1
What is man? This is the most important question
which has ever been put before the mind.
2
The idea of man which exists in and is eternally
known by the World-Mind is a master-idea.(P)
3
When we can learn what the true worth of man is and
wherein lies his real salvation, we shall learn the most practical of all
things. For this, more than anything else, will show us how to live on earth
peacefully, prosperously, healthily, and usefully.
4
If a man does not know what he is in the very
essence of his human beingness, he does not really know what he is talking
about.
5
Scientific concepts of the nature of man which leave
out the intuitive and spiritual element in it as existing independently and in
its own level, will always remain inadequate to explain man, however brilliant
they themselves admittedly often are.
6
If man's life were nothing more than a
physiochemical process, then man's highest aspirations and intuitions,
unselfishness and aestheticism would still need an explanation.
7
For more than a century we have been listening to
what men think about the universe. It might be more illuminating, now, to learn
what the universe thinks about man.
8
The more he perceives the immensity of intelligence
behind the World-Idea, the more he perceives the insignificance of his own
entity in relation to it. This increasing humility is in striking contrast to
the increasing pride which so many intellectuals develop.
9
It is not arrogantly to overrate the function of man
in the universe to say that he has a co-operative and creative role to play in
it. Those who point to his insignificance and helplessness do well, but they do
not do enough.
10
If experience teaches anything at all, it teaches
the littleness of men but the greatness of Man.
11
Science frightened man when, in the last century,
it told him that he was not the constant attention of God, as he believed, but a
most insignificant particle in an immense universe.
12
Against this immense cosmic background, we may see
the paltriness of human pride, the ridiculousness of human conceit.
13
Although it is not possible to offer irrefutable
scientific proof of the doctrine of spiritual evolution, it can be shown to be
as reasonable a doctrine as any of its rivals. And for those who have had
mystical experience of the divine presence behind the mind, of divine wisdom
behind the cosmos, it is the only acceptable doctrine.
14
The Darwinian idea of evolution as a struggle for
existence is blind; the philosophic idea sees it as rhythmic unfoldment,
following a spiral pattern and accompanied by involution.
15
A different view of the descent of man may be
obtained if we start with the theory that the human form was born out of a pair
of apes, that it originated by a process of natural selection. But we still need
the Missing Link. This is something which will never be found by the methods of
scientific investigation. There is evolution only in outward appearance
but unfoldment in inward reality. The human entity paradoxically contains
within itself all lower forms of life from the very beginning, although they are
quite different from the one it manifests when fully developed. The living,
intelligent human entity preexists elsewhere, and takes up its physical
residence on earth only when that is ready for it. From the moment this specific
unit of life separated from the cosmic Life, through all the different
experiences whereby it developed, and through all the different kingdoms of
Nature, its spiritual identity as Man was predetermined.
16
The materialistic belief that man has evolved from
the monkey is not accepted by philosophy. The race of apes came from a
conjunction of primitive man and female beast. It was a degeneration, not an
evolution.
17
It is true that we got our bodies, as Darwin says,
from the best type of animals on earth through a utilization of them at the time
of conception. The progeny was animal plus human.
18
The monkey did not precede man, as so many
materialistic biologists assert, but appeared after him. Had it really preceded
him it would not have been in existence today, for in every case of the
evolution of species the predecessors die off and disappear.
19
There is a long evolutionary arc between a
thinking animal in human form and a beauty-inspired man.
20
According to philosophic tradition, we are in the
"monkey" stage of development where our relationship toward the full "human"
stage is as far away as that of a monkey is to a present-day man.
21
The "half-ape," half-human being which passes
today for a real "man" will one day give place to the real thing. Only then will
it deserve the appellation.
22
The grossest humans, not far from animals in
habits and ways, and the most unrefined primitive communities contain this
possibility of eventual development. But its realization can come only with
time, with birth after birth slowly and spirally unfolding the World-Idea.
23
Is man only a reasoning ape - a creative animal?
The religious instinct, the ethical conscience, the metaphysical faculty, and
the mystical intuition proclaim, with one voice, the answer: "No!"
24
Man is the keystone of the arch of material life,
whereas an animal lives solely under the impulses of self-preservation and
self-procreation. Only in man can this Divine Being arrive at
Self-consciousness, because only man can develop intelligence in its fullness.
The intelligence which animals possess, however excellently it suffices them, is
after all one which is concerned purely with objective things. Animals cannot
move in the realm of abstract ideas, but man can escape from the concrete
through his developed reason, his religious feeling, his mystic intuition.
25
So far as man is an animal body, he shares with
the other animals their interest in eating, drinking, and copulation. But their
interest does not go beyond this point whereas his does. He wants to know about
other things and to express what he knows or to receive communications from
others concerning what they know.
26
No living creature in the kingdom of animals knows
more than its immediate surroundings or cares for more than the sustenance of
its immediate existence. It lives in an immense and varied universe but that
fact is lost to its mentality and outside its interest. Only when the evolving
entity attains the stage of developed human beings does this unconsciousness
disappear. Then life takes on a larger meaning and the life-force becomes aware
of itself, individualized, self-conscious. Only then does a higher purpose
become possible and apparent.(P)
27
Is there any animal which tries to understand the
meaning of its life, much more the meaning of life in the whole cosmos? Only
when its consciousness has advanced to some extent into the human kingdom does
the beginning of such an attempt become noticeable.
28
When Consciousness in any creature reaches by
successive periods of growth the stage where it asks itself "What am I?" thus
betraying developed intelligence of a kind which no animal possesses, it is
ready to seek the Spirit.
29
The moral idealism and metaphysical thinking which
is possible to man is impossible to animals.
30
What animal could hold any metaphysical theory,
could generalize ideas about space, time, and mind, could analyse situations and
relationships, could be seriously concerned about a higher ethical problem?
31
No animal has the capacity to get outside itself
and to perceive itself quite impersonally. Some humans do have it and more will
have it as they develop their potentialities.
32
A self-conscious creature is one that not only
knows its own individual feelings and thoughts, its own mind, but can also
reflect upon them. The animal has not reached this stage but the human has.
33
Tied to the physical body as he is, the outlook
would seem bleak for man if there were no way of going beyond it. For then he
would be but an animal. But he has mental and emotional possibilities and
capacities, imaginations and sensitivities, which can carry him where animals
cannot penetrate.
34
There are certain ideas which belong exclusively
to the higher part of man's nature. We would look in vain into any animal's mind
to match them.
35
Man is the only creature among earth's animals
which aspires to reach beyond himself, which has the inner urge to grow. He also
is the only creature which desires to know what life is here for. The human
animal is unique.
36
Yes, let it be admitted that man moves and acts
with an animal body but let it not be forgotten that he thinks with a human
brain and feels with a heart capable of responding to calls for charity. More,
there is something in him which aspires to spirituality.
37
Growth is the characteristic of the plant kingdom,
movement of the animal, thought of the human.
38
The mineral, the plant, and the animal have the
infinite Life-Power within them, too, but they do not know that they have it.
Man alone can know his own divinity. Indeed he is not truly a man until he has
known it.
39
What the fishes and flies cannot attain, the human
can. And that is the Supreme Awareness, the Divine Being discovered under the
cosmic masquerade.
40
The animal's active possibilities are limited to
eating, drinking, sex, and obedience to, or service of, human masters. It has no
cultural possibilities, no aesthetic faculty or artistic appreciation, no
intellectual development. But the highest possibility which separates man from
beast is attainment of insight into truth, experience of his divine source.
41
All animals must reincarnate but men may take to
the Quest and with time stop the process.
42
A tension holds all things in equilibrium between
coming together of their elements, temporary maintenance of their forms, and
passing away into dissolution. This includes the mineral, the plant, the animal,
and the human. But when we look at the last-named, a new possibility opens up
which could not have happened to Nature's earlier kingdoms. All things dissolve
in the end, I wrote, but man alone dissolves consciously into a higher
Consciousness.(P)
43
We are not just higher animals and nothing more
but are possessed of something that the other animals do not possess - a
self-consciousness which can be developed until it matures into a thinking power
as well as a totally superior kind of awareness - that of the Overself.
