The Renaissance in India
and
CONTENTS
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A Defence of Indian Culture
I
A Rationalistic Critic on Indian Culture
WHEN we try to appreciate a culture, and when that culture is the one in which we have grown up or from
which we draw our governing ideals and are likely from overpartiality to minimise its deficiencies or from overfamiliarity to miss aspects or values of it which would strike an unaccustomed eye, it is always useful as well as interesting
to know how others see it. It will not move us to change our view-point for theirs; but we can get fresh light from a study
of this kind and help our self-introspection. But there are different ways of seeing a foreign civilisation and culture. There
is the eye of sympathy and intuition and a close appreciative self-identification: that gives us work like Sister Nivedita's
Web
of Indian Life or Mr. Fielding's book on Burma or Sir John Woodroffe's studies of Tantra. These are attempts to push aside
all concealing veils and reveal the soul of a people. It may well be that they do not give us all the hard outward fact, but we are
enlightened of something deeper which has its greater reality; we get not the thing as it is in the deficiencies of life, but its
ideal meaning. The soul, the essential spirit is one thing, the forms taken in this difficult human actuality are another and
are often imperfect or perverted; neither can be neglected if we would have a total vision. Then there is the eye of the discerning
and dispassionate critic who tries to see the thing as it is in its intention and actuality, apportion the light and shade, get the
balance of merit and defect, success and failure, mark off that which evokes appreciative sympathy from that which calls for
critical censure. We may not always agree; the standpoint is different and by its externality, by failure of intuition and
self-identification it may miss things that are essential or may not
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get the whole meaning of that which it praises or condemns: still we profit, we can add to our sense of shade and tone or correct
our own previous judgment. Finally there is the eye of the hostile critic, convinced of the inferiority of the culture in question, who
gives plainly and honestly without deliberate overcharging what he conceives to be sound reason for his judgment. That too has
its use for us; hostile criticism of this kind is good for the soul and the intellect, provided we do not allow ourselves to be afflicted,
beaten down or shaken from the upholding centre of our living faith and action. Most things in our human world are imperfect
and it is sometimes well to get a strong view of our imperfections. Or, if nothing else, we can at least learn to appreciate opposite
standpoints and get at the source of the opposition; wisdom, insight and sympathy grow by such comparisons.
But hostile criticism to be of any sound value must be criticism, not slander and false witness, not vitriol-throwing: it must
state the facts without distortion, preserve consistent standards of judgment, observe a certain effort at justice, sanity, measure. Mr. William Archer's well-known book on India, which on account of its very demerits I have taken as the type of the
characteristic Western or anti-Indian regard on our culture, was certainly not of this character. It is not only that here we have a
wholesale and unsparing condemnation, a picture all shade and no light: that is a recommendation, for Mr. Archer's professed
object was to challenge the enthusiastic canonisation of Indian culture by its admirers in the character of a devil's advocate
whose business is to find out and state in its strongest terms everything that can be said against the claim. And for us too it is
useful to have before us an attack which covers the whole field so that we may see in one comprehensive view the entire enemy
case against our culture. But there are three vitiating elements in his statement. First, it had an ulterior, a political object; it
started with the underlying idea that India must be proved altogether barbarous in order to destroy or damage her case for
self-government. That sort of extraneous motive at once puts his whole pleading out of court; for it means a constant deliberate
distortion in order to serve a material interest, foreign altogether
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to the disinterested intellectual objects of cultural comparison and criticism.
In fact this book is not criticism; it is literary or rather journalistic pugilism. There too it is of a peculiar kind; it is a
furious sparring at a lay figure of India which is knocked down at pleasure through a long and exuberant dance of misstatement and exaggeration in the hope of convincing an ignorant audience that the performer has prostrated a living adversary.
Sanity, justice, measure are things altogether at a discount: a show-off of the appearance of staggering and irresistible blows
is the object held in view, and for that anything comes in handy, — the facts are altogether misstated or clumsily caricatured,
the most extraordinary and unfounded suggestions advanced with an air of obviousness, the most illogical inconsistencies
permitted if an apparent point can be scored. All this is not the occasional freak of a well-informed critic suffering from a fit of
mental biliousness and impelled to work it off by an extravagant intellectual exercise, an irresponsible fantasia or a hostile
war-dance around a subject with which he is not in sympathy. That is a kind of extravagance, which is sometimes permissible
and may be interesting and amusing. It is a sweet and pleasant thing, cries the Roman poet, to play the fool in place and right
season, dulce est desipere in loco. But Mr. Archer's constant departures into irrational extravagance are not by any means
in loco. We discover very soon, — in addition to his illegitimate motive and his deliberate unfairness this is a third and worst
cardinal defect, — that for the most part he knew absolutely nothing about the things on which he was passing his confident
damnatory judgments. What he has done is to collect together in his mind all the unfavourable comments he had read about India,
eke them out with casual impressions of his own and advance this unwholesome and unsubstantial compound as his original
production, although his one genuine and native contribution is the cheery cocksureness of his secondhand opinions. The book
is a journalistic fake, not an honest critical production.
The writer was evidently no authority on metaphysics,
which he despises as a misuse of the human mind; yet he lays
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down the law at length about the values of Indian philosophy. He was a rationalist to whom religion is an error, a psychological
disease, a sin against reason; yet he adjudges here between the comparative claims of religions, assigning a
proxime accessit
to Christianity, mainly, it seems, because Christians do not seriously believe in their own religion,
— let not the reader
laugh, the book advances quite seriously this amazing reason, — and bestowing the wooden spoon on Hinduism. He admits his
incompetence to speak about music, yet that has not prevented him from relegating Indian music to a position of hopeless inferiority. His judgment on art and architecture is of the narrowest kind; but he is generously liberal of his decisive depreciations.
In drama and literature one would expect from him better things; but the astonishing superficiality of his standards and his
arguments here leaves one wondering how in the world he got his reputation as a dramatic and literary critic: one concludes
that either he must have used a very different method in dealing with European literature or else it is very easy to get a reputation
of this kind in England. An ill-informed misrepresentation of facts, a light-hearted temerity of judgment on things he has not
cared to study constitute this critic's title to write on Indian culture and dismiss it authoritatively as a mass of barbarism.
It is not then for a well-informed outside view or even an instructive adverse criticism of Indian civilisation that I have
turned to Mr. William Archer. In the end it is only those who possess a culture who can judge the intrinsic value of its productions, because they alone can enter entirely into its spirit. To the foreign critic we can only go for help in forming a
comparative judgment, — which too is indispensable. But if for any reason we had to depend on a foreign judgment for the
definitive view of these things, it is evident that in each field it is to men who can speak with some authority that we must turn.
It matters very little to me what Mr. Archer or Dr. Gough or Sir John Woodroffe's unnamed English professor may say about
Indian philosophy; it is enough for me to know what Emerson or Schopenhauer or Nietzsche, three entirely different minds of
the greatest power in this field, or what thinkers like Cousin
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and Schlegel have to say about it or to mark the increasing influence of some of its conceptions, the great parallel lines of
thought in earlier European thinking and the confirmations of ancient Indian metaphysics and psychology which are the results of the most modern research and inquiry. For religion I shall not go to Mr. Harold Begbie or any European atheist or
rationalist for a judgment on our spirituality, but see rather what are the impressions of open-minded men of religious feeling and
experience who can alone be judges, a spiritual and religious thinker such as Tolstoy, for instance. Or I may study even, allowing for an inevitable bias, what the more cultured Christian missionary has to say about a religion which he can no longer
dismiss as a barbarous superstition. In art I shall not turn to the opinion of the average European who knows nothing of the
spirit, meaning or technique of Indian architecture, painting and sculpture. For the first I shall consult some recognised authority
like Fergusson; for the others if critics like Mr. Havell are to be dismissed as partisans, I can at least learn something from
Okakura or Mr. Laurence Binyon. In literature I shall be at a loss, for I cannot remember that any Western writer of genius or
high reputation as a critic has had any first-hand knowledge of Sanskrit literature or of the Prakritic tongues, and a judgment
founded on translations can only deal with the substance, — and even that in most translations of Indian work is only the
dead substance with the whole breath of life gone out of it. Still even here Goethe's well-known epigram on the Shakuntala will
be enough by itself to show me that all Indian writing is not of a barbarous inferiority to European creation. And perhaps we
may find a scholar here and there with some literary taste and judgment, not a too common combination, who will be of help
to us. This sort of excursion will certainly not give us an entirely reliable scheme of values, but at any rate we shall be safer than
in a resort to the great lowland clan of Goughs, Archers and Begbies.
If I still find it necessary or useful to notice these lucubrations, it is for quite another purpose. Even for that purpose
all that Mr. Archer writes is not of utility; much of it is so
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irrational, inconsequent or unscrupulous in suggestion that one can only note and pass on. When for instance he assures his readers that Indian philosophers think that sitting cross-legged and contemplating one's own navel is the best way of ascertaining
the truths of the universe and that their real object is an indolent immobility and to live upon the alms of the faithful, his object
in thus describing one of the postures of abstracted meditation is to stamp the meditation itself in the eyes of ignorant English
readers with the character of a bovine absurdity and a selfish laziness; that is an instance of his unscrupulousness which helps
us to observe the kinks of his own rationalistic mind, but is useful for nothing else. When he denies that there is any real
morality in Hinduism or affirms that it has never claimed moral teaching as one of its functions, statements which are the exact
contrary of the facts, when he goes so far as to say that Hinduism is the character of the people and it indicates a melancholy
proclivity towards whatever is monstrous and unwholesome, one can only conclude that truth-speaking is not one of the
ethical virtues which Mr. William Archer thought it necessary to practise or at least that it need be no part of a rationalist's
criticism of religion.
But no, after all Mr. Archer does throw a grudging tribute
on the altar of truth; for he admits in the same breath that Hinduism talks much of righteousness and allows that there
are in the Hindu writings many admirable ethical doctrines. But that only proves that Hindu philosophy is illogical,
— the
morality is there indeed, but it ought not to be; its presence does not suit Mr. Archer's thesis. Admire the logic, the rational
consistency of this champion of rationalism! Mark that at the same time one of his objections to the Ramayana, admitted
to be one of the Bibles of the Hindu people, is that its ideal characters, Rama and Sita, the effective patterns of the highest
Indian manhood and womanhood, are much too virtuous for his taste. Rama is too saintly for human nature. I do not know
in fact that Rama is more saintly than Christ or St. Francis, yet I had always thought they were within the pale of human
nature; but perhaps this critic will reply that, if not beyond that
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pale, their excessive virtues are at least like the daily practice of the Hindu cult,
— shall we say for example, scrupulous physical purity and personal cleanliness and the daily turning of the mind to God in worship and meditation,
— "sufficient to
place them beyond the pale of civilisation." For he tells us that Sita, the type of conjugal fidelity and chastity, is so excessive
in her virtue "as to verge on immorality." Meaningless smart extravagance has reached its highest point when it can thus
verge on the idiotic. I am as sorry to use the epithet as Mr. Archer to harp on Indian "barbarism", but there is really no
help for it; "it expresses the essence of the situation." If all were of this character,
— there is too much of it and it is deplorable, — a contemptuous silence would be the only possible reply. But fortunately Apollo does not always stretch his bow
thus to the breaking-point; all Mr. Archer's shafts are not of this wildgoose flight. There is much in his writing that expresses
crudely, but still with sufficient accuracy the feeling of recoil of the average occidental mind at its first view of the unique
characteristics of Indian culture and that is a thing worth noting and sounding; it is necessary to understand it and find
out its value.
This is the utility I wish to seize on; for it is an utility and
even more. It is through the average mind that we get best at the bedrock of the psychological differences which divide from
each other great blocks of our common humanity. The cultured mind tends to diminish the force of these prejudices or at least
even in difference and opposition to develop points of similarity or of contact. In the average mentality we have a better chance
of getting them in their crude strength and can appreciate their full force and bearing. Mr. Archer helps us here admirably. Not
that we have not to clear away much rubbish to get at what we want. I should have preferred to deal with a manual of misunderstanding which had the same thoroughness of scope, but expressed itself with a more straightforward simplicity and less
of vicious smartness and of superfluous ill-will; but none such is available. Let us take Mr. Archer then and dissect some of
his prejudices to get at their inner psychology. We shall perhaps
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find that through all this unpleasant crudity we can arrive at the essence of a historic misunderstanding of continents. An exact
understanding of it may even help us towards an approach to some kind of reconciliation.
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II
A Rationalistic Critic on
Indian Culture 2
IT IS best to start with a precise idea of the species of critic from whom we are going to draw our estimate of oppositions. What we have before us are the ideas of an average and typical occidental mind on Indian culture, a man of sufficient
education and wide reading, but no genius or exceptional capacity, rather an ordinary successful talent, no flexibility or broad
sympathy of mind, but pronounced and rigid opinions which are backed up and given an appearance of weight by the habit
of using to good effect a varied though not always sound information. This is in fact the mind and standpoint of an average
Englishman of some ability formed in the habit of journalism. That is precisely the kind of thing we want in order to seize
the nature of the antagonism which led Mr. Rudyard Kipling, — himself a super-journalist and "magnified non-natural" average
man, the average lifted up, without ceasing to be itself, by the glare of a kind of crude and barbaric genius,
— to affirm the
eternal incompatibility of the East and the West. Let us see what strikes such a mentality as unique and abhorrent in the Indian
mind and its culture: if we can put aside all sensitiveness of personal feeling and look dispassionately at this phenomenon,
we shall find it an interesting and illuminative study.
A certain objection may be advanced against taking a rationalistic critic with a political bias, a mind belonging at best to the today which is already becoming yesterday, in this widely
representative capacity. The misunderstanding of continents has been the result of a long-enduring and historic difference, and
this book gives us only one phase of it which is of a very modern character. But it is in modern times, in an age of scientific
and rationalistic enlightenment, that the difference has become
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most pronounced, the misunderstanding most aggressive and the sense of cultural incompatibility most conscious and
self-revealing. An ancient Greek, full of disinterested intellectual curiosity and a flexible aesthetic appreciation, was in spite of his
feeling of racial and cultural superiority to the barbarian much nearer to the Indian mind than a typical modern European. Not
only could a Pythagoras or a philosopher of the Neo-platonist school, an Alexander or a Menander understand with a more
ready sympathy the root ideas of Asiatic culture, but an average man of ability, a Megasthenes for instance, could be trusted to
see and understand, though not inwardly and perfectly, yet in a sufficient measure. The mediaeval European, for all his militant
Christianity and his prejudice against the infidel and paynim, yet resembled his opponent in many characteristic ways of seeing
and feeling to an extent which is no longer possible to an average European mind, unless it has been imbued with the new ideas
which are once more lessening the gulf between the continents. It was the rationalising of the occidental mind, the rationalising
even of its religious ideas and sentiments, which made the gulf so wide as to appear unbridgeable. Our critic represents this
increased hostility in an extreme form, a shape given to it by the unthinking free-thinker, the man who has not thought out
originally these difficult problems, but imbibed his views from his cultural environment and the intellectual atmosphere of the
period. He will exaggerate enormously the points of opposition, but by his very exaggeration he will make them more strikingly
clear and intelligible. He will make up for his want of correct information and intelligent study by a certain sureness of instinct
in his attack upon things alien to his own mental outlook.
It is this sureness of instinct which has led him to direct
the real gravamen of his attack against Indian philosophy and religion. The culture of a people may be roughly described as
the expression of a consciousness of life which formulates itself in three aspects. There is a side of thought, of ideal, of upward
will and the soul's aspiration; there is a side of creative self-expression and appreciative aesthesis, intelligence and imagination; and there is a side of practical and outward formulation.
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A people's philosophy and higher thinking give us its mind's purest, largest and most general formulation of its consciousness
of life and its dynamic view of existence. Its religion formulates the most intense form of its upward will and the soul's aspirations towards the fulfilment of its highest ideal and impulse. Its art, poetry, literature provide for us the creative expression and
impression of its intuition, imagination, vital turn and creative intelligence. Its society and politics provide in their forms an
outward frame in which the more external life works out what it can of its inspiring ideal and of its special character and nature
under the difficulties of the environment. We can see how much it has taken of the crude material of living, what it has done
with it, how it has shaped as much of it as possible into some reflection of its guiding consciousness and deeper spirit. None
of them express the whole secret spirit behind, but they derive from it their main ideas and their cultural character. Together
they make up its soul, mind and body. In Indian civilisation philosophy and religion, philosophy made dynamic by religion,
religion enlightened by philosophy have led, the rest follow as best they can. This is indeed its first distinctive character, which
it shares with the more developed Asiatic peoples, but has carried to an extraordinary degree of thoroughgoing pervasiveness.
