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Chapter XXIII
The Double Soul in Man
The Purusha, the inner Self, no larger than the size of a man's thumb.
Katha Upanishad.1
Swetaswatara Upanishad.2
He who knows this Self who is the eater of the honey of existence and the lord of what is and shall be, has thenceforward
no shrinking.
Katha Upanishad.3
Whence shall he have grief, how shall he be deluded who sees everywhere the Oneness?
Isha Upanishad.4
He who has found the bliss of the Eternal has no fear from
any quarter.
Taittiriya Upanishad.5
THE FIRST status of Life we found to be characterised by a dumb inconscient drive or urge, a force of some
involved will in the material or atomic existence, not free and possessor of itself or its works or their results, but entirely
possessed by the universal movement in which it arises as the obscure unformed seed of individuality. The root of the second
status is desire, eager to possess but limited in capacity; the bud of the third is Love which seeks both to possess and be possessed,
to receive and to give itself; the fine flower of the fourth, its sign of perfection, we conceive as the pure and full emergence of the
original will, the illumined fulfilment of the intermediate desire, the high and
deep satisfaction of the conscious interchange of Love by the
unification of the state of the possessor and possessed in the divine unity of souls which is the foundation of the
supramental existence. If we scrutinise these terms carefully we
1
II. 1. 12, 13; II. 3. 17.
2
III. 13.
3
II. 1. 5.
4 Verse 7.
5
II. 9.
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shall see that they are shapes and stages of the soul's seeking for
the individual and universal delight of things; the ascent of Life is in its nature the ascent of the divine Delight in things from its
dumb conception in Matter through vicissitudes and opposites to its luminous consummation in Spirit.
The world being what it is, it could not be otherwise. For the world is a masked form of Sachchidananda, and the nature of
the consciousness of Sachchidananda and therefore the thing in which His force must always find and achieve itself is divine
Bliss, an omnipresent self-delight. Since Life is an energy of His conscious-force, the secret of all its movements must be
a hidden delight inherent in all things which is at once cause, motive and object of its activities; and if by reason of egoistic
division that delight is missed, if it is held back behind a veil, if it is represented as its own opposite, even as being is masked in
death, consciousness figures as the inconscient and force mocks itself with the guise of incapacity, then that which lives cannot be satisfied, cannot either rest from the movement or fulfil the movement except by laying hold on this universal delight
which is at once the secret total delight of its own being and the original, all-encompassing, all-informing, all-upholding delight
of the transcendent and immanent Sachchidananda. To seek for delight is therefore the fundamental impulse and sense of Life;
to find and possess and fulfil it is its whole motive.
But where in us is this principle of Delight? through what
term of our being does it manifest and fulfil itself in the action of the cosmos
as the principle of Conscious-Force manifests and uses Life for its
cosmic term and the principle of Supermind manifests and uses Mind? We have distinguished a
fourfold principle of divine Being creative of the universe,
―Existence, Conscious-Force, Bliss and Supermind. Supermind,
we have seen, is omnipresent in the material cosmos, but veiled; it is behind the actual phenomenon of things and occultly
expresses itself there, but uses for effectuation its own subordinate term, Mind. The divine Conscious-Force is omnipresent
in the material cosmos, but veiled, operative secretly behind the actual phenomenon of things, and it expresses itself there
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characteristically through its own subordinate term, Life. And,
though we have not yet examined separately the principle of Matter, yet we can already see that the divine All-existence
also is omnipresent in the material cosmos, but veiled, hidden behind the actual phenomenon of things, and manifests itself
there initially through its own subordinate term, Substance, Form of being or Matter. Then, equally, the principle of divine
Bliss must be omnipresent in the cosmos, veiled indeed and possessing itself behind the actual phenomenon of things, but
still manifested in us through some subordinate principle of its own in which it is hidden and by which it must be found and
achieved in the action of the universe.
