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BOOK II
Part
II
THE KNOWLEDGE AND THE IGNORANCE
THE SPIRITUAL EVOLUTION
CHAPTER
XV
Reality and the Integral Knowledge
This Self is to be won by the Truth and by an integral knowledge.
Mundaka Upanishad.¹
Hear how thou shalt
know Me in My totality... for even of the
seekers who have achieved,
hardly one knows Me in all the truth
of My being.
Gita.²
THIS
then is the origin, this the nature, these the boundaries of the
Ignorance. Its origin is a limitation of knowledge, its
distinctive character a separation of the being from its own
integrality and entire reality; its boundaries are determined by
this separative development of the consciousness, for it shuts us to
our true self and to the true self and whole nature of
things and obliges us to live in an apparent surface existence. A
return or a progress to integrality, a disappearance of the
limitation, a breaking down of separativeness, an overpassing of
boundaries, a recovery of our essential and whole reality
must be the sign and opposite character of the inner turn towards
Knowledge. There must be a replacement of a limited and
separative by an essential and integral consciousness identified with
the original truth and the whole truth of self and
existence. The integral Knowledge is something that is already there in
the integral Reality: it is not a new or still
non-existent thing that has to be created, acquired, learned, invented
or built up by the mind; it must rather be discovered or
uncovered, it is a Truth that is self-revealed to a spiritual
endeavour: for it is there veiled in our deeper and greater self; it is
the very stuff of our own spiritual consciousness, and it is by awaking
to it even in our surface self that we have to possess
it. There is an integral self-knowledge that we have to recover and,
because the world-self also is our self, an integral
world-knowledge. A knowledge that can be learned or constructed by the
mind exists and has
¹
III. 1. 5.
² VII. 1, 3.
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its value, but that is not what is meant when we speak of the Knowledge and the Ignorance.
An integral spiritual consciousness carries in it a knowledge of all
the terms of being; it links the highest to the lowest
through all the mediating terms and achieves an indivisible whole. At
the highest summit of things it opens to the reality,
ineffable because superconscient to all but its own self-awareness, of
the Absolute. At the lowest end of our being it
perceives the Inconscience from which our evolution begins; but at the
same time it is aware of the One and the All
self-involved in those depths, it unveils the secret Consciousness in
the Inconscience. Interpretative, revelatory, moving
between these two extremes, its vision discovers the manifestation of
the One in the Many, the identity of the Infinite in the
disparity of things finite, the presence of the timeless Eternal in
eternal Time; it is this seeing that illumines for it the meaning
of the universe. This consciousness does not abolish the universe; it
takes it up and transforms it by giving to it its hidden
significance. It does not abolish the individual existence; it
transforms the individual being and nature by revealing to them
their true significance and enabling them to overcome their
separateness from the Divine Reality and the Divine Nature.
An integral knowledge
presupposes an integral Reality; for it is the power of a
Truth-Consciousness which is itself the
consciousness of the Reality. But our idea and sense of Reality vary
with our status and movement of consciousness, its
sight, its stress, its intake of things; that sight or stress can be
intensive and exclusive or extensive, inclusive and
comprehensive. It is quite possible,—and it is in its own field a valid
movement for our thought and for a very high line of
spiritual achievement,— to affirm the existence of the ineffable
Absolute, to emphasise its sole Reality and to negate and
abolish for our self, to expunge from our idea and sense of reality,
the individual being and the cosmic creation. The reality
of the individual is Brahman the Absolute; the reality of the cosmos is
Brahman the Absolute: the individual is a
phenomenon, a temporal appearance in the cosmos; the cosmos itself is a
phenomenon, a larger and more complex temporal
appearance. The two terms, Knowledge and Igno-
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rance, belong only to this appearance; in order to reach an absolute superconsciousness both have to be transcended:
ego-consciousness and cosmic consciousness are extinguished in that supreme transcendence and there remains only the
Absolute. For the absolute Brahman exists only in its own identity and is beyond all other-knowledge; there the very idea of
the knower and the known and therefore of the knowledge in which they meet and become one, disappears, is transcended
and loses its validity, so that to mind and speech the absolute Brahman must remain always unattainable. In opposition to the
view we have put forward or in completion of it,—the view of the Ignorance itself as only either a limited or an involved
action of the divine Knowledge, limited in the partly conscient, involved in the inconscient,—we might say from this other
end of the scale of things that Knowledge itself is only a higher Ignorance, since it stops short of the absolute Reality which
is self-evident to Itself but to mind unknowable. This absolutism corresponds to a truth of thought and to a truth of supreme
experience in the spiritual consciousness; but by itself it is not the whole of spiritual thought complete and comprehensive
and it does not exhaust the possibilities of the supreme spiritual experience.
The absolutist view of reality, consciousness and knowledge is founded on one side of the earliest Vedantic thought, but
it is not the whole of that thinking. In the Upanishads, in the inspired scripture of the most ancient Vedanta, we find the
affirmation of the Absolute, the experience-concept of the utter and ineffable Transcendence; but we find also, not in
contradiction to it but as its corollary, an affirmation of the cosmic Divinity, an experience-concept of the cosmic Self and
the becoming of Brahman in the universe. Equally, we find the affirmation of the Divine Reality in the individual: this too is
an experience-concept; it is seized upon not as an appearance, but as an actual becoming. In place of a sole supreme
exclusive affirmation negating all else than the transcendent Absolute we find a comprehensive affirmation carried to its
farthest conclusion: this concept of Reality and of Knowledge enveloping in one view the cosmic and the Absolute coincides
fundamentally with our own; for it implies that the Ignorance too is a half-veiled part of the Knowledge and world-
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knowledge a part of self-knowledge. The Isha
Upanishad insists on the unity and reality of all the manifestations of
the
Absolute; it refuses to confine truth to any one aspect. Brahman is the
stable and the mobile, the internal and the external,
all that is near and all that is far whether spiritually or in the
extension of Time and Space; it is the Being and all becomings,
the Pure and Silent who is without feature or action and the Seer and
Thinker who organises the world and its objects; it is
the One who becomes all that we are sensible of in the universe, the
Immanent and that in which he takes up his dwelling.
