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CHAPTER
V
The Destiny of the Individual
By the Ignorance they cross beyond Death and by the Knowledge
enjoy Immortality....
By the Non-Birth they cross beyond Death and by the Birth
enjoy Immortality.
Isha Upanishad.¹
An Omnipresent Reality is
the truth of all life and existence whether absolute or relative,
whether corporeal or incorporeal,
whether animate or inanimate, whether intelligent or unintelligent; and
in all its infinitely varying and even constantly opposed
self-expressions, from the contradictions nearest to our ordinary
experience to those remotest antinomies which lose
themselves on the verges of the Ineffable, the Reality is one and not a
sum or concourse. From that all variations begin, in
that all variations consist, to that all variations return. All
affirmations are denied only to lead to a wider affirmation of the
same Reality. All antinomies confront each other in order to recognise
one Truth in their opposed aspects and embrace by
the way of conflict their mutual Unity. Brahman is the Alpha and the
Omega. Brahman is the One besides whom there is
nothing else existent.
But this unity is in its nature indefinable. When we seek to envisage
it by the mind we are compelled to proceed through
an infinite series of conceptions and experiences. And yet in the end
we are obliged to negate our largest conceptions, our
most comprehensive experiences in order to affirm that the Reality
exceeds all definitions. We arrive at the formula of the
Indian sages, neti neti, “It is not this, It is not that”, there is no
experience by which we can limit It, there is no conception
by which It can be defined.
An Unknowable which appears to us in many states and attributes of
being, in many forms of consciousness, in many
activities of energy, this is what Mind can ultimately say about the
existence which we ourselves are and which we see in
all that is presented to our thought and senses. It is in and through
those
¹ Verses 11, 14.
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states, those forms, those activities that we have to approach and know the Unknowable. But if in our haste to arrive at a
Unity that our mind can seize and hold, if in our insistence to confine the Infinite in our embrace we identify the Reality with
any one definable state of being however pure and eternal, with any particular attribute however general and
comprehensive, with any fixed formulation of consciousness however vast in its scope, with any energy or activity however
boundless its application, and if we exclude all the rest, then our thoughts sin against Its unknowableness and arrive not at a
true unity but at a division of the Indivisible.
So strongly was this truth
perceived in the ancient times that the Vedantic Seers, even after they
had arrived at the
crowning idea, the convincing experience of Sachchidananda as the
highest positive expression of the Reality to our
consciousness, erected in their speculations or went on in their
perceptions to an Asat, a Non-Being beyond, which is not the
ultimate existence, the pure consciousness, the infinite bliss of which
all our experiences are the expression or the
deformation. If at all an existence, a consciousness, a bliss, it is
beyond the highest and purest positive form of these things
that here we can possess and other therefore than what here we know by
these names. Buddhism, somewhat arbitrarily
declared by the theologians to be an un-Vedic doctrine because it
rejected the authority of the Scriptures, yet goes back to
this essentially Vedantic conception. Only, the positive and synthetic
teaching of the Upanishads beheld Sat and Asat not as
opposites destructive of each other, but as the last antinomy through
which we look up to the Unknowable. And in the
transactions of our positive consciousness, even Unity has to make its
account with Multiplicity; for the Many also are
Brahman. It is by Vidya, the Knowledge of the Oneness, that we know
God; without it Avidya, the relative and multiple
consciousness, is a night of darkness and a disorder of Ignorance. Yet
if we exclude the field of that Ignorance, if we get rid
of Avidya as if it were a thing non-existent and unreal, then Knowledge
itself becomes a sort of obscurity and a source of
imperfection. We become as men blinded by a light so that we can no
longer see the field which that light illumines.
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Such is the teaching, calm, wise
and clear, of our most ancient sages. They had the patience and the
strength to find
and to know; they had also the clarity and humility to admit the
limitation of our knowledge. They perceived the borders
where it has to pass into something beyond itself. It was a later
impatience of heart and mind, vehement attraction to an
ultimate bliss or high masterfulness of pure experience and trenchant
intelligence which sought the One to deny the Many
and because it had received the breath of the heights scorned or
recoiled from the secret of the depths. But the steady eye
of the ancient wisdom perceived that to know God really, it must know
Him everywhere equally and without distinction,
considering and valuing but not mastered by the oppositions through
which He shines.
We will put aside then the
trenchant distinctions of a partial logic which declares that because
the One is the reality, the
Many are an illusion, and because the Absolute is Sat, the one
existence, the relative is Asat and non-existent. If in the
Many we pursue insistently the One, it is to return with the
benediction and the revelation of the One confirming itself in the
Many.
We will guard ourselves
also against the excessive importance that the mind attaches to
particular points of view at
which it arrives in its more powerful expansions and transitions. The
perception of the spiritualised mind that the universe is
an unreal dream can have no more absolute a value to us than the
perception of the materialised mind that God and the
Beyond are an illusory idea. In the one case the mind, habituated only
to the evidence of the senses and associating reality
with corporeal fact, is either unaccustomed to use other means of
knowledge or unable to extend the notion of reality to a
supra-physical experience. In the other case the same mind, passing
beyond to the overwhelming experience of an
incorporeal reality, simply transfers the same inability and the same
consequent sense of dream or hallucination to the
experience of the senses. But we perceive also the truth that these two
conceptions disfigure. It is true that for this world of
form in which we are set for our self-realisation, nothing is entirely
valid until it has possessed itself of our physical
consciousness and manifested on the lowest levels in harmony with its
manifestation on the highest
sum-
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mits. It is equally true that form and matter asserting themselves as a self-existent reality are an illusion of Ignorance.