44
A human life presents the only opportunity for
attaining the realization of Overself. It ought not to be taken away from any
man, however evil he may be, and however remote from this goal, in punishment
for his crime.
45
How can men be so blind to the truth of their very
being? Their quality of consciousness provides the clue, but it must be followed
up, which few - and no animals - do. This is no shame for the animals, for they
cannot, whereas men can but do not.
46
It is questionable whether the advantages of being
a human creature are outweighed by the disadvantages. The Buddhists think they
are, the Epicureans think they are not, but the Vedantins think man is an
immensely fortunate creature. Why? Simply because he may use his human faculties
to transcend his present level and, as they call it, "realize himself."
47
The choice between submitting or not submitting to
his animal genes and hormones belongs to man, but the tendency to follow them
belongs to the earlier stage; it is very, very ancient and is coming under his
control very, very slowly. He fulfils himself as truly human when this
transcendence of his ancestry is complete.
48
If man walks upright, and most of the animals do
not, it is because this upright posture is symbolic of his gradual progression
into ruling his animal body and animal nature.
49
The ordinary ego-driven unenlightened man is acted
on by lower cosmic Nature, just as plants and animals are. But in a human
animal, individuality and intellect are additionally present - whether slightly
in the savage or markedly in the highly civilized person. The enlightened man is
also acted on, but in his case it is by higher cosmic Nature. Instead of being
guided by passion and desire, he is guided by intuition. The changeover from
lower to higher requires his contribution, his effort to control nature, to
discipline individuality, and to achieve self-mastery.
50
It is not only in the possession of reason and the
reception of intuition that the human form of life is superior to the animal,
but also in the exercise of will.
51
Man, by contrast with the animal, is an
individualized creature. He is aware of his own separate identity and special
personality. The animal is not individually responsible for its actions, being
entirely responsive to its surroundings and herd instinct. If man feels
the same responsiveness, he modifies it by his own particular characteristics.
52
Whereas the animal and even the plant are moved
solely by instinct - unless they have lived closely with man - the human being
adds a new urge, that of conscious development through intelligence.
53
The impersonal and eternal part of us is the god
in us, symbolized by the upper half of the Sphinx's head, as the lower half
symbolized the human part, and as the body itself symbolized the animal part.
54
We cannot separate the importance of the body from
the importance of the mind. We are animals in one part of our nature, human
beings in the second part, and sometimes angelic in the third part. All make one
creature. We learn what our bodies are through the physical senses. We learn a
part of what the mind is through our thoughts. We learn still more about the
mind's deeper phases through our non-thoughts - that is, intuitions.
55
Such is the triple nature of man - a lower self of
animal instincts, a middle self of human thoughts, a higher self of divine
nature.
56
We may well wonder how animal lust, human cunning,
and angelic nobility can come to be mingled in a single entity. That indeed is
the mystery of man.
57
When the whole cosmos shows its double-face of Yin
and Yang, shadow and light, we must expect the individual creature to show the
same. Hence man is half animal and half god, with reason as their link; he
fulfils himself only when he establishes an equilibrium between them.
58
Nature is what it is - bipolar - so existence
involves struggle and conflict for all of us until the genius in a million finds
the point of equilibrium between the two opposing pulls, between the savage and
the saint in him.
59
The animal nature is naturally selfish, the
spiritual nature unselfish. Between these two poles, man is brought more and
more into conflict with himself as he evolves.
60
Because they are human animals tied to a divine
spirit, we see men and women as erratic in their behaviour and irrelevant in
their purposes.
61
They bear the human form externally but are
largely predatory animal internally. Mind - that is, character and consciousness
- is the real essence of a man.
62
There is the brute and the angel in almost every
man. But how much there is of the one and how little of the other, differs with
every man.
63
The ideas in a man's mind are hidden and secret
until he expresses them through actions, or as speech, or as the visible
creations and productions of his hands, or in behaviour generally. Those ideas
are neither lost nor destroyed. They are a permanent part of the man's memory
and character and consciousness and subconsciousness, where they have been
recorded as automatically and as durably as a master phonograph disc records
music. Just as a wax copy may be burnt but the music will still live on in the
master disc, so the cosmos may be annihilated or disintegrate completely but the
creative idea of it will still live on in the World-Mind. More, in the same way
a man's body may die and disintegrate but the creative idea of him will still
live on in the World-Mind. More, in the same way a man's body may die and
disintegrate, but the creative idea of him will still remain in the World-Mind
as his Soul. It will not die. It's his real Self, his perfect Self. It is the
true Idea of him which is forever calling to be realized. It is the unmanifest
image of God in which man is made and which he has yet to bring into
manifestation in his everyday consciousness.(P)
64
If the world is a thought in the mind of God, then
men are thoughts in the World-Mind, who is their God in reality and in logic. If
all thoughts must go in the end, this is true also of the World-Mind, except
that here millions of years are involved.
65
The World-Mind works in and through everything.
The World-Idea reveals a mere hint of its wisdom and intelligence to that
projection from Itself which is man.
66
Every law of the universe and every principle of
its operation can be found reflected in the nature and life of every man.
67
In the complicated structure of the human
personality, we find different levels of being, with different forces operating
at each level.
68
Man is what he is. Nothing can alter that. Out of
the immortal, benign, eternal Mind he came, to It he shall return. Meanwhile It
is his very essence, that is, It is life.
69
Man is Mind individualized.
70
We must see in each man the beginning of a fresh
and unique attempt of the Infinite to express itself in the finite world of
space-time.
71
The Unseen Power, Al (without beginning)
lah (without end), is One. Every other kind of power derives from It. And
this holds true even of the little power which a little ant shows. Hence the
energies of a human being are linked with It. From this we may deduce that he is
unaware of, and not using, all his potential resources.
72
Though it seems entirely our own faculty, this
thought-making power is derived from a hidden one, the Universal Mind, in which
all other men's minds lie embedded. What he does with this power is a man's own
concern, for better or worse, yielding him more knowledge or more ignorance.(P)
73
The man who, according to the Bible, is made in
the image of God is not the earthly man, visible to all and speaking in a voice
that sounds in physical ears. He is to be found in the deep centre of
consciousness, where there is only a Void, and he speaks in silence to the
attentive mind, not to other persons.
74
The man that is made in the image of God is not
physical man or desire-filled man or thought-breeding man but he who dwells
behind all these - silent, serene, and unnoticed.(P)
75
Here, and here alone, is the real meaning and true
portrait of a man.
76
What is the inner purpose of human life as apart
from its outer object?
77
What is the highest end of the life of man?
78
We may not be able to comprehend the universe's
meaning - why it should come into existence at all - simply because human
capacity is too limited; but we should be able to comprehend some meaning -
enough for practical purposes - in our own personal existences.
79
To enquire into such matters is very far from
being a remote and unimportant affair, for on its final results depend the
answers to such questions as: "Does this earthly life exhaust all possibilities
of human life?" "Is there anything more than death for man to expect as the
final experience life offers him?"
80
"What are we here for?" asked Empedocles, and
several reflective thinkers have since supplied their answers. Each is
different, but each is only a single part of the total answer.
81
If we begin at some time to wonder at the starred
sky and go on to speculate at our human destiny, there will be moments when a
feeling rises that there must be something behind it all. They pass and mystery
engulfs us again.
82
If we do not know the "why" of universal
existence, we do know the "why" of human existence. It provides the field of
experience for discovering the divine soul. The integral quest which ends in
this discovery is, consequently, the greatest and most important of human
undertakings.
83
Where is the possibility for the puny intellect of
human beings to hold in its consciousness simultaneously and all-embracingly the
innumerable stars, planets, suns, systems, galaxies, and universes? Yet man's
curiosity cannot be stilled; his eager mind insists on knowing more and more,
his ever-upwelling stream of questions never stops flowing. What do these two
conflicting situations mean when put together? The answer is simply that there
is something which he can and must know in order to fulfil himself, but
it is not a piling-up of numbered facts; it is nothing other than his relation
to the source of the cosmos.
