1
If materialism reduces man to mere physical
substance, mentalism magnifies him to the grander stature of Mind.
2
The mere definition of mentalism startles the common
mind, antagonizes the materialistic mind, but comforts the spiritually oriented
mind.
3
Mentalism is the first and best way of breaking
through the glamour which the world's materiality throws over most people. The
Real is hidden from them. Consciousness is then supposed to be a property
belonging to a lump of matter. This upside-down assumption is a false piece of
knowledge. It must be dropped from possession, from held faith and reasoned
conclusion - and each person must do this for himself: no other can take his
place, not even a guru - or the illusion will return.
4
So long as a man does not see that his sense
experiences are really mental experiences, so long will the truth of spiritual
being remain effectually veiled from him.
5
In this doctrine of mentalism we come upon the
central mystery of philosophy.
6
The mentalist character of all their experience is
little or not at all understood by the great mass of people. Yet, curiously and
paradoxically, this truth is the hidden basis of their religious beliefs, no
matter what sect they belong to, for mentalism alone can make plainer the idea
of Spirit, and make plausible the operations of Spirit.
7
If he does not wish to trouble his head, he can
comfortably accept the appearances of things; but then he will be living only in
the comfort of illusion. If however he wants to ferret out what is real
in existence he must put himself to some trouble. He must persevere, read and
re-read these pages until the meaning of it all dawns suddenly upon him, as it
will if he does. It is perfectly natural for man to regard as the highest
reality the experiences which impress themselves most forcibly upon him, which
are those gained externally through his physical senses, and to regard as but
half-real the experiences which impress themselves least forcibly upon him,
which are those created internally by his own thoughts and fancies. But if he
can be brought, as a true metaphysics can bring him, to arrive intellectually at
the discernment that when he believes he is seeing and experiencing matter he is
only seeing and experiencing thought, and that the entire cosmos is an image
co-jointly held in the cosmic and individual minds, he will not unconsciously
set up all those artificial resistances to the mystical intuitions and
ultramystical illuminations which wait in the future for him.(P)
8
If negatively it rejects the teaching of materialism
that all mental conditions have their origin in matter, it has good reasons for
its rejection. If positively it finds that Mind is the reality which sustains
our experience of the world, it has the high authority of a long list of
illustrious names to support it - from ancient India, China, and Greece to
modern England, America, and Germany.
9
We do not intend to deal here with some supernatural
"spirit" which does not explain the world but only mystifies us, which is beyond
all ordinary experience and whose existence cannot be irrefutably proved. We do
not need to go beyond Mind - which explains the world as a form of
consciousness, which is everyone's familiar experience at every moment of the
day or night, and whose existence is unquestionably self-evident, for it makes
us aware of every other kind of existence.(P)
10
It is because men are deceived by their senses
into accepting materialism that they are deceived by their ego into committing
sin. Mentalism is not only an intellectual doctrine but also an ethical one.(P)
11
Mentalism as the key to the understanding of the
nature of the universe dissolves materialism. In this way it restores
real religion to its rightful place and importance, but it does not
restore the hollow semi-materialistic theatrical performance which passes for
it. It restores a truer concept of God and brings back a solidly based faith in
God.
12
If God is not the inner reality of this universe,
then Matter is both its inner and outer reality. There will then be no room in
the thinking mind for any belief other than materialism, no place for religion,
no admittance to a spiritual metaphysics.
13
The notions of existence of fairies, devas,
gods, goddesses, and especially of invisible worlds and planes and invisible
beings and spirits are given through the form of popular myth and simple
religion to primitive humanity partly to help them up from crude materialism and
partly to foreshadow the doctrine that all worlds and all people are ideas. For
ideas are as beyond the senses as are the invisible worlds and their beings. The
early races of men would never have been able to understand idealism, and so an
intermediate and understandable doctrine was given them; they could imagine
heavens and hells and spirits as existing somewhere, even when they could not
imagine that the solid earth was mere idea.
14
That man can hold the secret of this stupendous
universe in his little head is something to be marvelled at.
15
The dematerializing of human belief has to pass
through more than one stage before the process completes itself. All religious,
metaphysical, and mystical systems which recognize the existence of Spirit but,
side by side with it, the reality of Matter also, have passed through the
earlier stages but not through the later ones. Only when they advance to
mentalism will this final dematerialization be possible.
16
When a man begins to make Thought the subject of
his thoughts, he opens a path to great discoveries.
17
Once rid of the basic error of materialism, once
he has comprehended mentalism, the way is open for a real, and not illusory,
progress.
18
How many riddles shall we solve, how many secrets
unlock, when we solve the riddle of our own mind!
19
Man's search for an intelligible meaning in the
universe can have no full success until he divests his thought of its
materialistic assumptions and replaces them by mentalistic facts.
20
If the basic teaching of Mentalism seems too
daring to risk acceptance, too impossible to be credible, he should look into
the statements of celebrated persons who supported it - Plato, Plotinus, Chuang
Tzu, Sir James Jeans, Bishop Berkeley.
21
Is mentalism suited to the world's present needs?
On scientific, cultural, practical, and religious grounds, we reply Yes.
22
It was a favorite saying of my venerable old
teacher, the late Subramanya Iyer, that you may measure the spiritual profundity
of a people or nation by its appreciation and acceptance of the doctrine of
mentalism.
23
Truth, in its higher reaches, is subversive of
common sense, shattering to common mentality, and inconceivable to ego-cramped
persons.
24
To be initiated into "The Mysteries" is to be
introduced to the revelation of Mentalism, to what it means and to what
startling consequences it leads; it is to discover that life, after all, no
matter how thrilling, is like a dream passing in the night. But even the
uninitiated are not allowed to stay in perpetual ignorance. For the tremendous
event of leaving the body at death is attended by the enforced learning of this
lesson, however much a man clings to his memories of this world.
25
With intellectual assurance, mystical experience,
and the sages' confirmation, he can afford a wholehearted assurance about the
truth of mentalism.
26
If it can make a man radiant and his aura vibrant,
as mentalism properly understood can, it surely has sufficient inspiration
behind it.
27
We may weep over, or laugh at, the human situation
but whatever we do it is prudent to look at it through the glass of mentalism.
28
Unless there is a thorough understanding and
appreciation of mentalism, several other important doctrines will remain
incomprehensible to the human mind, or else will be incorrectly interpreted.
29
To understand this, to believe in the reality of
mind and in the falsity of matter, is to escape from a delusion a hundred times
subtler than the delusion that the earth is still, when in fact it is really
moving quicker than the quickest train.
30
There are certain guiding ideas which are
essential to a properly balanced life and one of them, however surprisingly, is
that of mentalism.
31
To have his beliefs turned upside down and inside
out may be painful for a man, but it could also be beneficial. This is certainly
the case concerning the belief in mentalism.
32
Adherents of religion, practisers of meditation,
and dabblers in spiritism, magic, or occultism can hypnotize themselves into
believing anything, such as that there is no individual self, no physical world,
and no physical disease. All these beliefs may be contradicted by their own
experience or may be confirmed in temporary mental states. If the former, they
ignore or explain away the contradiction. If the latter, the state passes away
and they return to normal - a common phenomenon of hypnotism. Mind can play
tricks upon itself, by itself, upon others. To understand what is true and what
is false in such beliefs we must turn away from their parrot-like repetition to
the study of mind in its various phases. This is supposedly done, and in great
detail, in the academic world; but the central, the most important point is
entirely missed. To learn what that is, study Mentalism.
33
When we ask what is the purpose of the
individual's existence, we shall find that the physical world can give us
neither a complete nor a satisfying answer.
34
This doctrine is the spinal column of the whole
body of philosophic teaching.
35
Through mentalism he will learn to question the
earth's seeming reality and his own personality's seeming identity.
36
From this single idea of mentalism, several others
take their birth.
37
This thought, this idea, is as topical and living
today as it was in the time of the Greek Proclus, the Chinese Chuang Tzu, and
the Hindu Vasistha.
38
The teachings of mentalism must be turned round
and round, like a globe, until every aspect of it is seen and studied.
39
To appreciate the teaching that the world is an
appearance is immeasurably easier than to establish its actuality in
consciousness.
40
The road from mentalism as conception to mentalism
as a conviction is a long one.
41
Few will welcome an astounding teaching like
mentalism which turns their beliefs, ideas, even experiences, upside down.
