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CHAPTER
III
The Two Negations
II. THE REFUSAL OF THE ASCETIC
All this is the Brahman; this Self is the Brahman and the Self is fourfold.
Beyond relation, featureless, unthinkable, in which all is still.
Mandukya
Upanishad.¹
AND still there is a beyond.
For on the other side of the cosmic consciousness there is, attainable to us, a consciousness yet more
transcendent,—transcendent not only of the ego, but of the Cosmos itself,—against which the universe seems to stand out
like a petty picture against an immeasurable background. That supports the universal activity,—or perhaps only tolerates it;
It embraces Life with Its vastness,—or else rejects it from Its infinitude.
If the materialist is justified from his point of view in insisting on
Matter as reality, the relative world as the sole thing of
which we can in some sort be sure and the Beyond as wholly unknowable,
if not indeed non-existent, a dream of the mind,
an abstraction of Thought divorcing itself from reality, so also is the
Sannyasin, enamoured of that Beyond, justified from his
point of view in insisting on pure Spirit as the reality, the one thing
free from change, birth, death, and the relative as a
creation of the mind and the senses, a dream, an abstraction in the
contrary sense of Mentality withdrawing from the pure
and eternal Knowledge.
What justification, of logic or of experience, can be asserted in
support of the one extreme which cannot be met by an
equally cogent logic and an equally valid experience at the other end?
The world of Matter is affirmed by the experience of
the physical senses which, because they are themselves unable to
perceive anything immaterial or not organised as gross
Matter, would persuade us that the suprasensible is the unreal. This
vulgar or
¹Verses 2, 7.
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rustic error of our corporeal organs does not gain in validity by being promoted into the domain of philosophical reasoning.
Obviously, their pretension is unfounded. Even in the world of Matter there are existences of which the physical senses are
incapable of taking cognisance. Yet the denial of the suprasensible as necessarily an illusion or a hallucination depends on
this constant sensuous association of the real with the materially perceptible, which is itself a hallucination. Assuming
throughout what it seeks to establish, it has the vice of the argument in a circle and can have no validity for an impartial
reasoning.
Not only are there physical
realities which are suprasensible, but, if evidence and experience are
at all a test of truth,
there are also senses which are supraphysical¹
and can not only take cognisance of the realities of the material world without the aid of the corporeal sense-organs, but can
bring us into contact with other realities, supraphysical and belonging to another world—included, that is to say, in an
organisation of conscious experiences that are dependent on some other principle than the gross Matter of which our suns
and earths seem to be made.
Constantly asserted by
human experience and belief since the origins of thought, this truth,
now that the necessity of an
exclusive preoccupation with the secrets of the material world no
longer exists, begins to be justified by new-born forms of
scientific research. The increasing evidences, of which only the most
obvious and outward are established under the name
of telepathy with its cognate phenomena, cannot long be resisted except
by minds shut up in the brilliant shell of the past, by
intellects limited in spite of their acuteness through the limitation
of their field of experience and inquiry, or by those who
confuse enlightenment and reason with the faithful repetition of the
formulas left to us from a bygone century and the
jealous conservation of dead or dying intellectual dogmas.
It is true that the glimpse of supraphysical realities acquired by
methodical research has been imperfect and is yet
ill-affirmed; for the methods used are still crude and defective. But
these rediscovered subtle senses have at least been
found to be true
¹ Sūksma indriya, subtle organs, existing in the subtle body (suksma deha), and the means of subtle vision and
experience (sūksma drsti).
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witnesses to physical facts beyond the range of the corporeal organs. There is no justification, then, for scouting them as
false witnesses when they testify to supraphysical facts beyond the domain of the material organisation of consciousness.
Like all evidence, like the evidence of the physical senses themselves, their testimony has to be controlled, scrutinised and
arranged by the reason, rightly translated and rightly related, and their field, laws and processes determined. But the truth of
great ranges of experience whose objects exist in a more subtle substance and are perceived by more subtle instruments
than those of gross physical Matter, claims in the end the same validity as the truth of the material universe. The worlds
beyond exist: they have their universal rhythm, their grand lines and formations, their self-existent laws and mighty energies,
their just and luminous means of knowledge. And here on our physical existence and in our physical body they exercise their
influences; here also they organise their means of manifestation and commission their messengers and their witnesses.
But the worlds are only frames for our experience, the senses only instruments of experience and conveniences.
