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CHAPTER
VIII
The Methods of Vedantic Knowledge
This secret Self in all beings is not apparent, but it is seen by means of the supreme reason, the subtle, by those who
have the subtle vision.
Katha Upanishad.¹
BUT what then is the working of this Sachchidananda in the world and by what process of things are the relations between
itself and the ego which figures it first formed, then led to their consummation? For on those relations and on the process
they follow depend the whole philosophy and practice of a divine life for man.
We arrive at the conception
and at the knowledge of a divine existence by exceeding the evidence of
the senses and
piercing beyond the walls of the physical mind. So long as we confine
ourselves to sense-evidence and the physical
consciousness, we can conceive nothing and know nothing except the
material world and its phenomena. But certain
faculties in us enable our mentality to arrive at conceptions which we
may indeed deduce by ratiocination or by imaginative
variation from the facts of the physical world as we see them, but
which are not warranted by any purely physical data or
any physical experience. The first of these instruments is the pure
reason.
Human reason has a double
action, mixed or dependent, pure or sovereign. Reason accepts a mixed
action when it
confines itself to the circle of our sensible experience, admits its
law as the final truth and concerns itself only with the study
of phenomenon, that is to say, with the appearances of things in their
relations, processes and utilities. This rational action is
incapable of knowing what is, it only knows what appears to be, it has
no plummet by which it can sound the depths of
being, it can only survey the field of becoming. Reason, on the other
hand, asserts its pure action, when accepting our
sensible experiences as a starting-point but refusing to be limited by
them it goes behind,
¹I. 3. 12.
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judges, works in its own right and strives to arrive at general and unalterable concepts which attach themselves not to the
appearances of things, but to that which stands behind their appearances. It may arrive at its result by direct judgment
passing immediately from the appearance to that which stands behind it and in that case the concept arrived at may seem to
be a result of the sensible experience and dependent upon it though it is really a perception of reason working in its own
right. But the perceptions of the pure reason may also—and this is their more characteristic action—use the experience
from which they start as a mere excuse and leave it far behind before they arrive at their result, so far that the result may
seem the direct contrary of that which our sensible experience wishes to dictate to us. This movement is legitimate and
indispensable, because our normal experience not only covers only a small part of universal fact, but even in the limits of its
own field uses instruments that are defective and gives us false weights and measures. It must be exceeded, put away to a
distance and its insistences often denied if we are to arrive at more adequate conceptions of the truth of things. To correct
the errors of the sense-mind by the use of reason is one of the most valuable powers developed by man and the chief cause
of his superiority among terrestrial beings.
The complete use of pure
reason brings us finally from physical to metaphysical knowledge. But
the concepts of
metaphysical knowledge do not in themselves fully satisfy the demand of
our integral being. They are indeed entirely
satisfactory to the pure reason itself, because they are the very stuff
of its own existence. But our nature sees things
through two eyes always, for it views them doubly as idea and as fact
and therefore every concept is incomplete for us and
to a part of our nature almost unreal until it becomes an experience.
But the truths which are now in question, are of an
order not subject to our normal experience. They are, in their nature,
“beyond the perception of the senses but seizable by
the perception of the reason”. Therefore, some other faculty of
experience is necessary by which the demand of our nature
can be fulfilled and this can only come, since we are dealing with the
supraphysical, by an extension of psychological
experience.
