Chapter
III
The
Present Evolutionary Crisis
It
is often claimed that reason is the highest faculty of man
and that it has enabled him to master himself and to master
Nature. Has reason really succeeded?
. . . Apart from the stumbling action of the world, there has
been a labour of the individual thinker in man and this has achieved
a higher quality and risen to a loftier and clearer atmosphere
above the general human thought-levels. Here there has been the
work of a reason that seeks always after knowledge and strives
patiently to find out truth for itself, without bias, without
the interference of distorting interests, to study everything,
to analyse everything, to know the principle and process of everything.
Philosophy, Science, learning, the reasoned arts, all the agelong
labour of the critical reason in man have been the result of
this effort. In the modern era under the impulsion of Science
this effort assumed enormous proportions and claimed for a time
to examine successfully and lay down finally the true principle
and the sufficient rule of process not only for all the activities
of Nature, but for all the activities of man. It has done great
things, but it has not been in the end a success. The human mind
is beginning to perceive that it has left the heart of almost
every problem untouched and illumined only outsides and a certain
range of processes. There has been a great and ordered classification
and mechanization, a great discovery and practical result of
increasing knowledge, but only on the physical surface of things.
Vast abysses of Truth lie below in which are concealed the real
springs, the mysterious powers and secretly decisive influences
of existence. It is a question whether the intellectual reason
will ever be able to give us an adequate account of these deeper
and greater things or subject them to the intelligent will as
it has succeeded in explaining and canalizing, through still
imperfectly, yet with much show of triumphant result, the forces
of physical Nature. But these other powers are much larger, subtler,
deeper down, more hidden, elusive and variable than those of
physical Nature.
The whole difficulty of the reason in trying to govern our existence
is that because of its own inherent limitations it is unable
to deal with life in its complexity, or in its integral movements;
it is compelled to break it up into parts, to make more or less
artificial classifications, to build systems with limited data
which are contradicted, upset or have to be continually modified
by other data, to work out a selection of regulated potentialities
which is broken down by the bursting of a new wave of yet unregulated
potentialities.
When
reason applies itself to life and action it becomes partial
and passionateand the servant of other forces than the pure truth.
But even if the intellect keeps itself as impartial and disinterested
as possible,--and altogther impartial, altogether disinterested
the human intellect cannot be unless it is content to arrive
at an entire divorce from practice or a sort of large but ineffective
tolerantism, eclecticism or sceptical curiosity,--still the truths
it discovers or the ideas it promulgates become, the moment they
are applied to life, the plaything of forces over which the reason
has little control. Science pursuing its cold and even way has
made discoveries which have served on one side a practical humanitarianism,
on the other supplied monstrous weapons to egoism and mutual
destruction; it has made possible a gigantic efficiency of organization
which has been used on one side for the economic and social amelioration
of the nations and on the other for turning each into a colossal
battering-ram of aggression, ruin and slaughter. It has given
rise on the one side to a large rationalistic and altruistic
humanitarianism, on the other it has justified a godless egoism,
vitalism, vulgar will to power and success. It has drawn mankind
together and given it a new hope and at the same time crushed
it with the burden of a monstrous commercialism. Nor is this
due, as is so often asserted, to its divorce from religion or
to any lack of idealism. Idealistic philosophy has been equally
at the service of the powers of good and evil and provided an
intellectual conviction both for reaction and for progress. Organized
religion itself has often enough in the past hounded men to crime
and massacre and justified obscurantism and oppression.
The truth is that upon which we are now insisting, that reason
is in its nature an imperfect light with a large but still restricted
mission and that once it applies itself to life and action it
becomes subject to what it studies and the servant and counsellor
of the forces in whose obscure and ill-understood struggle it
intervenes. It can in its nature be used and has always been
used to justify any idea, theory of life, system of society or
government, ideal of individual or collective action to which
the will of man attaches itself for the moment or through the
centuries. In philosophy it gives equally good reasons for monism
and pluralism or for any halting-place between them, for the
belief in Being or for the belief in Becoming, for optimism and
pessimism, for activism and quietism. It can justify the most
mystic religionism and the most positive atheism, get rid of
God or see nothing else. In aesthetics it supplies the basis
equally for classicism and romanticism, for an idealistic, religious
or mystic theory of art or for the most earthy realism. It can
with equal power base austerely a strict and narrow moralism
or prove triumphantly the thesis of the antinomian. It has been
the sufficient and convincing prophet of every kind of autocracy
or oligarchy and of every species of democracy; it supplies excellent
and satisfying reasons for competitive individualism and equally
excellent and satisfying reasons for communism or against communism
and for State socialism or for one variety of socialism against
another. It can place itself with equal effectivity at the service
of utilitarianism, economism, hedonism, aestheticism, sensualism,
ethicism, idealism, or any other essential need or activity of
man and build around it a philosophy, a political and social
system, a theory of conduct and life. Ask it not to lean to one
idea alone, but to make an eclectic combination or a synthetic
harmony and it will satisfy you; only, there being any number
of possible combinations or harmonies, it will equally well justify
the one or the other and set up or throw down any one of them
according as the spirit in man is attracted to or withdraws from
it. For it is really that which decides and the reason is only
a brilliant servant and minister of this veiled and secret sovereign.
