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CHAPTER
VI
Man in the Universe
The Soul of man, a traveller, wanders in this cycle of Brahman, huge, a totality of lives, a totality of states, thinking itself
different from the Impeller of the journey. Accepted by Him, it attains its goal of Immortality.
Swetaswatara Upanishad.¹
THE progressive revelation of a great, a transcendent, a luminous Reality with the multitudinous relativities of this world that
we see and those other worlds that we do not see as means and material, condition and field, this would seem then to be the
meaning of the universe,—since meaning and aim it has and is neither a purposeless illusion nor a fortuitous accident. For
the same reasoning which leads us to conclude that world-existence is not a deceptive trick of Mind, justifies equally the
certainty that it is no blindly and helplessly self-existent mass of separate phenomenal existences clinging together and
struggling together as best they can in their orbit through eternity, no tremendous self-creation and self-impulsion of an
ignorant Force without any secret Intelligence within aware of its starting-point and its goal and guiding its process and its
motion. An existence, wholly self-aware and therefore entirely master of itself, possesses the phenomenal being in which it
is involved, realises itself in form, unfolds itself in the individual.
That luminous Emergence is
the dawn which the Aryan forefathers worshipped. Its fulfilled
perfection is that highest
step of the world-pervading Vishnu which they beheld as if an eye of
vision extended in the purest heavens of the Mind. For
it exists already as an all-revealing and all-guiding Truth of things
which watches over the world and attracts mortal man,
first without the knowledge of his conscious mind, by the general march
of Nature, but at last consciously by a progressive
awakening and self-enlargement, to his divine ascension. The ascent to
the divine Life is the human journey, the Work of
works, the acceptable Sacrifice. This alone is man's real business in
the world and the
1 I. 6
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justification of his existence, without which he would be only an insect crawling among other ephemeral insects on a speck
of surface mud and water which has managed to form itself amid the appalling immensities of the physical universe.
This Truth of things that
has to emerge out of the phenomenal world's contradictions is declared
to be an infinite Bliss
and self-conscious Existence, the same everywhere, in all things, in
all times and beyond Time, and aware of itself behind all
these phenomena by whose intensest vibrations of activity or by whose
largest totality it can never be entirely expressed or
in any way limited; for it is self-existent and does not depend for its
being upon its manifestations. They represent it, but do
not exhaust it; point to it, but do not reveal it. It is revealed only
to itself within their forms. The conscious existence involved
in the form comes, as it evolves, to know itself by intuition, by
self-vision, by self-experience. It becomes itself in the world
by knowing itself; it knows itself by becoming itself. Thus possessed
of itself inwardly, it imparts also to its forms and modes
the conscious delight of Sachchidananda. This becoming of the infinite
Bliss-Existence-Consciousness in mind and life and
body,—for independent of them it exists eternally,—is the
transfiguration intended and the utility of individual existence.
Through the individual it manifests in relation even as of itself it
exists in identity.
The Unknowable knowing
itself as Sachchidananda is the one supreme affirmation of Vedanta; it
contains all the others
or on it they depend. This is the one veritable experience that remains
when all appearances have been accounted for
negatively by the elimination of their shapes and coverings or
positively by the reduction of their names and forms to the
constant truth that they contain. For fulfilment of life or for
transcendence of life, and whether purity, calm and freedom in
the spirit be our aim or puissance, joy and perfection, Sachchidananda
is the unknown, omnipresent, indispensable term for which the human
consciousness, whether in knowledge and sentiment or in sensation and
action, is eternally seeking.
The universe and the
individual are the two essential appearances into which the Unknowable descends
and through which it has to be approached; for other intermediate collectivities
are
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born only of their interaction. This descent of the supreme Reality is in its nature a self-concealing; and in the descent there
are successive levels, in the concealing successive veils. Necessarily, the revelation takes the form of an ascent; and
necessarily also the ascent and the revelation are both progressive. For each successive level in the descent of the Divine is
to man a stage in an ascension; each veil that hides the unknown God becomes for the God-lover and God-seeker an
instrument of His unveiling. Out of the rhythmic slumber of material Nature unconscious of the Soul and the Idea that
maintain the ordered activities of her energy even in her dumb and mighty material trance, the world struggles into the more
quick, varied and disordered rhythm of Life labouring on the verges of self-consciousness. Out of Life it struggles upward
into Mind in which the unit becomes awake to itself and its world, and in that awakening the universe gains the leverage it
required for its supreme work, it gains self-conscious individuality. But Mind takes up the work to continue, not to complete
it. It is a labourer of acute but limited intelligence who takes the confused materials offered by Life and, having improved,
adapted, varied, classified according to its power, hands them over to the supreme Artist of our divine manhood. That Artist
dwells in Supermind; for Supermind is Superman. Therefore our world has yet to climb beyond Mind to a higher principle, a
higher status, a higher dynamism in which universe and individual become aware of and possess that which they both are
and therefore stand explained to each other, in harmony with each other, unified.