The Upanishad affirms the perfect and the liberating knowledge to be
that which excludes neither the Self nor its creations:
the liberated spirit sees all these as becomings of the Self-existent
in an internal vision and by a consciousness which
perceives the universe within itself instead of looking out on it, like
the limited and egoistic mind, as a thing other than itself.
To live in the cosmic Ignorance is a blindness, but to confine oneself
in an exclusive absolutism of Knowledge is also a
blindness: to know Brahman as at once and together the Knowledge and
the Ignorance, to attain to the supreme status at
once by the Becoming and the Non-Becoming, to relate together
realisation of the transcendent and the cosmic self, to
achieve foundation in the supramundane and a self-aware manifestation
in the mundane, is the integral knowledge; that is
the possession of Immortality. It is this whole consciousness with its
complete knowledge that builds the foundation of the
Life Divine and makes its attainment possible. It follows that the
absolute reality of the Absolute must be, not a rigid
indeterminable oneness, not an infinity vacant of all that is not a
pure self-existence attainable only by the exclusion of the
many and the finite, but something which is beyond these definitions,
beyond indeed any description either positive or
negative. All affirmations and negations are expressive of its aspects,
and it is through both a supreme affirmation and a
supreme negation that we can arrive at the Absolute.
On the one side, then,
presented to us as the Reality, we have an absolute Self-Existence, an
eternal sole self-being, and
through the experience of the silent and inactive Self or the detached
immobile Purusha we can move towards this
featureless and
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relationless Absolute, negate the actions of the
creative Power, whether that be an illusory Maya or a formative
Prakriti,
pass from all circling in cosmic error into the eternal Peace and
Silence, get rid of our personal existence and find or lose
ourselves in that sole true Existence. On the other side, we have a
Becoming which is a true movement of Being, and both
the Being and the Becoming are truths of one absolute Reality. The
first view is founded on the metaphysical conception
which formulates an extreme perception in our thought, an exclusive
experience in our consciousness of the Absolute as a
reality void of all relations and determinations: that imposes as its
consequence a logical and practical necessity to deny the
world of relativities as a falsity of unreal being, a Non-Existent
(Asat), or at least a lower and evanescent, temporal and
pragmatic self-experience, and to cut it away from the consciousness in
order to arrive at liberation of the spirit from its
false perceptions or its inferior creations. The second view is based
on the conception of the Absolute as neither positively
nor negatively limitable. It is beyond all relations in the sense that
it is not bound by any relativities or limitable by them in its
power of being: it cannot be tied down and circumscribed by our
relative conceptions, highest or lowest, positive or negative;
it is bound neither by our knowledge nor by our ignorance, neither by
our concept of existence nor by our concept of
non-existence. But neither can it be limited by any incapacity to
contain, sustain, create or manifest relations: on the
contrary, the power to manifest itself in infinity of unity and
infinity of multiplicity can be regarded as an inherent force, sign,
result of its very absoluteness, and this possibility is in itself a
sufficient explanation of cosmic existence. The Absolute
cannot indeed be bound in its nature to manifest a cosmos of relations,
but neither can it be bound not to manifest any
cosmos. It is not itself a sheer emptiness; for a vacant Absolute is no
Absolute,—our conception of a Void or Zero is only a
conceptual sign of our mental inability to know or grasp it: it bears
in itself some ineffable essentiality of all that is and all
that can be; and since it holds in itself this essentiality and this
possibility, it must also hold in itself in some way of its
absoluteness either the permanent truth or the inherent, even if
latent, realisable actuality
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of all that is fundamental to our or the world's existence. It is this realisable actuality actualised or this permanent truth
deploying its possibilities that we call manifestation and see as the universe.
There is, then, in the
conception or the realisation of the truth of the Absolute no inherent
inevitable consequence of a
rejection or a dissolution of the truth of the universe. The idea of an
essentially unreal universe manifested somehow by an
inexplicable Power of illusion, the Absolute Brahman regarding it not
or aloof and not affecting it even as it is unaffected by
it, is at bottom a carrying over, an imposing or imputation, adhyāropa, of an incapacity of our mental consciousness to That
so as to limit it. Our mental consciousness, when it passes beyond its limits, loses its own way and means of knowledge and
tends towards inactivity or cessation; it loses at the same time or tends to have no further hold on its former contents, no
continuing conception of the reality of that which once was to it all that was real: we impute to absolute Parabrahman,
conceived as non-manifest for ever, a corresponding inability or separation or aloofness from what has become or seems
now to us unreal; it must, like our mind in its cessation or self-extinction, be by its very nature of pure absoluteness void of
all connection with this world of apparent manifestation, incapable of any supporting cognition or dynamic maintenance of it
that gives it a reality,— or, if there is such a cognition, it must be of the nature of an Is that is not, a magical Maya. But
there is no binding reason to suppose that this chasm must exist; what our relative human consciousness is or is not capable
of, is no test or standard of an absolute capacity; its conceptions cannot be applied to an absolute self-awareness: what is
necessary for our mental ignorance in order to escape from itself cannot be the necessity of the Absolute which has no
need of self-escape and no reason for refusing to cognise whatever is to it cognisable.
