SECTION
NINE
Fate and Free-Will, Karma and Heredity, etc.
YOUR extracts
taken by themselves are very impressive, but when one reads the book, the
impression made diminishes and fades away. You have quoted Cheiro's
successes, but what about his failures? I have looked at the book and was
rather staggered by the number of
prophecies that have failed to come off. You can't deduce from a small number
of predictions, however accurate, that all is predestined down to your putting
the questions in the letter and my answer. It may be, but the evidence is not
sufficient to prove it. What is evident is that there is an element of the
predictable, predictable accurately and in detail as well as in large points,
in the course of events. But that was already known; it leaves the question
still unsolved whether all is predictable, whether destiny is the sole factor
in existence or there are other factors also that can modify destiny, – or,
destiny being given, there are not different sources or powers or planes of
destiny and we can modify the one with which we started by calling in another
destiny source, power or plane and making it active in our life. Metaphysical
questions are not so simple that they can be trenchantly solved either in one
sense or in another contradictory to it – that is the popular way of settling
things, but it is quite summary and inconclusive. All is free-will or else all
is destiny – it is not so simple as that. This question of free-will or
determination is the most knotty of all metaphysical questions and nobody has
been able to solve it – for a good reason that both destiny and will exist and
even a free-will exists somewhere; the difficulty is only how to get at it and
make it effective.
Astrology? Many
astrological predictions come true, quite a mass of them, if one takes all
together. But it does not follow that the stars rule our destiny; the stars
merely record a destiny that has been already formed, they are a hieroglyph,
not a Force, – or if their action constitutes a force, it is a transmitting
energy,
Page – 467
not an originating Power. Someone
is there who has determined or something is there which is Fate, let us say;
the stars are only indicators. The astrologers themselves say that there are
two forces, daiva
and purusakāra,
fate and individual energy, and the individual energy can modify and even
frustrate fate. Moreover, the stars often indicate several fate-possibilities;
for example that one may die in mid-age, but that if that determination can be
overcome, one can live to a predictable old age. Finally, cases are seen in
which the predictions of the horoscope fulfil themselves with great accuracy up
to a certain age, then apply no more. This often happens when the subject turns
away from the ordinary to the spiritual life. If the turn is very radical, the
cessation of predictability may be immediate; otherwise certain results may
still last on for a time, but there is no longer the same inevitability. This
would seem to show that there is or can be a higher power or higher plane or
higher source of spiritual destiny which can, if its hour has come, override
the lower power, lower plane or lower source of vital and material fate of
which the stars are indicators. I say vital because character can also be
indicated from the horoscope much more completely and satisfactorily than the
events of the life.
The Indian
explanation of fate is Karma. We ourselves are our own fate through our
actions, but the fate created by us binds us; for what we have sown, we must
reap in this life or another. Still we are creating our fate for the future
even while undergoing old fate from the past in the present. That gives a
meaning to our will and action and does not, as European critics wrongly
believe, constitute a rigid and sterilising fatalism. But again, our will and
action can often annul or modify even the past Karma, it is only certain strong
effects, called utkata
karma, that are non-modifiable. Here too the achievement of the spiritual
consciousness and life is supposed to annul or give the power to annul Karma.
For we enter into union with the Will Divine, cosmic or transcendent, which can
annul what it had sanctioned for certain conditions, new-create what it had
created, the narrow fixed lines disappear, there is a more plastic freedom and
wideness. Neither Karma nor Astrology therefore points to a rigid and for ever
immutable fate.
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As for prophecy,
I have never met or known of a prophet, however reputed, who was infallible.
Some of their predictions come true to the letter, others do not, – they
half-fulfil or misfire entirely. It does not follow that the power of prophecy
is unreal or the accurate predictions can be all explained by probability,
chance, coincidence. The nature and number of those that cannot is too great.
