|
CHAPTER
XIII
The Divine Maya
By the Names of the Lord and hers they shaped
and measured
the force of the Mother of Light; wearing might
after might of
that
Force as a robe the lords of Maya shaped out Form in this
Being.
The Masters of Maya shaped all by
His Maya; the Fathers who
have divine vision set Him
within as a child that is to be born.
Rig Veda.¹
EXISTENCE
that acts and creates by the power and from the pure delight of its
conscious being is the reality that we are, the
self of all our modes and moods, the cause, object and goal of all our
doing, becoming and creating. As the poet, artist or
musician when he creates does really nothing but develop some
potentiality in his unmanifested self into a form of
manifestation and as the thinker, statesman, mechanist only bring out
into a shape of things that which lay hidden in
themselves, was themselves, is still themselves when it is cast into
form, so is it with the world and the Eternal. All creation
or becoming is nothing but this self-manifestation. Out of the seed
there evolves that which is already in the seed,
pre-existent in being, predestined in its will to become, prearranged
in the delight of becoming. The original plasm held in
itself in force of being the resultant organism. For it is always that
secret, burdened, self-knowing force which labours under
its own irresistible impulse to manifest the form of itself with which
it is charged. Only, the individual who creates or
develops out of himself, makes a distinction between himself, the force
that works in him and the material in which he
works. In reality the force is himself, the individualised
consciousness which it instrumentalises is himself, the material which
it uses is himself, the resultant form is himself. In other words it is
one existence, one force, one delight of being which
concentrates itself at various points, says of each “This is I” and
works in it by a various play of self-force for a various play
of self-formation.
¹ III. 38. 7; IX. 83. 3.
Page-112
What it produces is itself
and can be nothing other than itself; it is working out a play, a
rhythm, a development of its
own existence, force of consciousness and delight of being. Therefore
whatever comes into the world, seeks nothing but
this, to be, to arrive at the intended form, to enlarge its
self-existence in that form, to develop, manifest, increase, realise
infinitely the consciousness and the power that is in it, to have the
delight of coming into manifestation, the delight of the
form of being, the delight of the rhythm of consciousness, the delight
of the play of force and to aggrandise and perfect that
delight by whatever means is possible, in whatever direction, through
whatever idea of itself may be suggested to it by the
Existence, the Conscious-Force, the Delight active within its deepest
being.
And if there is any goal,
any completeness towards which things tend, it can only be the
completeness,—in the
individual and in the whole which the individuals constitute,—of its
self-existence, of its power and consciousness and of its
delight of being. But such completeness is not possible in the
individual consciousness concentrated within the limits of the
individual formation; absolute completeness is not feasible in the
finite because it is alien to the self-conception of the finite.
Therefore the only final goal possible is the emergence of the infinite
consciousness in the individual; it is his recovery of the
truth of himself by self-knowledge and by self-realisation, the truth
of the Infinite in being, the Infinite in consciousness, the
Infinite in delight repossessed as his own Self and Reality of which
the finite is only a mask and an instrument for various
expression.
Thus by the very nature of
the world-play as it has been realised by Sachchidananda in the
vastness of His existence
extended as Space and Time, we have to conceive first of an involution
and a self-absorption of conscious being into the
density and infinite divisibility of substance, for otherwise there can
be no finite variation; next, an emergence of the
self-imprisoned force into formal being, living being, thinking being;
and finally a release of the formed thinking being into the
free realisation of itself as the One and the Infinite at play in the
world and by the release its recovery of the boundless
existence-consciousness-bliss that even now it is secretly, really and
eternally. This triple
Page-113
movement is the whole key of the world-enigma.
It is so that the ancient
and eternal truth of Vedanta receives into itself and illumines,
justifies and shows us all the
meaning of the modern and phenomenal truth of evolution in the
universe. And it is so only that this modern truth of
evolution which is the old truth of the Universal developing itself
successively in Time, seen opaquely through the study of
Force and Matter, can find its own full sense and justification,—by
illuminating itself with the Light of the ancient and
eternal truth still preserved for us in the Vedantic Scriptures. To
this mutual self-discovery and self-illumination by the fusion
of the old Eastern and the new Western knowledge the thought of the
world is already turning.
