Sri Aurobindo
Essays in Philosophy and Yoga
Shorter Works. 1910 – 1950
Part Three. Writings from the Arya (1914 – 1921
Section I: Rebirth and Karma
The Ascending Unity
The human mind loves a clear simplicity of view; the more trenchant a statement, the more violently it is caught by it and inclined to acceptance. This is not only natural to our first crudity of thinking, and the more attractive because it makes things delightfully easy to handle and saves an immense amount of worry of enquiry and labour of reflection, but, modified, it accompanies us to the higher levels of a more watchful mentality. Alexander’s method with the fateful knot is our natural and favourite dealing with the tangled web of things, the easy cut, the royal way, the facile philosophy of this and not this, that and not that, a strong yes and no, a simple division, a pair of robust opposites, a clean cut of classification. Our reason acts by divisions, even our ordinary illogical thought is a stumbling and bungling summary analysis and arrangement of the experience that offers itself to us with such unending complexity. But the cleanest and clearest division is that which sets us most at ease, because it impresses on our still childlike intelligence a sense of conclusive and luminous simplicity.
But the average mind enamoured of a straight and plain
thinking, for which, for a famous instance, that great doctor Johnson thought
with the royal force dear to all strong men when he destroyed Berkeley’s whole
philosophy by simply kicking a stone and saying “There I prove the reality of
matter,” is not alone affected by this turn towards simple solutions. Even the
philosopher, though he inclines to an intricate reasoning by the way, is best
delighted when he can get by it to some magnificently conclusive conclusion,
some clean-cutting distinction between Brahman and non-Brahman, Reality and
unreality or any of the host of mental oppositions on which so many “isms” have
been founded. These royal roads of philosophy have the advantage that they are
highly and grandly cut for the steps of the
metaphysical intellect and at the same time attract and overpower the ordinary
mind by the grandiose eminence of the peak in which they end, some snow-white
heaven-cutting Matterhorn of sovereign formula. What a magnificent exterminating
sweep do we hear for instance in that old renowned sentence,
brahma satyaṃ jagan mithyā, the Eternal alone is true, the universe is a
lie, and how these four victorious words seem to settle the whole business of
God and man and world and life at once and for ever in their uncompromising
antithesis of affirmation and negation. But after all perhaps when we come to
think more at large about the matter, we may find that Nature and Existence are
not of the same mind as man in this respect, that there is here a great
complexity which we must follow with patience and that those ways of thinking
have most chance of a fruitful truth-yielding, which like the inspired thinking
of the Upanishads take in many sides at once and reconcile many conflicting
conclusions. One can hew material for a hundred philosophies out of the
Upanishads as if from some bottomless Titans’ quarry and yet no more exhaust it
than one can exhaust the opulent bosom of our mother Earth or the riches of our
father Ether.
Man began this familiar process of simple cuttings by
emphasising his sense of himself as man; he made of himself a being separate,
unique and peculiar in this world, for whom or round whom everything else was
supposed to be created,– and all the rest, the subhuman existence, animal,
plant, inanimate object, everything to the original atom seemed to him a
creation different from himself, separate, of another nature; he condemned all
to be without a soul, he was the one ensouled being. He saw life, defined it by
certain characters that struck his mind, and set apart all other existence as
non-living, inanimate. He looked at his earth, made it the centre of the
universe, because the one inhabited scene of embodied souls or living beings;
but the innumerable other heavenly bodies were only lights to illumine earth’s
day or to relieve her night. He perceived the insufficiency of this one earthly
life only to create another opposite definition of a perfect heavenly existence
and set it in the skies he saw above him. He perceived his “I” or self and
conceived of it as a separate embodied ego, the
centre of all his earthly and heavenly interests, and cut off all other being as
the not-I which was there for him to make the best use he could out of it for
this little absorbing entity. When he looked beyond these natural sense-governed
divisions, he still followed the same logical policy. Conceiving of spirit, he
cut it off sharply as a thing by itself, the opposite of all that was not
spirit; an antinomy between spirit and matter became the base of his
self-conception, or else more amply between spirit on the one side and on the
other mind, life and body. Then conceiving of self as a pure entity, all else
being not-self was separated from it as of quite another character.
