There have been teachers such as Orpheus, Hermes,
Buddha, Lao-tzu and Christ, the historicity of whose human existence is
doubtful, and to whom there may be accorded the higher dignity of a mythical
reality. Sankara, like Plotinus, Augustine, or Eckhart, was certainly a
man among men, though we know comparatively little about his life. He was
of south Indian Brahman birth, flourished in the first half of the ninth
century A.D., and founded a monastic order which still survives. He became
a samnyasin, or "truly poor
man," at the age of eight, as the disciple of a certain Govinda and
of Govinda's own teacher Gaudapada, the author of a treatise on the Upanisads
in which their essential doctrine of the nonduality of the divine Being
was set forth. Sankara journeyed to Benares and wrote the famous commentary
on the Brahma Sutra there in his twelfth year; the commentaries on the
Upanisads and Bhagavad Gita were written later. Most of the great sage's
life was spent wandering about India, teaching and taking part in controversies.
He is understood to have died between the ages of thirty and forty. Such
wanderings and disputations as his have always been characteristically
Indian institutions; in his days, as now, Sanskrit was the lingua franca
of learned men, just as for centuries Latin was the lingua franca of Western
countries, and free public debate was so generally recognized that halls
erected for the accommodation of peripatetic teachers and disputants were
at almost every court.
The traditional metaphysics with which the
name of Sankara is connected is known either as the Vedanta, a term which
occurs in the Upanisads and means the "Vedas' ends," both as "latter part"
and as "ultimate significance"; or as Atmavidya, the doctrine of the knowledge
of the true "self" or "spiritual essence"; or as Advaita, "Nonduality,"
a term which, while it denies duality, makes no affirmations about the
nature of unity and must not be taken to imply anything like our monisms
or pantheisms. A gnosis (jnana) is
taught in this metaphysics.
Sankara was not in any sense the founder,
discoverer, or promulgator of a new religion or philosophy; his great work
as an expositor consisted in a demonstration of the unity and consistency
of Vedic doctrine and in an explanation of its apparent contradictions
by a correlation of different formulations with the points of view implied
in them. In particular, and exactly as in European Scholasticism, he distinguished
between the two complementary approaches to God, which are those of the
affirmative and negative theology. In the way of affirmation, or relative
knowledge, qualities are predicated in the Supreme Identity by way of excellence,
while in the way of negation all qualities are abstracted. The famous "No,
no" of the Upanisads, which forms the basis of Sankara's method, as it
did of the Buddha's, depends upon a recognition of the truth-expressed
by Dante among many others-that there are things which are beyond the reach
of discursive thought and which cannot be understood except by denying
things of them.
Sankara's style is one of great originality and power as well as subtlety.
I shall cite from his commentary on the Bhagavad Gita a passage that has
the further advantage of introducing us at once to the central problem
of the Vedanta-that of the discrimination of what is really, and not merely
according to our way of thinking, "myself." "How is it," Sankara says,
"that there are professors who like ordinary men maintain that I am so-and-so'
and 'This is mine'? Listen: it is because their so-called learning consists
in thinking of
the body as their 'self."' In the Commentary on the Brahma Sutra he
enunciates in only four Sanskrit words what has remained in Indian metaphysics
from first to last the consistent doctrine of the immanent Spirit within
you as the only knower, agent, and
transmigrant.
The metaphysical literature underlying Sankara's
expositions consists essentially of the Four Vedas together with the Brahmanas
and their Upanisads, all regarded as revealed, eternal, datable (as to
their recension, in any case) before 500 B.C., together with the
Bhagavad Gita and Brahma Sutra (datable before the beginning of the
Christian era). Of these books, the Vedas are liturgical, the Brahmanas
are explanatory of the ritual, and the Upanisads are devoted to the Brahma-doctrine
or Theologia Mystica, which is taken for granted in the liturgy and ritual.
The Brahma Sutra is a greatly condensed compendium of Upanisad doctrine,
and the Bhagavad Gita is an exposition adapted to the understanding of
those whose primary business has to do with the active rather than the
contemplative life.
For many reasons, which I shall try to explain,
it will be far more difficult to expound the Vedanta than it would be to
expound the personal views of a modern "thinker," or even such a thinker
as Plato or Aristotle. Neither the modern English vernacular nor modern
philosophical or psychological jargon provides us with an adequate
vocabulary, nor does education provide us with the ideological background
which would be essential for easy communication. I shall have to make use
of a purely symbolic, abstract, and technical language, as if I were speaking
in terms of higher mathematics; you may recall that Emile Mâle speaks
of Christian symbolism as a "calculus." There is this advantage: the matter
to be communicated and the symbols to be employed are no more peculiarly
Indian than peculiarly Greek or Islamic, Egyptian or Christian.
Metaphysics, in general, resorts to visual
symbols (crosses and circles, for example) and above all to the symbolism
of light and of the sun-than which, as Dante says, "no object of sense
in the whole world is more worthy to be made a type of God." But I shall
also
have to use such technical terms as essence and substance, potentiality
and act, spiration and despiration, exemplary likeness, aeviternity, form
and accident. Metempsychosis must be distinguished from transmigration
and both from "reincarnation." We shall have to distinguish soul from spirit.