Consciousness is the great underlying fact, the universal witness for whom the world is a field, the senses instruments. To
that witness the worlds and their objects appeal for their reality and for the one world or the many, for the physical equally
with the supraphysical we have no other evidence that they exist. It has been argued that this is no relation peculiar to the
constitution of humanity and its outlook upon an objective world, but the very nature of existence itself; all phenomenal
existence consists of an observing consciousness and an active objectivity, and the Action cannot proceed without the
Witness because the universe exists only in or for the consciousness that observes and has no independent reality. It has
been argued in reply that the material universe enjoys an eternal self-existence; it was here before life and mind made their
appearance: it will survive after they have disappeared and no longer trouble with their transient strivings and limited
thoughts the eternal and inconscient rhythm of the suns. The difference, so metaphysical in appearance, is yet of the utmost
practical import, for it determines the whole
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outlook of man upon life, the goal that he shall
assign for his efforts and the field in which he shall circumscribe his
energies.
For it raises the question of the reality of cosmic existence and, more
important still, the question of the value of human life.
If we push the materialist
conclusion far enough, we arrive at an insignificance and unreality in
the life of the individual
and the race which leaves us, logically, the option between either a
feverish effort of the individual to snatch what he may
from a transient existence, to “live his life”, as it is said, or a
dispassionate and objectless service of the race and the
individual, knowing well that the latter is a transient fiction of the
nervous mentality and the former only a little more
long-lived collective form of the same regular nervous spasm of Matter.
We work or enjoy under the impulsion of a material
energy which deceives us with the brief delusion of life or with the
nobler delusion of an ethical aim and a mental
consummation. Materialism like spiritual Monism arrives at a Maya that
is and yet is not,—is, for it is present and
compelling, is not, for it is phenomenal and transitory in its works.
At the other end, if we stress too much the unreality of
the objective world, we arrive by a different road at similar but still
more trenchant conclusions,—the fictitious character of
the individual ego, the unreality and purposelessness of human
existence, the return into the Non-Being or the relationless
Absolute as the sole rational escape from the meaningless tangle of
phenomenal life.
And yet the question cannot
be solved by logic arguing on the data of our ordinary physical
existence; for in those data
there is always a hiatus of experience which renders all argument
inconclusive. We have, normally, neither any definitive
experience of a cosmic mind or supermind not bound up with the life of
the individual body, nor, on the other hand, any firm
limit of experience which would justify us in supposing that our
subjective self really depends upon the physical frame and
can neither survive it nor enlarge itself beyond the individual body.
Only by an extension of the field of our consciousness or
an unhoped-for increase in our instruments of knowledge can the ancient
quarrel be decided.
The extension of our consciousness, to be satisfying, must
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necessarily be an inner enlargement from the individual into the cosmic existence. For the Witness, if he exists, is not the
individual embodied mind born in the world, but that cosmic Consciousness embracing the universe and appearing as an
immanent Intelligence in all its works to which either world subsists eternally and really as Its own active existence or else
from which it is born and into which it disappears by an act of knowledge or by an act of conscious power. Not organised
mind, but that which, calm and eternal, broods equally in the living earth and the living human body and to which mind and
senses are dispensable instruments, is the Witness of cosmic existence and its Lord.
The possibility of a cosmic
consciousness in humanity is coming slowly to be admitted in modern
Psychology, like the
possibility of more elastic instruments of knowledge, although still
classified, even when its value and power are admitted, as
a hallucination. In the psychology of the East it has always been
recognised as a reality and the aim of our subjective
progress. The essence of the passage over to this goal is the exceeding
of the limits imposed on us by the ego-sense and at
least a partaking, at most an identification with the self-knowledge
which broods secret in all life and in all that seems to us
inanimate.
Entering into that Consciousness,
we may continue to dwell, like It, upon universal existence. Then we
become
aware—for all our terms of consciousness and even our sensational
experience begin to change,—of Matter as one
existence and of bodies as its formations in which the one existence
separates itself physically in the single body from itself
in all others and again by physical means establishes communication
between these multitudinous points of its being. Mind
we experience similarly, and Life also, as the same existence one in
its multiplicity, separating and reuniting itself in each
domain by means appropriate to that movement. And, if we choose, we can
proceed farther and, after passing through
many linking stages, become aware of a supermind whose universal
operation is the key to all lesser activities. Nor do we
become merely conscious of this cosmic existence, but likewise
conscious in it, receiving it in sensation, but also entering
into it in awareness. In it we live as we lived before in the
ego-sense, active, more and more in contact, even
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unified more and more with other minds, other lives, other bodies than the organism we call ourselves, producing effects not
only on our own moral and mental being and on the subjective being of others, but even on the physical world and its events
by means nearer to the divine than those possible to our egoistic capacity.
Real then to the man who has had
contact with it or lives in it, is this cosmic consciousness, with a
greater than the
physical reality; real in itself, real in its effects and works. And as
it is thus real to the world which is its own total
expression, so is the world real to it; but not as an independent
existence. For in that higher and less hampered experience
we perceive that consciousness and being are not different from each
other, but all being is a supreme consciousness, all
consciousness is self-existence, eternal in itself, real in its works
and neither a dream nor an evolution. The world is real
precisely because it exists only in consciousness; for it is a
Conscious Energy one with Being that creates it. It is the
existence of material form in its own right apart from the
self-illumined energy which assumes the form, that would be a
contradiction of the truth of things, a phantasmagoria, a nightmare, an
impossible falsehood.