The disorders of life and
mind cease by discerning the secret of a more perfect order than the
physical. Matter below
life and mind contains in itself the balance between a perfect poise of
tranquillity and the action of an immeasurable energy, but does not
possess that which it contains. Its peace wears the dull mask of an
obscure inertia, a sleep of unconsciousness or rather of a drugged and
imprisoned consciousness. Driven by a force which is its real self but
whose sense it cannot yet seize nor share, it has not the awakened joy
of its own harmonious energies.
Life and mind awaken to the sense of
this want in the form
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of a striving and seeking ignorance and a troubled
and baffled desire which are the first steps towards self-knowledge and
self-fulfilment. But where then is the kingdom of their
self-fulfilling? It comes to them by the exceeding of themselves.
Beyond life and mind we recover consciously in its divine truth that
which the balance of material Nature grossly
represented,—a tranquillity which is neither inertia nor a sealed
trance of consciousness but the concentration of an absolute
force and an absolute self-awareness, and an action of immeasurable
energy which is at the same time an out-thrilling of
ineffable bliss because its every act is the expression, not of a want
and an ignorant straining, but of an absolute peace and
self-mastery. In that attainment our ignorance realises the light of
which it was a darkened or a partial reflection; our desires
cease in the plenitude and fulfilment towards which even in their most
brute material forms they were an obscure and fallen
aspiration.
The universe and the
individual are necessary to each other in their ascent. Always indeed
they exist for each other and
profit by each other. Universe is a diffusion of the divine All in
infinite Space and Time, the individual its concentration
within limits of Space and Time. Universe seeks in infinite extension
the divine totality it feels itself to be but cannot entirely realise;
for in extension existence drives at a pluralistic sum of itself which
can neither be the primal nor the final unit, but
only a recurring decimal without end or beginning. Therefore it creates
in itself a self-conscious concentration of the All
through which it can aspire. In the conscious individual Prakriti turns
back to perceive Purusha, World seeks after Self; God
having entirely become Nature, Nature seeks to become progressively God.
On the other hand, it is by means of the universe that the individual is impelled to realise himself. Not only is it his
foundation, his means, his field, the stuff of the divine Work; but also, since the concentration of the universal Life which he
is takes place within limits and is not like the intensive unity of Brahman free from all conception of bound and term, he must
necessarily universalise and impersonalise himself in order to manifest the divine All which is his reality. Yet is he called
upon to preserve, even when he most extends himself in universality of
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consciousness, a mysterious transcendent something of which his sense of personality gives him an obscure and egoistic
representation. Otherwise he has missed his goal, the problem set to him has not been solved, the divine work for which he
accepted birth has not been done.
The universe comes to the
individual as Life,—a dynamism the entire secret of which he has to
master and a mass of
colliding results, a whirl of potential energies out of which he has to
disengage some supreme order and some yet unrealised
harmony. This is after all the real sense of man's progress. It is not
merely a restatement in slightly different terms of what
physical Nature has already accomplished. Nor can the ideal of human
life be simply the animal repeated on a higher scale
of mentality. Otherwise, any system or order which assured a tolerable
well-being and a moderate mental satisfaction would
have stayed our advance. The animal is satisfied with a modicum of
necessity; the gods are content with their splendours.
But man cannot rest permanently until he reaches some highest good. He
is the greatest of living beings because he is the
most discontented, because he feels most the pressure of limitations.
He alone, perhaps, is capable of being seized by the
divine frenzy for a remote ideal.
To the Life-Spirit,
therefore, the individual in whom its potentialities centre is
pre-eminently Man, the Purusha. It is the
Son of Man who is supremely capable of incarnating God. This Man is the
Manu, the thinker, the Manomaya Purusha,
mental person or soul in mind of the ancient sages. No mere superior
mammal is he, but a conceptive soul basing itself on
the animal body in Matter. He is conscious Name or Numen accepting and
utilising form as a medium through which Person
can deal with substance. The animal life emerging out of Matter is only
the inferior term of his existence. The life of
thought, feeling, will, conscious impulsion, that which we name in its
totality Mind, that which strives to seize upon Matter
and its vital energies and subject them to the law of its own
progressive transformation, is the middle term in which he takes
his effectual station. But there is equally a supreme term which Mind
in man searches after so that having found he may
affirm it in his mental
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and bodily existence. This practical affirmation of
something essentially superior to his present self is the basis of the
divine
life in the human being.
Awakened to a profounder
self-knowledge than his first mental idea of himself, Man begins to
conceive some formula
and to perceive some appearance of the thing that he has to affirm. But
it appears to him as if poised between two
negations of itself. If, beyond his present attainment, he perceives or
is touched by the power, light, bliss of a self-conscious
infinite existence and translates his thought or his experience of it
into terms convenient for his mentality,—Infinity,
Omniscience, Omnipotence, Immortality, Freedom, Love, Beatitude,
God,—yet does this sun of his seeing appear to shine
between a double Night,—a darkness below, a mightier darkness beyond.
