CHAPTER
XVIII
The Infrarational Age of
the Cycle
IN
SPIRITUALITY
then would lie our ultimate, our only hope for the perfection whether of the
individual or of the communal man; not the spirit which for its separate satisfaction turns away
from
the earth and her works, but that greater
spirit which surpasses and yet accepts and fulfils them. A spirituality that
would take up into itself man's rationalism, aestheticism, ethicism, vitalism,
corporeality, his aspiration towards knowledge, his attraction towards beauty,
his need of love, his urge towards perfection, his demand for power and
fullness of life and being, a spirituality that would reveal to these
ill-accorded forces their divine sense and the conditions of their godhead,
reconcile them all to each other, illumine to the vision of each the way which
they now tread in half-lights and shadows, in blindness or with a deflected
sight, is a power which even man's too self-sufficient reason can accept or may
at least be brought one day to accept as sovereign and to see in it its own
supreme light, its own infinite source. For that reveals itself surely in the
end as the logical ultimate process, the inevitable development and
consummation of all for which man is individually and socially striving. A
satisfying evolution of the nascent spirituality still raw and inchoate in the
race is the possibility to which an age of subjectivism is a first glimmer of
awakening or towards which it shows a first profound potentiality of return. A
deeper, wider, greater, more spiritualised subjective understanding of the
individual and communal self and its life and a growing reliance on the
spiritual light and the spiritual means for the final solution of its problems
are the only way to a true social perfection. The free rule, that is to say,
the predominant lead, control and influence of the developed spiritual man -
not the half-spiritualised priest, saint or prophet or the raw religionist
- is our hope for a divine guidance of the race.
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A spiritualised society
can alone bring about a reign of individual harmony and communal happiness; or,
in words which, though liable to abuse by the reason and the passions, are
still the most expressive we can find, a new kind of theocracy, the kingdom of
God upon earth, a theocracy which shall be the government of mankind by the
Divine in the hearts and minds of men.
Certainly, this will not come about
easily, or, as men have always vainly hoped from each great new turn and
revolution of politics and society, by a sudden and at once entirely satisfying
change and magical transformation. The advance, however it comes about, will be
indeed of the nature of a miracle, as are all such profound changes and immense
developments; for they have the appearance of a kind of realised impossibility.
But God works all his miracles by an evolution of secret possibilities which
have been long prepared, at least in their elements, and in the end by a rapid
bringing of all to a head, a throwing together of the elements so that in their
fusion they produce a new form and name of things and reveal a new spirit.
Often the decisive turn is preceded by an apparent emphasizing and raising to
their extreme of things which seem the very denial, the most uncompromising
opposite of the new principle and the new creation. Such an evolution of the
elements of a spiritualised society is that which a subjective age makes at
least possible, and if at the same time it raises to the last height of active
power things which seem the very denial of such a potentiality, that need be no
index of a practical impossibility of the new birth, but on the contrary may be
the sign of its approach or at the lowest a strong attempt at achievement.
Certainly, the whole effort of a subjective age may go wrong; but this happens
oftenest when by the insufficiency of its materials, a great crudeness of its
starting-point and a hasty shallowness or narrow intensity of its inlook into
itself and things it is foredoomed to a fundamental error of self-knowledge. It
becomes less likely when the spirit of the age is full of freedom, variety and
a many-sided seeking, a persistent effort after know- ledge and perfection in
all the domains of human activity; that can well convert itself into an intense
and yet flexible straining after the infinite and the divine on many sides and
in many aspects. In such circumstances, though a full advance may
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possibly not be made, a
great step forward can be predicted.
We have seen that there are necessarily
three stages of the social evolution or, generally, of the human evolution in
both individual and society. Our evolution starts with an infrarational stage
in which men have not yet learned to refer their life and action in its
principles and its forms to the judgment of the clarified intelligence; for
they still act principally out of their instincts, impulses, spontaneous ideas,
vital intuitions or else obey a customary response to desire, need and
circumstance, - it is these things that are canalised or crystallised in their
social institutions. Man proceeds by various stages out of these beginnings
towards a rational age in which his intelligent will more or less developed becomes
the judge, arbiter and presiding motive of his thought, feeling and action, the
moulder, destroyer and re-creator of his leading ideas, aims and intuitions.
