CHAPTER
XVII
Nature's
Law in Our Progress - Unity in Diversity, Law and Liberty
FOR man alone of terrestrial creatures
to live rightly involves the necessity of knowing rightly, whether, as
rationalism pretends, by the sole or dominant instrumentation of his reason or,
more largely and complexly, by the sum of his faculties; and what he has to
know is the true nature of being and its constant self-effectuation in the
values of life, in less abstract language the law of Nature and especially of
his own nature, the forces within him and around him and their right utilisation for his own greater perfection and happiness or for that and the
greater perfection and happiness of his fellow creatures. In the old phrase his
business is to learn to live according to Nature. But Nature can no longer be
imaged, as once it was, as an eternal right rule from which man has wandered,
since it is rather a thing itself changing, progressing, evolving, ascending
from height to more elevated height, widening from limit to broader limit of
its own possibilities. Yet in all this changing there are certain eternal
principles or truths of being which re- main the same and upon them as
bed-rock, with them as a primary material and within them as a framework, our
progress and perfection are compelled to take place. Otherwise there would be
an infinite chaos and not a world ordered even in the clash of its forces.
The
subhuman life of animal and plant is not subjected to this necessity of
knowledge nor of that which is the necessary accompaniment of knowledge, a
conscious will impelled always to execute what knowledge perceives. By this
exemption it is saved from an immense amount of error, deformation and disease,
for it lives spontaneously according to Nature, its knowledge and will are hers
and incapable, whether conscient or subconscient, of variation from her laws
and dictates. Man
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seems, on the contrary, to possess a power of turning
his mind and will upon Nature and a possibility of governing her movement, even
of varying from the course she dictates to him. But here there is really a
deformative trick of language. For man's mentality is also a part of Nature;
his mentality is even the most important, if not the largest part of his
nature. It is, we may say, Nature become partly conscious of her own laws and
forces, conscious of her struggle of progression and inspired with the
conscious will to impose a higher and higher law on her own processes of life
and being. In subhuman life there is a vital and physical struggle, but no
mental conflict. Man is subjected to this mental conflict and is therefore at
war not only with others but with himself; and because he is capable of this
war with himself, he is also capable of that which is denied to the animal, of
an inner evolution, a progression from higher to higher type, a constant
self-transcending.
This evolution takes place at
present by a conflict and progress of ideas applied to life. In their primary
aspect human ideas of life are simply a mental translation of the forces and tendencies
of life itself as they emerge in the form of needs, desires and interests. The
human mind has a practical intelligence more or less clear and exact which
takes these things into account and gives to one and another a greater or less
value according to its own experience, preference and judgment. Some the man
accepts and helps in their growth by his will and intelligence, others he
rejects, discourages and even succeeds in eliminating. But from this elementary
process there emerges a second and more advanced character of man's ideas about
life; he passes beyond the mere mental translation and ready dynamic handling
to a regulated valuation of the forces and tendencies that have emerged or are
emerging in him and his environment. He studies them as fixed processes and
rules of Nature and endeavours to understand their law and norm. He tries to
determine the laws of his mind and life and body, the law and rule of the facts
and forces about him that constitute his environment and determine the field and
the mould of his action. Since we are imperfect and evolutionary beings, this
study of the laws of life is bound to envisage two aspects: it perceives the
rule of what is and the rule
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of what mayor ought to be, the law of our actualities
and the law of our potentialities. The latter takes for the human intellect
which tends always to an arbitrary and emphatic statement of things, the form
of a fixed ideal standard or set of principles from which our actual life is a
fall and deviation or towards which it is a progress and aspiration.