Form and matter can be valid only as shape and substance of manifestation for the incorporeal and immaterial. They are in
their nature an act of divine consciousness, in their aim the representation of a status of the Spirit.
In other words, if Brahman
has entered into form and represented Its being in material substance,
it can only be to
enjoy self-manifestation in the figures of relative and phenomenal
consciousness. Brahman is in this world to represent Itself
in the values of Life. Life exists in Brahman in order to discover
Brahman in itself. Therefore man's importance in the world
is that he gives to it that development of consciousness in which its
transfiguration by a perfect self-discovery becomes
possible. To fulfil God in life is man's manhood. He starts from the
animal vitality and its activities, but a divine existence is
his objective.
But as in Thought, so in
Life, the true rule of self-realisation is a progressive comprehension.
Brahman expresses Itself
in many successive forms of consciousness, successive in their relation
even if coexistent in being or coeval in Time, and
Life in its self-unfolding must also rise to ever-new provinces of its
own being. But if in passing from one domain to another
we renounce what has already been given us from eagerness for our new
attainment, if in reaching the mental life we cast
away or belittle the physical life which is our basis, or if we reject
the mental and physical in our attraction to the spiritual,
we do not fulfil God integrally, nor satisfy the conditions of His
self-manifestation. We do not become perfect, but only shift
the field of our imperfection or at most attain a limited altitude.
However high we may climb, even though it be to the
Non-Being itself, we climb ill if we forget our base. Not to abandon
the lower to itself, but to transfigure it in the light of the
higher to which we have attained, is true divinity of nature. Brahman
is integral and unifies many states of consciousness at
a time; we also, manifesting the nature of Brahman, should become
integral and all-embracing.
Besides the recoil from the
physical life, there is another exaggeration of the ascetic impulse
which this ideal of an
integral
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manifestation corrects. The nodus of Life is the
relation between three general forms of consciousness, the individual,
the
universal and the transcendent or supracosmic. In the ordinary
distribution of life's activities the individual regards himself as
a separate being included in the universe and both as dependent upon
that which transcends alike the universe and the
individual. It is to this Transcendence that we give currently the name
of God, who thus becomes to our conceptions not so
much supracosmic as extracosmic. The belittling and degradation of both
the individual and the universe is a natural
consequence of this division: the cessation of both cosmos and
individual by the attainment of the Transcendence would be,
logically, its supreme conclusion.
The integral view of the
unity of Brahman avoids these consequences. Just as we need not give up
the bodily life to
attain to the mental and spiritual, so we can arrive at a point of view
where the preservation of the individual activities is no
longer inconsistent with our comprehension of the cosmic consciousness
or our attainment to the transcendent and supracosmic. For the
World-Transcendent embraces the universe, is one with it and does not
exclude it, even as the
universe embraces the individual, is one with him and does not exclude
him. The individual is a centre of the whole universal
consciousness; the universe is a form and definition which is occupied
by the entire immanence of the Formless and
Indefinable.
This is always the true
relation, veiled from us by our ignorance or our wrong consciousness of
things. When we attain
to knowledge or right consciousness, nothing essential in the eternal
relation is changed, but only the inview and the outview
from the individual centre is profoundly modified and consequently also
the spirit and effect of its activity. The individual is
still necessary to the action of the Transcendent in the universe and
that action in him does not cease to be possible by his
illumination. On the contrary, since the conscious manifestation of the
Transcendent in the individual is the means by which
the collective, the universal is also to become conscious of itself,
the continuation of the illumined individual in the action of
the world is an imperative need of the world-play. If his inexorable
removal through
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the very act of illumination is the law, then the world is condemned to remain eternally the scene of unredeemed darkness,
death and suffering. And such a world can only be a ruthless ordeal or a mechanical illusion.
It is so that ascetic philosophy tends to conceive it. But individual salvation can have no real sense if existence in the
cosmos is itself an illusion. In the Monistic view the individual soul is one with the Supreme, its sense of separateness an
ignorance, escape from the sense of separateness and identity with the Supreme its salvation. But who then profits by this
escape? Not the supreme Self, for it is supposed to be always and inalienably free, still, silent, pure. Not the world, for that
remains constantly in the bondage and is not freed by the escape of any individual soul from the universal Illusion. It is the
individual soul itself which effects its supreme good by escaping from the sorrow and the division into the peace and the
bliss. There would seem then to be some kind of reality of the individual soul as distinct from the world and from the
Supreme even in the event of freedom and illumination. But for the Illusionist the individual soul is an illusion and
non-existent except in the inexplicable mystery of Maya. Therefore we arrive at the escape of an illusory non-existent soul
from an illusory non-existent bondage in an illusory non-existent world as the supreme good which that non-existent soul has
to pursue! For this is the last word of the Knowledge, “There is none bound, none freed, none seeking to be free.” Vidya
turns out to be as much a part of the Phenomenal as Avidya; Maya meets us even
in our escape and laughs at the triumphant logic which seemed to cut the knot of
her mystery.
