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CHAPTER
X
Conscious Force
They beheld the self-force of the Divine Being deep hidden by its own conscious modes of working.
Swetaswatara
Upanishad.¹
This is he
that is awake in those who sleep.
Katha
Upanishad.
²
ALL
phenomenal existence resolves itself into Force, into a movement of
energy that assumes more or less material, more or
less gross or subtle forms for self-presentation to its own experience.
In the ancient images by which human thought
attempted to make this origin and law of being intelligible and real to
itself, this infinite existence of Force was figured as a
sea, initially at rest and therefore free from forms, but the first
disturbance, the first initiation of movement necessitates the
creation of forms and is the seed of a universe.
Matter is the presentation of force which is most easily intelligible
to our intelligence, moulded as it is by contacts in
Matter to which a mind involved in material brain gives the response.
The elementary state of material Force is, in the view
of the old Indian physicists, a condition of pure material extension in
Space of which the peculiar property is vibration
typified to us by the phenomenon of sound. But vibration in this state
of ether is not sufficient to create forms. There must
first be some obstruction in the flow of the Force ocean, some
contraction and expansion, some interplay of vibrations, some
impinging of force upon force so as to create a beginning of fixed
relations and mutual effects. Material Force modifying its
first ethereal status assumes a second, called in the old language the
aerial, of which the special property is contact between
force and force, contact that is the basis of all material relations.
Still we have not as yet real forms but only varying forces.
A sustaining principle is needed. This is provided by a third
self-modification of the primitive Force of which the principle of
light, electricity, fire and heat is for us the characteristic
manifestation. Even then, we can have forms of
¹ I. 3.
² II. 2. 8.
force preserving their own character and peculiar action, but not stable forms of Matter. A fourth state characterised by
diffusion and a first medium of permanent attractions and repulsions, termed picturesquely water or the liquid state, and a
fifth of cohesion, termed earth or the solid state, complete the necessary elements.
All forms of Matter of
which we are aware, all physical things even to the most subtle, are
built up by the combination
of these five elements. Upon them also depends all our sensible
experience; for by reception of vibration comes the sense of
sound; by contact of things in a world of vibrations of Force the sense
of touch; by the action of light in the forms hatched,
outlined, sustained by the force of light and fire and heat the sense
of sight; by the fourth element the sense of taste; by the
fifth the sense of smell. All is essentially response to vibratory
contacts between force and force. In this way the ancient
thinkers bridged the gulf between pure Force and its final
modifications and satisfied the difficulty which prevents the
ordinary human mind from understanding how all these forms which are to
his senses so real, solid and durable can be in
truth only temporary phenomena and a thing like pure energy, to the
senses non-existent, intangible and almost incredible,
can be the one permanent cosmic reality.
The problem of
consciousness is not solved by this theory; for it does not explain how
the contact of vibrations of Force
should give rise to conscious sensations. The Sankhyas or analytic
thinkers posited therefore behind these five elements two
principles which they called Mahat and Ahankara, principles which are
really non-material; for the first is nothing but the
vast cosmic principle of Force and the other the divisional principle
of Ego-formation. Nevertheless, these two principles, as
also the principle of intelligence, become active in consciousness not
by virtue of Force itself, but by virtue of an inactive
Conscious-Soul or souls in which its activities are reflected and by
that reflection assume the hue of consciousness.
Such is the explanation of
things offered by the school of Indian philosophy which comes nearest
to the modern
materialistic ideas and which carried the idea of a mechanical or
unconscious Force in Nature as far as was possible to a seriously reflective Indian mind. Whatever its defects, its main idea
was so indisputable that it came to be generally accepted. However the phenomenon of consciousness may be explained,
whether Nature be an inert impulse or a conscious principle, it is certainly Force; the principle of things is a formative
movement of energies, all forms are born of meeting and mutual adaptation between unshaped forces, all sensation and
action is a response of something in a form of Force to the contacts of other forms of Force. This is the world as we
experience it and from this experience we must always start.
Physical analysis of Matter by modern Science has come to the same general conclusion, even if a few last doubts still
linger. Intuition and experience confirm this concord of Science and Philosophy. Pure reason finds in it the satisfaction of its
own essential conceptions. For even in the view of the world as essentially an act of consciousness, an act is implied and in
the act movement of Force, play of Energy. This also, when we examine from within our own experience, proves to be the
fundamental nature of the world. All our activities are the play of the triple force of the old philosophies, knowledge-force,
desire-force, action-force, and all these prove to be really three streams of one original and identical Power, Adya Shakti.
Even our states of rest are only equable state or equilibrium of the play of her movement.
