1
We can find no direct connection or immediate
operation between a thought and a thing. We instinctively rebel at the notion
that there could be one. And rightly so. For there are no things apart from the
thoughts of them.
2
It was Plato who rightly pointed out that experience
is really a medley of changing opinions and conflicting beliefs, thereby
offering contrast with the orderliness and consistency of reasoned knowledge.
This is why we have to begin intellectual analysis of the world by separating
the realm of sense perception from the realm of reasoned perception, as though
they were entirely different. But we must not end with such an artificial
separation. For in the higher stages we climb to the viewpoint which reunites
them again. The Thought is then the Thing. The Appearance is then also the Real!
3
The falsity of the view that the real world is
outside consciousness and that the mental copy of it alone is inside
consciousness, becomes known only after thoroughly deep penetrative thought.
There is no world apart and separate to be copied, for the idea is the
world.
4
We do not have a direct acquaintance with an
external, material object; we have a direct acquaintance with our own perception
only, the rest being a process of unconscious inference. We do not arrive at the
notion of the man as a whole until we have experienced a compound of sensations
such as his height, form, colour, and feel. A percept is the discrimination and
combination of sensations, to which is added the assumption of extra-mental,
separate, independent existence of the thing perceived. That a man is standing
two feet away from our body in the domain of objectivity is an inference
which we draw unconsciously, for the only experience which we have of him are
these happenings in the eye and ear - that is, happenings which are ultimately
within mind. It is only at the end of this whole process that we assume the
object is in an independent, outside world. From these personal impressions our
mind gets to work and makes a deduction that an outer man is there. What we
really see is something mental, the existence of the material man being deduced
from that of the mental experience. We do not immediately see any separate,
independent, external, material man.
5
Things that can be seen and handled are not the less
seen and handled mentally.
6
The first question which needs to be asked and
correctly answered is: In what relation does our thought of a thing stand to the
thing itself?
7
If a thing really stood aloof from consciousness, we
could never obtain knowledge of it. Some relation must subsist between the two.
To deny this, to assert that consciousness merely lights up the object's
separate existence for us, is unconsciously to assume and take for granted as
true a theory that still remains to be proved.
8
When we believe that we are experiencing the world
outside, we are really experiencing the self inside.
9
The common belief is that the correct order is:
first the world of things exists for us, and second we form an idea of the world
afterwards.
10
We all firmly believe in the existence of this
material world and we all appeal to common sense and common experience in
support of our belief. Idealism retorts: That a world of which we are conscious
exists is undeniable; but that this world is material in nature is disputable.
11
Only when an object is registered in consciousness
is it really seen at all. Not even all the physical details of vision constitute
the real experience of seeing it, for the awareness of it is not a
physical experience at all.(P)
12
What we first become acquainted with are thoughts
and sensations, feelings and percepts, memories and anticipations - that is,
with mental things.
13
The mind deals directly with its objects and not
through the intermediary working of ideas for the ideas are its only objects.(P)
14
Such is the make-up of our habitual outlook that
we take it unquestioningly and immediately for granted that the presence of a
sensation in our field of awareness indicates the presence of an external
material thing.
15
All experience is thought-experience. What we know
as the world is a series of thoughts, not a number of material things plus a
number of mental thoughts. Consciousness runs through all of them as their
common element: they originate from it, exist in it, leave it behind when they
vanish.
16
The thought of a thing invariably follows
attention to a thing, but the almost instantaneous rapidity with which it does
so, together with the momentary character of both, produces the illusion of a
single conscious act and we remain ignorant of the succession.
17
We have now been able to discover that our
ordinary sense of self is a muddled one, confusing thought and thing, mind and
body. It may be thought that the statement of mentalism contradicts our natural
belief in the solidity of the material world. But as a matter of fact it does
not really contradict either of the aforementioned beliefs; it merely corrects
them. For it does not deny that the world is external to the body, and it does
not deny that all tangible things are solid to the touch. What it does say is
that the world is internal to the mind and that its solidity is likewise present
in the mind alone.
18
The fountain pen, being a mental appearance, and
one's awareness of it, being a mental activity, are therefore separated only
within the world of mind and possess it as their common factor.
19
All we can rightly say is that the idea of the
world is present in our consciousness. The moment we assert that the real world
corresponding to it is outside, independent, and apart from us, we assert a
supposition.
20
We form an idea of a table and unconsciously
assume there is a separate object without us which corresponds to the image
formed, but actually the existence of the external table is an assumption, for
we know and have only known the mental table.
21
Does the world exist outside of and separately
from the mind that knows it? This is quite a different question from that
which deals with its relation to the body. Nobody could dispute its
outsideness and separateness then. But the question we are really asking is not
so simple. For the light-born image of the world which forms itself on the
retina of the eye, the awareness of things touched, smelled, or tasted,
is all that the mind actually knows. It cannot speak and has no right to speak
of any world which possibly lies beyond its frontiers.
22
We are easily deluded by the solidity of things
into a belief in "matter." The solidity is certainly there, it is real enough,
but the "matter" is not.
