the lower source whence they
have arisen.
65
He feels released from the strain and tension of
everyday life, for in its midst an enormous sense of well-being permeates him.
66
The divinely inspired mind may function in
meditation or in action. If it has achieved the philosophic degree, there will
be no difference between the two states.
67
He is a practical optimist. He turns rosy dreams
to reality. He catches the bright but cloudy fancies of the optimist and ties
them down to earth. He keeps his head among the stars but his feet are firmly
planted on the ground.
68
He combines somehow the sophistication of the man
of experience with the simplicity of the monkish ascetic.
69
The term yogi in the East has for centuries
been almost synonymous with a man who has withdrawn from social life. Yoga aims
at the suppression of thinking as a goal in itself, which means that it aims at
conscious trance (for this is the only thought-free state apart from deep sleep)
and hence at an inactive life. A philosopher is free to live like a yogi if he
is led to do so or, on the contrary, to use both a developed thinking activity
and a practical existence. Activity will then be quite spontaneous, not with the
spontaneity of impulse or passion, but with that derived from the absence of
merely animal motivation. It will indeed be inspired living.
70
He will possess the trained mentality and
disciplined character which reacts swiftly to urgent situations, calmly to
dangerous ones, and wisely to unexpected ones.
71
Having passed through the stage of lunacy which is
communal and individual life today, he is at last enjoying the true normalcy of
sanity, which yields its effects in comprehension and serenity.
72
He feels the truth deep within himself: his ideas
are warmly held, not coldly intellectualized. Yet despite this love for them,
the intellect is not absent, only it is put into a kind of balance with the
heart so that light and power are combined.
73
He is idealistic without being fanatical,
realistic without being materialistic, reformist without being obsessed.
74
When the full range of philosophic knowledge,
experience, worship, and presence is gone through, the man ceases to seek: he is
at peace.
75
He senses the power of the ever-accompanying
Presence: it makes him sturdily independent.
76
The philosophic ideal is not to achieve a
self-conscious spirituality but rather a natural one.
77
He will be more spiritual in an authentic sense
than some others who, deliberately and consciously, try oft and long to be
otherworldly.
78
A philosopher is not necessarily a man who
lectures on philosophy, be it genuine wisdom or mere academic and scholarly
word-spinning. He is a man who knows that life is not only for thought about it,
and for insight into its deepest reality, but also for living. He is
withal as sensitive as a mystic and feels nuances beyond the ordinary, but he
cultivates calmness in the midst of normal activity and remains unflappable.
79
There is a singing joy in the Presence and a
mental ease in the awakened consciousness.
80
The man whose thinking is unbiased by prejudice
and whose feeling is untainted by selfishness is invested with a moral authority
which others lack.
81
Attention is forever being caught by some thought
or some thing, by some feeling or some experience. In the case of the ordinary
man, consciousness is lost in the attention; but in the case of the philosophic
man there is a background which evaluates the attention and controls it.(P)
82
The enlightened man may outwardly appear to live
like others, a normal and ordinary life, but whether he does so or not, there
will always be this vital difference between him and ordinary men: that he never
forgets his true nature.
83
The results in consciousness will be to gain a new
understanding of the world. The savage who sees and hears a cinema for the first
time may believe that he is seeing flesh-and-blood people, but the civilized man
who sees and hears the same film will know that he is seeing only their
pictures. Again, whereas one man will believe the picture-people's environment
to be of the same fixed size in space as the screen on which the perspective
appears, another will know that - being made only of light and light in itself
being quite formless - the perception of their spatial character is really a
variable one. Great as is the difference in understanding between these two men,
the difference between the world-understanding of the civilized man and that of
the man possessed of this insight is even greater.
84
In the philosopher intellect is ruled by intuition
whereas in the ordinary man intuition is dulled by intellect.
85
The Stoic, whose highest lights are his ethical
principles, may attain cold neutral peace. The philosopher, who lives by
trans-egoic awareness, finds a gracious tranquillity.
86
All men are subject to some effect from the people
around them but only philosophers are able to be fully conscious of the
influences impinging on them and to reject part or all of them if necessary.
87
Such a man can feel as joyfully enthusiastic about
impersonal ideas as other men can feel only about personal fortunes.
88
Such a man is not plagued in society by
self-consciousness.
89
He who has attained to this utter calm of the
Overself, or come near enough to feel it every day, individualizes himself out
of the crowd and finds his own soul. He no longer has to be with the majority to
feel at ease.
90
The practical difference between a fool and a
philosopher is that the first is always impatient with the second, whereas the
second is always patient with the first.
91
Like men speaking in different languages, they are
unable to establish any real intercourse with one another. Yet there is this
difference, that whereas the philosopher has a clear enough perception of what
is in their hearts they cannot comprehend what is in the philosopher's.
92
If they cannot make any inner contact with one
another, the fault is not the philosopher's but the crowd's. He is ever ready to
give every man he meets a mental handshake, ever ready to accept all people for
what they are. Moreover, he is inwardly laid by his higher self under obligation
to benefit mankind by what he knows and is.
93
His eyes look upon the same world as other men's
but he sees much in it which they do not see.
