Chapter
VII
The
Ascent Towards Supermind
It is difficult to conceive intellectually what the Super- mind
is;
and to describe it, another language would be needed than the
poor abstract counters of the mind.
The psychic transformation and the first stages of the spiritual
transformation are well within our conception; their perfection
would be the perfection, wholeness, consummated unity of a knowledge
and experience which is already part of things realized, though
only by a small number of human beings. But the supramental change
in its process carries us into less explored regions; it initiates
a vision of heights of consciousness which have indeed been glimpsed
and visited, but have yet to be discovered and mapped in their
completeness. The highest of these peaks or elevated plateaus
of consciousness, the supramental, lies far beyond the possibility
of any satisfying mental scheme or map of it or any grasp of
mental seeing and description. It would be difficult for the
normal unillumined or untransformed mental conception to express
or enter into something that is based on so different a consciousness
with a radically different awareness of things; even if they
were seen or conceived by some enlightenment or opening of vision,
another language than the poor abstract counters used by our
mind would be needed to translate them into terms by which their
reality could become at all seizable by us. As the summits of
human mind are beyond animal perception, so the movements of
supermind are beyond the ordinary human mental conception: it
is only when we have already had experience of a higher intermediate
consciousness that any terms attempting to describe supramental
being could convey a true meaning to our intelligence; for then,
having experienced something akin to what is described, we could
translate an inadequate language into a figure of what we knew.
If the mind cannot enter into the nature of supermind, it can
look towards it through these high and luminous approaches and
catch some reflected impression of the Truth, the Right, the
Vast which is the native kingdom of the free Spirit.
The transition from mind to Supermind is a passage from Nature
into Supernature. For that every reason it cannot be achieved
by a mere effort of our mind or our unaided aspiration. Overmind
and Supermind are involved and hidden in the earth-nature; but,
in order that they may emerge in us, there is needed a pressure
of the same powers already formulated in their full natural force
on their own superconscient planes. The powers of the Super-
conscience must descend into us and uplift us and trans- form
our being.
The transition to Supermind through overmind is a passage from
Nature as we know it into Super-Nature. It is by that very fact
impossible for any effort of the mere Mind to achieve; our unaided
personal aspiration and endeavour cannot reach it: our effort
belongs to the inferior power of Nature; a power of the Ignorance
cannot achieve by its own strength or characteristic or available
methods what is beyond its own domain of nature. All the previous
ascensions have been effectuated by a secret Consciousness-Force
operating first in Inconscience and then in the Ignorance: it
has worked by an emergence of its involved powers to the surface,
powers concealed behind the veil and superior to the past formulations
of Nature, but even so there is needed a pressure of the same
superior powers already formulated in their full natural force
on their own planes; these superior planes create their own foundation
in our subliminal6 parts and from there are able to influence
the evolutionary process on the surface. Overmind and Supermind
are also involved and occult in earth-Nature, but they have no
formations on the accessible levels of our subliminal inner consciousness;
there is as yet no overmind being or organized overmind nature,
no supramental being or organized supermind nature acting either
on our surface or in our normal subliminal parts: for these greater
powers of consciousness are superconscient to the level of our
ignorance. In order that the involved principles of Overmind
and Supermind should emerge from their veiled secrecy, the being
and powers of the superconscience must descend into us and uplift
us and formulate themselves in our being and powers; this descent
is a sine qua non of the transition and transformation.
For a real transformation there must be a direct and unveiled
intervention from above; there would be necessary too a total
submission and surrender of the lower consciousness, a cessation
of its insistence, a will in it for its separate law of action
to be completely annulled by transformation and lose all rights
over our being. If these two conditions can be achieved even
now by a conscious call and will in the spirit and a participation
of our whole manifested and inner being in its change and elevation,
the evolution, the transformation can take place by a comparatively
swift conscious change; the supramental Consciousness-Force from
above and the evolving Consciousness-Force from behind the veil
acting on the awakened awareness and will of the mental human
being would accomplish by their united power the momentous transition.