The variability of fulfilment may be explained either by an imperfect power in
the prophet sometimes active, sometimes failing or by the fact that things are
predictable in part only, they are determined in part only or else by different
factors or lines of power, different series of potentials and actuals. So long as one is in touch with one line, one predicts
accurately, otherwise not – or if the lines of power change, one's prophecy
also goes off the rails. All the same, one may say, there must be, if things
are predictable at all, some power or plane through which or on which all is
foreseeable; if there is a divine Omniscience and Omnipotence, it must be so.
Even then what is foreseen has to be worked out, actually is worked out by a
play of forces, – spiritual, mental, vital and physical forces – and in that
plane of forces there is no absolute rigidity discoverable. Personal will or
endeavour is one of those forces. Napoleon when asked why he believed in Fate,
yet was always planning and acting, answered, “Because it is fated that I
should work and plan”; in other words, his planning and acting were part of
Fate, contributed to the results Fate had in view. Even if I foresee an adverse
result, I must work for the one that I consider should be; for it keeps alive
the force, the principle of Truth which I serve and gives it a possibility to
triumph hereafter so that it becomes part of the working of the future
favourable Fate, even if the fate of the hour is adverse. Men do not abandon a
cause because they have seen it fail or foresee its failure; and they are
spiritually right in their stubborn perseverance. Moreover, we do not live for
outward result alone; far more the object of life is the growth of the soul, – not
outward success of the hour or even of the near future. The soul can grow
against or even by a material destiny that is adverse.
Finally, even if
all is determined, why say that life is, in Shakespeare's phrase or rather
Macbeth's, “a tale told by an idiot
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full of sound and fury,
signifying nothing”? Life would rather be that if it were all chance and random
incertitude. But if it is something foreseen, planned in every detail, does it
not rather mean that life does signify something, that there must be a secret
Purpose that is being worked up to, powerfully, persistently, through the ages,
and ourselves are a part of it and fellow-workers in the fulfilment of that
invincible Purpose?
P.S. Well, one of
the greatest ecstasies possible is to feel oneself carried by the Divine, not
by the stars or Karma, for the latter is a bad business, dry and uncomfortable
– like being turned on a machine, “yantrārūdhāni māyayā”.
I am afraid I have no great confidence
in Cheiro's ideas and prophecies – some prophecies
are fulfilled but most have gone wrong.
The idea about the Jews is an old Jewish and Christian belief; not much faith
can be put in it. As for the numbers, it is true that according to occult science
numbers have a mystic meaning. It is also true that there are periods and
cycles in life as well as in world-life. But too exact a meaning cannot always
be put in these things.
I have not said that everything
is rigidly predetermined. Play of forces does not mean that. What I said was
that behind visible events in the world there is always a mass of invisible
forces at work unknown to the outward minds of men, and by yoga, (by going
inward and establishing a conscious connection with the Cosmic Self and Force
and forces,) one can become conscious of these forces, intervene consciously in
the play, and to some extent at least determine things in the result of the
play. All that has nothing to do with predetermination. On the contrary, one
watches how things develop and gives a push here and a push there when possible
or when needed. There is nothing in all that to contradict the dictum of the
great scientist Sir C. V.
Page – 470
Raman. Raman said once that all
these scientific discoveries are only games of chance. Only, when he says that
scientific discoveries are games of chance, he is merely saying that human
beings don't know how it works out. It is not rigid predetermination, but it is
not a blind inconscient Chance either. It is a play in which there is a working
out of the possibilities in Time.