When it is spoken of as a Brahminical civilisation, that is the real significance of the phrase. The phrase cannot truly imply
any domination of sacerdotalism, though in some lower aspects of the culture the sacerdotal mind has been only too prominent;
for the priest as such has had no hand in shaping the great lines of the culture. But it is true that its main motives have
been shaped by philosophic thinkers and religious minds, not by any means all of them of Brahmin birth. The fact that a
class has been developed whose business was to preserve the spiritual traditions,
knowledge and sacred law of the race, —
for this and not a mere priest trade was the proper occupation of the Brahmin,
— and that this class could for thousands of
years maintain in the greatest part, but not monopolise, the keeping of the national mind and conscience, and the direction
of social principles, forms and manners, is only a characteristic
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indication. The fact behind is that Indian culture has been from the beginning and has remained a spiritual, an inward-looking
religio-philosophical culture. Everything else in it has derived from that one central and original peculiarity or has been in
some way dependent on it or subordinate to it; even external life has been subjected to the inward look of the spirit.
Our critic has felt the importance of this central point and directed upon it his most unsparing attack; in other quarters he
may make concessions, allow attenuations, here he will make none. All here must be bad and harmful, or if not deleterious,
then ineffective, by the very nature of the central ideas and motives, for any real good. This is a significant attitude. Of
course there is the polemical motive. That which is claimed for the Indian mind and its civilisation is a high spirituality, high
on all the summits of thought and religion, permeating art and literature and religious practice and social ideas and affecting
even the ordinary man's attitude to life. If the claim is conceded, as it is conceded by all sympathetic and disinterested inquirers
even when they do not accept the Indian view of life, then Indian culture stands, its civilisation has a right to live. More, it has a
right even to throw a challenge to rationalistic modernism and say, "Attain first my level of spirituality before you claim to
destroy and supersede me or call on me to modernise myself entirely in your sense. No matter if I have myself latterly fallen
from my own heights or if my present forms cannot meet all the requirements of the future mind of humanity; I can reascend, the
power is there in me. I may even be able to develop a spiritual modernism which will help you in your effort to exceed yourself
and arrive at a larger harmony than any you have reached in the past or can dream of in the present." The hostile critic feels that
he must deny this claim at its roots. He tries to prove Indian philosophy to be unspiritual and Indian religion to be an irrational
animistic cult of monstrosity. In this effort which is an attempt to stand Truth on her head and force her to see facts upside down,
he lands himself in a paradoxical absurdity and inconsistency which destroy his case by sheer overstatement. Still there arise
even from this farrago two quite genuine issues. First, we can
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ask whether the spiritual and religio-philosophical view of life and the government of civilisation by its ideas and motives or the
rationalistic and external view of life and the satisfaction of the vital being governed by the intellectual and practical reason give
the best lead to mankind. And granting the value and power of a spiritual conception of life, we can ask whether the expression
given to it by Indian culture is the best possible and the most helpful to the growth of humanity towards its highest level.
These are the real questions at issue between this Asiatic or ancient mind and the European or modern intelligence.
The typical occidental mind, which prolongs still the mentality of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, has been almost
entirely fashioned by the second view; it has grown into the mould of the vitalistic rational idea. Its attitude to life has never
been governed by a philosophic conception of existence except during a brief period of Graeco-Roman culture and then only in
a small class of thinking and highly cultivated minds; always it is dominated by environmental necessity and the practical reason.
It has left behind it too the ages in which spiritual and religious conceptions which invaded it from the East, strove to impose
themselves on the vitalistic and rational tendency; it has largely rejected them or thrust them into a corner. Its religion is the
religion of life, a religion of earth and of terrestrial humanity, an ideal of intellectual growth, vital efficiency, physical health
and enjoyment, a rational social order. This mind confronted by Indian culture is at once repelled, first by its unfamiliarity and
strangeness, then by a sense of irrational abnormality and a total difference and often a diametrical opposition of standpoints and
finally by an abundance and plethora of unintelligible forms. These forms appear to its eye to teem with the supranatural
and therefore, as it thinks, with the false. Even the unnatural is there, a persistent departure from the common norm, from right
method and sound device, a frame of things in which everything, to use Mr. Chesterton's expression, is of the wrong shape. The
old orthodox Christian point of view might regard this culture as a thing of hell, an abnormal creation of demons; the modern
orthodox rationalistic standpoint looks at it as a nightmare not
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only irrational, but antirational, a monstrosity, an out-of-date anomaly, at best a coloured fantasia of the oriental past. That
is no doubt an extreme attitude, — it is Mr Archer's, — but incomprehension and distaste are the rule. One continually finds
traces of these feelings even in minds which try to understand and sympathise; but to the average occidental content with his
first raw natural impressions all is a repellent confusion. Indian philosophy is an incomprehensible, subtly unsubstantial
cloud-weaving; Indian religion meets his eye as a mixture of absurd asceticism and an absurder gross, immoral and superstitious
polytheism. He sees in Indian art a riot of crudely distorted or conventional forms and an impossible seeking after suggestions
of the infinite — whereas all true art should be a beautiful and rational reproduction or fine imaginative representation of the
natural and finite. He condemns in Indian society an anachronistic and semi-barbaric survival of old-world and mediaeval ideas
and institutions. This view, which has recently undergone some modification and is less loud and confident in expression, but
still subsists, is the whole foundation of Mr. Archer's philippic.
This is evident from the nature of all the objections he
brings against Indian civilisation. When you strip them of their journalistic rhetoric, you find that they amount simply to this
natural antagonism of the rationalised vital and practical man against a culture which subordinates reason to a supra-rational
spirituality and life and action to a feeling after something which is greater than life and action. Philosophy and religion are the
soul of Indian culture, inseparable from each other and interpenetrative. The whole objective of Indian philosophy, its entire
raison d'être, is the knowledge of the spirit, the experience of it
and the right way to a spiritual existence; its single aim coincides with the highest significance of religion. Indian religion draws
all its characteristic value from the spiritual philosophy which illumines its supreme aspiration and colours even most of what
is drawn from an inferior range of religious experience. But what are Mr. Archer's objections, first to Indian philosophy? Well, his
first objection simply comes to this that it is too philosophical. His second accusation is that even as that worthless thing, meta
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physical philosophy, it is too metaphysical. His third charge, the most positive and plausible, is that it enervates and kills the
personality and the will-power by false notions of pessimism, asceticism, karma and reincarnation. If we take his criticism
under each of these heads, we shall see that it is really not a dispassionate intellectual criticism, but the exaggerated expression
of a mental dislike and a fundamental difference of temperament and standpoint.
Mr. Archer cannot deny, — the denial would go beyond even his unequalled capacity for affirming absurdities,
— that the Indian mind has displayed an unparalleled activity and fruitfulness in philosophical thinking. He cannot deny that a familiarity
with metaphysical conceptions and the capacity of discussing with some subtlety a metaphysical problem is much more widespread in India than in any other country. Even an ordinary Indian intellect can understand and deal with questions of this
kind where an occidental mind of corresponding culture and attainments would be as hopelessly out of its depth as is Mr.
Archer in these pages. But he denies that this familiarity and this subtlety are any proof of great mental capacity
— "necessarily", he adds, I suppose in order to escape the charge of having suggested that Plato, Spinoza or Berkeley did not show
a great mental capacity. Perhaps it is not "necessarily" such a proof; but it does show in one great order of questions, in one
large and especially difficult range of the mind's powers and interests a remarkable and unique general development. The
European journalist's capacity for discussing with some show of acumen questions of economy and politics or, for that matter, art, literature and drama, is not "necessarily" proof of a great mental capacity; but it does show a great development of
the European mind in general, a wide-spread information and normal capacity in these fields of its action. The crudity of his
opinions and his treatment of his subjects may sometimes seem a little "barbaric" to an outsider; but the thing itself is a proof
that there is a culture, a civilisation, a great intellectual and civic achievement and a sufficient wide-spread interest in the
achievement. Mr. Archer has to avoid a similar conclusion in
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another subtler and more difficult range about India. He does it by denying that philosophy is of any value; this activity of the
Indian mind is for him only an unequalled diligence in knowing the unknowable and thinking about the unthinkable. And why
so? Well, because philosophy deals with a region where there is no possible "test of values" and in such a region thought itself,
since it is simply unverifiable speculation, can be of little or no value.
There we come to a really interesting and characteristic opposition of standpoints, more, a difference in the very grain of
the mind. As stated, it is the sceptical argument of the atheist and agnostic, but after all that is only the extreme logical statement of
an attitude common to the average European turn of thinking which is inherently a positivist attitude. Philosophy has been
pursued in Europe with great and noble intellectual results by the highest minds, but very much as a pursuit apart from life,
a thing high and splendid, but ineffective. It is remarkable that while in India and China philosophy has seized hold on life, has
had an enormous practical effect on the civilisation and got into the very bones of current thought and action, it has never at all
succeeded in achieving this importance in Europe. In the days of the Stoics and Epicureans it got a grip, but only among the
highly cultured; at the present day, too, we have some renewed tendency of the kind. Nietzsche has had his influence, certain
French thinkers also in France, the philosophies of James and Bergson have attracted some amount of public interest; but it
is a mere nothing compared with the effective power of Asiatic philosophy. The average European draws his guiding views not
from the philosophic, but from the positive and practical reason. He does not absolutely disdain philosophy like Mr. Archer, but
he considers it, if not a "man-made illusion", yet a rather nebulous, remote and ineffective kind of occupation. He honours
the philosophers, but he puts their works on the highest shelf of the library of civilisation, not to be taken down or consulted
except by a few minds of an exceptional turn. He admires, but he distrusts them. Plato's idea of philosophers as the right rulers
and best directors of society seems to him the most fantastic
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and unpractical of notions; the philosopher, precisely because he moves among ideas, must be without any hold on real life. The
Indian mind holds on the contrary that the Rishi, the thinker, the seer of spiritual truth is the best guide not only of the religious
and moral, but the practical life. The seer, the Rishi is the natural director of society; to the Rishis he attributes the ideals and
guiding intuitions of his civilisation. Even today he is very ready to give the name to anyone who can give a spiritual truth which
helps his life or a formative idea and inspiration which influences religion, ethics, society, even politics.
This is because the Indian believes that the ultimate truths are truths of the spirit and that truths of the spirit are the most
fundamental and most effective truths of our existence, powerfully creative of the inner, salutarily reformative of the outer life.
To the European the ultimate truths are more often truths of the ideative intellect, the pure reason; but, whether intellectual or
spiritual, they belong to a sphere beyond the ordinary action of the mind, life and body where alone there are any daily
verifying "tests of values". These tests can only be given by living experience of outward fact and the positive and practical
reason. The rest are speculations and their proper place is in the world of ideas, not in the world of life. That brings us to
a difference of standpoint which is the essence of Mr. Archer's second objection. He believes that all philosophy is speculation
and guessing; the only verifiable truth, we must suppose, is that of the normal fact, the outward world and our responses to it,
truth of physical science and a psychology founded on physical science. He reproaches Indian philosophy for having taken its
speculations seriously, for presenting speculation in the guise of dogma, for the "unspiritual" habit which mistakes groping for
seeing and guessing for knowing, — in place, I presume, of the very spiritual habit which holds the physically sensible for the
only knowable and takes the knowledge of the body for the knowledge of the soul and spirit. He waxes bitterly sarcastic
over the idea that philosophic meditation and Yoga are the best way to ascertain the truth of Nature and the constitution of
the universe. Mr. Archer's descriptions of Indian philosophy are
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a grossly ignorant misrepresentation of its idea and spirit, but in their essence they represent the view inevitably taken by the
normal positivist mind of the Occident.
In fact, Indian philosophy abhors mere guessing and speculation. That word is constantly applied by European critics to the thoughts and conclusions of the Upanishads, of the philosophies,
of Buddhism; but Indian philosophers would reject it altogether as at all a valid description of their method. If our philosophy admits an ultimate unthinkable and unknowable, it does not concern itself with any positive description or analysis of
that supreme Mystery, — the absurdity the rationalist ascribes to it; it concerns itself with whatever is thinkable and knowable to us at the highest term as well as on the lower ranges of our experience. If it has been able to make its conclusions
articles of religious faith, — dogmas, as they are here called, — it is because it has been able to base them on an experience verifiable by any man who will take the necessary means and apply the only possible tests. The Indian mind does not
admit that the only possible test of values or of reality is the outward scientific, the test of a scrutiny of physical Nature
or the everyday normal facts of our surface psychology, which is only a small movement upon vast hidden subconscious and
superconscious heights, depths and ranges. What are the tests of these more ordinary or objective values? Evidently, experience, experimental analysis and synthesis, reason, intuition, — for I believe the value of intuition is admitted nowadays by
modern philosophy and science. The tests of this other subtler order of truths are the same, experience, experimental analysis
and synthesis, reason, intuition. Only, since these things are truths of the soul and spirit, it must necessarily be a psychological and spiritual experience, a psychological and psychophysical experimentation, analysis and synthesis, a larger intuition which looks into higher realms, realities, possibilities of being, a reason which admits something beyond itself, looks
upward to the supra-rational, tries to give as far as may be an account of it to the human intelligence. Yoga, which Mr.
Archer invites us so pressingly to abandon, is itself nothing
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but a well-tested means of opening up these greater realms of experience.
Mr. Archer and minds of his type cannot be expected to know these things; they are beyond the little narrow range of
facts and ideas which is to them the whole arc of knowledge. But even if he knew, it would make no difference to him; he
would reject the very thought with scornful impatience, without any degrading of his immense rationalistic superiority by any
sort of examination into the possibility of an unfamiliar truth. In this attitude he would have the average positivist mind on
his side. To that mind such notions seem in their very nature absurd and incomprehensible,
— much worse than Greek and
Hebrew, languages which have very respectable and creditworthy professors; but these are hieroglyphs which can only be
upheld as decipherable signs by Indians and Theosophists and mystical thinkers, a disreputable clan. It can understand dogma
and speculation about spiritual truth, a priest, a Bible, whether disbelieving them or giving them a conventional acceptance;
but profoundest verifiable spiritual truth, firmly ascertainable spiritual values! The idea is foreign to this mentality and sounds
to it like jargon. It can understand, even when it dismisses, an authoritative religion, an "I believe because it is rationally
impossible"; but a deepest mystery of religion, a highest truth of philosophical thinking, a farthest ultimate discovery of psychological experience, a systematic and ordered experimentation of self-search and self-analysis, a constructive inner possibility
of self-perfection, all arriving at the same result, assenting to each other's conclusions, reconciling spirit and reason and the
whole psychological nature and its deepest needs, — this great ancient and persistent research and triumph of Indian culture
baffles and offends the average positivist mind of the West. It is bewildered by the possession of a knowledge which the West
never more than fumbled after and ended by missing. Irritated, perplexed, contemptuous, it refuses to recognise the superiority
of such a harmony to its own lesser self-divided culture. For it is accustomed only to a religious seeking and experience which is at
war with science and philosophy or oscillates between irrational
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belief and a troubled or else a self-confident scepticism. In Europe philosophy has been sometimes the handmaid
— not
the sister — of religion; but more often it has turned its back on religious belief in hostility or in a disdainful separation.
The war between religion and science has been almost the leading phenomenon of European culture. Even philosophy and
science have been unable to agree; they too have quarrelled and separated. These powers still coexist in Europe, but they are not
a happy family; civil war is their natural atmosphere.
No wonder that the positivist mind to which this seems the
natural order of things, should turn from a way of thinking and knowing in which there is a harmony, a consensus, a union
between philosophy and religion and a systematised well-tested psychological experience. It is easily moved to escape from the
challenge of this alien form of knowledge by readily dismissing Indian psychology as a jungle of self-hypnotic hallucinations,
Indian religion as a rank growth of antirational superstitions, Indian philosophy as a remote cloud-land of unsubstantial speculation. It is unfortunate for the peace of mind which this
self-satisfied attitude brings with it and for the effect of Mr. Archer's
facile and devastating method of criticism that the West too has recently got itself pushed into paths of thinking and discovery which seem dangerously likely to justify all this mass of unpleasant barbarism and to bring Europe herself nearer to so
monstrous a way of thinking. It is becoming more and more clear that Indian philosophy has anticipated in its own way
most of what has been or is being thought out in metaphysical speculation. One finds even scientific thought repeating very
ancient Indian generalisations from the other end of the scale of research. Indian psychology which Mr. Archer dismisses along
with Indian cosmology and physiology as baseless classification and ingenious guessing,
— it is anything but that, for it is based
rigorously on experience, — is justified more and more by all the latest psychological discoveries. The fundamental ideas of
Indian religion look perilously near to a conquest by which they will become the prominent thought and sentiment of a new and
universal religious mentality and spiritual seeking. Who can say
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that the psycho-physiology of Indian Yoga may not be justified if certain lines of "groping and guessing" in the West are pushed
a little farther? And even perhaps the Indian cosmological idea that there are other planes of being than this easily sensible kingdom of Matter, may be rehabilitated in a not very distant future? But the positivist mind may yet be of good courage: for its hold
is still strong and it has still the claim of intellectual orthodoxy and the prestige of the right of possession; many streams must
swell and meet together before it is washed under and a tide of uniting thought sweeps humanity towards the hidden shores of
the Spirit.