Why does man have faith in reason? Because reason has a legitimate
function to fulfil, for which it is perfectly adpated; and
this is to justify and illumine for man his various experiences
and to give him faith and conviction in holding on to the
enlarging of his consciousness.
This truth is hidden from the rationalist because he is supported
by two constant articles of faith, first that his own reason
is right and the reason of others who differ from him is wrong,
andsecondly that whatever may be the present deficiencies of
the human intellect, the collective human reason will eventually
arrive at purity and be able to found human thoughts and life
securely on a clear rational basis entirely satisfying to the
intelligence. His first article of faith is no doubt the common
expression of our egoism and arrogant fallibility, but it is
something more; it expresses this truth that it is the legitimate
function of the reason to justify to man his action and his
hope and the faith that is in him and to give him that
idea and knowledge,
however restricted, and that dynamic conviction, however narrow
and intolerant, which he needs in order that he may live, act
and grow in the highest light available to him. The reason
cannot grasp all truth in its embrace because truth is
too infinite
for it; but still it does grasp the something of it which we
immediately need, and its insufficiency does not detract from
the value of its work, but is rather the measure of its value.
For man is not intended to grasp the whole truth of his being
at once, but to move towards it through a succession of experiences
and a constant, though not by any means perfectly continuous
self-enlargement. The first business of reason then is to justify
and enlighten to him his various experiences and to give him
faith and conviction in holding on to his self-enlargings.
It justifies to him now this, now that, the experiences
of the moment,
the receding light of the past, the half-seen vision of the
future. Its inconstancy, its divisibility against itself,
its power of
sustaining opposite views are the wohle secret of its value.
It would not do indeed for it to support too conflicting views
in the same individual, except at moments of awakening and
transition, but in the collective body of men and in
the successions of Time
that is its whole business. For so man moves towards the infinity
of Truth by the experience of its variety; so his reason helps
him to build, change, destroy what he has built and prepare
a new construction, in a word, to progress, grow, enlarge
himself
in his self-knowledge and world-knowledge and their works.
But
reason cannot arrive at any final truth because it can neither
get to the root of things nor embrace their totality. It deals
with the finite, the separate and has no measure for the all
and the infinite.
The second article of faith of the believer in reason is also
an error and yet contains a truth. The reason cannot arrive at
any final truth because it can neither get to the root of things
nor embrace the totality of their secrets; it deals with the
finite, the separate, the limited aggregate, and has no measure
for the all and the infinite. Nor can reason found a perfect
life for man or a perfect society. A purely rational human life
would be a life baulked and deprived of its most powerful dynamic
sources; it would be a substitution of the minister for the sovereign.
A purely rational society could not come into being and, if it
could be born, either could not live or would sterilize and petrify
human existence. The root powers of human life, it intimate causes
are below, irrational, and they are above, suprarational. But
this is true that by constant enlargement, purification, openness
the reason of man is bound to arrive at an intelligent sense
even of that which is hidden from it, a power of passive yet
sympathetic reflection of the Light that surpasses it. Its limit
is reached, its function is finished when it can say to man,
'There is a Soul, a Self, a God in the world and in man who works
concealed and all is his self-concealing and gradual self-unfolding.
His minister I have been, slowly to unseal your eyes, remove
the thick integuments of your vision until there is only my own
luminous veil between you and him. Remove that and make the soul
of man one in fact and nature with this Divine; then you will
know yourself, discover the highest and widest law of your being,
become the possessorsor at least the receivers and instruments
of a higher will and knowledge than mine and lay hold at last
on the true secret and the whole sense of a human and yet divine
living.'
The limitations of reason become very strikingly apparent when
it is confronted with the religious life.
Here
is a realm at which the intellectual reason gazes with the
bewildered mind
of a foreigner who hears a language of which the words and
the spirit are unintelligible to him and sees everywhere forms
of
life and principles of thought and action which are absolutely
stange to his experience.
The unaided intellectual reason faced with the phenomena of
the religious life is naturally apt to adopt one of two attitudes,
both of them shallow in the extreme, hastily presumptuous and
erroneous. Either it views the whole thing as a mass of superstition,
a mystical nonsense, a farrago of ignorant barbaric survivals,
- that was the extreme spirit of the rationalist now happily,
though not dead, yet much weakened and almost moribund, - or
it patronizes religion, tries to explain its origins, to get
rid of it by the process of explaining it away; or it labours
gently or forcefully to reject or correct its superstitions,
crudities, absurdities, to purify it into an abstract nothingness
or persuade it to purify itself in the light of the reasoning
intelligence; or it allows it a role, leaves it perhaps for the
edification of the ignorant, admits its value as a moralizing
influence or its utility to the State for keeping the lower classes
in order, even perhaps tries to invent that strange chimera,
a rational religion.