Before we can know when, if ever, it is proper to render a given Sanskrit
word by our word "soul" (anima, psyche), we must have known in what manifold
senses the word "soul" has been employed in the European tradition; what
kind of souls can be "saved"; what kind of soul Christ requires us to "hate"
if we would be his disciples; what kind of soul Eckhart refers to when
he says that the soul must "put itself to death." We must know what Philo
means by the "soul of the soul"; and we must ask how we can think of animals
as "soulless," notwithstanding that the word "animal" means quite literally
"ensouled." We must distinguish essence from existence. And I may have
to coin such a word as "nowever" to express the full and original meanings
of such words as "suddenly," "immediately" and "presently."
The sacred literature of India is available
to most of us only in translations made by scholars trained in linguistics
rather than in metaphysics; and it has been expounded and explained - or
as I should rather say, explained away-mainly by scholars provided with
the assumptions of the naturalist and anthropologist, scholars whose
intellectual capacities have been so much inhibited by their own powers
of observation that they can no longer distinguish the reality from the
appearance, the Supernal Sun of metaphysics from the physical sun of their
own experience. Apart from these, Indian literature has either been studied
and explained by Christian propagandists whose main concern has been to
demonstrate the falsity and absurdity of the doctrines involved, or by
theosophists by whom the doctrines have been caricatured with the best
intentions and perhaps even worse results.
The educated man of today is, moreover, completely
out of touch with those European modes of thought and those intellectual
aspects of the Christian doctrine which are nearest those of the Vedic
traditions. A knowledge of modern Christianity will be of little
use because the fundamental sentimentality of our times has diminished
what was once an intellectual doctrine to a mere morality that can hardly
be distinguished from a pragmatic humanism. A European can hardly be said
to be adequately prepared for the study of the Vedanta unless he has acquired
some knowledge and understanding of at least Plato, Philo, Hermes, Plotinus,
the Gospels (especially John), Dionysius, and finally Eckhart who, with
the possible exception of Dante, can be regarded from an Indian point of
view as the greatest of all Europeans.
The Vedanta is not a "philosophy" in the current
sense of the word, but only as the word is used in the phrase Philosophia
Perennis, and only if we have in mind the Hermetic "philosophy" or that
"Wisdom" by whom Boethius was consoled. Modern philosophies
are closed systems, employing the method of dialectics, and taking
for granted that opposites are mutually exclusive. In modern philosophy
things are either so or not so; in eternal philosophy this depends upon
our point of view. Metaphysics is not a system, but
a consistent doctrine;' it is not merely concerned with conditioned
and quantitative experience, but with universal possibility. It therefore
considers possibilities that may be neither possibilities of manifestation
nor in any sense formal, as well as ensembles of
possibility that can be realized in a given world. The ultimate reality
of metaphysics is a Supreme Identity in which the opposition of all contraries,
even of being and not-being, is resolved; its "worlds" and "gods" are levels
of reference and symbolic entities which are
neither places nor individuals but states of being realizable within
you. Philosophers have personal theories about the nature of the world;
our "philosophical discipline" is primarily a study of the history of these
opinions and of their historical connections. We encourage the budding
philosopher to have opinions of his own on the chance that they may represent
an improvement on previous theories. We do not envisage, as does the Philosophia
Perennis, the possibility of knowing the Truth once and for all; still
less do we set before us as our goal to become this truth.
The metaphysical "philosophy" is called "perennial"
because of its eternity, universality, and immutability; it is Augustine's
"Wisdom uncreate, the same now as it ever was and ever will be"; the religion
which, as he also says, only came to be called "Christianity" after the
coming of Christ. What was revealed in the beginning contains implicitly
the whole truth; and so long as the tradition is transmitted without deviation,
so long, in other words, as the chain of teachers and disciples remains
unbroken, neither inconsistency nor error is possible. On the other hand,
an understanding of the doctrine must be perpetually renewed; it is not
a matter of words. That the doctrine has no history by no means excludes
the possibility, or even the necessity, for a perpetual explicitation of
its formulae, an adaptation of the rites originally practiced, and an application
of its principles to the arts and sciences. The more humanity declines
from its first self- sufficiency, the more the necessity for such an application
arises. Of these explicitations and adaptations a history is possible.
Thus a distinction is drawn between what was "heard" at the outset and
what has been "remembered."
A deviation or heresy is only possible when the
essential teaching has been in some respect misunderstood or perverted.
To say, for example, that "I am a pantheist" is merely to confess that
"I am not a metaphysician," just as to say that "two and two make five"
would be to confess "I am not a mathematician." Within the tradition
itself there cannot be any contradictory or mutually exclusive theories
or dogmas. For example, what are called the "six systems of Indian philosophy"
(a phrase in which only the words "six" and
"Indian" are justified) are not mutually contradictory and exclusive
theories. The so- called "systems" are no more or less orthodox than mathematics,
chemistry, and botany which, though separate disciplines more or less scientific
amongst themselves, are not
anything but branches of one "science." India, indeed, makes use of
the term "branches" to denote what the Indologist misunderstands to be
"sects." It is precisely because there are no "sects" within the fold of
Brahmanical orthodoxy that an intolerance in the
European sense has been virtually unknown in Indian history-and for
the same reason, it is just as easy for me to think in terms of the Hermetic
philosophy as in terms of Vedanta. There must be "branches" because nothing
can be known except in the mode of the
knower; however strongly we may realize that all roads lead to one
Sun, it is equally evident that each man must choose that road which starts
from the point at which he finds himself at the moment of setting out.
For the same reasons, Hinduism has never been a
missionary faith. It may be true that the metaphysical tradition has
been better and more fully preserved in India than in Europe. If so, it
only means that the Christian can learn from the Vedanta how to understand
his own "way" better.
The philosopher expects to prove his points.