For when he strives to know it utterly, it seems to
pass into something which neither any one of these terms nor the sum of
them can at all represent. His mind at last negates
God for a Beyond, or at least it seems to find God transcending
Himself, denying Himself to the conception. Here also, in
the world, in himself, and around himself, he is met always by the
opposites of his affirmation. Death is ever with him,
limitation invests his being and his experience, error, inconscience,
weakness, inertia, grief, pain, evil are constant oppressors
of his effort. Here also he is driven to deny God, or at least the
Divine seems to negate or to hide itself in some appearance
or outcome which is other than its true and eternal reality.
And the terms of this denial are not, like that other and remoter negation, inconceivable and therefore naturally
mysterious, unknowable to his mind, but appear to be knowable, known, definite,—and still mysterious. He knows not what
they are, why they exist, how they came into being. He sees their processes as they affect and appear to him; he cannot
fathom their essential reality.
Perhaps they are
unfathomable, perhaps they also are really unknowable in their essence?
Or, it may be, they have no
essential reality,—are an illusion, Asat, non-being. The superior
Negation appears to us sometimes as a Nihil, a
Non-Existence; this inferior negation may also be, in its essence, a
Nihil, a non-
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existence. But as we have already put away from us
this evasion of the difficulty with regard to that higher, so also we
discard it for this inferior Asat. To deny entirely its reality or to
seek an escape from it as a mere disastrous illusion is to put
away from us the problem and to shun our work. For Life, these things
that seem to deny God, to be the opposites of
Sachchidananda, are real, even if they turn out to be temporary. They
and their opposites, good, knowledge, joy, pleasure,
life, survival, strength, power, increase, are the very material of her
workings.
It is probable indeed that
they are the result or rather the inseparable accompaniments, not of an
illusion, but of a wrong
relation, wrong because it is founded on a false view of what the
individual is in the universe and therefore a false attitude
both towards God and Nature, towards self and environment. Because that
which he has become is out of harmony both
with what the world of his habitation is and what he himself should be
and is to be, therefore man is subject to these
contradictions of the secret Truth of things. In that case they are not
the punishment of a fall, but the conditions of a
progress. They are the first elements of the work he has to fulfil, the
price he has to pay for the crown which he hopes to
win, the narrow way by which Nature escapes out of Matter into
consciousness; they are at once her ransom and her
stock.
For out of these false
relations and by their aid the true have to be found. By the Ignorance
we have to cross over
death. So too the Veda speaks cryptically of energies that are like
women evil in impulse, wandering from the path, doing
hurt to their Lord, which yet, though themselves false and unhappy,
build up in the end “this vast Truth”, the Truth that is the
Bliss. It would be, then, not when he has excised the evil in Nature
out of himself by an act of moral surgery or parted with
life by an abhorrent recoil, but when he has turned Death into a more
perfect life, lifted the small things of the human
limitation into the great things of the divine vastness, transformed
suffering into beatitude, converted evil into its proper good,
translated error and falsehood into their secret truth that the
sacrifice will be accomplished, the journey done and Heaven
and Earth equalised join hands in the bliss of the Supreme.
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Yet how can such contraries pass into each other? By what alchemy shall this lead of mortality be turned into that gold
of divine Being? But if they are not in their essence contraries? If they are manifestations of one Reality, identical in
substance? Then indeed a divine transmutation becomes conceivable.
We have seen that the
Non-Being beyond may well be an inconceivable existence and perhaps an
ineffable Bliss. At
least the Nirvana of Buddhism which formulated one most luminous effort
of man to reach and to rest in this highest
Non-Existence, represents itself in the psychology of the liberated yet
upon earth as an unspeakable peace and gladness; its
practical effect is the extinction of all suffering through the
disappearance of all egoistic idea or sensation and the nearest
we can get to a positive conception of it is that it is some
inexpressible Beatitude (if the name or any name can be applied to
a peace so void of contents) into which even the notion of
self-existence seems to be swallowed up and disappear. It is a
Sachchidananda to which we dare no longer apply even the supreme terms
of Sat, of Chit and of Ananda. For all terms are
annulled and all cognitive experience is overpassed.
On the other hand, we have
hazarded the suggestion that since all is one Reality, this inferior
negation also, this other
contradiction or non-existence of Sachchidananda is none other than
Sachchidananda itself. It is capable of being conceived
by the intellect, perceived in the vision, even received through the
sensations as verily that which it seems to deny, and such
would it always be to our conscious experience if things were not
falsified by some great fundamental error, some
possessing and compelling Ignorance, Maya or Avidya. In this sense a
solution might be sought, not perhaps a satisfying metaphysical
solution for the logical mind,—for we are standing on the border-line
of the unknowable, the ineffable and straining our eyes beyond,—but a
sufficient basis in experience for the practice of the divine life.
To do this we must dare to go below
the clear surfaces of things on which the mind loves to dwell, to tempt the vast
and obscure, to penetrate the unfathomable depths of consciousness and identify
ourselves with states of being that are not our own.
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Human language is a poor help in such a search, but at least
we may find in it some symbols and figures, return with some just expressible
hints which will help the light of the soul and throw upon the mind some
reflection of the ineffable design.
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