The evolutionary idea of Nature
and life brings us to a pro- founder view. Both what is and what may be are
expressions of the same constant facts
of existence and forces or powers of our Nature from which we cannot and are
not meant to escape, since all life is Nature fulfilling itself and not Nature
destroying or denying itself; but we may raise and we are intended to raise,
change and widen the forms, arrangements and values of these constant facts and
forces of our nature and existence, and in the course of our progress the
change and perfectioning may amount to what seems a radical transformation,
although nothing essential is altered. Our actualities are the form and value
or power of expression to which
our nature and life have attained; their norm or law is the fixed arrangement
and process proper to that stage of evolution. Our potentialities point us to a
new form, value, power of expression with their new and appropriate arrangement
and process which is their proper law and norm. Standing thus between the
actual and the possible, our intellect tends to mistake present law and form
for the eternal law of our nature and existence and regard any change as a
deviation and fall or else, on the contrary, to mistake some future and
potential law and form for our ideal rule of life and all actual deviation from that as an error or sin of our
nature. In reality, only that is eternal which is constant through all changes
and our ideal can be no more than a progressive expression of it. Only the
utmost limit of height, wideness and fullness of self- expression possible to
man, if any such limit there be, could be regarded, did we know of it, - and as
yet we do not know our utmost possibilities, - as the eternal ideal.
Whatever
the ideas or ideals which the human mind extracts from life or tries to apply
to life, they can be nothing but the expression of that life itself as it
attempts to find more and more and fix higher and higher its own law and
realise its potentialities.
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Our mentality represents the conscious part of the
movement of Nature in this progressive self-realisation and self-fulfilment of
the values and potentialities of her human way of living. If that mentality
were perfect, it would be one in its knowledge and will with the totality of
the secret Knowledge and Will which she is trying to bring to the surface and
there would be no mental conflict. For we should then be able to identify
ourself with her movement, know her aim and follow intelligently her course, - realising the truth on which the
Gita lays stress that it is Nature alone that acts and the movements of our
mind and life are only the action of her modes. The subhuman life vitally,
instinctively and mechanically does this very thing, lives according to Nature
within the limits of its type and is free from internal conflict though not
from conflict with other life. A superhuman life would reach consciously this
perfection, make the secret Knowledge and Will in things its own and fulfil
itself through Nature by her free, spontaneous and harmonious movement un-
hasting, unresting, towards that full development which is her inherent and
therefore her predestined aim. Actually, because our mentality is imperfect, we
catch only a glimpse of her tendencies and objects and each glimpse we get we
erect into an absolute principle or ideal theory of our life and conduct; we
see only one side of her process and put that forward as the whole and perfect
system which must govern our ordering of our life. Working through the
imperfect individual and still more imperfect collective mind, she raises up
the facts and powers of our existence as opposing principles and forces to
which we attach ourselves through our intellect and emotions, and favouring and
depressing now this and now another she leads them in the mind of man through
struggle and conflict towards a mutual knowledge and the sense of their mutual
necessity and towards a progressively right relation and synthesis of their
potentialities which is represented in an increasing harmony and combination of
realised powers in the elastic potentiality of human life.
The social
evolution of the human race is necessarily a development of the relations
between three constant factors, individuals, communities of various sorts and
mankind. Each seeks
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its own fulfilment and satisfaction, but each is
compelled to develop them not independently but in relation to the others. The
first natural aim of the individual must be his own inner growth and fullness
and its expression in his outer life; but this he can only accomplish through
his relations with other individuals, to the various kinds of community
religious, social, cultural and political to which he belongs and to the idea
and need of humanity at large. The community must seek its own fulfilment, but
whatever its strength of mass consciousness and collective organisation, can
accomplish its growth only through its individuals under the stress of the
circumstances set for it by its environment and subject to the conditions
imposed by its relations to other communities and individuals and to humanity
at large. Mankind as a whole has at present no consciously. organised common
life; it has only an inchoate organisation determined much more by
circumstances than by human intelligence and will. And yet the idea and the
fact of our common human existence, nature, destiny has always exercised its
strong influence on human thought and action. One of the chief preoccupations
of ethics and religion has been the obligations of man to mankind. The pressure
of the large movements and fluctuations of the race has always affected the
destinies of its separate communities and there has been a constant
return-pressure of separate communities
social, cultural, political, religious to expand and include, if it might be,
the totality of the race. And if or when the whole of humanity arrives at an
organised common life and seeks a common fulfilment and satisfaction, it can
only do it by means of the relation of this whole to its parts and by the aid
of the expanding life of individual human beings and of the communities whose
progress constitutes the larger terms of the life of the race.