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III
A Rationalistic Critic on
Indian Culture 3
THIS CRITICISM so far is not very formidable; its edge, if it has any apart from the edge of trenchant misrepresentation, turns against the assailant. To have put a high value on philosophy, sought by it the highest secrets of our being,
turned an effective philosophic thought on life and called in the thinkers, the men of profoundest spiritual experience, highest
ideas, largest available knowledge, to govern and shape society, to have subjected creed and dogma to the test of the philosophic
mind and founded religious belief upon spiritual intuition, philosophical thought and psychological experience, are signs, not of
barbarism or of a mean and ignorant culture, but marks of the highest possible type of civilisation. There is nothing here
that would warrant us in abasing ourselves before the idols of the positivist reason or putting the spirit and aim of Indian
culture at all lower than the spirit and aim of Western civilisation whether in its high ancient period of rational enlightenment and
the speculative idea or in its modern period of broad and minute scientific thought and strong applied knowledge. Different it is,
inferior it is not, but has rather a distinct element of superiority in the unique height of its motive and the spiritual nobility of its
endeavour.
It is useful to lay stress on this greatness of spirit and aim, not
only because it is of immense importance and the first test of the value of a culture, but because the assailants take advantage of
two extraneous circumstances to create a prejudice and confuse the real issues. They have the immense advantage of attacking
India when she is prostrate and in the dust and, materially, Indian civilisation seems to have ended in a great defeat and downfall.
Strong in this temporary advantage they can afford to show a
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superb and generous courage in kicking the surrounding dust and mire with their hooves upon the sick and wounded lioness
caught in the nets of the hunters and try to persuade the world that she had never any strength and virtue in her. It is an easy
task in this age of the noble culture of Reason and Mammon and Science doing the works of Moloch, when the brazen idol of
the great goddess Success is worshipped as she was never before worshipped by cultured human beings. But they have too the yet
greater advantage of representing her to the world in a period of the eclipse of her civilisation when after at least two thousand
years of the most brilliant and many-sided cultural activity she had for a time lost everything except the memory of her past
and her long depressed and obscured but always living and now strongly reviving religious spirit.
I have touched elsewhere on the significance of this failure and this temporary eclipse. I may have to deal with it again
at closer quarters, since it has been raised as an objection to the value of Indian culture and Indian spirituality. At present it
will be enough to say that culture cannot be judged by material success; still less can spirituality be brought to that touchstone.
Philosophic, aesthetic, poetic, intellectual Greece failed and fell while drilled and militarist Rome triumphed and conquered,
but no one dreams of crediting for that reason the victorious imperial nation with a greater civilisation and a higher culture.
The religious culture of Judaea is not disproved or lessened by the destruction of the Jewish State, any more than it is proved
and given greater value by the commercial capacity shown by the Jewish race in their dispersion. But I admit, as ancient Indian thought admitted, that material and economic capacity and prosperity are a necessary, though not the highest or most
essential part of the total effort of human civilisation. In that respect India throughout her long period of cultural activity can
claim equality with any ancient or mediaeval country. No people before modern times reached a higher splendour of wealth, commercial prosperity, material appointment, social organisation. That is the record of history, of ancient documents, of contemporary witnesses; to deny it is to give evidence of a singular
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prepossession and obfuscation of the view, an imaginative, or is it unimaginative, misreading of present actuality into past actuality. The splendour of Asiatic and not least of Indian prosperity, the wealth of Ormuz and of Ind, the "barbaric doors rough with
gold", barbaricae postes squalentes auro, were once stigmatised by the less opulent West as a sign of barbarism. Circumstances
are now strangely reversed; the opulent barbarism and a much less artistic ostentation of wealth are to be found in London,
New York and Paris, and it is the nakedness of India and the squalor of her poverty which are flung in her face as evidence of
the worthlessness of her culture.
India's ancient and mediaeval political, administrative, military and economic organisation was no mean achievement; the records stand and can be left to contradict the ignorance of the
uninstructed and the rhetoric of the journalistic critic or the interested politician. There was no doubt an element of failure
and defect, almost unavoidable in the totality of a problem on so large a scale and in the then conditions. But to exaggerate
that into a count against her civilisation would be a singular severity of criticism which few civilisations watched to their end
could survive. Failure in the end, yes, because of the decline of her culture, but not as a result of its most valuable elements. A
later eclipse of the more essential elements of her civilisation is not a disproof of their original value. Indian civilisation must be
judged mainly by the culture and greatness of its millenniums, not by the ignorance and weakness of a few centuries. A culture
must be judged, first by its essential spirit, then by its best accomplishment and, lastly, by its power of survival, renovation
and adaptation to new phases of the permanent needs of the race. In the poverty, confusion and disorganisation of a period of
temporary decline, the eye of the hostile witness refuses to see or to recognise the saving soul of good which still keeps this civilisation alive and promises a strong and vivid return to the greatness of its permanent ideal. Its obstinate elastic force of rebound, its
old measureless adaptability are again at work; it is no longer even solely on the defence, but boldly aggressive. Not survival
alone, but victory and conquest are the promise of its future.
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But our critic does not merely deny the lofty aim and greatness of spirit of Indian civilisation, which stand too high to be
vulnerable to an assault of this ignorant and prejudiced character. He questions its leading ideas, denies its practical life-value,
disparages its fruits, efficacy, character. Has this disparagement any critical value or is it only a temperamental expression of
the misunderstanding natural to a widely different view of life and to a diametrically opposite estimate of our nature's highest
significances and realities? If we consider the character of the attack and its terms, we shall see that it amounts to no more
than a condemnation passed by the positivist mind attached to the normal values of life upon the quite different standards of
a culture which looks beyond the ordinary life of man, points to something greater behind it and makes it a passage to something eternal, permanent and infinite. India, we are told, has no spirituality,
— a portentous discovery; on the contrary she has
succeeded, it would seem, in killing the germs of all sane and virile spirituality. Mr. Archer evidently puts his own sense, a novel
and interesting and very occidental sense, on the word. Spirituality has meant hitherto a recognition of something greater
than mind and life, the aspiration to a consciousness pure, great, divine beyond our normal mental and vital nature, a surge and
rising of the soul in man out of the littleness and bondage of our lower parts towards a greater thing secret within him. That
at least is the idea, the experience, which is the very core of Indian thinking. But the rationalist does not believe in the spirit
in this sense; life, human will-force and reason are his highest godheads. Spirituality then,
— it would have been simpler and
more logical to reject the word when the thing on which it rests is denied, — has to be given another sense, some high passion
and effort of the emotions, will and reason, directed towards the finite, not towards the infinite, towards things temporary,
not towards the eternal, towards perishable life, not towards any greater reality which overpasses and supports the superficial phenomena of life. The thought and suffering which seam and furrow the ideal head of Homer, there, we are told, is the
sane and virile spirituality. The calm and compassion of Buddha
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victorious over ignorance and suffering, the meditation of the thinker tranced in communion with the Eternal, lifted above
the seekings of thought into identity with a supreme light, the rapture of the saint made one by love in the pure heart with the
transcendent and universal Love, the will of the Karmayogin raised above egoistic desire and passion into the impersonality
of the divine and universal will, these things on which India has set the highest value and which have been the supreme endeavour of her greatest spirits, are not sane, not virile. This, one may be allowed to say, is a very occidental and up to
date idea of spirituality. Homer, Shakespeare, Raphael, Spinoza, Kant, Charlemagne, Abraham Lincoln, Lenin, Mussolini, these,
shall we suggest, are to figure henceforth not only as great poets and artists or heroes of thought and action, but as our
typical heroes and exemplars of spirituality. Not Buddha, not Christ, Chaitanya, St. Francis, Ramakrishna; these are either
semi-barbaric Orientals or touched by the feminine insanity of an oriental religion. The impression made on an Indian mind
resembles the reaction that a cultured intellectual might feel if he were told that good cooking, good dressing, good engineering, good schoolmastering are the true beauty and their pursuit the right, sane, virile aesthetic cult and literature, architecture,
sculpture and painting are only a useless scribbling on paper, an insane hacking of stone and an effeminate daubing of canvas;
Vauban, Pestalozzi, Dr. Parr, Vatel and Beau Brummell are then the true heroes of artistic creation and not Da Vinci, Angelo,
Sophocles, Dante, Shakespeare or Rodin. Whether Mr. Archer's epithets and his accusations against Indian spirituality stand
in the comparison, let the judicious determine. But meanwhile we see the opposition of the standpoints and begin to understand the inwardness of the difference between the West and India.
This forms the gravamen of the charge against the effective value of Indian philosophy, that it turns away from life, nature,
vital will and the effort of man upon earth. It denies all value to life; it leads not towards the study of nature, but away from it. It
expels all volitional individuality; it preaches the unreality of the
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world, detachment from terrestrial interests, the unimportance of the life of the moment compared with the endless chain of
past and future existences. It is an enervating metaphysic tangled up with false notions of pessimism, asceticism, karma and
reincarnation, all of them ideas fatal to that supreme spiritual thing, volitional individuality. This is a grotesquely exaggerated
and false notion of Indian culture and philosophy, got up by presenting one side only of the Indian mind in colours of a
sombre emphasis, after a manner which I suppose Mr. Archer has learned from the modern masters of realism. But in substance
and spirit it is a fairly correct statement of the notions which the European mind has formed in the past about the character of
Indian thought and culture, sometimes in ignorance, sometimes in defiance of the evidence. For a time even it managed to impress
some strong shadow of this error on the mind of educated India. It is best to begin by setting right the tones of the picture; that
done, we can better judge the opposition of mentality which is at the bottom of the criticism.
To say that Indian philosophy has led away from the study of nature is to state a gross unfact and to ignore the magnificent
history of Indian civilisation. If by nature is meant physical Nature, the plain truth is that no nation before the modern epoch
carried scientific research so far and with such signal success as India of ancient times. That is a truth which lies on the face of
history for all to read; it has been brought forward with great force and much wealth of detail by Indian scholars and scientists
of high eminence, but it was already known and acknowledged by European savants who had taken the trouble to make a comparative study in the subject. Not only was India in the first rank in mathematics, astronomy, chemistry, medicine, surgery, all the
branches of physical knowledge which were practised in ancient times, but she was, along with the Greeks, the teacher of the
Arabs from whom Europe recovered the lost habit of scientific enquiry and got the basis from which modern science started. In
many directions India had the priority of discovery, — to take only two striking examples among a multitude, the decimal
notation in mathematics or the perception that the earth is a
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.
moving body in astronomy, — calā prthvī sthirā bhāti, the earth
moves and only appears to be still, said the Indian astronomer many centuries before Galileo. This great development would
hardly have been possible in a nation whose thinkers and men of learning were led by its metaphysical tendencies to turn away
from the study of nature. A remarkable feature of the Indian mind was a close attention to the things of life, a disposition to
observe minutely its salient facts, to systematise and to found in each department of it a science, Shastra, well-founded scheme
and rule. That is at least a good beginning of the scientific tendency and not the sign of a culture capable only of unsubstantial
metaphysics.
It is perfectly true that Indian science came abruptly to a halt
somewhere about the thirteenth century and a period of darkness and inactivity prevented it from proceeding forward or sharing
at once in the vast modern development of scientific knowledge. But this was not due to any increase or intolerance of the metaphysical tendency calling the national mind away from physical nature. It was part of a general cessation of new intellectual
activity, for philosophy too ceased to develop almost at the same time. The last great original attempts at spiritual philosophy are
dated only a century or two later than the names of the last great original scientists. It is true also that Indian metaphysics did not
attempt, as modern philosophy has attempted without success, to read the truth of existence principally by the light of the truths
of physical Nature. This ancient wisdom founded itself rather upon an inner experimental psychology and a profound psychic
science, India's special strength, — but study of mind too and of our inner forces is surely study of nature,
— in which her success
was greater than in physical knowledge. This she could not but do, since it was the spiritual truth of existence for which she
was seeking; nor is any really great and enduring philosophy possible except on this basis. It is true also that the harmony
she established in her culture between philosophical truth and truth of psychology and religion was not extended in the same
degree to the truth of physical Nature; physical Science had not then arrived at the great universal generalisations which would
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have made and are now making that synthesis entirely possible. Nevertheless from the beginning, from as early as the thought of
the Vedas, the Indian mind had recognised that the same general laws and powers hold in the spiritual, the psychological and the
physical existence. It discovered too the omnipresence of life, affirmed the evolution of the soul in Nature from the vegetable
and the animal to the human form, asserted on the basis of philosophic intuition and spiritual and psychological experience
many of the truths which modern Science is reaffirming from its own side of the approach to knowledge. These things too
were not the results of a barren and empty metaphysics, not the inventions of bovine navel-gazing dreamers.
Equally is it a misrepresentation to say that Indian culture denies all value to life, detaches from terrestrial interests and
insists on the unimportance of the life of the moment. To read these European comments one would imagine that in all Indian
thought there was nothing but the nihilistic school of Buddhism and the monistic illusionism of Shankara and that all Indian art,
literature and social thinking were nothing but the statement of their recoil from the falsehood and vanity of things. It does not
follow that because these things are what the average European has heard about India or what most interests or strikes the European scholar in her thought, therefore they are, however great may have been their influence, the whole of Indian thinking.
The ancient civilisation of India founded itself very expressly upon four human interests; first, desire and enjoyment, next,
material, economic and other aims and needs of the mind and body, thirdly, ethical conduct and the right law of individual and
social life, and, lastly spiritual liberation; kāma, artha,
dharma,
moksa. The business of culture and social organisation was to
lead, to satisfy, to support these things in man and to build some harmony of their forms and motives. Except in very rare cases
the satisfaction of the three mundane objects must run before the other; fullness of life must precede the surpassing of life. The
debt to the family, the community and the gods could not be scamped; earth must have her due and the relative its play, even
if beyond it there was the glory of heaven or the peace of the
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Absolute. There was no preaching of a general rush to the cave and the hermitage.
The symmetric character of ancient Indian life and the vivid variety of its literature were inconsistent with any exclusive
other-worldly direction. The great mass of Sanskrit literature is a literature of human life; certain philosophic and religious
writings are devoted to the withdrawal from it, but even these are not as a rule contemptuous of its value. If the Indian mind
gave the highest importance to a spiritual release, — and whatever the positivist mood may say, a spiritual liberation of some
kind is the highest possibility of the human spirit, — it was not interested in that alone. It looked equally at ethics, law, politics, society, the sciences, the arts and crafts, everything that appertains to human life. It thought on these things deeply and
scrutinisingly and it wrote of them with power and knowledge. What a fine monument of political and administrative genius is
the Śukra-Nīti, to take one example only, and what a mirror of the practical organisation of a great civilised people! Indian
art was not always solely hieratic, — it seemed so only because it is in the temples and cave cathedrals that its greatest work
survived; as the old literature testifies, as we see from the Rajput and Mogul paintings, it was devoted as much to the court and
the city and to cultural ideas and the life of the people as to the temple and monastery and their motives. Indian education of
women as well as of men was more rich and comprehensive and many-sided than any system of education before modern times.
The documents which prove these things are now available to anyone who cares to study. It is time that this parrot talk about
the unpractical, metaphysical, quietistic, anti-vital character of Indian civilisation should cease and give place to a true and
understanding estimate.
But it is perfectly true that Indian culture has always set the
highest value on that in man which rises beyond the terrestrial preoccupation; it has held up the goal of a supreme and arduous
self-exceeding as the summit of human endeavour. The spiritual life was to its view a nobler thing than the life of external power
and enjoyment, the thinker greater than the man of action, the
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spiritual man greater than the thinker. The soul that lives in God is more perfect than the soul that lives only in outward
mind or only for the claims and joys of thinking and living matter. It is here that the difference comes in between the typical
Western and the typical Indian mentality. The West has acquired the religious mind rather than possessed it by nature and it
has always worn its acquisition with a certain looseness. India has constantly believed in worlds behind of which the material
world is only the antechamber. Always she has seen a self within us greater than the mental and vital self, greater than the ego.
Always she has bowed her intellect and heart before a near and present Eternal in which the temporal being exists and to which
in man it increasingly turns for transcendence. The sentiment of the Bengali poet, the wonderful singer and rapt devotee of the
Divine Mother, —
How rich an estate man lies fallow here!