It is difficult indeed to make
out what Planck means in these pages – what is his conclusion and how he
arrives at it; he has probably so condensed his arguments that the necessary
explanatory links are missing. The free-will affair, I see by glancing through
the previous pages, arises only incidentally from his position that the new
discoveries grouped round the quantum theory do not make a radical difference
in physics. If there is a tendency to regard laws as statistical, – in which
case there is no “strict causality” and no determinism – still there is nothing
to prove that they cannot be treated and may not be advantageously treated as
dynamical also – in which case determinism can stand; the uncertainty of
individual behaviour (electrons, quanta) does not
really undermine determinism, but only brings a new feature into it. That seems
from a hasty glance to be his position. Certain scientific thinkers consider
this uncertainty of individual behaviour to be a
physical factor correspondent to the element of free-will in individual human
beings. It is here that Planck brings in the question of free-will to refute
the conclusion that it affects strict causality and the law of determinism. His
argument, as far as I can make it out, is this:
1. The law of
strict causality stands because any given action or inner happening of the
individual human being is an effect determined completely by two causes, (a)
the previous state of his mind taken as a whole, (b) external influences.
2. The will is a
mental process completely determined by these two factors; therefore it is not
free, it is part of the chain of strict causality – as are also the results of
the free-will.
3. What is
important is not the actual freedom of the will, but the man's consciousness of
freedom. This creates an inner
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experience of conscious motive
which again creates fresh motives and so on indefinitely. For this reason it is
impossible for a man to predict his future action – for at any moment a fresh
motive may arise. But when we look back at the past, then the concatenation of
cause and effect becomes apparent.
4. The fact of
strict causality (or at least the theory of it) stands therefore unshaken by
the consciousness of free-will of the individual. It is only obscured by the
fact that a man cannot predict his own actions or grasp the causes of his
present state; but that is because here the subject and object are the same and
this subject-object is in a state of constant alternative motion unlike an
object outside, which is supposed not to change as a result of the inner
movements of the knower.
There is a
reference to causal law and ethical law which baffles me. Is the “ethical law”
something outside the strict chain of effects and causes? Is there such a thing
at all? If “strict causality” rules all, what is such an ethical law doing
there?
That is the
argument so far as I can follow it, but it does not seem to me very conclusive.
If a man's conduct cannot be predicted by himself, neither can it be predicted
by anyone else, though here the subject and object are not the same; if not
predictable, then it must be for the same reason, the element of free-will and
the mobility created by the possible indefinite intrusion of fresh motives. If
that is so, strict causality cannot be affirmed, – though a plastic causality
in which the power of choice called by us free-will is an element (either as
one among many contributory causes or as an instrument of a cause beyond
itself) can still be asserted as possible.
The statement
that the action of the individual is strictly determined by his total mental
state plus external influences is doubtful and does not lead very far. It is
possible to undermine the whole idea of inevitable causality by holding that
the total existing state before a happening is only the condition under which
it happens – there are a mass of antecedents and there is a sequent, if it may
be so called, or a mass of sequences, but nothing proves that the latter are
inevitable consequences of the mass of antecedents. Possibly, this total
existing state is a matrix into which some seed of happening is thrown or
becomes active,
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so that there may be many
possible results, and in the case of human action it is conceivable that
free-will is the or at least a determining factor.
I do not think
therefore that these arguments of Planck carry us very far. There is also, of
course, the question raised in the book itself whether, granting determinism, a
local state of things is an independent field of causality or all is so bound
together that it is the whole that determines the local result. A man's action
then would be determined by universal forces and his state of mind and apparent
choice would be part of the instrumentation of the Universal Force.
In the case of
Socrates and that of the habitual drunkard raised by you, the difference you
make is correct. The weak-willed man is governed by his vital and physical
impulsions, his mental being is not dynamic enough to make its will prevail
over them. His will is not “free” because it is not strong enough to be free,
it is the slave of the forces that act on or in his vital and physical nature.
