A spiritual evolution, an evolution of
consciousness in Matter in a constant developing self-formation till the form
can reveal the indwelling Spirit, is then the keynote, the central significant
motive of the terrestrial existence. This significance is concealed at the
outset by the involution of the Spirit, the Divine Reality, in a dense material
Inconscience; a veil of Inconscience,
a veil of insensibility of Matter hides the universal Consciousness-Force which
works within it, so that the Energy, which is the first form the Force of
creation assumes in the physical universe, appears to be itself inconscient and yet does the works of a vast occult
Intelligence. The
1 VI. 11, 12. 2
V. 3-5. 3 II. 2. 12. 4
I. 95. 4, 5. 5
I. 3. 28.
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824
obscure mysterious creatrix
ends indeed by delivering the secret consciousness out of its thick and
tenebrous prison; but she delivers it slowly, little by little, in minute
infinitesimal drops, in thin jets, in small vibrant concretions of energy and
substance, of life, of mind, as if that were all she could get out through the
crass obstacle, the dull reluctant medium of an inconscient
stuff of existence. At first she houses herself in forms of Matter which appear
to be altogether unconscious, then struggles towards mentality in the guise of
living Matter and attains to it imperfectly in the conscious animal. This
consciousness is at first rudimentary, mostly a half subconscious or just
conscious instinct; it develops slowly till in more organised
forms of living Matter it reaches its climax of intelligence and exceeds itself
in Man, the thinking animal who develops into the reasoning mental being but
carries along with him even at his highest elevation the mould of original animality, the dead weight of subconscience
of body, the downward pull of gravitation towards the original Inertia and
Nescience, the control of an inconscient material
Nature over his conscious evolution, its power for limitation, its law of
difficult development, its immense force for retardation and frustration. This
control by the original Inconscience over the
consciousness emerging from it takes the general shape of a mentality
struggling towards knowledge but itself, in what seems to be its fundamental nature,
an Ignorance. Thus hampered and burdened, mental man has still to evolve out of
himself the fully conscious being, a divine manhood or a spiritual and supramental supermanhood which
shall be the next product of the evolution. That transition will mark the
passage from the evolution in the Ignorance to a greater evolution in the
Knowledge, founded and proceeding in the light of the Superconscient
and no longer in the darkness of the Ignorance and Inconscience.
This terrestrial
evolutionary working of Nature from Matter to Mind and beyond it has a double
process: there is an outward visible process of physical evolution with birth
as its machinery,—for each evolved form of body housing its own evolved power
of consciousness is maintained and kept in continuity by heredity; there is, at
the same time, an invisible process of soul evolution
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825
with rebirth into ascending grades of form and
consciousness as its machinery. The first by itself would mean only a cosmic evolution;
for the individual would be a quickly perishing instrument, and the race, a
more abiding collective formulation, would be the real step in the progressive
manifestation of the cosmic Inhabitant, the universal Spirit: rebirth is an indispensable
condition for any long duration and evolution of the individual being in the
earth-existence. Each grade of cosmic manifestation, each type of form that can
house the indwelling Spirit, is turned by rebirth into a means for the individual
soul, the psychic entity, to manifest more and more of its concealed consciousness;
each life becomes a step in a victory over Matter by a greater progression of
consciousness in it which shall make eventually Matter itself a means for the
full manifestation of the Spirit.
But
this account of the process and meaning of the terrestrial creation is at every
point exposed to challenge in the mind
of man himself, because the evolution is still
half-way on its journey, is still in the Ignorance, is still seeking in the
mind a half-evolved humanity for its own purpose and significance. It is
possible to challenge the theory of evolution on the ground that it is
insufficiently founded and that it is superfluous as an explanation of the
process of terrestrial existence. It is open to doubt, even if evolution is
granted, whether man has the capacity to develop into a higher evolutionary
being. It is open also to doubt whether the evolution is likely to go any
farther than it has gone already or whether a supramental
evolution, the appearance of a consummated Truth-Consciousness, a being of
Knowledge, is at all probable in the fundamental Ignorance of the earthly
Nature. Another construction neither teleological nor evolutionary can be put
on the workings of the Spirit in the manifestation here, and it may be as well
before proceeding farther to formulate succinctly the line of thinking which makes
such a construction possible.
Admitting that the
creation is a manifestation of the Timeless Eternal in a Time Eternity,
admitting that there are the seven grades of Consciousness and that the
material Inconscience has been laid down as a basis
for the reascent of the Spirit, admitting
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826
that rebirth is a fact, a part of the
terrestrial order, still a spiritual evolution of the individual being is not
an inevitable consequence of any of these admissions or even of all of them
together. It is possible to take another view of the spiritual significance and
the inner process of terrestrial existence. If each thing created is a form of
the manifest Divine Existence, each is divine in itself by the spiritual
presence within it, whatever its appearance, its figure or character in Nature.
In each form of manifestation the Divine takes the delight of existence and
there is no need of change or progress within it. Whatever ordered display or
hierarchy of actualised possibilities is necessitated
by the nature of the Infinite Being, is sufficiently provided for by the
numberless variation, the teeming multitude of forms, types of consciousness,
natures that we see everywhere around us. There is no teleological purpose in
creation and there cannot be, for all is there in the Infinite: the Divine has
nothing that he needs to gain or that he has not; if there is creation and
manifestation, it is for the delight of creation, of manifestation, not for any
purpose. There is then no reason for an evolutionary movement with a
culmination to be reached or an aim to be worked out and effectuated or a drive
towards ultimate perfection.