For the metaphysician it suffices to show that a supposedly false doctrine
involves a contradiction of first principles. For example, a philosopher
who argues for an immortality of the soul endeavors to discover proofs
of
the survival of personality; for the metaphysician it suffices to remember
that "the first beginning must be the same as the last end"-from which
it follows that a soul, understood to have been created in time, cannot
but end in time. The metaphysician can no more be
convinced by any so-called "proof of the survival of personality" than
a physicist could be convinced of the possibility of a perpetual motion
machine by any so-called proof. Furthermore, metaphysics deals for the
most part with matters which cannot be publicly
proved, but can only be demonstrated, i.e., made intelligible by analogy,
and which even when verified in personal experience can only be stated
in terms of symbol and myth. At the same time, faith is made relatively
easy by the infallible logic of the texts themselves- which is their beauty
and their attractive power. Let us remember the Christian definition of
faith: "assent to a credible proposition." One must believe in order to
understand, and understand in order to believe. These are not successive,
however, but simultaneous acts of the mind. In other words, there can be
no knowledge of anything to which the will refuses its consent, or love
of anything that has not been known.
Metaphysics differs still further from philosophy
in having a purely practical purpose. It is no more a pursuit of truth
for truth's sake than are the related arts a pursuit of art for art's sake,
or related conduct the pursuit of morality for the sake of morality. There
is
indeed a quest, but the seeker already knows, so far as this can be
stated in words, what it is that he is in search of; the quest is achieved
only when he himself has become the object of his search. Neither verbal
knowledge nor a merely formal assent nor impeccable conduct is of any more
than indispensable dispositive value-means to an end. Taken in their materiality,
as "literature," the texts and symbols are inevitably misunderstood by
those who are not themselves in quest. Without exception, the metaphysical
terms and symbols are the technical terms of the chase. They are never
literary ornaments, and as Malinowski has so well said in another connection,
"Technical language, in matters of practical pursuit, acquires its meaning
only through personal participation in this type of pursuit." That is why,
the Indian feels, the Vedantic texts have been only verbally and grammatically
and never really understood by European scholars, whose methods of study
are avowedly objective and noncommittal. The Vedanta can be known only
to the extent that it has been lived. The Indian, therefore, cannot trust
a teacher whose doctrine is not directly reflected in his very being. Here
is something very far removed from the modern European concept of scholarship.
We must add, for the sake of those who entertain romantic notions of the
"mysterious East," that the Vedanta has nothing to do with magic or with
the exercise of occult powers. It is true that the efficacy of magical
procedure and the actuality of occult powers are taken for granted in India.
But the magic is regarded as an applied science of the basest kind; and
while occult powers, such as that of operation "at a distance," are incidentally
acquired in the course of contemplative practice, the use of them-unless
under the most exceptional circumstances-is regarded as a dangerous deviation
from the path.
Nor is the Vedanta a kind of psychology or
Yoga a sort of therapeutics except quite accidentally. Physical and moral
health are prerequisites to spiritual progress. A psychological analysis
is employed only to break down our fond belief in the unity and
immateriality of the 'Soul’, and with a view to a better distinguishing
of the spirit from what is not the spirit but only a temporary psycho-physical
manifestation of one of the most limited of its modalities. Whoever, like
Jung, insists upon translating the essentials
of Indian or Chinese metaphysics into a psychology is merely distorting
the meaning of the texts. Modern psychology has, from an Indian point of
view, about the same values that attach to spiritualism and magic and other
"superstitions." Finally, I must point out that the metaphysics, the Vedanta,
is not a form of mysticism, except in the sense that with Dionysius we
can speak of a Theologia Mystica. What is ordinarily meant by "mysticism"
involves a passive receptivity - "we must be able to let things happen
in the psyche" is Jung's way of putting it (and in this statement he proclaims
himself a "mystic"). But metaphysics repudiates the psyche altogether.
The words of Christ, that "No man can be my disciple who hateth not his
own soul," have been voiced again and .again by every Indian guru; and
so far from involving passivity, contemplative practice involves an activity
that is commonly compared to the blazing of a fire at a temperature so
high as to show neither flickering nor smoke. The pilgrim is called a "toiler,"
and the characteristic refrain of the pilgrim song is "keep on going, keep
on going." The "Way" of the Vedantist is above all an activity.
The Vedanta takes for granted an omniscience
independent of any source of knowledge external to itself, and a beatitude
independent of any external source of pleasure. In saying "That art thou,"
the Vedanta affirms that man is possessed of, and is himself, "that one
thing which when it is known, all things are known" and "for the sake of
which alone all things are dear." It affirms that man is unaware of this
hidden treasure within himself because he has inherited an ignorance that
inheres in the very nature of the psycho- physical vehicle which he mistakenly
identifies with himself. The purpose of all teaching is to dissipate this
ignorance; when the darkness has been pierced nothing remains but the Gnosis
of the Light. The technique of education is, therefore, always formally
destructive and iconoclastic; it is not the conveyance of information but
the education of a latent knowledge.
The "great dictum" of the Upanisads is, "That
art thou." "That" is here, of course, Atman or Spirit, Sanctus Spiritus,
Greek pneuma, Arabic ruh, Hebrew ruah, Egyptian Amon, Chinese ch'i; Atman
is spiritual essence, impartite whether transcendent or immanent;
and however many and various the directions to which it may extend
or from which it may withdraw, it is unmoved mover in both intransitive
and transitive senses. It lends itself to all modalities of being but never
itself becomes anyone or anything. That than
which all else is a vexation - That art thou. "That," in other words,
is the Brahman, or God in the general sense of Logos or Being, considered
as the universal source of all Being-expanding, manifesting and productive,
font of all things, all of which are "in" him
as the finite in the infinite, though not a "part" of him, since the
infinite has no parts. For the most part, I shall use the word Atman hereafter.
