{"id":2101,"date":"2013-07-13T01:39:27","date_gmt":"2013-07-13T01:39:27","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/?p=2101"},"modified":"2013-07-13T01:39:27","modified_gmt":"2013-07-13T01:39:27","slug":"32-the-eternal-and-the-individual-vol-21-22-the-life-divine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/01-works-of-sri-aurobindo\/03-cwsa\/21-22-the-life-divine\/32-the-eternal-and-the-individual-vol-21-22-the-life-divine","title":{"rendered":"-32_The Eternal and the Individual.html"},"content":{"rendered":"<div align=\"center\">\n<table border=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" cellspacing=\"0\" width=\"100%\">\n<tr>\n<td width=\"100%\" valign=\"top\">\n<font face=\"Times New Roman\"> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<b>Chapter III  <\/b><br \/>\n<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<b><font size=\"4\">The Eternal and the Individual <\/font><\/b><br \/>\n<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:25pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">He am I.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"right\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:25pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<i>Isha Upanishad.<\/i><sup><font size=\"2\">1<\/font><\/sup>  <\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:25pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:25pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">It is an eternal portion of Me that has become the living being  in a world of living beings. . . . The eye of knowledge sees the  Lord abiding in the body and enjoying and going forth from<br \/>\nit<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"right\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:25pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<i>Gita.<\/i><sup><font size=\"2\">2<\/font><\/sup> .  <\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:25pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:25pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">Two birds beautiful of wing, friends and comrades, cling to a  common tree, and one eats the sweet fruit, the other regards  him and eats not. . . . Where winged souls cry the discoveries  of knowledge over their portion of immortality, there the Lord  of all, the Guardian of the World took possession of me, he<br \/>\nthe Wise, me the ignorant<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"right\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:25pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<i>Rig Veda.<\/i><sup><font size=\"2\">3<\/font><\/sup><br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:25pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<b><font size=\"5\">T<\/font>HERE<\/b> is then a fundamental truth of existence, an  Omnipresent Reality, omnipresent above the cosmic  manifestation and in it and immanent in each individual.  There is also a dynamic power of this Omnipresence, a creative  or self-manifesting action of its infinite Consciousness-Force.  There is as a phase or movement of the self-manifestation a  descent into an apparent material inconscience, an awakening  of the individual out of the Inconscience and an evolution of  his being into the spiritual and supramental consciousness and  power of the Reality, into his own universal and transcendent  Self and source of existence. It is on this foundation that we  have to base our conception of a truth in our terrestrial being  and the possibility of a divine Life in material Nature. There our  chief need is to discover the origin and nature of the Ignorance<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">1 Verse 16.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 2<br \/>\nXV. 7, 10.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 3 I. 164. 20, 21.  &nbsp; <\/font><br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 380<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n\t<span lang=\"en-gb\">which we see emerging out of the inconscience of matter or  disclosing itself within a body of matter and the nature of the  Knowledge that has to replace it, to understand too the process  of Nature&#8217;s self-unfolding and the soul&#8217;s recovery. For in fact  the Knowledge is there concealed in the Ignorance itself; it  has rather to be unveiled than acquired: it reveals itself rather  than is learned, by an inward and upward self-unfolding. But  first it will be convenient to meet and get out of the way one  difficulty that inevitably arises, the difficulty of admitting that,  even given the immanence of the Divine in us, even given our  individual consciousness as a vehicle of progressive evolutionary  manifestation, the individual is in any sense eternal or that there  can be any persistence of individuality after liberation has been  attained by unity and self-knowledge.