23
The fact is we have never seen more than our idea
of the external world, never known its physical nature, the latter being our own
imagination or mental projection.
24
What is the use of maintaining that the universe
has an existence of its own, entirely separate and apart from that which our
minds give it, when we have never been able to know it and obviously can never
know it except through our minds? Any such statement is a mere assumption for
which we have no grounds at all.
25
The world is to be sought within
consciousness, not outside it.
26
The objection is made that even if the world does
not exist for us when we do not think it, it still exists for all the other
human beings. The answer to this is: How does it exist for each of this
multitude of persons? It is in his thought just as much as in ours.
27
The Chinese Chan-jan wrote, as far back as the
twelfth century: "No objects exist apart from the mind."
28
The antique Indian division of manifestation into
self and not-self and the labelling of the latter as maya because it
wears a misleading garb is quite understandable on a mentalistic basis. For if
the universe is really our thought of it, its seeming separateness and apparent
externality do not make it, as a thought, any less a part of our own self.
29
Lao Tzu's definition of intelligence as the
ability to see things in the germ is excellent, but the ability to see things as
ideas is even better.
30
Philosophy is nondualistic in its view of mind and
matter. They are not two separate things, it says, but one.
31
The notion that there is an inner representation
within the consciousness of another world, a mental existence of this world
corresponding to a physical one, is not admissible.
32
The statement that we can know only our own
sensations and that we do not experience the world directly constitutes the very
beginning of the doctrine of mentalism.(P)
33
The physical senses do not provide a
picture of the object to the mind for the simple reason that all objects,
including the senses themselves, are held in the mind. This is possible, this
could only be possible, because the individual mind is not separate from
the universal mind. As the Hindus say: Atman and Brahman are one. But that is
carrying the discussion to a level that must be deferred for later study.
34
Our thoughts cannot be separated from our world.
The two come into being together.
35
There is no difference whatever between the things
of his experience and the thoughts whereby these things are known to him. In
fact the things are the thoughts and vice versa.
36
There cannot be any contact with a world outside
consciousness. This is a tenet fundamental to mentalism.
37
We are not asked to doubt the actuality of the
ground beneath our feet or the music in our ears, but to understand that they
have reached our consciousness because we have thought them.
38
What, beyond a continuously flowing stream of
moments of sensation, do we really know as ourselves?
39
The view which critical reflection gives of an
object does not coincide with the view which common sense gives of it. The first
turns it into an idea whereas the latter retains it as something material.
40
No one can contest that the idea of the world
surrounding us is in the mind. But that there is something else beyond the idea
itself is contestable.
41
Consciousness presents its own products to itself,
fabricating an entire world in the process. Mind makes and sees the picture.
42
The wall which I see is seen as something separate
- as apart from my body. This is the external aspect of perception. The colour,
the size, and the form of the wall are sensations which are experienced mentally
and therefore within me. This is the internal aspect of perception. That a wall
is without me I know only by something that happens within me. This may seem
paradoxical but the truth is I do not know the externality of the wall but infer
it. It is now necessary to attend closely to an examination of the mechanism of
what follows. For having surmised the separate and external existence of a wall
I have really projected part of my mental experience into the world outside. I
have objectified an idea.
43
The mind has the power to externalize the very
thing it perceives.
44
The world is apparently suspended in time and
space but actually all three are suspended in the mind.
45
A distinguished musician once said to me that the
effective power and reality of music lay not in the sensory impressions it
causes, but rather in the mental ones, not in the sounds that enter the ear but
in the thoughts provoked by those sounds. He added that its essential features
of time and number are mathematical ones - that is, mental ones.
46
Mind constructs its own concepts and its own space
wherein to set them up, and finally views them as different from itself and
external to itself. Yet both differences and externality are illusions.
47
Herbert Spencer admitted the truth of mentalism in
his Principles of Psychology (Vol. 2, Part 7). He admitted that the world
we know is mentally constructed and mentally existent. Having got so far, he
then fell into error, for he said that our experience of the resistance which
objects in the world offer us proves that they also exist independently of and
outside the mind. What was Spencer's mistake "of all of the objective
idealists"? It was the failure to penetrate sufficiently far into the meaning of
these two words: "independent" and "outside." How can the world have an
independent existence when it has no significance for us before we actually
experience it? It must touch our body or affect our senses before its existence
comes to have any meaning at all for us. When this happens we have the feelings
or thoughts which science calls sensations. Whether they are feelings of
hardness, resistance, or weight, thoughts of redness, fragrance, or noise, they
are still nothing else than our feelings and thoughts. Where is the independence
here? The objects in the world are only objects of our consciousness. They may
be independent in relation to our body but they are not independent in relation
to our senses and hence to our mind. The sensations of resistance and hardness
are no less mental ultimately than are any of the other sensations. Again, where
is the outsideness here? Does the world really stand outside the mind that knows
it? It is only at the cost of self-contradiction that we can answer that it does
so stand. For whatever is in consciousness, whatever is mental, can be explained
by the mind alone. It is the mind's own activity which makes resistance as it
makes smells, sounds, and sights. Furthermore it is this same activity which
creates the space-relationships between objects and hence the thought of
their outsideness.