While this Atman, as that which blows and enlightens, is primarily "Spirit,"
because it is this divine Eros that is the
quickening essence in all things and thus their real being, the word
Atman is also used reflexively to mean "self” - either "oneself" in whatever
sense, however gross, the notion may be entertained, or with reference
to the spiritual self or person (which is the only
knowing subject and essence of all things, and must be distinguished
from the affected and contingent "I" that is a compound of the body and
of all that we mean by "soul" when we speak of a "psychology"). Two very
different "selves" are thus involved, and it has
been the custom of translators, accordingly, to render Atman as "self,"
printed either with a small or with a capital s according to the context.
The same distinction is drawn, for example, by St. Bernard between what
is my "property" (Proprium) and what is my very
being (esse). An alternative Indian formulation distinguishes the "knower
of the field"- viz. the Spirit as the only knowing subject in all things
and the same in all-from the "field," or body-and-soul as defined above
(taken together with the pastures of the senses and embracing therefore
all things that can be considered objectively). The Atman or Brahman itself
cannot be thus considered: "How couldst thou know the knower of knowing?"
- or in other words, how can the first cause of all things be one of them?
The Atman is impartite, but it is apparently divided and identified into
variety by the differing forms of its vehicles, mouse or man, just as space
within a jar is apparently signate and distinguishable from space without
it. In this sense it can be said that "he is one as he is in himself but
many as he is in his children," and that "participating himself, he fills
these worlds." But this is only in the sense that light fills space while
it remains itself without discontinuity; the distinction of things from
one another thus depending not on differences in the light but on differences
in reflecting power. When the jar is shattered, when the vessel of life
is unmade, we realize that what was apparently delimited had no boundaries
and that "life" was a meaning not to be confused with "living." To say
that the Atman is thus at once participated and impartible, "undivided
amongst divided things," without local position and at the same time everywhere,
is
another way of stating what we are more familiar with as the doctrine
of Total Presence. At the same time, every one of these apparent definitions
of the Spirit represents the actuality in time of one of its indefinitely
numerous possibilities of formal manifestation.
The existence of the apparition begins at
birth and ends at death; it can never be repeated. Nothing of Sankara survives
but a bequest. Therefore though we can speak of him as still a living power
in the world, the man has become a memory. On the other hand, for the gnostic
Spirit, the Knower of the field, the Knower of all births, there can never
at any time cease to be an immediate knowledge of each and every one of
its modalities, a knowledge without before or after (relative to the appearance
or disappearance of Sankara from the field of our experience). It follows
that where knowledge and being, nature and essence are one and the same,
Sankara's being has no beginning and can never cease. In other words, there
is a sense in which we can properly speak of "my spirit" and "my person"
as well as of "the Spirit" and "the Person," notwithstanding that Spirit
and Person are a perfectly simple substance without composition. I shall
return to the meaning of "immortality" later, but for the present I want
to use what has just been said to explain what was meant by a nonsectarian
distinction of points of view. For, whereas the Western student of "philosophy"
thinks of Samkhya and Vedanta as two incompatible "systems," because the
former is concerned with the liberation of a plurality of Persons and the
latter with the liberty of an inconnumerable Person, no such antinomy is
apparent to the Hindu. This can be explained by pointing out that in the
Christian texts, "Ye are all one in Christ Jesus" and "Whoever is joined
unto the Lord is one spirit," the plurals "ye" and "whoever" represent
the Samkhya and the singular "one" the Vedanta point of view. The validity
of our consciousness of being, apart from any question of being So-and-so
by name or by registrable characters, is accordingly taken for granted.
This must not be confused with the argument, "Cogito ergo sum." That "I"
feel or "I" think is no proof that "I" am; for we can say with the Vedantist
and Buddhist that this is merely a conceit, that "feelings are felt" and
"thoughts are thought," and that all this is a part of the "field" of which
the spirit is the surveyor, just as we look at a picture which is in one
sense a part of us though we are not in any sense a part of it. The question
is posed accordingly: "Who art thou?" "What is that self to which we should
resort?" We recognize that "self" can have more than one meaning when we
speak of an "internal conflict"; when we say that "the spirit is willing
but the flesh is weak"; or when we say, with the Bhagavad Gita, that "the
Spirit is at war with whatever is not the Spirit."
Am "I" the spirit or the flesh? (We must always
remember that in metaphysics the "flesh" includes all the aesthetic and
recognitive faculties of the "soul.") We may be asked to consider our reflection
in a mirror, and may understand that there we see "ourself"; if we
are somewhat less naive, we may be asked to consider the image of the
psyche as reflected in the mirror of the mind and may understand that this
is what "I" am; or if still better advised, we may come to understand that
we are none of these things-that they
exist because we are, rather than that we exist inasmuch as they are.
The Vedanta affirms that "I" in my essence am as little, or only as much,
affected by all these things as an author-playwright is affected by the
sight of what is suffered or enjoyed by those who
move on the stage-the stage, in this case, of "life" (in other words,
the "field" or "pasture" as distinguished from its aquiline surveyor, the
Universal Man). The whole problem of man's last end, liberation, beatitude,
or deification is accordingly one of finding "oneself"
no longer in "this man" but in the Universal Man, the forma humanitatis,
who is independent of all orders of time and has neither beginning nor
end.