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">This is a difficulty of the logical reason and must be met  by a larger and more catholic enlightening reason. Or if it is a  difficulty of spiritual experience, it can only be met by a wider  resolving experience. It can indeed be met also by a dialectical  battle, a logomachy of the logical mind; but that by itself is an  artificial method, often a futile combat in the clouds and always  inconclusive. Logical reasoning is useful and indispensable in its  own field in order to give the mind a certain clearness, precision<br \/>\n\tand subtlety in dealing with its own ideas and word-symbols, so that our<br \/>\n\tperception of the truths which we arrive at by observation and experience or which physically, psychologically or  spiritually we have seen, may be as little as possible obscured by  the confusions of our average human intelligence, its proneness  to take appearance for fact, its haste to be misled by partial  truth, its exaggerated conclusions, its intellectual and emotional  partialities, its incompetent bunglings in that linking of truth to  truth by which alone we can arrive at a complete knowledge. We  must have a clear, pure, subtle and flexible mind in order that we  may fall as little as possible into that ordinary mental habit of  our kind which turns truth itself into a purveyor of errors. That  clarification the habit of clear logical reasoning culminating in  the method of metaphysical dialectics does help to accomplish  and its part in the preparation of knowledge is therefore very  &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 381<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n  <span lang=\"en-gb\">great. But by itself it cannot arrive either at the knowledge of  the world or the knowledge of God, much less reconcile the  lower and the higher realisation. It is much more efficiently a  guardian against error than a discoverer of truth,&nbsp; \u2014 although  by deduction from knowledge already acquired it may happen  upon new truths and indicate them for experience or for the  higher and larger truth-seeing faculties to confirm. In the more  subtle field of synthetical or unifying knowledge the logical habit  of mind may even become a stumbling-block by the very faculty  which gives it its peculiar use; for it is so accustomed to making  distinctions and dwelling upon distinctions and working by distinctions that it is always a little at sea when distinctions have to  be overridden and overpassed. Our object, then, in considering  the difficulties of the normal mind when face to face with the  experience of cosmic and transcendental unity by the individual,  must be solely to make more clear to ourselves, first, the origin  of the difficulties and the escape from them and by that, what is  more important, the real nature of the unity at which we arrive  and of the culmination of the individual when he becomes one  with all creatures and dwells in the oneness of the Eternal.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">The first difficulty for the reason is that it has always been  accustomed to identify the individual self with the ego and to  think of it as existing only by the limitations and exclusions of  the ego. If that were so, then by the transcendence of the ego the  individual would abolish his own existence; our end would be  to disappear and dissolve into some universality of matter, life,  mind or spirit or else some indeterminate from which our egoistic determinations of individuality have started. But what is this  strongly separative self-experience that we call ego? It is nothing  fundamentally real in itself but only a practical construction of  our consciousness devised to centralise the activities of Nature in  us. We perceive a formation of mental, physical, vital experience  which distinguishes itself from the rest of being, and that is what  we think of as ourselves in nature&nbsp; \u2014 this individualisation of<br \/>\n\tbeing in becoming. We then proceed to conceive of ourselves as something<br \/>\n\twhich has thus individualised itself and only exists so long as it is individualised,&nbsp;<br \/>\n\u2014 a temporary or at least a  &nbsp;  <\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 382<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n\t<span lang=\"en-gb\">temporal becoming; or else we conceive of ourselves as someone  who supports or causes the individualisation, an immortal being  perhaps but limited by its individuality. This perception and this  conception constitute our ego-sense. Normally, we go no farther  in our knowledge of our individual existence.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">But in the end we have to see that our individualisation  is only a superficial formation, a practical selection and limited  conscious synthesis for the temporary utility of life in a particular  body, or else it is a constantly changing and developing synthesis  pursued through successive lives in successive bodies. Behind it  there is a consciousness, a Purusha, who is not determined or  limited by his individualisation or by this synthesis but on the  contrary determines, supports and yet exceeds it. That which  he selects from in order to construct this synthesis, is his total  experience of the world-being. Therefore our individualisation  exists by virtue of the world-being, but also by virtue of a  consciousness which uses the world-being for experience of its  possibilities of individuality. These two powers, Person and his  world-material, are both necessary for our present experience  of individuality. If the Purusha with his individualising synthesis  of consciousness were to disappear, to merge, to annul himself  in any way, our constructed individuality would cease because  the Reality that supported it would no longer be in presence;  if, on the other hand, the world-being were to dissolve, merge,  disappear, then also our individualisation would cease, for the  material of experience by which it effectuates itself would be  wanting. We have then to recognise these two terms of our existence, a world-being and an individualising consciousness which  is the cause of all our self-experience and world-experience.