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The Three Purushas
THE
greatest of all the philosophical problems which human thought has struggled to solve is the exact
nature and relation to us of the conscious Intelligence in the
phenomenal existence around. The idealist denies the phenomenal existence, the materialist denies the conscious Intelligence.
To the former, phenomenon is a passing shadow on the luminous calm of the single universal Spirit: to the latter, Intelligence
is a temporary result of the motions of Matter. The idealist can
give no satisfactory explanation of the existence of the shadow;
.he admits that it is inexplicable, a thing that is and yet is not: the
materialist can give no satisfactory explanation of the existence of
intelligence; he simply tries to trace the stages of its development and the methods of its workings, and covers over the want
of an explanation by the abundant minuteness of his observations. But the soul of Man, looking out and in, is satisfied neither
with Shankara nor with Haeckel. It sees the universal existence
of phenomena, it sees the universal existence of Intelligence.
It seeks a term which will admit both, cover both, identify both;
it demands, not an elimination of either, but a reconcilement.
The Upanishads do not deny the reality of the world, but
they identify it with Brahman who transcends it. He is the One
without a second; He is the All. If all is Brahman, then there
can be nothing but Brahman, and therefore the existence of the
All, sarvam idam, does not contradict the unity of Brahman, does
not establish the reality of bheda, difference. It is one Intelligence looking at itself from a hundred viewpoints, each point
conscious of and enjoying the existence of the others. The
shoreless stream of idea and thought, imagination and experience, name and form, sensation and vibration sweeps onward
for ever, without beginning, without end, rising into view, sinking
out of sight; through it the one Intelligence with its million self-expressions pours itself abroad, an ocean with innumerable
waves. One particular self-expression may disappear into its
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source and continent, but that does not and cannot abolish the
phenomenal universe. The One is for ever, and the Many are
for ever because the One is for ever. So long as there is a sea,
there will be waves.
In the oceanic stir and change of universal Nature the soul
or Purusha is the standing-point, stable, unmoving, unchanging,
eternal, — nityah sarvagatah sthānur acalo'yam sanātanah. In the
whole, the Purusha or soul is one, — there is One Spirit which
supports the stir of the Universe, not many. In the individual the
One Purusha has three stages of personality; He is One, but
triple, trivrt. The Upanishads speak of two birds on one tree, of
which one eats the fruit of the tree, the other, seated on a higher
branch, does not eat but watches its fellow; one is īśa or Lord of
itself, the other is anīśā, not lord of itself, and it is when the
eater looks up and perceives the greatness of the watcher and fills
himself with it that grief, death, subjection, — in one word māyā,
ignorance and illusion,—cease to touch him. There are two
unborn who are male and one unborn who is female; she is the
tree with its sweet and bitter fruit, the two are the birds. One of
the unborn enjoys her sweetness, the other has put it away from
him. These are the two Purushas, the aksara or immutable spirit,
and the ksara or apparently mutable, and the tree or woman is
Prakriti, universal Energy which the Europeans call Nature.
The ksara Purusha is the soul in Nature and enjoying Nature,
the aksara Purusha is the soul above Nature and watching her.
But there is One who is not seated on the tree but occupies and
possesses it, who is not only lord of Himself, but lord of all that
is; He is higher than the ksara, higher than the aksara. He is
Purushottama, the Soul one with God, with the All.
These three Purushas are described in the fifteenth chapter
of the Gita. "There are two Purushas in the world, the aksara
and the ksara, — the ksara is all creatures, the aksara is called
kūtastha, the one on the summit. There is another Purusha, the
highest (uttama), called also the paramātmā or Supreme Spirit,
who enters into the three worlds, (the worlds of susupti, svapna, jāgrat, otherwise the causal, mental and physical planes of existence), and sustains them as their imperishable lord." And in
the thirteenth chapter, while drawing the distinction between
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the lower Purusha and the higher, Sri Krishna defines more minutely the relations of God and the individual soul to Nature.
"Prakriti is the basic source of cause, effect and agency; the
Purusha, of the sense of enjoyment, of happiness and grief;
for it is the soul in Nature (Purusha in Prakriti) that enjoys
the threefold workings of things caused by Nature (the play of
conservation, creation and destruction; reception, reaction and
resistance; illumination, misconception and obscuration; calm,
work and inertia; all being different manifestations of three
fundamental forces called the gunas or essential properties of
Prakriti), and it is the attachment of the soul to the gunas that is
the cause of births in bodies, good and evil. The highest Purusha
in this body is the one who watches, who sanctions, who enjoys,
who upholds, who is the mighty Lord and the Supreme Soul."
The personality of the Supreme Soul is universal, not individual. Whatever is in all creatures, character, idea, imagination,
experience, sensation, motion, is contained by Him as an object
of spiritual enjoyment without limiting or determining Him.