That term is something in us which we sometimes call in
a special sense the soul, ―that is to say, the psychic principle which is not
the life or the mind, much less the body, but which holds in itself
the opening and flowering of the essence of all these to their own
peculiar delight of self, to light, to love, to joy and beauty and
to a refined purity of being. In fact, however, there is a double
soul or psychic term in us, as every other cosmic principle in us is
also double. For we have two minds, one the surface mind of our
expressed evolutionary ego, the superficial mentality created by us
in our emergence out of Matter, another a subliminal mind which is
not hampered by our actual mental life and its strict limitations, something large, powerful and luminous, the true mental being behind that superficial form of
mental personality which we mistake for ourselves. So also we have two lives, one outer, involved in the physical body, bound
by its past evolution in Matter, which lives and was born and will die, the other a subliminal force of life which is not cabined
between the narrow boundaries of our physical birth and death, but is our true vital being behind the form of living which we
ignorantly take for our real existence. Even in the matter of our being there is this duality; for behind our body we have
a subtler material existence which provides the substance not only of our physical but of our vital and mental sheaths and
is therefore our real substance supporting this physical form which we erroneously imagine to be the whole body of our
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spirit. So too we have a double psychic entity in us, the surface
desire-soul which works in our vital cravings, our emotions, aesthetic faculty and mental seeking for power, knowledge and
happiness, and a subliminal psychic entity, a pure power of light, love, joy and refined essence of being which is our true soul
behind the outer form of psychic existence we so often dignify by the name. It is when some reflection of this larger and purer
psychic entity comes to the surface that we say of a man, he has a soul, and when it is absent in his outward psychic life that we
say of him, he has no soul.
The external forms of our being are those of our small egoistic
existence; the subliminal are the formations of our larger true
individuality. Therefore are these that concealed part of our being in which our individuality is close to our universality, touches it, is in constant relation and commerce with it. The subliminal
mind in us is open to the universal knowledge of the cosmic Mind, the subliminal life in us to the universal force of the cosmic
Life, the subliminal physicality in us to the universal force-formation of cosmic Matter; the thick walls which divide from
these things our surface mind, life, body and which Nature has to pierce with so much trouble, so imperfectly and by so many
skilful-clumsy physical devices, are there, in the subliminal, only a rarefied medium at once of separation and communication.
So too is the subliminal soul in us open to the universal delight which the cosmic soul takes in its own existence and in the existence of the myriad souls that represent it and in the operations of mind, life and matter by which Nature lends herself to their
play and development; but from this cosmic delight the surface soul is shut off by egoistic walls of great thickness which have
indeed gates of penetration, but in their entry through them the touches of the divine cosmic Delight become dwarfed, distorted
or have to come in masked as their own opposites.
It follows that in this surface or desire-soul there is no true
soul-life, but a psychic deformation and wrong reception of the touch of things. The malady of the world is that the individual
cannot find his real soul, and the root-cause of this malady is again that he cannot meet in his embrace of things outward
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the real soul of the world in which he lives. He seeks to find
there the essence of being, the essence of power, the essence of conscious-existence, the essence of delight, but receives instead a
crowd of contradictory touches and impressions. If he could find that essence, he would find also the one universal being, power,
conscious existence and delight even in this throng of touches and impressions; the contradictions of what seems would be
reconciled in the unity and harmony of the Truth that reaches out to us in these contacts. At the same time he would find
his own true soul and through it his self, because the true soul is his self's delegate and his self and the self of the world are
one. But this he cannot do because of the egoistic ignorance in the mind of thought, the heart of emotion, the sense which
responds to the touch of things not by a courageous and wholehearted embrace of the world, but by a flux of reachings and
shrinkings, cautious approaches or eager rushes and sullen or discontented or panic or angry recoils according as the touch
pleases or displeases, comforts or alarms, satisfies or dissatisfies. It is the desire-soul that by its wrong reception of life becomes
the cause of a triple misinterpretation of the
rasa, the delight in things, so that, instead of figuring the pure essential joy of being,
it comes rendered unequally into the three terms of pleasure, pain and indifference.