In the case of Socrates the will is so far free that it stands above the play
of these forces and he determines by his mental idea and resolve what he shall
or shall not do. The question remains whether the will of Socrates is only free
in this sense, itself being actually determined by something larger than the
mentality of Socrates, something of which it is the instrument – whether the
Universal Force or a Being in him of which his daemon was the voice and which
not only gave his mind that decisive awareness of the mental ideal but imposed
on it the drive to act in obedience to the awareness. Or it may be subject to a
nexus between the inner Purusha and the Universal Force. In the latter case
there would be an unstable balance between the determinism of Nature and a
self-determination from within. If we start from the Sankhya view of things,
that being (viz., the one of which his daemon was the voice) would be the soul
or Purusha and both in the strong-willed Socrates and in the weak-willed slave
of vital impulse, the action and its results would be determined by the assent
or refusal of the Purusha. In the
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latter the Purusha gives its
assent to and undergoes the play of the forces of Nature, the habit of the
vital impulse, through a vital submission while the mind looks on helpless. In
Socrates the Purusha has begun to emancipate itself and decide what it shall
accept or shall not accept – the conscious being has begun to impose itself on
the forces that act on it. This mastery has become so complete that he can
largely determine his own actions and can even within certain limits not only
forecast but fix the results – so that what he wants shall happen sooner or
later.
As for the
Superman, that is the conscious being whose emancipation is complete by his
rising to a station beyond the limits of mind. He can determine his action in
complete accord with an awareness which perceives all the forces acting in and
on and around him and is able, instead of undergoing, to use them and even to
determine.
After reading X's cogent
exposition, I saw what might be said from the intellectual point of view on
this question so as to link the reality of the supreme Freedom with the
phenomenon of the Determinism of Nature – in a different way from his, but to
the same purpose. In reality, the freedom and the determination are only two
sides of the same thing – for the fundamental truth is self-determination of
the cosmos and in it a secret self-determination of the individual. The
difficulty arises from the fact that we live in the surface mind of ignorance,
do not know what is going on behind and see only the phenomenal process of
Nature. There the apparent fact is an overwhelming determinism of Nature and as
our surface consciousness is part of that process, we are unable to see the
other term of the biune reality. For practical purposes, on the surface there
is an entire determinism in Matter—though this is now disputed by the latest
school of Science. As Life emerges a certain plasticity sets in, so that it is
difficult to predict anything exactly as one predicts material things that obey
a rigid law. The plasticity increases with the growth of Mind, so that man can
have at least a sense of free-will, of a choice of his action, of a
self-movement which at least
Page – 474
helps to determine circumstances.
But this freedom is dubious because it can be declared to be an illusion, a
device of Nature, part of its machinery of determination, only a seeming
freedom or at most a restricted, relative and subject independence. It is only
when one goes behind away from Prakriti to Purusha and upward away from Mind to
spiritual Self that the side of freedom comes to be first evident and then, by
unison with the Will which is above Nature, complete.
In life all sorts of things offer
themselves. One cannot take anything that comes with the idea that it is sent
by the Divine. There is a choice and a wrong choice produces its consequences.
Destiny in the rigid sense
applies only to the outer being so long as it lives in the Ignorance. What we
call destiny is only in fact the result of the present condition of the being
and the nature and energies it has accumulated in the past acting on each other
and determining the present attempts and their future results. But as soon as
one enters the path of spiritual life, this old predetermined destiny begins to
recede. There comes in a new factor, the Divine Grace, the help of a higher
Divine Force other than the force of Karma, which can lift the sadhak beyond
the present possibilities of his nature. One's spiritual destiny is then the
divine election which ensures the future. The only doubt is about the
vicissitudes of the path and the time to be taken by the passage. It is here
that the hostile forces playing on the weaknesses of the past nature strive to
prevent the rapidity of the progress and to postpone the fulfilment. Those who
fall, fall not because of the attacks of the vital forces, but because they put
themselves on the side of the hostile Force and prefer a vital ambition or
desire (ambition, vanity, lust, etc.) to the spiritual siddhi.
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Neither Nature nor Destiny nor
the Divine work in the mental way or by the law of the mind or according to its
standards – that is why even to the scientist and the philosopher Nature,
Destiny, the way of the Divine all remain a mystery. The Mother does not act by
the mind, so to judge her action with the mind is futile.