42
When a man really understands this tenet of
mentalism, he will admit its truth for he cannot help but do so. The defect in
those who combat or reject it is a defect in investigation, study, and
knowledge.
43
Faith in mentalism sometimes comes abruptly, on
its very first presentation, when it comes with shattering force. More often it
comes slowly, after having been fought by doubt and argument every step of the
way.
44
If he becomes a real thinker he may also come in
time to a self-conversion to the basic truth of mentalism.
45
Mentalism, the teaching that this is a mental
universe, is too hard to believe for the ordinary man yet too hard to disbelieve
for the illumined man. This is because to the first it is only a theory, but to
the second it is a personal experience. The ordinary man's consciousness is kept
captive by his senses, each of which reports a world of matter outside him. The
illumined man's consciousness is free to be itself, to report its own reality
and to reveal the senses and their world to be mere ideation.(P)
46
The spirit of true Science must be ours, too. We
can accept nothing as true which is dubious as undemonstrable. The modern world,
and especially the Western world, can sympathize with a teaching only if it will
stand the double test of reason and experience.(P)
47
Only a highly educated mind can appreciate
intellectually the truth which lies in mentalism, as only a highly
intuitive one can feel its truth.(P)
48
If the Sphinx of mystic wisdom has kept her
secrets well down all these centuries, she has not kept them from a few probing
minds who have attained a sufficient measure of emancipation from the body to
possess the proper equipment for such exploration.
49
It is seldom that the meaning of mentalism is
immediately grasped; this is why it needs both explaining and approaching from
various angles.
50
If we examine the world with the surface-faculties
of the mind, we get a surface-result. If, however, we examine it with the deeper
faculties, we shall get a deeper result.
51
It is not only a doctrinal belief to be accepted
but also a metaphysical truth to be understood.
52
We dwell in a shadow world which seems to the
unenquiring solid and substantial and therefore quite real. A man must do much
to himself to make the journey from the illusion of the one to the illumination
of the other.
53
How shall thinking man find his way out of the
materialism into which his thought has led him? Consciousness is the clue. For
if he will follow up this Ariadne-thread it will lead him into the liberating
knowledge of mentalism.
54
In the beginning, Mentalism needs both study and
thought, repeated again and again until the leap into understanding is finally
made. When that happens there is a kind of intellectual catch-of-the-breath.
From then onward it becomes a clear irrefutable doctrine. It is even more: it
inspiringly opens the way to the major truths of real religion.
55
It is a truth which, because of its tremendous
importance, its eternal unchanging character, clamours to be proclaimed to every
age afresh but which, because of its very nature, is the least mentioned, the
most unfamiliar of all. However late in his life a man discovers this truth for
himself, its surprise is overwhelming. For most people are simply not ready to
receive it.
56
Intellect, because of insufficient data or
emotional distortions, may be misleading. Sense, whether touch or sight, because
of physical and mental illusions, may be deceptive. Thus we are forewarned by
the practical experiences of life not to reject mentalism hastily merely because
it offends intellect or conflicts with sense. It is easy for the impatient to
dismiss mentalism with an irritable stamp of the foot, as Dr. Samuel Johnson did
the kindred teaching of Berkeley, but men who have given more time and thought
to this subject are not so hasty in reaching a conclusion. After thirty years of
teaching academic philosophy in London, Dr. C.E.M. Joad was forced to confess
that the questions involved in mentalism are too difficult to be settled with
any degree of certainty.
57
It is a doctrine which shocks common sense and
clashes with simple experience. For it is ineffably subtle and immeasurably
supersensuous. It can make its way into men's hearts only by struggling long and
hard with them.
58
Every philosophy must start with things as
they are, as we find them, and then it ascends up to higher and ultimate truths.
We find matter to be real. So we do not assume its unreality, but proceed to
prove that on the initial basis of its reality. But blind dogmatists
reverse the process and start with unproved dogmas.
59
He should not rest satisfied with hazy notions of
mentalism but should get its principles in sharp, clear focus. If necessary he
should return and reconsider them until they are well understood. This may
demand hard work but it is well worthwhile.
60
Only the unreflective man can be a materialist,
for only he can accept the prosaic fact of the world's existence without enquiry
into what lies beneath it. The man who can make his reflections deep enough and
sustained enough mentally discovers that the world's appearance is illusionary
and that the world's reality certainly does not lie in its materiality.
61
Mentalism has evoked disdain, ridicule, or
attempts to refute it, but none has successfully done so.
62
The idea must sink ever deeper and deeper
if it is to become strong and resurface later as understanding and conviction.
63
I have met very few people who really understand
what is the simplest of all mystical, religious, and metaphysical tenets and
yet, at the same time, the most important of them all - mentalism.
64
It is a measure of the depth, subtlety, and
freedom of a man's mind how far he can follow the thread of mentalism to a point
where he himself must refute materialism.
65
It is by repeatedly returning to an idea so
utterly strange as this mentalism, learning to know it well and making oneself
thoroughly familiar with it, that the materialistic resistance to it is
gradually diminished.
66
Some are not so arrogant as to dismiss it with
scorn. But it bewilders them all the same because it is too far from their
experience and comprehension.
67
When the understanding of mentalism attains
maturity the conviction of its truth attains finality. There will be no foothold
for doubt. Thereafter the mentalist's attitude becomes unshakeable.
68
Everyone sees first only the absurdity of
mentalism; some, proceeding to investigate, become bewildered by it; a few,
persevering until they master it, see its truth.
69
They are victims of their experience: the world is
solid, so it seems to be material; it is continuous and lasting, so it seems to
be real. Only instruction, intuition, profound thinking, or profound mystical
experience can dissuade them from their ignorant opinion and show them that it
is the Consciousness behind their experience which is real.
70
We, the universe, everything, are pure Mind. This
is unchangeable, hence unevolutable, or it could not be the Real. Once you
awaken to IT you know it always was what it is; it can never evolve. All the
rest was a kind of self-hypnotization, hence unreal. In that sense the Garden of
Eden story is correct. We were then immortal, immaterial, innocent. We lost this
by losing our awareness and accepting a limited idea of ourselves. We have been
driven out of the Garden because we wanted knowledge. Knowledge presupposes "a
second thing" - something to be known. Thus we lost unity, sought a world of
objects, and got into oblivion of self. The happy Edenic state can be restored
by right thinking and de-hypnotization of ourselves.
71
A rare few understand and know the truth of
mentalism; they have validated it intellectually and verified it experientially:
its mystical side is open to them daily and they pass into it nightly. But the
great mass of people have never even heard of it.
72
Inevitably, as his reflections on mentalism
continue and deepen and his intuitions assert themselves, a man comes to the
time when it triumphs. Then, subtly, what he regards as reality changes and
shifts from matter to mind.
73
Wide experience shows that it is not worth trying
to convince those who deny this fundamental axiom. They lack the power to think
abstractly and mere reiteration will not supply it. To expect them to be able to
set aside their present standpoint and leap up to a higher one is vain; to
explain what is incomprehensible to them is useless.
74
It would be better to keep silent than to make
concessions out of weakness to the multitude's bias or incredulity. For
mentalism is admittedly hard to apprehend until the last stages of meditation
alters its level. The ego's heavy weight falls off his shoulders then: it
imperceptibly lets go.
75
If the understanding of the truth of mentalism
sinks deep enough, it will become lasting enough in the same way that the
understanding of two plus two equals four remains an established knowledge.
76
The mentality which can carry its thought deep
enough, and sustain the single line long enough, will in the end have to give
intellectual assent to this grand concept.
77
Belief in materiality is natural because men need
form and images, something touchable, whereas only developed minds can receive
into consciousness abstract ideas like mentalism's truth and reality. Hence
materiality - that is, maya, deception, illusion - is easily accepted.
78
The central truth of mentalism is both easy and
hard to understand.
79
Mentalism is not to the taste of most people. It
does violence to their common sense. It is too little known, hence has few
followers. There are two kinds of truth: one is the truth of appearances, and
the other is hidden deep down. The first is easy to understand; the other
requires much work on one's own mind to get it sharp enough to recognize what is
so elusive.
80
Put in the shortest way, mentalism is the teaching
that all human experience is mental experience. But this truth does not come by
itself to the uninstructed.