48
It is the starting point of all error to assume
that at some point in time if not in space the mind suddenly made its appearance
in the universe. This is the initial error of all materialism - whether it be
scientific or theological or metaphysical. Mind is supposed by all these views
to start functioning after matter has had a long inning on the
cricket-field of the cosmos. Insoluble problems flow naturally out of this
error.
49
All forms of the past have existed in time and
place but many of them are now existing only in memory, that is, in thought.
Mentalism says, "They were always in thought only."
50
All our experience is ordinarily confined to what
the five senses present us - that is, to the sounds touches smells tastes and
colours which are their objects. All these may conveniently be called our
"sensations." These are what we really know, they are ours individually,
and anything which we believe we know beyond them - such as separate and
independently existent material objects - are mere suppositions and inferences.
Therefore, there must be something in us which projects them so as to appear
outside or interprets them as caused by something outside - which amounts to the
same thing. Both projection and interpretation are governed by conditions of
space and time. The obscurity in which all these operations are carried on does
not cancel out the operations themselves. The world does not exist outside of
our mind.
51
The existence of the world is not a testimony to
the existence of a divine creator, but to the constructive capacity of the mind.
52
Stereoscopy offers an excellent illustration to
help us realize that space is an illusion created before our very eyes. If two
photographs of the same object are taken from different angles, placed in a
simple stereoscopic apparatus, and looked at through its little window, the
resulting picture is no longer a flat two-dimensional thing but a bulky
three-dimensional one. There has been added to the height and width of an
ordinary photograph the new element of depth, which makes the object stand out
in relief. What seems to be a tangible space has been created behind and in
front of the object. The consequence is that the image is transformed in a
startling manner from a lifeless representation to something that seems vividly
real. When such an apparatus so obviously creates space for us we ought not to
regard it as fantastic when mentalism tells us that the human mind
subconsciously creates its own forms and projects them into a fancied space.
53
All this vast and wonderful universe is in the end
only the play of mind. We are imprisoned in our own involuntary creation.
54
The necessary action of human reason when at its
best and sharpest, and when directed inwards upon itself, leads it to this
irresistible conclusion - that the whole experience of this world is but the
end-product of a process of the human mind.
55
It is not the clock or the sun which really
measures time for us but the mind, by feelings and moods. Time, space, cause,
and form are all of subjective origin.
56
Is it possible that the mere operation of thought
suffices to produce this vast and wonderful universe in our field of awareness?
We have only to study carefully, by way of illustration, the experiences of the
dreamer, the novelist, and the hypnotic subject to understand that the answer
may be in the affirmative.
57
"The mind, generated by thy ignorance, imagines
the entire universe," says an old Sanskrit text, Sankshepa Sarirake, by
Sarvajnatma Muni.
58
The molds of time and place, ego and its
extensions, which shape human mentalism, the forms of thought, belong to this
maya, this alchemically transforming power of mind.
59
How can you have movement without space? But if
space is in the mind, so must movement be there too.
60
His difficulty may be self-created because he may
think of the spiritual world as something still on a space-time level, only far
finer than the physical world - something outside himself awaiting his entry.
But like all the dream worlds, it is inseparable from his mind - only it is free
from the space-time characteristics inherent in the present level of mental
experience.
61
What I experience in my mind is projected out in
space, but the ordinary person in his ignorance believes the very reverse is
happening.
62
The world that you have is created by your mind.
This applies to the after-death state and to the present state. Ideas manifest
themselves in this world. Thus an architect's ideas manifest as a palace.
63
We experience the world as outside us not because
we choose to do so but because we are obliged to do so.
64
The world seems to be "out there at a distance"
but it is actually here within the consciousness.
65
The seeming reality of physical movement is not
less yet not more than the seeming reality of mental awareness. Movement implies
the existence of space in which it happens. Where is this space? It is in us, in
our mind. All motion of the body is an item of the mind's awareness.
66
If the past is a memory and the future a dream,
then both are thoughts. And if the past was once the present and the future will
one day be the present, what else but a thought too can today's present be?
67
All questions about the universe's creation
presuppose the previous existence of time and space since they unwittingly look
for its beginning in a particular place at a particular moment which, in turn,
suggests a previous one, and so on in an endless series. These questions defeat
themselves: unaskable and unanswerable. Every experience of the world involves
thoughts of it: this remains true when going backward into its past or forward
into its future. Thoughts rise, or appear, in Consciousness. The universe is
inseparable from this consciousness of it. This, isolated from every thing,
should be the subject of our questions.