Conceive that the "field" is the round or
circus of the world, that the throne of the Spectator, the Universal Man,
is central and elevated, and that his aquiline glance at all times embraces
the whole of the field (equally before and after the enactment of any
particular event) in such a manner that from his point of view all
events are always going on. We are to transfer our consciousness of being,
from our position in the field where the games are going on, to the pavilion
in which the Spectator, on whom the whole performance depends, is seated
at ease.
Conceive that the right lines of vision by
which the Spectator is linked to each separated performer, and along which
each performer might look upward (inward) to the Spectator if only his
powers of vision sufficed, are lines of force, or the strings by which
the puppet-master moves the puppets for himself (who is the whole audience).
Each of the performing puppets is convinced of its own independent existence
and of itself as one amongst others, which it sees in its own immediate
environment and which it distinguishes by name, appearance, and behavior.
The Spectator does not, and cannot, see the performers as they see themselves,
imperfectly, but he knows the being of each one of them as it really is-that
is to say, not merely as effective in a given local position, but simultaneously
at every point along the line of visual force by which the puppet is connected
with himself, and primarily at that point at which all lines converge and
where the being of all things coincides with being in itself. There the
being of the puppet subsists as an eternal reason in the eternal intellect--otherwise
called the Supernal Sun, the Light of lights, Spirit and Truth.
Suppose now that the Spectator goes to sleep:
when he closes his eyes the universe disappears, to reappear only when
he opens them again. The opening of eyes ("Let there be light") is called
in religion the act of creation, but in metaphysics it is called
manifestation, utterance, or spiration (to shine, to utter, and to
blow being one and the same thing in divinis); the closing of eyes is called
in religion the "end of the world," but in metaphysics it is called concealment,
silence, or despiration. For us, then, there is an
alternation or evolution and involution. But for the central Spectator
there is no succession of events. He is always awake and always asleep;
unlike the sailor who sometimes sits and thinks and sometimes does not
think, our Spectator sits and thinks, and does not think, nowever.
A picture has been drawn of the cosmos and
its overseeing "Eye." I have only omitted to say that the field is divided
by concentric fences which may conveniently, although not necessarily,
be thought of as twenty-one in number. The Spectator is thus at the twenty-
first remove from the outermost fence by which our present environment
is defined. Each player's or groundling's performance is confined to the
possibilities that are represented by the space between two fences. There
he is born and there he dies. Let us consider this born being, So-and-so,
as he is in himself and as he believes himself to be-"an animal, reasoning
and mortal; that I know, and that I confess myself to be," as Boethius
expresses it. So-and-so does not conceive that he can move to and fro in
time as he will, but knows that he is getting older every day, whether
he likes it or not. On the other hand, he does conceive that in some other
respects he can do what he likes, so far as this is not prevented by his
environment-for example, by a stone wall, or a policeman, or contemporary
mores. He does not realize that this environment of which he is a part,
and from which he cannot except himself, is a causally determined environment;
that it does what it does because of what has been done. He does not realize
that he is what he is and
does what he does because others before him have been what they were
and have done what they did, and all this without any conceivable beginning.
He is quite literally a creature of circumstances, an automaton, whose
behavior could have been foreseen and
wholly explained by an adequate knowledge of past causes, now represented
by the nature of things-his own nature included. This is the well-known
doctrine of karma, a doctrine of inherent fatality, which is stated as
follows by the Bhagavad Gita, xviii.20,
"Bound by the working (karma) of a nature that is born in thee and
is thine own, even that which thou desirest not to do thou doest willy-nilly."
So-and-so is nothing but one link in a causal chain of which we cannot
imagine a beginning or an end. There is nothing here that the most pronounced
determinist can disagree with. The metaphysician-who is not, like the determinist,
a "nothing-morist" (nastika) -merely points out at this stage that only
the working of life, the manner of its perpetuation, can thus be causally
explained; that the existence of a chain of causes presumes the logically
prior possibility of this existence - in other words, presumes a first
cause which cannot be thought of as one amongst other mediate causes, whether
in place or time.
To return to our automaton, let us consider
what takes place at its death. The composite being is unmade into the cosmos;
there is nothing whatever that can survive as a consciousness of being
So-and-so. The elements of the psycho-physical entity are broken
up and handed on to others as a bequest. This is, indeed, a process
that has been going on throughout our So-and-so's life, and one that can
be most clearly followed in propagation, repeatedly described in the Indian
tradition as the "rebirth of the father in and as the son."
So-and-so lives in his direct and indirect descendants. This is the
so-called Indian doctrine of "reincarnation"; it is the same as the Greek
doctrine of metasomatosis and metempsychosis; it is the Christian doctrine
of our preexistence in Adam "according to
bodily substance and seminal virtue"; and it is the modern doctrine
of the "recurrence of ancestral characters." Only the fact of such a transmission
of psycho-physical characters can make intelligible what is called in religion
our inheritance of original sin, in metaphysics our inheritance of ignorance,
and by the philosopher our congenital capacity for knowing in terms of
subject and object. It is only when we are convinced that nothing happens
by chance that the idea of a Providence becomes intelligible.
Need I say that this is not a doctrine of
reincarnation? Need I say that no doctrine of reincarnation, according
to which the very being and person of a man who has once lived on earth
and is now deceased will be reborn of another terrestrial mother, has ever
been
taught in India, even in Buddhism - or for that matter in the Neoplatonic
or any other orthodox tradition? As definitely in the Brahmanas as in the
Old Testament, it is stated that those who have once departed from this
world have departed forever, and are not to be seen again amongst the living.