Finally, if our analysis and forecast are correct, the human evolution must
move through a subjective towards a suprarational or spiritual age in which he
will develop progressively a greater spiritual, supra-intellectual and
intuitive, perhaps in the end a more than intuitive, a gnostic consciousness.
He will be able to perceive a higher divine end, a divine sanction, a divine
light of guidance for all he seeks to be, think, feel and do, and able, too,
more and more to obey and live in this larger light and power. That will not be
done by any rule of infrarational religious impulse and ecstasy, such as
characterised or rather darkly illumined the obscure confusion and brute
violence of the Middle Ages, but by a higher spiritual living for which the
clarities of the reason are a necessary preparation and into which they too
will be taken up, transformed, brought to their invisible source.
These stages or periods are much more
inevitable in the psychological evolution of mankind than the Stone and other
Ages marked out by Science in his instrumental culture, for they depend not on
outward means or accidents, but on the. very nature of his being. But we must
not suppose that they are naturally exclusive and absolute in their nature, or
complete in their tendency or fulfilment when they come, or rigidly marked off
from each other in their action or their time. For they not only arise out of
each other, but may be partially developed in
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each other and they may
come to co-exist in different parts of the earth at the same time. But,
especially, since man as a whole is always a complex being, even man savage or
degenerate, he cannot be any of these things exclusively or absolutely,
- so long
as he has not exceeded himself, has not developed into
the superman, has not, that is to say, spiritualised and divinised his whole
being. At his animal worst he is still some kind of thinking or reflecting
animal: even the infrarational man cannot be utterly infrarational, but must
have or tend to have some kind of play more or less evolved or involved of the
reason and a more or less crude suprarational element, a more or less disguised
working of the spirit. At his lucid mental best, he is still not a pure
mental being, a pure intelligence ; even the most perfect intellectual is not
and cannot be wholly or merely rational,
-
there are vital urges that he cannot exclude, visits
or touches of a light from above that are not less suprarational because he
does not recognise their source. No god, but at his highest a human being
touched with a ray of the divine influence, man's very spirituality, however
dominant, must have, while he is still this imperfectly evolved human, its
rational and infrarational tendencies
and elements. And as with the psychological life of individuals, so must it be
with the ages of his communal existence; these may be marked off from each
other by the predominant play of one element, its force may overpower the
others or take them into itself or make some compromise, but an exclusive play
seems to be neither intended nor possible.
Thus an infrarational period of human
and social development need not be without its elements, its strong elements of
reason and of spirituality. Even the savage, whether he be primitive or
degenerate man, has some coherent idea of this world and the beyond; a theory
of life and a religion. To us with our more advanced rationality his theory of
life may seem incoherent, because we have lost its point of view and its
principle of mental associations. But it is still an act of reason, and within
its limits he is capable of a sufficient play of thought both ideative and
practical, as well as a clear ethical idea and motive, some aesthetic notions
and an understood order of society poor and barbarous to our view, but well
enough contrived and put together to
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serve the simplicity of its objects. Or again we may
not realise the element of reason in a primitive theory of life or of
spirituality in a barbaric religion, because it appears to us to be made up of
symbols and forms to which a superstitious value is attached by these
undeveloped minds. But this is because the reason at this stage has an
imperfect and limited action and the element of spirituality is crude or
undeveloped and not yet self-conscious; in order to hold firmly their workings
and make them real and concrete to his mind and spirit primitive man has to
give them shape in symbols and forms to which he clings with a barbaric awe and
reverence, because they alone can embody for him his method of self-guidance in
life. For the dominant thing in him is his infrarational life of instinct,
vital intuition and impulse, mechanical custom and tradition, and it is that to
which the rest of him has to give some kind of primary order and first
glimmerings of light. The unrefined reason and unenlightened spirit in him
cannot work for their own ends; they are bond-slaves of his infrarational
nature.