What is religion really and essentiallyand why is it outside
the realm of reason?
The deepest heart, the inmost essence of religion, apart from
its outward machinery of creed, cult, ceremony and symbol, is
the search for God and the finding of God. Its aspiration is
to discover the Infinite, the Absolute, the One, the Divine,
who is all these things and yet no abstraction but a Being. Its
work is a sincere living out of the true and intimate relations
between man and God, relations of unity, relations of difference,
relations of an illuminated knowledge, an ecstatic love and delight,
an absolute surrender and service, a casting of every part of
our existence out of its normal status into an uprush of man
towards the Divine and a descent of the Divine into man. All
this has nothing to do with the realm of reason or its normal
activities; its aim, its sphere, its process is suprarational.
The knowledge of God is not to be gained by weighing the feeble
arguments of reason for or against his existence: it is to be
gained only by a self-transcending and absolute consecration,
aspiration and experience. Nor does that experience proceed by
anything like rational scientific experiment or rational philosophic
thinking. Even in those parts of religious discipline which seem
most to resemble scientific experiment, the method is a verification
of things which exceed the reason and its timid scope. Even in
those parts of religious knowledge which seem most to resemble
intellectual operations, the illuminating faculties are not imagination,
logic and rational judgement, but revelations, inspirations,
intuitions, intuitive discernments that leap down to us from
a plane of suprarational light. The love of God is an infinite
and absolute feeling which does not use a language of rational
worship and adoration; the delight in God is that peace and bliss
which passes all understanding. The surrender to God is the surrender
of the whole being to a suprarational light, will, power and
love and his service takes no account of the compromises with
life which the practical reason of man uses as the best part
of its method in the ordinary conduct of mundane existence. Wherever
religion really finds itself, wherever it opens itself to its
own spirit,--there is plenty of that sort of religious practice
which is halting, imperfect, half-sincere, only half-sure of
itself and in which reason can get in a word,--its way is absolute
and its fruits are ineffable.
Can
religion then be the guide of human life? It is a fact that
in ancient times society gave a pre-eminent place to religion.
Since the infinite, the absolute and transcendent, the universal,
the One is the secret summit of existence and to reach the
spiritual consciousness and the Divine the ultimate goal
and aim of our
being and therefore of the whole development of the individual
and the collectivity in all its parts and all its activities,
reason cannot be the last and highest guide . . . For reason
stops short of the Divine and only compromises with the problems
of life . . .
Where
then are we to find the directing light and the regulating
and harmonizing principle?The
first answer which will suggest itself, the answer constantly
given by the Asiatic mind, is that we shall find it directly
and immediately in religion.
A certain pre-eminence of religion, the overshadowing or at
least the colouring of life, an overtopping of all the other
instincts and fundamental ideas by the religious instinct and
the religious ideas is, we may note, not peculiar to Asiatic
civilizations, but has always been more or less the normal state
of the human mind and of human societies . . . We must suppose
then that in this leading, this predominant part assigned to
religion by the normal human collectivity there is some great
need and truth of our natural being to which we must always after
however long an infidelity return.
But,
on the other hand, humanity - and in particular that portion
of humanity which was the standard-bearer of progress - has
revolted against the predominance of religion.
On the other hand, we must recognize the fact that in a time
of great activity, of high aspiration, of deep sowing, of rich
fruit-bearing, such as the modern age with all its faults and
errors has been, a time especially when humanity got rid of much
that was cruel, evil, ignorant, dark, odious, not by the power
of religion, but by the power of the awakened intelligence and
of human idealism and sympathy, this predominance of religion
has been violently attacked and rejected by that portion of humanity
which was for that time the standard-bearer of thought and progress,
Europe after the Renascence, modern Europe.
Very often the accredited religions have opposed progress and
sided with the forces of obscurity and oppression. And it has
needed a denial, a revolt of the oppressed human mind and heart
to correct these errors and set religion right. This would not
have been so if religion were the true and sufficient guide of
the whole of human life.
We need not follow the rationalistic or atheistic mind through
all its aggressive indictment of religion. We need not for instance
lay a too excessive stress on the superstitions, aberrations,
violences, crimes even, which Churches and cults and creeds have
favoured, admitted, sanctioned, supported or exploited for their
own benefit . . . As well might one cite the crimes and errors
which have been committed in the name of liberty or of order
as a sufficient condemnation of the ideal of liberty or the ideal
of social order. But we have to note the fact that such a thing
was possible and to find its explanation . . . We must observe
the root of this evil, which is not in true religion itself,
but in its infrarational parts, not in spiritual faith and aspiration,
but in our ignorant human confusion of religion with a particular
creed, sect, cult, religious society or Church.