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In a sense all our
experience is psychological since even what we receive by the senses
has no meaning or value to us
till it is translated into the terms of the sense-mind, the Manas of
Indian philosophical terminology. Manas, say our
philosophers, is the sixth sense. But we may even say that it is the
only sense and that the others, vision, hearing, touch,
smell, taste are merely specialisations of the sense-mind which,
although it normally uses the sense-organs for the basis of
its experience, yet exceeds them and is capable of a direct experience
proper to its own inherent action. As a result
psychological experience, like the cognitions of the reason, is capable
in man of a double action, mixed or dependent, pure or
sovereign. Its mixed action takes place usually when the mind seeks to
become aware of the external world, the object; the
pure action when it seeks to become aware of itself, the subject. In
the former activity, it is dependent on the senses and
forms its perceptions in accordance with their evidence; in the latter
it acts in itself and is aware of things directly by a sort
of identity with them. We are thus aware of our emotions; we are aware
of anger, as has been acutely said, because we
become anger. We are thus aware also of our own existence; and here the
nature of experience as knowledge by identity
becomes apparent. In reality, all experience is in its secret nature
knowledge by identity; but its true character is hidden
from us because we have separated ourselves from the rest of the world
by exclusion, by the distinction of ourself as
subject and everything else as object, and we are compelled to develop
processes and organs by which we may again enter
into communion with all that we have excluded. We have to replace
direct knowledge through conscious identity by an
indirect knowledge which appears to be caused by physical contact and
mental sympathy. This limitation is a fundamental
creation of the ego and an instance of the manner in which it has
proceeded throughout, starting from an original falsehood
and covering over the true truth of things by contingent falsehoods
which become for us practical truths of relation.
From this nature of mental and sense knowledge as it is at present
organised in us, it follows that there is no inevitable
necessity in our existing limitations. They are the result of an
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evolution in which mind has accustomed itself to depend upon certain physiological functionings and their reactions as its
normal means of entering into relation with the material universe. Therefore, although it is the rule that when we seek to
become aware of the external world, we have to do so indirectly through the sense-organs and can experience only so much
of the truth about things and men as the senses convey to us, yet this rule is merely the regularity of a dominant habit. It is
possible for the mind,—and it would be natural for it, if it could be persuaded to liberate itself from its consent to the
domination of matter,—to take direct cognisance of the objects of sense without the aid of the sense-organs. This is what
happens in experiments of hypnosis and cognate psychological phenomena. Because our waking consciousness is
determined and limited by the balance between mind and matter worked out by life in its evolution, this direct cognisance is
usually impossible in our ordinary waking state and has therefore to be brought about by throwing the waking mind into a
state of sleep which liberates the true or subliminal mind. Mind is then able to assert its true character as the one and
all-sufficient sense and free to apply to the objects of sense its pure and sovereign instead of its mixed and dependent
action. Nor is this extension of faculty really impossible but only more difficult in our waking state,—as is known to all who
have been able to go far enough in certain paths of psychological experiment.
The sovereign action of the
sense-mind can be employed to develop other senses besides the five
which we ordinarily
use. For instance, it is possible to develop the power of appreciating
accurately without physical means the weight of an
object which we hold in our hands. Here the sense of contact and
pressure is merely used as a starting-point, just as the
data of sense-experience are used by the pure reason, but it is not
really the sense of touch which gives the measure of the
weight to the mind; that finds the right value through its own
independent perception and uses the touch only in order to
enter into relation with the object. And as with the pure reason, so
with the sense-mind, the sense-experience can be used
as a mere first point from which it proceeds to a knowledge that has
nothing to do
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with the sense-organs and often contradicts their
evidence. Nor is the extension of faculty confined only to outsides and
superficies. It is possible, once we have entered by any of the senses
into relation with an external object, so to apply the Manas as to
become aware of the contents of the object, for example, to receive or
to perceive the thoughts or feelings of
others without aid from their utterance, gesture, action or facial
expressions and even in contradiction of these always partial
and often misleading data. Finally, by an utilisation of the inner
senses,—that is to say, of the sense-powers, in themselves, in
their purely mental or subtle activity as distinguished from the
physical which is only a selection for the purposes of outward
life from their total and general action,—we are able to take cognition
of sense-experiences, of appearances and images of
things other than those which belong to the organisation of our
material environment. All these extensions of faculty, though
received with hesitation and incredulity by the physical mind because
they are abnormal to the habitual scheme of our
ordinary life and experience, difficult to set in action, still more
difficult to systematise so as to be able to make of them an
orderly and serviceable set of instruments, must yet be admitted, since
they are the invariable result of any attempt to
enlarge the field of our superficially active consciousness whether by
some kind of untaught effort and casual ill-ordered
effect or by a scientific and well-regulated practice.