There is that unmanifest Unknowable; there is this manifest knowable, partly manifest to our ignorance, manifest
entirely to the divine Knowledge which holds it in its own infinity. If it is true that neither our ignorance nor our utmost and
widest mental knowledge can give us a hold of the Unknowable, still it is also true that, whether through our knowledge or
through our
igno-
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rance, That variously manifests itself; for it cannot be manifesting something other than itself, since nothing else can
exist: in this variety of manifestation there is that Oneness and through the diversity we can touch the Oneness. But even so,
even accepting this co-existence, it is still possible to pass a final verdict and sentence of condemnation on the Becoming
and decide on the necessity of a renunciation of it and a return into the absolute Being. This verdict can be based on the
distinction between the real reality of the Absolute and the partial and misleading reality of the relative universe.
For we have in this
unfolding of knowledge the two terms of the One and the Many, as we
have the two terms of the
finite and the infinite, of that which becomes and of that which does
not become but for ever is, of that which takes form
and of that which does not take form, of Spirit and Matter, of the
supreme Superconscient and the nethermost Inconscience;
in this dualism, and to get away from it, it is open to us to define
Knowledge as the possession of one term and the
possession of the other as Ignorance. The ultimate of our life would
then be a drawing away from the lower reality of the
Becoming to the greater reality of the Being, a leap from the Ignorance
to the Knowledge and a rejection of the Ignorance,
a departure from the many into the One, from the finite into the
infinite, from form into the formless, from the life of the
material universe into the Spirit, from the hold of the inconscient
upon us into the superconscient Existence. In this solution
there is supposed to be a fixed opposition, an ultimate
irreconcilability in each case between the two terms of our being. Or
else, if both are a means of the manifestation of the Brahman, the
lower is a false or imperfect clue, a means that must fail,
a system of values that cannot ultimately satisfy us. Dissatisfied with
the confusions of the multiplicity, disdainful of even the
highest light and power and joy that it can reveal, we must drive
beyond to the absolute one-pointedness and
one-standingness in which all self-variation ceases. Unable by the
claim of the Infinite upon us to dwell for ever in the bonds
of the finite or to find there satisfaction and largeness and peace, we
have to break all the bonds of individual and universal
Nature, destroy all values, symbols, images, self-definitions,
limitations
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of the illimitable and lose all littleness and
division in the Self that is for ever satisfied with its own infinity.
Disgusted with
forms, disillusioned of their false and transient attractions, wearied
and discouraged by their fleeting impermanence and vain
round of recurrence, we must escape from the cycles of Nature into the
formlessness and featurelessness of permanent
Being. Ashamed of Matter and its grossness, impatient of the
purposeless stir and trouble of Life, tired out by the goalless
running of Mind or convinced of the vanity of all its aims and objects,
we have to release ourselves into the eternal repose
and purity of the Spirit. The Inconscient is a sleep or a prison, the
conscient a round of strivings without ultimate issue or the
wanderings of a dream: we must wake into the superconscious where all
darkness of night and half-lights cease in the
self-luminous bliss of the Eternal. The Eternal is our refuge; all the
rest are false values, the Ignorance and its mazes, a
self-bewilderment of the soul in phenomenal Nature.
Our conception of the
Knowledge and the Ignorance rejects this negation and the oppositions
on which it is founded: it
points to a larger if more difficult issue of reconciliation. For we
see that these apparently opposite terms of One and Many,
Form and the Formless, Finite and Infinite, are not so much opposites
as complements of each other; not alternating values
of the Brahman which in its creation perpetually loses oneness to find
itself in multiplicity and, unable to discover itself in
multiplicity, loses it again to recover oneness, but double and
concurrent values which explain each other; not hopelessly
incompatible alternatives, but two faces of the one Reality which can
lead us to it by our realisation of both together and not
only by testing each separately,—even though such separate testing may
be a legitimate or even an inevitable step or part of
the process of knowledge. Knowledge is no doubt the knowledge of the
One, the realisation of the Being; Ignorance is a
self-oblivion of Being, the experience of separateness in the
multiplicity and a dwelling or circling in the ill-understood maze
of becomings: but this is cured by the soul in the Becoming growing
into knowledge, into awareness of the Being which
becomes in the multiplicity all these existences and can so become
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because their truth is already there in its timeless existence. The integral knowledge of Brahman is a consciousness in
possession of both together, and the exclusive pursuit of either closes the vision to one side of the truth of the omnipresent
Reality. The possession of the Being who is beyond all becomings, brings to us freedom from the bonds of attachment and
ignorance in the cosmic existence and brings by that freedom a free possession of the Becoming and of the cosmic
existence. The knowledge of the Becoming is a part of knowledge; it acts as an Ignorance only because we dwell
imprisoned in it, avidyāyām antare, without possessing the Oneness of the Being, which is its base, its stuff, its spirit, its
cause of manifestation and without which it could not be possible.