In fact we see that the
principles of creation are permanent and unchanging: each type of being remains
itself and does not try nor has any need to become other than itself; granting
that some types of existence disappear and others come into being, it is
because the Consciousness-Force in the universe withdraws its life-delight from
those that perish and turns to create others for its pleasure. But each type of
life, while it lasts, has its own pattern and remains faithful with whatever minor
variations to that pattern: it is bound to its own consciousness and cannot get
away from it into other-consciousness; limited by its own nature, it cannot
transgress these boundaries and pass into other-nature. If the
Consciousness-Force of the Infinite has manifested Life after manifesting
Matter and Mind after manifesting Life, it does not follow that it will proceed
to manifest Supermind as the next terrestrial
creation. For Mind and Supermind belong to quite
different hemispheres, Mind to the lower status of the Ignorance, Supermind to the higher status
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of the Divine Knowledge. This world is a world
of the Ignorance and intended to be that only; there need be no intention to bring
down the powers of the higher hemisphere into the lower half of existence or to
manifest their concealed presence there; for, if they are at all existent here,
it is in an occult incommunicable immanence and only to maintain the creation,
not to perfect it. Man is the summit of this ignorant creation; he has reached
the utmost consciousness and knowledge of which it is capable: if he tries to
go farther, he will only revolve in larger cycles of his own mentality. For
that is the curve of his existence here, a finite circling which carries the
Mind in its revolutions and returns always to the point from which it started;
Mind cannot go outside its own cycle,—all idea of a straight line of movement
or of progress reaching infinitely upward or sidewise into the Infinite is a
delusion. If the soul of man is to go beyond humanity, to reach either a supramental or a still higher status, it must pass out of
this cosmic existence, either to a plane or world of Bliss and Knowledge or
into the unmanifest Eternal and Infinite.
It is true that Science
now affirms an evolutionary terrestrial existence: but if the facts with which Science deals are reliable, the generalisations it hazards are short-lived; it holds them
for some decades or some centuries, then passes to another generalisation,
another theory of things. This happens even in physical Science where the facts
are solidly ascertainable and verifiable by experiment: in psychology,—which is
relevant here, for the evolution of consciousness comes into the picture,—its
instability is still greater; it passes there from one theory to another before
the first is well-founded; indeed, several conflicting theories hold the field
together. No firm metaphysical building can be erected upon these shifting quicksands. Heredity, upon which Science builds its concept
of life-evolution, is certainly a power, a machinery for keeping a type of
species in unchanged being: the demonstration that it is also an instrument for
persistent and progressive variation is very questionable; its tendency is
conservative rather than evolutionary,—it seems to accept with difficulty the
new character that the Life-Force attempts to force upon it. All the facts show
that a type can vary within its own specification of nature, but there is
nothing to show that it
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828
can go beyond it. It has not yet been really
established that ape-kind developed into man; for it would rather seem that a type
resembling the ape, but always characteristic of itself and not of apehood, developed within its own tendencies of nature and
became what we know as man, the present human being. It is not even established
that inferior races of man developed out of themselves the superior races;
those of an inferior organisation and capacity
perished, but it has not been shown that they left behind the human races of
today as their descendants: but still such a development within the type is imaginable.
The progress of Nature from Matter to Life, from Life to Mind, may be conceded:
but there is no proof yet that Matter developed into Life or Life-energy into
Mind-energy; all that can be conceded is that Life has manifested in Matter, Mind
in living Matter. For there is no sufficient proof that any vegetable species
developed into an animal existence or that any organisation
of inanimate Matter developed into a living organism. Even if it be discovered
hereafter that under certain chemical or other conditions Life makes its
appearance, all that will be established by this coincidence is that in certain
physical circumstances Life manifests, not that certain chemical conditions are
constituents of Life, are its elements or are the evolutionary cause of a
transformation of inanimate into animate Matter. Here as elsewhere each grade
of being exists in itself and by itself, is manifested according to its own
character by its own proper energy, and the gradations above or below it are
not origins and resultant sequences but only degrees in the continuous scale of
earth-nature.