94
It is the difference in world-view which explains
why one man fills his heart with anger and hate at exactly the same mistreatment
under which another man fills his heart with forbearance and forgiveness.
95
Philosophy takes into account the whole
personality of man. The sage knows more about human nature than the
psychoanalyst for, besides noting the structure of human behaviour, he takes
into account both karmic factors of cause and effect and the higher reaches of
the mind.
96
Sects who cling to their little fanaticisms with
blind fervour show thereby their lack of balance. The philosopher also clings to
truth with even more fervour because he sees what it is that he is
clinging to, but he does so calmly, maintains a considerable self-effacing
equilibrium, and keeps a large tolerance. He knows too that the truth is
substantiated by observed fact, by the highest kind of feeling, by the oldest
religion and the newest science.
97
Do not put a tag on the philosopher. To the
observer staring at him and his life, he is a bundle of contradictions and
inconsistencies. But whereas he reconciles them, they cannot.
98
Those who think that philosophy ends in a torpid
indifference to life are in error. Rather does it end in a proper evaluation of
life, which balances calm indifference against keen interest, so as not to be
lost in either.
99
He lives in the world like other men and beholds
all but, unlike other men, accepts all.
100
The philosophic attitude is to be in the world
but not of it, to hold necessary useful or beautiful possessions but not to be
held by them. It knows the transiency of things, the brevity of pleasures, the
movement of every situation. This is the way of the universe, the ebb and flow
of life, the power of time to alter the pattern of every existence. So the
philosopher adjusts himself to this rhythm, learns how and when to let go and
when to hold on, and so retains his inner equilibrium, his inner poise and
peace. During stormy times he stands firm as a rock, he studies their meaning
and accepts their lesson; during sunny times he avoids identifying himself with
the little ego and remembers his true security is in the Overself.
101
He knows full well how illusory the form
of the world is, yet he keeps this knowledge in perfect balance with his duties
responsibilities and tasks in that world. He does what needs doing as
effectually as any man of action, yet is inwardly as detached as any idle
dreamer.
102
Is the philosopher affected by his surroundings
like everyone else? He is, so far as they report their nature to his senses. But
there the likeness ends. For his mind then steps in to work constructively on
the report and to interpret it philosophically.
103
The aim is to develop an equable disposition
which does not alternate misery with joy, friendliness with antipathy, or
extreme with extreme. This is not the same as an inert apathetic disposition.
104
Some part of his mind and heart will always be
elsewhere, out of all this activity, above and detached from it all.
105
It is not that he becomes a mere onlooker at
life - although during the pre-philosophic period this temptation is present -
but that the difference between absolute reality and relative existence becomes
all too plain.
106
The ordinary man who loves comfort and desires
possessions, property, or position is not acting wrongly. He is wrong when he
lets himself get tied to them and suffers intensely at their loss. The
philosopher may also have these things, but there is this difference: that he
will be inwardly free of them.
107
The philosopher's duty leaves him free to live
in the world or leave it. There are no compulsive rules for him. But if he
decides to stay, or is compelled by his need to earn a livelihood, he will take
care not to be of the world.
108
A perfect degree of impersonality is unlikely to
be found because it is generally unsought and ordinarily unattainable. But a
large measure of it may be arrived at.
109
The modern philosopher cannot fail to be a most
paradoxical gentleman. He works as actively and apparently as ambitiously as
other men, relaxes with entertainment or with the arts, but withal keeps his
innermost self aloof and detached from the scenes and agitations around him.
110
In the philosophic experience, feeling is there
and must be there, as it is with the unphilosophical. But it is more and more
impersonalized - that is the vital difference. Yet it is a difference which
repels, chills, or even terrifies some persons when the philosopher comes under
their observation.
111
If the intellect of the philosopher is a
developed one, it will be active in the creation of ideas if he is working with
them, or of images if he is working in an artistic pursuit. But, in either case,
he will still be detached from them, unbound by them, free to pursue them or to
drop them.
112
The so-called dehumanized coolness of the
philosopher is frightening to some, while to others its lack of negative
passions and animal wraths is felt as a silent accusation, is catalytic in
causing a feeling of guilt to arise - and so his company becomes uncomfortable.
113
He will grow into a great-hearted man with a
clear insight into human motivation and a calm acceptance of men and women as he
finds them. Something of Nature's patience in working out her evolutionary
scheme will enter into his soul. When he thinks of those who have wronged him,
he will spontaneously and effortlessly forgive them.
114
He will look at experience from a new centre. He
will see all things and creatures not only as they are on earth but also as they
are "in heaven."
115
He takes people just as he finds them and events
just as they happen. He does not outwardly express any desire for them to be
different from what they are. There are at least two reasons for this attitude.
First, he knows that the divine thought of the universe contains the idea of
evolution. So he believes that however bad people may be, one day they will be
better; however untoward circumstances may be, divine wisdom has brought them
about. Second, he knows that if he is to keep an unruffled peace inside him, he
must allow nothing outside him to disturb it. Because he regards the outer life
as being as ephemeral as a dream, he is reconciled to everything, rebellious
against nothing.