If this were tilled, a golden crop would spring, —
expresses the real Indian feeling about human life. But it is most
attracted by the greater spiritual possibilities man alone of terrestrial beings possesses. The ancient Aryan culture recognised
all human possibilities, but put this highest of all and graded life according to a transitional scale in its system of the four classes
and the four orders. Buddhism first gave an exaggerated and enormous extension to the ascetic ideal and the monastic impulse, erased the transition and upset the balance. Its victorious system left only two orders, the householder and the ascetic, the
monk and the layman, an effect which subsists to the present day. It is this upsetting of the Dharma for which we find it fiercely
attacked in the Vishnu Purana under the veil of an apologue, for it weakened in the end the life of society by its tense exaggeration
and its hard system of opposites. But Buddhism too had another side, a side turned towards action and creation and gave a new
light, a new meaning and a new moral and ideal power to life. Afterwards there came the lofty illusionism of Shankara at the
close of the two greatest known millenniums of Indian culture. Life thenceforward was too much depreciated as an unreality or
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a relative phenomenon, in the end not worth living, not worth our assent to it and persistence in its motives. But this dogma
was not universally accepted, nor admitted without a struggle; Shankara was even denounced by his adversaries as a masked
Buddhist. The later Indian mind has been powerfully impressed by his idea of Maya; but popular thought and sentiment was
never wholly shaped by it. The religions of devotion which see in life a play or Lila of God and not a half sombre, half glaring illusion defacing the white silence of eternity had a closer growing influence. If they did not counteract, they humanised
the austere ascetic ideal. It is only recently that educated India accepted the ideas of English and German scholars, imagined for
a time Shankara's Mayavada to be the one highest thing, if not the whole of our philosophy, and put it in a place of exclusive
prominence. But against that tendency too there is now a powerful reaction, not towards replacing the spirit without life by life
without the spirit, but towards a spiritual possession of mind, life and matter. Still it is true that the ascetic ideal which in the
ancient vigour of our culture was the fine spire of life mounting into the eternal existence, became latterly its top-heavy dome
and tended under the weight of its bare and imposing sublimity to crush the rest of the edifice.
But here also we should get the right view, away from all exaggeration and false stress. Mr. Archer drags in Karma and
Reincarnation into his list of anti-vital Indian notions. But it is preposterous, it is a stupid misunderstanding to speak of
reincarnation as a doctrine which preaches the unimportance of the life of the moment compared with the endless chain of
past and future existences. The doctrine of reincarnation and Karma tells us that the soul has a past which shaped its present
birth and existence; it has a future which our present action is shaping; our past has taken and our future will take the form
of recurring terrestrial births and Karma, our own action, is the power which by its continuity and development as a subjective
and objective force determines the whole nature and eventuality of these repeated existences. There is nothing here to depreciate
the importance of the present life. On the contrary the doctrine
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gives it immense vistas and enormously enhances the value of effort and action. The nature of the present act is of an incalculable importance because it determines not only our immediate but our subsequent future. There will be found too insistently
pervading Indian literature and deeply settled in the mind of the people the idea of a whole-hearted concentrated present action
and energy, tapasyā, as a miraculous all-powerful force for the acquisition of our desires, whether the material or the spiritual
desires of the human will. No doubt, our present life loses the exclusive importance which we give to it when we regard it only
as an ephemeral moment in Time never to be repeated, our one sole opportunity, without any after-existence beyond it. But a
narrow exaggerated insistence on the present shuts up the human soul in the prison of the moment: it may give a feverish intensity
to action, but it is inimical to calm and joy and greatness of the spirit. No doubt, too, the idea that our present sufferings are the
results of our own past action, imparts a calm, a resignation, an acquiescence to the Indian mind which the restless Western
intelligence finds it difficult to understand or tolerate. This may degenerate in a time of great national weakness, depression and
misfortune, into a quietistic fatalism that may extinguish the fire of reparative endeavour. But that is not its inevitable turn, nor
is it the turn given to it in the records of the more vigorous past of our culture. The note there is of action, of
tapasyā. There is
too another turn given to this belief which increased with time, the Buddhistic dogma of the succession of rebirths as a chain of
Karma from which the soul must escape into the eternal silence. This notion has strongly affected Hinduism; but whatever is
depressing in it, belongs not properly to the doctrine of rebirth but to other elements stigmatised as an ascetic pessimism by the
vitalistic thought of Europe.
Pessimism is not peculiar to the Indian mind: it has been an
element in the thought of all developed civilisations. It is the sign of a culture already old, the fruit of a mind which has lived much,
experienced much, sounded life and found it full of suffering, sounded joy and achievement and found that all is vanity and
vexation of spirit and there is nothing new under the sun or, if
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there is, its novelty is but of a day. Pessimism has been as rampant in Europe as in India and it is certainly a singular thing to find
the materialist of all people bringing against Indian spirituality this accusation of lowering the values of existence. For what
can be more depressing than the materialistic view of the quite physical and ephemeral nature of human life? There is nothing
in the most ascetic notes of the Indian mind like the black gloom of certain kinds of European pessimism, a city of dreadful night
without joy here or hope beyond, and nothing like the sad and shrinking attitude before death and the dissolution of the body
which pervades Western literature. The note of ascetic pessimism often found in Christianity is a distinctly Western note; for it is
absent in Christ's teachings. This mediaeval religion with its cross, its salvation by suffering, its devil-ridden and flesh-ridden
world and the flames of eternal hell waiting for man beyond the grave has a character of pain and terror alien to the Indian mind,
to which indeed religious terror is a stranger. The suffering of the world is there, but it fades into a bliss of spiritual peace or ecstasy
beyond the sorrow line. Buddha's teaching laid heavy stress on the sorrow and impermanence of things, but the Buddhist Nirvana won by the heroic spirit of moral self-conquest and calm wisdom is a state of ineffable calm and joy, open not only to
a few like the Christian heavens, but to all, and very different from the blank cessation which is the mechanical release of our
pain and struggle, the sorry Nirvana of the Western pessimist, the materialist's brute flat end of all things. Even illusionism
preached, not a gospel of sorrow, but the final unreality of joy and grief and the whole world-existence. It admits the practical
validity of life and allows its values to those who dwell in the Ignorance. And like all Indian asceticism it places before man
the possibility of a great effort, a luminous concentration of knowledge, a mighty urge of the will by which he can rise to
an absolute peace or an absolute bliss. A not ignoble pessimism there has been about man's normal life as it is, a profound sense
of its imperfection, a disgust of its futile obscurity, smallness and ignorance; but an unconquerable optimism as regards his
spiritual possibility was the other side of this mood. If it did
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not believe in the ideal of an immense material progress of the race or a perfection of the normal man with earth as its field,
it believed in a sure spiritual progress for every individual and an ultimate perfection lifted above subjection to the shocks of
life. And this pessimism with regard to life is not the sole note of the Indian religious mind; its most popular forms accept life as
a game of God and see beyond our present conditions for every human being the eternal nearness to the Divine. A luminous
ascent into godhead was always held to be a consummation well within man's grasp. That can hardly be called a depressing
or pessimistic theory of existence.
There can be no great and complete culture without some
element of asceticism in it; for asceticism means the self-denial and self-conquest by which man represses his lower impulses and
rises to greater heights of his nature. Indian asceticism is not a mournful gospel of sorrow or a painful mortification of the flesh
in morbid penance, but a noble effort towards a higher joy and an absolute possession of the spirit. A great joy of self-conquest,
a still joy of inner peace and the forceful joy of a supreme self-exceeding are at the heart of its experience. It is only a mind
besotted with the flesh or too enamoured of external life and its restless effort and inconstant satisfactions that can deny the
nobility or idealistic loftiness of the ascetic endeavour. But there are the exaggerations and deflections that all ideals undergo.
Those which are the most difficult to humanity, suffer from them most, and asceticism may become a fanatic self-torture, a
crude repression of the nature, a tired flight from existence or an indolent avoidance of the trouble of life and a weak recoil
from the effort demanded of our manhood. Practised not by the comparatively few who are called to it, but preached in its
extreme form to all and adopted by unfit thousands, its values may be debased, counterfeits may abound and the vital force
of the community lose its elasticity and its forward spring. It would be idle to pretend that such defects and untoward results
have been absent in India. I do not accept the ascetic ideal as the final solution of the problem of human existence; but even its
exaggerations have a nobler spirit behind them than the vitalistic
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exaggerations which are the opposite defect of Western culture.
After all asceticism and illusionism are minor issues. The
point to be pressed is that Indian spirituality in its greatest eras and in its inmost significance has not been a tired quietism or a
conventional monasticism, but a high effort of the human spirit to rise beyond the life of desire and vital satisfaction and arrive
at an acme of spiritual calm, greatness, strength, illumination, divine realisation, settled peace and bliss. The question between
the culture of India and the vehement secular activism of the modern mind is whether such an endeavour is or is not essential
to man's highest perfection. And if it is, then the other question arises whether it is to be only an exceptional force confined to a
few rare spirits or can be made the main inspiring motive-power of a great and complete human civilisation.
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IV
A Rationalistic Critic on
Indian Culture 4
A
RIGHT judgment of the life-value of Indian philosophy is intimately bound up with a right appreciation of
the life-value of Indian religion; religion and philosophy are too intimately one in this culture to be divided from each
other. Indian philosophy is not a purely rational gymnastic of speculative logic in the air, an ultra-subtle process of
thought-spinning and word-spinning like the greater part of philosophy in Europe; it is the organised intellectual theory of the intuitive
ordering perception of all that is the soul, the thought, the dynamic truth, the heart of feeling and power of Indian religion.
Indian religion is Indian spiritual philosophy put into action and experience. Whatever in the religious thought and practice of
that vast, rich, thousand-sided, infinitely pliable, yet very firmly structured system we call Hinduism, does not in intention come
under this description, — whatever its practice, — is either social framework or projection of ritual buttresses or survival of old
supports and additions. Or else it is an excrescence and growth of corruption, a degradation of its truth and meaning in the vulgar mind, part of the debased mixtures that overtake all religious thinking and practice. Or, in some instances, it is dead habit
contracted in periods of fossilisation or ill-assimilated extraneous matter gathered into this giant body. The inner principle of
Hinduism, the most tolerant and receptive of religious systems, is not sharply exclusive like the religious spirit of Christianity or
Islam; as far as that could be without loss of its own powerful idiosyncrasy and law of being, it has been synthetic, acquisitive,
inclusive. Always it has taken in from every side and trusted to the power of assimilation that burns in its spiritual heart and
in the white heat of its flaming centre to turn even the most
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unpromising material into forms for its spirit.
But before we turn to see what it is that so fiercely irritates
and exasperates our hostile Western critic in Indian religious philosophy, it is as well to consider what he has to say about
other sides of this ancient, dateless and still vigorously living, growing, all-assimilating Hinduism. For he has a great deal to
say and it is unsparing and without measure. There is not the intemperate drunkenness of denunciation and vomit of false
witness, hatred, uncharitableness and all things degrading and unspiritual and unclean that are the mark of a certain type of
"Christian literature" on the subject, — for example, the superlative specimen of this noxious compound which Sir John
Woodroffe has cited from the pages of Mr. Harold Begbie, "virile" perhaps if violence is virile, but certainly not sane. But
still it is a mass of unsparing condemnation, exaggerated where it has any foundation at all and serenely illogical in its blithe joy
of deliberate misrepresentation. Still, even from this crude mass it is possible to disengage the salient and typical antipathies that
recommend it to the uncritical and even to many critical minds, and it is these alone that it is useful to discover.
The total irrationality of Hinduism is the main theme of the attack. Mr. Archer does casually admit a philosophical, and
one might therefore suppose a rational element in the religion of India, but he disparages and dismisses as false and positively
harmful the governing ideas of this religious philosophy as he understands or imagines he understands them. He explains the
pervading irrational character of Hindu religion by the allegation that the Indian people have always gravitated towards the
form rather than the substance and towards the letter rather than the spirit. One would have supposed that this kind of
gravitation is a fairly universal feature of the human mind, not only in religion, but in society, politics, art, literature, even in
science. In every conceivable human activity a cult of the form and forgetfulness of the spirit, a turn towards convention, externalism, unthinking dogma has been the common drift of the human mind from China to Peru and it does not skip Europe on
its way. And Europe where men have constantly fought, killed,
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burned, tortured, imprisoned, persecuted in every way imaginable by human stupidity and cruelty for the sake of dogmas,
words, rites and forms of church government, Europe where these things have done duty for spirituality and religion, has
hardly a record which would entitle it to cast this reproach in the face of the East. But, we are told, this gravitation afflicts the
Indian religion more than any other creed. Higher Hinduism can be scarcely said to exist except in certain small reforming
sects and current Hinduism, the popular religion, is the cult of a monstrous folk-lore oppressive and paralysing to the imagination, — although here again one would think that if anything an excess rather than a paralysis of the creative imagination might
be charged against the Indian mind. Animism and magic are the prevailing characteristics. The Indian people has displayed
a genius for obfuscating reason and formalising, materialising and degrading religion. If India has possessed great thinkers, she
has not extracted from their thoughts a rational and ennobling religion: the devotion of the Spanish or the Russian peasant
is rational and enlightened by comparison. Irrationalism, anti-rationalism, — that in this laboured and overcharged accusation
is the constant cry; it is the keynote of the Archer tune.
The phenomenon that has astonished and disgusted the
mind of the critic is the obstinate survival in India of the old religious spirit and large antique religious types unsubmerged
by the flood of modernism and its devastating utilitarian free thought. India, he tells us, still clings to what not only the Western world, but China and Japan have outgrown for ages. The religion is a superstition full of performances of piety repulsive
to the free enlightened secular mind of the modern man. Its daily practices put it far outside the pale of civilisation. Perhaps, if it
had confined its practice decorously to church attendance on Sundays and to marriage and funeral services and grace before
meat, it might have been admitted as human and tolerable! As it is, it is the great anachronism of the modern world; it has not
been cleansed for thirty centuries; it is paganism, it is a wholly unfiltered paganism; its tendency towards pollution rather than
purification marks out its place as incomparably the lowest in
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the scale of world religions. An ingenious remedy is proposed. Christianity destroyed Paganism in Europe; therefore, since any
immediate or very rapid triumph of sceptical free-thought would be too happily abrupt a transition to be quite feasible, we unenlightened, polluted, impure Hindus are advised to take up for a time with Christianity, poor irrational thing that it is,
dark and deformed though it looks in the ample light of the positivist reason, because Christianity and especially Protestant
Christianity will be at least a good preparatory step towards the noble freedom and stainless purities of atheism and agnosticism.
But if even this little cannot be hoped for in spite of numerous famine conversions, at any rate Hinduism must somehow or
other get itself filtered, and until that hygienic operation has been executed, India must be denied fellowship on equal terms
with the civilised nations.
Incidentally, to support this charge of irrationalism and its
companion charge of Paganism, we find a third and more damaging count brought against us and our religious culture, an
alleged want of all moral worth and ethical substance. There is now an increasing perception, even in Europe, that reason
is not the last word of human mind, not quite the one and only sovereign way to truth and certainly not the sole arbiter
of religious and spiritual truth. The accusation of paganism too does not settle the question, since plenty of cultivated minds are
well able to see that there were many great, true and beautiful things in the ancient religions that were lumped together by
Christian ignorance under that inappropriate nickname. Nor has the world been entirely a gainer by losing these high ancient
forms and motives. But whatever the actual practice of men, — and in this respect the normal human being is a singular mixture
of the sincere but quite ineffective, the just respectable, would-be ethical man and the self-deceiving or semi-hypocritical Pharisee,
— one can always appeal with force to a moralistic prejudice. All religions raise high the flag of morality and, whether religious or
secular-minded, all but the antinomian, the rebel and the cynic, profess to follow or at least to admit that standard in their lives.
This accusation is therefore about the most prejudicial charge
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that can be brought against any religion. The self-constituted prosecuting judge whose diatribe we are examining brings it
without scruple and without measure. He has discovered that Hinduism is not an ennobling or even a morally helpful religion;
if it has talked much of righteousness, it has never claimed moral teaching as one of its functions. A religion that can talk much of
righteousness without performing the function of moral teaching, sounds rather like a square which can make no claim to be
a quadrilateral; but let that pass. If the Hindu is comparatively free from the grosser Western vices,
— as yet only, and only until
he enters "the pale of civilisation" by adopting Christianity or otherwise, — it is not because there is any ethical strain in his
character; it is because these vices do not come his way. His social system founded on the barbarous idea of the Dharma, of
the divine and the human, the universal and the individual, the ethical and the social law, and supported on it at every point,
has stupidly neglected to supply him with the opportunities of departing from it so liberally provided by Western civilisation!
And yet the whole character of Hinduism, which is the character of the people, indicates, we are calmly told, a melancholy proclivity towards whatever is monstrous and unwholesome! On that highest note of unmeasured denunciation we may leave Mr.
Archer's monstrous and unwholesome dance of disparagement and turn to disengage the temperamental sources of his dislike
and anger.