Nature is very largely what you
make of her or can make of her.
Each has his own destiny and his
entering into a particular family in one life is only an incident.
Consciousness is not a mechanical
dead thing to cut in that way. Hereditary influence creates an affinity and
affinity is a long thing. It is only when the hereditary part is changed that
the affinity ceases.
[Stamp of heredity, race, caste
and family:] A very big stamp in most cases – it is in the physical vital and
physical material that the stamp chiefly exists – and it is increased by education
and upbringing.
Many things in the body and some
in the mind and vital are inherited from the father and mother or other
ancestors – that everybody is supposed to know. There are other things that are
not inherited, but peculiar to one's own nature or developed by the happenings
of this life.
Karma and heredity are the two
main causes [which determine
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the temperament at birth].
According to some heredity is also subject to Karma, but that may be only in a
general way, not in all the details.
All energies put into activity – thought,
speech, feeling, act – go to constitute Karma. These things help to develop the
nature in one direction or another, and the nature and its actions and
reactions produce their consequences inward and outward: they also act on
others and create movements in the general sum of forces which can return upon
oneself sooner or later. Thoughts unexpressed can also go out as forces and
produce their effects. It is a mistake to think that a thought or will can have
effect only when it is expressed in speech or act: the unspoken thought, the
unexpressed will are also active energies and can produce their own vibrations,
effects or reactions.
Exact? How can one measure
exactly where vital, mental and spiritual factors come in? In dealing with a
star and atom you may (though it appears you can't with an electron) but not
with a man and his living mind, soul and body.
II
What X said is true, the play of
the forces is very complex and one has to be conscious of them and, as it were,
see and watch how they work before one can really understand why things happen
as they do. All action is surrounded by a complexity of forces and if one puts
a force for one of them to succeed, one must be careful to do it thoroughly and
maintain it and not leave doors open for the other contrary ones to find their
way in. Each man is himself a field of many forces – some were working for his
sadhana, some were working for his ego and desires. There are besides powers
which seek to make a man an instrument for purposes not his own without his
knowing it. All
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of these may combine to bring
about a particular result. These forces work each for the fulfilment of its own
drive – they need not be at all what we call hostile forces, – they are simply
forces of Nature.
The feeling of
jealousy and abhimāna
was of course a survival from the past movements of the nature. It is so that
these things go out if they are rejected; they lose their force, can stay less
and less, can affect less and less the consciousness, – finally, they are able
to touch no longer and so come no longer.
Anyone with some intelligence and
power of observation who lives more in an inward consciousness can see the play
of invisible forces at every step which act on men and bring about events
without their knowing about the instrumentation. The difference created by yoga
or by an inner consciousness – for there are people like Socrates who develop
or have some inner consciousness without yoga – is that one becomes conscious
of these invisible forces and can also consciously profit by them or use and
direct them. That is all.
[Vital interchange:] Difficult to
specify. There is always a drawing of vital forces from one to another in all
human social mixture that takes place automatically. Love-making is one of the
most powerful ways of each drawing upon the other's vital force, or of one
drawing the other's, which also often happens in a one-sided way to the great
detriment of the “other”. In the passage come many things good and bad,
elation, feeling of strength and support, infiltration of good or bad
qualities, interchange of psychological moods, states and movements,
depressions, exhaustion – the whole gamut. People don't know it – which is a
mercy of God upon them – but when one gets into a certain yogic consciousness,
one becomes very much aware and sensitive to all this interchange and action
and reaction, but also one can build a wall against, reject etc. etc. It is a
wall of consciousness that one has to build.
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Consciousness is not something
abstract, it is like existence itself or Ananda or mind or prāna, something very
concrete. If one becomes aware of the inner consciousness, one can do all sorts
of things with it, send it out as a stream of force, erect a circle or wall of
consciousness around oneself, direct an idea so that it shall enter somebody's
head in America etc. etc.