From the Indian as from the Platonic point of view, all change is a dying.
We die and are reborn daily and hourly, and death "when the time comes"
is only a special case.
I do not say that a belief in reincarnation
has never been entertained in India. I do say that such a belief can only
have resulted from a popular misinterpretation of the symbolic language
of the texts; that the belief of modern scholars and theosophists is the
result of
an equally naive and uninformed interpretation of texts. If you ask
how such a mistake could have arisen I shall ask you to consider the following
statements of Saints Augustine and Thomas Aquinas: that we were in Adam
"according to bodily substance and seminal
virtue"; "the human body preexisted in the previous works in their
causal virtues"; "God does not govern the world directly, but also by means
of mediate causes, and were this not, so the world would have been deprived
of the perfection of causality"; "As a mother
is pregnant with the unborn offspring, so the world itself is pregnant
with the causes of unborn things"; "Fate lies in the created causes themselves."
If these had been texts extracted from the Upanisads or Buddhism, would
you not have seen in them not merely
what is really there, the doctrine of karma, but also a doctrine of
"reincarnation"? By "reincarnation" we mean a rebirth here of the very
being and person of the deceased. We affirm that this is an impossibility,
for good and sufficient metaphysical reasons. The
main consideration is this: that inasmuch as the cosmos embraces an
indefinite range of possibilities, all of which must be realized in an
equally indefinite duration, the present universe will have run its course
when all its potentialities have been reduced to act just
as each human life has run its course when all its possibilities have
been exhausted. The end of an aeviternity will have been reached without
any room for any repetition of events or any recurrence of past conditions.
Temporal succession implies a succession of different things. History repeats
itself in types, but cannot repeat itself in any particular. We can speak
of a "migration" of "genes" and call this a rebirth of types, but this
reincarnation of So-and-so's character must be distinguished from the "transmigration"
of So-and-so's veritable person.
Such are the life and death of the reasoning
and mortal animal So-and-so. But when Boethius confesses that he is just
this animal, Wisdom replies that this man, So-and-so, has forgotten who
he is. It is at this point that we part company with the "nothing-morist,"
or "materialist" and “sentimentalist" (I bracket these two words because
"matter" is what is "sensed"). Bear in mind the Christian definition of
man as "body, soul and spirit." The Vedanta asserts that the only veritable
being of the man is spiritual, and that this being of his is not "in" So-and-so
or in any "part" of him but is only reflected in him. It asserts, in other
words, that this being is not in the plane of or in any way limited by
So-and-so's field, but extends from this field to its center, regardless
of the fences that it penetrates. What takes place at death, then, over
and above the unmaking of So-and-so, is a withdrawal of the spirit from
the phenomenal vehicle of which it had been the "life." We speak, accordingly,
with strictest accuracy when we refer to death as a "giving up of the ghost"
or say that So-and-so "expires." I need, I feel sure, remind you only in
parenthesis that this "ghost" is not a spirit in the Spiritualist's sense,
not a "surviving personality," but a purely intellectual principle such
as ideas are made of; "ghost" is "spirit" in the sense that the Holy Ghost
is Sanctus Spiritus. So then, at death, the dust returns to dust and the
spirit to its source.
It follows that the death of So-and-so involves
two possibilities, which are approximately those implied by the familiar
expressions "saved" or "lost." Either So-and-so's consciousness of being
has been self-centered and must perish with himself, or it has
been centered in the spirit and departs with it. It is the spirit,
as the Vedantic texts express it, that "remains over" when body and soul
are unmade. We begin to see now what is meant by the great commandment,
"Know thyself." Supposing that our consciousness of
being has been centered in the spirit, we can say that the more completely
we have already "become what we are," or "awakened," before the dissolution
of the body, the nearer to the center of the field will be our next appearance
or "rebirth." Our consciousness of being goes nowhere at death where it
is not already.
Later on we shall consider the case of one
whose consciousness of being has already awakened beyond the last of our
twenty-one fences or levels of reference and for whom there remains only
a twenty-second passage. For the present let us consider only the first
step. If we have taken this step before we die-if we have been to some
degree living "in the spirit" and not merely as reasoning animals-we shall,
when the body and soul are unmade into the cosmos, have crossed over the
first of the fences or circumferences that
lie between ourselves and the central Spectator of all things, the
Supernal Sun, Spirit and Truth. We shall have come into being in a new
environment where, for example, there may still be a duration but not in
our present sense a passage of time. We shall not have
taken with us any of the psycho-physical apparatus in which a sensitive
memory could inhere. Only the "intellectual virtues" survive. This is not
the survival of a "personality" (that was a property bequeathed when we
de. parted); it is the continued being of the very
person of So-and-so, no longer encumbered by the grossest of So-and-so's
former definitions. We shall have crossed over without interruption of
consciousness of being. In this way, by a succession of deaths and rebirths,
all of the fences may be crossed. The
pathway that we follow will be that of the spiritual ray or radius
that links us with the central Sun. It is the only bridge that spans the
river of life dividing the hither from the farther shore. The word "bridge"
is used advisedly, for this is the "causeway sharper than
a razor's edge," the Cinvat bridge of the Avesta, the "brig of dread,"
familiar to the folklorist, which none but a solar hero can pass; it is
a far-flung bridge of light and consubstantial with its source. The Veda
expresses it "Himself the Bridge' - a description
corresponding to the Christian I am the Way." You will have divined
already that the passage of this bridge constitutes, by stages that are
defined by its points of intersection with our twenty-one circumferences,
what is properly called a transmigration or
progressive regeneration. Every step of this way has been marked by
a death to a former "self" and a consequent and immediate "rebirth" as
"another man." I must interpolate here that this exposition has inevitably
been oversimplified. Two directions of motion, one circumferential and
determinate, the other centripetal and free, have been distinguished; but
I have not made it clear that their resultant can be properly indicated
only by a spiral. But the time has come to break down the spatial and temporal
materialism of our picture of the cosmos and of man's pilgrimage from its
circumference to its center and heart. All of the states of being, all
of the So-and-sos that we have thought of as coming into being on superimposed
levels of reference, are within you, awaiting recognition: all of the deaths
and rebirths involved are supernatural-that is, not "against Nature" but
extrinsic to the particular possibilities of the given state of being from
which the transmigration is thought of as taking place. Nor is any time
element involved. Rather, since temporal
vicissitudes play no part in the life of the spirit, the journey can
be made in part or in its entirety, whether before the event of natural
death, at death, or thereafter. The Spectator's pavilion is the Kingdom
of Heaven that is within you, viz. in the "heart" (in all Oriental and
ancient traditions not only the seat of the will but of the pure intellect,
the place where the marriage of Heaven and Earth is consummated); it is
there only that the Spectator can himself be seen by the contemplative-whose
glance is inverted, and who thus retraces the path of the Ray that links
the eye without to the Eye within, the breath of life with the Gale of
the Spirit.