84
Man's experience is so limited and his mental
equipment so small that his attempt to understand the universe would seem
impertinent were it not for the assurance of great prophets and seers that where
intellect and sense fail, intuition succeeds.
85
The structure of the human being - his bodily
senses and mental faculties - does not permit him to get more than a limited
awareness of his environment. The remainder - which may be very large - is not
only unknown but likely to remain unknowable. This means that what he does know,
being neither complete nor completely true, concerns a world that is only
relatively real. The world as it really is in itself escapes his knowledge and
remains the greatest mystery. Only those who are piqued by their ignorance of
reality look beyond science, beyond the intellect even, for truth.
86
If human life has any higher purpose, it is that
the human ego should find its way back to that harmony with the Overself which
has become disturbed but never disrupted.
87
We must all give life what it demands from the
human - that it shall seek to transcend its present state, that is, transcend
itself in the end. For life as we know it is only one expression of the
World-Idea, the inexorable will of the World-Mind.
88
Everywhere in the advanced countries specialists,
experts, and scientists are seeking more knowledge of the human body and its
world or are applying this knowledge to practical use. Yet the highest work in
which intellectual power can engage is to seek the reason for human existence.
This will lead it to discover, and bow before, the World-Mind.
89
If a creature is capable of conceiving the highest
purpose for human life as something which transcends physical existence and even
overpasses its ordinary thinking and image-making existence, there is here a
phenomenon where this creature is either intuiting or predicting its own
destiny. And it must be something glorious, something whose nature few cultures
and civilizations have yet enjoyed.
90
The goal of life is to be consciously united with
Life.(P)
91
Man's need is twofold: recollection of his divine
nature and redemption from his earthly nature.
92
If it be asked whether there is any purpose in
life, the answer must be "Yes! - to perfect ourselves and know ourselves; to
find the happiness which comes as a fruit of such fulfilment."
93
Attaining to our manhood is good chiefly as it
provides us with the chance, during subsequent years, of attaining to our higher
selfhood.
94
The higher purpose of existence is to advance man
until he can live in the awareness of his divine selfhood.
95
It is within the ultimate capacity of man and part
of the higher purpose for him to achieve this awareness.
96
Revelation establishes that the sequence of events
in our universe is an orderly one, while observation confirms it. They do not
just happen by chance, and chaos is not their background. Many will admit this
but yet they are unable to admit that this orderliness is not limited to stars
and planets alone, nor to the chemical elements also, nor to the physical forces
of Nature in addition. They are unable to extend it to human life, to its birth,
course, fortunes, and death. But the philosophic revelation tells us that law
and order are here not less than elsewhere. It is unreasonable to suggest that
although they rule all the lower kingdoms, they do not touch us. Our experiences
too are controlled by heaven's laws.
97
There is order in the starry systems, on the
planets, and on this earth, because the World-Idea provides law and pattern.
What is true of the universe is true also of man, of his body and his inner
being.
98
There is an orderly structure in the universe and
an orderly pattern in the lives of its creatures. If everything else is governed
by laws, why not the growth of man's spirituality?
99
All personal fates are fulfilled within the larger
predetermination of the World-Idea. And only within that larger meaning can men
find any real meaning in their own lives.
100
The divine pattern is there not only in Nature
but in Man, not only in inspired written revelations but in secret unwritten
meditations.
101
You are part of the World-Mind's World-Idea.
Therefore, you are a part of its purpose too. Seek to be shown what that is, and
how you may realize it, rather than mope in misery, frustration, or fear. Look
upon your situation - personal, domestic, career, mental, emotional, spiritual -
as having significance within that purpose, as teaching you some specific lesson
or telling you what to do or not to do.
102
It is nonsense to say that any man is alone in
his trouble. He is in the great World-Idea, part of it, belonging to it,
sustained by it.
103
Men imagine they are acting for their own
personal objectives only and for their own personal choices. They believe that
they are moving through their life-scenes by their own freedom. But the fact is
that, all unwittingly, they are acting for the World-Idea and moving by the
power which inheres in it.
104
What are we to say of the many whose lives
evince no purpose, whose years show no progress? This judgement is a surface
one. All people respond to the power of God, and perform their role in the idea
of God, however slight be the measure of their response or however hidden be
their role.
105
Every person is unconsciously trying to fulfil a
higher purpose set for him by the Overself, and all the purposes fit together
and combine to form a part of the World-Idea.
106
Humans are part of the World-Idea; most of what
comes to them is within that part too: much of what comes from
them likewise. They are free only within the World-Idea.
107
Whether we like it or not we must submit to the
World-Idea. It is there and must be accepted - reluctantly, resentfully, or
blindly and devotedly. None of us has total freedom; that is an illusion, for it
could never exist in a world based upon orderliness and equilibrium.
108
The World-Idea contains from the beginning to
the end each individual life in its picture. How much freedom that life really
contains is a matter for seers to say, not for intellectuals to debate.
109
How old is the series of experiences through
which we moved unknowingly towards our present evolutionary position! How lofty
is the level toward which we have yet to climb! How ironic is the discovery that
what we thought was being done by free personal choice was merely blind
obedience to universal force; that where we believed free will was exercised,
there we merely conformed to the World-Idea!
110
The World-Idea is the ordained will of the
World-Mind. Within its large outlines, change is impossible. All its parts serve
them. But it would not be correct to assert that we humans are slaves of that
Idea. Somewhere within each part some sort of freedom is possible.
111
That in the end nothing that the human will can
do can sway human life into divergence from the World-Idea, that All is fixed by
it, is not quite correct. The main outlines of World-Idea can certainly not be
affected, however, for they are inherent in the nature of things.
112
Every man is offered a chance to live again, not
once but as many times as will bring him to his diviner being and establish him
in that. Human existence is a kind of bewitchment; we experience what we are
made to experience. All is simply the expression of the World-Idea - that is, of
God's will - but we share in the making, participate in the divine ideation.
113
In the end the World-Idea triumphs as, in
reality and actuality, it is doing at every moment. Even man's own personal will
unwittingly prepares itself for such eventual conformity.
114
The pressure of the World-Idea shapes his
tendencies and his circumstances, denies him any other freedom than the mental
position which he finally takes up, than the alliance with or rejection of moral
conscience.
115
The World-Idea's end is foreordained from the
beginning. This leaves no ultimate personal choice. But there's a measure of
free will in a single direction - how soon or how late that divine end is
accomplished. The time element has not been ordered, the direction has.(P)
116
Both the ordinary man and the enlightened man
are playing the role allotted to them in the divine World-Idea. Neither could
change that part of the planetary fate. But whereas the first is doing it
unwittingly, blindly, and at times rebelliously, the second is doing it
knowingly, perceptively, and submissively.
117
There are no mistakes anywhere in the
World-Idea, nor even accidents. But there is enough flexibility in its human
part, enough freedom there, to make it seem as if there were some
mistakes and some accidents.
118
The meteor which moves across the earth's orbit
is as much beyond man's control as is his larger part in the World-Idea.
119
Is the human race nothing else than God acting
out a multitude of different parts in a tremendous play?
120
If this were so, all men would be no different
than the mere figments of imagination of authors creating characters in novels.
But living men are different. If they were just as illusory as those
creations there would be something wrong with philosophy, with mind, and, let it
be said, with God. It is needful to penetrate reflectively more deeply to bring
light upon this point.
121
When one is allowed a glimpse of the World-Idea,
he feels that he understands at last why he came here, what he has to do, and
where his place is. It is like an immense enlargement of the mind, an escape
from the littleness of the ego, and a finding-out of a long-hidden secret.
122
When the fact of the World-Idea flashes into his
mind, he stands like Hillary on Mount Everest. At last this bewildering enigma
which surrounds and entraps everyone everywhere assumes pattern, the countless
events and things and processes leave their isolation, their useless chaos, and
fit together.