81
A special kind of patience is needed to gain a
correct understanding of mentalism. The key idea that the world's existence
(including our own, since we too are a part of it) is in the end a mental one
can be set down in a single sentence. But the clear and full grasp of all its
implications could absorb the larger fraction of a lifetime for many persons, or
a few months only for others.
82
It is not easy to perceive the truth of mentalism:
if it were, religion would not have been needed nor mysticism practised. Thought
and feeling must struggle with themselves, and suffer, before illusion is
shifted out of the way.
83
Many who tried to understand mentalism have
complained that they could not do so. Such an intellectual failure is
understandable. The old thought-habits need a total reconstruction. The new
ones, bringing in new ideas, must be learned until acceptable and then practised
patiently.
84
The fact is that there are few actual mystics but
many more would-be ones. Consequently there are few who fully recognize,
understand, and accept this truth of mentalism.
85
No man becomes a confirmed mentalist save after
many doubts and some lapses, after strenuous reflections extending over years,
and mystical intuitions manifesting in spite of himself. The strangeness and
mystery of this doctrine are too baffling to be overcome either easily or
quickly.
86
The acceptance of mentalist views is perhaps
possible only after a great strain upon the intellect and the emotions has been
passed through and left behind. This is comprehensible because the changeover
from the familiar and conventional standpoint is so immense and so abrupt.
87
A modern man, educated in the scientific outlook,
feels as a first reaction to such statements the impulse to reject them. A wiser
reaction would be to take second thoughts and enquire into the reasons which
prompted the seers to make them.
88
Unreflective minds are amazed, then scornful, when
they first hear someone deny the existence of matter. Reflective minds are
equally amazed but less scornful. If they take the trouble to investigate the
assertion, they may be left with an uncomfortable suspicion that there might be
something in it, even though they feel it too deep or too difficult for a final
judgement.
89
A man needs to be extremely scrupulous about his
own thinking, about what it contains of influences, suggestions, and
preconceptions, before he can reflect philosophically about the Truth. That few
persons arrive at mentalism is mostly because they fail to do so.
90
If in earlier eras a select tiny minority alone
could take hold of the basic truths of mentalism, because they alone had the
educational preparation, the intellectual development and emotional refinement,
the personal leisure and the will to do so, in this era the ordinary man may, at
least in part, do so. Teachings and revelations formerly regarded as
inaccessible in his case can now have more interest and some meaning for him.
91
The physical world exists as a reality only with
reference to the physical senses. For when insight is developed it is seen to be
a mental state. How can the two views be harmonized? By analysis and study, by
pondering over the very idea itself, and by deeper meditation. Spirit is
thenceforth no enigma to the intellect.
92
The theory of mentalism is not understandable by
the ordinary man when he is presented with it for the first time. It then seems
puzzling as the hieroglyphics on an Egyptian papyrus. But if the same man will
perseveringly study the explanations of it, eventually light will break in on
his mind and he will see its truth.
93
The very idea that this world is not what it seems
to be would yield an uncanny feeling did it not yield a derisive one much more
to the vulgar mind.
94
In dealing with those who have not evolved enough
to understand, much less accept, such a high doctrine as mentalism, it becomes
necessary to modify, simplify, or even withhold it for a time.
95
Up to a certain point, the teachings are well
within the mental grasp of any average mentality, but beyond that point they are
not.
96
Whether we begin by accepting no knowledge not
born out of common experience or whether we begin by accepting conclusions
derived from transcendental dogmas, the end will be the same: mentalism!
97
It is the easiest of acts to reject mentalism but
the hardest to refute it.
98
The sensation which a man experiences when he
first begins to investigate mentalism is something like the one he experiences
when standing on his head.
99
How few have reflected that all this multitude of
different thoughts which stream through their consciousness presupposes the
existence of a single Thought-stuff?
100
By applying either his belief in, or his
knowledge of, mentalism and throwing everything into Mind, he practises
nondualism and gets rid of the divided subject-object attitude. This work may
take many years or it may not: it must be done calmly, patiently, without
attempting to measure progress - itself an obstructive idea.
101
Those who have not had the inward revelation
granted them, who have not awakened what the Hindu yogis call
antardrishti, a kind of clairvoyant insight, often believe that mentalism
is mere theory and that its talk of the world's unreality is mere verbalism.
Even some among the seers have not seen this, although they have seen much else
that fleshly eyes cannot. Sri Aurobindo in India, for instance, disputed
mentalism, although his neighbour and contemporary, Ramana Maharshi, fully
accepted it. Rudolf Steiner in Switzerland likewise disputed it although J.J.
van der Leeuw, his Dutch contemporary, understood and explained it. This
situation is strange, but among the sages with whom I found the deepest
penetration into the nature of things and who were nearly all mentalists, some
observed that the capacity to receive and understand the mentalist doctrine was
the sharpest of all tests to which a truth-seeker could be subjected.
102
Many years ago Einstein was reported as
criticizing Jeans and Eddington for their mentalistic views. He asked why
anybody like the astronomer Jeans should trouble to look at the stars if he did
not believe that they were really there. This is a tremendous misconception of
the mentalist position.
103
If a study is made of the way in which we become
aware of physical things, the process by which we perceive Nature around us, and
if we put the collected facts into logical order and extract a logical
conclusion from them, we shall understand a little better why the world's
profoundest thinkers and most illumined mystics were mentalists.
104
No one yet has successfully refuted the
logical truth of mentalism. Yet few people feel it to be true and
therefore few can bring themselves to accept it. It is easy for a solitary
mystic here and there who has been granted the revelation through his mystical
experience, to adhere stubbornly to the statement that the world is a product of
consciousness. But for others belief wavers and doubt undermines.
105
Tolstoy, when a mere youth, caught a glimpse of
mentalist truth but fell into solipsistic fallacy. He thought he alone existed
and that he merely had to withdraw his attention from the world-idea, and then
it would completely vanish. Sometimes he even turned round abruptly, hoping to
see this vast void!
106
It is strange how illuminated mystics have been
unable to agree with each other on the question of mentalism and its truth.
Among the moderns, Rudolf Steiner vehemently opposes it, whereas Ramana Maharshi
strongly upholds it. Among the ancients, Patanjali deliberately attacked it,
whereas Gaudapada specially advocated it. And if we leave the mystics for a
moment and turn to the scientists, the same puzzling contradiction will be
found: Thomas Henry Huxley and Sir Arthur Eddington bravely endorsed mentalism,
whereas Einstein openly ridiculed it. How, when these great minds cannot settle
the problem of mentalism once and for all, can the lesser ones of the mass of
humanity hope to solve it?
107
There is one sentence in Professor Joad's book
entitled God and Evil in which he mentions that after studying and
teaching philosophy for thirty years he is unable to make up his mind either way
about the truth of mentalism. This, if anything, should be a caution against its
quick rejection, even though it is admittedly not an argument in its favour.
108
The mentalist position is the most acceptable of
all to the philosopher not only because it has come down to him as a traditional
teaching of the sages of antiquity, not only because it has proved itself to him
in his own personal ultramystic experience, but because of the best of all
reasons - it is irrefutable.
109
Solipsism is a belief into which a man more
easily falls if he is a castaway alone on an unvisited island or lost in an
uninhabited desert. Those who live in the world of action, who have obligations
to and responsibilities in it, who are involved in social occupational and
business relationships, are more protected against the solipsistic illusion.
110
We are moving in a subtle and delicate world
when we are moving in the world of mind. It is necessary to comprehend our terms
carefully and correctly if we are to understand the teaching of mentalism
truthfully.
111
The Indians have built an entire metaphysical
system - the Advaita - around the Upanishadic statement: "The Self alone
exists." This might be called spiritual solipsism. To experience during
meditation a state confirming this belief is their highest goal. The mind's
power to create its own "inner experiences" is known, a power once alluded to by
Ramana Maharshi as "expectancy" but which we in the West call "suggestion." The
higher phases of Buddhist psychology refer to an almost identical experience as
the Advaitic, but in their reference the Self does not enter the picture and its
existence is never affirmed. In Mentalism it is understood that consciousness
can shed its thoughts during the experience of Mental Quiet - also similar -
including thoughts of the world and even of the individual ego, but it is not
therefore claimed that these thoughts have no existence too and have never had
any at any time. All this shows once again that mystic experience, even in its
more advanced stage, is one thing and its interpretation - usually unconsciously
made and religiously influenced - is another.