There would be no farther need of a slow evolution counting many
millenniums for each step, the halting and difficult evolution
operated by Nature in the past in the unconscious creatures of
the Ignorance.
What should be the preparation for the supramental transformation?
First, an increasing control of the individual over his own nature
and a more and more conscious participation in the action of
the Supernature.
It is a first condition of this change that the mental Man
we now are should become inwardly aware and in possession
of his
own deeper law of being and its processes; he must become the
psychic and inner mental being master of his energies, no longer
a slave of the movements of the lower Prakriti, in control
of it, seated securely in a free harmony with a higher
law of Nature.
In human mind there is the first appearance of an observing
intelligence that regards what is being done and of a will and
choice that have become conscious; but the consciousness is still
limited and superficial: the knowledge also is limited and imperfect,
it is a partial intelligence, a half understanding, groping and
empirical in great part or, if rational, then rational by constructions,
theories, formulas. There is not as yet a luminous seeing which
knows things by a direct grasp and arranges them with a spontaneous
precision according to the seeing, according to the scheme of
their inherent truth; although there is a certain element of
instinct and intuition and insight which has some beginning of
this power, the normal character of human intelligence is an
inquiring reason or reflective thoght which observes, supposes,
infers, concludes, arrives by labour at a constructed truth,
a constructed scheme of knowledge, a deliberately arranged action
of its own making.
It is only a free and entire intuitive consciousness which would
be able to see and to grasp things by direct contact and penetrating
vision or a spontaneous truth-sense born of an underlying unity
or identity and arrange an action of Nature according to the
truth of Nature. This would be a real participation by the individual
in the working of the universal Consciousness-Force; the individual
Purusha would become the master of his own executive energy and
at the same time a conscious partner, agent, instrument of the
Cosmic Spirit in the working of the universal Energy: the universal
Energy would work through him, but he also would work through
her and the harmony of the intuitive truth would make this double
working a single action. A growing conscious participation of
this higher and more intimate kind must be one accompaniment
of the transition from our present state of being to a state
of supernature.
Thus the individuality would become more and more powerful and
effective in proportion as it realized itself as a centre and
formation of the universal and transcendent Being and Nature.
For as the progression of the change proceeded, the energy of
the liberated individual would be no longer the limited energy
of mind, life and body, with which it started; the being would
emerge into and put on - even as there would emerge in him and
descend into him, assuming him into it - a greater light of Consciousness
and a greater action of Force: his natural existence would be
the instrumentation of a superior Power, an overmental and supramental
Consciousness-Force, the power of the original Divine Shakti.
All the processes of the evolution would be felt as the action
of a supreme and universal Consciousness, a supreme and universal
Force working in whatever way it chose, on whatever level, within
whatever self-determined limits, a conscious working of the transcendent
and cosmic Being, the action of the omnipotent and omniscient
World-Mother raising the being into herself, into her supernature.
In place of the Nature of Ignorance with the individual as its
closed field and unconscious or half-conscious instrument, there
would be a Super-Nature of the divine Gnosis and the individual
soul would be its conscious, open and free field and instrument,
a participant in its action, aware of its purpose and process,
aware too of its own greater Self, the universal, the transcendent
Reality, and of its own Person as illimitably one with that and
yet an individual being of Its being, an instrument and a spiritual
centre.
A first opening toward this participation in an action of Supernature
is a condition of the turn towards the last, the supramental
transformation: for this transformation is the completion of
a passage from the obscure harmony of a blind automatism with
which Nature sets out to the luminous authentic spontaneity,
the infallible motion of the self-existent truth of the Spirit.
The evolution begins with the automatism of Matter and of a lower
life in which all obeys implicitly the drive of Nature, fulfils
mechanically its law of being and therefore succeeds in maintaining
a harmony of its limited type of existence and action; it proceeds
through the pregnant confusion of the mind and life of a humanity
driven by this inferior Nature but struggling to escape from
her limitations, to master and drive and use her; it emerges
into a greater spontaneous harmony and automatic self-fulfilling
action founded on the spiritual Truth of things. In this higher
state the consciousness will see that Truth and follow the line
of its energies with a full knowledge, with a strong participation
and instrumental mastery, a complete delight in action and existence.