Incidentally, with the eye of his inveterate dividing mind, he saw it as his own
separate self and, just as before he had made the satisfaction of ego his whole
business on earth, so he made the soul’s own individual salvation its one
all-important spiritual and heavenly transaction. Or he saw the universal and
denied the reality of the individual, refusing to them any living unity or
coexistent reality, or saw a transcendent Absolute separate from individual and
universe so that these became a figment of the unreal, Asat. Being and Becoming
are to his clean-cutting confidently trenchant mind two opposite categories, of
which one or the other must be denied, or made a temporary construction or a
sum, or sicklied over with the pale hue of illusion, and not Becoming accepted
as an eternal display of Being. These conceptions of the sense-guided or the
intellectual reason still pursue us, but a considering wisdom comes more and
more to perceive that conclusive and satisfying as they may seem and helpful
though they may be for action of life, action of mind, action of spirit, they
are yet, as we now put them, constructions. There is a truth behind them, but a
truth which does not really permit of these isolations. Our classifications set
up too rigid walls; all borders are borders only and not impassable gulfs. The
one infinitely variable Spirit in things carries over all of himself into each
form of his omnipresence; the self, the Being is at once unique in each, common
in our collectivities and one in all beings. God moves in many ways at once in
his own indivisible unity.
The conception of man
as a separate and quite peculiar being in the universe has been rudely shaken
down by a patient and disinterested examination of the process of nature. He is
without equal or peer and occupies a privileged position on earth, but is not
solitary in his being; all the evolution is there to explain this seeker of
spiritual greatness embodied in a fragile body and narrow life and bounded mind
who in turn by his being and seeking explains to itself the evolution. The
animal prepares and imperfectly prefigures man and is itself prepared in the
plant, as that too is foreseen obscurely by all that precedes it in the
terrestrial expansion. Man himself takes up the miraculous play of the electron
and atom, draws up through the complex development of the protoplasm the
chemical life of subvital things, perfects the original nervous system of the
plant in the physiology of the completed animal being, consummates and repeats
rapidly in his embryonic growth the past evolution of the animal form into the
human perfection and, once born, rears himself from the earthward and downward
animal proneness to the erect figure of the spirit who is already looking up to
his farther heavenward evolution. All the terrestrial past of the world is there
summarised in man, and not only has Nature given as it were the physical sign
that she has formed in him an epitome of her universal forces, but
psychologically also he is one in his subconscient being with her obscurer
subanimal life, contains in his mind and nature the animal and rises out of all
this substratum into his conscious manhood.
Whatever soul there is in man is not a separate
spiritual being which has no connection with all the rest of the terrestrial
family, but seems to have grown out of it by a taking up of it all and an
exceeding of its sense by a new power and meaning of the spirit. This is the
universal nature of the type man on earth, and it is reasonable to suppose that
whatever has been the past history of the individual soul, it must have followed
the course of the universal nature and evolution. The separative pride which
would break up the unity of Nature in order to make of ourselves another as well
as a greater creation, has no physical warrant, but has been found on the
contrary to be contradicted by all the
evidence; and there is no reason to suppose that it has any spiritual
justification. The physical history of humankind is the growth out of the
subvital and the animal life into the greater power of manhood; our inner
history as indicated by our present nature, which is the animal plus something
that exceeds it, must have been a simultaneous and companion growing on the same
curve into the soul of humanity. The ancient Indian idea which refused to
separate nature of man from the universal Nature or self of man from the one
common self, accepted this consequence of its seeing. Thus the Tantra assigns
eighty millions of plant and animal lives as the sum of the preparation for a
human birth and, without binding ourselves to the figure, we can appreciate the
force of its idea of the difficult soul evolution by which humanity has come or
perhaps constantly comes into being. We can only get away from this necessity of
an animal past by denying all soul to subhuman nature.
But this denial is only one of the blind, hasty and
presumptuous isolations of the human mind which shut up in its own prison of
separate self-perception refuses to see its kinship with the rest of natural
being. Because soul or spirit works in the animal on a lower scale, we are not
warranted in thinking that there is no soul in him, any more than a divine or
superhuman being would be justified in regarding us as soulless bodies or
soulless minds because of the grovelling downward drawn inferiority of our
half-animal nature. The figure which we use when sometimes we say of one of our
own kind that he has no soul, is only a figure; it means only that the animal
type of soul predominates in him over the more developed soul type which we
expect in the finer spiritual figure of humanity. But this animal element is
present in every mother’s son of us; it is our legacy, our inheritance from the
common earth-mother: and how spiritually do we get this element of our being or
incur the burden of this inheritance, if it is not the earning of our own past,
the power we have kept from a bygone formative experience? The spiritual law of
Karma is that the nature of each being can be only the result of his past
energies; to suppose a soul which assumes and continues a past karma that is not
its own, is to cut a line of dissociation
across this law and bring in an unknown and unverified factor. But if we admit
it, we must account for that factor, we must explain or discover by what law, by
what connection, by what necessity, by what strange impulsion of choice a spirit
pure of all animal nature assumes a body and nature of animality prepared for it
by a lower order of being. If there is no affinity and no consequence of past
identity or connection, this becomes an unnatural and impossible assumption.