123
He has come to the inner sight of the
World-Idea's meaning for him: that he is to use the human self to lift his
nature up from the animal one, and that he is to put himself at the service of
his angelic, his best, self, to lift his nature up from the ordinary human. In
this way he co-operates with the World-Idea. This is the use he is to make of
his life on earth: his personal life, his family relations, his professional
career - all must become subject to the higher purpose. The resolve made, the
matter of success or failure is no longer urgent, for every subsequent
embodiment will point in this direction. Philosophy has instructed him in the
unreality of time and has revealed to him his indissoluble connection with the
Overself. All this was seen by the sages long ago and symbolized by them in the
Sphinx and the Pyramid.
124
He sees that life is encircled by a great Being,
that the Mind behind the universe - although so still and uncommunicative and,
apparently, unconcerned - is in reality sending its messages in varied ways all
the time.
125
The world is no longer merely itself. Henceforth
it is the expression of a divine Idea.
126
It is then that the awareness of the World-Idea
comes to him, explaining his planetary surroundings and enlightening his
situation therein. Every relationship and every event is then seen to be
significant, falling into place in this amazing pattern.
127
He sees the world forever changing its forms,
forever in process, and he himself as part of it under the same doom. All is
appearance, not reality. But he sees also the Essence.
128
This is the world as my experience showed it to
be, the world as it was revealed to me by the Overself.
129
In those divinely captured moments when ego is
loosened and Overself is present in awareness, the amazing pattern of the
World-Idea shines clearly.
130
He becomes awed, through such heavenly glimpses,
by the tremendous intelligence behind and within the Cosmos.
131
He will begin to see an intelligence moving in
and through the universe which he had not seen before. The universe will no
longer be a strange symbol without any meaning.
132
There is a wisdom within the cosmos beyond our
telling or knowing, but we may feel its presence in tranquil moments if we turn
in reverence to it or in remembrance of it.
133
To feel the divine presence is much more common
an experience than to perceive the divine purpose.
134
The World-Idea authentically exists but not in
the way that physical things exist. No human mind can receive and hold it in the
same definite way it can receive and hold all other ideas. Even in those exalted
psychological states or mystical experiences when the world's meaning is
perceived, its inner drama understood during a brief glimpse, the seer gets only
the fragment which his mind can take in, limited and conditioned as he is.
135
The vast coverage of the World-Idea, coupled
with the microscopic spaces in which it is equally manifest, transcends human
grasp. A few have been lifted out of themselves, like Buddha and Arjuna, to
receive the Cosmic Vision for historic purposes. The others receive glimpses, at
best, of parts only, but even these are awe-inspiring.
136
What they may expect to find with intellect is
at most the slow uncovering of little fragments of the World-Idea: but with
intuition the subtler meanings and larger patterns are possible. These include
but also transcend the physical plane. A few fated persons, whose mission is
revelation, are granted once in a lifetime the Cosmic Vision.(P)
137
The six darsanas are ways of looking at
the world, of seeing it metaphysically: a darsana is the vision a man has
of revealed truth of the universe, God, and man.
138
No human mind is capable of ultimate knowledge
of all the universe's secrets, nor of absolute comprehension of what is in the
World-Mind, no matter what the Indians claim or what the Westerners assert so
glibly about God.
139
Wise men co-operate voluntarily with the
World-Mind before they are forced into going along with it and its expression,
the World-Idea.
140
Only to the extent that he unites his own little
purpose with the universal purpose can he find harmony and happiness. Its
strength will support him firmly in adversity and misfortune, as it will carry
him triumphantly through misery and hostility.
141
He who begins to sense the World-Idea, as
expressed through him and his environment, has still to put aside self - with
all its short-sighted emotionality and sentimentality - if he is to accept the
Idea as perfect.
142
The more one learns about the World-Idea, the
more one wonders at it. To go farther and co-operate with it is to find peace.
143
To bring himself consciously and deliberately
within the World-Idea is a holy act. He is within it anyway, but without the
consciousness.
144
His personal share in the World-Idea is limited
to reception of it in every corner of his conscious being.
145
If Nature keeps her lips inexorably shut to the
questions of those who abuse her, she graciously opens them in perfect response
to those who ask with a quieted, co-operative and harmonious ego.(P)
146
We can be co-workers with the World-Mind only to
the extent that we withdraw from our ego. Then only are we able to receive
correctly the wonderful revelation of the world's meaning and laws, so that we
can participate intelligently and lovingly.
147
When he sees the meaning of life, he cannot help
but give it his acceptance. Circumstances previously rebelled against now fit
into a reasonable place in the pattern of things.
148
Nature gives her message to man, and gives it
all the time all at once. But man hears it only in bits and pieces, even when
and if he hears it at all.
149
How to live well while in this world does not
only mean how to live comfortably, nor even morally, but also how to live in
harmony with the World-Idea. To be unaware that there is any such meaning to
existence is to be unable to live really well and truly wisely as a human being.
150
Bring in a single light and there follows
recognition of several objects in a room; there is knowledge of their existence,
their form, and often their function. In the same way, some knowledge of the
World-Idea makes possible the clearer comprehension of human existence, its
hidden purposes, goals, and enigmas.
151
I have only a very partial knowledge of the
World-Idea but it is enough to throw a practical working light upon our business
here on earth.
152
Only when man finds out his correct relation to
the universe and to his fellow creatures will he find his own well-being.
153
We too are elements of the world like the
mountains and flowers around us and need to understand it in co-operation with
the need to understand ourselves. The two cannot be separated without loss to
our own fullness of understanding and practicality.
154
"He who knows not the world-order, knows not his
own place therein." - Marcus Aurelius
155
Since the human being is one among many other
creatures existent in the cosmos, if he is to know himself properly he must know
enough cosmology to enable him to do so.
156
Because the World-Mind is here the cosmos is
there. Because the cosmos is there you are there.
157
Such knowledge will enable him to make the best
use of himself and his environment, for its beneficial influence will pervade
his general life and work.
158
To what ideal ought the young advance? This is
where foreknowledge of the World-Idea is helpful to them.
159
The value of a knowledge of cosmology is that it
makes a man feel, intellectually at least, that he is part of something
immensely great and immensely significant.
160
The highest mystical teachings end, and can only
end, in proclamation of the One Reality or, more properly, the Ineffable, the
One-without-a-Second. Nothing much can really be affirmed about It other than
that It IS. But revelation cannot end with this affirmation. For man finds
himself subject to the necessities of a physical body living in a physical
environment. The higher laws governing such earthly existence affect him
vitally. He ought not to remain ignorant of them, if he is to live in harmony,
not conflict, with these laws.
161
All spiritual study is incomplete if it ignores
the facts, truths, laws, and principles of cosmogony. To attempt to justify this
neglect with the accusation that they belong to the world of illusion is silly
and useless. For the accuser must still continue to live in an illusory body and
use an illusory self governed by those laws. After every such attempt and for
each violation of those laws - upon which the order and harmony of the universe
depend - which his neglect brings about, he must pay the penalty in
suffering.(P)
162
As knowledge of the true facts about the world
in which we live becomes available (and I mean by knowledge not only scientific
knowledge, but also spiritual knowledge and psychical knowledge), more and more
the human race will discover that it has obligations to the cosmos, and that
they cannot be ignored without retribution.
163
It is not possible, and it is not necessary, for
any human mind to learn all the higher laws governing life. But it is possible
to learn some of them and also the archetypal ways in which the World-Idea
manifests. With them, one has something of a key to the unknown laws.
164
It must be remembered that these higher laws are
established throughout the cosmos, not merely in our part of it; that this
higher truth can never undergo any alteration in itself, whatever way different
men of insight may speak about it; that we human beings have the privilege, when
purified, of partaking in the real holy communion which alone fulfils our
highest prayers.
165
Those who seek to do God's will must first seek
to discern it not only within themselves but also in their environment outside.
For this a study of the pattern of the World-Idea is necessary.
166
Spinoza saw that the whole universe conformed to
a world-order under what he named "laws of necessity." But the source of these
laws was God. He saw too that Man, in the effort to understand all this, and
drawn by an intellectual love of God, would unfold intuition and come closer to
God.
167
Learning what these cosmic laws are and trying
to live in obedience to them is the only way whereby humanity can do what is
best for itself. It will have to come to such obedience through the lessons of
experience and cannot escape it.