<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">But we see farther that in the end this Purusha, this cause  and self of our individuality, comes to embrace the whole world  and all other beings in a sort of conscious extension of itself  and to perceive itself as one with the world-being. In its conscious extension of itself it exceeds the primary experience and  abolishes the barriers of its active self-limitation and individualisation; by its perception of its own infinite universality it goes  beyond all consciousness of separative individuality or limited  &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 383<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n  <span lang=\"en-gb\">soul-being. By that very fact the individual ceases to be the<br \/>\n\tself-limiting ego; in other words, our false consciousness of existing  only by self-limitation, by rigid distinction of ourselves from the  rest of being and becoming is transcended; our identification of<br \/>\n\tourselves with our personal and temporal individualisation in a particular<br \/>\n\tmind and body is abolished. But is all truth of individuality and individualisation abolished? does the Purusha cease  to exist or does he become the world-Purusha and live intimately  in innumerable minds and bodies? We do not find it to be so.  He still individualises and it is still he who exists and embraces  this wider consciousness while he individualises: but the mind  no longer thinks of a limited temporary individualisation as all  ourselves but only as a wave of becoming thrown up from the  sea of its being or else as a form or centre of universality. The  soul still makes the world-becoming the material for individual  experience, but instead of regarding it as something outside and<br \/>\n\tlarger than itself on which it has to draw, by which it is affected, with<br \/>\n\twhich it has to make accommodations, it is aware of it subjectively as within itself; it embraces both its world-material and  its individualised experience of spatial and temporal activities  in a free and enlarged consciousness. In this new consciousness  the spiritual individual perceives its true self to be one in being  with the Transcendence and seated and dwelling within it, and  no longer takes its constructed individuality as anything more  than a formation for world-experience.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">Our unity with the world-being is the consciousness of a  Self which at one and the same time cosmicises in the world and  individualises through the individual Purusha, and both in that  world-being and in this individual being and in all individual  beings it is aware of the same Self manifesting and experiencing  its various manifestations. That then is a Self which must be  one in its being,&nbsp; \u2014 otherwise we could not have this experience  of unity,&nbsp; \u2014 and yet must be capable in its very unity of cosmic  differentiation and multiple individuality. The unity is its being,  &nbsp;\u2014 yes, but the cosmic differentiation and the multiple individuality are the power of its being which it is constantly displaying  and which it is its delight and the nature of its consciousness to  &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 384<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n\t<span lang=\"en-gb\">display. If then we arrive at unity with that, if we even become  entirely and in every way that being, why should the power of  its being be excised and why at all should we desire or labour to  excise it? We should then only diminish the scope of our unity  with it by an exclusive concentration accepting the divine being  but not accepting our part in the power and consciousness and  infinite delight of the Divine. It would in fact be the individual  seeking peace and rest of union in a motionless identity, but  rejecting delight and various joy of union in the nature and act  and power of the divine Existence. That is possible, but there is  no necessity to uphold it as the ultimate aim of our being or as  our ultimate perfection.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">Or the one possible reason would be that in the power, the  act of consciousness there is not real union and that only in the  status of consciousness is there perfect undifferentiated unity.  