If it be asked, how then
did all these various gradations and types of being come into existence, it can
be answered that, fundamentally, they were manifested in Matter by the
Consciousness-Force in it, by the power of the Real-Idea building its own
significant forms and types for the indwelling Spirit's cosmic existence: the
practical or physical method might vary considerably in different grades or
stages, although a basic similarity of line may be visible; the creative Power
might use not one but many processes or set many forces to act together. In
Matter the process is a creation of infinitesimals charged with
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829
an immense energy, their association by design
and number, the manifestation of larger infinitesimals on that primary basis, the
grouping and association of these together to found the appearance of sensible
objects, earth, water, minerals, metals, the whole material kingdom. In Life
also the Consciousness-Force begins with infinitesimal forms of vegetable life
and infinitesimal animalcules; it creates an original plasm
and multiplies it, creates the living cell as a unit, creates other kinds of minute
biological apparatus like the seed or the gene, uses always the same method of
grouping and association so as to build by a various operation various living
organisms. A constant creation of types is visible, but that is no indubitable
proof of evolution. The types are sometimes distant from each other, sometimes
closely similar, sometimes identical in basis but different in detail; all are
patterns, and such a variation in patterns with an identical rudimentary basis
for all is the sign of a conscious Force playing with its own Idea and
developing by it all kinds of possibilities of creation. Animal species in
coming into birth may begin with a like rudimentary embryonic or fundamental
pattern for all, it may follow out up to a stage certain similarities of development
on some or all of its lines; there may too be species that are twy-natured, amphibious, intermediate between one type and
another: but all this need not mean that the types developed one from another
in an evolutionary series. Other forces than hereditary variation have been at
work in bringing about the appearance of new characteristics; there are
physical forces such as food, light-rays and others that we are only beginning
to know, there are surely others which we do not yet know; there are at work
invisible life-forces and obscure psychological forces. For these subtler
powers have to be admitted even in the physical evolutionary theory to account
for natural selection; if the occult or subconscious energy in some types
answers to the need of the environment, in others remains unresponsive and
unable to survive, this is clearly the sign of a varying life-energy and
psychology, of a consciousness and a force other than the physical at work
making for variation in Nature. The problem of the method of operation is still
too full of obscure and nknown factors for any at
present possible structure of theory to be definitive.
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830
Man is a type among many
types so constructed, one pattern among the multitude of patterns in the
manifestation in Matter. He is the most complex that has been created, the
richest in content of consciousness and the curious ingeniousness of his
building; he is the head of the earthly creation, but he does not exceed it.
Even as others, so he too has his own native law, limits, special kind of
existence, svabh\=ava, svadharma; within those limits he can extend and develop,
but he cannot go outside them. If there is a perfection to which he has to
arrive, it must be a perfection in his own kind, within his own law of
being,—the full play of it, but by observation of its mode and measure, not by
transcendence. To exceed himself, to grow into the superman, to put on the
nature and capacities of a god would be a contradiction of his self-law,
impracticable and impossible. Each form and way of being has its own
appropriate way of the delight of being; to seek through the mind the mastery
and use and enjoyment of the environment of which he is capable is rightly man
the mental being's objective: but to look beyond, to run after an ulterior
object or aim of existence, to aspire to surpass the mental stature is to bring
in a teleological element into existence which is not visible in the cosmic
structure. If a supramental being is to appear in the
terrestrial creation, it must be a new and independent manifestation; just as
Life and Mind have manifested in Matter, so Supermind
must manifest there and the secret Conscious-Energy must create the necessary
patterns for this new grade of its potencies. But there is no sign of any such
intention in the operations of Nature.
But if a superior
creation is intended, then, certainly, it is not out of man that the new grade,
type or pattern can develop; for in that case there would be some race or kind
or make of human beings that has already the material of the superman in it,
just as the peculiar animal being that developed into humanity had the
essential elements of human nature already potential or present in it: there is
no such race, kind or type, at most there are only spiritualised
mental beings who are seeking to escape out of the terrestrial creation. If by
any occult law of Nature such a human development of the supramental
being is intended, it could only be by a few in humanity detaching
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831
themselves from the race so as to become a first
foundation for this new pattern of being. There is no reason to suppose that
the whole race could develop this perfection; it cannot be a possibility generalised in the human creature.
If indeed man has
evolved in Nature out of the animal, yet now we see that no other animal type
shows any signs of an evolution beyond itself; if then there was this
evolutionary stress in the animal kingdom, it must have sunk back into quiescence
as soon as the object was fulfilled by man's appearance: so too if there is any
such stress for a new step in evolution, for self-exceeding, it is likely to
subside into quiescence as soon as its object is fulfilled by the supramental being's appearance. But there is no such stress
in reality: the idea of human progress itself is very probably an illusion, for
there is no sign that man, once emerged from the animal stage, has radically
progressed during his race-history; at most he has advanced in knowledge of the
physical world, in Science, in the handling of his surroundings, in his purely
external and utilitarian use of the secret laws of Nature. But otherwise he is
what he always was in the early beginnings of civilisation:
he continues to manifest the same capacities, the same qualities and defects,
the same efforts, blunders, achievements, frustrations. If progress there has
been, it is in a circle, at most perhaps in a widening circle. Man today is not
wiser than the ancient seers and sages and thinkers, not more spiritual than
the great seekers of old, the first mighty mystics, not superior in arts and
crafts to the ancient artists and craftsmen; the old races that have
disappeared showed as potent an intrinsic originality, invention, capacity of
dealing with life and, if modern man in this respect has gone a little farther,
not by any essential progress but in degree, scope, abundance, it is because he
has inherited the achievements of his forerunners. Nothing warrants the idea
that he will ever hew his way out of the half-knowledge half-ignorance which is
the stamp of his kind, or, even if he develops a higher knowledge, that he can
break out of the utmost boundary of the mental circle.