None of them, however,
leads to the aim we have in view, the psychological experience of those
truths that are
“beyond perception by the sense but seizable by the perceptions of the
reason”, buddhigrāhyam atīndriyam.¹
They give us only a larger field of phenomena and more effective means for the observation of phenomena. The truth of
things always escapes beyond the sense. Yet is it a sound rule inherent in the very constitution of universal existence that
where there are truths attainable by the reason, there must be somewhere in the organism possessed of that reason a means
of arriving at or verifying them by experience. The one means we have left in our mentality is an extension of that form of
knowledge by identity which gives us the awareness of our own existence. It is really upon a self-awareness
¹ Gita, VI. 21.
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more or less conscient, more or less present to our conception that the knowledge of the contents of our self is based. Or to
put it in a more general formula, the knowledge of the contents is contained in the knowledge of the continent. If then we
can extend our faculty of mental self-awareness to awareness of the Self beyond and outside us, Atman or Brahman of the
Upanishads, we may become possessors in experience of the truths which form the contents of the Atman or Brahman in
the universe. It is on this possibility that Indian Vedanta has based itself. It has sought through knowledge of the Self the
knowledge of the universe.
But always mental
experience and the concepts of the reason have been held by it to be
even at their highest a
reflection in mental identifications and not the supreme self-existent
identity. We have to go beyond the mind and the
reason. The reason active in our waking consciousness is only a
mediator between the subconscient All that we come from
in our evolution upwards and the superconscient All towards which we
are impelled by that evolution. The subconscient and
the superconscient are two different formulations of the same All. The
master-word of the subconscient is Life, the
master-word of the superconscient is Light. In the subconscient
knowledge or consciousness is involved in action, for action
is the essence of Life. In the superconscient action re-enters into
Light and no longer contains involved knowledge but is
itself contained in a supreme consciousness. Intuitional knowledge is
that which is common between them and the
foundation of intuitional knowledge is conscious or effective identity
between that which knows and that which is known; it
is that state of common self-existence in which the knower and the
known are one through knowledge. But in the
subconscient the intuition manifests itself in the action, in
effectivity, and the knowledge or conscious identity is either
entirely or more or less concealed in the action. In the
superconscient, on the contrary, Light being the law and the principle,
the intuition manifests itself in its true nature as knowledge emerging
out of conscious identity, and effectivity of action is
rather the accompaniment or necessary consequent and no longer masks as
the primary fact. Between these two states
reason and mind act as
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intermediaries which enable the being to liberate knowledge out of its imprisonment in the act and prepare it to resume its
essential primacy. When the self-awareness in the mind applied, both to continent and content, to own-self and other-self,
exalts itself into the luminous self-manifest identity, the reason also converts itself into the form of the self-luminous
intuitional¹
knowledge. This is the highest possible state of our knowledge when mind fulfils itself in the supramental.
Such is the scheme of the
human understanding upon which the conclusions of the most ancient Vedanta were
built. To develop the results arrived at on this foundation by the ancient sages
is not my object, but it is necessary to pass briefly in review some of their
principal conclusions so far as they affect the problem of the divine Life with
which alone we are at present concerned. For it is in those ideas that we shall
find the best previous foundation of that which we seek now to rebuild and
although, as with all knowledge, old expression has to be replaced to a certain
extent by new expression suited to a later mentality and old light has to merge
itself into new light as dawn succeeds dawn, yet it is with the old treasure as
our initial capital or so much of it as we can recover that we shall most
advantageously proceed to accumulate the largest gains in our new commerce with
the ever-changeless and ever-changing Infinite.
