ESSAYS IN PHILOSOPHY AND YOGA

 

CONTENTS

 

Pre-content

 

 

Part One

Essays from the Karmayogin (1909 – 1910)

 

The Ideal of the Karmayogin

Karmayoga

Man — Slave or Free?

Yoga and Human Evolution

Yoga and Hypnotism

The Greatness of the Individual

The Process of Evolution

Stead and the Spirits

Stead and Maskelyne

Fate and Free-Will

The Three Purushas

The Strength of Stillness

The Principle of Evil

The Stress of the Hidden Spirit

 

Part Two

The Yoga and Its Objects (circa 1912)

 

The Yoga and Its Objects

Appendix: Explanations of Some Words and Phrases

 

 

Part Three

Writings from the Arya (1914 – 1921)

 

Notes on the Arya

The “Arya’s” Second Year

Appendix: Passages Omitted from “Our Ideal”

The "Arya's" Fourth Year

 

On Ideals and Progress

On Ideals

Yoga and Skill in Works

Conservation and Progress

The Conservative Mind and Eastern Progress

Our Ideal

 

The Superman

The Superman

All-Will and Free-Will

The Delight of Works

 

Evolution

Evolution

The Inconscient

Materialism

 

Thoughts and Glimpses

Aphorisms

Thoughts and Glimpses

 

Heraclitus

Heraclitus

 

The Problem of Rebirth

Section I: Rebirth and Karma

Rebirth

The Reincarnating Soul

Rebirth, Evolution, Heredity

Rebirth and Soul Evolution

The Significance of Rebirth

The Ascending Unity

Involution and Evolution

Karma

Karma and Freedom

Karma, Will and Consequence

Rebirth and Karma

Karma and Justice

 

Section II: The Lines of Karma

The Foundation

The Terrestrial Law

Mind Nature and Law of Karma

The Higher Lines of Karma

Appendix I: The Tangle of Karma

Appendix II: A Clarification

 

Other Writings from the Arya

The Question of the Month

The Needed Synthesis

“Arya” — Its Significance

Meditation

Different Methods of Writing

Occult Knowledge and the Hindu Scriptures

The Universal Consciousness

 

The News of the Month

The News of the Month

 

South Indian Vaishnava Poetry

Andal: The Vaishnava Poetess

Nammalwar: The Supreme Vaishnava Saint and Poet

 

Arguments to The Life Divine

Arguments to The Life Divine

 

Part Four

From the Standard Bearer (1920)

 

Ourselves

 

 

Part Five

From the Bulletin of Physical Education (1949 – 1950)

 

The Supramental Manifestation upon Earth

Message

Perfection of the Body

The Divine Body

Supermind and the Life Divine

Supermind and Humanity

Supermind in the Evolution

Mind of Light

Supermind and Mind of Light

 

NOTE ON THE TEXTS

 

Yoga and Human Evolution

 

THE WHOLE burden of our human progress has been an attempt to escape from the bondage to the body and the vital impulses According to the scientific theory, the human being began as the animal, developed through the savage and consummated in the modern civilised man The Indian theory is different God created the world by developing the many out of the One and the material out of the spiritual From the beginning, the objects which compose the physical world were arranged by Him in their causes, developed under the law of their being in the subtle or psychical world and then manifested in the gross or material world From kārana to sūksma,  from sūksma to sthūla, and back again, that is the formula Once manifested in matter the world proceeds by laws which do not change, from age to age, by a regular succession, until it is all withdrawn back again into the source from which it came The material goes back into the psychical and the psychical is involved in its cause or seed It is again put out when the period of expansion recurs and runs its course on similar lines but with different details till the period of contraction is due Hinduism regards the world as a recurrent series of phenomena of which the terms vary but the general formula abides the same The theory is only acceptable if we recognise the truth of the conception formulated in the Vishnu Purana of the world   as vijñāna-vijrmbhitāni, developments of ideas in the Universal  Intelligence which lies at the root of all material phenomena and by its indwelling force shapes the growth of the tree and the evolution of the clod as well as the development of living creatures and the progress of mankind Whichever theory we take, the laws of the material world are not affected From aeon to aeon, from kalpa to kalpa Narayan manifests himself in an ever-evolving humanity which grows in experience by a  

 

Page - 18


series of expansions and contractions towards its destined self-realisation in God That evolution is not denied by the Hindu theory of yugas Each age in the Hindu system has its own line of moral and spiritual evolution and the decline of the dharma or established law of conduct from the Satya to the Kaliyuga is not in reality a deterioration but a detrition of the outward forms and props of spirituality in order to prepare a deeper spiritual intensity within the heart In each Kaliyuga mankind gains something in essential spirituality Whether we take the modern scientific or the ancient Hindu standpoint the progress of humanity is a fact The wheel of Brahma rotates for ever but it does not turn in the same place; its rotations carry it forward