There will be a luminous and enjoyed perfection of unity with
all instead of a blind and suffered subjection of the individual
to the universal, and at every moment the action of the universal
in the individual and the individual in the universal will be
enlightened and governed by the rule of the transcendent Supernature.
A
second condition consists in a conscious obedience, a surrender
of our whole being, to the light, the truth and force from
above.
But this highest condition is difficult and must evidently take
long to bring about; for the participation and consent of the
Purusha to the transition is not sufficient, there must be also
the consent and participation of the Prakriti. It is not only
the central thought and will that have to acquiesce, but all
the parts of our being must assent and surrender to the law of
the spiritual Truth; all has to learn to obey the government
of the conscious Divine Power in the members. There are obstinate
difficulties in our being born of its evolutionary constitution
which militate against this assent. For some of these parts are
still subject to the inconscience and subconscience and to the
lower automatism of habit or so-called law of the nature,--mechanical
habit of mind, habit of life, habit of instinct, habit of personality,
habit of character, the ingrained mental, vital, physical needs,
impulses, desires of the natural man, the old functionings of
all kinds that are rooted there so deep that it would seem as
if we had to dig to abysmal foundations in order to get them
out . . . At each step of the transition the assent of the Purusha
is needed and there must be too the consent of each part of the
nature to the action of the higher power for its change. There
must be then a conscious self-direction of the mental being in
us towards this change, this substitution of Supernature for
the old nature, this transcendence. The rule of conscious obedience
to the higher truth of the spirit, the surrender of the whole
being to the light and power that come from the Supernature,
is a second condition which has to be accomplished slowly and
with difficulty by the being itself before the supramental transformation
can become at all possible.
It follows that the psychic and the spiritual transformation
must be far advanced, even as complete as may be, before there
can be any beginning of the third and consummating supramental
change; for it is only by this double transmutation that the
self-will of the Ignorance can be totally altered into a spiritual
obedience to the remoulding truth and will of the greater Consciousness
of the Infinite. A long, difficult stage of constant effort,
energism, austerity of the personal will, tapasya, has ordinarily
to be traversed before a more decisive stage can be reached in
which a state of self-giving of all the being to the Supreme
Being and the Supreme Nature can become total and absolute.
A
third condition is the unification of the whole being around
the true self and the opening of the individual to the cosmic
consciousness.
A unification of the entire being by a breaking down of the
wall between the inner and outer nature, - a shifting of the
wall between the inner and outer nature, - a shifting of the
position and centration of the consciousness from the outer to
the inner self, a firm foundation on this new basis, a habitual
action from this inner self and its will and vision and an opening
up of the individual into the cosmic consciousness, - is another
necessary condition for the supramental change. It would be chimerical
to hope that the supreme Truth-consciousness can establish itself
in the narrow formulation of our surface mind and heart and life,
however turned towards spirituality. All the inner centers must
have burst open and released into action their capacities; the
psychic entity must be unveiled and in control. If this first
change establishing the being in the inner and larger, a Yogic
in place of an ordinary consciousness has not been done, the
greater transmutation is impossible. Moreover the individual
must have sufficiently universalized himself, he must have recast
his individual mind in the boundlessness of a cosmic mentality,
enlarged and vivified his individual life into the immediate
sense and direct experience of the dynamic motion of the universal
life, opened up the communications of his body with the forces
of universal Nature, before he can be capable of a change which
transcends the present cosmic formulation and lifts him beyond
the lower hemisphere of universality into a consciousness belonging
to its spiritual upper hemisphere. Besides he must have already
become aware of what is now to him superconscient; he must be
already a being conscious of the higher spiritual Light, Power,
Knowledge, Ananda, penetrated by its descending influences, new-made
by a spiritual change.