It is tempting and not
illogical to regard rebirth as the potential means of a spiritual evolution,
the factor that makes
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832
it possible, but still it is not certain,
granting rebirth to be a fact, that this is its significance. All the ancient
theories about reincarnation supposed it to be a constant transmigration of the
soul from animal to human, but also from human to animal bodies: the Indian
idea added the explanation of Karma, of a return for good or evil done, of a
result of past will and effort; but there was no suggestion of a progressive
evolution from type to higher type, still less of birth into a kind of being
that has never yet existed but has still to evolve in the future. If evolution
there is, then man is the last stage, because through him there can be the
rejection of terrestrial or embodied life and an escape into some heaven or
Nirvana. That was the end envisaged by the ancient theories and, since this is
fundamentally and unchangeably a world of Ignorance,—even if all cosmic
existence is not in its nature a state of Ignorance,—that escape is likely to
be the true end of the cycle.
This
is a line of reasoning that has a considerable cogency and importance, and it
was necessary to state it, even if too briefly for its importance, in order to
meet it. For although some of its propositions are valid, its view of things is
not complete and its cogency is not conclusive. And first we may without much
difficulty get rid of the objection to the teleological element which the idea
of a predetermined evolution from inconscience to superconscience, the development of a rising order of
beings with a culminating transition from the life of the Ignorance to a life
in the Knowledge, brings into the structure of the terrestrial existence. The
objection to a teleological cosmos can be based on two very different grounds,—a
scientific reasoning proceeding on the assumption that all is the work of an inconscient Energy which acts automatically by mechanical
processes and can have no element of purpose in it, and a metaphysical
reasoning which proceeds on the perception that the Infinite and Universal has
everything in it already, that it cannot have something unaccomplished to accomplish,
something to add to itself, to work out, to realise,
and there can therefore be in it no element of progress, no original or emergent
purpose.
The scientific or
materialist objection cannot maintain its
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833
validity if there is a secret Consciousness in
or behind the apparently inconscient Energy in
Matter. Even in the Inconscient there seems to be at
least an urge of inherent necessity producing the evolution of forms and in the
forms a developing Consciousness, and it may well be held that this urge is the
evolutionary will of a secret Conscious-Being and its push of progressive
manifestation the evidence of an innate intention in the evolution. This is a
teleological element and it is not irrational to admit it: for the conscious or
even the inconscient nisus arises from a truth of
conscious-being that has become dynamic and set out to fulfil
itself in an automatic process of material Nature; the teleology, the element
of purpose in the nisus is the translation of self-operative Truth of Being
into terms of self-effective Will-Power of that Being, and, if consciousness is
there, such a Will-Power must also be there and the translation is normal and
inevitable. Truth of Being inevitably fulfilling itself would be the
fundamental fact of the evolution, but Will and its purpose must be there as
part of the instrumentation, as an element in the operative principle.
The metaphysical
objection is more serious; for it seems self-evident that the Absolute can have
no purpose in manifestation except the delight of manifestation itself: an
evolutionary movement in Matter as part of the manifestation must fall within
this universal statement; it can be there only for the delight of the
unfolding, the progressive execution, the objectless seried
self-revelation. A universal totality may also be considered as something
complete in itself; as a totality, it has nothing to gain or to add to its
fullness of being. But here the material world is not an integral totality, it
is part of a whole, a grade in a gradation; it may admit in it, therefore, not
only the presence of undeveloped immaterial principles or powers belonging to
the whole that are involved within its Matter, but also a descent into it of
the same powers from the higher gradations of the system to deliver their
kindred movements here from the strictness of a material limitation. A manifestation
of the greater powers of Existence till the whole being itself is manifest in
the material world in the terms of a higher, a spiritual creation, may be
considered as the teleology
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834
of the evolution. This teleology does not bring
in any factor that does not belong to the totality; it proposes only the realisation of the totality in the part. There can be no
objection to the admission of a teleological factor in a part movement of the
universal totality, if the purpose,—not a purpose in the human sense, but the
urge of an intrinsic Truth-necessity conscious in the will of the indwelling
Spirit,—is the perfect manifestation there of all the possibilities inherent in
the total movement. All exists here, no doubt, for the delight of existence,
all is a game or Lila; but a game too carries within itself an object to be
accomplished and without the fulfilment of that
object would have no completeness of significance. A drama without denouement
may be an artistic possibility,—existing only for the pleasure of watching the
characters and the pleasure in problems posed without a solution or with a
forever suspended dubious balance of solution; the drama of the earth evolution
might conceivably be of that character, but an intended or inherently
predetermined denouement is also and more convincingly possible. Ananda is the secret principle of all being and the support
of all activity of being: but Ananda does not exclude
a delight in the working out of a Truth inherent in being, immanent in the
Force or Will of being, upheld in the hidden self-awareness of its
Consciousness-Force which is the dynamic and executive agent of all its
activities and the knower of their significance.