68
The difference between the chair thought and the
table thought, the red thought and the green thought, the innumerable
relationships among ideas, are all explicable by the fact that the mind's
primary power is image making. This is a power which, in human beings,
can be called into play deliberately and voluntarily, as we often do during
wakefulness, or spontaneously and involuntarily, as we invariably do during
dreams. The moment mind emerges from deep sleep and becomes active, it begins to
imagine the wakeful world. What happens with men on a small scale happens
also with the Universal Mind (God, if you like) on a cosmic scale. Its first
activity is imagining.
69
The mind exists and develops on its own latent
resources and needs nothing from outside. There is nothing outside.
Nevertheless, its imaginative and creative power calls into play an environment
which seems to be outside and which elicits those resources.
70
Two persons seeing the same fountain pen will
experience two distinct sets of sensations and therefore what they actually see
must inevitably differ. For each person perceives his own mental construction,
despite the apparent reference being the same.
71
To have seen Himalaya's snows turn pink at sunset
and the Taj Mahal's marble turn phosphorescent in moonlight, is to have seen
beauty indeed. Yet after all it is not the place or the handiwork that really
matters when we have gone, but the emotion evoked, the memory etched, and the
taste refined. All these are mental things. We find at such high moments
of appreciation, of aesthetic uplift, that the very essence of beauty is already
present within ourselves, is an internal fact, made momentarily vivid by an
external stimulus.
72
The mind forms its ideas and images. Hence
"mental formation" would be a correct term to replace "mental construction."
73
I live in a world of Mind. The material forms
which I see only appear as if they were non-mental.
74
If Matter has any existence at all, it is as the
externalizing power of the mind.(P)
75
When we pierce through the illusion of matter we
discover that his environment is as mental as the man himself.
76
The ego, the consciousness of the personal and
physical "I," is that of which we are most vividly aware. And this essence is
the mental, not bodily, part of us. But we are a part of the universe. Therefore
the universe's own essence is also mental, not the physical part which we see
and experience all around us.
77
Matter is merely something we imagine. Causation
is merely succession and coexistence.
78
It is not possible to explain intellectually how
sensations of the physical world are converted into ideas, how the leap-over
from nervous vibrations into consciousness occurs, and how a neurosis becomes a
psychosis. No one has ever explained this, nor will any scientist ever succeed
in doing so. Truth alone can dispose of this poser by pointing out that
sensations never really occur, but that the Self merely projects ideas of them;
just as a man sees a mirage and mistakes it for real water merely by his mental
projection, so people regard the world as real when they are merely transferring
their own mental ideas to the world.(P)
79
His mind is much more a man's own than anything
else could possibly be.
80
All other people throughout the world may
apparently be sharing the same experience of its existence as our own but it is
never really so. Each one's is wholly individual to himself and is lived only
within himself, his consciousness.
81
We must firmly grasp this principle, that the only
objects we know, the only world of our experience, have no existence apart from
the mind. They do not and cannot subsist externally by themselves. That which
projects them into space is mind, and as space itself is within the mind, their
independent existence is sheer illusion, or Maya as Indians call it. We
must look behind their illusory independence into the mind from which they
spring.
82
Analyse your awareness of the physical world and,
if your analysis is deep enough, you will be unable to avoid the conclusion that
it is really a series of changes, or a group of states, of your consciousness.
In other words, matter is something presented in my consciousness, whether it be
now, at some time past, or in the future, even though it gives the impression of
outsideness.
83
I see something, it may be a post or it may be a
man. Then by the sense of agency one out of these possibilities is associated
with ahamkara and I then know - I know I see a post.
84
"Thou art only thought," said the philosophic yogi
whom Alexander the Great interviewed. He then proceeded to prove his statement
by mesmerizing the king into believing himself to be a poor man struggling
against destitution. I do not know if this anecdote exists amongst the Greek
records of Alexander's adventures, but I found it amongst the Indian traditions
about him.
85
If we do some act without attending to it but, on
the contrary, with our thoughts engrossed on an entirely different subject which
perhaps fills us with anxiety or joy, we are often later quite unable to
remember whether we have done it or not. Here is an indication that if, as
mentalism declares, it is not man's surface mind nor his everyday consciousness
which presents the universe to him as an outside appearance then, in fact, he
has a deeper unconscious mind which does it.
86
If the world is an idea, the ego which perceives
it is itself an idea too.
87
The first step toward ceasing such wrong
self-identification is to recognize the body to be but a state of consciousness,
and the ego to be but an idea.
88
The life which is everywhere apparent, the forms
in which it is constantly embodying itself are the effects of the mysterious
movement which is the kinetic aspect of the Overself.
89
Mentalism tells us not only that matter is an
unreal show but also that motion is just the same. The events and movements on a
cinema film are not affecting or moving the white backsheet at all. Yet withdraw
matter and motion and the whole universe will become nothing more substantial
than a cosmic cinema picture.
90
The sensations of seeing, hearing, touching,
smelling, and tasting things combine to make up our knowledge of the world
around us in space and time. This knowledge depends therefore on egocentric
personal experience. This is very easily proven by contrasting the statements
made by a hypnotized subject about an object, and those made about it by a
person in normal condition.