116
Another characteristic of the philosopher is his
capacity to see the point of view of all, of the sinner and the criminal, the
weak and the ignorant, equally with that of the saint and the sage. This is born
partly out of his developed intelligence, partly out of his profound
impersonality, and partly out of his wide compassion. This leads to the
consequence that when seeking practical remedies for social wrongs, or redress
for private ones, he seeks beneath the surface for ultimate causes. A merely
superficial view, which may deceive millions of people, is rejected by him. The
punishment of a crime without accompanying ethical education, for instance, he
regards as clumsy and inefficient brutality. Prison punishment, especially,
should be set in a framework of ethical instruction which includes the doctrine
of karma. Without such a setting its deterrent effect is not sufficient to make
it more than a half-success and a half-failure.
117
The philosophic attitude, being a truth-seeking
attitude, never criticizes merely for the sake of criticizing, and never seeks
to uncover what is bad in a thing without seeking at the same time to uncover
what is good. Its critical judgements are fair, never destructive but always
constructive. Whatever it attacks because of the error and evil it contains, it
also defends because of the truth and good it contains.
118
Even if he finds it necessary to give cautionary
criticism, it will be philosophically balanced, truly constructive, and entirely
free from condemnation.
119
His attitude is always fair and unbiased,
because his sincerity is illumined by knowledge.
120
The philosopher will be patient with the moral
and intellectual deficiencies of others. He will arrive at this patience not by
a long training, but by immediate insight.
121
Feeling this sympathy with his fellow-beings,
understanding why they act as they do, he can no longer bring himself to fear,
hate, or condemn them.
122
A tender, world-embracing compassion overwhelms
him.
123
He is able to determine precisely what ethical
principle is their guiding and dominant force, and what mental status they have
reached. Yet paradoxically enough, the greater clarity with which he can now
view the souls of others does not diminish his tolerance but, on the contrary,
increases it. For he understands that everything and everyone are the result of
the previous experience which life has given them, that they cannot help being
other than what they are, and that all occupy a certain place at some stage or
other in the universal evolutionary scheme - even those who are actuated by
devilish and evil characteristics. Instead of placing himself in inward
opposition to the wicked and thus setting up conflict, he silently pities them
in his own heart, for he knows that the karmic law will reflect back to its
perpetrator suffering for every evil deed. On the other hand, he will not
hesitate impersonally to perform a drastic punitive duty should it be his duty
to do so according to his position in the outer world.
124
The philosophical attitude maintains fairness
and courtesy even toward those who attack philosophy.
125
If the world is merely indifferent to these
ideas he is not troubled. If it is actually hostile to them, he is
understandingly tolerant, calm, and compassionate.
126
This is the paradox of the philosophic attitude,
a paradox which few of its critics understand, that it directly faces or
analyses its problems and yet turns away from them in utter unconcern. It is
able to do this only because it functions on two levels, the immediate and the
ultimate, because it refuses to leave either one of them out of its picture of
life.
127
At last he will have reached a point where his
thinking can be utterly free of past periods and present influences, where it
can embody his own research and its independent results, where it is the voice
of his own source.
128
He has discovered the strength which comes from
self-control, the peace which comes from stilled thoughts, and the happiness
which comes from the true self.
129
He enters into the mastery of philosophy when he
not only sees its truth but also feels it fully and loves it deeply. He has
attained peace of mind, yes, but he is still a human being, has known suffering
and sometimes even tragedy, has blundered and groped his way through a necessary
apprenticeship. He has acquired knowledge, yes, but with it a paradoxical
sensitivity.
130
He will know R E A L I T Y, and know it too as
his own ultimate being, indestructible and ever-existent. Amid the most prosaic
surroundings, deep in the core of his own heart there will be perfect calm for
himself and goodwill for all others.
131
He attains the beatitude of knowing his higher
self.
132
His own fine balance not only saves him from
falling into any one-sidedness but also allows him to recognize unhesitatingly
and value justly whatever is worthwhile in all the sides of a subject or a
situation. It keeps him inwardly free to admire without exaggeration or to
criticize without prejudice.
133
The sanity with which he negotiates life's
practical problems is impressive.
134
The philosopher, and the philosopher alone, can
sincerely believe and accept two opposite points of view at the same time.
135
He will not gladly bear any label, for he
considers truth a state of being rather than a set of dogmas, and he prefers the
freedom to search and hold it to the shackles of sectarian connection. But if
the world insists on his identifying himself, he will take the name of
philosopher, as being broader, more universal, and less restrictive than any
other. It is a name which links and limits him to no religious denomination,
which detaches him from all intellectual schools, and which puts him under no
organizational, party, or sectarian roof.
136
The philosopher has liberated himself from all
the mental cages which are offered by time and tradition to seeking man. He is
not the representative of any organized religion nor the advocate of any
denominational sect nor the missionary of any proselytizing cult. He appreciates
the past history of religion and extracts what he can find of value in it, but
he refuses to let it burden him with what is not. He is determined to remain
free from its debris and to find his way to the original source of truth.