A theory of spiritual
evolution is not identical with a scientific theory of form-evolution and
physical life-evolution; it must stand on its own inherent justification: it
may accept the scientific account of physical evolution as a support or an element,
but the support is not indispensable. The scientific theory is concerned only
with the outward and visible machinery and process, with the detail of Nature's
execution, with the physical development of things in Matter and the law of development
of Life and Mind in Matter; its account of the process may have to be
considerably changed or may be dropped altogether in the light of new
discovery, but that will not affect the self-evident fact of a spiritual
evolution, an evolution of Consciousness, a progression of the soul's
manifestation in material
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835
existence. In its outward aspects this is what
the theory of evolution comes to,—there is in the scale of terrestrial
existence a development of forms, of bodies, a progressively complex and
competent organisation of Matter, of Life in Matter,
of Consciousness in living Matter; in this scale, the better organised the form, the more it is capable of housing a
better organised, a more complex and capable, a more
developed or evolved Life and Consciousness. Once the evolutionary hypothesis
is put forward and the facts supporting it are marshalled,
this aspect of the terrestrial existence becomes so striking as to appear
indisputable. The precise machinery by which this is done or the exact
genealogy or chronological succession of types of being is a secondary, though
in itself an interesting and important question; the development of one form of
life out of a precedent less evolved form, natural selection, the struggle for
life, the survival of acquired characteristics may or may not be accepted, but
the fact of a successive creation with a developing plan in it is the one conclusion
which is of primary consequence. Another self-evident conclusion is that there
is a graduated necessary succession in the evolution, first the evolution of
Matter, next the evolution of Life in Matter, then the evolution of Mind in living
Matter, and in this last stage an animal evolution followed by a human
evolution. The first three terms of the succession are too evident to be
disputable. It may be debated whether there was a succession of man to animal
or a simultaneous initial development, man outstripping the animal in
Mind-evolution; a theory has even been put forward that man was not the last,
but the first and eldest of the animal species. This priority of man is an
ancient conception, but it was not universal; it is born of the sense of the
clear supremacy of man among earthly creatures, the dignity of this supremacy seeming
to demand a priority of birth: but in evolutionary fact the superior is not
prior but posterior in appearance, the less developed precedes the more
developed and prepares it.
In fact, the idea of the
priority of the lower forms of Life is not altogether absent in ancient
thinking. Apart from mythical accounts of creation, we find already in ancient
and mediaeval
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836
thought in India utterances that favour the priority of the animal over man in the time
succession in a sense that agrees with the modern evolutionary conception. An
Upanishad declares that the Self or Spirit after deciding on life-creation
first formed animal kinds like the cow and horse, but the gods,—who are in the
thought of the Upanishads powers of Consciousness and powers of Nature,—found
them to be insufficient vehicles, and the Spirit finally created the form of
man which the gods saw to be excellently made and sufficient and they entered
into it for their cosmic functions. This is a clear parable of the creation of
more and more developed forms till one was found that was capable of housing a
developed consciousness. In the Puranas it is stated
that the tamasic animal creation was the first in
time. Tamas is the Indian word for the principle of inertia
of consciousness and force: a consciousness dull and sluggish and incompetent
in its play is said to be tamasic; a force, a Life-energy
that is indolent and limited in its capacity, bound to a narrow range of
instinctive impulses, not developing, not seeking farther, not urged to a
greater kinetic action or a more luminously conscious action, would be assigned
to the same category. The animal, in whom there is this less developed force of
consciousness, is prior in creation; the more developed human consciousness, in
which there is a greater force of kinetic Mind-energy and light of perception,
is a later creation. The Tantra speaks of a soul
fallen from its status passing through many lacs of
births in plant and animal forms before it can reach the human level and be
ready for salvation. Here, again, there is implied the conception of vegetable
and animal life-forms as the lower steps of a ladder, humanity as the last or
culminating development of the conscious being, the form which the soul has to
inhabit in order to be capable of the spiritual motive and a spiritual issue
out of mentality, life and physicality. This is indeed the normal conception,
and it recommends itself so strongly both to reason and intuition that it
hardly needs debate,—the conclusion is almost unescapable.
It is against this
background of a developing evolutionary process that we have to look at man,
his origin and first appearance, his
status in the manifestation. There are here two
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837
possibilities; either there was the sudden
appearance of a human body and consciousness in the earth-nature, an abrupt creation
or independent automatic manifestation of reasoning mentality in the material
world intervening upon a previous similar manifestation of subconscious
life-forms and of living conscious bodies in Matter, or else there was an
evolution of humanity out of animal being, slow perhaps in its preparation and
in its stages of development, but with strong leaps of change at the decisive
points of the transition. The latter theory offers no difficulty: for it is
certain that changes of characteristics in the type, though not of the fundamental
type itself, can be brought about in species or genus,—indeed this has already
been done by man himself and its possibilities are being strikingly worked out
on a small scale by experimental Science,—and it may fairly be assumed that the
secretly conscious Energy in Nature could effect large-scale operations of the
kind and bring about considerable and decisive developments by means of its own
creative conventions. The necessary condition for the change from the normal
animal to the human character of existence would be a development of the physical
organisation which would capacitate a rapid
progression, a reversal or turnover of the consciousness, a reaching to a new
height and a looking down from it at the lower stages, a heightening and widening
of capacity which would enable the being to take up the old animal faculties
with a larger and more plastic, a human intelligence, and at the same time or
later to develop greater and subtler powers proper to the new type of being,
powers of reason, reflection, complex observation, organised
invention, thought and discovery. If there is an emergent Consciousness-Force,
there would be no difficulty in the transition, the instrument being provided,
except the difficulty of the obstruction and resistance of the material Inconscience. The animal has already some of the
corresponding qualities on a limited scale, for action only, in a rudimentary organization
crude and simple, with a very inferior scope and plasticity, a narrower and
more casual command of the faculty; but especially the working of these
faculties is more mechanical, less deliberate, marked with the character of an
automatism of Nature-Energy driving an operation of
Page
838
primitive consciousness and not, as in man, of a
conscious Energy observing and to a great extent directing and governing and
deliberately changing or modifying its own operations. Other animal habits of
consciousness are not fundamentally different from man's; all he had to do was
to develop and enlarge them on a higher mental level and wherever possible, to mentalise, refine, subtilise,—in
brief, to bring to them the enlightenment of his new understanding and
intellectual capacity and a power of reasoned control denied to the animal.