91
Every presented thing which is seen smelled,
heard, felt, or tasted, no less than every representative thought, idea, name,
or image, is entirely mental. The streets of busy towns and the forests of
lonely mountains are all, without exception, mere constructs of the imagining
faculty.
92
He who doubts the power of mind to fashion its own
world should consider such authentic instances of this power as those provided
by the hypnotist's art. This has turned water into wine for its victim, chilling
cold into heat, and volition into paralysis. The transformations are all
imaginary ones yet are not bereft of their reality for him because of that.
93
The mind creates these images by its own power and
their totality constitutes the universe of its experience.
94
His own past, once so intensely real, so vividly
actual, has become only a faded and broken panorama of mental pictures. The
"matter" of which it was made is now nothing more than "thought-stuff."
95
The chair which we see at an instantaneous and
simple glance was really built up in the mind out of several separate elements.
96
The moods succeed each other - sometimes bright,
sometimes dark - but who is the experiencer of them? It is the ego. The first
stage of philosophy is to learn the secret of mentalism. Look upon every mood as
a bunch of thoughts. The second stage is to look upon the experiencer as an
object of those thoughts.
97
This is knowledge of the highest order, that
everything around us and within us, every bit of Nature and creature, the
experience of life with a physical body and of death without it - all are but
forms of consciousness.
98
My experience of a thing is received from the
body's senses. Sight: the eyes tell me its shape and colour.
Touch: the skin tells me its hardness or softness, solidity or liquidity.
Smell and taste may give more information. These perceptions make up the thing
for me. But they would be non-existent if they failed to reach consciousness as
thoughts. It exists because my consciousness exists. If this
consciousness did not exist by itself alone before the thought my
experience would be impossible. It is primary. It will continue to exist even
between two thoughts, and, even more important, between two sensorial thoughts -
sight and touch - connected with the physical body. But the brain is part of the
body. So mind is not the same thing but exists as an independent entity, however
close their working connection may be. This mind has no shape or colour, whereas
the brain has. It being formless, no one can see or take hold of it, yet it is
there. Now drop the term mind, the term consciousness, and let the term spirit
take their place. Here psychological analysis of experience seems to cross the
border into religion. For mind is a real thing, not a no-thing. It exists in its
own right. More, all experience is an uninterrupted spiritual experience,
whatever man has done to degrade it.
Every man knows that he is aware of himself, others, the world. But that awareness exists also in an unlimited uninterrupted way he does not know. Yet to the extent that he has this limited kind of consciousness he derives from It, shares the spirit, is part of it.
99
It would be absurd for him to deny the actuality,
the living presence, of all that is happening to him in every moment of the day.
They are there and they are real as experiences and he would be a fool indeed to
deny them. Nor does mentalism ask him to do so. What it does say is that if he
analyses the actuality of all these experiences, if he tries to trace out their
beginning and end, their existence and continuity, he will discover that
consciousness is their seat, that this consciousness can by profound thought be
separated from its projections - the thoughts, the scenes, the objects and
events, the people and the world - in short, that everything including
himself is in the mind.
100
It is not merely a personal speculation but a
commonplace fact of science, an item of the accepted physiology of the senses, a
known result of anatomical research, that the consciousness of what we
see and feel is what we really experience, not the things themselves. In the end
all our facts are mental ones, all our surroundings are known only as our own
thoughts.
101
The mentalness of all existence is not a theory
nor a belief. It is an incontrovertible actuality.
102
If the world were not in the mind to start with,
we would never know that there was world at all.
103
Just as the electric current must meet a second
thing, resistance, before it can appear as light, sound, heat, or magnetism, so
mind must meet with an idea before it can appear as consciousness, in the way we
humans know the latter. Until then it must rest in the blankness of sleep, or
the latency of subconsciousness.
104
It is not possible for sincere, scrupulous
thinking to admit, and never possible to prove, the existence of a world outside
of, and separate from, its consciousness. The faith by which we all
conventionally grant such existence is mere superstition.(P)
105
The world is never really given to us by
experience nor actually known by the mind. What is given is idea, what is known
is idea, to be transcended only when profound analysis transforms the Idea into
the Reality.(P)
106
We cannot help taking objects into our
consciousness so long as we take the ego into it.
107
It is not because a thing is existent that you
think it but because you think it, even if involuntarily, that it is existent.
And this thought of it is a part of your own consciousness, not outside you.(P)
108
It is absurd even to suggest that there is an
external world wholly outside of one's consciousness and wholly independent of
it. One knows only certain changes of mental awareness, never of externals. The
mind can only know its changes of individual consciousness. All its
observations, each of its inferences, everything it knows - these lie enclosed
within that consciousness and are never beyond it.