168
The more a man learns what laws move this
universe in which he exists, the better will he find the universe to be and the
happier will his existence be.
169
In the long slow course of development, as it
stretches out with time, men will come to understand the true nature of the
universe around them and the correct nature of their relationship to it. It will
be a logical corollary that as they come thereafter to understand also the harm
they do themselves by every violation of the higher laws they will begin to
change their thoughts and amend their conduct.
170
It is not possible to know what lies at the
heart of the great mystery, but it is possible to know what it is not. The
intellect, bound by the forms of logic and conditioned by the linkage between
cause and effect, here enters a realm where these hold no sway. The discoveries
of Germany's leading nuclear physicist, Professor Heisenberg, were formulated in
his law of indeterminacy. The ancient Egyptian sages symbolized this
inscrutability under the figure of the Veil of Isis. The ancient Hindu sages
called it Maya, that is, the inexplicable. Argument and debate, ferreting and
probing among all available facts, searching and sifting of records are futile
here. This is the real truth behind the doctrine of agnosticism. Every man, no
matter who he be, from the most knowledgeable scientist to the profoundest
philosopher, must bow his head in acknowledgment of this human limitation. He is
still a human being, he is not a god. Yet there is something godlike within him
and this he must find and cling to for his true salvation, his only redemption.
If he does this he will fulfil his purpose on earth and then only he finds true
peace of mind and an end to all this restless, agitated, uncertain mental
condition. Study what this planet's best men have given us. It is no truer
message than this: "Seek for the divine within yourself, return to it every day,
learn how to continue in it and finally be it."(P)
171
The forces which move men and bring about events
are not always to be found by rational analysis. There is another factor present
which eludes such analysis. It may be called the evolutionary intent of the
World-Mind.
172
All things and beings flow forth from the
illimitable Power, all derive their consciousness from It. Nor may we stop with
this acknowledgment. For they derive whatsoever they have of intelligence from
It, too. Is it not a grand thought, full of promise and hope, that in the
gradual progression of this intelligence from minute cells to celestial beings,
it passes upward through man, enabling him in time to attain and know his own
Divinity?
173
The World-Idea is drawing us little by little
after the pattern of its own infinite perfection.
174
To say that man is unconsciously seeking God, or
rather his Higher Self, is the truth. To say that God is seeking man is an error
based upon a truth. This truth is that in the divine idea of the universe, the
evolutionary development of life-cells will bring them slowly up to an awareness
of the diviner level; but the Higher Self, having no desire and no emotions,
cannot be said to be seeking anything. Indeed, the evolutionary pattern being
what it is, there is no need for it to seek, as the development of all beings
from primitive amoeba to perfect spiritual consciousness is assured.(P)
175
We may call it evolution if we wish but the
actuality is not quite the same. The universe is being guided to follow
the World-Idea - this is the essence of what is happening.(P)
176
The pattern of evolution is an endless one. The
meaning of the pattern could not but be a wise one.
177
Because mind is the basal reality, all this
majestic progression is nothing else than an evolution from lower to higher
forms of intelligence and consciousness.
178
Within the Overself, the infinite absolute
principle of mind, there arises the idea of the cosmos, and from this original
idea proceed all other mental constructions that constitute a universe. Because
the Overself is formless and unindividuated, we have to picture it under the
glyph of darkness. The cosmic idea will then appear as a primordial germ of
light, called by the Hindus Hiranyagarbha (the golden embryo). The entire
panoply of suns and stars and creatures is contained latently within this point
of light. This first-born God is the primal Idea.
179
World-Mind, concerned only with Its own larger
purposes, which are hidden from us, directs us in that light.
180
We must begin by recognizing that this planet
exists for a specific purpose and that the evolution of all creatures upon it is
part of that purpose.
181
This earth, with the varied experiences of good
and evil, joy and suffering, peace and peril which it offers us, is a school of
initiation leading primitive animal man into the development of awareness until
he reaches the first discovery of his Overself.
182
The world exists for the training of
ever-ascending living things - from their early start as protoplasmic cells to
their later development as human beings.
183
Despite the pious assertions of our Western
theologians, the world does not exist solely for the benefit of the human
species. It is a means of development and expression for all kinds of creatures,
a development in which the humans share so largely.
184
Who can calculate the number of years which
shaped the primal atom into its latest form - the modern man?
185
The differences in consciousness between an
amoeba, an insect, an animal, and a human represent a line of growth.
186
Because evolution is not merely a physical
matter of size and shape, because it is primarily a mental matter of
intelligence and consciousness, philosophy finds the ant nearer to man than is
the panther.
187
Animal life climbs ever higher in the scale of
evolution, reappears in forms of a more developed type. That is one compensation
for the manner of its death, which is so often to be devoured by other forms.
188
Everything that has feeling or awareness,
however dim, is capable of developing to higher and higher forms of existence.
But only when it is individuated and attains the human form does it fulfil its
possibilities.
189
The human foetus grows through various stages,
each of which corresponds to a parallel stage of the whole human race's own
previous evolution.
190
Examine any living organism you choose and you
will find that its conception, birth, and growth show an innate evolutionary
trend. The process of passing from an embryonic stage to a more evolved one
involves considerable differences physically. It is equally true, although less
apparent, mentally.
191
The nature and functions of man are reflected in
miniature in the cells which compose his body, while he himself reflects those
of the Universal Mind in which he is similar to the cell.
192
There is not one cell in the whole organism of
man which does not reflect in miniature the pattern, the proportions, and the
functions of the immense cosmos itself.(P)
193
The microorganism has within it all the varied
possibilities of becoming a human entity.
194
The body's physical cells disintegrate into the
earth and become part of the soil until they take new forms in plant and animal
life. Just as a class in school one day breaks up and all the students go their
separate ways, and in its place another class is formed, so the units are fully
individualized only when they enter the human stage. Until then they very, very
slowly approach this release, just as an embryo in the womb approaches the form
of a newborn baby.
195
The human body is composed of millions of tiny
different intelligences, each having its own specialized life, all having
developed from a single generalized cell. Some cells die within hours, others
within days or even longer after the body's own death. The fertilized egg
contains all the organs of the human being in miniature. They merely grow and
become big to produce the adult.
196
It is an astonishing thought that the entire
human body, from its head to its feet, is contained in miniature in the cell
from which it starts existence. No microscope can see it, for it still is only
an idea. But given time the idea finds expression in a form.
197
In our bodies, the phagocyte cells follow the
very opposite path to all the other cells, scattering and moving restlessly
where the others are settling down into groups.
198
There are millions of living cells which, in
their totality, compose the human body. Each has its own separate birth, life,
and death.
199
Nature extravagantly spends large fragments of
time on outworking her high purpose; a million years to her are nothing
remarkable. We poor mortals, however - being helpless prisoners in the captivity
of time, whose tyrannous character we have yet to understand - are eager to see
improvement and progress before the same day's sun has set. We need but to
consider the enormous duration of the aeons which have straddled the globe since
the first Lemurian lived and loved.
200
Those who get discouraged by seeing how slow is
humanity's moral growth, and how few are the signs of its spiritual awakening,
may gain fresh hope if they study the World-Idea.
201
There are different stages in the development of
people: some stand on the lower, some on the higher ones - and others fill in
the space between. There is no equality among human beings, in character or
manners, in intelligence or intuitiveness. Those who resent this fact may deny
it, thereby revealing their incapacity for understanding truth. Exploitation of
the lower types by the higher ones has bred the resentment, and this in turn has
blinded the eyes or the mind.
202
By his own reaction to the fragments of
knowledge of the World-Idea which come to a man, he reveals himself, his kind of
character and stage of development.
203
The wise and the foolish, the enlightened and
the ignorant, the good and the bad, dwell on the same earth outwardly but on
different planets inwardly.
204
The human being slowly unfolds its possibilities
through the workings of manifold experiences. In this there are to be seen
conscience, guiding it along ever-higher moral paths; capacity, expressing its
active power and creative talent; and intelligence, teaching it to discriminate
between foolishness and wisdom or to penetrate through appearance to reality.