This change or reversal once effected, the power of the human mind to work upon
itself and things, create, know, speculate, would develop in the course of his
evolution, even if, as is conceivable, they were at the beginning small in
scope, nearer to the animal, still comparatively simple and crude in their action.
Such a reversal has been made in each radical transition of Nature: Life-Force
emerging turns upon Matter, imposes a vital content on the operations of
material Energy while it develops also its own new movements and operations; Life-Mind
emerges in Life-Force and Matter and imposes its content of consciousness on
their operations while it develops also its own action and faculties; a new
greater emergence and reversal, the emergence of humanity, is in line with
Nature's precedents; it would be a new application of the general principle.
This theory is therefore
easy to accept: its working is intelligible. But the other hypothesis presents
considerable difficulties. On the side of consciousness the new manifestation,
the human, could be accounted for by an upsurge of concealed Consciousness from
the involution in universal Nature. But in that case it must have had some
material form already existent for its vehicle of emergence, the vehicle being
adapted by the force of the emergence itself to the needs of a new inner
creation; or else a rapid divergence from previous physical types or patterns
may have brought a new being into existence. But whichever the hypothesis
accepted, this means an evolutionary process,—there is only a difference in the
method and machinery of the divergence or transition. Or there may have been,
on the contrary, not an upsurgence but a descent of
mentality from a Mind-plane above us, perhaps the descent of a soul or mental
being into terrestrial Nature. The difficulty would then be the appearance of
the
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human body, too complex and difficult an organ
to have been suddenly created or manifested; for such a miraculous speed of
process, though quite possible on a supraphysical
plane of being, does not seem to figure among the normal possibles
or potentials of the material Energy. It could only happen there by an
intervention of a supraphysical force or law of
Nature or by a creator Mind acting with full power and directly on Matter. An
action of a supraphysical Force and a creator may be conceded
in every new appearance in Matter; each such appearance is at bottom a miracle
operated by a secret Consciousness supported by a veiled Mind-Energy or
Life-Energy: but the action is nowhere seen to be direct, overt, self-sufficient;
it is always superimposed on an already realised
physical basis and acts by an extension of some established process of Nature.
It is more conceivable that there was an opening of some existing body to a supraphysical influx so that it was transformed into a new
body; but no such event can lightly be assumed to have taken place in the past
history of material Nature: in order to happen it would seem to need either the
conscious intervention of an invisible mental being to form the body he
intended to inhabit or else a previous development of a mental being in Matter
itself who would be already able to receive a supraphysical
power and impose it on the rigid and narrow formulas of his physical existence.
Otherwise we must suppose that there was a pre-existent body already so much
evolved as to be fitted for the reception of a vast mental influx or capable of
a pliable response to the descent into it of a mental being. But this would
suppose a previous evolution of mind in body to the point at which such a
receptivity would be possible. It is quite conceivable that such an evolution
from below and such a descent from above co-operated in the appearance of
humanity in earth-nature. The secret psychical entity already there in the
animal might have itself called down the mental being, the Mind-Purusha, into the realm of living Matter in order to take
up the vital-mental energy already at work and lift it into a higher mentality.
But this would still be a process of evolution, the higher plane only
intervening to assist the appearance and enlargement of its own principle in
terrestrial Nature.
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Next, it may be conceded that each type or
pattern of consciousness and being in the body, once established, has to be faithful
to the law of being of that type, to its own design and rule of nature. But it
may also very well be that part of the law of the human type is its impulse
towards self-exceeding, that the means for a conscious transition has been
provided for among the spiritual powers of man; the possession of such a
capacity may be a part of the plan on which the creative Energy has built him.
It may be conceded that what man has up till now principally done is to act
within the circle of his nature, on a spiral of nature-movement, sometimes
descending, sometimes ascending,—there has been no straight line of progress,
no indisputable, fundamental or radical exceeding of his past nature: what he
has done is to sharpen, subtilise, make a more and
more complex and plastic use of his capacities. It cannot truly be said that
there has been no such thing as human progress since man's appearance or even
in his recent ascertainable history; for however great the ancients, however
supreme some of their achievements and creations, however impressive their
powers of spirituality, of intellect or of character, there has been in later
developments an increasing subtlety, complexity, manifold development of
knowledge and possibility in man's achievements, in his politics, society,
life, science, metaphysics, knowledge of all kinds, art, literature; even in
his spiritual endeavour, less surprisingly lofty and
less massive in power of spirituality than that of the ancients, there has been
this increasing subtlety, plasticity, sounding of depths, extension of seeking.