The whole root of the historic insufficiency of religion as
a guide and control of human society lies there. Churches and
creeds have, for example, stood violently in the way of philosophy
and science, burned a Giordano Bruno, imprisoned a Galileo, and
so generally misconducted themselves in this matter that philosophy
and science had in self-defense to turn upon Religion and rend
her to pieces in order to get a free field for their legitimate
development; and this because men in the passion and darkness
of their vital nature had chosen to think that religion was bound
up with certain fixed intellectual conceptions about God and
the world which could not stand scrutiny, and therefore scrutiny
had to be put down by fire and sword; scientific and philosophical
truth had to be denied in order that religious error might survive.
We see too that a narrow religious spirit often oppresses and
impoverishes the joy and beauty of life, either from an intolerant
asceticism or, as the Puritans attempted it, because they could
not see that religious austerity is not the whole of religion,
though it may be an important side of it, is not the sole ethico-religious
approach to God, since love, charity, gentleness, tolerance,
kindliness are also and even more divine, and they forgot or
never knew that God is love and beauty as well as purity. In
politics religion has often thrown itself on the side of power
and resisted the coming of larger political ideals, because it
was itself, in the form of a Church, supported by power and because
it confused religion with the Church, or because it stood for
a false theocracy, forgetting that true theocracy is the kingdom
of God in man and not the kingdom of a Pope, a priesthood or
a sacerdotal class. So too it has often supported a rigid and
outworn social system, because it thought its own life bound
up with social forms with which it happened to have been associated
during a long portion of its own history and erroneously concluded
that even a necessary change there would be a violation of religion
and a danger to its existence. As if so mighty and inward a power
as the religious spirit in man could be destroyed by anything
so small as the change of a social form or so outward as a social
readjustment! This error in its many shapes has been the great
weakness of religion as practised in the past and the opportunity
and justification for the revolt of the intelligence, the aesthetic
sense, the social and political idealism, even the ethical spirit
of the human being against what should have been its own highest
tendency and law.
If
religion has failed, it is because it has confused the essential
with the adventitious. True religion is spiritual religion, it
is a seeking after God,
the opening of the deepest life of the soul to the indwelling
Godhead, the eternal Omnipresence. Dogmas, cults, moral codes
are aids and props; they may be offered to man but not imposed
on him.
It is true in a sense that religion should be the dominant thing
in life, its light and law, but religion as it should be and
is in its inner nature, its fundamental law of being, a seeking
after God, the cult of spirituality, the opening of the deepest
life of the soul to the indwelling Godhead, the eternal Omnipresence.
On the other hand, it is true that religion when it identifies
itself only with a creed, a cult, a Church, a system of ceremonial
forms, may well become a retarding force and there may therefore
arise a necessity for the human spirit to reject its control
over the varied activities of life. There are two aspects of
religion, true religion and religionism. True religion is spiritual
religion, that which seeks to live in the spirit, in what is
beyond the intellect, beyond the aesthetic and ethical and practical
being of man, and to inform and govern these members of our being
by the higher light and law of the spirit.
Religionism, on the contrary, entrenches itself in some narrow
pietistic exaltation of the lower members or lays exclusive stress
on intellectual dogmas, forms and ceremonies, on some kixed and
rigid moral code, on some religio-political, or religio-social
system. Not that these things are altogether negligible or that
they must be unworthy or unnecessary or that a spiritual religion
need disdain the aid of forms, ceremonies, creeds or systems.
On the contrary, they are needed by man because the lower members
have to be exalted and raised before they can be fully spiritualized,
before they can directly feel the spirit obey its law. An intellectual
formula is often needed by the thinking temperament or other
parts of the infrarational being, a set moral code by man's vital
nature in their turn towards the inner life. But these things
are aids and supports, not the essence; precisely because they
belong to the rational and infrarational parts, they can be nothing
more and, if too blindly insisted on, may even hamper the suprarational
light. Such as they are, they have to be offered to man and used
by him, but not to be imposed on him as his sole law by a forced
and inflexible domination. In the use of them toleration and
free permission of variation is the first rule which should be
observed. The spiritual essence of religion is alone the one
thing supremely needful, the thing to which we have always to
hold and subordinate to it every other element or motive.
Moreover,
religion often considers spiritual life as made up of renunciation
and mortification. Religion thus becomes a force that discourages
life and it cannot, therefore, be a true law and guide for
life.
But here comes in an ambiguity which brings in a deeper source
of divergence. For by spirituality religion seems often to mean
something remote from earthly life, different from it, hostile
to it. It seems to condemn the pursuit of earthly aims as a trend
opposed to the turn to a spiritual life and the hopes of man
on earth as an illusion or a vanity incompatible with the hopes
of man in heaven. The spirit then becomes something aloof which
man can only reach by throwing away the life of his lower members.
Either he must abandon this nether life after a certain point,
when it has served its purpose, or must persistently discourage,
mortify and kill it. If that be the true sense of religion, then
obviously religion has no positive message for human society
in the proper field of social effort, hope and aspiration or
for the individual in any of the lower members of his being.