At a higher stage of development or of a
return towards a fuller evolution, - for the actual savage in humanity is
perhaps not the original primitive man, but a relapse and reversion to- wards
primitiveness, - the infrarational stage of society may arrive at a very lofty
order of civilisation. It may have great intuitions of the 'meaning or general
intention of life, admirable ideas of the arrangement of life, a harmonious,
well-adapted, durable and serviceable social system, an imposing religion which
will not be without its profundities, but in which symbol and ceremonial will
form the largest portion and for the mass of man will be almost the whole of
religion. In this stage pure reason and pure spirituality will not govern the
society, or move large bodies of men, but will be represented, if at all, by
individuals at first few, but growing in number as these two powers increase in
their purity and vigour and attract more and more votaries.
This may well lead to an age, if the development of reason is
strongest, of great individual thinkers who seize on some idea of life and its
origins and laws and erect that into a philosophy, of critical minds standing
isolated above the mass who judge life, not yet with a luminous largeness, a
minute flexibility of under-
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standing or a clear and comprehensive
profundity, but still with power of intelligence, insight, acuteness, perhaps
even a pre-eminent social thinker here and there who, taking advantage of some
crisis or disturbance, is able to get the society to modify or reconstruct
itself on the basis of some clearly rational and intelligent principle. Such an
age seems to be represented by the traditions of the beginnings of Greek civilisation,
or rather the beginnings of its mobile and progressive period. Or if
spirituality predominates, there will be great mystics capable of delving into
the profound and still occult psychological possibilities of our nature who
will divine and realise the truth of the self and spirit in man and even though
they keep these things secret and imparted only to a small number of initiates,
may yet succeed in deepening with them the crude forms of the popular life.
Even such a development is obscurely indicated in the old traditions of the
mysteries. In prehistoric India we see it take a peculiar and unique turn which
determined the whole future trend of the society and made Indian civilisation a
thing apart and of its own kind in the history of the human race. But these
things are only a first beginning of light in the midst of a humanity which is still infrarational as well as
infra-spiritual and, even when it under- goes the influence of these
precursors, responds only obscurely to their inspirations and without any
clearly intelligent or awakened spiritual reception of what they impart or
impose. It still turns everything into infrarational form and disfiguring
tradition and lives spiritually by ill-understood ceremonial and disguising
symbol. It feels obscurely the higher things, tries to live them in its own
stumbling way, but it does not yet understand; it cannot lay hold either on the
intellectual form or the spiritual heart of their significance.
As reason and spirituality
develop, they begin to become a larger and more diffused force, less intense
perhaps, but wider and more effective on the mass. The mystics become the
sowers of the seed of an immense spiritual development in which whole classes
of society and even men from all classes seek the light, as happened in India
in the age of the Upanishads. The solitary individual thinkers are replaced by
a great number of writers, poets, thinkers, rhetoricians, sophists, scientific
inquirers, who
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pour out a profuse flood of acute speculation and inquiry
stimulating the thought-habit and creating
even in the mass a generalised
activity of the intelligence,
- as
happened in Greece in the age of the
sophists. The spiritual development, arising uncurbed
by reason
in an infrarational society,
has often a tendency to outrun at first
the rational and intellectual movement. For the greatest illuminating force of the infrarational man,
as he develops, is an inferior intuition, an instinctively intuitional sight
arising out of the force of life in him, and the transition from this to an
intensity of inner life and the growth of a deeper spiritual intuition which
outleaps the intellect and seems to dispense with it, is an easy passage in the
individual man. But for humanity at large this movement cannot last; the mind
and intellect must develop to their fullness so that the spirituality of the
race may rise securely upward upon a broad basis of the developed lower nature
in man, the
intelligent mental being. Therefore we see
that the reason
in its growth either does away
with the distinct spiritual tendency for a time, as in ancient Greece, or
accepts it but spins out around its first data and activities a vast web of the
workings of the intelligence, so that, as in India, the early mystic seer is replaced
by the philosopher-mystic, the religious thinker and even the philosopher pure
and simple.