137
When he reaches this understanding he will no
longer look to any personage for inspiration, he will no longer take any guru at
his self-asserted or disciple-asserted value; he will be attached only to
principles, to Truth itself. Thus at long last he will achieve liberation from
guru-hunting and find true self-sufficing peace.
138
Only the philosopher can move through the narrow
world of conventional religions and remain strong in individuality and free in
mentality. The same truth which gives him faith in religion also saves him from
its limitations.
139
As the member of a social community he may
prefer or find it necessary to wear a badge, to be joined to some religious
organization, or he may not. But as a philosopher he cannot put such limits on
his mind, faith, or practice, cannot commit his inner freedom into the hands of
other men.
140
The philosopher is usually happier if his
spiritual freedom is expressed in outer freedom from ecclesiastical cages or
cultists' groups. That is why he is reluctant to identify himself with any
single organized church or mystical society. But if particular circumstances or
special service or inner direction call him to it, he will not refuse to
surrender this outer freedom.
141
He is the true philosopher who neither falls
into the trap of warring sectarianism nor allows others to push him into it, who
looks for and accepts the flowering of what is best and truest in all the
religions and movements, ideas and principles but himself remains unlabelled. He
must refuse to restrict himself to or to conform with any single fixed and rigid
faith. Whatever leads to a superior quality of consciousness is welcome,
wherever it be found and whenever it originated.
142
The philosopher is usually too comprehensive in
his outlook to confine his stand to one of two sides; he prefers to take a third
position.
143
The philosopher more than other men is a
cosmopolitan creature. He scorns the fierce nationalisms which run riot in the
world and feels the truth of Jesus' message of goodwill towards all men.
144
If you have understood philosophy you will
follow no spiritual leader, be he P.B. or anyone else.
145
The superior mind is marked by a universality of
outlook which is the hallmark of development and spirituality.
146
The philosopher is non-partisan in the sense
that he maintains his freedom to think independently and to make individual
judgements throughout. He is free from bias and prejudice. If his conclusions
happen to coincide with those of any group or denomination he will note the fact
but does not necessarily support their other doctrines nor join their ranks.
147
All that is true and good and beautiful in every
faith creed sect or school belongs to him yet he himself may belong to none.
148
When he has the confidence to speak from
personal discovery and the authority to speak from a superior level, a few may
then listen, but more will do so later.
149
Whatever the standpoint he will try to
understand it even while seeing its falsity.
150
The man who finishes the Way must necessarily be
solitary inwardly, for he has torn himself away from the common illusion.
151
The philosopher accepts his predestined
isolation not only because that is the way his position has to be, but also
because his physical presence arouses negative feelings in the hearts of
ordinary people as it arouses positive ones in the hearts of certain seekers.
The negatives may range all the way from puzzlement, bewilderment, and suspicion
to fear, opposition, and downright enmity. The positives may range from
instinctive attraction to a readiness to lay down life in his defense or
service. All these feelings arise instantly, irrationally, and instinctively.
And they are unconnected with whether or not he reveals his true personal
identity. This is because they are the consequence of a psychical impingement of
his aura upon theirs. The contact is unseen and unapparent in the physical
world, but it is very real in the mental-emotional world. It is truly a
psychical experience for both: clear and precise and correctly understood by
him, vague and disturbing and utterly misunderstood by ordinary people as well
as pseudo-questers. It is both a psychical and a mystical experience for those
genuine questers with whom he has some inward affinity, a glad recognition of a
long-lost, much revered Elder Brother. Unfortunately, despite the generous
compassion and enormous goodwill which he bears in his heart for all alike, it
is the unpleasant contacts which make up the larger number whenever the
philosopher descends into the world. Let him not be blamed if he prefers
solitude to society. For there is nothing he can do about it. People are what
they are. Most times when he tries to make himself agreeable to them, as though
they both belonged to the same spiritual level, he fails. He learns somewhat
wearily to accept his isolation and their limitation as inevitable and, at the
present stage of human evolution, unalterable. He learns, too, that it is futile
to desire these things to be otherwise.(P)
152
Even the philosopher who goes out of his way to
avoid provoking anyone in any way - who never shows hate, passion, wrath, or
resentment, who keeps his ego out of his dealings with others, and who in short
does all he can to diminish the chances of disturbing them - even such a man
will nevertheless be criticized, attacked, interfered with, or abused, in spite
of his good thoughts and good deeds. Such is the evil in men and so widespread
is it. But this will happen only if he ventures into any dealings or any
relations with them, if he appears publicly among them to teach or serve in some
way. It will not happen if he prudently remains aloof, apart, secluded, obscure,
a hermit - or, if that be not possible, if he goes out of his way in order not
to attract attention. In that case, he will enjoy his peace undisturbed by the
world's opposition. But it would then also be the world's loss.
153
The more he advances in power and consciousness,
the more he grows in humility. Now, when he has something really worth being
vain about, he takes especial care to be inconspicuous and not to seem
extraordinary or holy above others. This is one of the causes of his
secretiveness.
154
This silence which enwraps him does so only
where his spiritual life is concerned. It is not quite the pride of feeling
inner greatness nor a way of protecting that life against sneering laughter or
inquisitive intruders. It is the sense of a holiness around it, the attitude of
reverence for it.