One's knowledge of anything whatsoever is simply one's thought of it. This is not to be confused with one's right thought of it. It is a conscious mental state, and even other persons are but appearances within this state, creatures in the cosmic dream. To follow this line of reflection to its inevitable end demands courage and candour of the highest kind, for it demands as ultimate conclusion the principle that knowledge being but ideas in the mind, the whole universe is nothing but an immense idea within one's own mind. For the very nature of knowledge is thus internal, and hence the individual mind cannot know any reality external to itself. It believes that it observes a world without when it only observes its own mental pictures of that world.(P)
109
It is a generative idea. Here is a whole
philosophy congealed into a single phrase: the world is an idea.(P)
110
Unless we are in personal touch with the world,
it is not present for us. The relation ends the moment our ego is withdrawn.
Without it, without a viewing subject, the world as object simply does not
exist. And nobody living in the ego-consciousness has any way of knowing what
the world is in and by itself.
111
All experience is experience in the world of
consciousness. There is no other.
112
So far as it appears in any creature's
experience, the world is only a thought in that creature's mind. All creatures
may banish the thought by sleep but only a human creature may banish it by yoga.
113
The only world we know, the only one we can ever
know, is the one within our mind. The first proof of this is that when it leaves
the mind in deep sleep, it has no existence for us at all; the second proof is
that when it re-enters the mind on awakening, the sense-perceptions which tell
us of its existence re-enter it also.
114
The hill or the star is a perception in your
mind. You cannot now say exactly when your mind began to exist or when it will
cease to do so, but only conjecture about it.
115
Such is the metaphysical importance of memory
that it gives us the key to existence. For what is the once so real-seeming
world of the now-shadowing past when recalled again into being by its magical
power but a procession and collection of mental images of like texture to a
dream? Did it not then exist like a common dream only in the consciousness of
all its creatures? And do not the places and things and persons take on a
curiously dream-like character when we bring it back into remembrance? Thus we
have to step out of the past, which means to step out of the chains of time,
before we can discover the essential mentalness of all our experience.
116
All that is real in human experience is the
mind's experience; all that is received into the mind are ideas; all events of
whatever kind are mental, that is, ideas.
117
Men talk of the solidity of their material
existence yet a whole continent - Atlantis - vanished in a day.
118
What is experienced is nothing other than
yourself, for it is nothing other than your thought and your perception.
119
When we give ourselves up to a desire or an
attachment, why do we really do so? It is because we seek the state of happy
consciousness which the thing obtained or the situation realized would, we
believe, lead to. What we really desire is in the mind.
120
The doctrine of mentalism begins and ends with
the bold pronouncement that all experience and even all being is in the mind.
121
How can a thought exist apart from its thinker?
One can imagine this, but philosophy does not deal with imagination, only
with known facts. The notion that thoughts are set out into space and that
others tune into them is based on the illusion that mind is in the body or
brain, whereas the reverse is true. Has anyone ever measured the mind and shown
where it started and ended? The very notion of the world is within one's
mind. This shows that he cannot say that thoughts are outside the mind merely
because he believes they touch somebody who is hundreds of miles away. There is
no more separation between thoughts and thinker than between dreams and the
dreamer.
122
We have no other contact than with our own
thoughts of the world, yet those thoughts are as truly and actually our
experiences of it as anything else could ever be.
123
It is utterly impossible to explain the material
world satisfactorily without reference to mind, and this reference must come
first, not last, because it is the mind that tells that the world exists.
124
When the Naqshabandi Dervish Mullah (expounder
and explainer of the teaching) says to a crowd around him, "You are here because
of me!" his meaning can come alive only in a mentalistic sense.
125
We are able to think our surroundings only
because ultimately they are as mental in substance as our commonly accepted
thinking.
126
What fact is more certain, what part of human
life more inescapable, than that of consciousness? What would become of our
experience of the world without the awareness which is basic to it?
127
Mind is the foundation of all our existence. It
is always there even when, as in deep sleep, we are not personally conscious
that it is there. Any materialistic denial of its self-existence can be made
only because mind is present to make it.
128
What is Mind? It is that in us which thinks,
which is aware, and which knows.(P)
129
There is one natural capacity which is common to
every human being and to every animal being - a capacity which is the very
essence of its selfhood. It is consciousness. The most important of all states
of consciousness is knowledge.
130
The only real existence is the mind's. But we
ordinarily know only its projections and retractions, its phases and states, its
consciousnesses and lapses.
131
Mind is that quality or capacity in man which
enables him to be aware of both himself and his surroundings.
132
We are conscious of a world outside through the
knowing faculty, the mind. The various ideas which we form of the world are
simply states of the mind. These ideas are not separate from the mind itself and
could not be. If they were, then we would have to become conscious of them, as
we are of the world, through other ideas, through other states of the mind.
133
There is a region of mind which lies beyond the
intellect's immediate reach. Because it holds so many lower but repressed
desires, some psychologists have called it the subconscious. Because it holds so
many laudable but vague aspirations, most religionists have called it the Soul.
Because it is not ordinarily in the focus of awareness, other psychologists have
called it the unconscious mind. All three groups are right, but each is limited
in what it sees and what it understands, as if groping for knowledge in the
dusk.
134
It is not that there are different minds in man,
but different qualities of one and the same mind in each.