In fact, the Brahman is one
not only in a featureless oneness beyond all relation, but in the very
multiplicity of the
cosmic existence. Aware of the works of the dividing mind but not
itself limited by it, It finds its oneness as easily in the
many, in relations, in becoming as in any withdrawal from the many,
from relations, from becoming. Ourselves also, to
possess even its oneness fully, must possess it,—since it is there,
since all is that,—in the infinite self-variation of the
cosmos. The infinity of the multiplicity finds itself explained and
justified only when it is contained and possessed in the
infinity of the One; but also the infinity of the One pours itself out
and possesses itself in the infinity of the Many. To be
capable of that outpouring of its energies as well as not to lose
itself in it, not to recoil defeated from its boundlessness and
endlessness of vicissitudes and differences as well as not to be
self-divided by its variations, is the divine strength of the free
Purusha, the conscious Soul in its possession of its own immortal
self-knowledge. The finite self-variations of the Self in
which the mind losing self-knowledge is caught and dispersed among the
variations, are yet not the denials but the endless
expression of the Infinite and have no other meaning or reason for
existence: the Infinite too, while it possesses its delight of
limitless being, finds also the joy of that very limitlessness in its
infinite self-definition in the universe. The Divine Being is not
incapable of taking innumerable forms because He is beyond all form in
His essence, nor by assuming
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them does He lose His divinity, but pours out rather
in them the delight of His being and the glories of His godhead; this
gold
does not cease to be gold because it shapes itself into all kinds of
ornaments and coins itself into many currencies and
values, nor does the Earth-Power, principle of all this figured
material existence, lose her immutable divinity because she
forms herself into habitable worlds, throws herself out in the hills
and hollows and allows herself to be shaped into utensils of
the hearth and household or as hard metal into the weapon and the
engine. Matter,—substance itself, subtle or dense,
mental or material,—is form and body of Spirit and would never have
been created if it could not be made a basis for the
self-expression of the Spirit. The apparent Inconscience of the
material universe holds in itself darkly all that is eternally
self-revealed in the luminous Superconscient; to reveal it in Time is
the slow and deliberate delight of Nature and the aim of
her cycles.
But there are other
conceptions of reality, other conceptions of the nature of knowledge
which demand consideration.
There is the view that all that exists is a subjective creation of
Mind, a structure of Consciousness, and that the idea of an
objective reality self-existent, independent of Consciousness, is an
illusion, since we have and can have no evidence of any
such independent self-existence of things. This way of seeing may lead
to the affirmation of the creative Consciousness as
the sole Reality or to the denial of all existence and the affirmation
of Non-Existence or a nescient Zero as the sole Reality.
For, in one view, the objects constructed by consciousness have no
intrinsic reality, they are merely structures; even the
consciousness that constructs them is itself only a flux of perceptions
that assume an appearance of connection and
continuity and create a sense of continuous time, but in reality these
things have no stable basis as they are only an
appearance of reality. This would mean that the reality is an eternal
absence at once of all self-conscious existence and of
all that constitutes movement of existence: Knowledge would mean a
return to that from the appearance of the constructed
universe. There would be a double and complete self-extinction, the
disappearance of Purusha, the cessation or extinction of
Prakriti; for the conscious Soul and Nature are
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the two terms of our being and comprehend all that we mean by existence, and the negation of both is the absolute Nirvana.
What is real, then, must be either an Inconscience, in which this flux and these structures appear, or a Superconscience
beyond all idea of self or existence. But this view of the universe is only true of the appearance of things when we regard
our surface mind as the whole of consciousness; as a description of the working of that Mind it is valid; there, undoubtedly,
all looks like a flux and a construction by an impermanent Consciousness. But this cannot prevail as a whole account of
existence if there is a greater and deeper self-knowledge and world-knowledge, a knowledge by identity, a consciousness to
which that knowledge is normal and a Being of which that consciousness is the eternal self-awareness; for then the
subjective and the objective can be real and intimate to that consciousness and being, both can be something of itself, sides
of its identity, authentic to its existence.
On the other hand, if the constructing Mind or Consciousness is real and the sole reality, then the universe of material
beings and objects may have an existence, but it is purely subjective-structural, made by Consciousness out of itself,
maintained by it, dissolving into it in their disappearance. For if there is nothing else, no essential Existence or Being
supporting the creative Power, and there is not, either, a sustaining Void or Nihil, then this Consciousness which creates
everything must itself have or be an existence or a substance; if it can make structures, they must be constructions out of its
own substance or forms of its own existence. A consciousness which is not that of an Existence or is not itself an existence,
must be an unreality, a perceptive Force of a Void or in a Void raising there unreal structures made of nothing,—a
proposition which is not easily acceptable unless all others prove to be invalid. It then becomes apparent that what we see
as consciousness must be a Being or an Existence out of whose substance of consciousness all is created.
But if we thus get back to
the biune or the dual reality of Being and Consciousness, we can either
suppose with
Vedanta one original Being or with Sankhya a plurality of beings to
whom Consciousness or some Energy to which we
attribute consciousness presents its structures. If a plurality of
separate
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original beings alone is real, then, since each
would be or create its own world in its own consciousness, the
difficulty is to
account for their relations in a single identical universe; there must
be a one Consciousness or one Energy,—corresponding
to the Sankhya idea of a single Prakriti which is the field of
experience of many like Purushas,—in which they meet in an
identical mind-constructed universe. This theory of things has the
advantage of accounting for the multitude of souls and
multitude of things and the oneness in diversity of their experience,
while at the same time it gives a reality to the separate
spiritual growth and destiny of the individual being. But if we can
suppose a One Consciousness, or a One Energy, creating
a multitude of figures of itself and accommodating in its world a
plurality of beings, there is no difficulty in supposing a one
original Being who supports or expresses himself in a plurality of
beings,— souls or spiritual powers of his one-existence; it
would follow also that all objects, all the figures of consciousness
would be figures of the Being. It must then be asked
whether this plurality and these figures are realities of the one Real
Existence, or representative personalities and images
only, or symbols or values created by Mind to represent It. This would
depend largely on whether it is only Mind as we
know it that is in action or a deeper and greater Consciousness, of
which Mind is a surface instrument, executrix of its
initiations, medium of its manifestations. If it is the former, the
universe constructed and seen by Mind can only have a
subjective or symbolic or representative reality: if the latter, then
the universe and its natural beings and objects can be true
realities of the One Existence, forms or powers of its being manifested
by its force of being. Mind would be only an
interpreter between the universal Reality and the manifestations of its
creative Consciousness-Force, Shakti, Prakriti, Maya.