We have seen, when we considered the Delight of Existence in its relations to the world, that there is no absoluteness or
essential validity in our standards of pleasure and pain and indifference, that they are entirely determined by the subjectivity
of the receiving consciousness and that the degree of either pleasure and pain can be heightened to a maximum or depressed to a
minimum or even effaced entirely in its apparent nature. Pleasure can become pain or pain pleasure because in their secret reality
they are the same thing differently reproduced in the sensations and emotions. Indifference is either the inattention of the surface
desire-soul in its mind, sensations, emotions and cravings to the
rasa
of things, or its incapacity to receive and respond to it, or
its refusal to give any surface response or, again, its driving and crushing down of the pleasure or the pain by the will into the
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neutral tint of unacceptance. In all these cases what happens is
that either there is a positive refusal or a negative unreadiness or incapacity to render or in any way represent positively on the
surface something that is yet subliminally active.
For, as we now know by psychological observation and
experiment that the subliminal mind receives and remembers all those touches of things which the surface mind ignores,
so also we shall find that the subliminal soul responds to the
rasa, or essence in experience, of these things which the surface
desire-soul rejects by distaste and refusal or ignores by neutral unacceptance. Self-knowledge is impossible unless we go behind
our surface existence, which is a mere result of selective outer experiences, an imperfect sounding-board or a hasty, incompetent and fragmentary translation of a little out of the much that we are,
―unless we go behind this and send down our plummet
into the subconscient and open ourself to the superconscient so as to know their relation to our surface being. For between these
three things our existence moves and finds in them its totality. The superconscient in us is one with the self and soul of the world
and is not governed by any phenomenal diversity; it possesses therefore the truth of things and the delight of things in their
plenitude. The subconscient, so called,6 in that luminous head of itself which we call the subliminal, is, on the contrary, not a true
possessor but an instrument of experience; it is not practically one with the soul and self of the world, but it is open to it
through its world-experience. The subliminal soul is conscious inwardly of the
rasa
of things and has an equal delight in all
contacts; it is conscious also of the values and standards of the surface desire-soul and receives on its own surface corresponding
touches of pleasure, pain and indifference, but takes an equal delight in all. In other words, our real soul within takes joy
of all its experiences, gathers from them strength, pleasure and knowledge, grows by them in its store and its plenty. It is this
6 The real subconscious is a nether diminished consciousness close to the Inconscient; the subliminal is a consciousness larger than our surface existence. But both belong
to the inner realm of our being of which our surface is unaware, so both are jumbled together in our common conception and parlance.
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real soul in us which compels the shrinking desire-mind to bear
and even to seek and find a pleasure in what is painful to it, to reject what is pleasant to it, to modify or even reverse its
values, to equalise things in indifference or to equalise them in joy, the joy of the variety of existence. And this it does because
it is impelled by the universal to develop itself by all kinds of experience so as to grow in Nature. Otherwise, if we lived only
by the surface desire-soul, we could no more change or advance than the plant or stone in whose immobility or in whose routine
of existence, because life is not superficially conscious, the secret soul of things has as yet no instrument by which it can rescue
the life out of the fixed and narrow gamut into which it is born. The desire-soul left to itself would circle in the same grooves for
ever.