205
It is significant that animals tend to live in
herds. As man matures, he reaches more and more individuality.
206
Slowly, at times pleasurably and at times
painfully, the human entity builds up its consciousness and capacities through
the ages.
207
If human needs brought us thus far, human
curiosity is bringing us into another kind of cycle.
208
Yet this perception of the ultimate goodness
behind life, the ultimate triumph of light and love, need not keep us from
recognizing that there are evil tendencies in many men. We may recognize them as
motes in the beam, as dust in the sunray, for we must not lose our perspective
about them; but we may still regard them as temporary phases of human
vicissitude that will be over-passed and left behind as the slow course of
evolution carries out its work upon the human race.
209
There is no immediate guarantee that the good
man may not become a vicious one. The evolutionary arc does not rise with utter
smoothness; there are strayings aside, fallings down, and erratic jags. But
there is an ultimate guarantee that the experiences of life are so ordained as
to open the eyes and direct the will of every man at some point, and to repeat
this process at intervals until he does so of his own spontaneous accord.
210
Easy hopes about perpetual progress and shallow
optimism about scientific improvement are alike going to be frustrated so long
as the higher development of man himself is less valued.
211
Things and information are accumulated. This is
naïvely called progress, although the man who uses them is as bad as before - as
his inability to stop warring clearly shows.
212
The mere movement in time does not automatically
bring progress.
213
If left to their own capacity, many would fall
back and fail to grow. But life or Nature does not leave them unassisted like
that. For there is the World-Idea, the vital spark, the germ born of World-Mind,
the mental picture held by the higher power, which pushes each living cell to
fulfil itself. But there is also ignorance opposition and deterioration. Man
must make his contribution and in the end does so. He has to. As the
World-Idea unfolds, he gets more self-control and gains self-knowledge until he
discovers the Overself.
214
There is no choice in the matter, ultimately,
although there is immediately. The entire human race will have to traverse the
course chalked out for it, will have to develop the finer feelings, the concrete
intellect, the abstract intellect, the balance between the different sides. If
men do not seek to do so now, it is only a question of time before they will be
forced to do so later.(P)
215
Man will be redeemed and saved. This is not mere
pious wishful thinking but ineluctable destiny. The divine World-Idea could not
be realized if this redemption and this salvation were not eventually possible
and inescapably certain.
216
It is easier to transform a wilderness into a
garden flourishing with plants and flowers than to transform humanity into a
spiritual race. But time and life, evolution and experience will all combine to
do it. The movement up to higher levels will be slow and painful, the maturation
of human character retarded and halting, but they will be sure because they are
written in the fate of man.
217
Set, in the Egyptian religion, was the
Destroyer, the leader of the powers of darkness, the opposer of Life and the
adversary of aspiring man; hence he was turned into Satan by the Christians,
into Shai'tan by the Israelites. But just as Set was defeated in the end, his
power broken and his submission as a penitent accepted, so man, the prodigal
son, will return and will be saved, despite his sins. The covenant has been
made: there is ultimate hope for all.
218
The World-Idea is operative on every level. It
invites savage humans to outwit their fellow animals by beginning to use
brain-power through arrows, slings, and primitive traps; at a higher level to
compete with fellow humans and rise economically and socially by using the same
power; at a still higher level to reduce sufferings and self-made miseries by
practising control over self and avoidance of injury to others; then, at a still
higher level, to discover and nurture their spiritual nature.
219
Men are what they are. We have only to look
around and see how the great Avatars have not much saved the human species. It
is still more or less what it was thousands of years ago. If those men of light
and power could not change the masses, how can others do so? Is this a doctrine
of hopelessness? No! Men will have to change despite themselves, but it will be
under the inexorable pressure of the World-Idea, which will be their teacher,
their guide, and their enlightener, because it is the expression of the
World-Mind.
220
As the two interact - the human purpose and the
World-Idea - each man slowly unfolds his intelligence, which is the fusion of
intellect with intuition, and this culminates in Enlightenment, the ultimate and
revelatory Insight.
221
The movement upward from the ego's "me" to the
real "I" consciousness is as sure as the movement of the planets themselves.
222
Human life does not escape the working of divine
law. Human thought, feeling, and action all fall within its circle. The law is
unalterable and absolute, universal and sure. It always operates, even when its
operation is quite unseen and unknown, because the development of human entities
is a part of its own reason for existence.
223
In the end, and whatever his heredity or
environment may predetermine and irrespective of his own free choices, the
development as well as the history of man must move in obedience to the
World-Idea. What that is is known in its completeness only to the World-Mind,
but sudden or fleeting glimpses of some tiny part of it have come to a few
seers. Yet they have been received, recorded, and handed down as tremendous
revelations - and quite rightly.
224
The compulsion exercised by the World-Idea is a
secret obscure one, but it may become clearer and plainer as events unfold and
experience increases.
225
The achievement of these goals is not left to
the effects of chance or the whims of men. It is the half-hidden, half-declared
purpose of Nature, and as such is quite compulsive.
226
The mass of people are like blind worms
wriggling through the earth. They toil but do not know that the real value of
their labours is not in the passages they make for air and moisture or in the
fertile mould they carry to the soil's surface. No! - it is in the evolutionary
consequences within themselves.
227
They have tried and tried to find their own
substitute for the higher-than-animal life, but it is ordained that satisfaction
of the physical needs of the human species is not enough to give them
fulfilment, and that not even the satisfaction of their cultural needs can do
so. They are forced in the end to push onward and upward.
228
Life is governed by its own mysterious laws,
driven in certain directions by its own mysterious momentum, conformed to a
hidden scheme by its own mysterious quality. Nature is significant. The human
entity is not just drifting. It will certainly arrive somewhere.
229
Human beings are not only what their past births
have made them but also, in the most popular and least accurate language, what
God has made them.
230
We have to pass from prattling about man's
long-past Fall to declaring his newly possible Rise. It is time to take a better
view of him, and certainly of his prospects.
231
Recognizing this, humanity will within a certain
time - not in our time - humbly submit as it once did in prehistoric times to
rulers guided by true sages and adopt the higher forms of government inspired by
the true facts of life. Philosophers will then be not merely the witnesses of
their age but also its activators. Then only will humanity at last prevent outer
war, even though its own moral nature will still need much more growth. With
that recognition, Nature herself will grow kindlier and the area of other forms
of human suffering will diminish noticeably.
232
Even though we reach a higher kind of
civilization one day, human differences will continue to express themselves.
233
Nobler and wiser types of humanity, standing at
loftier altitudes of consciousness, will begin to emerge from the mass. If they
are all too few today, they will be more numerous tomorrow.
234
We are very far from the true man which we are
destined to become, the evolved masterpiece of Nature. We possess only rare
inklings of the day when the ego's "I" will be transformed into the Overself
I-ness.
235
The waves of life have moved across other
planets before arriving on this earth and, when this has outserved its
usefulness, will move on again.
236
The inhabitants of each planet belong to
different stages of evolution: some higher and some lower. This applies not only
to the human inhabitants but also to the animal and even the plant inhabitants.
They pass in great waves from one planet to another at certain stages of this
evolution, going where they can find the most appropriate conditions either for
expression of their present stage or for the stimulation of their next immediate
stage. Consequently the stragglers and laggards who fall behind pass to a planet
where the conditions are of a lower nature, for there they are more at home. On
the other hand, the pioneers who have outstripped the mass and can find no
conditions suitable for their further development pass to a planet in a higher
stage.(P)
237
The notion that God created this world spectacle
for the benefit of man alone is an absurd and unwarranted anthropolatry, but the
notion that life first attains individual self-consciousness in man is justified
in philosophy and by experience. What is it of which he alone is conscious? It
is of being himself, his ego. In all earlier stages of evolution, consciousness
is entirely veiled in its forms and never becomes self-aware. Only in the human
state does individual consciousness of being first dawn. There may exist on
other planets creatures infinitely more intelligent and more amiable than human
beings. We may not be the only pebbles on the beach of life. Nevertheless the
piece of arrogance which places man highest in the scale of existence contains
the dim reverberation of a great truth, for man bears the divine within his
breast.(P)
238
Human beings have made too much fuss about
themselves, their own importance in the cosmic scale. Why should there not be
other forms of life superior to them, conscious intelligent beings higher in
mentality, character, and spiritual knowledge, better equipped with powers and
techniques?(P)
239
Even a partial awareness of what it means to be
a man - as above an animal - capable of thinking abstractly, conscious of the
vastness of the universe and the littleness of the ego, asking the age-old
questions about meaning and purpose in life, sometimes getting a glimpse of a
few words of the answer through religion, art, Nature, mysticism, joy,
suffering, or intelligence, even this is enough to make him wonder what follows
in development after him, higher than himself, if not here then perhaps on other
planets or in a fourth dimension. Such beings must already exist somewhere. Are
they the gods of ancient fable and myth, disfigured or miscomprehended in human
narratives by the passing of time? Were they visitors who helped infant humanity
reach its teens and then left it, withdrew, except for rare appearances as
avatars, angels, or lawgivers?