It is clear that a Mind of the nature of our surface intelligence can be only a secondary power of existence. For it bears
the stamp of incapacity and ignorance as a sign that it is derivative and not the original creatrix; we see that it does not
know or understand the objects it perceives, it has no automatic control of them; it has to acquire a laboriously built
knowledge and controlling power. This initial incapacity could not be there if
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these objects were the Mind's own structures, creations of
its self-Power. It may be that this is so because individual mind has only a
frontal and derivative power and knowledge and there is a universal Mind that is
whole, endowed with omniscience, capable of omnipotence. But the nature of Mind
as we know it is an Ignorance seeking for knowledge; it is a knower of fractions
and worker of divisions striving to arrive at a sum, to piece together a
whole,—it is not possessed of the essence of things or their totality: a
universal Mind of the same character might know the sum of its divisions by
force of its universality, but it would still lack the essential knowledge, and
without the essential knowledge there could be no true integral knowledge. A
consciousness possessing the essential and integral knowledge, proceeding from
the essence to the whole and from the whole to the parts, would be no longer
Mind, but a perfect Truth-Consciousness automatically possessed of inherent
self-knowledge and world-knowledge. It is from this basis that we have to look
at the subjective view of reality. It is true that there is no such thing as an
objective reality independent of consciousness; but at the same time there is a
truth in objectivity and it is this, that the reality of things resides in
something that is within them and is independent of the interpretation our mind
gives to them and of the structures it builds upon its observation. These
structures constitute the mind's subjective image or figure of the universe, but
the universe and its objects are not a mere image or figure. They are in essence
creations of consciousness, but of a consciousness that is one with being, whose
substance is the substance of Being and whose creations too are of that
substance, therefore real. In this view the world cannot be a purely subjective
creation of Consciousness; the subjective and the objective truth of things are
both real, they are two sides of the same Reality.
In a certain sense, to use the
relative and suggestive phrasing of our human language, all things are the
symbols through which we have to approach and draw nearer to That by which we
and they exist. The infinity of unity is one symbol, the infinity of the
multiplicity is another symbol: again, since each thing in the multiplicity
points back to the unity, since each thing that
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we call finite is a representative figure, a
form-front, a silhouette shadowing out something of the infinite, all
that defines
itself in the universe,—all its objects, happenings, idea-formations,
life-formations,—are in their turn each a clue and a
symbol. To our subjective mind the infinity of existence is one symbol,
the infinity of non-existence is another symbol. The
infinity of the Inconscient and the infinity of the Superconscient are
two poles of the manifestation of the absolute
Parabrahman, and our existence between these two poles and our passage
from one to the other are a progressive seizing, a
constant interpretation, a subjective building up in ourselves of this
manifestation of the Unmanifest. Through such an
unfolding of our self-existence we have to arrive at the consciousness
of its ineffable Presence and of ourselves and the
world and all that is and all that is not as the unveiling of that
which never entirely unveils itself to anything other than its
own self-light eternal and absolute.
But this way of seeing
things belongs to the action of the mind interpreting the relation
between the Being and the
external Becoming; it is valid as a dynamic mental representation
corresponding to a certain truth of the manifestation, but
subject to the proviso that these symbolic values of things do not make
the things themselves mere significant counters,
abstract symbols like mathematical formulae or other signs used by the
mind for knowledge: for forms and happenings in the
universe are realities significant of Reality; they are
self-expressions of That, movements and powers of the Being. Each
form is there because it is an expression of some power of That which
inhabits it; each happening is a movement in the
working out of some Truth of the Being in its dynamic process of
manifestation. It is this significance that gives validity to
the mind's interpretative knowledge, its subjective construction of the
universe; our mind is primarily a percipient and
interpreter, secondarily and derivatively a creator. This indeed is the
value of all mental subjectivity that it reflects in it some
truth of the Being which exists independently of the
reflection,—whether that independence presents itself as a physical
objectivity or a supraphysical reality perceived by the mind but not
perceptible by the physical senses. Mind, then, is not the
original constructor of the universe: it
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is an intermediate power valid for certain
actualities of being; an agent, an intermediary, it actualises
possibilities and has its
share in the creation, but the real creatrix is a Consciousness, an
Energy inherent in the transcendent and cosmic Spirit.
There is a precisely
opposite view of reality and knowledge which affirms an objective
Reality as the only entire truth
and an objective knowledge as the sole entirely reliable knowledge.