Still, when we have found
that all things are Sachchidananda, all has not yet been explained. We
know the Reality of
the universe, we do not yet know the process by which that Reality has
turned itself into this phenomenon. We have the key
of the riddle, we have still to find the lock in which it will turn.
For this Existence, Conscious-Force, Delight does not work
directly or with a sovereign irresponsibility like a magician building
up worlds and universes by the mere fiat of its word. We
perceive a process, we are aware of a Law.
It is true that this Law
when we analyse it, seems to resolve itself into an equilibrium of the
play of forces and a
determination of that play into fixed lines of working by the accident
of development and the habit of past realised energy.
But this apparent and secondary truth is final to us only so long as we
conceive of Force solely. When we perceive that
Force is a self-expression of Existence, we are bound to perceive also
that this line which Force has taken, corresponds to
some self-truth of that Existence which governs and determines its
constant curve and destination. And since consciousness
is the nature of the original Existence and the essence of its Force,
this truth must be a self-perception in Conscious-Being
and this determination of the line taken by Force must result from a
power of self-directive knowledge inherent in
Consciousness which enables it to guide its own Force inevitably along
the logical line of the original self-perception. It is
then a self-determining power in universal consciousness, a capacity in
self-awareness of infinite existence to
Page-114
perceive a certain Truth in itself and direct its force of creation along the line of that Truth, which has presided over the
cosmic manifestation.
But why should we interpose
any special power or faculty between the infinite Consciousness itself
and the result of its
workings? May not this Self-awareness of the Infinite range freely
creating forms which afterwards remain in play so long
as there is not the fiat that bids them cease,—even as the old Semitic
Revelation tells us, “God said, Let there be Light, and
there was Light”? But when we say, “God said, Let there be Light”, we
assume the act of a power of consciousness which
determines light out of everything else that is not light; and when we
say “and there was Light” we presume a directing
faculty, an active power corresponding to the original perceptive
power, which brings out the phenomenon and, working out
Light according to the line of the original perception, prevents it
from being overpowered by all the infinite possibilities that
are other than itself. Infinite consciousness in its infinite action
can produce only infinite results; to settle upon a fixed Truth
or order of truths and build a world in conformity with that which is
fixed, demands a selective faculty of knowledge
commissioned to shape finite appearance out of the infinite Reality.
This power was known to the
Vedic seers by the name of Maya. Maya meant for them the power of
infinite
consciousness to comprehend, contain in itself and measure out, that is
to say, to form—for form is delimitation—Name and
Shape out of the vast illimitable Truth of infinite existence. It is by
Maya that static truth of essential being becomes ordered
truth of active being,—or, to put it in more metaphysical language, out
of the supreme being in which all is all without barrier
of separative consciousness emerges the phenomenal being in which all
is in each and each is in all for the play of existence
with existence, consciousness with consciousness, force with force,
delight with delight. This play of all in each and each in
all is concealed at first from us by the mental play or the illusion of
Maya which persuades each that he is in all but not all in
him and that he is in all as a separated being not as a being always
inseparably one with the rest of existence. Afterwards
we have to emerge from this
Page-115
error into the supramental play or the truth of Maya where the “each” and the “all” coexist in the inseparable unity of the
one truth and the multiple symbol. The lower, present and deluding mental Maya has first to be embraced, then to be
overcome; for it is God's play with division and darkness and limitation, desire and strife and suffering in which He subjects
Himself to the Force that has come out of Himself and by her obscure suffers Himself to be obscured. That other Maya
concealed by this mental has to be overpassed, then embraced; for it is God's play of the infinities of existence, the
splendours of knowledge, the glories of force mastered and the ecstasies of love illimitable where He emerges out of the
hold of Force, holds her instead and fulfils in her illumined that for which she went out from Him at the first.
This distinction between
the lower and the higher Maya is the link in thought and in cosmic Fact
which the pessimistic
and illusionist philosophies miss or neglect. To them the mental Maya,
or perhaps an Overmind, is the creatrix of the world,
and a world created by mental Maya would indeed be an inexplicable
paradox and a fixed yet floating nightmare of
conscious existence which could neither be classed as an illusion nor
as a reality. We have to see that the mind is only an
intermediate term between the creative governing knowledge and the soul
imprisoned in its works. Sachchidananda,
involved by one of His lower movements in the self-oblivious absorption
of Force that is lost in the form of her own
workings, returns towards Himself out of the self-oblivion; Mind is
only one of His instruments in the descent and the
ascent. It is an instrument of the descending creation, not the secret
creatrix,—a transitional stage in the ascent, not our high
original source and the consummate term of cosmic existence.