155
It is not an exclusiveness born of spiritual
pride but of spiritual humility. For the philosopher feels profoundly that he
must respect other people's viewpoint because it is the result of their own
individual experience of life.
156
The philosopher's inner life is an isolated one.
It would be very foolish to blurt out all that he believes, thinks, or knows in
any and every company. He recognizes the graded character of human mentality.
This recognition compels him quite often to listen without dispute and with all
tolerance to statements embodying extremely limited conceptions, half-developed
ideas, or wholly biased views. A consequence of this attitude is that he usually
understands more than anyone guesses.
157
If he has to live among those to whom his inner
life would be uncomprehended, he guards his words, practises secrecy, and meets
them on their own level.
158
He who seeks truth beyond the horizon of common
humanity thereby sets up a difference which is no less actual and deep because
it is invisible. But it is not merely because he is conscious that he is
different from the herd that the philosopher wears a mask of secrecy over the
face of his philosophy: it is also because he is conscious that there is little
he can do about it, that the long discipline of life will do better whatever is
necessary to bring the herd into the same perception.
159
What he carries within his heart and mind is, he
feels, to be treasured. It is a spiritual treasure. He winces away from showing
it to those who may despise it or even hate it.
160
The philosopher is not interested in drawing
attention to himself but only to his ideas, his discoveries, and his
revelations.
161
He will keep all mention of philosophy to
himself and break his silence only when true need to do so manifests itself. He
will do his exercises and practices in secret, unobserved, so that he may remain
undisturbed. Where he must depart from the norm in public, as in following a
fleshless diet, he will try to behave inconspicuously and thus draw no attention
to his departure. From the standpoint of conventional society, he will not
ordinarily be known as a follower of philosophy. In the Japanese phrase, "he
will walk the Path as if not walking it."
162
He accepts his inner isolation and learns to
live in it, realizing that he can do nothing about it. The compensation for such
acceptance is that his serenity remains impregnable.
163
Philosophy touches life at all points. The
philosopher willingly comes into contact with all kinds and conditions of men -
to observe, to study, and to learn. But there are times when he may not do this,
may not expose himself to psychic infections or disturbances.
164
Why should he confide this knowledge to those
who are likely to treat it with either disdain or disbelief? Hence at the first
sign of these reactions he draws back and says no more.
165
It is by the maintenance of such secrecy that
they succeed in avoiding conflict with the prejudice and narrowness, the
dogmatism and intolerance prevailing among those around them.
166
The earlier philosophic training in
self-restraint enables him easily to conceal from the world what ought to be
concealed.
167
Neither his speech nor his manner will divulge
his secret.
168
He always makes it a point to behave civilly and
sympathetically to everyone; nevertheless, if he deliberately lives a lonely
existence, if he withdraws from the society of evolutionary inferiors, it is not
only because he has no spiritual interests in common and familiarity could only
lead in the end to boredom, but also because promiscuous intimacy would expose
them to the perils of overstimulation which the forces present in him bring
about automatically.
169
He does not want others to think of him nor like
him. He believes in evolutionary grades of human mentality and is willing to
accept with indifference the variety which is one result.
170
Whenever he happens to be forced into closer
contact with worldlings, he will be polite to them but that is the end of the
contact. His inmost thoughts will remain unshared.
171
His silence and reserve, his secrecy, become a
kind of fortress for his protection.
172
With many persons he will feel only half of
himself, with all his finest inner life closed up, and shut in with them he is
physically present but spiritually far off.
173
He who appears amongst humanity bearing the
chalice of pure truth in his hands must expect insult and endure isolation.
174
Instead of proclaiming himself among the
greatest of the Great, the philosopher confesses, "I am nothing." Instead of
pretentiously gathering followers around his name as the High Prophet, he pushes
them away, for this is related to his degree of inner development.
175
He has no banners to unfurl, so sure is he that
the eternal truths can take care of themselves. Men and movements can try to
destroy the belief in them, but given enough time it will reappear.
176
The glory of his achievement is balanced by the
memory of his past failure.
177
He will remain indifferent whether he be
calumniated or revered, sneered at or glorified.
178
Whatever his task or profession in the world may
be, he will so contrive that it will become a labour for the good of his fellow
creatures not less than for personal profit.
179
To know the truth, to express it crisply with
full calm authority - this is to be his mission henceforth.
180
The free soul has brought his thought and
actions into perfect harmony with Nature's morality. He lives not merely for
himself alone, but for himself as a part of the whole scheme. Consequently, he
does not injure others but only benefits them. He does not neglect his own
benefit, however, but makes the two work together. His activities are devoted to
fulfilling the duties and responsibilities set for him by his best wisdom, by
his higher self.