Movement of Force being admitted as the whole nature of the Cosmos, two questions arise. And first, how did this
movement come to take place at all in the bosom of existence? If we suppose it to be not only eternal but the very essence
of all existence, the question does not arise. But we have negatived this theory. We are aware of an existence which is not
compelled by the movement. How then does this movement alien to its eternal repose come to take place in it? by what
cause? by what possibility? by what mysterious impulsion?
The answer most approved by
the ancient Indian mind was that Force is inherent in Existence. Shiva
and Kali,
Brahman and Shakti are one and not two who are separable. Force
inherent in existence may be at rest or it may be in
motion, but
when it is at rest, it exists none the less and is not abolished, diminished or in any way essentially altered. This reply is so
entirely rational and in accordance with the nature of things that we need not hesitate to accept it. For it is impossible,
because contradictory of reason, to suppose that Force is a thing alien to the one and infinite existence and entered into it
from outside or was non-existent and arose in it at some point in Time. Even the Illusionist theory must admit that Maya, the
power of self-illusion in Brahman, is potentially eternal in eternal Being and then the sole question is its manifestation or
non-manifestation. The Sankhya also asserts the eternal coexistence of Prakriti and Purusha, Nature and Conscious-Soul,
and the alternative states of rest or equilibrium of Prakriti and movement or disturbance of equilibrium.
But since Force is thus
inherent in existence and it is the nature of Force to have this double
or alternative potentiality of
rest and movement, that is to say, of self-concentration in Force and
self-diffusion in Force, the question of the how of the
movement, its possibility, initiating impulsion or impelling cause does
not arise. For we can easily, then, conceive that this
potentiality must translate itself either as an alternative rhythm of
rest and movement succeeding each other in Time or else
as an eternal self-concentration of Force in immutable existence with a
superficial play of movement, change and formation
like the rising and falling of waves on the surface of the ocean. And
this superficial play—we are necessarily speaking in
inadequate images—may be either coeval with the self-concentration and
itself also eternal or it may begin and end in Time
and be resumed by a sort of constant rhythm; it is then not eternal in
continuity but eternal in recurrence.
The problem of the how thus
eliminated, there presents itself the question of the why. Why should
this possibility of a
play of movement of Force translate itself at all? why should not Force
of existence remain eternally concentrated in itself,
infinite, free from all variation and formation? This question also
does not arise if we assume Existence to be non-conscious
and consciousness only a development of material energy which we
wrongly suppose to be immaterial. For then we can say
simply
that this rhythm is the nature of Force in existence and there is absolutely no reason to seek for a why, a cause, an initial
motive or a final purpose for that which is in its nature eternally self-existent. We cannot put that question to eternal
self-existence and ask it either why it exists or how it came into existence; neither can we put it to self-force of existence
and its inherent nature of impulsion to movement. All that we can then inquire into is its manner of self-manifestation, its
principles of movement and formation, its process of evolution. Both Existence and Force being inert,—inert status and inert
impulsion,—both of them unconscious and unintelligent, there cannot be any purpose or final goal in evolution or any original
cause or intention.
But if we suppose or find
Existence to be conscious Being, the problem arises. We may indeed
suppose a conscious
Being which is subject to its nature of Force, compelled by it and
without option as to whether it shall manifest in the
universe or remain unmanifest. Such is the cosmic God of the Tantriks
and the Mayavadins who is subject to Shakti or
Maya, Purusha involved in Maya or controlled by Shakti. But it is
obvious that such a God is not the supreme infinite
Existence with which we have started. Admittedly, it is only a
formulation of Brahman in the cosmos by the Brahman which
is itself logically anterior to Shakti or Maya and takes her back into
its transcendental being when she ceases from her
works. In a conscious existence which is absolute, independent of its
formations, not determined by its works, we must
suppose an inherent freedom to manifest or not to manifest the
potentiality of movement. A Brahman compelled by Prakriti is not
Brahman, but an inert Infinite with an active content in it more
powerful than the continent, a conscious holder of Force of whom his
Force is master. If we say that it is compelled by itself as Force, by
its own nature, we do not get rid of the contradiction, the evasion of
our first postulate. We have got back to an Existence which is really
nothing but Force, Force at rest or in movement, absolute Force
perhaps, but not absolute Being.
It is then necessary to examine into
the relation between Force and Consciousness. But what do we mean by the latter
term? Ordinarily we mean by it our first obvious
idea of a mental waking consciousness such as is possessed by the human
being during the major part of his bodily existence, when he is not
asleep, stunned or otherwise deprived of his physical and
superficial methods of sensation. In this sense it is plain enough that
consciousness is the exception and not the rule in the
order of the material universe. We ourselves do not always possess it.