Two things especially distinguish the normal European
mind, — for we must leave aside some great souls and some great thinkers or some moments or epochs of abnormal religiosity and
look at the dominant strain. Its two significant characters are the cult of the inquiring, defining, effective, practical reason and the
cult of life. The great high tides of European civilisation, Greek culture, the Roman world before Constantine, the Renascence,
the modern age with its two colossal idols, Industrialism and physical Science, have come to the West on the strong ascending
urge of this double force. Whenever the tide of these powers has ebbed, the European mind has entered into much confusion, darkness and weakness. Christianity failed to spiritualise
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Europe, whatever it may have done towards humanising it in certain ethical directions, because it ran counter to these two
master instincts; it denied the supremacy of the reason and put its anathema on a satisfied or strenuous fullness of life.
But in Asia there has been neither this predominance of reason and the life-cult nor any incompatibility of these two powers
with the religious spirit. The great ages of Asia, the strong culminations of her civilisation and culture,
— in India the high
Vedic beginning, the grand spiritual stir of the Upanishads, the wide flood of Buddhism, Vedanta, Sankhya, the Puranic and
Tantric religions, the flowering of Vaishnavism and Shaivism in the southern kingdoms
— have come in on a surge of spiritual
light and a massive or intense climbing of the religious or the religio-philosophic mind to its own heights, its noblest realities,
its largest riches of vision and experience. It was in such periods that intellect, thought, poetry, the arts, the material life flowered
into splendour. The ebbing of spirituality brought in always, on the contrary, the weakness of these other powers, periods of
fossilisation or at least depression of the power of life, tracts of decline, even beginnings of decay. This is a clue to which we have
to hold if we would understand the great lines of divergence between the East and the West.
Towards the spirit if not all the way to it man must rise or he misses his upward curve of strength; but there are different ways
of approach to its secret forces. Europe, it would seem, must go through the life and the reason and find spiritual truth by their
means as a crown and a revelation; she cannot at once take the kingdom of heaven by violence, as the saying of Christ would
have men do. The attempt confuses and obscures her reason, is combated by her life instincts and leads to revolt, negation,
a return to her own law of nature. But Asia or at any rate India lives naturally by a spiritual influx from above; that alone
brings with it a spiritual evocation of her higher powers of mind and life. The two continents are two sides of the integral orb
of humanity and until they meet and fuse, each must move to whatever progress or culmination the spirit in humanity seeks,
by the law of its being, its own proper Dharma. A one-sided
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world would have been the poorer for its uniformity and the monotone of a single culture; there is a need of divergent lines
of advance until we can raise our heads into that infinity of the spirit in which there is a light broad enough to draw together and
reconcile all highest ways of thinking, feeling and living. That is a truth which the violent Indian assailant of a materialistic
Europe or the contemptuous enemy or cold disparager of Asiatic or Indian culture agree to ignore. There is here no real question
between barbarism and civilisation, for all masses of men are barbarians labouring to civilise themselves. There is only one of
the dynamic differences necessary for the completeness of the growing orb of human culture.
Meanwhile the divergence unfortunately gives rise to a constant warring opposition of outlooks in religion and in most
other matters, and the opposition brings with it more or less of an incapacity for mutual understanding and even a positive
enmity or dislike. The emphasis of the Western mind is on life, the outer life above all, the things that are grasped, visible, tangible. The inner life is taken only as an intelligent reflection of the outer world, with the reason for a firm putter of things
into shape, an intelligent critic, builder, refiner of the external materials offered by Nature. The present use of living, to be
wholly in this life and for this life, is all the preoccupation of Europe. The present life of the individual and the continuous
physical existence and developing mind and knowledge of humanity make up her one absorbing interest. Even from religion
the West is apt to demand that it shall subordinate its aim or its effect to this utility of the immediate visible world. The Greek
and the Roman looked on religious cult as a sanction for the life of the "polis" or a force for the just firmness and stability of the
State. The Middle Ages when the Christian idea was at its height were an interregnum; it was a period during which the Western
mind was trying to assimilate in its emotion and intelligence an oriental ideal. But it never succeeded in firmly living it and had
eventually to throw it aside or keep it only for a verbal homage. The present moment is in the same way for Asia an interregnum
dominated by an attempt to assimilate in its intellect and life in
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spite of a rebellious soul and temperament the Western outlook and its earth-bound ideal. And it may be safely predicted that
Asia too will not succeed in living out this alien law firmly or for a long time. But in Europe even the Christian idea, marked
in its purity by the emphasis of its introspective tendency and an uncompromising other-worldliness, had to compromise with
the demands of the occidental temperament and in doing that it lost its own inner kingdom. The genuine temperament of
the West triumphed and in an increasing degree rationalised, secularised and almost annihilated the religious spirit. Religion
became more and more a pale and ever thinning shadow pushed aside into a small corner of the life and a still smaller corner of
the nature and awaiting sentence of death or exile, while outside the doors of the vanquished Church marched on their victorious
way the triumphant secular pomps of the outward life and the positive reason and materialistic Science.
The tendency to secularism is a necessary consequence of the cult of life and reason divorced from their inmost inlook.
Ancient Europe did not separate religion and life; but that was because it had no need for the separation. Its religion, once it
got rid of the oriental element of the mysteries, was a secular institution which did not look beyond a certain supraphysical
sanction and convenient aid to the government of this life. And even then the tendency was to philosophise and reason away the
relics of the original religious spirit, to exile the little shadow that remained of the brooding wings of a suprarational mystery
and to get into the clear sunlight of the logical and practical reason. But modern Europe went farther and to the very end
of this way. The more effectually to shake off the obsession of the Christian idea, which like all oriental religious thought
claims to make religion commensurate with life and, against whatever obstacles may be opposed to it by the unregenerate
vital nature of the animal man, spiritualise the whole being and its action, modern Europe separated religion from life, from
philosophy, from art and science, from politics, from the greater part of social action and social existence. And it secularised
and rationalised too the ethical demand so that it might stand
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in itself on its own basis and have no need of any aid from religious sanction or mystic insistence. At the end of this turn is
an antinomian tendency, constantly recurring in the life-history of Europe and now again in evidence. This force seeks to annul
ethics also, not by rising above it into the absolute purity of the spirit, as mystic experience claims to do, but by breaking out of
its barriers below into an exultant freedom of the vital play. In this evolution religion was left aside, an impoverished system of
belief and ceremony to which one might or might not subscribe with very little difference to the march of the human mind and
life. Its penetrating and colouring power had been reduced to a faint minimum; a superficial pigmentation of dogma, sentiment
and emotion was all that survived this drastic process.
Even the poor little corner that was still conceded to it,
intellectualism insisted on flooding as much as possible with the light of reason. The trend has been to reduce, not only the infrarational, but equally the suprarational refuges of the religious spirit. The old pagan polytheistic symbolism had clothed with
its beautiful figures the ancient idea of a divine presence and supraphysical life and Power in all Nature and in every particle
of life and matter and in all animal existence and in all the mental action of man; but this idea, which to the secularist reason is
only an intellectualised animism, had already been ruthlessly swept aside. The Divinity had abandoned the earth and lived far
aloof and remote in other worlds, in a celestial heaven of saints and immortal spirits. But why should there be any other worlds?
I admit, cried the progressing intellect, only this material world to which our reason and senses bear witness. A vague bleak
abstraction of spiritual existence without any living habitation, without any means of dynamic nearness was left to satisfy the
wintry remnants of the old spiritual sense or the old fantastic illusion. A blank and tepid Theism remained or a rationalised
Christianity without either the name of Christ or his presence. Or why should that even be allowed by the critical light of
the intelligence? A Reason or Power, called God for want of a better name, represented by the moral and physical Law in
the material universe, is quite sufficient for any rational mind,
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— and so we get to Deism, to a vacant intellectual formula. Or why should there be any God at all? The reason and the
senses by themselves give no witness to God; at best they can make of Him only a plausible hypothesis. But there is no need
of an unsubstantial hypothesis, since Nature is enough and the sole thing of which we have knowledge. Thus by an inevitable
process we reach the atheistic or agnostic cult of secularism, the acme of denial, the zenith of the positive intelligence. And
there reason and life may henceforward take their foundation and reign well satisfied over a conquered world,
— if only that
inconvenient veiled ambiguous infinite Something behind will leave them alone for the future!
A temperament, an outlook of this kind must necessarily be impatient of any such thing as an earnest straining after the
suprarational and the infinite. It may tolerate some moderate play of these fine hallucinations as an innocent indulgence of the
speculative mind or the artistic imagination, provided it is not too serious and does not intrude upon life. But asceticism and
other-worldliness are abhorrent to its temperament and fatal to its outlook. Life is a thing to be possessed and enjoyed rationally
or forcefully according to our power, but this earthly life, the one thing we know, our only province. At most a moderate
intellectual and ethical asceticism is permissible, the simple life, plain living, high thinking; but an ecstatic spiritual asceticism
is an offence to the reason, almost a crime. Pessimism of the vitalistic kind may be allowed its mood or its hour; for it admits
that life is an evil that has to be lived and does not cut at its roots. But the obvious right standpoint is to take life as it is and
make the most of it, either practically for the best ordering of its mixed good and evil or ideally with some hope of a relative perfection. If spirituality is to have any meaning, it can only signify the aim or the high labour of a lofty intelligence, rational will,
limited beauty and moral good which will try to make the best of this life that is, but not vainly look beyond to some unhuman,
unattainable, infinite or absolute satisfaction. If religion is to survive, let its function be to serve this kind of spiritual aim, to
govern conduct, to give beauty and purity to our living, but let it
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minister only to this sane and virile spirituality; let it keep within
the bounds of the practical reason and an earthly intelligence. This description no doubt isolates the main strands and ignores
departures to one side or the other; and in all human nature there must be departures, often of an extreme kind. But it would not,
I think, be an unfair or exaggerated description of the persistent ground and characteristic turn of the Western temperament and
its outlook and the normal poise of its intelligence. This is its self-fulfilled static poise before it proceeds to that deflection or
that self-exceeding to which man is inevitably moved when he reaches the acme of his normal nature. For he harbours a power
in Nature that must either grow or else stagnate and cease and disintegrate, and until he has found all himself, there is for him
no static abiding and no permanent home for his spirit.
Now when this Western mind is confronted with the still
surviving force of Indian religion, thought, culture, it finds that all its standards are denied, exceeded or belittled; all that it
honours is given a second place, all that it has rejected is still held in honour. Here is a philosophy which founds itself on
the immediate reality of the Infinite, the pressing claim of the Absolute. And this is not as a thing to speculate about, but as
a real presence and a constant Power which demands the soul of man and calls it. Here is a mentality which sees the Divine
in Nature and man and animal and inanimate thing, God at the beginning, God in the middle, God at the end, God everywhere.
And all this is not a permissible poetical play of the imagination that need not be taken too seriously by life, but is put forward
as a thing to be lived, realised, put at the back even of outward action, turned into stuff of thought, feeling and conduct! And
whole disciplines are systematised for this purpose, disciplines which men still practise! And whole lives are given up to this
pursuit of the supreme Person, the universal Godhead, the One, the Absolute, the Infinite! And to pursue this immaterial aim
men are still content to abandon the outward life and society and home and family and their most cherished pursuits and
all that has to a rational mind a substantial and ascertainable value! Here is a country which is still heavily coloured with the
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ochre tint of the garb of the Sannyasin, where the Beyond is still preached as a truth and men have a living belief in other worlds
and reincarnation and a whole army of antique ideas whose truth is quite unverifiable by the instruments of physical Science.
Here the experiences of Yoga are held to be as true or more true than the experiments of the laboratory. Is this not a thinking of
things evidently unthinkable since the rational Western mind has ceased to think about them? Is it not an attempt to know things
evidently unknowable since the modern mind has abandoned all attempt to know them? There is amongst these irrational
half-savages an endeavour even to make this unreal thing the highest flight of life, its very goal, and a governing force, a shaping
power in art and culture and conduct. But art and culture and conduct are things which, this rational mind tells us, Indian
spirituality and religion ought logically not to touch at all; for they belong to the realm of the finite and can only be founded
on the intellectual reason and the practical environment and the truths and suggestions of physical Nature. There in its native
form is the apparent gulf between the two mentalities and it looks unbridgeable. Or rather the Indian mind can understand
well enough, even when it does not share, the positivist turn of the occidental intelligence; but it is itself to the latter a thing, if
not damnable, at least abnormal and unintelligible.
The effects of the Indian religio-philosophical standpoint
on life are to the occidental critic still more intolerable. If his reason was already offended by this suprarational and to him
antirational urge, it is the strongest instincts of his temperament that are now violently shocked by their own direct contrasts and
opposites. Life, the thing on which he puts an entire and unquestioning value, is questioned here. It is belittled and discouraged
by the extremest consequences of one side of the Indian outlook or inlook and is nowhere accepted as it is for its own sake.
Asceticism ranges rampant, is at the head of things, casts its shadow on the vital instincts and calls man to exceed the life of
the body and even the life of the mental will and intelligence. The Western mind lays an enormous stress upon force of personality,
upon the individual will, upon the apparent man and the desires
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and demands of his nature. But here is an opposing stress on a high growth towards impersonality, on the widening of the
individual into the universal will, on an increasing or breaking beyond the apparent man and his limits. The flowering of the
mental and vital ego or at most its subservience to the larger ego of the community is the West's cultural ideal. But here the
ego is regarded as the chief obstacle to the soul's perfection and its place is proposed to be taken not by the concrete communal
ego, but by something inward, abstract, transcendental, something supramental, supraphysical, absolutely real. The Western
temperament is rajasic, kinetic, pragmatic, active; thought for it turns always to action and has little value except for the sake of
action or else for a fine satisfaction of the mind's play and vigour. But here the type proposed for admiration is the self-possessed
sattwic man for whom calm thought, spiritual knowledge and the inner life are the things of the greatest importance and action
is chiefly of consequence not for its own sake, not for its rewards and fruits, but for its effects on the growth of the inner nature.
Here too is a disconcerting quietism which looks forward to the cessation or Nirvana of all thought and action in a perpetual
light and peace. It is not surprising that a critic with an unreleased occidental mind should look upon these contrasts with
much dissatisfaction, a recoil of antipathy, an almost ferocious repugnance.
But at any rate these things, however remote they may seem to his understanding, contain something that is lofty and noble.
He can disparage them as false, antirational and depressing, but not denounce them as evil and ignoble. Or he can do this only
on the strength of such misrepresentations as some of those we have noted in Mr. Archer's more irresponsible strictures.
These things may be signs of an antique or an antiquated mind, but are certainly not the fruits of a barbaric culture. But when
he surveys the forms of the religion which they enlighten and animate, it does look to him as if he was in the presence of a pure
barbarism, a savage ignorant muddle. For here is an abundance of everything of which he has so long been steadily emptying
religion in his own culture, well content to call that emptiness
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reformation, enlightenment and the rational truth of things. He sees a gigantic polytheism, a superabundance of what seems to
his intelligence rank superstition, a limitless readiness of belief in things that are to him without significance or incredible. The
Hindu is popularly credited with thirty crores and more of gods, as many inhabitants for all the many heavens as there are men
in this single earthly peninsula India; and he has no objection to adding, if need be, to this mighty multitude. Here are temples,
images, a priesthood, a mass of unintelligible rites and ceremonies, the daily repetition of Sanskrit mantras and prayers,
some of them of a prehistoric creation, a belief in all kinds of supraphysical beings and forces, saints, gurus, holy days, vows,
offerings, sacrifice, a constant reference of life to powers and influences of which there can be no physical evidence instead
of a rational scientific dependence on the material laws which alone govern the existence of mortal creatures. It is to him an
unintelligible chaos; it is animism; it is a monstrous folk-lore. The meaning which Indian thought puts upon these things, their
spiritual sense, escapes him altogether or it leaves him incredulous or else strikes his mind as a vain and mad symbolism
subtle, useless, futile. And not only is the cult and belief of this people antiquated and mediaeval in kind, but it is not kept in
its proper place. Instead of putting religion into an unobtrusive and ineffective corner, the Indian mind has the pretension, the
preposterous pretension which rational man has outgrown for ever, of filling with it the whole of life.
It would be difficult to convince the too positive average European intelligence which has "outgrown" the religious mentality or is only struggling back towards it after a not yet liquidated bankruptcy of rationalistic materialism, that there is any
profound truth or meaning in these Indian religious forms. It has been well said that they are rhythms of the spirit; but one
who misses the spirit must necessarily miss too the connection of the spirit and the rhythm. The gods of this worship are,
as every Indian knows, potent names, divine forms, dynamic personalities, living aspects of the one Infinite. Each Godhead is
a form or derivation or dependent power of the supreme Trinity,
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each Goddess a form of the universal Energy, Conscious-Force or Shakti. But to the logical European mind monotheism, polytheism, pantheism are irreconcilable warring dogmas; oneness, many-ness, all-ness are not and cannot be different but concordant aspects of the eternal Infinite. A belief in one Divine Being superior to cosmos who is all cosmos and who lives in many
forms of godhead, is a hotch-potch, mush, confusion of ideas; for synthesis, intuitive vision, inner experience are not the forte
of this strongly external, analytic and logical mind. The image to the Hindu is a physical symbol and support of the supraphysical;
it is a basis for the meeting between the embodied mind and sense of man and the supraphysical power, force or presence which
he worships and with which he wishes to communicate. But the average European has small faith in disembodied entities and, if
they are at all, he would put them away into a category apart, another unconnected world, a separate existence. A nexus between the physical and supraphysical is to his view a meaningless subtlety admissible only in imaginative poetry and romance.