135
What we are is what we are conscious of. The
mind makes its own reality. Consciousness is king.
136
Why is it that so many people are so unaware of
their own higher existence? The answer is that their faculty of awareness itself
is that spiritual existence. Whatever they know, people know through the
consciousness within them. That in them which knows anything is their divine
element. The power of knowing - whether it be a thought that is known, a complex
of thoughts such as memories, a thing such as a landscape - is a divine power
for it derives from the higher self which they possess.
137
The mind interprets its own experience in a
particular way because, owing to its structure, it could not do so in another
way. But these limitations are not eternal and absolute. When, as in dream,
yoga, death, or hallucination, they are abruptly loosened, then experience is
interpreted in a new and different way.(P)
138
To feel and to know are attributes of
consciousness, not of brute matter.
139
We know only by inference or analogy that the
minds of individuals exist, not by direct perception. Our social life is
based upon this knowledge and, acting on it, we find it largely true.
140
Just as we first find water to be a liquid and
later to be a gaseous combination, so we first find in vision that all the world
is light, and later, in knowledge, that it is Mind.
141
Thinking is an act done mentally and, like all
acts, points to the existence of someone who already exists or to something
independent of it.
142
The writer George Moore was not particularly
interested in metaphysics and usually left the subject alone. Yet half of a
sentence he wrote upon writing itself contained the most important and
significant metaphysical principle. It was: "My own mind alone is known to me."
143
There can be no thought without a thinker, and
when we begin to search for that which thinks, we begin to follow a trail which
leads to the Soul.
144
"I see" and "I know" are two very ordinary
phrases. But what tremendous metaphysical meanings are hidden behind them!
145
When man turns to observe himself in the effort
to know himself, what he first notices is not at all what he will have to notice
later in the end: that is Consciousness.
146
By the light of mind, man is able to know,
think, reflect, and feel.
147
If the human being finds that he has the
capacity to think, to produce ideas, to discover the words or pictures in which
he can clothe these ideas, he should remember that all this becomes possible
only because of the primacy of the mind; that is, mind consciousness already
existed, and hence they are able to exist. Without its prior existence they
could not come to birth.
148
This deep unknown basis of mind determines its
surface life and is the key to its conscious trends; therefore it should become
our chief object of study.
149
That which enables us to know the world outside
and to be aware of the self inside, is Mind.
150
Is man nothing more than nerve-stuff, flesh, and
bone? Thought asks this question. Thought alone can answer it. No butcher shop,
however crammed with nerve-stuff, flesh, and bone, will ever answer it. Only
the thinking principle in man, which is an emanation of his soul, can explain
itself.
151
It is mind which makes thoughts intelligible,
things experienceable, and the thinker (the experiencer) self-conscious - Mind!
the mysterious unknown background of our life.
152
We do not know the self directly but only
through the thoughts it produces. It is impossible intellectually to examine it
and equally impossible to exclude it from our examinations.
153
Things exist only in the character of known
things. If they are absent from our senses they are present in our thoughts. If
they are absent from our consciousness they must be present to the universal
consciousness. Whatever is characterized as something known, cannot be the
knowing principle itself.
154
Thinking is possible only where there exists an
object about which to think, whether it be a material thing or a mere idea. We
cannot think unless we have something in mind. This means in every act of
thought there are two elements: the thinking itself and the object or idea
thought about. These are so coupled together by the psychological constitution
of man that the first cannot exist without the second.
This is equally true of the act of seeing. We cannot see anything unless there is some object, something to be seen. Hence sight depends upon both seeing itself and the object seen. Both are so interrelated that the former could not exist if there were not the other.
These statements may be more easily understood after due reflection, but it will be much more difficult to understand that the contrary ones likewise hold true. That is to say, no object or idea can exist without being thought of, and nothing perceptible can exist without something or someone to see it. In short, the factors which have been coupled together here are mutually dependent.
It is impossible for a thinkable object or idea to exist in a state where thought itself is impossible. It is impossible for a seeable thing to exist in a state where sight is impossible, as in deep sleep. And, since everything material is either thinkable or seeable or both, it follows that the entire material universe has its being in being thought of or perceived. It is only an appearance within the mind of the thinker or dependent upon the perceiver. No idea, no object, could have any conceivable existence if the perceiver himself never had any. Something living and conscious that can think and become aware of them must first exist through their relation to it. They cannot possibly exist in disconnection from a conscious mind.
If we imagine a universal state wherein there was no body present, no mind that could think of anything, perceive it, or be conscious of it, then we are quite unable to put any idea or object or sound or colour into this state.
This is true whether we apply it to mere ideas or to hard and heavy things which we see and feel, such as houses and trees. The point cannot be grasped by the understanding without previous reflection and meditation, for it appears to be contrary to common experience and common sense. In short, matter is a mental sensation and not the cause of a mental sensation.
155
Whatever thought, idea, image, or remembrance
comes to us is not separate from our mind and consequently from us. And because
every object, thing, or creature in the world around us is only a thought, idea,
image, or remembrance to us, it is likewise not separate from us.
