Sri Aurobindo
Essays in Philosophy and Yoga
Shorter Works. 1910 – 1950
Part Three. Writings from the Arya (1914 – 1921
Notes on the Arya
The “Arya’s” Fourth Year
We close this month the fourth year of the “Arya”, and bring to a conclusion at the same time the “Psychology of Social Development”, the “Ideal of Human Unity” and the first series of the “Essays on the Gita”. A few more chapters will complete the “Life Divine”. We are therefore well in view of the completion of the first part of the work which we had proposed to ourselves in starting this philosophical monthly, and we take the opportunity to say a few words upon the principle which has governed our writing and which the difficulty of a serial exposition on several lines at a time, scattering and breaking up the total impression, may have prevented some of our readers from grasping in its entirety.
We had not in view at any time a review or magazine in
the ordinary sense of the word, that is to say, a popular presentation or
criticism of current information and current thought on philosophical questions.
Nor was it, as in some philosophical and religious magazines in India, the
restatement of an existing school or position of philosophical thought cut out
in its lines and needing only to be popularised and supported. Our idea was the
thinking out of a synthetic philosophy which might be a contribution to the
thought of the new age that is coming upon us. We start from the idea that
humanity is moving to a great change of its life which will even lead to a new
life of the race,– in all countries where men think, there is now in various
forms that idea and that hope,– and our aim has been to search for the
spiritual, religious and other truth which can enlighten and guide the race in
this movement and endeavour. The spiritual experience and the general truths on
which such an attempt could be based, were already present to us, otherwise we
should have had no right to make the endeavour at all; but the complete
intellectual statement of them and their results and
issues had to be found. This meant a continuous thinking, a high and subtle and
difficult thinking on several lines, and this strain, which we had to impose on
ourselves, we were obliged to impose also on our readers. This too is the reason
why we have adopted the serial form which in a subject like philosophy has its
very obvious disadvantages, but was the only one possible.
Our original intention was to approach the synthesis
from the starting-point of the two lines of culture which divide human thought
and are now meeting at its apex, the knowledge of the West and the knowledge of
the East; but owing to the exigencies of the war this could not be fulfilled.
The “Arya” except for one unfinished series has been an approach to the highest
reconciling truth from the point of view of the Indian mentality and Indian
spiritual experience, and Western knowledge has been viewed from that
standpoint. Here the main idea which has governed our writing, was imposed on us
by the very conditions of the problem. All philosophy is concerned with the
relations between two things, the fundamental truth of existence and the forms
in which existence presents itself to our experience. The deepest experience
shows that the fundamental truth is truth of the Spirit; the other is the truth
of life, truth of form and shaping force and living idea and action. Here the
West and East have followed divergent lines. The West has laid most emphasis on
truth of life and for a time come to stake its whole existence upon truth of
life alone, to deny the existence of spirit or to relegate it to the domain of
the unknown and unknowable; from that exaggeration it is now beginning to
return. The East has laid most emphasis on truth of the Spirit and for a time
came, at least in India, to stake its whole existence upon that truth alone, to
neglect the possibilities of life or to limit it to a narrow development or a
fixed status; the East too is beginning to return from this exaggeration. The
West is reawaking to the truth of the Spirit and the spiritual possibilities of
life, the East is reawaking to the truth of Life and tends towards a new
application to it of its spiritual knowledge. Our view is that the antinomy
created between them is an unreal one. Spirit being the fundamental truth of
existence, life can be only its manifestation; Spirit must be not only the origin of life but its basis, its pervading reality
and its highest and total result. But the forms of life as they appear to us are
at once its disguises and its instruments of self-manifestation. Man has to grow
in knowledge till they cease to be disguises and grow in spiritual power and
quality till they become in him its perfect instruments. To grow into the
fullness of the divine is the true law of human life and to shape his earthly
existence into its image is the meaning of his evolution. This is the
fundamental tenet of the philosophy of the “Arya”.
This truth had to be worked out first of all from the
metaphysical point of view; for in philosophy metaphysical truth is the nucleus
of the rest, it is the statement of the last and most general truths on which
all the others depend or in which they are gathered up. Therefore we gave the
first place to the “Life Divine”. Here we start from the Vedantic position, its
ideas of the Self and mind and life, of Sachchidananda and the world, of
Knowledge and Ignorance, of rebirth and the Spirit. But Vedanta is popularly
supposed to be a denial of life, and this is no doubt a dominant trend it has
taken. Though starting from the original truth that all is the Brahman, the
Self, it has insisted in the end that the world is simply not-Brahman, not-Self;
it has ended in a paradox. We have attempted on the contrary to establish from
its data a comprehensive Adwaita. We have shown that mind and life and matter
are derivations from the Self through a spiritual mind or supermind which is the
real support of cosmic existence and by developing mind into that, man can
arrive at the real truth of the spirit in the world and the real truth and
highest law of life. The Self is Sachchidananda and there is no incurable
antinomy between that and the world; only we see the world through the eyes of
the Ignorance and we have to see it through the eyes of the Knowledge. Our
ignorance itself is only knowledge developing out of its involution in the
apparent nescience of Matter and on its way to a return to its conscious
integrality. To accomplish that return and manifest the spiritual life in the
human existence is the opportunity given by the successions of rebirth. We
accept the truth of evolution, not so much in the physical form given to it by
the West as in its philosophical truth, the
involution of life and mind and spirit here in matter and their progressive
manifestation. At the summit of this evolution is the spiritual life, the life
divine.
It was necessary to show that these truths were not inconsistent with the old Vedantic truth, therefore we included explanations from this point of view of the Veda, two of the Upanishads and the Gita. But the Veda has been obscured by the ritualists and the scholiasts. Therefore we showed in a series of articles, initially only as yet, the way of writing of the Vedic mystics, their system of symbols and the truths they figure. Among the Upanishads we took the Isha and the Kena; to be full we should have added the Taittiriya, but it is a long one and for it we had no space. The Gita we are treating as a powerful application of truth of spirit to the largest and most difficult part of the truth of life, to action, and a way by which action can lead us to birth into the Spirit and can be harmonised with the spiritual life. Truth of philosophy is of a merely theoretical value unless it can be lived, and we have therefore tried in the “Synthesis of Yoga” to arrive at a synthetical view of the principles and methods of the various lines of spiritual self-discipline and the way in which they can lead to an integral divine life in the human existence. But this is an individual self-development, and therefore it was necessary to show too how our ideal can work out in the social life of mankind. In the “Psychology of Social Development” we have indicated how these truths affect the evolution of human society. In the “Ideal of Human Unity” we have taken the present trend of mankind towards a closer unification and tried to appreciate its tendencies and show what is wanting to them in order that real human unity may be achieved.
Our plan has compelled us to deal mainly with first principles and work them out in their fullness. In future we do not propose to start any other long series of this kind, but to have more short articles with a broader, more direct and, as far as possible, more popular treatment. We shall also permit ourselves a freer range and diversity, so far as that is permissible in a philosophical review.