112
Mentalism leads neither to solipsism (one's own
existence is the only existence) nor to Hindu Advaita's denial of the World's
existence. The first is a misreading and consequent misunderstanding of it
caused by a failing to see that the individual ego is itself a projection of
Mind. The second fails to see that as an experience in the field of awareness of
that ego, as a given and fundamental idea in that consciousness, it is a
coexistent and not to be denied without impairing sanity.
113
We celebrate the tough logic of mentalism, its
metaphysical truth and practical power.
114
The test of reality is non-contradiction.
115
There are cults which take the truth of
mentalism but misapprehend and pervert it by fallacious reasoning. They do this
in order to, as they believe, gain prosperity and regain health.
116
What even he cannot deny is the consciousness
within himself. This, if he only knew, is part of the Universal Consciousness.
117
But if mentalism solves some of the major
problems of existence, it raises some minor ones of its own. These perplex the
beginner.
118
All life is a paradox, being at once a
combination of reality and appearance. An obstacle to the comprehension of
mentalism is that one persistently, if unconsciously, views the world from the
standpoint of the lower personality, which is extremely limited, and not from
that of the higher individuality, which transcends both the intellect and the
senses. Even life on earth in the body is really a kind of mystical experience
from the standpoint of the mentalist but it is only a blurred, vague, and
symbolic one. The thinking intellect finds it hard to grasp this situation
because it is itself something which has been greatly filtered down out of the
higher individuality. Mentalism can be understood up to a point through the use
of reasoning but after this point it can only be understood through the use of
intuition.
119
The first acquaintance with some of these ideas
- especially the mentalist nature of the world and the future of the personal
ego - alarms some people and makes them withdraw from any further interest in
such frightening notions.
120
The simpleton is taken in by appearances.
Whether he be a peasant in the field or a politician in the forum, he accepts
what he touches, sees, or hears as being nothing more and nothing less than what
it purports to be.
121
That mental processes are a function of the
physical body, that they cannot be separated from one another, that thinking and
sense-perception have neither existence nor meaning apart from physiology, that
mind is identified with flesh and cannot be otherwise - this is the theory of
materialism. And a plausible one, too!
122
Materialists of the scientific kind believe that
there is a real material world of nature which is reflected, through sensation
and thought, in the human mind. Materialists of the religious kind hold the same
belief but add to it belief in a second real world - that of the Spirit.
Mentalists reject this belief in a material world and declare the latter to be
an appearance to sensation, an idea to thought; they know only a single reality
- MIND - and a direct relationship only with its products - ideas.
123
We must understand that matter is not a thing
but a thought within consciousness.
124
The truth of mentalism can be appreciated and
accepted only by those who are either mentally competent to do so or intuitively
ready for it. If any man cannot free his mind sufficiently from the erroneous
suggestions with which either scientific materialism or religious dogma have
straitjacketed it, he will reject the idea. And if he cannot ponder the
questions involved with sufficient discernment and penetrate them with
sufficient depth, he will reject it too.
125
Bertrand Russell in his book Knowledge of the
External World came near to the metaphysical truth. In the end he couldn't
make the leap over the gap. The reason why people can't make the leap is that
they are so deeply identified with the body alone. This in turn depends partly
on the way of life and partly on mental sensitivity.
126
The deceptions bred by an unreflective attitude
towards the reports of sense and an unintuitive one towards the feeling of
personality, enter so deeply into his mental principle because of their growing
prevalence during a large number of births that they become almost an integral
part of it. The melancholy consequences of this disposition are an inability to
believe in mentalism and an incapacity to progress in mysticism.(P)
127
The illusions of materialism can in the end best
be dispelled by the revelations of religious or mystical experience.
128
It is the incapacity of our thinking, the
poverty of our perception, the vividness of our sense-experiences, and the
encrustation of our habitual outlook which creates and maintains the illusion of
the world's materiality and prevents us from noting that it is really a presence
within consciousness. How can those who test reality like Dr. Johnson by using
their feet or like any bricklayer by using their hands affirm any other doctrine
than that of materialism? Contrarily, how can those who use their God-given
intelligence to test reality arrive in the end at any other doctrine than that
of mentalism? Those materialists who tell us today that the line of the soul is
an unscientific one and that it is a legacy left to us by primitive simpletons
are themselves unscientific and oversimple. For science, which began by
repudiating mind and exalting matter, is being forced by facts to end by
repudiating matter and exalting mind. This is why philosophy today must sharply
emphasize and teach, alongside of ancient lore, the profounder mentalist import
of vital facts of modern discovery which have not yet received their deserved
reward of recognition from the world.
129
Some people complain that knowledge of mentalism
or belief in it cuts off the enjoyment of life and blunts the keenness with
which we meet it. I answer: Is their enjoyment of a play at the theatre cut off
in any way by their knowledge that it too is only a series of ideas? Are their
feelings blunted because the whole show is only the imagination of some author
sitting in his study? Are they less able to appreciate its drama, its humour, or
its pathos because they know that, like every other thought, it must pass and
end?
130
Those who wish to evade these concrete facts
commit a fraud upon themselves and impair their own intellectual integrity.
131
The doctrine of mentalism cannot be proved
completely to satisfy the materialist, but then he cannot disprove it either. To
end the dilemma, as a contemporary writer on mysticism ends it, by dismissing it
altogether from consideration as an "idle fancy" is to oppose the personal
affirmation of mentalism's truth by eminent ancient and modern mystics.
132
The materialist may turn all the knobs on his
radio and adjust them as he will, but he remains unable to tune in to
mentalism's wavelength. This is because he insists on missing the point, which
is: What about the person who is doing all this?
133
Without the power to produce abstract thoughts,
how can anyone understand that the self, or the mind, Consciousness, even
knowledge or perception, is an entity by itself and not merely a by-product of
the fleshly brain?
134
Those who have never thought through
their physical experience find the tenet of mentalism incredible, its
contradiction of sense-evidence imaginary.
135
They are willing to believe in mentalism but it
is a belief subject to doubts provoked intermittently by apparent contradiction
coming from sense-experience.
136
The mentalist meaning gets lost alas! before
this constant confrontation with hard outside objects, reminders of a presumed
material stuff out of which they are made.
137
It is doubtful if God created those strange
creatures, the materialists. They arrive on the scene of life with eyes closed
to their own existence as mind but wide open to the existence of
something which is not there, which they call matter.
138
Mentalism startles us because our thinking
habits are still coloured throughout with materialistic assumptions.
139
If he himself is a mere nothing who does not
exist, who then is it who takes all this trouble to prove it?
140
He puts onto the body, its brain and sense
organs, powers and attributes which belong to the mind. This is his error: this
is materialism.
141
If a man persists in acknowledging his bodily
self alone and in denying his spiritual self, he is not to be blamed for that.
His experience of life has brought him to this point of utter materialism while
his power of metaphysical reflection has not developed enough to carry him
beyond it. He is to be pitied therefore, rather than blamed.
142
If matter were real, or as real as Mind, then
the latter could no longer be the only reality. God would then no longer be
unique, the One Being that alone is the infinite Mind, but there would be at
least another alongside of it and identical in attributes with it. There would
be gods, but no God, which is absurd.
143
They believe that matter has formed by itself
its highest product - Man - who in turn has put forth his own highest product in
Thought. The next step from this is to proclaim that man's happiness wholly
depends upon his environment and not at all upon his inner life.
144
Most people, even most pious people, are
materialists. To them tangible things in a tangible world are the realities.
145
To Albert Camus, reflecting the decision of the
ordinary simple yet articulate man, it is enough merely to say that he can touch
the world to conclude that it exists.
146
Those who uphold the sunless idea that matter is
the only thing, as well as those who would insert a ghostlike thing called mind
into it, deride the mentalist's position. Yet they would shake their complacency
if only they could get unstuck from the limitation and incompleteness of their
views.
147
It is important to note that "matter" has gone
out of scientific thought but materialism has not gone out of popular life.
148
To follow closely an exposition of mentalist
metaphysics is to put a great strain upon the attention. After a time, when it
finds the solid earth seemingly deserted, it struggles to get away, unable to
bear the thin rarefied air in which it finds itself.
149
That this World, so solid to our touch, so
important to our lives, is "such stuff as dreams are made of," in Shakespeare's
haunting phrase, is incredible to the ordinary shallow materialist, whether he
be of a scientific or a pious mind. But then, we must allow that mentalism, even
if true, is a bizarre, a staggering idea.
