Sri Aurobindo
The Hour of God
and other writings
III. On Yoga
Purna Yoga [2]
Parabrahman, Mukti and Human Thought Systems
Parabrahman is the Absolute, and because It is the Absolute, it cannot be reduced into terms of knowledge. You can know the Infinite in a way, but you cannot know the Absolute.
All things in existence or non-existence are symbols of the Absolute created in self-consciousness (Chid-Atman); by its symbols the Absolute can be known so far as the symbols reveal or hint at it, but even the knowledge of the whole sum of symbols does not amount to real knowledge of the Absolute. You can become Parabrahman; you cannot know Parabrahman. Becoming Parabrahman means going back through self-consciousness into Parabrahman, for you already are That, only you have projected yourself forward in self-consciousness into its terms or symbols, Purusha and Prakriti through which you uphold the universe. Therefore, to become Parabrahman void of terms or symbols you must cease out of the universe.
By becoming Parabrahman void of Its self-symbols you do not become anything you are not already, nor does the universe cease
to operate. It only means that God throws back out of the ocean of manifest
consciousness one stream or movement of Himself into that from which all
consciousness proceeded.
All who go out of universe consciousness, do not necessarily go into Parabrahman. Some go into undifferentiated Nature (avyākrta prakrti), some lose themselves in God, some pass into a dark state of non-recognition of universe, (asat, śūnya) some into a luminous state of non-recognition of universe, — Pure undifferentiated Atman, Pure Sat or Existence-Basis of universe, — some into a temporary state of deep sleep (susupti) in the impersonal principles of Ananda, Chit or Sat. All these are forms of release and the ego gets from God by His Maya or Prakriti the impulse towards anyone of them to which the supreme Purusha chooses to direct him. Those whom He wishes to liberate, yet keep in the world, He makes jivanmuktas or sends them out again as His vibhūtis, they consenting to wear for the divine purposes a temporary veil of Avidya, which does not at all bind them and which they can rend or throw off very easily.
Therefore to lust after becoming Parabrahman is a sort of luminous illusion or sattwic play of Maya; for in reality there is none bound or none free and none needing to be freed and all is only God's Lila, Parabrahman's play of manifestation. God uses this sattwic Maya in certain egos in order to draw them upwards in the line of His special purpose and for these egos it is the only right and possible path.
But the aim of our Yoga is Jivanmukti in the universe; we have to live released in the world, not released out of the world, not because we need to be freed or for any other reason, but be- cause that is God's will in us.
The Jivanmukta has, for perfect knowledge and self-fulfilment, to stand on the threshold of Parabrahman, but not to cross the threshold. The statement he brings back from the threshold is that That is and we are That, but what That is or is not, words cannot describe, nor mind discriminate.
Parabrahman being the Absolute is indescribable by any
name or definite conception. It is not Being or Non-Being, but something of
which Being and Non-Being are primary symbols;
not Atman or un-Atman or Maya; not Personality or Impersonality; not Quality or
Non-Quality; not Consciousness or Non-Consciousness; not Bliss or Non-Bliss; not
Purusha or Prakriti; not god nor man nor animal; not release nor bondage; but
something of which all these are primary or derivative, general or particular
symbols. Still, when we say Parabrahman is not this or that, we mean that It
cannot in its essentiality be limited to this or that symbol or any sum of
symbols; in a sense Para- brahman is all this and all this is Parabrahman. There
is nothing else which all this can be. Parabrahman being Absolute is not subject
to logic, for logic applies only to the determinate. We talk confusion if we say
that the Absolute cannot manifest the determinate and therefore the universe is
false or non-existent. The very nature of the Absolute is that we do not know
what it is or is not, what it can do or cannot do; we have no reason to suppose
that there is anything it cannot do or that its Absolute- ness is limited by any
kind of impotency. We experience spiritually that when we go beyond everything
else we come to something Absolute; we experience spiritually that the universe
is in the nature of a manifestation proceeding, as it were, from the Absolute;
but all these words and phrases are merely intellectual terms trying to express
the inexpressible. We must state what we see as best we can, but need not
dispute what others see or state; rather we must accept and in our own system
locate and account for what they have seen and stated. Our only dispute is with
those who deny credit to the vision or freedom and value to the statements of
others; not with those who are content with stating their own vision.
A philosophical or religious system is only a statement of that arrangement of existence in universe which God has revealed to us as our status of being. It is given in order that the mind may have something to stand upon while we act in Prakriti. But our vision need not be precisely the same in arrangement as the vision of others, nor is the form of thought that suits our mentality bound to suit a mentality differently constituted. Firmness, without dogmatism, in our own system, toleration, without weakness, of all other systems should therefore be our intellectual outlook.
You will find disputants questioning your system on the ground that it is not consistent with this or that Shastra or this or
that great authority, whether philosophers, saints or Avatars. Remember then
that realisation and experience are alone of essential importance. What Shankara
argued or Vivekananda conceived intellectually about existence or even what
Ramakrishna stated from his multitudinous and varied realisations, is only of
value to you so far as you are moved by God to accept and renew it in your own
experience. The opinions of thinkers and saints and Avatars should be accepted
as hints but not as fetters. What matters to you is what you have seen or what
God in His universal personality or impersonally or again personally in some
teacher, Guru or path-finder undertakes to show to you in the path of Yoga.