The philosophies which recognise Mind alone as the creator of the
worlds or accept an original principle with Mind as
the only mediator between it and the forms of the universe, may be
divided into the purely noumenal and the idealistic. The
purely noumenal recognise in the cosmos only the work of Mind, Thought,
Idea: but Idea may be purely arbitrary and have
no essential relation to any real Truth of existence; or such Truth,
Page-116
if it exists, may be regarded as a mere Absolute
aloof from all relations and irreconcilable with a world of relations.
The
idealistic interpretation supposes a relation between the Truth behind
and the conceptive phenomenon in front, a relation
which is not merely that of an antinomy and opposition. The view I am
presenting goes farther in idealism; it sees the
creative Idea as Real-Idea, that is to say, a power of Conscious Force
expressive of real being, born out of real being and
partaking of its nature and neither a child of the Void nor a weaver of
fictions. It is conscious Reality throwing itself into
mutable forms of its own imperishable and immutable substance. The
world is therefore not a figment of conception in the
universal Mind, but a conscious birth of that which is beyond Mind into
forms of itself. A Truth of conscious being supports
these forms and expresses itself in them, and the knowledge
corresponding to the truth thus expressed reigns as a supramental
Truth-Consciousness¹ organising real ideas in a perfect harmony before they are cast into the mental-vital-material mould. Mind, Life and Body
are an inferior consciousness and a partial expression which strives to arrive in the mould of a various evolution at that
superior expression of itself already existent to the Beyond-Mind. That which is in the Beyond-Mind is the ideal which in its
own conditions it is labouring to realise.
From our ascending point of
view we may say that the Real is behind all that exists; it expresses
itself intermediately in
an Ideal which is a harmonised truth of itself; the Ideal throws out a
phenomenal reality of variable conscious-being which,
inevitably drawn towards its own essential Reality, tries at last to
recover it entirely whether by a violent leap or normally
through the Ideal which put it forth. It is this that explains the
imperfect reality of human existence as seen by the Mind, the
instinctive aspiration in the mental being towards a perfectibility
ever beyond itself, towards the concealed harmony of the
Ideal, and the supreme surge of the spirit beyond the ideal to the
transcendental. The very facts of our consciousness, its
constitution and
¹ I take the phrase from the Rig Veda,—,rta-cit, which means the consciousness of essential truth of being
(satyam), of ordered truth of active being (rtam) and the vast
self-awareness (brhat) in which alone this
consciousness is possible.
Page-117
its necessity presuppose such a triple order; they negate the dual and irreconcilable antithesis of a mere Absolute to a mere
relativity.
Mind is not sufficient to
explain existence in the universe. Infinite Consciousness must first
translate itself into infinite
faculty of Knowledge or, as we call it from our point of view,
omniscience. But Mind is not a faculty of knowledge nor an
instrument of omniscience; it is a faculty for the seeking of
knowledge, for expressing as much as it can gain of it in certain
forms of a relative thought and for using it towards certain capacities
of action. Even when it finds, it does not possess; it
only keeps a certain fund of current coin of Truth—not Truth itself—in
the bank of Memory to draw upon according to its
needs. For Mind is that which does not know, which tries to know and
which never knows except as in a glass darkly. It is
the power which interprets truth of universal existence for the
practical uses of a certain order of things; it is not the power
which knows and guides that existence and therefore it cannot be the
power which created or manifested it.
But if we suppose an infinite Mind which would be free from our limitations, that at least might well be the creator of
the universe? But such a Mind would be something quite different from the definition of mind as we know it: it would be
something beyond mentality; it would be the supramental Truth. An infinite Mind constituted in the terms of mentality as we
know it could only create an infinite chaos, a vast clash of chance, accident, vicissitude wandering towards an indeterminate
end after which it would be always tentatively groping and aspiring. An infinite, omniscient, omnipotent Mind would not be
mind at all, but supramental knowledge.