His new consciousness makes him
feel more strongly the opposite forces that one contacts when one moves in the
world and has to do affairs and meet with others and he is afraid of a response
in the vital which will upset his sadhana or create difficulties. Evidently he
is a man who is psychically sensitive or has become so to that thing which you
blindly refuse to recognise even when you are in the midst of it – the play of
forces. You can feel your friend's atmosphere through the letter “so beautiful,
so strengthening, so refreshing” and it has an immediate effect on you. But
your mind stares like an owl and wonders “What the hell can this be?”, I
suppose, because your medical books never told you about it and how can things be
true which are not known either to the ordinary mind or science? It is by an
incursion of an opposite kind of forces that you fall into the Old Man's
clutches, but you can only groan and cry, “What's this?” and when they are
swept aside in a moment by other forces blink and mutter, “Well, that's funny!”
Your friend can feel and know at once when he is being threatened by the
opposite forces and so he can be on his guard and resist old Nick, because he
can detect at once one of his principal means of attack.
The consciousness of these things
[influences of people] is intended for knowledge – a psycho-occult knowledge,
necessary for the fullness of consciousness and experience. It is not intended
that what is felt should be allowed to become an influence, whether a good one
or a bad one.
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As for the other matter, there
are two different things. Some people have a faculty for receiving impressions
about others which is not by any means infallible, but often turns out to be
right. That is one thing and the yogic intuition by which one directly knows or
feels what is in a man, his capacities, character, temperament is another. The
first may help for developing the other, but it is not the same thing. The
yogic faculty has to be and it can be complete only with a great development of
the inner consciousness.
Leave aside the question of
Divine or undivine, no spiritual man who acts dynamically is limited to
physical contact – the idea that physical contact through writing, speech,
meeting is indispensable to the action of the spiritual force is
self-contradictory, for then it would not be a spiritual force. The spirit is
not limited by physical things or by the body. If you have the spiritual force,
it can act on people thousands of miles away who do not know and never will
know that you are acting on them or that they are being acted upon – they only
know that there is a force enabling them to do things and may very well suppose
it is their own great energy and genius.
The Divine Forces are meant to be
used – the mistake of man individualised in the
Ignorance is to use it for the ego and not for the Divine. It is that that has
to be set right by the union with the Divine Consciousness and also by the
widening of the individual being so that it can live consciously in the
universal. Difficult it is owing to the fixed ego-habit, but it is not
impossible.
All force comes from the Divine
but it is more usually misused than used spiritually or rightly.
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It is certainly possible to have
consciousness of things at a distance and to intervene.
The idea that yogins do not or ought not to use these powers I regard as
an ascetic superstition. I believe that all yogins
who have these powers do use them whenever they find that they are called on
from within to do so. They may refrain if they think the use in a particular
case is contrary to the Divine Will or see that preventing one evil may be
opening the door to a worse or for any other valid reason, but not from any
general prohibitory rule. What is forbidden to anyone with a strong spiritual
sense is to be a miracle-monger, performing extraordinary things for show, for
gain, for fame, out of vanity or pride. It is forbidden to use powers from mere
vital motives, to make an Asuric ostentation of them or to turn them into a
support for arrogance, conceit, ambition or any other of the amiable weaknesses
to which human nature is prone. It is because half-baked yogins
so often fall into these traps of the hostile forces that the use of yogic
powers is sometimes discouraged as harmful to the user.
But it is mostly
people who live much in the vital that so fall; with a strong and free and calm
mind and a psychic awake and alive, such pettinesses
are not likely to occur. As for those who can live in the true Divine
Consciousness, certain powers are not powers at all in that sense, not, that is
to say, supernatural or abnormal, but rather their normal way of seeing and
acting, part of the consciousness – and how can they be forbidden or refuse to
act according to their consciousness and its nature?