He is all things at once. Such universality is necessary to support
and supply individual existence, but it cannot be the determining
limit of individual existence. Something has to be reserved,
something put forward, and this partial manifestation is the
individual. "It is verily an eternal part of Me that in the world
of individual existence becomes the jīva or individual." The jīva
or individual is ksara Purusha, and between him and the Supreme stands the aksara Purusha, the bird on the summit of the
tree, joyous in his own bliss, undisturbed by the play of Nature,
impartially watching it, receiving its image on his calm immovable existence without being for a moment bound or affected,
eternally self-gathered, eternally free. This aksara Purusha is
our real self, our divine unity with God, our inalienable freedom
from that which is transient and changing. If it did not exist,
there would be no escape from the bondage of life and death,
joy and grief, sin and virtue; we should be prisoners in a cage
without a door, beating our wings against the bars in vain for an
exit; life and death, joy and grief, sin and virtue would be eternal, ineffugable realities, not temporary rules determining the
great game of life, and we should be unwilling actors, not free
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playmates of God able to suspend and renew the game when we
will. It is by realising our oneness with the aksara Purusha that
we get freedom from ignorance, freedom from the cords of desire,
freedom from the imperative law of works. On the other hand,
if the aksara Purusha were all, as the Sankhya philosophy contends, there would be no basis for different experience, no varying personality, every individual existence would be precisely
like every other individual existence, the development and experience of one soul in Nature an exact replica of the development
and experience of another soul. It is the ksara Purusha who is all
creatures, and the variety of experience, character and development is effected by a particular part of the universal svabhāva
or nature of conscious existence in phenomena, being attached
to a particular individual or jīva. This is what is meant by saying
that it is a part of God which becomes the jīva. This svabhāva,
once determined, does not change; but it manifests various parts
of itself, at various times, under various circumstances, in various
forms of action and various bodies suited to the action or development it has to enjoy. It is for this reason that the Purusha in
Nature is called ksara, fluid, shifting, although it is not in reality
fluid or shifting, but constant, eternal and immutable, sanātana. It is the variety of its enjoyment in Time, Space and Causality
that makes it ksara. The enjoyment of the aksara Purusha is
self-existent, beyond Time, Space and Causality, aware of, but
undisturbed by the continual multitudinous flux and reflux of
Prakriti. The enjoyment of Purushottama is both in Prakriti
and beyond it, it embraces and is the reality of all experience and
enjoyment.
Development is determined by the ksara Purusha, but not
conducted by him. It is Prakriti, the Universal Energy, that
conducts development under the law of cause and effect and is
the true agent. The soul is not the agent, but the lord who enjoys
the results of the action of his agent, Prakriti or nature; only
by his attachment to Prakriti he forgets himself and identifies
himself with her so as to have the illusion of agency and, by thus
forgetting himself, ceases to be lord of himself, becomes subject
to Causality, imprisoned in Time and Space, bound by the work
which he sanctions. He himself, being a part of God, is made in
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His image, of one nature with Him. Therefore what God is, he
also is, only with limitation, subject to Time, Space and Causality, because he has, of his own will, accepted that bondage. He
is the witness, and if he ceased to watch, the drama would stop.
He is the source of sanction, and what he declares null and void,
drops away from the development. He is the enjoyer, and if
he became indifferent, that individual development would be
arrested. He is the upholder, and if he ceased to sustain the ādhāra, the vehicle, it would fall and cease. He is the lord, and it
is for his pleasure that Nature acts. He is the spirit, and matter
is only his vehicle, his robe, his means of self-expression. But all
his sanctions, refusals, behests act not at once, not there and then,
not by imperative absolute compulsion, but subject to lapse of
time, change of place, working of cause to effect. The lapse may
be brief or long, a moment or centuries; the change small or
great, here or in another world; the working direct or indirect,
with the rapid concentration of processes which men call a miracle or with the careful and laboured evolution in which every
step is visibly ordered and deliberate; but so long as the jīva
is
bound, his lordship is limited and constitutional, not despotic
and absolute. His sanction and signature are necessary, but it is
the Lords spiritual and temporal of his mind and body, the Commons in his external environment who do the work of the State,
execute, administer, legislate.
The first step in self-liberation is to get rid of the illusion of
agency, to realise that Nature acts, not the soul. The second is
to remove the siege of phenomenal associations, by surrendering
lordship to God, leaving Him alone to uphold and sanction by
the abdication of one's own independent use of these powers,
offering up the privilege of the enjoyer to Him. All that is then
left is the attitude of the aksara Purusha, the free, blissful self-existence watching the action of Prakriti, but outside it. The
ksara withdraws into the aksara. When the sāksī or witness withdraws into God Himself, that is the utter liberation.
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