The rites, ceremonies, system of cult and worship of Hinduism can only be understood if we remember its fundamental
character. It is in the first place a non-dogmatic inclusive religion and would have taken even Islam and Christianity into itself, if
they had tolerated the process. All that it has met on its way it has taken into itself, content if it could put its forms into some
valid relation with the truth of the supraphysical worlds and the truth of the Infinite. Again it has always known in its heart
that religion, if it is to be a reality for the mass of men and not only for a few saints and thinkers, must address its appeal
to the whole of our being, not only to the suprarational and the rational parts, but to all the others. The imagination, the
emotions, the aesthetic sense, even the very instincts of the half subconscient parts must be taken into the influence. Religion
must lead man towards the suprarational, the spiritual truth and it must take the aid of the illumined reason on the way, but
it cannot afford to neglect to call Godwards the rest of our complex nature. And it must take too each man where he stands and
spiritualise him through what he can feel and not at once force
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on him something which he cannot yet grasp as a true and living power. That is the sense and aim of all those parts of Hinduism
which are specially stigmatised as irrational or antirational by the positivist intelligence. But the European mind has failed to
understand this plain necessity or has despised it. It insists on "purifying" religion, by the reason and not by the spirit, on
"reforming" it, by the reason and not by the spirit. And we have seen what were the results of this kind of purification and
reformation in Europe. The infallible outcome of that ignorant doctoring has been first to impoverish and then slowly to kill
religion; the patient has fallen a victim to the treatment, while he might well have survived the disease!
The accusation of a want of ethical content is almost monstrously false, — it is the direct opposite of the truth; but we
must look for its explanation in some kind of characteristic misunderstanding; for it is not new. Hindu thought and literature might almost be accused of a tyrannously pervading ethical obsession; everywhere the ethical note recurs. The idea of the
Dharma is, next to the idea of the Infinite, its major chord; Dharma, next to spirit, is its foundation of life. There is no
ethical idea which it has not stressed, put in its most ideal and imperative form, enforced by teaching, injunction, parable, artistic creation, formative examples. Truth, honour, loyalty, fidelity, courage, chastity, love, long-suffering, self-sacrifice, harmlessness, forgiveness, compassion, benevolence, beneficence are its common themes, are in its view the very stuff of a right human
life, the essence of man's dharma. Buddhism with its high and noble ethics, Jainism with its austere ideal of self-conquest, Hinduism with its magnificent examples of all sides of the Dharma are not inferior in ethical teaching and practice to any religion
or system, but rather take the highest rank and have had the strongest effective force. For the practice of these virtues in
older times there is abundant internal and foreign evidence. A considerable stamp of them still remains in spite of much
degeneracy even though there has been some depression of the manlier qualities which only flourish in their fullest power on the
soil of freedom. The legend to the contrary began in the minds
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of English scholars with a Christian bias who were misled by the stress which Indian philosophy lays on knowledge rather
than works as the means of salvation. For they did not note or could not grasp the meaning of the rule well-known to all
Indian spiritual seekers that a pure sattwic mind and life are presupposed as the first step towards the divine
knowledge —
the doers of evil find me not, says the Gita. And they were unable to realise that knowledge of the truth means for Indian thought,
not intellectual assent or recognition, but a new consciousness and a life according to the truth of the Spirit. Morality is for the
Western mind mostly a thing of outward conduct; but conduct for the Indian mind is only one means of expression and sign of a
soul-state. Hinduism only incidentally strings together a number of commandments for observance, a table of moral laws; more
deeply it enjoins a spiritual or ethical purity of the mind with action as one outward index. It says strongly enough, almost too
strongly, "Thou shouldst not kill," but insists more firmly on the injunction, "Thou shalt not hate, thou shalt not yield to greed,
anger or malice," for these are the roots of killing. And Hinduism admits relative standards, a wisdom too hard for the European
intelligence. Non-injuring is the very highest of its laws,
ahimsā
paramo dharmah; still it does not lay it down as a physical .
rule for the warrior, but insistently demands from him mercy, chivalry, respect for the non-belligerent, the weak, the unarmed,
the vanquished, the prisoner, the wounded, the fugitive, and so escapes the unpracticality of a too absolutist rule for all life. A
misunderstanding of this inwardness and this wise relativity is perhaps responsible for much misrepresentation. The Western
ethicist likes to have a high standard as a counsel of perfection and is not too much concerned if it is honoured more by the
breach than by the observance; Indian ethics puts up an equally high and often higher standard; but less concerned with high
professions than with truth of life, it admits stages of progress and in the lower stages is satisfied if it can moralise as much
as possible those who are not yet capable of the highest ethical concepts and practice.
All these criticisms of Hinduism are therefore either false in
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fact or invalid in their very nature. It remains to be considered whether the farther yet more common charge is justified in full or
in part, — the damaging accusation that Indian culture depresses the vital force, paralyses the will, gives no great or vigorous
power, no high incentive, no fortifying and ennobling motive to human life.
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V
A Rationalistic Critic on
Indian Culture 5
THE QUESTION before us is whether Indian culture has a sufficient power for the fortifying and ennobling of our
normal human existence. Apart from its transcendental aims, has it any pragmatic, non-ascetic, dynamic value, any
power for expansion of life and for the right control of life? This is a question of central importance. For if it has nothing of
this kind to give us, then whatever its other cultural greatness, it cannot live. It becomes an abnormal cis-Himalayan hot-house
splendour which could subsist in its peninsular seclusion, but must perish in the keen and arduous air of the modern struggle
of life. No anti-vital culture can survive. A too intellectual or too ethereal civilisation void of strong vital stimulus and motive must languish for want of sap and blood. A culture to be permanently and completely serviceable to man must give him
something more than some kind of rare transcendental uprush towards an exceeding of all earthly life-values. It must do more
even than adorn with a great curiosity of knowledge, science and philosophic enquiry or a rich light and blaze of art, poetry
and architecture the long stability and orderly well-being of an old, ripe and humane society. All this Indian culture did in the
past to a noble purpose. But it must satisfy too the tests of a progressive Life-power. There must be some inspiration for
the terrestrial endeavour of man, an object, a stimulus, a force for development and a will to live. Whether or not our end is
silence and Nirvana, a spiritual cessation or a material death, this is certain that the world itself is a mighty labour of a vast
Life-Spirit and man the present doubtful crown on earth and the struggling but still unsuccessful present hero and protagonist of
its endeavour or its drama. A great human culture must see this
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truth in some fullness; it must impart some conscious and ideal power of self-effectuation to this upward effort. It is not enough
to found a stable base for life, not enough to adorn it, not enough to shoot up sublimely to summits beyond it; the greatness and
growth of the race on earth must be our equal care. To miss this great intermediate reality is a capital imperfection and in itself a
seal of failure.
Our critics will have it that the whole body of Indian culture
bears the stamp of just such a failure. The Western impression has been that Hinduism is an entirely metaphysical and otherworldly system dreaming of things beyond, oblivious of the now and here: a depressing sense of the unreality of life or an intoxication of the Infinite turns it away from any nobility, vitality and greatness of human aspiration and the earth's labour. Its
philosophy may be sublime, its religious spirit fervent, its ancient social system strong, symmetrical and stable, its literature and
its art good in their own way, but the salt of life is absent, the breath of will-power, the force of a living endeavour. This
new journalistic Apollo, our Archer who is out to cleave with his arrows the python coils of Indian barbarism, abounds in
outcries in this sense. But, if that is so, evidently India can have done nothing great, contributed no invigorating power to human
life, produced no men of mighty will, no potent personalities, no strong significant human lives, no vital human figures in art
and poetry, no significant architecture and sculpture. And that is what our devil's advocate tells us in graphic phrases. He tells us
that there is in this religion and philosophy a general undervaluing of life and endeavour. Life is conceived as a shoreless expanse
in which generations rise and fall as helplessly and purposelessly as waves in mid-ocean; the individual is everywhere dwarfed
and depreciated; one solitary great character, Gautama Buddha, who "perhaps never existed," is India's sole contribution to the
world's pantheon, or for the rest a pale featureless Asoka. The characters of drama and poetry are lifeless exaggerations or
puppets of supernatural powers; the art is empty of reality; the whole history of the civilisation makes a drab, effete, melancholy picture. There is no power of life in this religion and this
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philosophy, there is no breath of life in this history, there is no colour of life in this art and poetry; that is the blank result of
Indian culture. Whoever has seen at first hand and felt the literature, followed the history, studied the civilisation of India, can
see that this is a bitter misrepresentation, a violent caricature, an absurd falsehood. But it is an extreme and unscrupulous way
of putting an impression often given to the European mind and, as before, we must see why different eyes see the same object in
such different colours. It is the same primary misunderstanding that is at the root. India has lived and lived richly, splendidly,
greatly, but with a different will in life from Europe. The idea and plan of her life have been peculiar to her temperament, original
and unique. Her values are not easy to seize for an outsider and her highest things are easily open to hostile misrepresentation by
the ignorant, precisely because they are too high for the normal untrained mind and apt to shoot beyond its limits.
There are three powers that we must grasp in order to judge the life-value of a culture. There is, first, the power of
its original conception of life; there is, next, the power of the forms, types and rhythms it has given to life; there is, last, the
inspiration, the vigour, the force of vital execution of its motives manifested in the actual lives of men and of the community
that flourished under its influence. The European conception of life is a thing with which we in India are now very familiar,
because our present thought and effort are obscured with its shadow when they are not filled with its presence. For we have
been trying hard to assimilate something of it, even to shape ourselves and especially our political, economic and outward
conduct into some imitation of its forms and rhythms. The European idea is the conception of a Force that manifests itself in
the material universe and a Life in it of which man is almost the only discoverable meaning. This anthropocentric view of things
has not been altered by the recent stress of Science on the vast blank inanities of an inconscient mechanical Nature. And in
man, thus unique in the inert drift of Nature, the whole effort of Life is to arrive at some light and harmony of the understanding
and ordering reason, some efficient rational power, adorning
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beauty, strong utility, vital enjoyment, economic welfare. The free power of the individual ego, the organised will of the corporate ego, these are the great needed forces. The development of individual personality and an organised efficient national life
are the two things that matter in the European ideal. These two powers have grown, striven, run riot at times, and the restless
and often violent vividness of the historic stir and the literary and artistic vivacity of Europe are due to their powerful colours.
The enjoyment of life and force, the gallop of egoistic passion and vital satisfaction are a loud and insistent strain, a constant
high-voiced motive. Against them is another opposite effort, the endeavour to govern life by reason, science, ethics, art; a
restraining and harmonising utility is here the foremost motive. At different times different powers have taken the lead. Christian religiosity too has come in and added new tones, modified some tendencies, deepened others. Each age and period has increased the wealth of contributory lines and forces and helped the complexity and largeness of the total conception. At present
the sense of the corporate life dominates and it is served by the idea of a great intellectual and material progress, an ameliorated
political and social state governed by science. There is an ideal of intelligent utility, liberty and equality or else an ideal of stringent
organisation and efficiency and a perfectly mobilised, carefully marshalled uniting of forces in a ceaseless pull towards the
general welfare. This endeavour of Europe has become terribly outward and mechanical in its appearance; but some renewed
power of a more humanistic idea is trying to beat its way in again and man may perhaps before long refuse to be tied on the
wheel of his own triumphant machinery and conquered by his apparatus. At any rate we need not lay too much emphasis on
what may be a passing phase. The broad permanent European conception of life remains and it is in its own limits a great and
invigorating conception, — imperfect, narrow at the top, shut in under a heavy lid, poor in its horizons, too much of the soil, but
still with a sense in it that is strenuous and noble.
The Indian conception of life starts from a deeper centre and
moves on less external lines to a very different objective. The
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peculiarity of the Indian eye of thought is that it looks through the form, looks even through the force, and searches for the spirit
in things everywhere. The peculiarity of the Indian will in life is that it feels itself to be unfulfilled, not in touch with perfection,
not permanently justified in any intermediate satisfaction if it has not found and does not live in the truth of the spirit. The Indian
idea of the world, of Nature and of existence is not physical, but psychological and spiritual. Spirit, soul, consciousness are not
only greater than inert matter and inconscient force, but they precede and originate these lesser things. All force is power or
means of a secret spirit; the Force that sustains the world is a conscious Will and Nature is its machinery of executive power.
Matter is the body or field of a consciousness hidden within it, the material universe a form and movement of the Spirit.
Man himself is not a life and mind born of Matter and eternally subject to physical Nature, but a spirit that uses life and body.
It is an understanding faith in this conception of existence, it is the attempt to live it out, it is the science and practice of this
high endeavour, and it is the aspiration to break out in the end from this mind bound to life and matter into a greater spiritual
consciousness that is the innermost sense of Indian culture. It is this that constitutes the much-talked-of Indian spirituality. It
is evidently very remote from the dominant European idea; it is different even from the form given by Europe to the Christian
conception of life. But it does not mean at all that Indian culture concedes no reality to life, follows no material or vital aims
and satisfactions or cares to do nothing for our actual human existence. It cannot truly be contended that a conception of this
kind can give no powerful and inspiring motive to the human effort of man. Certainly, in this view, matter, mind, life, reason,
form are only powers of the spirit and valuable not for their
own sake, but because of the Spirit within them. Ātmārtham, they exist for the sake of the Self, says the Upanishad, and this
is certainly the Indian attitude to these things. But that does not depreciate them or deprive them of their value; on the contrary
it increases a hundredfold their significance. Form and body immensely increase in importance if they are felt to be instinct
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with the life of the Spirit and are conceived as a support for the rhythm of its workings. And human life was in ancient Indian
thought no vile and unworthy existence; it is the greatest thing known to us, it is desired, the Purana boldly says, even by the
gods in heaven. The deepening and raising of the richest or the most potent energies of our minds, our hearts, our life-power,
our bodies are all means by which the spirit can proceed to self-discovery and the return to its own infinite freedom and power.
For when mind and heart and reason heighten to their greatest lights and powers, they bring embodied life to the point where
it can open to a still greater light and power beyond them; the individual mind widens into a vast universal consciousness and
lifts towards a high spiritual transcendence. These are at least no sterilising and depressing ideas; they exalt the life of man and
make something like godhead its logical outcome.
The dignity given to human existence by the Vedantic
thought and by the thought of the classical ages of Indian culture exceeded anything conceived by the Western idea of humanity.
Man in the West has always been only an ephemeral creature of Nature or a soul manufactured at birth by an arbitrary breath
of the whimsical Creator and set under impossible conditions to get salvation, but far more likely to be thrown away into the
burning refuse-heap of Hell as a hopeless failure. At best he is exalted by a reasoning mind and will and an effort to be better
than God or Nature made him. Far more ennobling, inspiring, filled with the motive-force of a great idea is the conception
placed before us by Indian culture. Man in the Indian idea is a spirit veiled in the works of energy, moving to self-discovery,
capable of Godhead. He is a soul that is growing through Nature to conscious self-hood; he is a divinity and an eternal existence;
he is an ever-flowing wave of the God-ocean, an inextinguishable spark of the supreme Fire. Even, he is in his uttermost reality
identical with the ineffable Transcendence from which he came and greater than the godheads whom he worships. The natural
half-animal creature that for a while he seems to be is not at all his whole being and is not in any way his real being. His inmost
reality is the divine Self or at least one dynamic eternal portion
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of it, and to find that and exceed his outward, apparent, natural self is the greatness of which he alone of terrestrial beings is
capable. He has the spiritual capacity to pass to a supreme and extraordinary pitch of manhood and that is the first aim which
is proposed to him by Indian culture. Living no more in the first crude type of an undeveloped humanity to which most men
still belong, na yathā prākrto janah, he can even become a free
perfected semi-divine man, mukta, siddha. But he can do more;
released into the cosmic consciousness, his spirit can become one with God, one self with the Spirit of the universe or rise into
a Light and Vastness that transcends the universe; his nature can become one dynamic power with universal Nature or one Light
with a transcendental Gnosis. To be shut up for ever in his ego is not his ultimate perfection; he can become a universal soul, one
with the supreme Unity, one with others, one with all beings. This is the high sense and power concealed in his humanity that
he can aspire to this perfection and transcendence. And he can arrive at it through any or all of his natural powers if they will
accept release, through his mind and reason and thought and their illuminations, through his heart and its unlimited power
of love and sympathy, through his will and its dynamic drive towards mastery and right action, through his ethical nature
and its hunger for the universal Good, through his aesthetic sense and its seekings after delight and beauty or through his
inner soul and its power of absolute spiritual calm, wideness, joy and peace.