I suppose I have
had myself an even more completely European education than you, and I have had
too my period of agnostic denial, but from the moment I looked at these things
I could never take the attitude of doubt and disbelief which was for so long
fashionable in Europe. Abnormal, otherwise supraphysical
experiences and powers, occult or yogic, have always seemed to me something
perfectly natural and credible. Consciousness in its very nature could not be
limited by the ordinary physical human-animal consciousness, it must have other
ranges. Yogic or occult powers are no more supernatural or incredible than is
supernatural or incredible the power to write a great poem or compose great
music; few people can do it, as
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things are, – not even one in a
million; for poetry and music come from the inner being and to write or to
compose true and great things one has to have the passage clear between the
outer mind and something in the inner being. That is why you got the poetic
power as soon as you began yoga, – yogic force made the passage clear. It is
the same with yogic consciousness and its powers; the thing is to get the
passage clear, – for they are already within you. Of course, the first thing is
to believe, aspire and, with the true urge within, make the endeavour.
Jādu (magic) is a special
practice which is done by professional magicians or those who learn the art of
the magician, but it is no part of yoga. What happens in yoga is that sometimes
or even very commonly certain powers develop in the sadhak by which he can
influence others or make them do things or make things happen that he wants.
This and other yogic powers should never be used by the sadhak for egoistic
purposes or to satisfy his vital desires. They can only be used when they
become part of the realised divine consciousness by the Mother herself or at
her command for good and unselfish purposes. There is no harm in yogic powers
that come naturally as a part of the new consciousness and are not used for a
wrong personal purpose. For instance you see something in vision or dream and
that happens afterwards in the waking state. Well, that is a yogic power of
prevision, knowing future things which often occurs as the consciousness grows;
there is nothing wrong in its happening; it is part of the growth in sadhana.
So with other powers. Only one must not get proud or boast or misuse the powers
for the sake of desire, pride, power or the satisfaction of the ego.
The vision you
saw of the man and the fire at his feet was probably a vision of the God Agni from whom flows the fire of tapasya
and purification in the sadhana. When the sadhana progresses, one almost always
gets the power of vision; what one sees is true if one remains in the right
consciousness. There are also wrong voices and experiences. The people who have
gone mad, went mad because they were
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egoistic, began to think
themselves great sadhaks and attach an exaggerated importance to themselves and
their experiences; this made them get a wrong consciousness and wrong voices
and visions and inspirations. They attached so much importance to them that
they refused to listen to the Mother and finally became hostile to her because
she told them they were in error and checked their delusions. Your visions and
experiences are very true and good and I have explained to you what they
signify – the wrong ones tried to come but you threw them away, because you
were not attached to them and are fixed on the true aim of sadhana. One must
not get attached to these things, but observe them simply and go on; then they
become a help and cannot be a danger.
By black magic is meant the
occultism of the adverse powers – the occultism of the divine Powers is quite
different. One is based on unity, the other on division.
It is difficult to say [why
Christ healed people] – it looks from the Bible account as if he did it as a
sign that he was one sent by the Divine with power.
You are quite right. She [Madame Blavatsky] was an occultist, not a spiritual personality.
What spiritual teaching she gave, seemed to be based on intellectual knowledge,
not on realisation. Her attitude was Tibetan Buddhistic. She did not believe in
God, but in Nirvana, miraculous powers and the Mahatmas.
It is not possible to put any
credence in the stories about this Swami.... It is possible that he has
practised some kind of Tantric Yoga and obtained a few occult powers, but in
all that you have said about him and in the printed papers there is no
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trace of any spiritual
realisation or experience. All that he seems to think about is occult powers
and feats of thaumaturgy. Those who take their stand on occult powers divorced
from spiritual experiences are not yogis of a high plane of achievement. There
are yogis who behave as if they had no control over themselves – the theory is
that they separate the spirit from the nature and live in their inner realisation
leaving the nature to a disordered action “like a child, mad man, piśāca
or inert object”. There are others who deliberately use rough or violent speech
to keep people at a distance or to test them. But the outbreak of rage of this
Swami which you recount seems to have been simply an outburst of fury due to
offended egoism. His judgment about Ramana Maharshi is absurd in the extreme.1 As to his
asking for the nail, hair etc. and his presenting of clothes or jumper, it was
probably to establish a physical means of establishing an occult influence on
you and your wife possibly by some Tantric or magic kriyā – in Tibet such magic
processes are well-known and in common use.