The spiritual evolution obeys the logic of a successive unfolding;
it can take a new decisive main step only when the previous main
step has been sufficiently conquered: even if certain minor stages
can be swallowed up or leaped over by a rapid and brusque ascension,
the consciousness has to turn back to assure itself that the
ground passed over is securely annexed to the new condition.
It is true that the conquest of the spirit supposes the execution
in one life or a few lives of a process that in the ordinary
course of Nature would involve a slow and uncertain procedure
of centuries or even of millenniums: but this is a question of
the speed with which the steps are traversed; a greater or concentrated
speed does not eliminate the steps themselves or the necessity
of their successive surmounting. The increased rapidity is possible
only because the conscious participation of the inner being is
there and the power of the Supernature is already at work in
the half-transformed lower nature, so that the steps which would
otherwise have had to be taken tentatively in the night of Inconscience
or Ignorance can now be taken in an increasing light and power
of Knowledge.
Four steps of ascent lead from the human intelligence to the
Supermind; these are:
(1) Higher Mind
Our first decisive step out of our human intelligence, our normal
mentality, is an ascent into a higher Mind, a mind no longer
of mingled light and obscurity or half-light, but a large clarity
of the spirit. Its basic substance is a unitarian sense of being
with a powerful multiple dynamization capable of the formation
of a multitude of aspects of knowledge, ways of action, forms
and significances of becoming, of all of which there is a spontaneous
inherent knowledge . . . It is a luminous thought-mind, a mind
of spirit-born conceptual knowledge.
But here in this greater Thought there is no need of a seeking
and self-critical ratiocination, no logical motion step by step
towards a conclusion, no mechanism f express or implied deductions
and inferences, no building or deliberate concatenation of idea
with idea in order to arrive at an ordered sum or outcome of
knowledge . . .
This higher consciousness is a Knowledge formulating itself
on a basis of self-existent all-awareness and manifesting some
part of its integrality, a harmony of its significances put into
thought-form. It can freely express itself in single ideas, but
its most characteristic movement is a mass ideation, a system
or totality of truth-seeing at a single view; the relations of
idea with idea, of truth with truth are not established by logic
but pre-exist and emerge already self-seen in the integral whole.
There is an initiation into forms of an ever-present but till
now inactive knowledge, not a system of conclusions from premisses
or data; this thought is a self-revelation of eternal Wisdom,
not an acquired knowledge.
This is the Higher Mind in its aspect of cognition; but there
is also the aspect of will, of dynamic effectuation of the Truth:
here we find that this greater more brilliant Mind works always
on the rest of the being, the mental will, the heart and its
feelings, the life, the body, through the power of thought, through
the idea-force. It seeks to purify through knowledge, to deliver
through knowledge, to create by the innate power of knowledge.
The idea is put into the heart or the life as a force to be accepted
and worked out; the heart and life become conscious of the idea
and respond to its dynamisms and their substance begins to modify
itself in that sense, so that the feelings and actions become
the vibrations of this higher wisdom, are informed with it, filled
with the emotion and the sense of it: the will and the life impulses
are similarly charged with its power and its urge of self-effectuation;
even in the body the idea works so that, for example, the potent
thought and will of health replaces its faith in illness and
its consent to illness, or the idea* (* The word expressing the
idea has the same power if it is surcharged with the spiritual
force; that is the rationale of the Indian use of the mantra.)
of strength calls in the substance, power, motion, vibration
of strength; the idea generates the force and form proper to
the idea and imposes it on our substance of mind, life or matter.
It is in this way that the first working proceeds; it charges
the whole being with a new and superior consciousness, lays a
foundation of change, prepares it for a superior truth of existence.