But this vulgar and shallow idea of the nature of
consciousness, though it still colours our ordinary thought and
associations, must now definitely disappear out of philosophical
thinking. For we know that there is something in us which is conscious
when we sleep, when we are stunned or drugged or
in a swoon, in all apparently unconscious states of our physical being.
Not only so, but we may now be sure that the old
thinkers were right when they declared that even in our waking state
what we call then our consciousness is only a small
selection from our entire conscious being. It is a superficies, it is
not even the whole of our mentality. Behind it, much vaster
than it, there is a subliminal or subconscient mind which is the
greater part of ourselves and contains heights and profundities
which no man has yet measured or fathomed. This knowledge gives us a
starting-point for the true science of Force and its
workings; it delivers us definitely from circumscription by the
material and from the illusion of the obvious.
Materialism indeed insists
that, whatever the extension of consciousness, it is a material
phenomenon inseparable from
our physical organs and not their utiliser but their result. This
orthodox contention, however, is no longer able to hold the field
against the tide of increasing knowledge. Its explanations are becoming
more and more inadequate and strained. It is
becoming always clearer that not only does the capacity of our total
consciousness far exceed that of our organs, the
senses, the nerves, the brain, but that even for our ordinary thought
and consciousness these organs are only their habitual
instruments and not their generators. Consciousness uses the brain
which its upward strivings have produced, brain has not
produced nor does it use the consciousness. There are even abnormal
instances which go to prove that our organs are not
entirely indispensable instruments,—that the heart-beats are not
absolutely essential
to life, any more than is breathing, nor the organised brain-cells to thought. Our physical organism no more causes or
explains thought and consciousness than the construction of an engine causes or explains the motive-power of steam or
electricity. The force is anterior, not the physical instrument.
Momentous logical
consequences follow. In the first place we may ask whether, since even
mental consciousness
exists where we see inanimation and inertia, it is not possible that
even in material objects a universal subconscient mind is
present although unable to act or communicate itself to its surfaces
for want of organs. Is the material state an emptiness of
consciousness, or is it not rather only a sleep of consciousness—even
though from the point of view of evolution an original
and not an intermediate sleep? And by sleep the human example teaches
us that we mean not a suspension of
consciousness, but its gathering inward away from conscious physical
response to the impacts of external things. And is not
this what all existence is that has not yet developed means of outward
communication with the external physical world? Is
there not a Conscious Soul, a Purusha who wakes for ever even in all
that sleeps?
We may go farther. When we
speak of subconscious mind, we should mean by the phrase a thing not
different from
the outer mentality, but only acting below the surface, unknown to the
waking man, in the same sense if perhaps with a
deeper plunge and a larger scope. But the phenomena of the subliminal
self far exceed the limits of any such definition. It
includes an action not only immensely superior in capacity, but quite
different in kind from what we know as mentality in our
waking self. We have therefore a right to suppose that there is a
superconscient in us as well as a subconscient, a range of
conscious faculties and therefore an organisation of consciousness
which rise high above that psychological stratum to
which we give the name of mentality. And since the subliminal self in
us thus rises in superconscience above mentality, may
it not also sink in subconscience below mentality? Are there not in us
and in the world forms of consciousness which are
submental, to which we can give the name of vital and physical
consciousness? If so, we must suppose in the plant and the
metal also a force to which we can
give the name of consciousness although it is not the human or animal mentality for which we have hitherto preserved the
monopoly of that description.
Not only is this probable
but, if we will consider things dispassionately, it is certain. In
ourselves there is such a vital
consciousness which acts in the cells of the body and the automatic
vital functions so that we go through purposeful
movements and obey attractions and repulsions to which our mind is a
stranger. In animals this vital consciousness is an
even more important factor. In plants it is intuitively evident. The
seekings and shrinkings of the plant, its pleasure and pain,
its sleep and its wakefulness and all that strange life whose truth an
Indian scientist has brought to light by rigidly scientific
methods, are all movements of consciousness, but, as far as we can see,
not of mentality. There is then a sub-mental, a vital
consciousness which has precisely the same initial reactions as the
mental, but is different in the constitution of its
self-experience, even as that which is superconscient is in the
constitution of its self-experience different from the mental
being.
D
Does the range of what we
can call consciousness cease with the plant, with that in which we
recognise the existence
of a sub-animal life? If so, we must then suppose that there is a force
of life and consciousness originally alien to Matter
which has yet entered into and occupied Matter,—perhaps from another
world.¹For
whence, otherwise, can it have come? The ancient thinkers believed in
the existence of such other worlds, which
perhaps sustain life and consciousness in ours or even call it out by
their pressure, but do not create it by their entry. Nothing
can evolve out of Matter which is not therein already contained.