Then it is the most reasonable and concordant conclusion that man has the animal
nature,– and indeed if we consider well his psychology, we find that he houses
many kinds of animal souls or rather an amalgam of animal natures,– because the
developing self in him like the developed body has had a past subhuman
evolution. This conclusion preserves the unity of Nature and its developing
order; and it concurs with the persistent evidence of an interaction and
parallelism which we perceive between the inward and the outward, the physical
and the mental phenomenon,– a correspondence and companionship which some would
explain by making mind a result and notation of the act of nerve and body, but
which can now be better accounted for by seeing in vital and physical phenomenon
a consequence and minor notation of a soul-action which it at the same time
hints and conceals from our sense-bound mentality. Finally, it makes of soul or
spirit, no longer a miraculous accident or intervention in a material universe,
but a constant presence in it and the secret of its order and its existence.
The concession of an animal soul existence and of its
past subhuman births slowly and guardedly preparing the birth into humanity
cannot stop short at this abrupt line in the natural gradation. For man
epitomises in his being not only the animal existence below him, but the
obscurer subanimal being. But if it is difficult for us to concede a soul to the
despised animal form and mind, it is still more difficult to concede it to the
brute subconscience of the subanimal nature. Ancient belief made this concession
with the happiest ease, saw a soul, a living godhead everywhere in the animate
and in the inanimate and nothing was to its
view void of a spiritual existence. The logical abstracting intellect with its
passion for clean sections intermediately swept away these large beliefs as an
imaginative superstition or a primitive animism and, mastered by its limiting
and dividing definitions, it drove a trenchant sectional cleavage between man
and animal, animal and plant, animate and inanimate being. But now to the eye of
our enlarging reason this system of intolerant cleavages is in rapid course of
disappearance. The human mind is a development from what is inchoate in the
animal mentality; there is, even, in that inferior type a sort of suppressed
reason, for that name may well be given to a power of instinctive and customary
conclusion from experience, association, memory and nervous response, and man
himself begins with these things though he develops out of this animal
inheritance a free human self-detaching power of reflective will and
intelligence. And it is now clear that the nervous life which is the basis of
that physical mentality in man and animal, exists also in the plant with a
fundamental identity; not only so, but it is akin to us by a sort of nervous
psychology which amounts to the existence of a suppressed mind. A subconscient
mind in the plant, it is now not unreasonable to suggest,– but is it not at the
summits of plant experience only half subconscious? – becomes conscient in the
animal body. When we go lower down, we find hints that there are involved in the
subvital most brute material forms the rudiments of precisely the same energy of
life and its responses.