Sat Brahman, Existence
pure, indefinable, infinite, absolute, is the last concept at which
Vedantic analysis arrives in its
view of the universe, the fundamental Reality which Vedantic experience
discovers behind all the movement and formation
which constitute the apparent reality. It is obvious that when we posit
this conception, we go entirely beyond what our
ordinary consciousness, our normal experience contains or warrants. The
senses and sense-mind know nothing whatever
about any pure or absolute existence. All that our sense-experience
tells us of, is form and movement. Forms exist, but with
an existence that is not pure, rather always mixed, combined,
aggregated, relative.
¹ I use
the word “intuition” for want of a better. In truth, it is a makeshift and
inadequate to the connotation demanded of it. The same has to be said of the
word “consciousness” and many others which our poverty compels us to extend
illegitimately in their significance.
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When we go within ourselves, we may get rid of precise form, but we cannot get rid of movement, of change. Motion of
Matter in Space, motion of change in Time seem to be the condition of existence. We may say indeed, if we like, that this is
existence and that the idea of existence in itself corresponds to no discoverable reality. At the most in the phenomenon of
self-awareness or behind it, we get sometimes a glimpse of something immovable and immutable, something that we
vaguely perceive or imagine that we are beyond all life and death, beyond all change and formation and action. Here is the
one door in us that sometimes swings open upon the splendour of a truth beyond and, before it shuts again, allows a ray to
touch us,—a luminous intimation which, if we have the strength and firmness, we may hold to in our faith and make a
starting-point for another play of consciousness than that of the sense-mind, for the play of Intuition.
For if we examine
carefully, we shall find that Intuition is our first teacher. Intuition
always stands veiled behind our
mental operations. Intuition brings to man those brilliant messages
from the Unknown which are the beginning of his higher
knowledge. Reason only comes in afterwards to see what profit it can
have of the shining harvest. Intuition gives us that
idea of something behind and beyond all that we know and seem to be
which pursues man always in contradiction of his
lower reason and all his normal experience and impels him to formulate
that formless perception in the more positive ideas
of God, Immortality, Heaven and the rest by which we strive to express
it to the mind. For Intuition is as strong as Nature
herself from whose very soul it has sprung and cares nothing for the
contradictions of reason or the denials of experience. It
knows what is because it is, because itself it is of that and has come
from that, and will not yield it to the judgment of what
merely becomes and appears. What the Intuition tells us of, is not so
much Existence as the Existent, for it proceeds from
that one point of light in us which gives it its advantage, that
sometimes opened door in our own self-awareness. Ancient
Vedanta seized this message of the Intuition and formulated it in the
three great declarations of the Upanishads, “I am He”,
“Thou art That, O Swetaketu”, “All this is the Brahman; this Self is
the Brahman”.
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But Intuition by the very
nature of its action in man, working as it does from behind the veil,
active principally in his
more unenlightened, less articulate parts, served in front of the veil,
in the narrow light which is our waking conscience, only
by instruments that are unable fully to assimilate its
messages,—Intuition is unable to give us the truth in that ordered and
articulated form which our nature demands. Before it could effect any
such completeness of direct knowledge in us, it
would have to organise itself in our surface being and take possession
there of the leading part. But in our surface being it is
not the Intuition, it is the Reason which is organised and helps us to
order our perceptions, thoughts and actions. Therefore
the age of intuitive knowledge, represented by the early Vedantic
thinking of the Upanishads, had to give place to the age of
rational knowledge; inspired Scripture made room for metaphysical
philosophy, even as afterwards metaphysical philosophy
had to give place to experimental Science. Intuitive thought which is a
messenger from the superconscient and therefore our highest faculty,
was supplanted by the pure reason which is only a sort of deputy and
belongs to the middle heights of our being; pure reason in its turn was
supplanted for a time by the mixed action of the reason which lives on
our plains and lower elevations and does not in its view exceed the
horizon of the experience that the physical mind and senses or such
aids as we can invent for them can bring to us. And this process which
seems to be a descent, is really a circle of progress. For in each case
the lower faculty is compelled to take up as much as it can assimilate
of what the higher had already given and to attempt to re-establish it
by its own methods. By the attempt it is itself enlarged in its scope
and arrives eventually at a more supple and a more ample
self-accommodation to the higher faculties. Without this succession and
attempt at separate assimilation we should be obliged to remain under
the exclusive domination of a part of our nature while the rest
remained either depressed and unduly subjected or separate in its field
and therefore poor in its development. With this succession and
separate attempt the balance is righted; a more complete harmony of our
parts of knowledge is prepared.