Now in what we may call the waking union of the individual  with the Divine, as opposed to a falling asleep or a concentration  of the individual consciousness in an absorbed identity, there is  certainly and must be a differentiation of experience. For in this  active unity the individual Purusha enlarges its active experience<br \/>\n\talso as well as its static consciousness into a way of union with this Self<br \/>\n\tof his being and of the world-being, and yet individualisation remains and therefore differentiation. The Purusha is  aware of all other individuals as selves of himself; he may by  a dynamic union become aware of their mental and practical  action as occurring in his universal consciousness, just as he is  aware of his own mental and practical action; he may help to  determine their action by subjective union with them: but still  there is a practical difference. The action of the Divine in himself  is that with which he is particularly and directly concerned; the  action of the Divine in his other selves is that with which he  is universally concerned, not directly, but through and by his  union with them and with the Divine. The individual therefore  exists though he exceeds the little separative ego; the universal  exists and is embraced by him but it does not absorb and abolish  all individual differentiation, even though by his universalising  himself the limitation which we call the ego is overcome.  &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 385<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n\t<span lang=\"en-gb\">Now we may get rid of this differentiation by plunging into  the absorption of an exclusive unity, but to what end? For perfect  union? But we do not forfeit that by accepting the differentiation  any more than the Divine forfeits His oneness by accepting it.  We have the perfect union in His being and can absorb ourselves  in it at any time, but we have also this other differentiated unity  and can emerge into it and act freely in it at any time without  losing oneness: for we have merged the ego and are absolved  from the exclusive stresses of our mentality. Then for peace and  rest? But we have the peace and rest by virtue of our unity with  Him, even as the Divine possesses for ever His eternal calm in  the midst of His eternal action. Then for the mere joy of getting  rid of all differentiation? But that differentiation has its divine  purpose: it is a means of greater unity, not as in the egoistic life  a means of division; for we enjoy by it our unity with our other  selves and with God in all, which we exclude by our rejection  of His multiple being. In either experience it is the Divine in  the individual possessing and enjoying in one case the Divine  in His pure unity or in the other the Divine in that and in the  unity of the cosmos; it is not the absolute Divine recovering after  having lost His unity. Certainly, we may prefer the absorption  in a pure exclusive unity or a departure into a supracosmic  transcendence, but there is in the spiritual truth of the Divine  Existence no compelling reason why we should not participate  in this large possession and bliss of His universal being which is  the fulfilment of our individuality.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">But we see farther that it is not solely and ultimately the cosmic being into which our individual being enters but something  in which both are unified. As our individualisation in the world  is a becoming of that Self, so is the world too a becoming of  that Self. The world-being includes always the individual being;  therefore these two becomings, the cosmic and the individual,  are always related to each other and in their practical relation  mutually dependent. But we find that the individual being also  comes in the end to include the world in its consciousness, and  since this is not by an abolition of the spiritual individual, but by  his coming to his full, large and perfect self-consciousness, we<br \/>\n <\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 386<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n\t<span lang=\"en-gb\">must suppose that the individual always included the cosmos,  and it is only the surface consciousness which by ignorance failed  to possess that inclusion because of its self-limitation in ego. But  when we speak of the mutual inclusion of the cosmic and the  individual, the world in me, I in the world, all in me, I in all,  &nbsp;\u2014 for that is the liberated self-experience,&nbsp; \u2014 we are evidently  travelling beyond the language of the normal reason. That is  because the words we have to use were minted by mind and given  their values by an intellect bound to the conceptions of physical  Space and circumstance and using for the language of a higher  psychological experience figures drawn from the physical life  and the experience of the senses. But the plane of consciousness  to which the liberated human being arises is not dependent upon  the physical world, and the cosmos which we thus include and<br \/>\n\tare included in is not the physical cosmos, but the harmonically manifest<br \/>\n\tbeing of God in certain great rhythms of His conscious force and self-delight. Therefore this mutual inclusion is