156
Anyone who is able to imagine or feel a real
separation between thought and being, has done what I am quite unable to do. On
the contrary, I find myself always constrained to imagine or feel that an
essential and inevitable relation exists between them.
157
We never know things by and in themselves but
only by and in the mind.
158
Mind can know only that which is of the same
nature as itself, namely, thought.
159
If the object of my experience had nothing in
common with my idea of it, it could not even stand in this alleged relation of
cause and effect. If it does so stand, then what is the common thing between
them? There is no answer to this question except the mentalist one.
160
Space is simply the way in which our minds see
the world; that is, it is purely mental and not really outside us. The corollary
to this is that as all things have their being in space, they must likewise have
their being in the mind. But mind alone can only entertain mental
visitors; it is too subtle to receive non-mental materials. Mind cannot receive
that which is wholly dissimilar to it. Therefore all things must enter it as
ideas only.
161
The mind can have dealings only with kindred
objects formed from its own substance, that is, with thoughts, ideas. Therefore
when it knows material objects they must really be ideas.
162
Mind and matter are incommensurables. Mind can
enter into relations only with something allied to its own subtler nature, not
with something wholly dissimilar, as matter is said to be. That which the mind
knows must be relevant in relation to the Mind itself. There must be a community
of kind between the two, a common identity of substance. The world as known
cannot possibly be extra-mental in nature. Hence the characteristics of what the
mind knows must be mental - that is, they constitute our ideas.
163
The human mind can enter into relation with -
that is, become aware of - that which is of the same nature as itself, that
which is correlated to it, that which is also mental. It is impossible for
material things to enter directly into the immaterial consciousness of man.
164
Were our consciousness of the world and the
world itself so essentially different after all, then no real contact between
them could ever be possible. But contact does happen. And it does happen because
the world is nothing less than the mind's idea.
165
If a man would be willing to think deeply
enough, he would be obliged to agree with the assertion that he can know only
the idea of a thing, and not the thing-in-itself.
166
Two things which are totally different from one
another, quite unrelated, cannot work together or affect each other. This is
mentalism's case.
167
The human mind is forever dealing with human
conceptions of things under the belief that it is dealing with the things
themselves.
168
Two lips utter a single word. The experiencer
and the experienced object are a single stuff.
169
Mind is the knowing agent and mind is the object
known. In the first case it assumes the internal form of self-consciousness, in
the second case, the external form of experienced world.
170
When we analyse the experience of human
experience itself, we find that it reduces down to the knower and the known, the
mind and its thought. All attempts to separate the physical object from sense
data and these from mental perceptions end in artificiality.
171
Mind cannot project itself outside itself to
observe what it is. Only through what it knows or does or desires, only as its
existence is expressed in any given situation, can it perceive itself.
172
The object seen, the eye which sees it, and the
act of seeing are all part of a mentally created scene; all are idea.
173
The philosophical meaning of Einstein's
discoveries - that the nature of the world depends on the nature of its relation
to the one who sees it, that we cannot truly speak about any object
independently of the observer, and that time is the hallmark of this relativity
- is in perfect accordance with our own doctrine. Whatever is seen, is seen by
the mind. Apart from the mind we know nothing of its existence and apart from
the mind the thought of time could not arise for us. In short, every existent
object is wholly relative to the subject - Mind.
174
Experience is a unity and cannot be broken into
mind and matter. We cannot possibly separate the world from the mind that knows
it. The two are always related. To object that such a relation need not exist
outside the act of knowing the world, even though it must exist inside it, is to
utter words which dissolve away as soon as their meaning is analysed. For the
only world which human beings can ever discuss is one which they can think about
and which is therefore an idea for their minds.
175
Because I am a conscious being I am aware of
physical sensations and mental thoughts; but the consciousness which enables
such awareness to exist itself existed before sensation and before thought, and
this is as true of newborn babies as it is of dying men. This is what the
materialistic anatomist dissecting the body fails to perceive. This is the
forgotten self of the fabled ten persons crossing a river in Indian mythology,
and this is the great secret which mentalism unveils for us.
176
The tenth man in the Hindu story, who failed to
count himself when checking if all the party who waded across a river were safe;
the Hebrew rabbi who said on his deathbed, "If there proves to be no future
life, how I shall laugh!"; and the scientist who denied the existence of mind
because brain-flesh produces consciousness - all three show how easy it is to
forget the subject when looking at the object.
177
The object which the senses directly establish
contact with is regarded as one thing; the mental impression they have when
thinking of that object is regarded as another and totally different thing. This
is a very simple and apparently very obvious view of the matter. To the ordinary
mind, by which I mean the metaphysically unreflective mind, the statement is
unarguable and its implied division of Nature into mental and material,
uncontestable. But if you analyse the way you perceive objects you will find
that both the perceiver and the perceived are inseparable in the act of
perception. You cannot show a duality of idea and thing but only a unity of
them.(P)