240
There are existences for beings on levels and in
times and spaces different from ours. The level we know and the humans we see
only partially manifest the World-Idea.
241
The multibirthed nature of human experience fits
in with the shimmering galaxies of the multiverse itself. "We are not alone"
could be echoed back by this planet Earth itself.
242
There are beings not subject to the same laws as
those governing mankind's physical existence. They are normally not visible to
men. They are gods.(P)
243
The Gods are both symbols of particular forces
and beings dwelling on higher planes.(P)
244
Can it be true that all this vast travail, all
this long long ingathering of experience, all this travel to the farthest limit,
is only to end in negation, in unlearning all knowledge and returning to where
we started? My heart does not believe it, my reason cannot accept it.
245
The human entity has travelled through joy and
suffering, experienced birth and death, experimented with good and evil for the
very purpose of becoming a fully conscious entity. How then could annihilation -
Vedantic or any other kind - be its ultimate fate?
246
Is it for this, that man should end as a mere
speck of dust, that he was born? Consciousness, aspiration, insight, and
inspirations, artistic creations and scientific revelations, the noblest ethical
feelings - all useless because the being they serve is destined to vanish
utterly? If all man's seeming progress comes to an end with his death, his own
end, how futile it is! It helps little to say that others will benefit by it,
for this merely shifts the futility to them, for they too will die. The human
situation is unsatisfactory, as the Buddha tirelessly asserted and as the
Biblical Psalmist succinctly lamented.
247
We have not come from oblivion. All our past is
present in our characters, capacities, and tendencies; therefore we shall not go
into oblivion. There is no death - only a change of state.
248
We know that the cosmos manifests itself out of
the divine Mind, and within it, too. But why there should be such a
manifestation at all, we do not know. Many students raise this query and are
dissatisfied at the failure to obtain a good answer. But the fact is that such
questions cannot be adequately answered on the same plane as that on which they
arise. If we could shift our consciousness to a higher one, we would find that
they simply do not exist there. However, although complete adequacy may be
unattainable, some sort of working answer can be formulated and used for and by
those who are unable to effect such a shift. If the human entity has no other
purpose to fulfil on this earth than to return to the sphere of its origin, then
it had no business to leave that sphere. There must be something to be gained by
its earthly journey, if the universe has any sense in it at all.
249
His destination is also his origin. But to say
that he was born in the eternal Spirit starts the question, "How can time, which
is placed outside eternity, bring him to eternity?" The answer is that it does
not bring him there; it only educates him to look for, and prepares him to pass
through, the opening through which he can escape. Need it be said that this lies
at the point where ego surrenders wholly to Overself?
250
The Goal towards which man is slowly travelling
by successive steps is a threefold one: the fully developed environment, the
fully developed intelligence, and the realized soul. The last is the best and
the other two are but servants of it, for here he comes first to a comprehension
and then to a realization of himself. Yes, he is on his way to the grand
awakening into full self-consciousness.
251
All this vast evolution of environments and
their entities has but one ultimate aim from man's point of view and so far as
he is concerned. It is to bring him into a miniature likeness to his divine
Parent, to make him into an image of godlike beauty, power, wisdom, and being.
252
Yes, the earth has been, through this long
travail of countless ages, bringing forth the mineral, the plant, the animal,
and the human kingdoms. In man, she has given birth to a child who is destined
to rule with her when his Intelligence becomes perfected and consequently when
he is able to rule himself.
253
The process of human evolution serves a twofold
purpose. The first is to develop the physical, emotional, and intellectual
characteristics. The second is to lead the individual to enquire into, and
become fully conscious of, his divine origin.
254
The journey of life is both an adventure and a
pilgrimage. We pass from body to body to collect experience. The fruit of
experience is Enlightenment: the knowledge of Overself, established awareness of
its presence; and knowledge of the Unseen Power behind the universe, established
connection with it.
255
We are here in this world for a higher purpose
than the obvious physical one of self-preservation, for even that is
contributory to it. We are here to evolve into the consciousness of Overself.
Every physical experience is only a means toward such spiritual development.
256
Students who have come finally to philosophy
from the Indian Advaita Vedanta, bring with them the belief that the divine soul
having somehow lost its consciousness is now seeking to become self-conscious
again. They suppose that the ego originates and ends on the same level -
divinity - and therefore the question is often asked why it should go forth on
such a long and unnecessary journey. This question is a misconceived one. It is
not the ego itself which ever was consciously divine, but its source, the
Overself. The ego's divine character lies in its essential but hidden being, but
it has never known that. The purpose of gathering experience (the evolutionary
process) is precisely to bring it to such awareness. The ego comes to slow birth
in finite consciousness out of utter unconsciousness and, later, to recognition
and union with its infinite source. That source, whence it has emanated, remains
untouched, unaffected, ever knowing and serenely witnessing. The purpose in this
evolution is the ego's own advancement. When the Quest is reached, the Overself
reveals its presence fitfully and brokenly at first but later the hide-and-seek
game ends in loving union.(P)
257
What is the use, ask many questioners, of first,
an evolution of the human soul which merely brings it back to the same point
where it started and second, of developing a selfhood through the long cycles of
evolution only to have it merged or dissolved in the end into the unselfed
Absolute? Is not the whole scheme absurdly useless? The answer is that if this
were really the case, the criticism passed would be quite a fair one. But it is
not the case. The unit of life emanated from the Overself begins with the merest
glimmer of consciousness, appearing on our plane as a protozoic cell. It evolves
eventually into the fullest human consciousness, including the intellectual and
spiritual. It does not finish as it began; on the contrary, there is a grand
purpose behind all its travail. There is thus a wide gulf between its original
state and its final one. The second point is more difficult to clear up, but it
may be plainly affirmed that man's individuality survives even in the divinest
state accessible to him. There it becomes the same in quality but not identical
in essence. The most intimate mental and physical experiences of human love cast
a little light for our comprehension of this mystery. The misunderstanding which
leads to these questions arises chiefly because of the error which believes that
it is the divine soul which goes through all this pilgrimage by reincarnating in
a series of earthly forms. The true teaching about reincarnation is not that the
divine soul enters into the captivity and ignorance of the flesh again and again
but that something emanated from the soul, that is, a unit of life that
eventually develops into the personal ego, does so. The Overself contains this
reincarnating ego within itself but does not itself reincarnate. It is the
parent; the ego is only its offspring. The long and tremendous evolution through
which the unit of life passes from its primitive cellular existence to its
matured human one is a genuine evolution of its consciousness. Whoever believes
that the process first plunges a soul down from the heights into a body or
forces Spirit to lose itself in Matter, and then leaves it no alternative but to
climb all the way back to the lost summit again, believes wrongly. The Overself
never descends or climbs, never loses its own sublime consciousness. What really
does this is something that emanates from it and that consequently holds its
capacity and power in latency, something which is finited out of the Overself's
infinitude and becomes first, the simple unit of life and later, the complex
human ego. It is not the Overself that suffers and struggles during this long
unfoldment but its child, the ego. It is not the Overself that slowly expands
its intelligence and consciousness, but the ego. It is not the Overself that
gets deluded by ignorance and passion, by selfishness and extroversion, but the
ego.