For a time the new growth and impulse may
seem to take possession of a whole community as in Athens or in old Aryan
India. But these early dawns cannot endure in their purity, so long as the race
is not ready. There is a crystallisation, a lessening of the first impetus, a
new growth of infrarational forms in which the thought or the spirituality is
overgrown with, inferior accretions or it is imbedded in the form and may even
die in it, while the tradition of the living knowledge, the loftier life and
activity remains the property of the higher classes, or a highest class. The
multitude remains infrarational in its habit of mind, though perhaps it may still
keep in capacity an enlivened intelligence or a profound or subtle spiritual
receptiveness as its gain from the past. So long as the hour of the rational
age has not arrived, the irrational period of society cannot be left behind;
and that arrival can only be when not a class or a few, but the multitude has
learned to think, to exercise its intelligence
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actively - it matters not
at first however imperfectly - upon their life, their needs, their rights; their duties, their aspirations
as human beings. Until then we have as the highest possible development a mixed
society, infrarational in the mass, but saved for civilisation by a higher
class whose business it is to seek after the reason and the spirit, to keep the
gains of mankind in these fields, to add to them, to enlighten and raise with
them as much as possible the life of the whole.
At this point we see that Nature in
her human mass tends to move forward slowly on her various lilies of active
mind and life towards a greater application of reason and spirituality which
shall at last bring near the possibility of a rational and, eventually, a
spiritual age of mankind. Her difficulties proceed from two sides. First, while
she originally developed thought and reason and spirituality by exceptional
individuals, now she develops them in the mass by exceptional communities or
nations, - at least in the relative sense of a nation governed, led and
progressively formed and educated by its intellectually or spiritually cultured
class or classes. But the exceptional nation touched on its higher levels by a
developed reason or spirituality or both, as were Greece and later Rome in
ancient Europe, India, China and Persia in ancient Asia, is surrounded or
neighboured by enormous masses of the old infrarational humanity and endangered
by this menacing proximity; for until a developed science comes in to redress
the balance, the barbarian has always a greater physical force and unexhausted
native power of aggression than the cultured peoples. At this stage the light
and power of civilisation always collapses in the end before the attack of the
outer darkness. Then ascending Nature has to train the conquerors more or less
slowly, with long difficulty and much loss and delay to develop among
themselves what their incursion has temporarily destroyed or impaired. In the
end humanity gains by the process; a greater mass of the nations is brought in,
a larger and more living force of progress is applied, a starting-point is
reached from which it can move to richer and more varied gains. But a certain
loss is always the price of this advance.
But even within the communities
themselves reason and spirituality at this stage are always hampered and
endangered by
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existing in a milieu and
atmosphere not their own. The elite, the classes in charge of these powers are
obliged to throw them into forms which the mass of human ignorance they lead
and rule will accept, and both reason and spirituality tend to be stifled by
these forms, to get stereotyped, fossilised, void of life, bound up from their
natural play. Secondly, since they are after all part of the mass, these higher
enlightened elements are them- selves much under the influence of their infrarational parts and do not, except in individuals, arrive at the entirely
free play of the reason or the free light of the spirit. Thirdly, there is
always the danger of these elements gravitating downward to the ignorance below
or even collapsing into it. Nature guards herself by various devices for
maintaining the tradition of intellectual and spiritual activity in the
favoured classes; here she makes it a point of honour for them to preserve and
promote the national culture, there she establishes a preservative system of
education and discipline. And in order that these things may not degenerate
into mere traditionalism, she brings in a series of intellectual or spiritual
movements which by their shock revivify the failing life and help to bring
about a broadening and an enlarging and to drive the dominant reason or
spirituality deeper down into the infrarational mass. Each movement indeed
tends to petrify after a shorter or longer activity, but a fresh shock, a new
wave arrives in time to save and regenerate. Finally, she reaches the point
when, all immediate danger of relapse overcome, she' can proceed to her next
decisive advance in the cycle of social evolution. This must take the form of
an attempt to universalise first of all the habit of reason and the application
of the intelligence and intelligent will to life. Thus is instituted the
rational age of human society, the great endeavour to bring the power of the
reason and intelligence to bear on all that we are and do and to organise in
their light and by their guiding force the entire existence of the
race.
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