For each principle of our nature seeks naturally for perfection
in its own sphere and, if it is to obey a higher power, it must
be because that power gives it a greater perfection and a fuller
satisfaction even in its own field. But if perfectibility is
denied to it and therefore the aspiration to perfection taken
away by the spiritual urge, then it must either lose faith in
itself and the power to pursue the natural expansion of its energies
and activities or it must reject the call of the spirit in order
to follow its own bend and law, dharma. This quarrel between
earth and heaven, between the spirit and its members becomes
still more sterilizing if spirituality takes the form of a religion
of sorrow and suffering and austere mortification and the gospel
of the vanity of things; in its exaggeration it leads to such
nightmares of the soul as that terrible gloom and hopelessness
of the Middle Ages in their worst moment when the one hope of
mankind seemed to be in the approaching and expected end of the
world, an inevitable and desirable Pralaya. But even in less
pronounced and intolerant forms of this pessimistic attitude
with regard to the world, it becomes a force for the discouragement
of life and cannot, therefore, be a true law and guide for life.
All pessimism is to that extent a denial of the Spirit, of its
fullness and power, an impatience with the ways of God in the
world, an insufficient faith in the divine Wisdom and Will that
created the world and for ever guide it. It admits a wrong notion
about that supreme Wisdom and Power and therefore cannot itself
be the supreme wisdom and power of the spirit to which the world
can look for guidance and for the uplifting of its whole life
towards the Divine. . . .
The world-shunning monk, the mere ascetic may indeed well find
by this turn his own individual and peculiar salvation, the spiritual
recompense of his renunciation and tapasya, as the materialist
may find by his own exclusive method the appropriate rewards
of his energy and concentrated seeking; but neither can be the
true guide of mankind and its law-giver. The monastic attitude
implies fear, an aversion, a distrust of life and its aspirations,
and one cannot wisely guide that with which one is entirely out
of sympathy, that which one wishes to minimize and discourage.
The sheer ascetic spirit, if it directed life and human society,
could only prepare it to be a means for denying itself and getting
away from its own motives. An ascetic guidance might tolerate
the lower activities, but only with a view to persuade them in
the end to minimize and finally cease from their own action.
In
spirituality then, restored to its true sense, we must seek
for the directing lightand the harmonizing law.
But a spirituality which draws back from life to envelop it
without being dominated by it does not labour under this disability.
The spiritual man who can guide human life towards its perfection
is typified in the ancient Indian idea of the Rishi, one who
has lived fully the life of man and found the word of the supra-intelectual,
supramental, spiritual truth. He has risen above these lower
limitations and can view all things from above, but also he is
in sympathy with their effort and can view them from within;
he has the complete inner knowledge and the higher surpassing
knowledge. Therefore he can guide the world humanly as God guides
it divinely, because like the Divine he is in the life of the
world and yet above it.
In spirituality, then, understood in this sense, we must seek
for the directing light and the harmonizing law, and in religion
only in proportion as it identifies itself with this spirituality.
So long as it falls short of this, it is one human activity and
power among others, and, even if it be considered the most important
and the most powerful, it cannot wholly guide the others. If
it seeks always to fix them into the limits of a creed, an unchangeable
law, a particular system, it must be prepared to see them revolting
from its control; for although they may accept this impress for
a time and greatly profit by it in the end they must move by
the law of their being towards a freer activity and an untrammelled
movement. Spirituality respects the freedom of the human soul,
because it is itself fulfilled by freedom; and the deepest meaning
of freedom is the power to expand and grow towards perfection
by the law of one's own nature, dharma.
On
the other hand, modern man has not solved the problem of the
relation of the individual to the society. What are their respective
roles in the spiritual progress of mankind?
In our human aspiration towards a personal perfection and the
perfection of the life of the race the elements of the future
evolution are foreshadowed and striven after, but in a confusion
of half-enlightened knowledge; there is a discord between the
necessary elements, an opposing emphasis, a profusion of rudimentary
unsatisfying and ill-accorded solutions. These sway between the
three principal preoccupations of our idealism,--the complete
single development of the human being in himself, the perfectibility
of the individual, a full development pragmatically restricted,
the perfect or best possible relations of individual with individual
and society and of community with community. An exclusive or
dominant emphasis is laid sometimes on the individual, sometimes
on the collectivity or society, sometimes on a right and balanced
relation between the individual and the collective human whole.
In recent times the whole stress has passed to the life of the
race, to a search for the perfect society, and latterly to a
concentration on the right organization and scientific mechanization
of the life of mankind as a whole; the individual now tends more
to be regarded only as a member of the collectivity, a unit of
the race whose existence must be subordinated to the common aims
and total interest of the organized society, and much less or
not at all as a mental or spiritual being with his own right
and power of existence. This tendency has not yet reached its
acme everywhere, but everywhere it is rapidly increasing and
heading towards dominance.