Nature works always through these three terms
and none of them can be abolished. She starts from the visible manifestation of
the one and the many, from the totality and its constituent units and creates
intermediary unities between the two without which there can be no full
development either of the totality or of the units. In the life-type itself she
creates always the three terms of genus, species and individual. But while in
the animal life she
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is satisfied to separate rigidly and group suinmarily,
in the human she strives, on the contrary, to override the divisions she has
made and lead the whole kind to the sense of unity and the realisation of
oneness. Men's communities are formed not so much by the instinctive herding
together of a number of individuals of the same genus or species as by local
association, community of interests and community of ideas; and these limits
tend always to be overcome in the widening of human thoughts and sympathies
brought about by the closer intermingling of races, nations, interests, ideas,
cultures. Still, if overcome in their separatism, they are not abolished in
their fact, because they repose on an essential principle of Nature, - diversity in unity. Therefore it
would seem that the ideal or ultimate aim of Nature must be to develop the
individual and all individuals to their full capacity, to develop the community
and all communities to the full expression of that many-sided existence and
potentiality which their differences were created to express, and to evolve the
united life of mankind to its full common capacity and satisfaction, not by
suppression of the fullness of life of the individual or the smaller
commonalty, but by full advantage taken of the diversity which they develop.
This would seem the soundest way to increase the total riches of mankind and
throw them into a fund of common possession and enjoyment.
The united progress of mankind would thus be realised by a general principle of
interchange and assimilation between individual and individual and again
between individual and community, between community and community and again
between the smaller commonalty and the totality of mankind, between the common
life and consciousness of mankind and its freely developing communal and
individual constituents. As a matter of fact, although this interchange is what
Nature even now contrives to bring about to a certain extent, life is far from
being governed by such a principle of free and harmonious mutuality. There is a
struggle, an opposition of ideas, impulses and interests, an at- tempt of each
to profit by various kinds of war on the others, by a kind of intellectual,
vital, physical robbery and theft or even by the suppression, devouring,
digestion of its fellows rather than by a free and rich interchange. This is
the aspect of life which hu-
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manity
in its highest thought and aspiration knows that it has to transcend, but has
either not yet discovered the right means or else has not had the force to
apply it. It now endeavours instead to get rid of strife and the disorders of
growth by a strong subordination or servitude of the life of the individual to
the life of the community and, logically, it will be led to the attempt to get
rid of strife between communities by a strong subordination or servitude of the
life of the community to the united and organised life of the human race. To
remove freedom in order to get rid of disorder, strife and waste, to remove
diversity in order to get rid of separatism and jarring complexities is the
impulse of order and regimentation by which the arbitrary rigidity of the
intellectual reason seeks to substitute its straight line for the difficult
curves of the process of Nature.
But freedom
is as necessary to life as law and regime; diversity is as necessary as unity
to our true completeness. Existence is only one in its essence and totality, in
its play it is necessarily multiform. Absolute uniformity would mean the
cessation of life, while on the other hand, the vigour of the pulse of life may
be measured by the richness of the diversities which it creates. At the same
time, while diversity is essential for power and fruitfulness of life, unity is
necessary for its order, arrangement and stability. Unity we must create, but
not necessarily uniformity. If man could realise a perfect spiritual unity, no
sort of uniformity would be necessary; for the utmost play of diversity would
be securely possible on that foundation. If again he could realise a secure,
clear, firmly-held unity in the principle, a rich, even an unlimited diversity
in its application might be possible without any fear of disorder, confusion or
strife. Because he cannot do either of these things he is tempted always to
substitute uniformity for real unity. While the life-power in man demands diversity,
his reason favours uniformity. It prefers it because uniformity gives him a
strong and ready illusion of unity in place of the real oneness at which it is
so much more difficult to arrive. It prefers it, secondly, because uniformity
makes easy for him the otherwise difficult business of law, order and
regimentation. It prefers it too because the impulse of the mind in man is to
make every considerable diversity an excuse for strife and separation
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and therefore uniformity seems to him the one secure
and easy way to unification. Morever, uniformity in anyone direction or
department of life helps him to economise his energies for development in other
directions. If he can standardise his economic existence and escape from its
problems, he is likely to have more leisure and room to attend to his
intellectual and cultural growth. Or again, if he standardises his whole social
existence and rejects its farther possible problems, he is likely to have peace
and a free mind to attend more energetically to his spiritual development. Even
here, however, the complex unity of existence asserts its truth: in the end
man's total intellectual and cultural growth suffers by social immobility, - by any restriction or poverty of his
economic life; the spiritual existence of the race, if it attains to remote
heights, weakens at last in its richness and continued sources of vivacity when
it depends on a too standardised and regimented society; the inertia from below
rises and touches even the summits.