spiritual  and psychological; it is a translation of the two forms of the  Many, all and individual, into a unifying spiritual experience,  &nbsp;\u2014 a translation of the eternal unity of the One and the Many;  for the One is the eternal unity of the Many differentiating and  undifferentiating itself in the cosmos. This means that cosmos  and individual are manifestations of a transcendent Self who is  indivisible being although he seems to be divided or distributed;  but he is not really divided or distributed but indivisibly present  everywhere. Therefore all is in each and each is in all and all is  in God and God in all; and when the liberated soul comes into  union with this Transcendent, it has this self-experience of itself  and cosmos which is translated psychologically into a mutual  inclusion and a persistent existence of both in a divine union<br \/>\n\twhich is at once a oneness and a fusion and an embrace. <\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">The normal<br \/>\n\texperience of the reason therefore is not applicable to these higher truths. In the first place the ego is the  individual only in the ignorance; there is a true individual who  is not the ego and still has an eternal relation with all other  individuals which is not egoistic or self-separative, but of which  the essential character is practical mutuality founded in essential  &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 387<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n  <span lang=\"en-gb\">unity. This mutuality founded in unity is the whole secret of the  divine existence in its perfect manifestation; it must be the basis  of anything to which we can give the name of a divine life. But,  secondly, we see that the whole difficulty and confusion into  which the normal reason falls is that we are speaking of a higher  and illimitable self-experience founded on divine infinities and  yet are applying to it a language formed by this lower and limited experience which founds itself on finite appearances and the  separative definitions by which we try to distinguish and classify  the phenomena of the material universe. Thus we have to use the  word individual and speak of the ego and the true individual,  just as we speak sometimes of the apparent and the real Man.  Evidently, all these words, man, apparent, real, individual, true,  have to be taken in a very relative sense and with a full awareness  of their imperfection and inability to express the things that we  mean. By individual we mean normally something that separates  itself from everything else and stands apart, though in reality  there is no such thing anywhere in existence; it is a figment  of our mental conceptions useful and necessary to express a  partial and practical truth. But the difficulty is that the mind  gets dominated by its words and forgets that the partial and  practical truth becomes true truth only by its relation to others  which seem to the reason to contradict it, and that taken by  itself it contains a constant element of falsity. Thus when we  speak of an individual we mean ordinarily an individualisation  of mental, vital, physical being separate from all other beings,  incapable of unity with them by its very individuality. If we go  beyond these three terms of mind, life and body, and speak of the<br \/>\n\tsoul or individual self, we still think of an individualised being separate<br \/>\n\tfrom all others, incapable of unity and inclusive mutuality, capable at most of a spiritual contact and soul-sympathy.  It is therefore necessary to insist that by the true individual we  mean nothing of the kind, but a conscious power of being of the  Eternal, always existing by unity, always capable of mutuality.  It is that being which by self-knowledge enjoys liberation and  immortality.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">But we have to carry still farther the conflict between the  &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 388<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n\t<span lang=\"en-gb\">normal and the higher reason. When we speak of the true individual as a conscious power of being of the Eternal, we are still  using intellectual terms,&nbsp;<br \/>\n\u2014 we cannot help it, unless we plunge  into a language of pure symbols and mystic values of speech,&nbsp; \u2014  but, what is worse, we are, in the attempt to get away from the  idea of the ego, using a too abstract language. Let us say, then,  a conscious being who is for our valuations of existence a being  of the Eternal in his power of individualising self-experience; for  it must be a concrete being&nbsp;<br \/>\n\u2014 and not an abstract power&nbsp; \u2014 who  enjoys immortality. And then we get to this that not only am I in  the world and the world in me, but God is in me and I am in God;  by which yet it is not meant that God depends for His existence  on man, but that He manifests Himself in that which He manifests within Himself; the individual exists in the Transcendent,  but all the Transcendent is there concealed in the individual.  