This view starts from the idea of physical existence as
the one fundamental existence and the relegation of consciousness,
mind, soul or spirit to the position of a temporary
outcome of the physical Energy in its cosmic action,—if indeed soul or
spirit has any existence. All that is not physical and
objective has a lesser reality dependent on the physical and objective;
it has to justify itself to the physical mind by objective
evidence or a recognisable and verifiable relation to the truth of
physical and external things before it can be given a
passport of reality. But it is evident that this solution cannot be
accepted in its rigour, as it has no integrality in it but looks at
only one side of existence, even only one province or district of
existence, and leaves all the rest unexplained, without
inherent reality, without significance. If pushed to its extreme, it
would give to a stone or a plum-pudding a greater reality
and to thought, love, courage, genius, greatness, the human soul and
mind facing an obscure and dangerous world and
getting mastery over it an inferior dependent reality or even an
unsubstantial and evanescent reality. For in this view these
things so great to our subjective vision are valid only as the
reactions of an objective material being to an objective material
existence; they are valid only in so far as they deal with objective
realities and make themselves effective upon them: the
soul, if it exists, is only a circumstance of an objectively real
world-Nature. But it could be held, on the contrary, that the
objective assumes value only as it has a relation to the soul; it is a
field, an occasion, a means for the soul's progression in
Time: the objective is created as a ground of manifestation for the
subjective. The objective world is only an outward form
of becoming of the Spirit; it is here a first form, a basis, but it is
not the essential thing, the main truth of being. The
subjective and objective are two necessary sides of the
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manifested Reality and of equal value, and in the range of the objective itself the supraphysical object of consciousness has
as much right to acceptance as the physical objectivity; it cannot be a priori
set aside as a subjective delusion or
hallucination.
In fact, subjectivity and objectivity are not independent realities,
they depend upon each other; they are the Being,
through consciousness, looking at itself as subject on the object and
the same Being offering itself to its own consciousness
as object to the subject. The more partial view concedes no substantive
reality to anything which exists only in the
consciousness, or, to put it more accurately, to anything to which the
inner consciousness or sense bears testimony but
which the outer physical senses do not provide with a ground or do not
substantiate. But the outer senses can bear a reliable
evidence only when they refer their version of the object to the
consciousness and that consciousness gives a significance to
their report, adds to its externality its own internal intuitive
interpretation and justifies it by a reasoned adherence; for the
evidence of the senses is always by itself imperfect, not altogether
reliable and certainly not final, because it is incomplete
and constantly subject to error. Indeed, we have no means of knowing
the objective universe except by our subjective
consciousness of which the physical senses themselves are instruments;
as the world appears not only to that but in that, so
it is to us. If we deny reality to the evidence of this universal
witness for subjective or for supraphysical objectivities, there is
no sufficient reason to concede reality to its evidence for physical
objectivities; if the inner or the supraphysical objects of
consciousness are unreal, the objective physical universe has also
every chance of being unreal. In each case understanding,
discrimination, verification are necessary; but the subjective and the
supraphysical must have another method of verification
than that which we apply successfully to the physical and external
objective. Subjective experience cannot be referred to
the evidence of the external senses; it has its own standards of seeing
and its inner method of verification: so also
supraphysical realities by their very nature cannot be referred to the
judgment of the physical or sense mind except when
they project themselves into the physical, and even then
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that judgment is often incompetent or subject to caution; they can only be verified by other senses and by a method of
scrutiny and affirmation which is applicable to their own reality, their own nature.
There are different orders
of reality; the objective and physical is only one order. It is
convincing to the physical or externalising mind because it is directly
obvious to the senses, while of the subjective and the supraphysical
that mind has no
means of knowledge except from fragmentary signs and data and
inferences which are at every step liable to error. Our
subjective movements and inner experiences are a domain of happenings
as real as any outward physical happenings; but if
the individual mind can know something of its own phenomena by direct
experience, it is ignorant of what happens in the
consciousness of others except by analogy with its own or such signs,
data, inferences as its outward observation can give
it. I am therefore inwardly real to myself, but the invisible life of
others has only an indirect reality to me except in so far as
it impinges on my own mind, life and senses. This is the limitation of
the physical mind of man, and it creates in him a habit
of believing entirely only in the physical and of doubting or
challenging all that does not come into accord with his own
experience or his own scope of understanding or square with his own
standard or sum of established knowledge.
This ego-centric attitude has in recent times been elevated into a
valid standard of knowledge; it has been implicitly or
explicitly held as an axiom that all truth must be referred to the
judgment of the personal mind, reason and experience of
every man or else it must be verified or at any rate verifiable by a
common or universal experience in order to be valid. But
obviously this is a false standard of reality and of knowledge, since
this means the sovereignty of the normal or average
mind and its limited capacity and experience, the exclusion of what is
supernormal or beyond the average intelligence. In its
extreme, this claim of the individual to be the judge of everything is
an egoistic illusion, a superstition of the physical mind, in
the mass a gross and vulgar error. The truth behind it is that each man
has to think for himself, know for himself according
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to his capacity, but his judgment can be valid only on condition that he is ready to learn and open always to a larger
knowledge. It is reasoned that to depart from the physical standard and the principle of personal or universal verification will
lead to gross delusions and the admission of unverified truth and subjective phantasy into the realm of knowledge. But error
and delusion and the introduction of personality and one's own subjectivity into the pursuit of knowledge are always present,
and the physical or objective standards and methods do not exclude them. The probability of error is no reason for refusing
to attempt discovery, and subjective discovery must be pursued by a subjective method of enquiry, observation and
verification; research into the supraphysical must evolve, accept and test an appropriate means and methods other than
those by which one examines the constituents of physical objects and the processes of Energy in material Nature.