This is the sense of that spiritual liberation and perfection of which Indian thought and inner discipline have been full since
the earliest Vedic times. However high and arduous this aim may be, it has always seemed to it possible and even in a way near and
normal, once spiritual realisation has discovered its path. The positivist Western mind finds it difficult to give this conception
the rank of a living and intelligible idea. The status of the siddha,
bhāgavata, mukta appears to it a baseless chimera. It seems to its Christian associations a blasphemy against the solitary greatness
of God, before whom man is only a grovelling worm, to its fierce attachment to the normal ego a negation of personality
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and a repellent menace, to its earthbound rationalism a dream, a self-hypnotic hallucination or a deluding mania. And yet in
ancient Europe the Stoics, Platonists, Pythagoreans had made some approach to this aspiration, and even afterwards, a few
rare souls have envisaged or pursued it through occult ways. And now it is again beginning to percolate into the Western
imagination, but less as a dynamic life-motive than in poetry and in certain aspects of general thought or through movements
like Theosophy that draw from ancient and oriental sources. Science and philosophy and religion still regard it with scorn as
an illusion, with indifference as a dream or with condemnation as a heathen arrogance. It is the distinction of Indian culture to
have seized on this great dynamic hope, to have kept it a living and practicable thing and to have searched out all the possible
paths to this spiritual way of perfect existence. Indian thought has made this great thing the common highest aim and universal
spiritual destiny of the soul that is in every human creature.
The value of the Indian conception for life must depend on
the relations and gradations by which it connects this difficult and distant perfection with our normal living and present everyday nature. Put over against the latter without any connection or any gradations that lead up to it and make it possible, it
would either be a high unattainable ideal or the detached remote passion of a few exceptional spirits. Or even it would discourage the springs of our natural life by the too great contrast between this spiritual being and our own poor imperfect nature.
Something of the kind has happened in later times; the current Western impression about the exaggerated asceticism and otherworldliness of Indian religion and philosophy is founded on the growing gulf created by a later thought between man's spiritual
possibilities and his terrestrial status. But we must not be misled by extreme tendencies or the overemphasis put upon them in
a period of decline. If we would get at the real meaning of the Indian idea of life, we must go back to its best times. And we
must not look at this or that school of philosophy or at some side of it as the whole of Indian thought; the totality of the
ancient philosophical thinking, religion, literature, art, society
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must be our ground of enquiry. The Indian conception in its early soundness made no such mistake as to imagine that this great
thing can or even ought to be done by some violent, intolerant, immediate leap from one pole of existence to its opposite. Even
the most extreme philosophies do not go so far. The workings of the Spirit in the universe were a reality to one side of the
Indian mind, to another only a half reality, a self-descriptive Lila or illusory Maya. To the one the world was an action of the
Infinite Energy, Shakti, to the other a figment of some secondary paradoxical consciousness in the Eternal, Maya: but life as an
intermediate reality was never denied by any school of Indian thinking. Indian thought recognised that the normal life of man
has to be passed through with a conscientious endeavour to fulfil its purpose: its powers must be developed with knowledge;
its forms must be perused, interpreted and fathomed; its values must be worked out, possessed and lived; its enjoyments must
be fully taken on their own level. Only afterwards can we go on to self-existence or a supra-existence. The spiritual perfection
which opens before man is the crown of a long, patient, millennial outflowering of the spirit in life and nature. This belief
in a gradual spiritual progress and evolution here is indeed the secret of the almost universal Indian acceptance of the truth of
reincarnation. It is only by millions of lives in inferior forms that the secret soul in the universe, conscious even in the inconscient,
cetano acetanesu, has arrived at humanity: it is only by hundreds .
or thousands, perhaps even millions of human lives that man can grow into his divine self-existence. Every life is a step which he
can take backward or forward; his action in life, his will in life, his thought and knowledge by which he governs and directs his
life, determine what he is yet to be from the earliest stages to the
´ last transcendence. Yathā karma yathā śrutam.
This belief in a gradual soul evolution with a final perfection or divine transcendence and human life as its first direct
means and often repeated opportunity, is the pivot of the Indian conception of existence. This gives to our life the figure of an
ascent in spirals or circles; and the long period of the ascent has to be filled in with human knowledge and human action
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and human experience. There is room within it for all terrestrial aims, activities and aspirations; there is place in the ascent for
all types of human character and nature. For the spirit in the world assumes hundreds of forms and follows many tendencies
and gives many shapes to his play or līlā. All are part of the total
mass of our necessary experience; each has its justification, each has its natural or true law and reason of being, each has its utility
in the play and the process. The claim of sense satisfaction was not ignored, it was given its just importance. The soul's need
of labour and heroic action was not stifled, it was urged to its fullest action and freest scope. The hundred forms of the pursuit
of knowledge were given an absolute freedom of movement; the play of the emotions was allowed, refined, trained till they were
fit for the divine levels; the demand of the aesthetic faculties was encouraged in its highest rarest forms and in life's commonest
details. Indian culture did not deface nor impoverish the richness of the grand game of human life; it never depressed or mutilated
the activities of our nature. On the contrary, subject to a certain principle of harmony and government, it allowed them their full,
often their extreme value. Man was allowed to fathom on his way all experience, to give to his character and action a large rein
and heroic proportions, and to fill in life opulently with colour and beauty and enjoyment. This life side of the Indian idea is
stamped in strong relief over the epic and the classical literature. It is amazing indeed that anyone with an eye or a brain could
have read the Ramayana, Mahabharata, the dramas, the literary epics, the romances, and the great abundance of gnomic and lyric
poetry in Sanskrit and in the later tongues (to say nothing of the massive remains of other cultural work and social and political
system and speculation), and yet failed to perceive this breadth, wealth and greatness. One must have read without eyes to see
or without a mind to understand; most indeed of the adverse critics have not read or studied at all, but only flung about their
preconceived notions with a violent or a high-browed ignorant assurance.
But while it is the generous office of culture to enrich, enlarge and encourage human life, it must also give the vital
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forces a guiding law, subject them to some moral and rational government and lead them beyond their first natural formulations, until it can find for life the clue to a spiritual freedom, perfection and greatness. The preeminent value of the ancient
Indian civilisation lay in the power with which it did this work, the profound wisdom and high and subtle skill with which it
based society and ordered the individual life, and encouraged and guided the propensities of human nature and finally turned
them all towards the realisation of its master idea. The mind it was training, while not called away from its immediate aims,
was never allowed to lose sight of the use of life as a discipline for spiritual perfection and a passage to the Infinite.
The Indian mind whether in the government of life or in the discipline of spirituality kept always in sight two main truths of
our existence. First, our being in its growth has stages through which it must pass: if there are sometimes leaps forward, yet
most of its growth is a developing progression; the swiftest race has its stadia. Then again, life is complex and the nature of
man is complex; in each life man has to figure a certain sum of its complexity and put that into some kind of order. But the
initial movement of life is that form of it which develops the powers of the natural ego in man; self-interest and hedonistic
desire are the original human motives, — kāma, artha. Indian
culture gave a large recognition to this primary turn of our nature. These powers have to be accepted and put in order; for
the natural ego-life must be lived and the forces it evolves in the human being must be brought to fullness. But this element
must be kept from making any too unbridled claim or heading furiously towards its satisfaction; only so can it get its full results
without disaster and only so can it be inspired eventually to go beyond itself and turn in the end to a greater spiritual Good
and Bliss. An internal or external anarchy cannot be the rule; a life governed in any absolute or excessive degree by self-will,
passion, sense-attraction, self-interest and desire cannot be the natural whole of a human or a humane existence. The tempting
imagination that it can and that this is the true law is a lure with which the Western mind has played in characteristic leanings
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or outbursts; but this turn unjustly called Paganism, — for the Greek or Pagan intelligence had a noble thought for law and
harmony and self-rule, — is alien to the Indian spirit. India has felt the call of the senses not less than Greece, Rome or modern
Europe; she perceived very well the possibility of a materialistic life and its attraction worked on certain minds and gave birth
to the philosophy of the Charvakas: but this could not take full hold or establish even for a time any dominant empire. Even if
we can see in it, when lived on a grand scale, a certain perverse greatness, still a colossal egoism indulgent of the sole life of the
mind and the senses was regarded by her as the nature of the Asura and Rakshasa. It is the Titanic, gigantic or demoniac type
of spirit, permitted in its own plane, but not the proper law for a human life. Another power claims man and overtops desire
and self-interest and self-will, the power of the Dharma.
The Dharma, at once religious law of action and deepest
law of our nature, is not, as in the Western idea, a creed, cult or ideal inspiring an ethical and social rule; it is the right law
of functioning of our life in all its parts. The tendency of man to seek after a just and perfect law of his living finds its truth
and its justification in the Dharma. Every thing indeed has its dharma, its law of life imposed on it by its nature; but for man
the dharma is the conscious imposition of a rule of ideal living on all his members. Dharma is fixed in its essence, but still it
develops in our consciousness and evolves and has its stages; there are gradations of spiritual and ethical ascension in the
search for the highest law of our nature. All men cannot follow in all things one common and invariable rule. Life is too complex
to admit of the arbitrary ideal simplicity which the moralising theorist loves. Natures differ; the position, the work we have to
do has its own claims and standards; the aim and bent, the call of life, the call of the spirit within is not the same for everyone: the
degree and turn of development and the capacity, adhikara, are
not equal. Man lives in society and by society, and every society has its own general dharma, and the individual life must be fitted
into this wider law of movement. But there too the individual's part in society and his nature and the needs of his capacity and
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temperament vary and have many kinds and degrees: the social law must make some room for this variety and would lose by
being rigidly one for all. The man of knowledge, the man of power, the productive and acquisitive man, the priest, scholar,
poet, artist, ruler, fighter, trader, tiller of the soil, craftsman, labourer, servant cannot usefully have the same training, cannot
be shaped in the same pattern, cannot all follow the same way of living. All ought not to be put under the same tables of the
law; for that would be a senseless geometric rigidity that would spoil the plastic truth of life. Each has his type of nature and
there must be a rule for the perfection of that type; each has his own proper function and there must be a canon and ideal
for the function. There must be in all things some wise and understanding standard of practice and idea of perfection and
living rule, — that is the one thing needful for the Dharma. A lawless impulsion of desire and interest and propensity cannot be
allowed to lead human conduct; even in the frankest following of desire and interest and propensity there must be a governing and
restraining and directing line, a guidance. There must be an ethic or a science, a restraint as well as a scope arising from the truth
of the thing sought, a standard of perfection, an order. Differing with the type of the man and the type of the function these special
dharmas would yet rise towards the greater law and truth that contains and overtops the others and is universally effective.
This then was the Dharma, special for the special person, stage of development, pursuit of life or individual field of action, but
universal too in the broad lines which all ought to pursue.
The universal embracing dharma in the Indian idea is a law
of ideal perfection for the developing mind and soul of man; it compels him to grow in the power and force of certain high or
large universal qualities which in their harmony build a highest type of manhood. In Indian thought and life this was the ideal
of the best, the law of the good or noble man, the discipline laid down for the self-perfecting individual,
ārya, śrestha,
sajjana,
sādhu. This ideal was not a purely moral or ethical conception,
although that element might predominate; it was also intellectual, religious, social, aesthetic, the flowering of the whole ideal
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man, the perfection of the total human nature. The most varied
qualities met in the Indian conception of the best, śrestha, the
good and noble man, ārya. In the heart benevolence, beneficence, love, compassion, altruism, long-suffering, liberality, kindliness,
patience; in the character courage, heroism, energy, loyalty, continence, truth, honour, justice, faith, obedience and reverence
where these were due, but power too to govern and direct, a fine modesty and yet a strong independence and noble pride; in
the mind wisdom and intelligence and love of learning, knowledge of all the best thought, an openness to poetry, art and
beauty, an educated capacity and skill in works; in the inner being a strong religious sense, piety, love of God, seeking after
the Highest, the spiritual turn; in social relations and conduct a strict observance of all the social dharmas, as father, son,
husband, brother, kinsman, friend, ruler or subject, master or servant, priest or warrior or worker, king or sage, member of
clan or caste: this was the total ideal of the Arya, the man of high upbringing and noble nature. The ideal is clearly portrayed in
the written records of ancient India during two millenniums and it is the very life-breath of Hindu ethics. It was the creation of an
at once ideal and rational mind, spirit-wise and worldly-wise, deeply religious, nobly ethical, firmly yet flexibly intellectual,
scientific and aesthetic, patient and tolerant of life's difficulties and human weakness, but arduous in self-discipline. This was
the mind that was at the base of the Indian civilisation and gave its characteristic stamp to all the culture.
But even this was only the foundation and preparation for another highest thing which by its presence exalts human life
beyond itself into something spiritual and divine. Indian culture raised the crude animal life of desire, self-interest and satisfied
propensity beyond its first intention to a noble self-exceeding and shapeliness by infusing into it the order and high aims of
the Dharma. But its profounder characteristic aim — and in this it was unique
— was to raise this nobler life too of the self-perfecting human being beyond its own intention to a mightiest self-exceeding and freedom; it laboured to infuse into it the
great aim of spiritual liberation and perfection, mukti, moksa.
.
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The Law and its observance are neither the beginning nor the end of man; there is beyond the field of the Law a larger realm
of consciousness in which, climbing, he emerges into a great spiritual freedom. Not a noble but ever death-bound manhood
is the highest height of man's perfection: immortality, freedom, divinity are within his grasp. Ancient Indian culture held this
highest aim constantly before the inner eye of the soul and insistently inspired with its prospect and light the whole conception
of existence. The entire life of the individual was ennobled by this aim; the whole ordering of society was cast into a scale of
graduated ascension towards this supreme summit.
A well-governed system of the individual and communal
existence must be always in the first instance an ordering of the three first powers recognised by Indian thought. The claim of
the natural functionings must be recognised in it to the full; the pursuit of personal and communal interest and the satisfaction
of human desires as of human needs must be amply admitted and there must be an understanding combination of knowledge and
labour towards these ends. But all must be controlled, uplifted and widened to greater aims by the ideal of the Dharma. And
if, as India believes, there is a higher spiritual consciousness towards which man can rise, that ascent must be kept throughout in view as the supreme goal of life. The system of Indian culture at once indulged and controlled man's nature; it fitted
him for his social role; it stamped on his mind the generous ideal of an accomplished humanity refined, harmonised in all
its capacities, ennobled in all its members; but it placed before him too the theory and practice of a highest change, familiarised
him with the conception of a spiritual existence and sowed in him a hunger for the divine and the infinite. The symbols of
his religion were filled with suggestions which led towards it; at every step he was reminded of lives behind and in front
and of worlds beyond the material existence; he was brought close to the nearness, even to the call and pressure of the Spirit
who is greater than the life it informs, of the final goal, of a high possible immortality, freedom, God-consciousness, divine
Nature. Man was not allowed to forget that he had in him a
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highest self beyond his little personal ego and that always he and all things live, move and have their being in God, in the
Eternal, in the Spirit. There were ways and disciplines provided in number by which he could realise this liberating truth or
could at least turn and follow at a distance this highest aim
according to his capacity and nature, adhikara. Around him he saw and revered the powerful practicants and the mighty
masters of these disciplines. These men were in early times the teachers of his youth, the summits of his society, the inspirers
and fountain-heads of his civilisation, the great lights of his culture. Spiritual freedom, spiritual perfection were not figured
as a far-off intangible ideal, but presented as the highest human aim towards which all must grow in the end, and were made
near and possible to his endeavour from a first practicable basis of life and the Dharma. The spiritual idea governed, enlightened
and gathered towards itself all the other life-motives of a great civilised people.
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VI
A Rationalistic Critic on
Indian Culture 6
THESE are the principal lines upon which the structure of Indian civilisation was founded and they constitute the
power of its conception of life. I do not think it can be said that there is here any inferiority to other human cultures or
to any established conception of life that has ever held sway over the mind of man in historic times. There is nothing here that can
be said to discourage life and its flowering or to deprive it of impetus and elevation and a great motive. On the contrary there
is a full and frank recognition and examination of the whole of human existence in all its variety and range and power, there
is a clear and wise and noble idea for its right government and there is an ideal tendency pointing it upward and a magnificent
call to a highest possible perfection and greatness. These are the serious uses of culture, these are the things that raise the life of
man above a crude, primitive barbarism. If a civilisation is to be judged by the power of its ideas, their power for these great
uses, Indian civilisation was inferior to none. Certainly, it was not perfect or final or complete; for that can be alleged of no past
or present cultural idea or system. Man is in his inmost self an infinite being, in his mind and life too he is continually growing,
with whatever stumblings and long relapses, and he cannot be permanently bound in any one system of ideas or frame of living.