Further I am one with God in my being and yet I can have  relations with Him in my experience. I, the liberated individual,  can enjoy the Divine in His transcendence, unified with Him,  and enjoy at the same time the Divine in other individuals and  in His cosmic being. Evidently we have arrived at certain primary  relations of the Absolute and they can only be intelligible to the  mind if we see that the Transcendent, the individual, the cosmic  being are the eternal powers of consciousness&nbsp;<br \/>\n\u2014 we fall again,  this time without remedy, into a wholly abstract language,&nbsp; \u2014 of<br \/>\n\tan absolute existence, a unity yet more than a unity, which so expresses<br \/>\n\titself to its own consciousness in us, but which we can not adequately speak of in human language and must not hope  to describe either by negative or positive terms to our reason, but  can only hope to indicate it to the utmost power of our language.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">But the normal mind, which has no experience of these  things that are so powerfully real to the liberated consciousness,  may well revolt against what may seem to it nothing more than a  mass of intellectual contradictions. It may say, &#8220;I know very well  what the Absolute is; it is that in which there are no relations.  The Absolute and the relative are irreconcilable opposites; in  the relative there is nowhere anything absolute, in the Absolute  there can be nothing relative. Anything which contradicts these  &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 389<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n  <span lang=\"en-gb\">first data of my thought, is intellectually false and practically  impossible. These other statements also contradict my law of  contradictions which is that two opposing and conflicting affirmations cannot both be true. It is impossible that there should  be oneness with God and yet a relation with Him such as this of  the enjoyment of the Divine. In oneness there is no one to enjoy<br \/>\n\texcept the One and nothing to be enjoyed except the One. God, the individual<br \/>\n\tand the cosmos must be three different actualities, otherwise there could be no relations between them. Either  they are eternally different or they are different in present time,  although they may have originally been one undifferentiated  existence and may eventually re-become one undifferentiated  existence. Unity was perhaps and will be perhaps, but it is not  now and cannot be so long as cosmos and the individual endure.  The cosmic being can only know and possess the transcendent  unity by ceasing to be cosmic; the individual can only know  and possess the cosmic or the transcendental unity by ceasing  from all individuality and individualisation. Or if unity is the  one eternal fact, then cosmos and individual are non-existent;  they are illusions imposed on itself by the Eternal. That may  well involve a contradiction or an unreconciled paradox; but I  am willing to admit a contradiction in the Eternal which I am  not compelled to think out, rather than a contradiction here  of my primary conceptions which I am compelled to think out  logically and to practical ends. I am on this supposition able  either to take the world as practically real and think and act in  it or to reject it as an unreality and cease to think and act; I  am not compelled to reconcile contradictions, not called on to  be conscious of and conscious in something beyond myself and  world and yet deal from that basis, as God does, with a world  of contradictions. The attempt to be as God while I am still an  individual or to be three things at a time seems to me to involve a  logical confusion and a practical impossibility.&#8221; Such might well  be the attitude of the normal reason, and it is clear, lucid, positive  in its distinctions; it involves no extraordinary gymnastics of the  reason trying to exceed itself and losing itself in shadows and  half-lights or any kind of mysticism, or at least there is only one  &nbsp;<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 390<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n\t<span lang=\"en-gb\">original and comparatively simple mysticism free from all other  difficult complexities. Therefore it is the reasoning which is the  most satisfactory to the simply rational mind. Yet is there here  a triple error, the error of making an unbridgeable gulf between  the Absolute and the relative, the error of making too simple  and rigid and extending too far the law of contradictions and  the error of conceiving in terms of Time the genesis of things  which have their origin and first habitat in the Eternal.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">We mean by the Absolute something greater than ourselves,  greater than the cosmos which we live in, the supreme reality of  that transcendent Being which we call God, something without  which all that we see or are conscious of as existing, could not<br \/>\n\thave been, could not for a moment remain in existence. Indian thought calls<br \/>\n\tit Brahman, European thought the Absolute be cause it is a self-existent which is absolved of all bondage to  relativities. For all relatives can only exist by something which  is the truth of them all and the source and continent of their  powers and properties and yet exceeds them all; it is something  of which not only each relativity itself, but also any sum we can  make of all relatives that we know, can only be&nbsp; \u2014 in all that  we know of them&nbsp;<br \/>\n\u2014 a partial, inferior or practical expression.  