In the view of old philosophies pleasure and pain are inseparable like intellectual truth and falsehood and power and incapacity and birth and death; therefore the only possible escape from them would be a total indifference, a blank response to the excitations of the world-self. But a subtler psychological
knowledge shows us that this view which is based on the surface facts of existence only, does not really exhaust the possibilities
of the problem. It is possible by bringing the real soul to the surface to replace the egoistic standards of pleasure and pain
by an equal, an all-embracing personal-impersonal delight. The lover of Nature does this when he takes joy in all the things
of Nature universally without admitting repulsion or fear or mere liking and disliking, perceiving beauty in that which seems
to others mean and insignificant, bare and savage, terrible and repellent. The artist and the poet do it when they seek the
rasa
of the universal from the aesthetic emotion or from the physical line or from the mental form of beauty or from the inner sense
and power alike of that from which the ordinary man turns away and of that to which he is attached by a sense of pleasure. The
seeker of knowledge, the God-lover who finds the object of his love everywhere, the spiritual man, the intellectual, the sensuous,
the aesthetic all do this in their own fashion and must do it if they would find embracingly the Knowledge, the Beauty, the Joy
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or the Divinity which they seek. It is only in the parts where the
little ego is usually too strong for us, it is only in our emotional or physical joy and suffering, our pleasure and pain of life, before
which the desire-soul in us is utterly weak and cowardly, that the application of the divine principle becomes supremely difficult
and seems to many impossible or even monstrous and repellent. Here the ignorance of the ego shrinks from the principle of
impersonality which it yet applies without too much difficulty in Science, in Art and even in a certain kind of imperfect spiritual
living because there the rule of impersonality does not attack those desires cherished by the surface soul and those values of
desire fixed by the surface mind in which our outward life is most vitally interested. In the freer and higher movements there
is demanded of us only a limited and specialised equality and impersonality proper to a particular field of consciousness and
activity while the egoistic basis of our practical life remains to us; in the lower movements the whole foundation of our life has
to be changed in order to make room for impersonality, and this the desire-soul finds impossible.
The true soul secret in us
―subliminal, we have said, but the word is misleading, for this presence is not situated below
the threshold of waking mind, but rather burns in the temple of the inmost heart behind the thick screen of an ignorant mind,
life and body, not subliminal but behind the veil,
―this veiled psychic entity is the flame of the Godhead always alight within
us, inextinguishable even by that dense unconsciousness of any spiritual self within which obscures our outward nature. It is
a flame born out of the Divine and, luminous inhabitant of the Ignorance, grows in it till it is able to turn it towards the
Knowledge. It is the concealed Witness and Control, the hidden Guide, the Daemon of Socrates, the inner light or inner voice
of the mystic. It is that which endures and is imperishable in us from birth to birth, untouched by death, decay or corruption,
an indestructible spark of the Divine. Not the unborn Self or Atman, for the Self even in presiding over the existence of the
individual is aware always of its universality and transcendence, it is yet its deputy in the forms of Nature, the individual soul,
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caitya purusa, supporting mind, life and body, standing behind
. the mental, the vital, the subtle-physical being in us and watching and
profiting by their development and experience. These other
person-powers in man, these beings of his being, are also veiled in
their true entity, but they put forward temporary personalities
which compose our outer individuality and whose combined superficial
action and appearance of status we call ourselves: this inmost
entity also, taking form in us as the psychic Person, puts forward a
psychic personality which changes, grows, develops from life to life; for this is the traveller between birth and
death and between death and birth, our nature parts are only its manifold and changing vesture. The psychic being can at first
exercise only a concealed and partial and indirect action through the mind, the life and the body, since it is these parts of Nature
that have to be developed as its instruments of self-expression, and it is long confined by their evolution. Missioned
to lead man in the Ignorance towards the light of the Divine
Consciousness, it takes the essence of all experience in the
Ignorance to form a nucleus of soul-growth in the nature; the rest
it turns into material for the future growth of the instruments
which it has to use until they are ready to be a luminous
instrumentation of the Divine. It is this secret psychic entity
which is the true original Conscience in us deeper than the
constructed and conventional conscience of the moralist, for it is this which points
always towards Truth and Right and Beauty, towards Love and Harmony and all that is a divine possibility in us, and persists
till these things become the major need of our nature. It is the psychic personality in us that flowers as the saint, the sage, the
seer; when it reaches its full strength, it turns the being towards the Knowledge of Self and the Divine, towards the supreme
Truth, the supreme Good, the supreme Beauty, Love and Bliss, the divine heights and largenesses, and opens us to the touch of
spiritual sympathy, universality, oneness. On the contrary, where the psychic personality is weak, crude or ill-developed, the finer
parts and movements in us are lacking or poor in character and power, even though the mind may be forceful and brilliant,
the heart of vital emotions hard and strong and masterful, the
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life-force dominant and successful, the bodily existence rich and
fortunate and an apparent lord and victor. It is then the outer desire-soul, the pseudo-psychic entity, that reigns and we mistake its misinterpretations of psychic suggestion and aspiration, its ideas and ideals, its desires and yearnings for true soul-stuff
and wealth of spiritual experience.7 If the secret psychic Person can come forward into the front and, replacing the desire-soul,
govern overtly and entirely and not only partially and from behind the veil this outer nature of mind, life and body, then
these can be cast into soul images of what is true, right and beautiful and in the end the whole nature can be turned towards
the real aim of life, the supreme victory, the ascent into spiritual existence.