150
The world rarely finds reality for it judges
mostly by appearances and externals; hence the wide prevalence of materialism,
whether it takes an open self-confessed form or a covert religio-hypocritical
one.
151
Half of our puzzling problems follow in the
train of our naïve but erroneous belief that matter is itself an ultimate
reality.
152
When we are directly confronted with the logical
implications of this mentalistic discovery we are likely to withdraw to safer
ground.
153
It is an extraordinary fact, and perhaps a
paradoxical one, that he who states the simple scientific truth that the only
objects man knows are mental ones, that is, ideas, is usually considered mad.
154
Life extends far beyond the narrow domain of
this our flesh. Those who deride this truth will live to learn strange and
surprising things.
155
The true picture of a man is to be seen in his
mind and heart, not in his body. Yet the world generally believes in, and acts
on, the very contrary of this truth.
156
We are conscious creatures only because our
bodies possess brains: without them we would know nothing. Such is the notion
implanted in us by those educators who had themselves received it in their turn.
Mind did not exist by itself; Soul and spirit were imagined and inconceivable
things.
157
The materialist's mistake is to exaggerate the
physical facet of existence and then make a worshipped fetish of it.
158
Those who are spiritually blind, who have never
felt the attraction of any higher forces than those which affect the body's
senses, may consider such belief to be fantastic.
159
Those who have no better concept of
consciousness than the usual one regard any other as a curiosity, as unnatural,
and not as something which might be worth the trouble of investigating, much
less of acquiring.
160
He is still a materialist, however formally and
outwardly religious, who does not believe or perceive the truth of mentalism,
does not know that consciousness is apart from brain.
161
It is difficult for the true adherent of the
Quest to get over this hurdle of anti-mentalism, largely because of certain
mystical world-views. Without these, a closer accord would be reached. But here,
of course, one is up against the difficulties brought about by the contradictory
nature of such experiences.
162
The materialist who says that we humans come
from nothing and that if there is an infinite being, a God, he is infinitely
indifferent to us, is thinking only of the physical body.
163
That the majority of men have been unable in the
past to perceive mentalism's truth is fully understandable, even pardonable, if
we admit how stubbornly unshakeable is the human sense of material reality. The
only successful attack on it hitherto has been that made by actual personal
mystical experience - but mystics formed only a minority among men. This is why
the mid-twentieth-century discoveries in nuclear physics are so important, for
they must lead ultimately to the full vindication of mentalism, as they have
already begun to do partially.
164
The time will come, and cannot be avoided, when
both the new and the accumulated facts will force scientists to regard Mind as
the real thing they have to deal with, and matter as a group of states of mind.
But by that time they will be something more than mere scientists alone; they
will be somewhat on the way to becoming philosophical scientists.
165
The belief that to touch a wooden stick is to
touch matter is no longer good science. And it was physics, a science with its
feet well on the solid ground, which brought about this striking change in
outlook.
166
In this century the two streams of science and
mysticism are converging into mentalism.
167
When a mystical seer proclaimed on the basis of
his own insight that the reality of the universe was not matter but mind,
educated people could afford to disregard his proclamations. But when leading
scientists themselves proclaimed it on the basis of verifiable facts and
rational reflections, they could not help giving their confidence to it.
Consequently, those who have seriously absorbed the latest knowledge have been
falling away from intellectual materialism. It is indeed only the uneducated,
the half-educated, the pseudo-educated, and the word-educated who today believe
in this miserable doctrine.(P)
168
His feet tell him that the ground he walks on is
truly there. His four remaining senses tell him something about the other
objects around him. All his physical experience confirms the factuality of the
world. It is certainly an existent thing. How is it, then, that the Hindus and
Chinese have celebrated thinkers who claim that this existence is illusory? Can
Shakespeare's play Much Ado About Nothing thus be given a surprisingly
different and tremendously larger reference? Were this so, these Oriental
dreamers would be most alarming. Surely Western science would not deign to
consider them even for a moment? Let us pause and see.
169
Shankara's Snake-Rope illusion is out of date.
Science provides better illustration based on facts of continuous
experience instead of exceptional or occasional ones. Indians ignore the
fact that a thousand years have travelled on and away since Shankara's time.
Human intelligence has probed and discovered much. Modern evidence for mentalism
is more solid today. The tremendous advance of knowledge since his time has
shown that the substance of which this universe is made turns out to be no
substance at all.(P)
170
Is there some precise universal criterion of
truth which will be applicable at all times and under all circumstances, in
short, something unchanging and therefore supreme? For scientists know that the
great principles which formed landmarks in the history of science were really
successive stages on the route towards the precise truth. Science changes, its
doctrines change, and its earlier approximations are replaced from time to time
by more accurate points. We cannot hope to find an ultimate truth nowadays, when
science itself is so rapidly on the march. There remains, however, one unfailing
all-embracing fact which will forever remain true and which cannot possibly
change. Indeed, every advance in experiment and theory made by enterprising
scientists will only help to verify this grand discovery. What is it? It is that
the whole world which every department of science is busily engaged in examining
is nothing but an idea in the human mind. Physics, chemistry, geology,
astronomy, biology, and all the other sciences without a single exception are
concerned solely with what is ultimately a thought or series of thoughts passing
through human consciousness. Here, therefore, we possess a universal law which
embraces the entire field in which science is operating. This is an ultimate
truth which will stand immortal, when every other hypothesis formulated by
science has perished through advancing knowledge.(P)
171
Let us not be bewitched by Oriental futility and
deny what is palpably factual. It does not benefit truth, reason, or experience
to deny the world's existence. It does not help the spiritual life to do so. It
is a waste of time and an unnecessary cause of bewilderment or confusion to
Western students, setting vain problems for them which they need never have had.
This does not mean that they should desert the idea of nonduality and fall back
into dualism. It means only that they should not repeat, like parrots, what
others teach them without having first got a satisfactory understanding of the
teaching and tested its truth or falsity. To say that the world does not exist
is either a clumsy semantic error or one of those incomplete truths which,
unless fitted to its other half, misleads others and leads him into a
labyrinthine maze from which he either never gets out or takes years in the
process. By deep enough meditation he may get into a half trance which tricks
consciousness, so that he wriggles out of his five senses and loses his
awareness of what they normally tell him. The world is gone. But is it really
lost? For after his meditation he must come back to his senses when the world
reappears like a faithful dog. Instead of rejecting its claim to exist, the
honest thing is to accept it and make a proper appraisal of it. For the world is
a phenomenon: as an appearance it certainly does exist. But it appears in the
mind, not in matter. In the decade after the First World War great
scientific research was made. Einstein's formulations on relativity are justly
praised. Heisenberg's work on the structure of the atom with its ions,
electrons, and quantums brought him the Nobel Prize. The most advanced workers
in nuclear physics know the mentalist position if they have the willingness to
reflect deeply enough upon their observed facts and the mathematical capacity to
support this reflection. Few possess both. Most refuse to go so far because they
dare not abandon the last remnants of materialism which got so intertwined with
science during the past two hundred years that getting rid of them now actually
seems unscientific: Einstein deliberately refused even though he had the
capacity. Heisenberg accepted but would not publish his acceptance of the truth
until now. I believe he will do so before passing away. Professor Carl von
Weizsäcker, who worked in both fields - atomic physics and academic philosophy -
also perceives the truth about reality but must leave the immense labour of
presenting publicly the mathematical formulas involved, to a younger man. The
point of all this is that we do not have to swallow the incredible doctrine of
the world's non-existence in order to deny its materiality. Science properly
demands an explanation of the world. If it pushes this demand to the fullest
possible extent, it comes to the same truth as philosophy, even though it be by
a different way. The world is what it is, an appearance in the little mind; but
behind both is Mind, the great unchangeable reality which transcends all human
thought and touch and which alone is, was, and will be.
172
When Shankaracharya wrote his brilliant texts
and commentaries more than one thousand years ago, he was compelled to quote the
example (now so well known) of the rope mistaken for a snake. Today we have a
better and more convincing example which nuclear physical science has produced
by showing that almost invisible energies were being mistaken for solid material
substances before the invention of highly subtle, high-magnifying apparatus and
instruments which however were unable to omit the investigator's consciousness
from the energies discovered.