We see by reason that such an Absolute must exist; we become  by spiritual experience aware of its existence: but even when we  are most aware of it, we cannot describe it because our language  and thought can deal only with the relative. The Absolute is for  us the Ineffable.<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">So far there need be no real difficulty nor confusion. But  we readily go on, led by the mind&#8217;s habit of oppositions, of  thinking by distinctions and pairs of contraries, to speak of it as  not only not bound by the limitations of the relative, but as if it  were bound by its freedom from limitations, inexorably empty  of all power for relations and in its nature incapable of them,  something hostile in its whole being to relativity and its eternal  contrary. By this false step of our logic we get into an impasse.  Our own existence and the existence of the universe become not  only a mystery, but logically inconceivable. For we get by that to  an Absolute which is incapable of relativity and exclusive of all  &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 391<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n  <span lang=\"en-gb\">relatives and yet the cause or at least the support of relativity and  the container, truth and substance of all relatives. We have then  only one logical-illogical way of escape out of the impasse; we  have to suppose the imposition of the world as a self-effective  illusion or an unreal temporal reality, on the eternity of the  formless relationless Absolute. This imposition is made by our  misleading individual consciousness which falsely sees Brahman  in the figure of the cosmos&nbsp; \u2014 as a man mistakes a rope for a  serpent; but since either our individual consciousness is itself a  relative supported by the Brahman and only existent by it, not a  real reality, or since in its reality it is itself the Brahman, it is the  Brahman after all which imposes on itself in us this delusion and  mistakes in some figure of its own consciousness an existent rope  for a non-existent snake, imposes on its own indeterminable pure  Reality the semblance of a universe, or if it does not impose it on  its own consciousness, it is on a consciousness derived from it  and dependent on it, a projection of itself into Maya. By this explanation nothing is explained; the original contradiction stands<br \/>\n\twhere it was, unreconciled, and we have only stated it over again in other<br \/>\n\tterms. It looks as if, by attempting to arrive at an explanation by means of intellectual reasoning, we have only befogged  ourselves by the delusion of our own uncompromising logic: we  have imposed on the Absolute the imposition which our too  presumptuous reasoning has practised on our own intelligence;<br \/>\n\twe have transformed our mental difficulty in understanding the<br \/>\n\tworld-manifestation into an original impossibility for the Absolute to manifest itself in world at all. But the Absolute, obviously,  finds no difficulty in world-manifestation and no difficulty either  in a simultaneous transcendence of world-manifestation; the difficulty exists only for our mental limitations which prevent us<br \/>\n\tfrom grasping the supramental rationality of the coexistence of the infinite<br \/>\n\tand the finite or seizing the nodus of the unconditioned with the conditioned. For our intellectual rationality  these are opposites; for the absolute reason they are interrelated  and not essentially conflicting expressions of one and the same  reality. The consciousness of infinite Existence is other than our  mind-consciousness and sense-consciousness, greater and more  &nbsp;<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 392<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n\t<span lang=\"en-gb\">capacious, for it includes them as minor terms of its workings,  and the logic of infinite Existence is other than our intellectual  logic. It reconciles in its great primal facts of being what to our  mental view, concerned as it is with words and ideas derived  from secondary facts, are irreconcilable contraries.