(2) Illumined Mind
This greater Force is that of the Illumined Mind, a Mind no longer
of higher Thought, but of spiritual light. Here the clarity of
the spiritual intelligence, its tranquil day-light, gives place
or subordinates itself to an intense lustre, a splendour and
illumination of the spirit: a play of lightnings of spiritual
truth and power breaks from above into the consciousness and
adds to the calm and wide enlightenment and the vast descent
of peace which characterize or accompany the action of the larger
conceptual-spiritual principle, a fiery ardour of realization
and a rapturous ecstasy of knowledge. A downpour of inwardly
visible Light very usually envelops this action; for it must
be noted that, contrary to our ordinary conceptions, light is
not primarily a material creation and the sense or vision of
light accompanying the inner illumination is not merely a subjective
visual image or a symbolic phenomenon: light is primarily a spiritual
manifestation of the Divine Reality illuminative and creative;
material light is a subsequent representation or conversion of
it into Matter for the purposes of the material Energy. There
is also in this descent the arrival of a greater dynamic, a golden
drive, a luminous enthousiasmos' of inner force and power which
replaces the comparatively slow and deliberate process of the
Higher Mind by a swift, sometimes a vehement, almost a violent
impetus of rapid transformation.
The Illumined Mind does not work primarily by thought, but by
vision; thought is here only a subordinate movement expressive
of sight. The human mind, which relies mainly on thought, conceives
that to be the highest or the main process of knowledge, but
in the spiritual order thought is a secondary and a not indispensable
process.
A consciousness that proceeds by sight, the consciousness of
the seer, is a greater power for knowledge than the consciousness
of the thinker. The perceptual power of the inner sight is greater
and more direct than the perceptual power of thought: it is a
spiritual sense that seizes something of the substance of
Truth and not only her figure; but it outlines the figure also
and at the same time catches the significance of the figure,
and it can embody her with a finer and bolder revealing outline
and a larger comprehension and power of totality than thought-conception
can manage.
(3) Intuitive Mind
But these two stages of the ascent enjoy their authority and
can get their own united completeness only by a reference to
a third level; for it is from the higher summits where dwells
the intuitional being that they derive the knowledge which they
turn into thought or sight and bring down to us for the mind's
transmutation. Intuition is a power of consciousness nearer and
more intimate to the original knowledge by identity; for it is
always something that leaps out direct from a concealed identity
. . .
This close perception is more than sight, more than conception:
it is the result of a penetrating and revealing touch which carries
in it sight and conception as part of itself or as its natural
consequence. A concealed or slumbering identity, not yet recovering
itself, still remembers or conveys by the intuition its own contents
and the intimacy of its self-feeling and self-vision of things,
its light of truth, its overwhelming and automatic certitude.
In the human mind the intuition is even such a truth-remembrance
or truth-conveyance, or such a revealing flash or blaze breaking
into a great mass of ignorance or through a veil of nescience:
but we have seen that it is subject there to an invading mixture
or a mental coating or an interception and substitution; there
is too a manifold possibility of misinterpretation which comes
in the way of the purity and fullness of its action. Moreover,
there are seeming intuitions on all levels of the being which
are communications rather than intuitions, and these have a very
various provenance, value and character. The infrarational 'mystic',
so styled, - for to be a true mystic it is not sufficient to
reject reason and rely on sources of thought or action of which
one has no understanding, - is often inspired by such communications
on the vital level from a dark and dangerous source. In these
circumstances we are driven to rely mainly on the reason and
are disposed even to control the suggestions of the intuition
- or the pseudo-intuition, which is the more frequent phenomenon,
- by the observing and discriminating intelligence; for we feel
in our intellectual part that we cannot be sure otherwise what
is the true thing and what the mixed or adulterated article or
false substitute. But this largely discounts for us the utility
of the intuition: for the reason is not in this field a reliable
arbiter, since its methods are different, tentative, uncertain,
an intellectual seeking; even though it itself really relies
on a camouflaged intuition for its conclusions, - for without
that help it could not choose its course or arrive at any assured
finding, - it hides this dependence from itself under the process
of a reasoned conclusion or a verified conjecture. An intuition
passed in judicial review by the reason ceases to be an intuition
and can only have the authority of the reason for which there
is no inner source of direct certitude. But even if the mind
became predominantly an intuitive mind reliant upon its portion
of the higher faculty, the co-ordination of its cognitions and
its separated activities, - for in mind these would always be
apt to appear as a series of imperfectly connected flashes, -
would remain difficult so long as this new mentality has not
a conscious liaison with its suprarational source or a self-uplifting
access to a higher plane of consciousness in which an intuitive
action is pure and native.