Thus, in the vicissitudes of human thought, on one side the
individual is moved or invited to discover and pursue his own
self-affirmation, his own development of mind and life and body,
his own spiritual perfection; on the other he is called on to
efface and subordinate himself and to accept the ideas, ideals,
will, instincts, interests of the community as his own. He is
moved by Nature to live for himself and by something deep within
him to affirm his individuality; he is called upon by society
and by a certain mental idealism to live for humanity or for
the greater good of the community.The principle of self and its
interest is met and opposed by the principle of altruism. The
State erects its godhead and demands his obedience, submission,
subordination, self-immolation; the individual has to affirm
against this exorbitant claim the rights of his ideals, his ideas,
his personality, his conscience. It is evident that all this
conflict of standards is a groping of the mental Ignorance of
man seeking to find its way and grasping different sides of the
truth but unable by its want of integrality in knowledge to harmonize
them together. A unifying and harmonizing knowledge can alone
find the way, but that knowledge belongs to a deeper principle
of our being to which oneness and integrality are native. It
is only by finding that in ourselves that we can solve the problem
of our existence and with it the problem of the true way of individual
and communal living.
There is a Reality, a truth of all existence which is greater
and more abiding than all its formations and manifestations;
to find that truth and Reality and live in it, achieve the most
perfect manifestation and formation possible of it, must be the
secret of perfection whether of individual or communal being.
This Reality is there within each thing and gives to each of
its formations its power of being and value of being. The universe
is a manifestation of the Reality, and there is a truth of the
universal existence, a Power of cosmic being, an all-self or
world-spirit. Humanity is a formation or manifestation of the
Reality in the universe, and there is a truth and self of humanity,
a human spirit, a destiny of human life. The community is a formation
of the Reality, a manifestation of the spirit of man, and there
is a truth, a self, a power of this collective being. The individual
is a formation of the Reality, and there is a truth of the individual,
an individual self, soul or spirit that expresses itself through
the individual mind, life and body and can express itself too
in something that goes beyond mind, life and body, something
even that goes beyond humanity. For our humanity is not the whole
of the Reality or its best possible self-formation or self-expression,--the
Reality has assumed before man existed an infra-human formation
and self-creation and can assume after him or in him a suprahuman
formation and self-creation.
It
is wrong to demand that the individual subordinate himself
to the collectivity or merge in it, because it is by its
most advanced individuals that the collectivity
progresses and they can really advance only if they are free.
But it is true that as the individual advances spiritually,
he finds himself more and more united with the collectivity
and the All.
The individual is indeed the key of the evolutionary movement;
for it is the individual who finds himself, who becomes conscious
of the Reality. The movement of the collectivity is a largely
subconscious mass movement; it has to formulate and express itself
through the individuals to become conscious: its general mass
consciousness is always less evolved than the consciousness of
its most developed individuals, and it progresses in so far as
it accepts their impress or develops what they develop. The individual
does not owe his ultimate allegience either to the State which
is a machine or to the community which is a part of life and
not the whole life: his allegiance must be to the Truth, the
Self, the Spirit, the Divine which is in him and in all; not
to subordinate or lose himself in the mass, but to find and express
that truth of being in himself and help the community and humanity
in its seeking for its own truth and fullness of being must be
his real object of existence. But the extent to which the power
of the individual life or the spiritual Reality within it becomes
operative, depends on his own development: so long as he is undeveloped,
he has to subordinate in many ways his undeveloped self to whatever
is greater than it. As he develops, he moves towards a spiritual
freedom, but this freedom is not something entirely separate
from all-existence; it has a solidarity with it because that
too is the self, the same spirit. As he moves towards spiritual
freedom, he moves also towards spiritual oneness. The spiritually
realized, the liberated man is preoccupied, says the Gita, with
the good of all beings; Buddha discovering the way of Nirvana
must turn back to open that way to those who are still under
the delusion of their constructive instead of their real being--or
non-being; Vivekananda, drawn by the Absolute, feels also the
call of the disguised Godhead in humanity and most the call of
the fallen and the suffering, the call of the self to the self
in the obscure body of the universe. For the awakened individual
the realization of his truth of being and his inner liberation
and perfection must be his primary seeking, - first, because
that is the call of the Spirit within him, but also because it
is only be liberation and perfection and realization of the truth
of being that man can arrive at truth of living. A perfected
community also can exist only by the perfection of its individuals,
and perfection can come only by the discovery and affirmation
in life by each of his own spiritual being and the discovery
by all of their spiritual unity and a resultant life unity.
The
present evolutionary crisis comes from a disparity between
the limited faculties of man - mental, ethical and spiritual
- and the technical and economical means at his disposal.