173
The bomb, whose shadow darkly threatens the
whole planet in our time, is itself the last and latest demonstration that
matter is an illusion. The atomic physics which alone made the bomb possible has
penetrated to a level where matter has disappeared into radiation. There is no
matter there, only radiant energy.
174
In reducing matter to a mere formula of
mathematics, Einstein destroyed materialism through the appeal to intellect.
Thus he really brought a spiritual message, even though it was couched in the
modern idiom of his time - as another Jew, Jesus, brought a message that
destroyed materialism through the appeal to faith nearly two thousand years ago.
175
It was the keen thought of Gaudapada, with no
equipment, which enabled him to set down the truth of non-causality which Planck
and Heisenberg have reached in our own day through the use of the last word in
laboratories.
176
Science has begun to establish the fact that the
world is really mind; Truth established the fact that the mind is the Self. One
of the Upanishads says: "This (universe) is myself, who am all, that is
His highest state."
177
The tremendous implications of mentalism for
science and metaphysics, its enormous significance for mysticism and religion
will quietly come into prominence before this century closes.
178
Some scientists are approaching the position
that the world is ultimately an idea in the mind of the beholder. What will
follow? They must next proceed to the position that an idea has precisely the
same value as any mental picture seen in dream and hence must be just as
imaginary, which leads to the final position that the idea has no real permanent
existence.
179
The simple notion that the world is just a
machine, that God is the mechanic who puts its parts together and that matter is
the stuff he began with and used to make these parts, belongs to the primitive
levels of scientific thinking. It is for those who are just beginning to form
the conception of an orderly universe in their enthusiasm for the early
discoveries of science.
180
Matter is energy, pulsating as waves or formed
into knots.
181
If so-called matter consists of the energy of
the electron, whether as wave or particle, where is its existence as solid
substance? Quantum physics has so far unveiled the truth about matter.
182
When there is no weight, no volume, no inertia
to be found in the ultimate atom, where is "matter"? It is no longer existent.
But was it ever existent? Obviously deep and sustained reflection upon this
question could only turn a physicist into a metaphysicist - and that is not
permissible! Science must remain science: having started with the dogma that it
has nothing to do with metaphysics or religion it ends with it!
183
"What we know by our senses alone has reality,"
wrote D'Holbach, the French Encyclopaedist "All is matter and force." He meant
that matter was the real thing, and force was what pushed it about to take a
variety of forms. But how did he know that matter was there? Was it not his own
mind that told him so?
184
The universe cannot be explained by a few
scientific theories, notions, laws, or discoveries. It is unimaginably complex.
Even with the help of the most amazing equipment, instruments, apparati, science
discovers the merest fraction of the facts about anything in the universe. But
even more important is the very limited nature of the physical senses. They seem
to report the existence of matter, to give us substance and reality, when what
is, is an entirely different level - that of Mind.
185
The ideas of the scientist combine into an
intellectual outlook which increasingly influences the leaders, the teachers,
the fighters, and, so far as it filters down - the masses. To the measure that
science comes to understand that what it examines or investigates leaves out the
unconscious contribution made by the examiner or investigator, to that measure
its conclusion is incomplete. Further, that contribution is selective; it can
deal with objects only as far as it can penetrate the material of which they are
made. There is in consequence something missing from the scientist's knowledge
of the universe. It is the philosopher's discovery that this missing element is
vitally and fundamentally important.
186
When he comes to understand on what are really
scientific grounds that belief in the materiality of the world is groundless, he
may come to a better tolerance of the Quest.
187
Until lately, the education of medical students,
their observation of mental consequences of physical conditions, and the general
attitude of recent science led them into materialism and thence to agnosticism.
But several factors have begun, or else will shortly begin, a reversal of this
process.
188
A medical scientist declared himself opposed to
any association of physiology with psychology. It would only harm both, he
believed. He said that no one knows the link between consciousness and matter.
This statement is quite reasonable for anyone, materialist or religionist. Only
the mentalist can solve the problem.
189
Matter as an independent principle is
non-existent, whether it be physical matter, ethereal matter, astral matter, or
something else. All these are merely conceptions.
190
The book of Sir James Jeans entitled Physics
and Philosophy reveals what is the actual case. He concludes, "As we pass
from this phenomenal world of space and time to this substratum, we seem, in
some way we do not understand, to be passing from materialism to mentalism and
so possibly from matter to mind.... Modern physics has moved in the direction of
mentalism."
191
Eddington went much farther in acceptance of
mentalism than Jeans. He told science quite plainly that no satisfactory
explanation of matter can be made without postulating mind.
192
The geologist, the biologist, and the physicist
do not refute mentalism with their evolutionary stories. They only describe some
of the ways in which Mind works to throw up its images.
193
To trace the working of the senses, to explore
the problems of knowledge, and to understand the implications of nuclear physics
- to do all these things to the fullest possible extent is to come under the
compulsion of rejecting the claim of materialism that there is only a material
world and that we human beings are only material bodies; that all mental
experiences originate in material conditions only is the naïve conception which
today only a child may form and hold; all things today point to the truth of
mentalism.
194
It was a younger professor of biology in New
Zealand who said in my hearing that recent discoveries by neurobiology in
connection with the cell were undermining the materialistic view of it hitherto
held and were pointing to something more like consciousness or mentality as its
essence.
195
Matter, as an entity in itself, though so
scientifically acceptable at the beginning of the nineteenth century, will be
scientifically untenable at the end of the twenty-first century.
196
Science has long known that matter is able to
change into wave-like energy or particle-streamed energy. Philosophy comments
that what you see, this world of objects and creatures, is not really what you
think it is. It seems still, solid, stable, but all the time it is vibrating
with unbelievable speed and we, the observers, with it. Only when we
penetrate the calm centre of being do we find the real stability, the true
substance.
197
Those who are too intellectually dishonest and
too morally unscrupulous to be willing to accept the deeper implications of the
new scientific knowledge because it would so endanger their whole position, are
like criminals who do not believe in accepting the law of the land because it is
against their interests to do so.
198
There is nothing in these concepts that is
essentially new, but parts of their restatement with the help of modern
scientific knowledge inevitably are new.
199
Science has travelled far towards the mentalist
position when, in the person of Niels Bohr, one of its most distinguished
researchers, it admits that the human entity is both a spectator and an actor in
the world drama.
200
No scientist knows what matter is in itself.
201
The last outcome of all scientific research and
metaphysical thinking is, and can only be, mentalism.
202
The metaphysical doctrine called "subjective
idealism" is a first step towards truth but not at all the last step. Taken by
itself, leaving the universe within man's little finite mind alone as it does,
it can even lead to serious misconception and error. Only by putting the world
where it originates - in the World-Mind - and then alone bringing man's
participating and limiting mind into the scene, can the doctrine be completed
and corrected!
203
Berkeley said there was no object, only the
thought of it and the thinking self. Hume said there was no object and no
thinker, only the thought. Both men were approaching truth, guided by reason and
intuition, but could not clasp it altogether. For only insight could have led
them farther.
204
It is not enough, as the earlier Western
Idealists did, to take the physical senses - parts of the body - into relation
with the physical objects - the world outside them - and then remove the barrier
between the two metaphysically, and thus remove matter itself. It is necessary
to advance further, into a positive recognition of Pure Mind-in-Itself, and not
merely consider the relations between the senses and their objects.
205
Berkeley said he could find no Matter. Hume
agreed and went further by saying he could also find no Soul or Self. But
neither Kant nor Hegel denied the existence of Matter, as Berkeley did, though
they did reduce this entire existence to a form of thought.
206
Hume rightly pointed out that the mind is a mere
series of sensations but he wrongly concluded that the series is destitute of
any connecting thread. He saw nothing in the world but momentary perceptions,
and in perceptions he saw nothing at all. They arose and faded into a void. Thus
it might be said of the Scottish thinker that his doctrine was a Nihilistic
Idealism and his universe a meaningless one. "Everyone keeps at a distance," he
complained. "I have exposed myself to the enmity of all metaphysicians and even
theologians; and can I wonder at the insults I must suffer?"
207
I have tried to study the nature of the mind and
to understand its office in knowing. And the end of all my studies brought me to
the sequel that I was compelled to testify to Hume's strange statements:
"Nothing is ever really present with the mind but its perceptions.... We never
really advance a step beyond ourselves.... Philosophy informs us that everything
which appears to the mind is nothing but a perception, and is interrupted and
dependent on the mind, whereas the vulgar confound perceptions and objects, and
attribute a distinct, continued existence to the very things they feel or see.