I don't know whether I can throw any
positive light on X's mystic experiences. The description, at any rate the
latter part is not very easy to follow as it is very allusive in its
expressions and not always precise enough to be clear. The first part of the
experience indicates a native power of healing of whose action she herself does
not know the process. It seems from her account to come from something in
herself which should be from the terms she uses a larger and higher and
brighter and more powerful consciousness with which she is in occasional
communion but in which she does not constantly live. On the other hand another
sentence seems to point to a Godhead or Divine Presence giving commands to her
to guide others so that they might grow in consciousness. But she distinctly
speaks of it as a greater “me” standing behind a blue diamond force. We must
fall back then on the idea of a greater consciousness very high up with a
feeling of divinity, a sense of considerable light and spiritual
1Absurd because the greatness of a yogi does not
depend at all on how long he lives or his state of health, but on the height or
the depth of his spiritual realisation and experience.
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authority – perhaps in one of
those higher spiritual mental planes of which I speak in The Life Divine and the Letters.
The diamond light could well be native to these planes; it is usually white,
but there it might well be blue; it is a light that dispels or drives away all
impure things, especially a demoniac possession or the influence of some evil
force. Evidently, the use of a power like this should be carefully guarded from
the intrusion of any wrong element such as personal love of power, but that
need not cause any apprehension as a keen inlook into
oneself would be sufficient to reject it or keep it aloof. I think that is all
I can say upon the data given in her letter.
About spiritism,
I think, I can say this much for the present. It is quite possible for the dead
or rather the departed—for they are not dead – who are still in regions near
the earth to have communication with the living; sometimes it happens
automatically, sometimes by an effort at communication on one side of the
curtain or the other. There is no impossibility of such communication by the
means used by the spiritists; usually, however,
genuine communications or a contact can only be with those who are yet in a
world which is a sort of idealised replica of the
earth-consciousness and in which the same personality, ideas, memories persist
that the person had here. But all that pretends to be communications with
departed souls is not genuine, especially when it is done through a paid
professional medium. There is there an enormous amount of mixture of a very
undesirable kind – for apart from the great mass of unconscious suggestions
from the sitters or the contributions of the medium's subliminal consciousness,
one gets into contact with a world of beings which is of a very deceptive or
self-deceptive illusory nature. Many of these come and claim to be the departed
souls of relatives, acquaintances, well-known men, famous personalities, etc.
There are also beings who pick up the discarded feelings and memories of the
dead and masquerade with them. There are a great number of beings who come to
such seances only to play with the consciousness of
men or exercise their
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powers through this contact with
the earth and who dope the mediums and sitters with their falsehoods, tricks
and illusions. (I am supposing, of course, the case of mediums who are not
themselves tricksters.) A contact with such a plane of spirits can be harmful
(most mediums become nervously or morally unbalanced) and spiritually
dangerous. Of course, all pretended communications with the famous dead of
long-past times are in their very nature deceptive and most of those with the
recent ones also – that is evident from the character of these communications.
Through conscientious mediums one may get sound results (in the matter of the
dead), but even these are very ignorant of the nature of the forces they are
handling and have no discrimination which can guard them against trickery from
the other side of the veil. Very little genuine knowledge of the nature of the
after-life can be gathered from these seances; a true
knowledge is more often gained by the experience of individuals who make
serious contact or are able in one way or another to cross the border.
They [mediums, clairvoyants,
etc.] are most of them in contact with the vital-physical or subtle physical
worlds and do not receive anything higher at all.
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