But it might seem then that by bringing this psychic entity, this true soul in us, into the front and giving it there the lead
and rule we shall gain all the fulfilment of our natural being that we can seek for and open also the gates of the kingdom
of the Spirit. And it might well be reasoned that there is no need for any intervention of a superior Truth-Consciousness or
principle of Supermind to help us to attain to the divine status or the divine perfection. Yet, although the psychic transformation
is one necessary condition of the total transformation of our existence, it is not all that is needed for the largest spiritual
change. In the first place, since this is the individual soul in Nature, it can open to the hidden diviner ranges of our being
and receive and reflect their light and power and experience, but another, a spiritual transformation from above is needed for us
to possess our self in its universality and transcendence. By itself
7 The word "psychic" in our ordinary parlance is more often used in reference to this
desire-soul than to the true psychic. It is used still more loosely of psychological and other phenomena of an abnormal or supernormal character which are really connected
with the inner mind, inner vital, subtle physical being subliminal in us and are not at all direct operations of the psyche. Even such phenomena as materialisation and
dematerialisation are included, though, if established, they evidently are not soul-action and would not shed any light upon the nature or existence of the psychic entity, but
would rather be an abnormal action of an occult subtle physical energy intervening in the ordinary status of the gross body of things, reducing it to its own subtle condition
and again reconstituting it in the terms of gross matter.
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the psychic being at a certain stage might be content to create a
formation of truth, good and beauty and make that its station; at a farther stage it might become passively subject to the world-self, a mirror of the universal existence, consciousness, power, delight, but not their full participant or possessor. Although
more nearly and thrillingly united to the cosmic consciousness in knowledge, emotion and even appreciation through the senses, it
might become purely recipient and passive, remote from mastery and action in the world; or, one with the static self behind the
cosmos, but separate inwardly from the world-movement, losing its individuality in its Source, it might return to that Source and
have neither the will nor the power any further for that which was its ultimate mission here, to lead the nature also towards
its divine realisation. For the psychic being came into Nature from the Self, the Divine, and it can turn back from Nature to
the silent Divine through the silence of the Self and a supreme spiritual immobility. Again, an eternal portion of the Divine,8
this part is by the law of the Infinite inseparable from its Divine Whole, this part is indeed itself that Whole, except in its frontal
appearance, its frontal separative self-experience; it may awaken to that reality and plunge into it to the apparent extinction or
at least the merging of the individual existence. A small nucleus here in the mass of our ignorant Nature, so that it is described
in the Upanishad as no bigger than a man's thumb, it can by the spiritual influx enlarge itself and embrace the whole world
with the heart and mind in an intimate communion or oneness. Or it may become aware of its eternal Companion and elect
to live for ever in His presence, in an imperishable union and oneness as the eternal lover with the eternal Beloved, which of all
spiritual experiences is the most intense in beauty and rapture. All these are great and splendid achievements of our spiritual
self-finding, but they are not necessarily the last end and entire consummation; more is possible.
For these are achievements of the spiritual mind in man; they are movements of that mind passing beyond itself, but on