Mind, as we know it, is a reflective
mirror which receives presentations or images of a pre-existent Truth or Fact,
either external to or at least vaster than itself. It represents to itself from
moment to moment the phenomenon that is or has been. It possesses also the
faculty of constructing in itself possible images other than those of the actual
fact presented to it; that is to say, it represents to itself not only
phenomenon that has been but also phenomenon that may be: it cannot, be it
noted,
Page-118
represent to itself phenomenon that assuredly will be, except when it is an assured repetition of what is or has been. It has,
finally, the faculty of forecasting new modifications which it seeks to construct out of the meeting of what has been and
what may be, out of the fulfilled possibility and the unfulfilled, something that it sometimes succeeds in constructing more or
less exactly, sometimes fails to realise, but usually finds cast into other forms than it forecasted and turned to other ends
than it desired or intended.
An infinite Mind of this character might possibly construct an
accidental cosmos of conflicting possibilities and it might
shape it into something shifting, something always transient, something
ever uncertain in its drift, neither real nor unreal,
possessed of no definite end or aim but only an endless succession of
momentary aims leading,—since there is no superior
directing power of knowledge,—eventually nowhither. Nihilism or
Illusionism or some kindred philosophy is the only logical
conclusion of such a pure noumenalism. The cosmos so constructed would
be a presentation or reflection of something not
itself, but always and to the end a false presentation, a distorted
reflection; all cosmic existence would be a Mind struggling
to work out fully its imaginations, but not succeeding, because they
have no imperative basis of self-truth; overpowered and
carried forward by the stream of its own past energies, it would be
borne onward indeterminately for ever without issue
unless or until it can either slay itself or fall into an eternal
stillness. That traced to its roots is Nihilism and Illusionism and it
is the only wisdom if we suppose that our human mentality or anything
at all like it represents the highest cosmic force and
the original conception at work in the universe.
But the moment we find in the original power of knowledge a higher
force than that which is represented by our human
mentality, this conception of the universe becomes insufficient and
therefore invalid. It has its truth but it is not the whole
truth. It is law of the immediate appearance of the universe, but not
of its original truth and ultimate fact. For we perceive
behind the action of Mind, Life and Body, something that is not
embraced in the stream of Force but embraces and controls
Page-119
it; something that is not born into a world
which it seeks to interpret, but has created in its being a world of
which it has the
omniscience; something that does not labour perpetually to form
something else out of itself while it drifts in the
overmastering surge of past energies it can no longer control, but has
already in its consciousness a perfect Form of itself
and is here gradually unfolding it. The world expresses a foreseen
Truth, obeys a predetermining Will, realises an original
formative self-vision,—it is the growing image of a divine creation.
So long as we work only
through the mentality governed by appearances, this something beyond
and behind and yet
always immanent can be only an inference or a presence vaguely felt. We
perceive a law of cyclic progress and infer an
ever-increasing perfection of somewhat that is somewhere foreknown. For
everywhere we see Law founded in self-being
and, when we penetrate within into the rationale of its process, we
find that Law is the expression of an innate knowledge, a
knowledge inherent in the existence which is expressing itself and
implied in the force that expresses it; and Law developed
by Knowledge so as to allow of progression implies a divinely seen goal
towards which the motion is directed. We see too
that our reason seeks to emerge out of and dominate the helpless drift
of our mentality and we arrive at the perception that
Reason is only a messenger, a representative or a shadow of a greater
consciousness beyond itself which does not need to
reason because it is all and knows all that it is. And we can then pass
to the inference that this source of Reason is identical
with the Knowledge that acts as Law in the world. This Knowledge
determines its own law sovereignly because it knows
what has been, is and will be and it knows because it is eternally, and
infinitely cognises itself. Being that is infinite
consciousness, infinite consciousness that is omnipotent force, when it
makes a world,—that is to say, a harmony of
itself,—its object of consciousness, becomes seizable by our thought as
a cosmic existence that knows its own truth and
realises in forms that which it knows.
But it is only when we cease to
reason and go deep into ourselves, into that secrecy where the activity of mind
is stilled, that this other consciousness becomes really manifest to us—
how-
Page-120
ever imperfectly owing to our long habit of mental reaction and mental limitation. Then we can know surely in an
increasing illumination that which we had uncertainly conceived by the pale and flickering light of Reason. Knowledge waits
seated beyond mind and intellectual reasoning, throned in the luminous vast of illimitable self-vision.
Page-121
HOME
|