These things, it is said, cannot be
explained; they are the initial and insoluble miracle. They are for us a
practical fact and have to be accepted. We have to escape by a confusion out of
a confusion. The individual soul can only cut the knot of ego by a supreme act
of egoism, an exclusive attachment to its own individual salvation which amounts
to an absolute assertion of its separate existence in Maya. We are led to regard
other souls as if they were figments of our mind and their salvation
unimportant, our soul alone as if it were entirely real and its salvation the
one thing that matters. I come to regard my personal escape from bondage
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as real while other souls who are equally myself remain behind in the bondage!
It is only when we put
aside all irreconcilable antinomy between Self and the world that
things fall into their place by a
less paradoxical logic. We must accept the many-sidedness of the
manifestation even while we assert the unity of the
Manifested. And is not this after all the truth that pursues us
wherever we cast our eyes, unless seeing we choose not to
see? Is not this after all the perfectly natural and simple mystery of
Conscious Being that it is bound neither by its unity nor
by its multiplicity? It is “absolute” in the sense of being entirely
free to include and arrange in its own way all possible terms
of its self-expression. There is none bound, none freed, none seeking
to be free,—for always That is a perfect freedom. It is
so free that it is not even bound by its liberty. It can play at being
bound without incurring a real bondage. Its chain is a
self-imposed convention, its limitation in the ego a transitional
device that it uses in order to repeat its transcendence and
universality in the scheme of the individual Brahman.
The Transcendent, the
Supracosmic is absolute and free in itself beyond Time and Space and
beyond the conceptual
opposites of finite and infinite. But in cosmos it uses its liberty of
self-formation, its Maya, to make a scheme of itself in the
complementary terms of unity and multiplicity, and this multiple unity
it establishes in the three conditions of the
subconscient, the conscient and the superconscient. For actually we see
that the Many objectivised in form in our material
universe start with a subconscious unity which expresses itself openly
enough in cosmic action and cosmic substance, but of
which they are not themselves superficially aware. In the conscient the
ego becomes the superficial point at which the
awareness of unity can emerge; but it applies its perception of unity
to the form and surface action and, failing to take
account of all that operates behind, fails also to realise that it is
not only one in itself but one with others. This limitation of
the universal “I” in the divided ego-sense constitutes our imperfect
individualised personality. But when the ego transcends
the personal consciousness, it begins to include and be overpowered by
that which is to us superconscious; it becomes
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aware of the cosmic unity and enters into the Transcendent Self which here cosmos expresses by a multiple oneness.
The liberation of the
individual soul is therefore the keynote of the definite divine action;
it is the primary divine
necessity and the pivot on which all else turns. It is the point of
Light at which the intended complete self-manifestation in
the Many begins to emerge. But the liberated soul extends its
perception of unity horizontally as well as vertically. Its unity
with the transcendent One is incomplete without its unity with the
cosmic Many. And that lateral unity translates itself by a
multiplication, a reproduction of its own liberated state at other
points in the Multiplicity. The divine soul reproduces itself in
similar liberated souls as the animal reproduces itself in similar
bodies. Therefore, whenever even a single soul is liberated,
there is a tendency to an extension and even to an outburst of the same
divine self-consciousness in other individual souls of
our terrestrial humanity and,—who knows?—perhaps even beyond the
terrestrial consciousness. Where shall we fix the
limit of that extension? Is it altogether a legend which says of the
Buddha that as he stood on the threshold of Nirvana, of
the Non-Being, his soul turned back and took the vow never to make the
irrevocable crossing so long as there was a single
being upon earth undelivered from the knot of the suffering, from the
bondage of the ego?
But we can attain to the
highest without blotting ourselves out from the cosmic extension.
Brahman preserves always
Its two terms of liberty within and of formation without, of expression
and of freedom from the expression. We also, being
That, can attain to the same divine self-possession. The harmony of the
two tendencies is the condition of all life that aims at
being really divine. Liberty pursued by exclusion of the thing exceeded
leads along the path of negation to the refusal of that
which God has accepted. Activity pursued by absorption in the act and
the energy leads to an inferior affirmation and the
denial of the Highest. But what God combines and synthetises, wherefore
should man insist on divorcing? To be perfect as
He is perfect is the condition of His integral attainment.
Through Avidya, the
Multiplicity, lies our path out of the transitional egoistic
self-expression in which death and
suffering
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predominate; through Vidya consenting with Avidya by the perfect sense of oneness even in that multiplicity, we enjoy
integrally the immortality and the beatitude. By attaining to the Unborn beyond all becoming we are liberated from this lower
birth and death; by accepting the Becoming freely as the Divine, we invade mortality with the immortal beatitude and
become luminous centres of its conscious self-expression in humanity.
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