8 Gita, XV. 7.
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its own plane, into the splendours of the Spirit. Mind, even at
its highest stages far beyond our present mentality, acts yet in its nature by division; it takes the aspects of the Eternal and
treats each aspect as if it were the whole truth of the Eternal Being and can find in each its own perfect fulfilment. Even it
erects them into opposites and creates a whole range of these opposites, the Silence of the Divine and the divine Dynamis, the
immobile Brahman aloof from existence, without qualities, and the active Brahman with qualities, Lord of existence, Being and
Becoming, the Divine Person and an impersonal pure Existence; it can then cut itself away from the one and plunge itself into
the other as the sole abiding Truth of existence. It can regard the Person as the sole Reality or the Impersonal as alone true; it can
regard the Lover as only a means of expression of eternal Love or love as only the self-expression of the Lover; it can see beings as
only personal powers of an impersonal Existence or impersonal existence as only a state of the one Being, the Infinite Person. Its
spiritual achievement, its road of passage towards the supreme aim will follow these dividing lines. But beyond this movement
of spiritual Mind is the higher experience of the supermind Truth-Consciousness; there these opposites disappear and these
partialities are relinquished in the rich totality of a supreme and integral realisation of eternal Being. It is this that is the aim we
have conceived, the consummation of our existence here by an ascent to the supramental Truth-Consciousness and its descent
into our nature. The psychic transformation after rising into the spiritual change has then to be completed, integralised, exceeded
and uplifted by a supramental transformation which lifts it to the summit of the ascending endeavour.
Even as between the other divided and opposed terms of manifested Being, so also a supramental consciousness-energy
could alone establish a perfect harmony between these two terms
―apparently opposite only because of the Ignorance
―of spirit status and world dynamism in our embodied existence. In the Ignorance Nature centres the order of her psychological
movements, not around the secret spiritual self, but around its substitute, the ego-principle: a certain ego-centrism is the basis
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on which we bind together our experiences and relations in the
midst of the complex contacts, contradictions, dualities, incoherences of the world in which we live; this ego-centrism is our
rock of safety against the cosmic and the infinite, our defence. But in our spiritual change we have to forego this defence; ego
has to vanish, the person finds itself dissolved into a vast impersonality, and in this impersonality there is at first no key
to an ordered dynamism of action. A very usual result is that one is divided into two parts of being, the spiritual within, the
natural without; in one there is the divine realisation seated in a perfect inner freedom, but the natural part goes on with the old
action of Nature, continues by a mechanical movement of past energies her already transmitted impulse. Even, if there is an
entire dissolution of the limited person and the old ego-centric order, the outer nature may become the field of an apparent
incoherence, although all within is luminous with the Self. Thus we become outwardly inert and inactive, moved by circumstance
or forces but not self-mobile,9 even though the consciousness is enlightened within, or as a child though within is a plenary
self-knowledge,10 or as one inconsequent in thought and impulse though within is an utter calm and serenity,11 or as the
wild and disordered soul though inwardly there is the purity and poise of the Spirit.12 Or if there is an ordered dynamism
in the outward nature, it may be a continuation of superficial ego-action witnessed but not accepted by the inner being, or
a mental dynamism that cannot be perfectly expressive of the inner spiritual realisation; for there is no equipollence between
action of mind and status of spirit. Even at the best where there is an intuitive guidance of Light from within, the nature of its
expression in dynamism of action must be marked with the imperfections of mind, life and body, a King with incapable
ministers, a Knowledge expressed in the values of the Ignorance. Only the descent of the Supermind with its perfect unity of
Truth-Knowledge and Truth-Will can establish in the outer as
9
jadavat.
10 bālavat.
11
unmattavat.
12
piśācavat.
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in the inner existence the harmony of the Spirit; for it alone can
turn the values of the Ignorance entirely into the values of the Knowledge.
In the fulfilment of our psychic being as in the consummation of our parts of mind and life, it is the relating of it to its
divine source, to its correspondent truth in the Supreme Reality, that is the indispensable movement; and, here too as there, it
is by the power of the Supermind that it can be done with an integral completeness, an intimacy that becomes an authentic
identity; for it is the Supermind which links the higher and the lower hemispheres of the One Existence. In Supermind is the
integrating Light, the consummating Force, the wide entry into the supreme Ananda: the psychic being uplifted by that Light and
Force can unite itself with the original Delight of existence from which it came: overcoming the dualities of pain and pleasure,
delivering from all fear and shrinking the mind, life and body, it can recast the contacts of existence in the world into terms of
the Divine Ananda.
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