Intuition is always an edge or ray or outleap of a superior
light; it is in us a projecting blade, edge or point of a far-off
supermind light entering into and modified by some intermediate
truth-mind substance above us and, so modified, again entering
into and very much blinded by our ordinary or ignorant mind substance;
but on that higher level to which it is native its light is unmixed
and therefore entirely and purely veridical, and its rays are
not separated but connected or massed together in a play of waves
of what might almost be called in the Sanskrit poetic figure
a sea or mass of 'stable lightnings'. When this original or native
Intuition begins to descend into us in answer to an ascension
of our consciousness to its level or as a result of our finding
of a clear way of communication with it, it may continue to come
as a play of lightning-flashes, isolated or in constant action;
but at this stage the judgment of reason becomes quite inapplicable,
it can only act as an observer or registrar understanding or
recording the more luminous intimations, judgements and discriminations
of the higher power. To complete or verify an isolated intuition
or discriminate its nature, its application, its limitations,
the receiving consciousness must rely on another completing intuition
or be able to call downa massed intuition capable of putting
all in place. For once the process of the change has begun, a
complete transmutation of the stuff and activities of the mind
into the substance, form and power of intuition is imperative;
until then, so long as the process of consciousness depends upon
the lower intelligence serving or helping out or using the intuition,
the result can only be a survival of the mixed Knowledge-Ignorance
uplifted or relieved by a higher light and force acting in its
parts of Knowledge.
Intuition has a fourfold power. A power of revelatory truth-seeing,
a power of inspiration or truth-hearing, a power of truth-touch
or immediate seizing of significance, which is akin to the ordinary
nature of its intervention in our mental intelligence, a power
of true and automatic discrimination of the orderly and exact
relation of truth to truth, - these are the fourfold potencies
of Intuition. Intuition can therefore perform all the action
of reason - including the function of logical intelligence, which
is to work out the right relation of things and the right relation
of idea with idea, - but by its own superior process and with
steps that do not fail or falter.
(4) Overmind
The next step of the ascent brings us to the Overmind; the intuitional
change can only be an introduction to this higher spiritual overture.
But we have seen that the Overmind , even when it is selective
and not total in its action, is still a power of cosmic consciousness,
a principle of global knowledge which carries in it a delegated
light from the supramental gnosis. It is, therefore, only by
an opening into the cosmic consciousness that the overmind ascent
and descent can be made wholly possible: a high and intense individual
opening upwards is not sufficient, - to the vertical ascent towards
summit Light there must be added a vast horizontal expansion
of the consciousness into some totality of the Spirit.
When the overmind descends, the predominance of the centralizing
ego-sense is entirely subordinated, lost in largeness of being
and finally abolished; a wide cosmic perception and feeling of
a boundless universal self and movement replaces it: many motions
that were formerly ego-centric may still continue, but they occur
as currents or ripples in the cosmic wideness. Thought, for the
most part, no longer seems to originate individually in the body
or the person but manifests from above or comes in upon the cosmic
mind-waves: all inner individual sight or intelligence of things
is now a revelation or illumination of what is seen or comprehended,
but the source of the revelation is not in one's separate self
but in the universal knowledge; the feelings, emotions, sensations
are similarly felt as waves from the same cosmic immensity breaking
upon the subtle and the gross body and responded to in kind by
the individual centre of the universality; for the body is only
a small support or even less, a point of relation, for the action
of a vast cosmic instrumentation. In this boundless largeness,
not only the separate ego but all sense of individuality, even
of a subordinated or instrumental individuality, may entirely
disappear; the cosmic existence, the cosmic consciousness, the
cosmic delight, the play of cosmic forces are alone left: if
the delight or the centre of Force is felt in what was the personal
mind, life or body, it is not with a sense of personality but
as a field of manifestation, and this sense of delight or of
the action of Force is not confined to the person or the body
but can be felt at all points in an unlimited consciousness of
unity which pervades everywhere.