But there is no reason to suppose that the gamut of life and
consciousness fails and stops short in that which seems to
us purely material. The development of recent research and thought
seems to point to a sort of obscure beginning of life and
perhaps a sort of inert or suppressed consciousness in the metal and in
the earth and in other “inanimate” forms, or at least
the first stuff of
¹ The curious speculation is now current that
Life entered earth not from another world, but from another planet. To the
thinker that would explain nothing. The essential question is how Life comes
into Matter at all and not how it enters into the matter of a particular planet.
what becomes consciousness in us may be there. Only while in the plant we can dimly recognise and conceive the thing that
I have called vital consciousness, the consciousness of Matter, of the inert form, is difficult indeed for us to understand or
imagine, and what we find it difficult to understand or imagine we consider it our right to deny. Nevertheless, when one has
pursued consciousness so far into the depths, it becomes incredible that there should be this sudden gulf in Nature. Thought
has a right to suppose a unity where that unity is confessed by all other classes of phenomena and in one class only, not
denied, but merely more concealed than in others. And if we suppose the unity to be unbroken, we then arrive at the
existence of consciousness in all forms of the Force which is at work in the world. Even if there be no conscient or
superconscient Purusha inhabiting all forms, yet is there in those forms a conscious force of being of which even their outer
parts overtly or inertly partake.
Necessarily, in such a
view, the word consciousness changes its meaning. It is no longer
synonymous with mentality but
indicates a self-aware force of existence of which mentality is a
middle term; below mentality it sinks into vital and material
movements which are for us subconscient; above, it rises into the
supramental which is for us the superconscient. But in all
it is one and the same thing organising itself differently. This is,
once more, the Indian conception of Chit which, as energy,
creates the worlds. Essentially, we arrive at that unity which
materialistic Science perceives from the other end when it
asserts that Mind cannot be another force than Matter, but must be
merely development and outcome of material energy.
Indian thought at its deepest affirms on the other hand that Mind and
Matter are rather different grades of the same energy,
different organisations of one conscious Force of Existence.
But what right have we to
assume consciousness as the just description for this Force? For
consciousness implies some
kind of intelligence, purposefulness, self-knowledge, even though they
may not take the forms habitual to our mentality.
Even from this point of view everything supports rather than
contradicts the idea of a universal conscious Force. We see,
for instance, in the animal, operations of a perfect purposefulness
and an exact, indeed a scientifically minute knowledge which are quite beyond the capacities of the animal mentality and
which man himself can only acquire by long culture and education and even then uses with a much less sure rapidity. We
are entitled to see in this general fact the proof of a conscious Force at work in the animal and the insect which is more
intelligent, more purposeful, more aware of its intention, its ends, its means, its conditions than the highest mentality yet
manifested in any individual form on earth. And in the operations of inanimate Nature we find the same pervading
characteristic of a supreme hidden intelligence, “hidden in the modes of its own workings”.
The only argument against a
conscious and intelligent source for this purposeful work, this work of
intelligence, of
selection, adaptation and seeking is that large element in Nature's
operations to which we give the name of waste. But
obviously this is an objection based on the limitations of our human
intellect which seeks to impose its own particular
rationality, good enough for limited human ends, on the general
operations of the World-Force. We see only part of Nature's
purpose and all that does not subserve that part we call waste. Yet
even our own human action is full of an apparent waste,
so appearing from the individual point of view, which yet, we may be
sure, subserves well enough the large and universal
purpose of things. That part of her intention which we can detect,
Nature gets done surely enough in spite of, perhaps really
by virtue of her apparent waste. We may well trust to her in the rest
which we do not yet detect.
For the rest, it is
impossible to ignore the drive of set purpose, the guidance of apparent
blind tendency, the sure
eventual or immediate coming to the target sought, which characterise
the operations of World-Force in the animal, in the plant, in inanimate
things. So long as Matter was Alpha and Omega to the scientific mind,
the reluctance to admit intelligence as the mother of intelligence was
an honest scruple. But now it is no more than an outworn paradox to
affirm the emergence of human consciousness, intelligence and mastery
out of an unintelligent, blindly driving unconsciousness in which no
form or substance of them previously existed. Man's consciousness can
be nothing else than a form of Nature's consciousness. It is there in
other
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involved forms below Mind, it emerges in Mind, it shall
ascend into yet superior forms beyond Mind. For the Force that builds the worlds
is a conscious Force, the Existence which manifests itself in them is conscious
Being and a perfect emergence of its potentialities in form is the sole object
which we can rationally conceive for its manifestation of this world of forms.
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