At present mankind is undergoing an evolutionary crisis in which
is concealed a choice of its destiny; for a stage has been reached
in which the human mind has achieved in certain directions an
enormous development while in others it stands arrested and bewildered
and can no longer find its way. A structure of the external life
has been raised up by man's ever-active mind and life-will, a
structure of an unmanageable hugeness and complexity, for the
service of his mental, vital, physical claims and urges, a complex
political, social, administrative, economic, cultural machinery,
an organized collective means for his intellectual, sensational,
aesthetic and material satisfaction. Man has created a system
of civilization which has become too big for his limited mental
capacity and understanding and his still more limited spiritual
and moral capacity to utilize and manage, a too dangerous servant
of his blundering ego and its appetites. For no greater seeing
mind, no intuitive soul of knowledge has yet come to his surface
of consciousness which could make this basic fullness of life
a condition for the free growth of something that exceeded it.
This new fullness of the means of life might be, by its power
for a release from the incessant unsatisfied stress of his economic
and physical needs, an opportunity for the full pursuit of other
and greater aims surpassing the material existence, for the discovery
of a greater and diviner spirit which would intervene and use
life for a higher perfection of the being: but it is being used
instead for the multiplication of new wants and an aggressive
expansion of the collective ego. At the same time Science has
put at his disposal many potencies of the universal Force and
has made the life of humanity materially one; but what uses this
universal Force is a little human individual or communal ego
with nothing universal in its light of knowledge or its movements,
no inner sense or power which would create in this physical drawing
together of the human world a true life unity, a mental unity
or a spiritual oneness. All that is there is a chaos of clashing
mental ideas, urges of individual and collective physical want
and need, vital claims and desires, impulses of an ignorant life-push,
hungers and calls for life satisfaction of individuals, classes,
nations, a rich fungus of political and social and economic nostrums
and notions, a hustling medley of slogans and panaceas for which
men are ready to oppress and be oppressed, to kill and be killed,
to impose them somehow or other by the immense and too formidable
means placed at his disposal, in the belief that this is his
way out to something ideal. The evolution of human mind and life
must necessarily lead towards an increasing universality; but
on a basis of ego and segmenting and dividing mind this opening
to the universal can only create a vast pollulation of unaccorded
ideas and impulses, a surge of enormous powers and desires, a
chaotic mass of unassimilated and intermixed mental, vital and
physical material of a larger existence which, because it is
not taken up by a creative harmonizing light of the spirit, must
welter in a universalized confusion and discord out of which
it is impossible to build a greater harmonic life.
Without
an inner change man can no longer cope with the gigantic development
of the outer life.
A life unity, mutuality and harmony born of a deeper and wider
truth of our being is the only truth of life that can successfully
replace the imperfect mental constructions of the past which
were a combination of association and regulated conflict, an
accommodation of egos and interests grouped or dovetailed into
each other to form a society, a consolidation by common general
life-motives, a unification by need and the pressure of struggle
with outside forces. It is such a change and such a reshaping
of life for which humanity is blindly beginning to seek, now
more and more with a sense that its very existence depends upon
finding the way. The evolution of mind working upon life has
developed an organization of the activity of mind and use of
matter which can no longer be supported by human capacity without
an inner change. An accomodation of the ego-centric human individuality,
separative even in association, to a system of living which demands
unity, perfect mutuality, harmony, is imperative. But because
the burden which is being laid on mankind is too great for the
present littleness of the human personality and its petty mind
and small life-instincts, because it cannot operate the needed
change, because it is using this new apparatus and organization
to serve the old infraspiritual and infrarational life-self of
humanity, the destiny of the race seems to be heading dangerously,
as if impatiently and in spite of itself, under the drive of
the vital ego seized by colossal forces which are on the same
scale as the huge mechanical organization of life and scientific
knowledge which it has evolved, a scale too large for its reason
and will to handle, into a prolonged confusion and perilous crisis
and darkness of violent shifting incertitude. Even if this turns
out to be a passing phase or appearance and a tolerable structural
accomodation is found which will enable mankind to proceed less
catastrophically on its uncertain journey, this can only be a
respite. For the problem is fundamental and in putting it evolutionary
Nature in man is confronting herself with a critical choice which
must one day be solved in the true sense if the race is to arrive
or even to survive.
The
exaltation of the collectivity, of the State, only substitutes
the collective ego for the individual ego.
A rational and scientific formula of the vitalistic and materialistic
human being and his life, a search for a perfected economic society
and the democratic cultus of the average man are all that the
modern mind presents us in this crisis as a light for its solution.