And the question then arises whether there is not an
unbroken continuity in Nature, no scissions and sections, no unbridgeable gulfs
or impassable borders, but a complete unity, matter instinct with a suppressed
life, life instinct with a suppressed mind, mind instinct with a suppressed
energy of a diviner intelligence, each new form or type of birth evolving a
stage in the succession of suppressed powers, and there too the evolution not at
an end, but this large and packed intelligence the means of liberating a greater
and now suppressed self-power of the Spirit. A spiritual evolution thus meets
our eye in the world which an inner force raises up a certain scale of
gradations of its births in form by the unfolding of its own hidden powers to the greatness of its complete and highest reality. The word of the
ancient Veda stands,– out of all the ocean of inconscience,
apraketaṃ salilaṃ sarvam idam, it is that one spiritual Existent who is
born by the greatness of his own energy, tapasas tan mahinā
ajāyata ekam. Where in this evolution does the thing we call soul make
its first appearance? One is obliged to ask, was it not there, must it not have
been there from the first beginnings, even though asleep or, as we may say,
somnambulist in matter? If man were only a superior animal with a greater range
of physical mind, we might conceivably say that there was no soul or spirit, but
only three successive powers of Energy in a series of the forms of matter. But
in this human intelligence there does appear at its summit a greater power of
spirit; we rise up to a consciousness which is not limited by its physical means
and formulas. This highest thing is not, as it might first appear, an
unsubstantial sublimation of mind and mind a subtle sublimation of living
matter. This greatness turns out to have been the very self-existent substance
and power of our being; all other things seem in comparison only its lesser
forms of itself which it uses for a progressive revelation; spirit in the end
proves itself the first and not only the last, Alpha as well as Omega, and the
whole secret of existence from its beginning. We come to a fathomless conception
of this all, sarvam idam, in which we see that there
is an obscure omnipresent life in matter, activised by that life a secret
sleeping mind, sheltered in that sleep of mind an involved all-knowing
all-originating Spirit. But then soul is not to be conceived of as a growth or
birth of which we can fix a date of its coming or a stage in the evolution which
brings it to a first capacity of formation, but rather all here is assumption of
form by a secret soul which becomes in the self-seeking of life increasingly
manifest to a growing self-conscience. All assumption of form is a constant and
yet progressive birth or becoming of the soul, sambhava,
sambhūti,– the dumb and blind and brute is that and not only the finely,
mentally conscious human or the animal existence. All this infinite becoming is
a birth of the Spirit into form. This is the truth, obscure at first or vague to
the intelligence, but very
luminous to an inner
experience, on which the ancient Indian idea of rebirth took its station.
But the repeated birth of the same individual does not
at first sight seem to be indispensable in this overpowering universal unity. To
the logical intellect it might appear to be a contradiction, since all here is
the one self, spirit, existence born into nature, assuming a multitude of forms,
ascending many gradations of its stages of self-revelation. That summary cutting
of existence into the I and the not-I which was the convenience of our egoistic
notion of things, a turn of mind so powerful for action, would seem to be only a
practical or a mechanical device of the one Spirit to support its separative
phenomenon of birth and conscious variation of combined proceeding, a sorcerer’s
trick of the universal intelligence; it is only apparent fact of being, not its
truth,– there is no separation, only a universal unity, one spirit. But may not
this again be a swinging away to the opposite extreme? As the ego was an
excessive scission in the unity of being, so this idea of an ocean of unity in
which our life would be only an inconstant momentary wave, may be a violent
excision of something indispensable to the universal order. Individuality is as
important a thing to the ways of the Spirit of existence as universality. The
individual is that potent secret of its being upon which the universal stresses
and leans and makes the knot of power of all its workings: as the individual
grows in consciousness and sight and knowledge and all divine power and quality,
increasingly he becomes aware of the universal in himself, but aware of himself
too in the universality, of his own past not begun and ended in the single
transient body, but opening to future consummations. If the aim of the universal
in our birth is to become self-conscient and possess and enjoy its being, still
it is done through the individual’s flowering and perfection; if to escape from
its own workings be the last end, still it is the individual that escapes while
the universal seems content to continue its multitudinous births to all
eternity. Therefore the individual would appear to be a real power of the Spirit
and not a simple illusion or device, except in so far as the universal too may
be, as some would have it, an immense illusion or
a grand imposed device. On this line of thinking we arrive at the idea of some
great spiritual existence of which universal and individual are two companion
powers, pole and pole of its manifestation, indefinite circumference and
multiple centre of the activised realities of its being.
This is a way of seeing things, harmonious at least in its complexity, supple and capable of a certain all-embracing scope, which we can take as a basis for our ideas of rebirth,– an ascending unity, a spirit involved in material existence which scales wonderfully up many gradations through life to organised mind and beyond mind to the evolution of its own complete self-conscience, the individual following that gradation and the power for its self-crowning. If human mind is the last word of its possibility on earth, then rebirth must end in man and proceed by some abrupt ceasing either to an existence on other planes or to an annulment of its spiritual circle. But if there are higher powers of the spirit which are attainable by birth, then the ascent is not finished, greater assumptions may lie before the soul which has now reached and is lifted to a perfecting of the high scale of humanity. It may even be that this ascending rebirth is not the long upward rocket shooting of a conscious being out of matter or its whirling motion in mind destined to break up and dissolve in some high air of calm nothingness or of silent timeless infinity, but a progress to some great act and high display of the Divinity which shall give a wise and glorious significance to his persistent intention in an eternal creation. Or that at least may be one power of the Eternal’s infinite potentiality.