The world is necessarily affected by his presence and activities, and affected beneficially. First, the mere knowledge that such a man exists helps others to continue with their efforts at self-improvement, for they know then that the spiritual quest is not a vain dream but a practicable affair. Second, he influences those he meets to live better lives - whether they be few or many, influential or obscure. Third, he leaves behind a concentration of spiritual forces which works on for a long time, through other persons, after he leaves this world. Fourth, if he is a sage and balanced, he will always do something of a practical nature for the uplift of humanity instead of merely squatting in an ashram.(P)
181
He becomes in time, according to the measure of
his development, a dynamic influence upon others. This is in part because people
begin to see the benefits which he cannot hide, and in part because he wins
their respect by the superior character which he manifests in times of crisis or
difficulty. Among those who laughed derided or complained about his eccentric
convictions, some live to tolerate or even accept them.
182
He will work from the Overself; he will move and
serve the world from within his central being.
183
When he looks around at life from this fresh
vantage point of the higher self, sensing the timeless while in the very midst
of time, he becomes the bringer of an old-new hope for man.
184
He becomes an open channel through which flows
the beneficent, educative, and redemptive power of the Overself.
185
In every situation where he is involved with
other persons, he will consider neither his own welfare solely to the exclusion
of others nor theirs to the detriment of his own. He will do what is just and
wise in the situation, taking the welfare of all into consideration and being
guided ultimately by the impersonal intuition of the Overself.
186
We may say of the true philosophers what one
American author said of another American author. Herman Melville wrote in a
letter to Nathaniel Hawthorne: "Knowing you persuades me more than the Bible of
our immortality."
187
Whether he gives verbal form to the truth he has
found is not, he discovers, important. Living it is his really important work
and that he does spontaneously, naturally.
188
He becomes a centre of spiritual effluence.
189
Truth must be approached on its own terms. We
are not to set up rules for finding it.
190
There are no statements of truth which can be
called absolute on all levels of reference. Each is relative to the standpoint.
191
Although the pure truth has never been stated,
nevertheless it has never been lost. Its existence does not depend upon human
statement but upon human sensitivity. In this it is unlike all other knowledge.
192
There is but one God, one Truth, one Reality,
although there are several different degrees in their perception by man.
193
The same doctrine which clarifies the game of
life for one man, confuses it for another man. So long as truth is regarded from
a personal standpoint this must inevitably be so. All schools of thought are
tentatively correct if we assume the respective standpoints from which
they look at a subject. The personal self possesses its own idiosyncrasies and
peculiarities; its experience is circumscribed and it is guided by intellect,
emotion, and passion alone. So long as we see things from this limited
standpoint, so long shall we negate what others affirm, so long shall we now
believe what we ourselves may later contradict. Yet the truth is more than a
reconciliation of contradictory aspects, a bringing together of opposite
tendencies. It is a final union which is higher than any of its separate
elements. The process of attaining its height necessitates travelling a zig-zag
path of alternating standpoints only at first. For when we leave the personal
standpoint and win the higher self's in sight, with its infinite perspective, we
are able to harmonize all possible standpoints, we are able to give all other
standpoints an intellectual sympathy without however regarding any one of them
as possessing either universal or ultimate validity. But this need not lead to
the silly conclusion that one standpoint is as good as another. For as one
climbs up a hill the prospect varies, the outlook changes, and the field of view
expands. He who has reached the crest is alone able to survey the whole
landscape below, and to survey it accurately. Therefore the pilgrims of the
Overmind refrain from letting themselves become covered by a crusted outlook,
reserve their best exultations, remembering that ultimate Truth is of no party
and yet of all, and hasten to that summit whereon they may stand serene, free at
last from the noisy clamour of narrow minds. Then and then only the different
world views which come into collision with each other in unphilosophica l minds
are spontaneously harmonized. Thus the simile of a search which we have used in
the phrase "quest of the overself" is useful but does not cover the full
implication of the undertaking which confronts aspiring man.
194
Is there a universal truth? Is there a doctrine
which does not depend on individual opinion or the peculiarities of a particular
age or the level of culture of a particular land? Is there a teaching which
appeals to universal experience and not to private prejudice? We reply that
there is, but it has been buried underneath much metaphysical lumber, much
ancient lore, and much Oriental superstition. Our work has been to rescue this
doctrine from the dead past for the benefit of the living present. In these
pages we explode false counterfeits and expound the genuine doctrine.(P)
195
This truth is fixed, changeless, and eternal; it
towers like the Great Pyramid over the flat desert sands of all other knowledge.
It initiates us into a world of abstract being which paradoxically is not less
real than that whose face is so familiar.
196
To arrive at great certitude is to arrive at
great strength. Truth not only clears the head but also arms the will. It is not
only a light to our feet but is itself a force in the blood.(P)
197
There is a buoyant cheerful quality in this
truth; it acts as a tonic upon tired minds.
198
At the touch of truth falsehood goes, illusions
fade, and deceptions - whether from within oneself or prompted by others - fall
away.
199
Truth is the human knowledge of reality.
200
The coming of truth can be devastatingly cruel
to some persons and immeasurably kind to others. Or it can be both to the same
person at different periods of his life. It is not directly concerned with
personal happiness.
201
Just as the sun can be seen only by its own
light, so truth can be discerned only by its own self-revelation in the mind.
That is, only by grace leading to insight. There is no other way.
202
The truth possesses its own force, but only for
those who are ripe for its reception. The others can take nothing better than
watery dilutions of it, nothing higher than elementary lessons in it, nothing
subtler than symbolic revelations which obscure it.