Whatever the truth supporting these ideas, this is clearly not
enough to meet the need of a humanity which is missioned to evolve
beyond itself or, at any rate, if it is to live, must evolve
far beyond anything that it at present is. A life-instinct in
the race and in the average man himself has felt the inadequacy
and has been driving towards a reversal of values or a discovery
of new values and a transfer of life to a new foundation. This
has taken the form of an attempt to find a simple and ready-made
basis of unity, mutuality, harmony for the common life, to enforce
it by a suppression of the competitive clash of egos and so to
arrive at a life of identity for the community in place of a
life of difference. But to realize these desirable ends the means
adopted have been the forcible and successful materialization
of a few restricted ideas or slogans enthroned to the exclusion
of all other thought, the suppression of the mind of the individual,
a mechanized compression of the elements of life, a mechanized
unity and drive of the life-force, a coercion of man by the State,
the substitution of the communal for the individual ego. The
communal ego is idealized as the soul of the nation, the race,
the community; but this is a colossal and may turn out to be
a fatal error. A forced and imposed unanimity of mind, life,
action raised to their highest tension under the drive of something
which is thought to be greater, the collective soul, the collective
life, is the formula found. But this obscure collective being
is not the soul or self of the community; it is a life-force
that rises from the subconscient and, if denied the light of
guidance by the reason, can be driven only by dark massive forces
which are powerful but dangerous for the race because they are
alien to the conscious evolution of which man is the trustee
and bearer. It is not in this direction that evolutionary Nature
has pointed mankind; this is a reversion towards something that
she had left behind her.
If humanity is to survive, a radical transformation of human
nature is indispensable.
But it has not been found in experience, whatever might have
once been hoped, that education and intellectual training by
itself can change man; it only provides the human individual
and collective ego with better information and a more efficient
machinery for its self-affirmation, but leaves it the same unchanged
human ego. Nor can human mind and life be cut into perfection
- even into what is thought to be perfection, a constructed substitute,
- by any kind of social machinery; matter can be so cut, thought
can be so cut, but in our human existence matter and thought
are only instruments for the soul and the life-force. Machinery
cannot form the soul and life-force into standardized shapes;
it can at best coerce them, make soul and mind inert and stationary
and regulate the life's outward action; but if this is to be
effectively done, coercion and compression of the mind and life
are indispensable and that again spells either unprogressive
stability or decadence.
There is the possibility that in the swing back from a mechanistic
idea of life and society the human mind may seek refuge in a
return to the religious idea and a society governed or sanctioned
by religion. But orgnanized religion, though it can provide a
means of inner uplift for the individual and preserve in it or
behind it a way for his opening to spiritual experience, has
not changed human life and society; it could not do so because,
in governing society, it had to compromise with the lower parts
of life and could not insist on the inner change of the whole
being; it could insist only on a credal adherence, a formal acceptance
of its ethical standards and a conformity to institution, ceremony
and ritual. Religion so conceived can give a religio-ethical
colour or surface tinge, - sometimes, if it maintains a strong
kernel of inner experience, it can generalize to some extent
an incomplete spiritual tendency; but it does not transform the
race, it cannot create a new principle of the human existence.
A total spiritual direction given to the whole life and the whole
nature can alone lift humanity beyond itself. Another possible
conception akin to the religious solution is the guidance of
society by men of spiritual attainment, the brotherhood or unity
of all in the faith or in the discipline, the spiritualization
of life and society by the taking up of the old machinery of
life into such a unification or inventing a new machinery. This
too has been attempted before without success; it was the original
founding idea of more than one religion: but the human ego and
vital nature were too strong for a religious idea working on
the mind and by the mind to overcome its resistance. It is only
the full emergence of the soul,4 the full descent of the native
light and power of the Spirit and the consequent replacement
or transformation and uplifting of our insufficient mental and
vital nature by a spiritual and supramental supernature that
can effect this evolutionary miracle.
At first sight this insistence on a radical change of nature
might seem to put off all the hope of humanity to a distant evolutionary
future; for the transcendence of our normal human nature, a transcendence
of our mental, vital and physical being, has the appearance of
an endeavour too high and difficult and at present, for man as
he is, impossible. Even if it were so, it would still remain
the sole possibility for the transmutation of life; for to hope
for a true change of human life without a change of human nature
is an irrantional and unspiritual proposition; it is to ask for
something unnatural and unreal, an impossible miracle. But what
is demanded by this change is not something altogether distant,
alien to our existence and radically impossible; for what has
to be developed is there in our being and not something outside
it: what evolutionary Nature presses for, is an awakening to
the knowledge of self, the discovery of self, the manifestation
of the self and spirit within us and the release of its self-knowledge,
its self-power, its native self-instrumentation. It is, besides
a step for which the whole of evolution of the being touches
a point where intellect and vital force reach some acme of tension
and there is a need either for them to collapse, to sink back
into a torpor of defeat or a repose of unprogressive quiescence
or to rend their way through the veil against which they are
straining. What is necessary is that there should be a turn in
humanity felt by some or many towards the vision of this change,
a feeling of its imperative need, the sense of its possibility,
the will to make it possible in themselves and to find the way.
That trend is not absent and it must increase with the tension
of the crisis in human world-destiny; the need of an escape or
a solution, the feeling that there is no other solution than
the spiritual cannot but grow and become more imperative under
the urgency of critical circumstance. To that call in the being
there must always be some answer in the Divine Reality and in
Nature.
Chapter
4