There have been falls from a high type of culture, a sharp temporary descent
into a certain obscurantism, cessations of the spiritual urge, plunges into a
barbaric natural materialism; but these are temporary phenomena, at worst a
downward curve of the spiral of progress. This progress has not indeed carried
the race beyond itself, into a self-exceeding, a transformation of the mental
being. But that was not to be expected; for the action of evolutionary Nature
in a type of being and consciousness is first to develop the type to its utmost
capacity by just such a subtilisation and increasing
complexity till it is ready for her bursting of the shell, the ripened decisive
emergence, reversal, turning over of consciousness on itself that constitutes a
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new stage in the evolution. If it be supposed
that her next step is the spiritual and supramental
being, the stress of spirituality in the race may be taken as a sign that that
is Nature's intention, the sign too of the capacity of man to operate in
himself or aid her to operate the transition. If the appearance in animal being
of a type similar in some respects to the ape-kind but already from the
beginning endowed with the elements of humanity was the method of the human
evolution, the appearance in the human being of a spiritual type resembling
mental-animal humanity but already with the stamp of the spiritual aspiration
on it would be the obvious method of Nature for the evolutionary production of
the spiritual and supramental being.
It is pertinently
suggested that if such an evolutionary culmination is intended and man is to be
its medium, it will only be a few especially evolved human beings who will form
the new type and move towards the new life; that once done, the rest of
humanity will sink back from a spiritual aspiration no longer necessary for
Nature's purpose and remain quiescent in its normal status. It can equally be
reasoned that the human gradation must be preserved if there is really an
ascent of the soul by reincarnation through the evolutionary degrees towards
the spiritual summit; for otherwise the most necessary of all the intermediate
steps will be lacking. It must be conceded at once that there is not the least
probability or possibility of the whole human race rising in a block to the supramental level; what is suggested is nothing so
revolutionary and astonishing, but only the capacity in the human mentality,
when it has reached a certain level or a certain point of stress of the evolutionary
impetus, to press towards a higher plane of consciousness and its embodiment in
the being. The being will necessarily undergo by this embodiment a change from
the normal constitution of its nature, a change certainly of its mental and
emotional and sensational constitution and also to a great extent of the
body-consciousness and the physical conditioning of our life and energies; but
the change of consciousness will be the chief factor, the initial movement, the
physical modification will be a subordinate factor, a consequence. This
transmutation of the consciousness will always remain possible to the human
being when the flame of
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the soul, the psychic kindling, becomes potent
in heart and mind and the nature is ready. The spiritual aspiration is innate
in man; for he is, unlike the animal, aware of imperfection and limitation and
feels that there is something to be attained beyond what he now is: this urge
towards self-exceeding is not likely ever to die out totally in the race. The
human mental status will be always there, but it will be there not only as a
degree in the scale of rebirth, but as an open step towards the spiritual and supramental status.
It must be observed that
the appearance of human mind and body on the earth marks a crucial step, a
decisive change in the course and process of the evolution; it is not merely a
continuation of the old lines. Up till this advent of a developed thinking mind
in Matter evolution had been effected, not by the self-aware aspiration,
intention, will or seeking of the living being, but subconsciously or
subliminally by the automatic operation of Nature. This was so because the
evolution began from the Inconscience and the secret
Consciousness had not emerged sufficiently from it to operate through the
self-aware participating individual will of its living creature. But in man the
necessary change has been made,—the being has become awake and aware of himself; there has been
made manifest in Mind its will to develop, to grow in knowledge, to deepen the inner
and widen the outer existence, to increase the capacities of the nature. Man
has seen that there can be a higher status of consciousness than his own; the
evolutionary oestrus is there in his parts of mind
and life, the aspiration to exceed himself is delivered and articulate within
him: he has become conscious of a soul, discovered the Self and Spirit. In him,
then, the substitution of a conscious for a subconscious evolution has become
conceivable and practicable, and it may well be concluded that the aspiration,
the urge, the persistent endeavour in him is a sure
sign of Nature's will for a higher way to fulfilment,
the emergence of a greater status.
In the previous stages
of the evolution Nature's first care and effort had to be directed towards a
change in the physical organisation, for only so could
there be a change of consciousness; this was a necessity imposed by the
insufficiency of the
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force of consciousness already in formation to
effect a change in the body. But in man a reversal is possible, indeed inevitable;
for it is through his consciousness, through its transmutation and no longer
through a new bodily organism as a first instrumentation that the evolution can
and must be effected. In the inner reality of things a change of consciousness was
always the major fact, the evolution has always had a spiritual significance
and the physical change was only instrumental; but this relation was concealed
by the first abnormal balance of the two factors, the body of the external Inconscience outweighing and obscuring in importance the
spiritual element, the conscious being. But once the balance has been righted,
it is no longer the change of body that must precede the change of
consciousness; the consciousness itself by its mutation will necessitate and
operate whatever mutation is needed for the body. It has to be noted that the
human mind has already shown a capacity to aid Nature in the evolution of new
types of plant and animal; it has created new forms of its environment,
developed by knowledge and discipline considerable changes in its own
mentality. It is not an impossibility that man should aid Nature consciously
also in his own spiritual and physical evolution and transformation. The urge
to it is already there and partly effective, though still incompletely
understood and accepted by the surface mentality; but one day it may
understand, go deeper within itself and discover the means, the secret energy,
the intended operation of the Consciousness-Force within which is the hidden
reality of what we call Nature.