The structures in which he lives are incomplete and provisional; even those which seem the most comprehensive lose their force
to stand and are convicted by time of insufficiency and must be replaced or change. But this at least can be said of the Indian idea
that it seized with a remarkable depth and comprehensiveness on the main truths and needs of the whole human being, on his
mind and life and body, his artistic and ethical and intellectual
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parts of nature, his soul and spirit, and gave them a subtle and liberal, a profoundly large and high and wise, a sympathetic and
yet nobly arduous direction. More cannot be said for any past or any existing culture.
But there must be in any culture aiming at completeness, not only great and noble governing and inspiring ideas, but a
harmony of forms and rhythms, a mould into which the ideas and the life can run and settle. Here we must be prepared for
a lesser perfection, a greater incompleteness. And the reason is that just as the spirit is vaster than its ideas, the ideas too
are larger than their forms, moulds and rhythms. Form has a certain fixity which limits; no form can exhaust or fully express
the potentialities of the idea or force that gave it birth. Neither can any idea, however great, or any limited play of force or
form bind the infinite spirit: that is the secret of earth's need of mutation and progress. The idea is only a partial expression
of the spirit. Even within its own limits, on its own lines it ought always to become more supple, to fill itself out with other
views, to rise and broaden to new applications, and often it has to lose itself in uplifting transformations of its own meaning
into vaster significances or fuse itself into new and richer syntheses. In the history of all great cultures therefore we find a
passage through three periods, for this passage is a necessary consequence of this truth of things. There is a first period of
large and loose formation; there is a second period in which we see a fixing of forms, moulds and rhythms; and there is a closing
or a critical period of superannuation, decay and disintegration. This last stage is the supreme crisis in the life of a civilisation;
if it cannot transform itself, it enters into a slow lingering decline or else collapses in a death agony brought about by the
rapid impact of stronger and more immediately living though not necessarily greater or truer powers or formations. But if
it is able to shake itself free of limiting forms, to renovate its ideas and to give a new scope to its spirit, if it is willing to
understand, master and assimilate novel growths and necessities, then there is a rebirth, a fresh lease of life and expansion, a true
renascence.
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Indian civilisation passed in its own large and leisurely manner through all these stages. Its first period was that of a great
spiritual outflowering in which the forms were supple, flexible and freely responsive to its essential spirit. That fluid movement
passed away into an age of strong intellectuality in which all was fixed into distinct, sufficiently complex, but largely treated and
still supple forms and rhythms. There came as a consequence a period of richly crystallised fixity shaken by crises which were
partly met by a change of ideas and a modification of forms. But the hard binding of set forms triumphed at last and there
was a decline of the inspiring spirit, a stagnation of living force, a progressive decay of the outward structure. This decay was
accompanied and at once arrested for a moment and hastened in the end by the impact of other cultures. Today we are in the midst
of a violent and decisive crisis brought about by the inflooding of the West and of all for which it stands. An upheaval resulted
that began with the threat of a total death and irretrievable destruction of the culture; but its course is now uplifted on the
contrary by the strong hope of a great revival, transmutation and renascence. Each of these three stages has its special significance
for the student of culture. If we would understand the essential spirit of Indian civilisation, we must go back to its first formative period, the early epoch of the Veda and the Upanishads, its heroic creative seed-time. If we would study the fixed forms
of its spirit and discern the thing it eventually realised as the basic rhythm of its life, we must look with an observing eye at
the later middle period of the Shastras and the classic writings, the age of philosophy and science, legislation and political and
social theory and many-sided critical thought, religious fixation, art, sculpture, painting, architecture. If we would discover the
limitations, the points at which it stopped short and failed to develop its whole or its true spirit, we must observe closely the
unhappy disclosures of its period of decline. If, finally, we would discover the directions it is likely to follow in its transformation,
we must try to fathom what lies beneath the still confused movements of its crisis of renascence. None of these can indeed be cut
clean apart from each other; for what developed in one period
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is already forecast and begun in the preceding age: but still on a certain large and imprecise scale we can make these distinctions
and they are necessary for a discerning analytic view. But at present we are only concerned with the developed forms and
the principal rhythms which persisted through its greater eras.
The problem which Indian culture had to solve was that of a
firm outward basis on which to found the practical development of its spirit and its idea in life. How are we to take the natural
life of man and, while allowing it sufficient scope and variety and freedom, yet to subject it to a law, canon, dharma, a law
of function, a law of type, a law of each actual unideal human tendency and a law too of highest ideal intention? And how
again are we to point that dharma towards its own exceeding by the fulfilment and cessation of its disciplinary purpose in
the secure freedom of the spiritual life? Indian culture from an early stage seized upon a double idea for its own guidance
which it threw into a basic system of the individual life in the social frame. This was the double system of the four Varnas
and the four Asramas, — four graded classes of society and four successive stages of a developing human life.
The ancient Chaturvarnya must not be judged by its later disintegrated degeneration and gross meaningless parody, the
caste system. But neither was it precisely the system of the classes which we find in other civilisations, priesthood, nobility, merchant class and serfs or labourers. It may have had outwardly the same starting-point, but it was given a very different revealing significance. The ancient Indian idea was that man falls by his nature into four types. There are, first and highest, the
man of learning and thought and knowledge; next, the man of power and action, ruler, warrior, leader, administrator; third in
the scale, the economic man, producer and wealth-getter, the merchant, artisan, cultivator: these were the twice-born, who
received the initiation, Brahmin, Kshatriya, Vaishya. Last came the more undeveloped human type, not yet fit for these steps of
the scale, unintellectual, without force, incapable of creation or intelligent production, the man fit only for unskilled labour and
menial service, the Shudra. The economic order of society was
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cast in the form and gradation of these four types. The Brahmin class was called upon to give the community its priests, thinkers,
men of letters, legists, scholars, religious leaders and guides. The Kshatriya class gave it its kings, warriors, governors and administrators. The Vaishya order supplied it with its producers, agriculturists, craftsmen, artisans, merchants and traders. The
Shudra class ministered to its need of menials and servants. As far as this went, there was nothing peculiar in the system except
its extraordinary durability and, perhaps, the supreme position given to religion, thought and learning, not only at the top of
the scale, — for that can be paralleled from one or two other civilisations, — but as the dominant power. The Indian idea in
its purity fixed the status of a man in this order not by his birth, but by his capacities and his inner nature, and, if this rule
had been strictly observed, that would have been a very clear mark of distinctness, a superiority of a unique kind. But even
the best society is always something of a machine and gravitates towards the material sign and standard, and to found truly the
social order upon this finer psychological basis would have been in those times a difficult and vain endeavour. In practice we find
that birth became the basis of the Varna. It is elsewhere that we must look for the strong distinguishing mark which has made
of this social structure a thing apart and sole in its type.
At no time indeed was the adherence to the economic rule
quite absolute. The early ages show a considerable flexibility which was not quite lost in the process of complex crystallisation into a fixed form. And even in the greater rigidity of the latter-day caste system there has been in practice a confusion
of economic functions. The vitality of a vigorous community cannot obey at every point the indications of a pattern and
tradition cut by the mechanising mind. Moreover there was always a difference between the ideal theory of the system and
its rougher unideal practice. For the material side of an idea or system has always its weaknesses even in its best times, and
the final defect of all systems of this kind is that they stiffen into a fixed hierarchy which cannot maintain permanently its
purity or the utility it was meant to serve. It becomes a soulless
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form and prolongs itself in a state of corruption, degeneracy or oppressive formalism when the uses that justified it are no
longer in existence. Even when its ways can no longer be made consistent with the developing needs of the growth of humanity,
the formal system persists and corrupts the truth of life and blocks progress. Indian society did not escape this general law;
it was overtaken by these deficiencies, lost the true sense of the thing which it set out to embody and degenerated into a chaos of
castes, developing evils which we are now much embarrassed to eliminate. But it was a well-devised and necessary scheme in its
time; it gave the community the firm and nobly built stability it needed for the security of its cultural development,
— a stability
hardly paralleled in any other culture. And, as interpreted by the Indian genius, it became a greater thing than a mere outward
economic, political and social mechanism intended to serve the needs and convenience of the collective life.
For the real greatness of the Indian system of the four varnas did not lie in its well-ordered division of economic function;
its true originality and permanent value was in the ethical and spiritual content which the thinkers and builders of the society
poured into these forms. This inner content started with the idea that the intellectual, ethical and spiritual growth of the
individual is the central need of the race. Society itself is only the necessary framework for this growth; it is a system of relations
which provides it with its needed medium, field and conditions and with a nexus of helpful influences. A secure place had to
be found in the community for the individual man from which he could at once serve these relations, helping to maintain the
society and pay it his debt of duty and assistance, and proceed to his own self-development with the best possible aid from the
communal life. Birth was accepted in practice as the first gross and natural indicator; for heredity to the Indian mind has always
ranked as a factor of the highest importance: it was even taken in later thought as a sign of the nature and as an index to the
surroundings which the individual had prepared for himself by his past soul-development in former existences. But birth is not
and cannot be the sole test of Varna. The intellectual capacity
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of the man, the turn of his temperament, his ethical nature, his spiritual stature, these are the important factors. There was
erected therefore a rule of family living, a system of individual observance and self-training, a force of upbringing and education which would bring out and formulate these essential things. The individual man was carefully trained in the capacities, habits
and attainments, and habituated to the sense of honour and duty necessary for the discharge of his allotted function in life. He was
scrupulously equipped with the science of the thing he had to do, the best way to succeed in it as an interest,
artha, and to
attain to the highest rule, canon and recognised perfection of its activities, economic, political, sacerdotal, literary, scholastic or
whatever else they might be. Even the most despised pursuits had their education, their law and canon, their ambition of success,
their sense of honour in the discharge and scruple of well-doing, their dignity of a fixed standard of perfection, and it was because
they had these things that even the lowest and least attractive could be in a certain degree a means of self-finding and ordered
self-satisfaction. In addition to this special function and training there were the general accomplishments, sciences, arts, graces of
life, those which satisfy the intellectual, aesthetic and hedonistic powers of human nature. These in ancient India were many
and various, were taught with minuteness, thoroughness and subtlety and were available to all men of culture.
But while there was provision for all these things and it was made with a vivid liberality of the life-spirit and a noble sense
of order, the spirit of Indian culture did not, like other ancient cultures, stop here. It said to the individual: "This is only the
substructure; it is of a pressing importance indeed, but still not the last and greatest thing. When you have paid your debt to
society, filled well and admirably your place in its life, helped its maintenance and continuity and taken from it your legitimate
and desired satisfactions, there still remains the greatest thing of all. There is still your own self, the inner you, the soul which
is a spiritual portion of the Infinite, one in its essence with the Eternal. This self, this soul in you you have to find, you are here
for that, and it is from the place I have provided for you in life
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and by this training that you can begin to find it. For to each Varna I have supplied its highest ideal of manhood, the highest
ideal way of which your nature is capable. By directing your life and nature in its own law of being towards that perfection, you
can not only grow towards the ideal and enter into harmony with universal nature but come also into nearness and contact with
a greater nature of divinity and move towards transcendence. That is the real object before you. From the life-basis I give you
you can rise to the liberating knowledge which brings a spiritual release,
moksa. Then you can grow out of all these limitations in
. which you are being trained; you can grow through the fulfilled
Dharma and beyond it into the eternity of your self, into the fullness, freedom, greatness and bliss of the immortal spirit; for
that is what each man is behind the veils of his nature. When you have done that you are free. Then you have gone beyond all the
dharmas; you are then a universal soul, one with all existence, and you can either act in that divine liberty for the good of all
living things or else turn to enjoy in solitude the bliss of eternity and transcendence." The whole system of society, founded on
the four varnas, was made a harmonious means for the elevation and progress of the soul, mind and life from the natural pursuit
of interest and desire first to the perfection of the law of our being, Dharma, and at the end to a highest spiritual freedom.
For man's true end in life must be always this realisation of his own immortal self, this entry in its secret of an infinite and
eternal existence.
The Indian system did not entirely leave this difficult growth
to the individual's unaided inner initiative. It supplied him with a framework; it gave him a scale and gradation for his life which
could be made into a kind of ladder rising in that sense. This high convenience was the object of the four Asramas. Life was
divided into four natural periods and each of them marked out a stage in the working out of this cultural idea of living. There
was the period of the student, the period of the householder, the period of the recluse or forest-dweller, the period of the
free supersocial man, parivrājaka. The student life was framed
to lay the groundwork of what the man had to know, do and
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be. It gave a thorough training in the necessary arts, sciences, branches of knowledge, but it was still more insistent on the
discipline of the ethical nature and in earlier days contained as an indispensable factor a grounding in the Vedic formula
of spiritual knowledge. In these earlier days this training was given in suitable surroundings far away from the life of cities
and the teacher was one who had himself passed through the round of this circle of living and, very usually, even, one who
had arrived at some remarkable realisation of spiritual knowledge. But subsequently education became more intellectual and
mundane; it was imparted in cities and universities and aimed less at an inner preparation of character and knowledge and
more at instruction and the training of the intelligence. But in the beginning the Aryan man was really prepared in some degree
for the four great objects of his life, artha, kāma, dharma,
moksa.
Entering into the householder stage to live out his knowledge,
he was able to serve there the three first human objects; he satisfied his natural being and its interests and desire to take the
joy of life, he paid his debt to the society and its demands and by the way he discharged his life functions he prepared himself
for the last greatest purpose of his existence. In the third stage he retired to the forest and worked out in a certain seclusion
the truth of his spirit. He lived in a broad freedom from the stricter social bonds; but if he so willed, gathering the young
around him or receiving the inquirer and seeker, he could leave his knowledge to the new rising generation as an educator or a
spiritual teacher. In the last stage of life he was free to throw off every remaining tie and to wander over the world in an extreme
spiritual detachment from all the forms of social life, satisfying only the barest necessities, communing with the universal spirit,
making his soul ready for eternity. This circle was not obligatory on all. The great majority never went beyond the two first stages;
many passed away in the vānaprastha or forest stage. Only the
rare few made the last extreme venture and took the life of the wandering recluse. But this profoundly conceived cycle gave a
scheme which kept the full course of the human spirit in its view; it could be taken advantage of by all according to their
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actual growth and in its fullness by those who were sufficiently developed in their present birth to complete the circle.
On this first firm and noble basis Indian civilisation grew to its maturity and became a thing rich, splendid and unique. While
it filled the view with the last mountain prospect of a supreme spiritual elevation, it did not neglect the life of the levels. It
lived between the busy life of the city and village, the freedom and seclusion of the forest and the last overarching illimitable
ether. Moving firmly between life and death it saw beyond both and cut out a hundred high-roads to immortality. It developed
the external nature and drew it into the inner self; it enriched life to raise it into the spirit. Thus founded, thus trained, the
ancient Indian race grew to astonishing heights of culture and civilisation; it lived with a noble, well-based, ample and vigorous
order and freedom; it developed a great literature, sciences, arts, crafts, industries; it rose to the highest possible ideals and no
mean practice of knowledge and culture, of arduous greatness and heroism, of kindness, philanthropy and human sympathy
and oneness; it laid the inspired basis of wonderful spiritual philosophies; it examined the secrets of external nature and discovered and lived the boundless and miraculous truths of the inner being; it fathomed self and understood and possessed the
world. As the civilisation grew in richness and complexity, it lost indeed the first grand simplicity of its early order. The intellect
towered and widened, but intuition waned or retreated into the hearts of the saints and adepts and mystics. A greater stress came
to be laid on scientific system, accuracy and order, not only in all the things of the life and mind, but even in the things of the
spirit; the free flood of intuitive knowledge was forced to run in hewn channels. Society became more artificial and complex, less
free and noble; more of a bond on the individual, it was less a field for the growth of his spiritual faculties. The old fine integral
harmony gave place to an exaggerated stress on one or other of
its elemental factors. Artha and kāma, interest and desire were in some directions developed at the expense of the
dharma. The
lines of the dharma were filled and stamped in with so rigid a distinctness as to stand in the way of the freedom of the spirit.
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Spiritual liberation was pursued in hostility to life and not as its full-orbed result and high crowning. But still some strong basis
of the old knowledge remained to inspire, to harmonise, to keep alive the soul of India. Even when deterioration came and a slow
collapse, even when the life of the community degenerated into an uneasily petrified ignorance and confusion, the old spiritual
aim and tradition remained to sweeten and humanise and save in its worst days the Indian peoples. For we see that it continually swept back on the race in new waves and high outbursts of life-giving energy or leaped up in intense kindlings of the
spiritualised mind or heart, even as it now rises once more in all its strength to give the impulse of a great renascence.
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