There is no question of importance whose decision is not comprised in the
science of mind; and there is none which can be decided with any certainty
before we become acquainted with that."
208
Whitehead has endorsed mentalism to the extent
of admitting, in his work Process and Reality, that "apart from the
experiences of subjects there is nothing, bare nothingness."
209
Now the realist assigns a greater degree of
reality to that world than to its observer, because he says it will be there
even when the latter has passed away. The idealist, however, assigns all reality
to the observer because the world cannot be known apart from the latter.
210
"Thought and the object of thought are one and
the same." - Parmenides, the earliest Greek mentalist
211
Kant's analysis of cognition was his supreme
achievement. He traced back the true sources of our knowledge.
212
Plato, on Mentalism: "What a superior being
would have as subjective thought, the inferior perceives as objective things."
213
Kant asked the metaphysicians of his time to
cease their wrangling regarding the nature of the universe and the principles of
Being until they understood better the nature of our knowing process.
214
The mentalistic schools of Chinese Buddhism
existed only from 600 a.d. to 1100 a.d. They were named the Fa-hsiang and the
Wei-shih. The mentalist school of Japanese Buddhism was the Hosso.
215
Kant as an idealist brought out two sides of
idealism: that the world of experience is built up through certain processes,
that is, it is a construction; and that the synthetic activity of the mind
enables it to see the world as a finished thing. He was correct when he declared
the known world to be mentally constructed, but not when he declared that there
was an unknown world of things-in-themselves beyond it - unless we give that
name to the karmic forces which became transferred into the known world.
216
Marcus Aurelius: "When thou hast roused thyself
from sleep thou hast perceived that they were only dreams which troubled thee.
Now in thy waking hours look at these things about thee as thou didst look at
thy dreams."
217
P.B. Shelley, Adonais: He hath awakened
from the dream of life - 'Tis we who lost in stormy visions, keep With phantoms
as unprofitable strife, And in mad trance, strike out with spirits knife
Invulnerable nothings -
218
Malebranche: "We do not perceive the objects
which are outside us in themselves.... So by this word idea I understand nothing
other than that which is the immediate object."
219
Mind is the one aspect or phase that one knows,
in everything that exists. We can know nothing but mind. - Baruch (Benedict)
Spinoza
220
Bradley has pointed out that the knowing self is
itself only an idea and in that sense it is not distinct from the Predicate, the
known object of thought.
221
"Are we actually alive in real surroundings or
are we really only dreaming? Men, tired out with being fooled, have claimed that
nothing is real outside our mind." - Voltaire
222
Ashtavakra Samhita: "The universe is but
a state of the mind." Panchadasi: "The mind is virtually the external
world." Mahabharata: "The mind is the essence of all things that are
manifest." Taittiriya Upanishad: "From mind (manas) indeed are all
entities born." Brihadaranyaka Upanishad: "This great, endless, infinite
Reality is but purely mental (Vijnanaghana)." Jivanmukti Viveka:
"The whole world is the result of mere mental construction in me."
223
"I was often unable," Wordsworth says, in the
preface to his great "Ode," "to think of external things as having external
existence, and I communed with all that I saw as something not apart from, but
inherent in, my own immaterial nature. Many times while going to school have I
grasped at a wall or tree to recall myself from this abyss of idealism to the
reality."
224
"Only that day dawns to which you are awake." -
Thoreau
225
"The Manifest is Mind; and so too is the Void."
- Tilopa, The Vow of Mahamudra
226
Anaxagoras, the master of Socrates, taught that
the real existence of the things perceived by the five senses could not be
satisfactorily proved.
227
Oscar Wilde (in a conversation recorded by
Lawrence Housman): "That surely is true philosophy.... You are what you are
merely because they have made you a subject of thought; if they did not think of
you, you would not exist. And who knows? They may be right. For we cannot get
behind the appearance of things to the reality. And the terrible reason may be
that there is no reality in things apart from their appearances."
228
Chuang Tzu wrote: "Confucius and you are both
dreams; and I who say you are dreams - I am but a dream myself."
229
"Where are the pleasurable and unpleasurable
moments after they are past? They seem to be like a sound, a shadow, a breeze,
or a dream." - Su Tung Po
230
"I behold the world as if a picture," exclaims
Sri Shankaracharya in the Siddhantamuktavali.
231
"Everything I see seems a dream, everything I
perceive with the eyes of the body a derision" - Saint Teresa of Spain
232
William Blake, in his published Letters,
reveals mentalist truth on the basis of personal firsthand experience. Blending
the clairvoyant seer, the religious mystic, and the gifted artist, as he did,
this is only to be expected. "I know," he writes, "that this world of
imagination and vision is all one continued vision."
233
Berkeley used his mentalist discovery to restore
the anthropomorphic God to its neglected shrine. His great errors were to
introduce this personal deity as the author of man's ideas and to cling to the
finite ego without suspecting that it was itself an idea.
234
We must expect that Roman Catholic metaphysics,
following Saint Thomas Aquinas and, through him, Aristotle, accepting the
material world's reality, will vigorously oppose mentalism.
235
"I came to the conclusion that consciousness is
an undeniable datum, and therefore pure materialism is impossible. I fought
every inch of the way against Idealism in Metaphysic - and that is why I was
forced to understand it thoroughly before accepting it." - Bertrand Russell
236
Bishop Berkeley contributed valuably to these
mentalistic teachings, and we of the West should be grateful to him. But there
were a few weaknesses in them, which the best Asiatic thinkers immediately
detect and consistently avoid. For instance, Berkeley accepted an experience as
being true if the idea of it cohered and persisted strongly. Again and again
Shankaracharya pointed out that these conditions were also present in powerful
illusions.
237
The European thinkers who worked out the
mentalistic basis of life with intellectual thoroughness - although not always
with correctness - were German; Kant, Schopenhauer, Hartmann, Hegel, Schiller,
and Fichte saw and taught that Mind was the primal reality and that the world
was an idea in Mind.
238
Bishop Berkeley's metaphysical position is not
easily classed. For, as the Encyclopaedia Britannica says, "There is some
ground for the usual designation of his philosophy as subjective idealism. This
interpretation however clashes with his often repeated avowal that he was trying
to justify our natural belief that we have direct knowledge of a really
corporeal world."
239
Despite the twisted condition of D.H. Lawrence's
inner being he had moments of spiritual clairvoyance, of intellectual
perspicuity. That is why he wrote somewhere: "All we know is shadows. Shadows of
everything, of the whole world, shadows even of ourselves. We are all spectres.
Spectre you are to me, spectre I am to you. Shadows you are even to yourself.
And by shadow I mean, idea, concept, the abstracted reality, the ego."
240
It is an item of side interest that Berkeley's
wife was a follower of Madame de Guyon, the French lady who, though not a nun,
taught the practice of meditation and whose movement spread under the name of
"Quietism." Mrs. Berkeley was a devout, earnest mystic who took herself very
seriously and was very intent on self-improvement. In a few of the blank pages
left by her famous husband, at the end of a rough draft of Treatise
Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge, she wrote, after she was
widowed: "Who are you that you should fear man that is a worm of a day like
yourself? Fear him only who will reward or punish you as you behave.... Let not
imaginary goods as fame or riches charm you, the want of them, if you do, will
distress you." Her use of the word imaginary is amusing, in view of her late
husband's mentalistic doctrine.
241
Extract from the editor's (N. Rama Rao's) brief
biographical introduction to the collected Speeches of His Highness the late
Yuvaraja of Mysore: "Persons conversant with the evolution of his mind noted
that he started with a materialist theory of the universe, but as his studies
advanced and his thought matured, he came to hold a purely mentalistic
conception that the universe is mind-stuff."
242
The Japanese Kukai, also known as Kobo Daishi
(774-835 a.d.), in his work Attaining Enlightenment in this Lifetime,
wrote: "Differences exist between matter and mind, but in their essential nature
they remain the same. Matter is no other than mind."
243
Bergson said that philosophy must start with the
problem of the existence of matter.