To refuse to enquire upon any general ground preconceived and a priori is an obscurantism as prejudicial to the
extension of knowledge as the religious obscurantism which opposed in Europe the extension of scientific discovery. The
greatest inner discoveries, the experience of self-being, the cosmic consciousness, the inner calm of the liberated spirit, the
direct effect of mind upon mind, the knowledge of things by consciousness in direct contact with other consciousness or
with its objects, most spiritual experiences of any value, cannot be brought before the tribunal of the common mentality
which has no experience of these things and takes its own absence or incapacity of experience as a proof of their invalidity
or their non-existence. Physical truth of formulas, generalisations, discoveries founded upon physical observation can be so
referred, but even there a training of capacity is needed before one can truly understand and judge; it is not every untrained
mind that can follow the mathematics of relativity or other difficult scientific truths or judge of the validity either of their
result or their process. All reality, all experience must indeed, to be held as true, be capable of verification by a same or
similar experience; so, in fact, all men can have a spiritual experience and can follow it out and verify it in themselves, but
only when they have acquired the capacity or can
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follow the inner methods by which that experience and verification are made possible. It is necessary to dwell for a moment
on these obvious and elementary truths because the opposite ideas have been sovereign in a recent period of human
mentality,— they are now only receding,—and have stood in the way of the development of a vast domain of possible
knowledge. It is of supreme importance for the human spirit to be free to sound the depths of inner or subliminal reality, of
spiritual and of what is still superconscient reality, and not to immure itself in the physical mind and its narrow domain of
objective external solidities; for in that way alone can there come liberation from the Ignorance in which our mentality
dwells and a release into a complete consciousness, a true and integral self-realisation and self-knowledge.
An integral knowledge demands an exploration, an unveiling of all the possible domains of consciousness and
experience. For there are subjective domains of our being which lie behind the obvious surface; these have to be fathomed
and whatever is ascertained must be admitted within the scope of the total reality. An inner range of spiritual experience is
one very great domain of human consciousness; it has to be entered into up to its deepest depths and its vastest reaches.
The supraphysical is as real as the physical; to know it is part of a complete knowledge. The knowledge of the
supraphysical has been associated with mysticism and occultism, and occultism has been banned as a superstition and a
fantastic error. But the occult is a part of existence; a true occultism means no more than a research into supraphysical
realities and an unveiling of the hidden laws of being and Nature, of all that is not obvious on the surface. It attempts the
discovery of the secret laws of mind and mental energy, the secret laws of life and life-energy, the secret laws of the
subtle-physical and its energies,—all that Nature has not put into visible operation on the surface; it pursues also the
application of these hidden truths and powers of Nature so as to extend the mastery of the human spirit beyond the ordinary
operations of mind, the ordinary operations of life, the ordinary operations of our physical existence. In the spiritual domain
which is occult to the surface mind in so far as it passes beyond normal and
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enters into supernormal experience, there is
possible not only the discovery of the self and spirit, but the
discovery of the
uplifting, informing and guiding light of spiritual consciousness and
the power of the spirit, the spiritual way of knowledge, the
spiritual way of action. To know these things and to bring their truths
and forces into the life of humanity is a necessary part
of its evolution. Science itself is in its own way an occultism; for it
brings to light the formulas which Nature has hidden and
it uses its knowledge to set free operations of her energies which she
has not included in her ordinary operations and to organise and place
at the service of man her occult powers and processes, a vast system of
physical magic,—for there is
and can be no other magic than the utilisation of secret truths of
being, secret powers and processes of Nature. It may even
be found that a supraphysical knowledge is necessary for the completion
of physical knowledge, because the processes of
physical Nature have behind them a supraphysical factor, a power and
action mental, vital or spiritual which is not tangible
to any outer means of knowledge.
All insistence on the sole
or the fundamental validity of the objective real takes its stand on
the sense of the basic reality
of Matter. But it is now evident that Matter is by no means
fundamentally real; it is a structure of Energy: it is becoming
even a little doubtful whether the acts and creations of this Energy
itself are explicable except as the motions of power of a
secret Mind or Consciousness of which its processes and steps of
structure are the formulas. It is therefore no longer
possible to take Matter as the sole reality. The material
interpretation of existence was the result of an exclusive
concentration, a preoccupation with one movement of Existence, and such
an exclusive concentration has its utility and is
therefore permissible; in recent times it has justified itself by the
many immense and the innumerable minute discoveries of
physical Science. But a solution of the whole problem of existence
cannot be based on an exclusive one-sided knowledge;
we must know not only what Matter is and what are its processes, but
what mind and life are and what are their processes,
and one must know also spirit and soul and all that is behind the
material surface: only then can we have a
know-
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ledge sufficiently integral for a solution of the problem. For the same reason those views of existence which arise from
an exclusive or predominant preoccupation with Mind or with Life and regard Mind or Life as the sole fundamental reality,
have not a sufficiently wide basis for acceptance. Such a preoccupation of exclusive concentration may lead to a fruitful
scrutiny which sheds much light on Mind and Life, but cannot result in a total solution of the problem. It may very well be
that an exclusive or predominant concentration on the subliminal being, regarding the surface existence as a mere system of
symbols for an expression of its sole reality, might throw a strong light on the subliminal and its processes and extend vastly
the powers of the human being, but it would not be by itself an integral solution or lead us successfully to the integral
knowledge of Reality. In our view the Spirit, the Self is the fundamental reality of existence; but an exclusive concentration
on this fundamental reality to the exclusion of all reality of Mind, Life or Matter except as an imposition on the Self or
unsubstantial shadows cast by the Spirit might help to an independent and radical spiritual realisation but not to an integral
and valid solution of the truth of cosmic and individual existence.