We can now, perhaps, better understand all
that is meant by the poignant words of the Vedic requiem, "The Sun receive
thine eye, the Gale thy spirit," and can recognize their equivalent in
"Into thy hands I commend my spirit," or in Eckhart's "Eye wherewith I
see
God, that is the same eye wherewith God sees in me; my eye and God's
eye, that is one eye and one vision and one knowing and one love," or St.
Paul's "shall be one spirit." The traditional texts are emphatic. We find,
for example, in the Upanisads the statement that
whoever worships, thinking of the deity as other than himself, is little
better than an animal. This attitude is reflected in the proverbial saying,
"To worship God you must have become God"--which is also the meaning of
the words, to "worship in spirit and in
truth." We are brought back to the great saying, "That art thou," and
have now a better idea, though a far from perfect understanding (because
the last step remains to be taken), of what "That" may be. We can now see
how traditional doctrines (distinguishing the outer from the inner, the
worldly from the other-worldly man, the automaton from the immortal spirit),
while they admit and even insist upon the fact that So-and-so is nothing
but a link in an endless causal chain, can nevertheless affirm that the
chains can be broken and death defeated without respect to time: that this
may happen, therefore, as well here and now as at the moment of departure
or after death.
We have not even yet, however, reached what
is from the point of view of metaphysics defined as man's last end. In
speaking of an end of the road, we have so far thought only of a crossing
of all the twenty-one barriers and of a final vision of the Supernal Sun,
the
Truth itself; of reaching the Spectator's very pavilion; of being in
heaven face to face with the manifested Eye. This is, in fact, the conception
of man's last end as envisaged by religion. It is an aeviternal beatitude
reached at the "Top of the Tree," at the "Summit of
contingent being"; it is a salvation from all the temporal vicissitudes
of the field that has been left behind us. But it is a -heaven in which
each one of the saved is still one amongst others, and other than the Sun
of Men and Light of lights himself (these are Vedic as well as Christian
expressions); a heaven that, like the Greek Elysium, is apart from time
but not without duration; a resting place but not a final home (as it was
not our ultimate source, which was in the nonbeing of the Godhead). It
remains for us to pass through the
Sun and reach the Empyrean "home" of the Father. "No man cometh to
the Father save through me." We have passed through the opened doorways
of initiation and contemplation; we have moved, through a process of a
progressive self-naughting, from the outermost to the innermost court of
our being, and can see no way by which to continue-although we know that
behind this image of the Truth, by which we have been enlightened, there
is a somewhat that is not in any likeness, and although we know that behind
this face of God that shines upon the world there is another and more awful
side of him that is not man-regarding but altogether self-intent- an aspect
that neither knows nor loves anything whatever external to itself. It is
our own conception of Truth and Goodness that prevents our seeing Him who
is neither good nor true in any sense of ours. The only way on lies directly
through all that we had thought we had begun to understand: if we are to
find our way in, the image of "ourselves" that we still entertain-in however
exalted a manner-and that of the Truth and Goodness that we have "imagined"
per excellentiam, must be shattered by one and the same blow. "It is more
necessary that the soul lose God than that she lose creatures ... the soul
honors God most in being quit of God ... it remains for her to be somewhat
that he is not . . . to die to all the activity denoted by the divine nature
if she is to enter the divine nature where God is altogether idle . . .
she forfeits her very self, and going her own way, seeks God no more" (Eckhart).
In other words, we must be one with the Spectator, both when his eyes are
open and when they are shut. If we are not, what will become of us when
he sleeps? All that we have learned through the affirmative theology must
be complemented and fulfilled by an Unknowing, the Docta Ignorantia of
Christian theologians, Eckhart's Agnosia. It is for this reason that such
men as Sankara and Dionysius have so strongly insisted upon the via remotionis,
and not because a positive concept of Truth or Goodness was any less dear
to them than it could be to us. Samkara's personal practice, indeed, is
said to have been devotional-even while he prayed for pardon because he
had worshipped God by name, who has no name. For such as these there was
literally nothing dear that they were not ready to leave.