244
Dr. Samuel Johnson's erudition was admirably
shown in the original dictionary he compiled, as was his talent for expressing
common sense in pithy statements. But his metaphysical naïveté was equally shown
when he stamped a foot on the ground in refutation of Berkeley's discovery. The
foot's touch gave Johnson a physical sensation. He stopped there, not grasping
that the sensation had given him an idea - solidity - and that without this idea
his foot would not have felt the ground. He took it for granted that his
experience testified to material reality. Science knows now that it was
testimony to his sensations only, and the rest was theory and assumption:
Berkeley took it as testimony to Idea-lism. But that is only a halfway house to
adequate explanation, to Mentalism.
245
In a letter to H.W. Abbot, Santayana tersely
defined what he called "the idealistic dogma" as being: "Knowledge of objects is
but a modification of the subject." He then declares "the impossibility of being
a thorough-going idealist, because consciousness of any kind implies the
existence of something not itself outside of itself."
246
When, some years ago, I stayed in an ashram in
Western India and idly looked through the volumes on its library shelves, I
found a highly abridged version of a work called Yoga Vasistha; I
realized that I had also found one of those Eastern writings which deserve
Western readers too. That version had been made by an Indian scholar long
before, had apparently never circulated beyond the Indian shores, and, try as I
might, I could not secure another copy to take away with me. I think it had been
privately published, but anyway it was out of print. The contents were so
interesting that I never forgot the Sanskrit title. Now another and new
abridgment is in my hands. Its reading has given me pleasurable hours,,
interesting hours and thought-provoking hours. It is a book that should be also
in the hands of every mentalist.
247
When Berkeley says "to be is to be perceived"
(he means "by God"), it is equivalent, in philosophy, to "to be is to be known
to the World-Mind in the form of World-Idea." But there are subtle yet important
differences between the two outlooks. What did Berkeley define as God? Did he
rise to the Ultimate Possible Concept, that of Nonduality? Did he understand
that there is a distinction to be made between the Absolute Mind and the
World-Mind?
248
Saint Thomas Aquinas' metaphysical outlook is
coming more and more to be seen as Neoplatonism, with its mentalistic-mystical
doctrine, rather than Aristotelianism, as so many have believed for so long.
249
That the last play written by Shakespeare was
The Tempest is a historic fact which helps to explain why it holds the
most mysterious truth - Mentalism.
250
"Consciousness gives unbeatable testimony to its
own existence, but at first, unexamined, we limit that existence to
personality. As an ever changing thing it is only Me: examined, inquired
into, it becomes 'I-I-I,' that is, itself. The 'I' is not the 'Me'." - Coleridge
251
"...as in your own Bosom you bear your Heaven
And Earth and all you behold; Tho it appears without, it is within, In your
Imagination, of which This World of Mortality is but a Shadow." - William Blake
252
Denis Diderot, although himself a staunch
materialist, had to confess that Idealism "is the most difficult to oppose"
[because] "we never get outside ourselves." There was an English lawyer who
offered a large financial prize to anyone who could successfully refute the
tenets of Idealism. But the prize was never won, because no one was able to
provide a satisfactory refutation. Mentalism includes most of Idealism but goes
farther and explains more.
253
Great Greek thinkers discussed whether brain and
mind were two separate things or only one. But the greatest of them (such as
Plato) knew the mentalist truth.
254
Objective idealism is based on error. The error
is that objects have an existence separate from the idea of them. If this were
true, and he formed his idea of the object from the object itself, then it
should be asked, "What is it that tells him there is an object outside?" It is
the mind which tells this. But the mind can give him only a thought. Therefore
the idea which he forms and the object which reveals itself to the mind are
both ideas.
255
Metaphysical idealism could certainly be argued
about interminably, especially with the Neorealists. It is, however, just as
worthy of consideration by the spiritually minded, and has, in fact, been held
by a number of leaders in the mystical field - not merely through intellectual
activity, but also through mystical experience.
256
It would be incorrect to state that the drift of
science is away from Berkeley. It is true that Berkeley's view of mentalism was
a limited and imperfect one, merely a beginning, in fact. But it was a beginning
in the right direction.
257
Berkeley's clear thinking and clever statement
of a noble truth were admirable. But he made one large mistake in formulating
his views. This was to split the qualities of external objects into those which
the mind contributes and those which belong to the objects in their own right.
The fact is that everything, without exception, is derived from mind.
258
Even as a teenager the American poet Edgar Allan
Poe felt something of the Truth and wrote in one of his verses: "Is all that we
see or seem but a dream within a dream?"
259
Kant cleared the way admirably for other
metaphysical thinkers by applying the notions of infinity and eternity to time
and space, linking all to the human mind. Yet his own thinking was brought to a
halt, baffled, and remained incomplete; he had to admit that "the existence of
things outside of us must be accepted merely on faith."
260
"Are not the mountains, waves, and skies, a part
of me and my soul as I of them - Is not the love of these deep in my heart?"
wrote Byron as he gazed through windows of his hotel at Ouchy near Lausanne.
261
M.N. Roy: "Some leading scientists say, 'One has
the idea of a tree, but one can never know whether the tree really exists or not
because the content of the idea is the picture of the tree in the retina.'
According to them, there is no way of ascertaining the connection between the
picture in the retina and the tree supposed to be there at a distance; the
latter may just as well be a projection of the idea. How do we know that the
tree is the first and the picture on the retina is the second?"
262
Kant has written somewhere that our perception
of the world is "of no more objective reality than a dream."
263
The materialistic position, that there is
nothing in the world but matter, is as utterly devoid of justification as the
most baseless theological dogma. - Thomas H. Huxley
264
In his play The Tempest Shakespeare has
given clear expression to mentalism in the context of that famous line, "We are
such stuff as dreams are made of."
265
Ariel: "Idealism has never been convincingly
refuted. Bergson is the modern Idealist. All great philosophers have been
idealists. Ideas are the only true things. That which is alone known is idea for
it is that only which enters consciousness."
266
Berkeley dispelled the illusion that Matter
exists outside of us by showing that the sense-elements, its primary qualities
such as extension, form, and so on, and its secondary qualities such as
hardness, colour, and so on, are mere modes of feeling, are subjective; that the
existence of a hard, coloured, formed substance outside the perceiving mind was
an illusion. Berkeley said God awakened these sensorial perceptions in us and
the soul perceived them.
267
"We know that thought is the only reality in
this world.... Nothing exists except that which is imagined." - Anatole France
268
Carlyle: "This so solid-seeming world, after
all, is but an air-image over Me, the only reality; and nature with its
thousandfold productions and destruction, but the reflex of our inward force,
the phantasy of our dream."
269
Although Kant's primary work was to show that we
live in a mental representation of the world, he also thought it likely that the
world itself was mental too.
270
The twentieth-century metaphysical movement
Neorealism, whose most brilliant exponents have been Bertrand Russell, A.N.
Whitehead, and Samuel Alexander, took from materialism the postulate that the
universe of our experience is independent of, and is unaffected by, our
conscious experience of it. Nevertheless it also took from mentalism some of its
epistemological and psychological features. It started out to demolish the
mentalist position but in the end it came so perilously near demolishing its own
that it has become almost bankrupt.
271
Yoga Vasistha: "There is a mind behind
every particle of dust."
272
Hume, unlike the Advaitins, did not deny the
world's existence, but he did deny that there was enough proof of its
externality.
273
I did not work out the theory of mentalism
intellectually until it had first been revealed to me mystically.
274
Many complained about my presentation of
mentalism as being repetitious. Yet without such detailed reasoning and
elaborate argument it would have been harder for the Western reader to
understand, much more to accept, so unfamiliar a teaching.
275
A teaching like mentalism which does not agree
with commonly accepted ideas must be carefully presented, for its very surprise
may cause it to be deemed beyond, or not worth, discussion.
276
There are so many different points of view from
which we can approach one and the same Truth, many different aspects to it. The
mentalistic approach which I have emphasized was presented to the public quite
deliberately.
277
The fundamental truth of the principle of
mentalism is as clear to me as is the fundamental falsity of materialism.
278
The deep mystical background of mentalism is
mostly a feeling whereas the form in which it has to be expressed is mostly an
intellectual one.
279
The tenets expounded in my book The Hidden
Teaching Beyond Yoga are of a kind which become more understandable as they
become more familiar. It is really their intellectual strangeness which accounts
largely for their apparent absurdity. And this strangeness itself arises because
mentalism was originally discovered through mystical experience and has had to
be translated into non-mystical intellectual terms.
280
To reach the masses with a doctrine as deep as
mentalism is no little task, but this I have tried to do.