But there can be many formulations of overmind consciousness
and experience; for the overmind has a great plasticity and is
a field of multiple possibilities. In place of an uncentered
and unplaced diffusion there may be the sense of the universe
in oneself or as oneself: but there too this self is not the
ego; it is an extension of a free and pure essential self-consciousness
or it is an identification constituting a cosmic being, a universal
individual . . . In the transition towards the supermind this
centralizing action tends towards the discovery of a true individual
replacing the dead ego, a being who is in his essence one with
the supreme Self, one with the universe in extension and yet
a cosmic centre and circumference of the specialized action of
the Infinite.
The overmind change is the final consummating movement of the
dynamic spiritual transformation; it is the highest possible
status-dynamis of the spirit in the spiritual-mind plane. It
takes up all that is in the three steps below it and raises their
characteristic workings to their highest and largest power, adding
to them a universal wideness of consciousness and force, a harmonius
concert of knowledge, a more manifold edlight of being. But there
are certain reasons arising from its own characteristic status
and power that prevent it from being the final possibility of
the spiritual evolution. It is a power, though the highest power,
of the lower hemisphere; although its basis is a cosmic unity,
its action is an action of division and interaction, an action
taking its stand on the play of the multiplicity. Its play is,
like that of all Mind, a play of possibilities; although it acts
not in the Ignorance but with the knowledge of the truth of these
possibilities, yet it works them out through their own independent
evolution of their powers.
The
Overmind descent is not sufficient to transform wholly the
Inconscience, the Supramental Force alone is capable of achieving
this.
In the terrestrial evolution itself the overmind descent would
not be able to transform in each man it touched the whole conscious
being, inner and outer, personal and universally impersonal,
into its own stuff and impose that upon the Ignorance illumining
it into cosmic truth and knowledge. But a basis of Nescience
would remain; it would be as if a sun and its system were to
shine out in an original darkness of Space and illumine everything
as far as its rays could reach so that all that dwelt in the
light would feel as if no darkness were there at all in their
experience of existence. But outside that sphere or expanse of
experience the original darkness would still be there and, since
all things are possible in an overmind structure, could reinvade
the island of light created within its empire . . .
Also by this much evolution there could be no security against
the downward pull of gravitation of the Inconscience which dissolves
all the formations that life and mind build in it, swallows all
things that arise out of it or are imposed upon it and disintegrates
them into their original matter. The liberation from this pull
of the Inconscience and a secured basis for a continuous divine
or gnostic evolution would only be achieved by a descent of the
Supermind into the terrestrial formula, bringing into it the
supreme law and light and dynamics of the spirit and penetrating
with it and transforming the inconscience of the material basis.
A last transition from Overmind to Supermind and a descent of
Supermind must therefore intervene at this stage of evolutionary
Nature.
A transformation of human nature can only be achieved when the
substance of the being is so steeped in the spiritual principle
that all its movements are a spontaneous dynamism and a harmonized
process of the spirit. But even when the higher powers and their
intensities enter into the substance of the Inconscience, they
are met by this blind opposing Necessity and are subjected to
this circumscribing and diminishing law of the nescient substance.
It opposes them with its strong titles of an established and
inexorable Law, meets always the claim of life with the law of
death, the demand of Light with the need of a relief of shadow
and a background of darkness, the sovereignty and freedom and
dynamism of the spirit with its own force of adjustment by limitation,
demarcation by incapacity, foundation of energy on the repose
of an original Inertia. There is an occult truth behind its negations
which only the Supermind with its reconciliation of contraries
in the original Reality can take up and so discover the pragmatic
solution of the enigma. Only the supramental Force can entirely
overcome this difficulty of the fundamental Nescience; for with
it enters an opposite and luminous imperative Necessity which
underlies all things and is the original and final self-determining
truth-force of the self-existent Infinite. This greater luminous
spiritual Necessity and its sovereign imperative alone can displace
or entirely penetrate, transform into itself and so replace the
blind Ananke of the Inconscience.
Chapter
8