203
Because this is the purest truth, it is also the
most powerful truth. He who is possessed by it can do what others cannot.
Therefore we cannot afford to water it down.
204
Truth is our only salvation, the final truth
that in essence as Mind nobody is really disconnected from God, that the
delusion of being alone and separate from the infinite life creates all our
weaknesses, which in turn lead to most of our troubles, and that we are here to
learn by experience what sort of stuff we are made really of.
205
Truth utters itself anew whenever a human mind
comes fully to its self-discovery.
206
The depth of understanding at which men have
arrived determines the grade of interpretation which life yields them.
207
Truth does not need man's support, for even if
left unuttered it will survive and spread by the force which inheres in it. But
man needs truth's support, for without it he remains insecure and peaceless.
208
Truth has always been present in the world but
its acceptance has rarely been seen in the world.
209
All other questions resolve themselves in the
end into a single one: "What is truth?" For this will not only have to include
the world but also, and not less important: "What am I?"
210
Truth must be respected to the point of
reverence before it will yield its deeper secrets. It must indeed be entangled
with holiness.
211
This verity is trustworthy not because it is
traditional ancient and venerable but because it is open to vindication by each
man for himself.
212
All other truths need word or picture,
demonstration or laboratory when they are to be conveyed to others, but the one
truth which is an exception to this rule is also the deepest of all, the supreme
wisdom. It comes to man, whether from another man or from God, only when the
fullest silence reigns and when he himself is fully passive.
213
It has been said that man is too small mentally,
too limited a creature, and too finite to be able to understand the supreme
Absolute Being in all its greatness and grandeur. Therefore, however high his
mystic experiences, he should be content with a kind of agnostic mysticism, a
"thus far and no farther" in the realm of knowledge of this supreme entity. But
there is some confusion on this subject. It has been the victim of speculation
and miscomprehension. To get some clarity into it it is essential to free
oneself from all religious and sectarian prepossessions - whether they be Indian
or Western religions - and this is a service which philosophy alone can best
render. Only after this is done can this subject be dealt with as it ought to
be.
214
In the balanced mind which a philosopher trains
himself to possess, and in the harmonious, felicitous working together of
opposing qualities which he seeks to develop, the truth which he discovers -
which must necessarily be the highest truth - will take the form of striking
paradox.
215
Truth has too many sides to be held down
fanatically in one alone. This may make it seem illogical, paradoxical, or
contradictory. Do not ask any human mind to see what only a godlike mind can see
- all sides all at once.
216
Paradox is an essential part of true religion,
mysticism, and philosophy.
217
If the truth is that there is no truth, then
those, like Jesus and Buddha, who claimed a transcendent insight were
self-deceived fools.
218
Truth can frighten many by its high
impersonality, but it can also warm their hearts by its putting order, and
meaning, into life.
219
Truth is not only to be learned and known but
also to be felt and worshipped.
220
"The teaching which slices through illusion," as
the Oriental phrase puts it, is of course the Absolute Truth.
221
This truth can be confirmed by the great books
of scriptural revelation, by the final conclusions of reason working at its
highest impersonal level, and by the intimate facts of mystic experience.
222
The real Truth is so wonderful that it is what
it is because "it is too good to be true" in the little mind's expectations.
223
It is a truth which can never be negated, save
at the cost of letting in falsity. Nor can it be contaminated, save at the cost
of letting in the ego.
224
Henceforth we must cease to associate truth with
any particular race or people, country or man. Henceforth we must cease to look
for it here or there. We must begin to comprehend its universality. It may
manifest itself anywhere and amongst any people. Let us shed the delusion that
Shangri-la has or ever had the monopoly of it.
225
What does it matter at this distance of time,
either to us or to them, whether ancient Indians or modern Europeans have
written down the truth? It does matter, however, whether we can recognize in
both their literatures the truth as such and receive it into our minds.
226
Even if all written Truth vanished from the
world, and all remembered Truth passed from men's minds or memories, a time
would come again when someone, somewhere, somehow, and sometime would rediscover
the knowledge.
227
Whoever claims to know Truth, God, Reality, must
feel and love it too, or it is not Truth.
228
Most public attempts to interpret Truth to man
have ended in misinterpreting it. This is sometimes because they have ended in
compromises and sometimes because the interpreter's limitations got in the way.
229
Satisfaction invariably follows Truth, but Truth
does not invariably follow satisfaction.
230
If he is seeking tranquillity alone he may get
it, whereas if he is seeking truth the two together will be his reward.
231
It does not matter that philosophy is a lone
voice now, for it is an enduring one. Other and more orthodox voices will make
themselves better heard but they will also fade eventually into silence. The
truth can never perish but its counterfeits and substitutes, must.
232
Truth can be neither antiquated nor modernized,
but its formulation into words can.
233
Let us consider truth as an ever-receding
horizon. Thus we achieve humility and keep the mind open for progress through
these successive degrees.