All these are
conclusions that can be arrived at even from the observation of the outward
phenomena of Nature's progression, her surface evolution of being and of
consciousness in the physical birth and the body. But there is the other, the
invisible factor; there is rebirth, the progress of the soul by ascent from
grade to grade of the evolving existence, and in the grades to higher and
higher types of bodily and mental instrumentation. In this progression the
psychic entity is still veiled, even in man the conscious mental being, by its
instruments, by mind and life and body; it is unable to manifest fully, held
back from coming to the front where it can stand out as the master of its
nature, obliged to submit to a certain determination by the
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instruments, to a domination of Purusha by Prakriti. But in man
the psychic part of the personality is able to develop with a much greater
rapidity than in the inferior creation, and a time can arrive when the
soul-entity is close to the point at which it will emerge from behind the veil
into the open and become the master of its instrumentation in Nature. But this
will mean that the secret indwelling spirit, the Daemon, the Godhead within is
on the point of emergence; and, when it emerges, it can hardly be doubted that
its demand will be, as indeed it already is in the Mind itself when it
undergoes the inner psychic influence, for a diviner, a more spiritual
existence. In the nature of the earth-life where the Mind is an instrument of
the Ignorance, this can only be effected by a change of consciousness, a
transition from a foundation in Ignorance to a foundation in Knowledge, from
the mental to a supramental consciousness, a supramental instrumentation of Nature.
There is no conclusive
validity in the reasoning that because this is a world of Ignorance, such a
transformation can only be achieved by a passage to a heaven beyond or cannot
be achieved at all and the demand of the psychic entity is itself ignorant and
must be replaced by a merger of the soul in the Absolute. This conclusion could
only be solely valid if Ignorance were the whole meaning, substance and power
of the world-manifestation or if there were no element in World-Nature itself
through which there could be an exceeding of the ignorant mentality that still
burdens our present status of being. But the Ignorance is only a portion of
this World-Nature; it is not the whole of it, not the original power or
creator: it is in its higher origin a self-limiting Knowledge and even in its
lower origin, its emergence out of the sheer material Inconscience,
it is a suppressed Consciousness labouring to find,
to recover itself, to manifest Knowledge, which is its true character, as the
foundation of existence. In universal Mind itself there are ranges above our
mentality which are instruments of the cosmic truth-cognition, and into these
the mental being can surely rise; for already it rises towards them in supernormal
conditions or receives from them without yet knowing or possessing them
intuitions, spiritual intimations, large influxes of illumination or spiritual
capacity. All these
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ranges are conscious of what is beyond them, and
the highest of them is directly open to the Supermind,
aware of the Truth-Consciousness which exceeds it. Moreover, in the evolving
being itself, those greater powers of consciousness are here, supporting
Mind-truth, underlying its action which screens them; this Supermind
and those Truth-powers uphold Nature by their secret presence: even, truth of
Mind is their result, a diminished operation, a representation in partial
figures. It is, therefore, not only natural but seems inevitable that these
higher powers of Existence should manifest here in Mind as Mind itself has
manifested in Life and Matter.
Man's urge towards
spirituality is the inner driving of the spirit within him towards emergence,
the insistence of the Consciousness-Force of the being towards the next step of
its manifestation. It is true that the spiritual urge has been largely other-worldly
or turned at its extreme towards a spiritual negation and self-annihilation of
the mental individual; but this is only one side of its tendency maintained and
made dominant by the necessity of passing out of the kingdom of the fundamental
Inconscience, overcoming the obstacle of the body,
casting away the obscure vital, getting rid of the ignorant mentality, the
necessity to attain first and foremost, by a rejection of all these impediments
to spiritual being, to a spiritual status. The other, the dynamic side of the
spiritual urge has not been absent,—the aspiration to a spiritual mastery and mutation
of Nature, to a spiritual perfection of the being, a divinisation
of the mind, the heart and the very body: there has even been the dream or a
psychic prevision of a fulfilment exceeding the
individual transformation, a new earth and heaven, a city of God, a divine
descent upon earth, a reign of the spiritually perfect, a kingdom of God not
only within us but outside, in a collective human life. However obscure may
have been some of the forms taken by this aspiration, the indication they contain
of the urge of the occult spiritual being within to emergence in earth-nature
is unmistakable.
If a spiritual unfolding
on earth is the hidden truth of our birth into Matter, if it is fundamentally
an evolution of consciousness that has been taking place in Nature, then man as
he
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is cannot be the last term of that evolution: he
is too imperfect an expression of the Spirit, Mind itself a too limited form
and instrumentation; Mind is only a middle term of consciousness, the mental
being can only be a transitional being. If, then, man is incapable of exceeding
mentality, he must be surpassed and Supermind and
superman must manifest and take the lead of the creation. But if his mind is
capable of opening to what exceeds it, then there is no reason why man himself
should not arrive at Supermind and supermanhood or at least lend his mentality, life and body
to an evolution of that greater term of the Spirit manifesting in Nature.
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