But this conscious Being
which is the truth of the infinite supermind, is more than the universe
and lives independently in
Its own inexpressible infinity as well as in the cosmic harmonies.
World lives by That; That does not live by the world. And
as we can enter into the cosmic consciousness and be one with all
cosmic existence, so we can enter into the
world-transcending consciousness and become superior to all cosmic
existence. And then arises the question which first
occurred to us, whether this transcendence is necessarily also a
rejection. What relation has this universe to the Beyond?
For at the gates of the
Transcendent stands that mere and perfect Spirit described in the
Upanishads, luminous, pure,
sustaining the world but inactive in it, without sinews of energy,
without flaw of duality, without scar of division, unique,
identical, free from all appearance of relation and of
multiplicity,—the pure Self of the Adwaitins,¹
the inactive Brahman, the transcendent Silence. And the mind when it passes those gates
¹
The Vedantic Monists.
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suddenly, without intermediate transitions, receives
a sense of the unreality of the world and the sole reality of the
Silence
which is one of the most powerful and convincing experiences of which
the human mind is capable. Here, in the perception
of this pure Self or of the Non-Being behind it, we have the
starting-point for a second negation,—parallel at the other pole
to the materialistic, but more complete, more final, more perilous in
its effects on the individuals or collectivities that hear its
potent call to the wilderness,—the refusal of the ascetic.
It is this revolt of Spirit against Matter that for two thousand years, since Buddhism disturbed the balance of the old
Aryan world, has dominated increasingly the Indian mind. Not that the sense of the cosmic illusion is the whole of Indian
thought; there are other philosophical statements, other religious aspirations. Nor has some attempt at an adjustment
between the two terms been wanting even from the most extreme philosophies. But all have lived in the shadow of the great
Refusal and the final end of life for all is the garb of the ascetic. The general conception of existence has been permeated
with the Buddhistic theory of the chain of Karma and with the consequent antinomy of bondage and liberation, bondage by
birth, liberation by cessation from birth. Therefore all voices are joined in one great consensus that not in this world of the
dualities can there be our kingdom of heaven, but beyond, whether in the joys of the eternal Vrindavan¹or the high beatitude of Brahmaloka,²beyond all manifestations in some ineffable Nirvana³
or where all separate experience is lost in the featureless unity of the indefinable Existence. And through many centuries a
great army of shining witnesses, saints and teachers, names sacred to Indian memory and dominant in Indian imagination,
have borne always the same witness and swelled always the same lofty and distant appeal,—renunciation the sole path of
knowledge, acceptation of physical life the act of the ignorant, cessation from birth the right use of human birth, the call of
the Spirit, the recoil from Matter.
¹
Goloka, the Vaishnava heaven of eternal
Beauty and Bliss.
²The
highest state of pure existence, consciousness and beatitude attainable by the
soul without complete extinction in the Indefinable.
³
Extinction, not necessarily of all being, but of being as we know
it; extinction of ego, desire and egoistic action and mentality.
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For an age out of sympathy with
the ascetic spirit—and throughout all the rest of the world the hour of
the Anchorite
may seem to have passed or to be passing—it is easy to attribute this
great trend to the failing of vital energy in an ancient
race tired out by its burden, its once vast share in the common
advance, exhausted by its many-sided contribution to the sum
of human effort and human knowledge. But we have seen that it
corresponds to a truth of existence, a state of conscious realisation
which stands at the very summit of our possibility. In practice also
the ascetic spirit is an indispensable element in
human perfection and even its separate affirmation cannot be avoided so
long as the race has not at the other end liberated
its intellect and its vital habits from subjection to an always
insistent animalism.
We seek indeed a larger and
completer affirmation. We perceive that in the Indian ascetic ideal the
great Vedantic
formula, “One without a second”, has not been read sufficiently in the
light of that other formula equally imperative, “All this
is the Brahman”. The passionate aspiration of man upward to the Divine
has not been sufficiently related to the descending
movement of the Divine leaning downward to embrace eternally Its
manifestation. Its meaning in Matter has not been so
well understood as Its truth in the Spirit. The Reality which the
Sannyasin seeks has been grasped in its full height, but not,
as by the ancient Vedantins, in its full extent and comprehensiveness.
But in our completer affirmation we must not
minimise the part of the pure spiritual impulse. As we have seen how
greatly Materialism has served the ends of the Divine, so we must
acknowledge the still greater service rendered by Asceticism to Life.
We shall preserve the truths of material Science and its real utilities
in the final harmony, even if many or even if all of its existing forms
have to be broken or left aside. An even greater scruple of right
preservation must guide us in our dealing with the legacy, however
actually diminished or depreciated, of the Aryan past.
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