234
These seven truths constitute the skeleton of a
tradition which has been handed down from illuminate to pupil since prehistoric
periods. The tradition itself is imperishable, being rooted in the divinity of
human nature no less than in the sacred duty imposed upon the illuminati to
preserve its existence among chosen inheritors prior to their own disappearance
or death.
235
Truth does not display itself ostentatiously.
236
If any viewpoint has served its purpose but he
refuses to advance beyond it, then it has become an obstacle in his spiritual
path. The truth must be cautiously fitted to the receptivity of the learner. It
is not everyone who can receive the same message. Hence we find it takes, in
ascending degrees, the religious, the mystical, and the philosophical forms.
237
Philosophic truth has not merely a local or
parochial significance, like some religions, but a universal one.
238
Even if only a single man in the whole world
believes it, and all the others believe a falsity, truth still remains what it
is.
239
The truth can take care of itself. Nothing can
kill it although clouds of falsehood or illusion may obscure it. Therefore
philosophers have ever been content to be denounced and reviled, while refusing
to stoop to denunciation and revilement themselves.
240
Truth does not offer itself up to the call but
awaits the right moment.
241
The persuasive character of truth exists only
for those who are ready for it.
242
We may admire, respect, or even revere a man as
a person, but still fail to admire - much less accept - his views. Truth forces
us to separate personal emotion from clear reason, to deny sentimentality, to
abandon intellect if intuition's light appears.
243
There are truths which are unalterable by the
shifts of place, unmeltable by the discoveries of man.
244
These truths will continue to command the
allegiance of remote posterity as they have commanded the allegiance of remote
antiquity. Hence they may poetically be called eternal truths.
245
These truths must inevitably filter through from
spirit into man's mind.
246
The great error of those who discover the
relativity of truth, and are so overwhelmed by their discovery that they forget
that it must be held together with other discoveries, is to overlook the
progressive and evolutionary character of all conceptions of truth. It was so
overlooked by the Sceptics' school of metaphysics in ancient Greece and by the
Eel Wrigglers' school in ancient India. Life, experience, and reflection are at
work in drawing us to higher and ever higher conceptions. Consequently these
conceptions are emphatically not equal in value and we are emphatically not to
evaluate all as alike. Philosophy does not fall into this error. While readily
and fully acknowledging that all outlooks are relatively true at best, at the
same time it sets up a distinctive outlook of its own. It shows that there is a
definite ascent of progression through all these varying outlooks. They
culminate in its own because its own is alone free and flexible, undogmatic and
all-comprehensive.
247
He who wants the free Truth, unmixed with the
suggestions and opinions of others, will not attach himself to any group: that
is for complete beginners, who feel themselves too weak to search alone, who
need the confirmations of others. Let them attach if they must but let them also
regard it as a point of departure, not of arrival, not a stop.
248
If truth is unfathomable, those who claim its
possession ought to remain silent. If its communication is however desirable for
whatever reasons, including compassion, those who learn it ought to be warned in
advance that they are receiving something else instead - symbolism or whatnot.
249
Truth is hard to come by, for not only must it
be diligently sought after, but even when it is discovered the ego pushes its
own beliefs and misinterpretations, dogmas and colourings, into the experience
itself. Analysis and discrimination can only partly help to purify the result.
250
Finding the truth was the first great endeavour;
holding on to it is as hard in its own way as the first.
251
The truth is not a form to be pictured - that
merely shows how the physical body's senses dominate the mind - but a concept to
be understood.
252
If we go far back in time and space, to Greece
or India or China, we come close to the pure primordial truth. It is the same
for Parmenides and for the Upanishads' seers.
253
Full knowledge of the Truth can be sudden or
slow: the first way is through knowledge, the second through devotion and
meditation.
254
Only the philosophically trained mind can
respond, in complete truthfulness, to the Complete Truth that is the Overself's.
All others can respond in part only, accepting some things, ignoring other
things, even rejecting them.
255
It is a truth as fresh as this morning's shower
yet, at the same time, as old as the Inca ruins at Cuzco.
256
Truth is a sword that hurts the sceptic, but a
shield that protects the believer.
257
It is the conduct of children to accept truth
only if it comforts them and to reject it when it disheartens them; to seek it
when pleasant but to shun it when disagreeable. It is the conduct of adults to
seek it for its own sake, whatever its effect upon their personal emotions may
be.
258
If some aspects of the truth sadden us, other
aspects cheer us.
259
Such truths can never become obsolete by time,
although they may become hidden by it.
260
These truths belong to every mortal even though
their discovery has remained in a select and enquiring group. They belong to no
particular people, no special time. They are as ageless as they are universal.
261
They are paradoxes which discard outworn dogmas
yet which attach themselves to ancient truths; which invite new modes of living
yet offer practices which were known to the first Chinese emperors.
262
Truth existed before the churches began to spire
their way upwards into the sky, and it will continue to exist after the last
academy of philosophy has been battered down. Nothing can still the primal need
of it in man. Priesthoods can be exterminated until not one vestige is left in
the land; mystic hermitages can be broken until they are but dust; philosophical
books can be burnt out of existence by culture-hating tyrants, yet this
subterranean sense in man which demands the understanding of its own existence
will one day rise again with anurgent claim and create a new expression of
itself.(P)