We see this succession in the
Upanishads and the subsequent
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Indian philosophies. The sages of the Veda and Vedanta relied entirely upon intuition and spiritual experience. It is by an
error that scholars sometimes speak of great debates or discussions in the Upanishad. Wherever there is the appearance of
a controversy, it is not by discussion, by dialectics or the use of logical reasoning that it proceeds, but by a comparison of
intuitions and experiences in which the less luminous gives place to the more luminous, the narrower, faultier or less
essential to the more comprehensive, more perfect, more essential. The question asked by one sage of another is “What
dost thou know?”, not “What dost thou think?” nor “To what conclusion has thy reasoning arrived?” Nowhere in the
Upanishads do we find any trace of logical reasoning urged in support of the truths of Vedanta. Intuition, the sages seem to
have held, must be corrected by a more perfect intuition; logical reasoning cannot be its judge.
And yet the human reason demands its own method of satisfaction.
Therefore when the age of rationalistic speculation
began, Indian philosophers, respectful of the heritage of the past,
adopted a double attitude towards the Truth they sought.
They recognised in the Sruti, the earlier results of Intuition or, as
they preferred to call it, of inspired Revelation, an authority
superior to Reason. But at the same time they started from Reason and
tested the results it gave them, holding only those
conclusions to be valid which were supported by the supreme authority.
In this way they avoided to a certain extent the
besetting sin of metaphysics, the tendency to battle in the clouds
because it deals with words as if they were imperative
facts instead of symbols which have always to be carefully scrutinised
and brought back constantly to the sense of that
which they represent. Their speculations tended at first to keep near
at the centre to the highest and profoundest experience
and proceeded with the united consent of the two great authorities,
Reason and Intuition. Nevertheless, the natural trend of
Reason to assert its own supremacy triumphed in effect over the theory
of its subordination. Hence the rise of conflicting
schools each of which founded itself in theory on the Veda and used its
texts as a weapon against the others. For the
highest intuitive Knowledge sees things in the whole, in the large and
details only as sides of the indivisible whole; its
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tendency is towards immediate synthesis and the unity of knowledge. Reason, on the contrary, proceeds by analysis and
division and assembles its facts to form a whole; but in the assemblage so formed there are opposites, anomalies, logical
incompatibilities, and the natural tendency of Reason is to affirm some and to negate others which conflict with its chosen
conclusions so that it may form a flawlessly logical system. The unity of the first intuitional knowledge was thus broken up
and the ingenuity of the logicians was always able to discover devices, methods of interpretation, standards of varying value
by which inconvenient texts of the Scripture could be practically annulled and an entire freedom acquired for their
metaphysical speculation.
Nevertheless, the main
conceptions of the earlier Vedanta remained in parts in the various
philosophical systems and
efforts were made from time to time to recombine them into some image
of the old catholicity and unity of intuitional
thought. And behind the thought of all, variously presented, survived
as the fundamental conception, Purusha, Atman or Sad
Brahman, the pure Existent of the Upanishads, often rationalised into
an idea or psychological state, but still carrying something of its old
burden of inexpressible reality. What may be the relation of the
movement of becoming which is what we call the world to this absolute
Unity and how the ego, whether generated by the movement or cause of
the movement, can return to that true Self, Divinity or Reality
declared by the Vedanta, these were the questions speculative and
practical which have always occupied the thought of India.
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