Let us enunciate the Christian doctrine first
in order the better to understand the Indian. The words of Christ are these:
that "I am the door; by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved, and
shall pass in and out." It is not enough to have reached the' door; we
must be admitted. But there is a price of admission. "He that would save
his soul, let him lose it." Of man's two selves, the two Atmans of our
Indian texts, the self that was known by name as So-and-so must have put
itself to death if the other is to be freed of all encumbrances-is to be
"free as the Godhead in its nonexistence."
In the Vedantic texts it is likewise
the Sun of men and Light of lights that is called the doorway of the worlds
and the keeper of the gate. Whoever has come thus far is put to the test.
He is told in the first place that he may enter according to the balance
of good or evil he may have done. If he understands he will answer, "Thou
canst not ask me that; thou knowest that whatever I may have done was not
of 'my' doing, but of thine." This is the Truth; and it is beyond the power
of the Guardian of the Gate, who is himself the Truth, to deny himself.
Or he may be asked the question, "Who art thou?" If he answers by his own
or by a family name he is literally dragged away by the factors of time;
but if he answers, "I am the Light, thyself, and come to thee as such,"
the Keeper responds with
the words of welcome, "Who thou-art, that am I; and who I am, thou
art; come in." It should be clear, indeed, that there can be no return
to God of anyone who still is anyone, for as our texts express it, "He
has not come from anywhere or become anyone." In the same way, Eckhart,
basing his words on the logos, "If any man hate not father and mother....
yea and his own soul also, he cannot be my disciple," says that "so long
as thou knowest who thy father and thy mother have been in time, thou art
not dead with the real
death"; and in the same way, Rumi, Eckhart's peer in Islam, attributes
to the Keeper of the Gate the words, "Whoever enters saying 'I am so and
so,' I smite in the face." We cannot, in fact, offer any better definition
of the Vedic scriptures than St. Paul's "The
word of God is quick and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword,
extending even unto the sundering of soul from spirit": "Quid est ergo,
quod debet homo inquirere in hac vita? Hoc est ut sciat ipsum.” “Si ignoras
te, egredere!"
The last and most difficult problem arises
when we ask: what is the state of the being that has thus been freed from
itself and has returned to its source? It is more than obvious that a psychological
explanation is out of the question. It is, in fact, just at this point
that we can best confess with our texts, "He who is most sure that he understands,
most assuredly misunderstands." What can be said of the Brahman-that "He
is, by that alone can He be apprehended"-can as well be said, of whoever
has become the Brahman. It cannot be said what this is, because it is not
any "what." A being who is "freed in this life" (Rumi's "dead man walking")
is "in the world, but not of it."
We can, nevertheless, approach the problem
through a consideration of the terms in which the Perfected are spoken
of. They are called either Rays of the Sun, or Blasts of the Spirit, or
Movers-at-Will. It is also said that they are fitted for embodiment in
the
manifested worlds: that is to say, fitted to participate in the life
of the Spirit, whether it moves or remains at rest. It is a Spirit which
bloweth as it will. All of these expressions correspond to Christ's "shall
pass in and out, and shall find pasture." Or we can compare
it with the pawn in a game of chess. When the pawn has crossed over
from the hither to the farther side it is transformed. It becomes a minister
and is called a mover-at-will, even in the vernacular. Dead to its former
self, it Is no longer confined to particular motions or positions, but
can go in and out, at will, from the place where its transformation was
effected. And this freedom to move at will is another aspect of the state
of the Perfected, but a I thing beyond the conception of those who are
still mere pawns. It may be
observed, too, that the ertswhile pawn, ever in danger of an inevitable
death on its journey across the board, is at liberty after its transformation
either to sacrifice itself or to escape from danger. In strictly Indian
terms, its former motion was a crossing, its
regenerate motion a descent.
The question of "annihilation," so solemnly
discussed by Western scholars, does not arise. The word has no meaning
in metaphysics, which knows only of the nonduality of permutation and sameness,
multiplicity and unity. Whatever has been in eternal reason or idea or
name of an individual manifestation can never cease to be Such; the content
of eternity cannot be changed. Therefore, as the Bhagavad Gita expresses
it, "Never have I not been, and never hast thou not been."
The relation, in identity, of the "That".
and the "thou" in the logos "That art thou" is stated in the Vedanta either
by such designations as "Ray of the Sun" (implying filiation), or in the
formula bheddbheda (of which the literal meaning is "distinction without
difference"). The relation is expressed by the simile of lovers, so closely
embraced that there is no longer any consciousness of "a within or a without,"
and by the corresponding Vaisnava equation, "each is both." It can be seen
also in Plato's conception of the unification of the inner and the outer
man; in the Christian doctrine of membership in the mystical body of Christ;
in St. Paul's "whoever is joined unto the Lord is one spirit"; and in Eckhart's
admirable formula "fused but not confused."
I have endeavored to make it clear that Sankara's
so-called "philosophy" is not an "enquiry" but an "explicitation"; that
ultimate Truth is not, for the Vedantist, or for any traditionalist, a
something that remains to be discovered but a something that remains to
be understood by Everyman, who must do the work for himself. I have accordingly
tried to explain just what it was that Sankara understood in such texts
as Atharva Veda x.8.44: "Without any want, contemplative, immortal, self-originated,
sufficed with a quintessence, lacking in naught whatever: lie who knoweth
that constant, ageless, and ever-youthful Spirit, knoweth indeed him-Self,
and feareth not to die."