The belief in the merger of the ego held by some Hindu sects or in its annihilation held by some Buddhist ones, is unphilosophical. The "I" differentiated itself out of the infinite ocean of Mind into a distinct individuality after a long development through the diverse kingdoms of Nature. Having thus arrived at consciousness of what it is, having travelled the spiral of growth from germ to man, the result of all this effort is certainly not gained only to be thrown away.
Were this to happen then the entire history of the human race would be a meaningless one, its entire travail a resultless one, its entire aspiration a valueless one. If evolution were merely the complementary return journey of an involutionary process, if the evolving entity arrived only at its starting point for all its pains, then the whole plan would be a senseless one. If the journey of man consisted of nothing more than treading a circle from the time of his emergence from the Divine Essence to the time of his mergence back into it, it would be a vain and useless activity. It would be a stupendous adventure but also a stupid one. There is something more than that in his movement. Except in the speculations of certain theorists, it simply does not happen.
The self-consciousness thus developed will not be dissolved, extinguished, or re-absorbed into the Whole again, leaving not a trace behind. Rather will it begin a new spiral of evolution towards higher altitudes of consciousness and diviner levels of being, in which it will co-operate as harmoniously with the universal existence as formerly it collided against it. It will not separate its own good from the general good. Here is part of the answer to this question: What are the ultimate reasons for human wanderings through the world-process? That life matters, that the universe possesses meaning, and that the evolutionary agonies are leading to something worthwhile - these are beliefs we are entitled to hold. If the cosmos is a wheel which turns and turns endlessly, it does not turn aimlessly. Evolution does not return us to the starting point as we were. The ascent is not a circle but a spiral.
Evolution presupposes that its own possibility has always been latent within the evolving entities. Hence the highest form is hidden away in the lowest one. There is development from the blindly instinctive life of animals to the consciously thinking life of man. The blind instinctive struggles of the plant to sustain itself are displaced in the evolutionary process by the intelligent self-conscious efforts of the man. Nor does this ascent end in the Vedantic merger or the Buddhistic annihilation. It could not, for it is a development of the individuality. Everywhere we find that evolution produces variety. There are myriads of individual entities, but each possesses some quality of uniqueness which distinguishes it from all others. Life may be one but its multitudinous expressions do differ, as though difference were inherent in such expression.
Evolution as mentalistically defined by philosophy is not quite the same as evolution as materialistically defined by Darwin. With us it is simply the mode of striving, through rhythmic rise and fall, for an ever fuller expansion of the individual unit's consciousness. However, the ego already possesses all such possibilities latently. Consequently the whole process, although apparently an ascending one, is really an unfolding one.(P)
258
Although the possibility of this discovery and
awareness of Overself and establishment in it has always been with every man at
every moment, the probability has not. For he has to develop the equipment for
maturing from animal through man's gathered experience to this full
establishment in full union with his highest being. The savage may get the
glimpse, and does, but this is only a beginning, not an end. The teaching
favoured by Indian metaphysicians that we came from God and shall return to God
is an oversimplification which generally leads to misunderstanding. Then all
this long pilgrimage with all its sufferings becomes a senseless waste of time
and an idiotic expenditure of energy - if not on our part then on God's. It is
like banging one's head against a wall in order to enjoy the relief which
follows when the action ends. Through lack of a cosmogony the proponents of this
teaching are compelled to explain away the purpose of all this vast universe as
non-purpose, using the term maya, one of whose two meanings is "mystery."
The Infinite Being, whose Consciousness and Power is behind the universe of
history, can itself have no history, for it is beyond time, evolution, change,
development, can have no purpose which is gainful to itself, cannot be made the
object of human thought correctly because it utterly transcends the limitations
of such thought. But all this is not to say that the World-Mind's activity is
meaningless, Idea-less, and fruitless. The very contrary is the case.
259
But because causation is shown to be illusory,
and the cosmos uncreated and unending, this does not mean that our cosmology
denies the truth of evolution. It denies only the conventional attitude towards
evolution. For it takes all change and hence all progress out of the realm of
ultimate reality and relegates them to where they belong, to the realm of
immediate appearance.
260
Just as there have been misconceptions about the
role played by the personal ego and the physical ego in the life of mankind -
misconceptions which have arisen by holding on to ideas which are out of their
time and place - so the question must be asked, did these egos come, as
the Orient mostly believed, by a process which launched them on a path where, as
the poet Sir Edwin Arnold has beautifully put it, "The dew-drop slips into the
shining sea" where the ego is utterly annihilated, where the personal self is
completely dissolved in a sort of mass-consciousness, where all that it has
gained from experience, all that it has learned from intelligence, is to be
dissolved and thrown away as futile and useless although ages upon ages have
been taken for the process? Or will there unfold a higher type of individuality,
one that is free because it has earned its freedom; free to exist in
harmony with the universal harmony, with the Universal Mind. If nonduality, the
goal of Advaita, is to be the end of it all, the vast work of time and space
seems to have been in vain, a ghastly repetition of what was not worthwhile. Or
is there another explanation which philosophy offers? The answer is: there is.
261
If anyone finds anything in this universe about
which to complain, if he criticizes its defects and deficiencies, its evils and
imperfections, let him remember that a universe which is perfect in the sense
that he means does not and could not exist. Only God is perfect. Anything else,
even any universe, being distinct from God, cannot also be perfect. Consequently
it will display tendencies and situations open to human criticism. Even though a
universe is a manifestation of God, it cannot become as perfect as God without
becoming God - when it would itself vanish. Nevertheless its divine origin and
sustenance are revealed in the fact that all things and all beings in it strive
for perfection even if they never attain it. This is what evolution means and
this is the secret spring behind it. For in seeking to return to their source,
they are compelled to seek its perfection too. That is, they are compelled to
evolve from lower to higher states and forms, from evil conditions and
characteristics to ideal ones.
262
It is not a game of hide-and-seek that God is
playing with man, not a sport for God's own amusement as some Hindu sects
believe, but a process of evolvement intended to give man insight into the Real
and power for co-operative participation. It is a treasure-hunt through many
earthly lives.
263
We murmur against the world's obstructiveness to
our aspirations: the body is our stumbling-block. Yet if we had to live always
as disembodied spirits, our spiritual development would need an immeasurably
longer time to accomplish itself. The sharper focus of physical consciousness
quickens our pace.
264
Man, in his earlier phases of being, was
connected with the Overself and aware of it. But his connection lacked his own
control. Eventually, to fulfil the purpose of evolution, he lost this connection
and with it his awareness. Now he has to regain the connection and reawaken this
awareness by his own efforts and out of his own inner activity, through his own
desiring and in his own individual freedom. What has he gained by this change to
compensate the loss? His consciousness has become more sharply focused and
consequently more clearly aware.
265
Our source is in the Overself; our growth is but
a return to it, made fully conscious as we were not before.
266
The immediate purpose of human incarnation and
evolution is to develop a true and full self-consciousness at all levels from
the lowest to the highest. The man who does not know himself beyond the physical
intellectual ego is still only half-conscious.
267
As a man truly evolves, he is guided more and
more by intelligence and consciousness. It is a false evolvement which guides
him into cunning and selfishness.
268
The idea of human perfection would mean the
attainment of a static condition, but nowhere in nature do we find such
condition. Everything, as Buddha pointed out, is in a state of becoming, or as
Krishnamurti number two calls it: Reality is motion. Buddha never denied that
there was anything beyond becoming. He simply refused to discuss the
possibility, whereas persons like Krishnamurti two stop there and affirm it as
being the ultimate. There were very good reasons why Buddha refused. He was
living in a country where the intelligentsia were lost in fruitless and
impractical speculations, and where the emotional were lost in religion,
endlessly ritualized and filled with superstition. The mystics were lost in the
impossible task of making meditation their whole life. Nature forbade it and
brought them back. Becoming and motion are processes, but Being, pure
consciousness, is not. In the experience of a glimpse we discover this fact.
Being transcends becoming, but it is only the Gods who live on the plane of
Being; we humans may visit it, even for long periods, but we must return.(P)