An integral knowledge then
must be a knowledge of the truth of all sides of existence both
separately and in the relation
of each to all and the relation of all to the truth of the Spirit. Our
present state is an Ignorance and a many-sided seeking; it
seeks for the truth of all things but,—as is evident from the
insistence and the variety of the human mind's speculations as to
the fundamental Truth which explains all others, the Reality at the
basis of all things,—the fundamental truth of things, their
basic reality must be found in some at once fundamental and universal
Real; it is that which, once discovered, must embrace
and explain all,—for “That being known all will be known”: the
fundamental Real must necessarily be and contain the truth
of all existence, the truth of the individual, the truth of the
universe, the truth of all that is beyond the universe. The Mind, in
seeking for such a Reality and testing each thing from Matter upwards
to see if that might not be It, has not proceeded on a
wrong intuition. All that is necessary is to carry the
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inquiry to its end and test the highest and ultimate levels of experience.
But since it is from the
Ignorance that we proceed to the Knowledge, we have had first to
discover the secret nature
and full extent of the Ignorance. If we look at this Ignorance in which
ordinarily we live by the very circumstance of our separative existence
in a material, in a spatial and temporal universe, we see that on its
obscurer side it reduces itself, from
whatever direction we look at or approach it, into the fact of a
many-sided self-ignorance. We are ignorant of the Absolute
which is the source of all being and becoming; we take partial facts of
being, temporal relations of the becoming for the
whole truth of existence,—that is the first, the original ignorance. We
are ignorant of the spaceless, timeless, immobile and
immutable Self; we take the constant mobility and mutation of the
cosmic becoming in Time and Space for the whole truth
of existence,—that is the second, the cosmic ignorance. We are ignorant
of our universal self, the cosmic existence, the
cosmic consciousness, our infinite unity with all being and becoming;
we take our limited egoistic mentality, vitality,
corporeality for our true self and regard everything other than that as
not-self,—that is the third, the egoistic ignorance. We
are ignorant of our eternal becoming in Time; we take this little life
in a small span of Time, in a petty field of Space, for our
beginning, our middle and our end,—that is the fourth, the temporal
ignorance. Even within this brief temporal becoming we
are ignorant of our large and complex being, of that in us which is
superconscient, subconscient, intraconscient,
circumconscient to our surface becoming; we take that surface becoming
with its small selection of overtly mentalised
experiences for our whole existence,—that is the fifth, the
psychological ignorance. We are ignorant of the true constitution
of our becoming; we take the mind or life or body or any two of these
or all three for our true principle or the whole account
of what we are, losing sight of that which constitutes them and
determines by its occult presence and is meant to determine
sovereignly by its emergence their operations,—that is the sixth, the
constitutional ignorance. As a result of all these
ignorances, we miss the true knowledge, government and enjoyment of our
life in the
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world; we are ignorant in our thought, will, sensations, actions, return wrong or imperfect responses at every point to the
questionings of the world, wander in a maze of errors and desires, strivings and failures, pain and pleasure, sin and
stumbling, follow a crooked road, grope blindly for a changing goal,—that is the seventh, the practical ignorance.
Our conception of the
Ignorance will necessarily determine our conception of the Knowledge
and determine, therefore,
since our life is the Ignorance at once denying and seeking after the
Knowledge, the goal of human effort and the aim of the
cosmic endeavour. Integral knowledge will then mean the cancelling of
the sevenfold Ignorance by the discovery of what it
misses and ignores, a sevenfold self-revelation within our
consciousness: it will mean the knowledge of the Absolute as the
origin of all things; the knowledge of the Self, the Spirit, the Being
and of the cosmos as the Self's becoming, the becoming
of the Being, a manifestation of the Spirit; the knowledge of the world
as one with us in the consciousness of our true self,
thus cancelling our division from it by the separative idea and life of
ego; the knowledge of our psychic entity and its
immortal persistence in Time beyond death and earth-existence; the
knowledge of our greater and inner existence behind
the surface; the knowledge of our mind, life and body in its true
relation to the self within and the superconscient spiritual
and supramental being above them; the knowledge, finally, of the true
harmony and true use of our thought, will and action
and a change of all our nature into a conscious expression of the truth
of the Spirit, the Self, the Divinity, the integral spiritual
Reality.
But this is not an
intellectual knowledge which can be learned and completed in our
present mould of consciousness; it
must be an experience, a becoming, a change of consciousness, a change
of being. This brings in the evolutionary character
of the Becoming and the fact that our mental ignorance is only a stage
in our evolution. The integral knowledge, then, can
only come by an evolution of our being and our nature, and that would
seem to signify a slow process in Time such as has
accompanied the other evolutionary transformations. But as against that
inference there is the fact that the evolution has
now become conscious
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and its method and steps need not be altogether of
the same character as when it was subconscious in its process. The
integral knowledge, since it must result from a change of
consciousness, can be gained by a process in which our will and
endeavour have a part, in which they can discover and apply their own
steps and method: its growth in us can proceed by a
conscious self-transformation. It is necessary then to see what is
likely to be the principle of this new process of evolution
and what are the movements of the integral knowledge that must
necessarily emerge in it,—or, in other words, what is the
nature of the consciousness that must be the base of the life divine
and how that life may be expected to be formed or to
form itself, to materialise or, as one might say, to “realise”.
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