The animal is distinguished from man by its enslavement to the body and the vital impulses Aśanāyā mrtyuh, Hunger who  is Death, evolved the material world from of old, and it is the physical hunger and desire and the vital sensations and primary  emotions connected with the prāna that seek to feed upon the world in the beast and in the savage man who approximates to the condition of the beast Out of this animal state, according to European Science, man rises working out the tiger and the ape by intellectual and moral development in the social condition If the beast has to be worked out, it is obvious that the body and  the prāna must be conquered, and as that conquest is more or less complete, the man is more or less evolved The progress of mankind has been placed by many predominatingly in the development of the human intellect, and intellectual development is no doubt essential to self-conquest The animal and the savage are bound by the body because the ideas of the animal or the ideas of the savage are mostly limited to those sensations and associations which are connected with the body The development of intellect enables a man to find the deeper self within and partially replace what our philosophy calls the dehātmaka-buddhi, the sum of ideas and sensations which make us think of the body as ourself, by another set of ideas which reach beyond the body, and, existing for their own delight and substituting intellectual and moral satisfaction as the chief objects of life, master, if they cannot entirely silence, the clamour of the lower sensual desires  

 

Page - 19


That animal ignorance which is engrossed with the cares and the pleasures of the body and the vital impulses, emotions and sensations is tamasic, the result of the predominance of the third principle of nature which leads to ignorance and inertia That is the state of the animal and the lower forms of humanity which are called in the Purana the first or tamasic creation This animal ignorance the development of the intellect tends to dispel and it assumes therefore an all-important place in human evolution

But it is not only through the intellect that man rises If the clarified intellect is not supported by purified emotions, the intellect tends to be dominated once more by the body and to put itself at its service and the lordship of the body over the whole man becomes more dangerous than in the natural state because the innocence of the natural state is lost The power of knowledge is placed at the disposal of the senses, sattva serves tamas, the god in us becomes the slave of the brute The disservice which scientific Materialism is unintentionally doing the world is to encourage a return to this condition; the suddenly awakened masses of men, unaccustomed to deal intellectually with ideas, able to grasp the broad attractive innovations of free thought but unable to appreciate its delicate reservations, verge towards that reeling back into the beast, that relapse into barbarism which was the condition of the Roman Empire at a high stage of material civilisation and intellectual culture and which a distinguished British statesman declared the other day to be the condition to which all Europe approached The development of the emotions is therefore the first condition of a sound human evolution Unless the feelings tend away from the body and the love of others takes increasingly the place of the brute love of self, there can be no progress upward The organisation of human society tends to develop the altruistic element in man which       makes for life and battles with and conquers aśanāyā mrtyuh It  is therefore not the struggle for life, or at least not the struggle for our own life, but the struggle for the life of others which is the most important term in evolution, -for our children, for our family, for our class, for our community, for our race and nation, for humanity An ever-enlarging self takes the place of  

 

Page - 20


the old narrow self which is confined to our individual mind and body, and it is this moral growth which society helps and organises

So far there is little essential difference between our own ideas of human progress and those of the West except in this vital point that the West believes this evolution to be a development of matter and the satisfaction of the reason, the reflective and observing intellect, to be the highest term of our progress Here it is that our religion parts company with Science It declares the evolution to be a conquest of matter by the recovery of the deeper emotional and intellectual self which was involved in  the body and over-clouded by the desires of the prāna In the language of the Upanishads the manahkosa and the buddhikosa      are more than the prānakosa and annakosa and it is to them   that man rises in his evolution Religion farther seeks a higher term for our evolution than the purified emotions or the clarified activity of the observing and reflecting intellect The highest term of evolution is the spirit in which knowledge, love and action, the threefold dharma of humanity, find their fulfilment and end   This is the ātman in the ānandakosa, and it is by communion  and identity of this individual self with the universal self which is God that man will become entirely pure, entirely strong, entirely wise and entirely blissful, and the evolution will be fulfilled The conquest of the body and the vital self by the purification of the emotions and the clarification of the intellect was the principal work of the past The purification has been done by morality and religion, the clarification by science and philosophy, art, literature and social and political life being the chief media in which these uplifting forces have worked The conquest of the emotions and the intellect by the spirit is the work of the future Yoga is the means by which that conquest becomes possible

In Yoga the whole past progress of humanity, a progress which it holds on a very uncertain lease, is rapidly summed up, confirmed and made an inalienable possession The body is conquered, not imperfectly as by the ordinary civilised man, but entirely The vital part is purified and made the instrument of the higher emotional and intellectual self in its relations with  

 

Page - 21


the outer world The ideas which go outward are replaced by the ideas which move within, the baser qualities are worked out of the system and replaced by those which are higher, the lower emotions are crowded out by the nobler Finally all ideas and emotions are stilled and by the perfect awakening of the intuitive reason which places mind in communion with spirit the whole man is ultimately placed at the service of the Infinite All false self merges into the true Self Man acquires likeness, union or identification with God This is mukti, the state in which humanity thoroughly realises the freedom and immortality which are its eternal goal  

 

Page - 22