Owing to
the defects of our mentality uniformity has to a certain extent to be admitted
and sought after; still the real aim of Nature is a true unity supporting a
rich diversity. Her secret is clear enough from the fact that though she moulds
on one general plan, she insists always on an infinite variation. The plan of
the human form is one, yet no two human beings are precisely alike in their
physical characteristics. Human nature is one in its constituents and its grand
lines, but no two human beings are precisely alike in their temperament,
characteristics and psychological substance. All life is one in its essential
plan and principle; even the plant is a recognisable brother of the animal, but
the unity of life admits and encourages an infinite variety of types. The
natural variation of human communities from each other proceeds on the same
plan as the variation of individuals; each develops its own character, variant
principle, natural law. This variation and fundamental following of its own
separate law is necessary to its life, but it is equally necessary to the
healthy total life of mankind. For the principle of variation does not prevent
free interchange, does not oppose the enrichment of all from a common stock and
of the common stock by all which we have seen to be the ideal principle of
existence; on the contrary, without
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a secure variation such interchange and mutual
assimilation would be out of the question. Therefore we see that in this harmony
between our unity and our diversity lies the secret of life; Nature insists
equally in all her works upon unity and upon variation. We shall find that a
real spiritual and psychological unity can allow a free diversity and dispense
with all but the minimum of uniformity which is sufficient to embody the
community of nature and of essential principle. Until we can arrive at that
perfection, the method of uniformity has to be applied, but we must not over
apply it on peril of discouraging life in the very sources of its power,
richness and sane natural self-unfolding.
The quarrel
between law and liberty stands on the same ground and moves to the same
solution. The diversity, the variation must be a free variation. Nature does
not manufacture, does not impose a pattern or a rule from outside; she impels
life to grow from within and to assert its own natural law and development
modified only by its commerce with its environment. All liberty, individual,
national, religious, social, ethical, takes its ground upon this fundamental
principle of our existence. By liberty we mean the freedom to obey the law of
our being, to grow to our natural self-fulfilment, to find out naturally and
freely our harmony with our environment. The dangers and disadvantages of
liberty, the disorder, strife, waste and confusion to which its wrong use leads
are indeed obvious. But they arise from the absence or defect of the sense of
unity between individual and individual, between community and community, which
pushes them to assert themselves at the expense of each other instead of
growing by mutual help and interchange and to assert freedom for themselves in
the very act of encroaching on the free development of their fellows. If a
real, a spiritual and psycho- logical unity were effectuated, liberty would
have no perils and disadvantages; for free individuals enamoured of unity would
be compelled by themselves, by their own need, to accommodate perfectly their
own growth with the growth of their fellows and would not feel themselves
complete except in the free growth of others. Because of our present
imperfection and the ignorance of our mind and will, law and regimentation have
to be called in to restrain and to compel from outside. The facile advantages
of a
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strong law and compulsion are obvious, but equally
great are the disadvantages. Such perfection as it succeeds in creating tends
to be mechanical and even the order it imposes turns out to be artificial and
liable to break down if the yoke is loosened or the restraining grasp
withdrawn. Carried too far, an imposed order discourages the principle of
natural growth which is the true method of life and may even slay the capacity
for real growth. We repress and overstandardise life at our peril; by
over-regimentation we crush Nature's initiative and habit of intuitive
self-adaptation. Dwarfed or robbed of elasticity, the devitalised
individuality, even while it seems outwardly fair and symmetrical, perishes
from within. Better anarchy than the long continuance of a law which is not our
own or which our real nature cannot assimilate. And all repressive or
preventive law is only a make- shift, a substitute for the true law which must
develop from within and be not a check on liberty, but its outward image and
visible expression. Human society progresses really and vitally in proportion
as law becomes the child of freedom; it will reach its perfection when, man
having learned to know and become spiritually one with his fellow-man, the
spontaneous law of his society exists only as the outward mould of his
self-governed inner liberty.
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