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">Our mistake is that in trying to define the indefinable we  think we have succeeded when we have described by an<br \/>\nall-exclusive negation this Absolute which we are yet compelled  to conceive of as a supreme positive and the cause of all positives. It is not surprising that so many acute thinkers, with  their eye on the facts of being and not on verbal distinctions,  should be driven to infer that the Absolute is a fiction of the  intelligence, an idea born of words and verbal dialectics, a zero,  non-existent, and to conclude that an eternal Becoming is the  only truth of our existence. The ancient sages spoke indeed of  Brahman negatively,&nbsp; \u2014 they said of it,<br \/>\n<i>neti neti<\/i>, it is not this, it  is not that,&nbsp;<br \/>\n\u2014 but they took care also to speak of it positively;  they said of it too, it is this, it is that, it is all: for they saw that  to limit it either by positive or negative definitions was to fall  away from its truth. Brahman, they said, is Matter, is Life, is  Mind, is Supermind, is cosmic Delight, is Sachchidananda; yet it  cannot really be defined by any of these things, not even by our  largest conception of Sachchidananda. In the world as we see it,  for our mental consciousness however high we carry it, we find  that to every positive there is a negative. But the negative is not  a zero,&nbsp; \u2014 indeed whatever appears to us a zero is packed with<br \/>\n\tforce, teeming with power of existence, full of actual or potential<br \/>\n\tcontents. Neither does the existence of the negative make its corresponding positive non-existent or an unreality; it only makes  the positive an incomplete statement of the truth of things and  even, we may say, of the positive&#8217;s own truth. For the positive and  the negative exist not only side by side, but in relation to each  other and by each other; they complete and would to the all-view,  which a limited mind cannot reach, explain one another. Each by  itself is not really known; we only begin to know it in its deeper  truth when we can read into it the suggestions of its apparent  opposite. It is through such a profounder catholic intuition and  &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 393<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n  <span lang=\"en-gb\">not by exclusive logical oppositions that our intelligence ought  to approach the Absolute.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n\t<span lang=\"en-gb\">The positives of the Absolute are its various statements of itself to our<br \/>\n\tconsciousness; its negatives bring in the rest of its absolute positivity by which its limitation to these first statements  is denied. We have, to begin with, its large primary relations  such as the infinite and the finite, the conditioned and unconditioned, the qualitied and unqualitied; in each pair the negative  conceals the whole power of the corresponding positive which is  contained in it and emerges from it: there is no real opposition.  We have, in a less subtle order of truths, the transcendent and  the cosmic, the universal and the individual; here we have seen  that each member of these pairs is contained in its apparent  opposite. The universal particularises itself in the individual; the  individual contains in himself all the generalities of the universal. The universal consciousness finds all itself by the variations  of numberless individuals, not by suppressing variations; the  individual consciousness fulfils all itself when it is universalised  into sympathy and identity with the cosmic, not by limiting  itself in the ego. So too the cosmic contains in all itself and in  each thing in it the complete immanence of the transcendent; it  maintains itself as the world-being by the consciousness of its  own transcendent reality, it finds itself in each individual being  by the realisation of the divine and transcendent in that being  and in all existences. The transcendent contains, manifests, constitutes the cosmos and by manifesting it manifests or discovers,  as we may say in the old poetic sense of that word, its own  infinite harmonic varieties. But even in the lower orders of the  relative we find this play of negative and positive, and through  the divine reconciliation of its terms, not by excising them or  carrying their opposition to the bitter end, we have to arrive at  the Absolute. For there in the Absolute all this relativity, all this  varying rhythmic self-statement of the Absolute, finds, not its  complete denial, but its reason for existence and its justification,  not its conviction as a lie, but the source and principle of its truth.  Cosmos and individual go back to something in the Absolute  which is the true truth of individuality, the true truth of cosmic  &nbsp;<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 394<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n\t<span lang=\"en-gb\">being and not their denial and conviction of their falsity. The  Absolute is not a sceptical logician denying the truth of all his  own statements and self-expressions, but an existence so utterly  and so infinitely positive that no finite positive can be formulated  which can exhaust it or bind it down to its definitions.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">It is evident that if such is the truth of the Absolute, we  cannot bind it either by our law of contradictions. That law is  necessary to us in order that we may posit partial and practical  truths, think out things clearly, decisively and usefully, classify,  act, deal with them effectively for particular purposes in our  divisions of Space, distinctions of form and property, moments  of Time. It represents a formal and strongly dynamic truth of  existence in its practical workings which is strongest in the most  outward term of things, the material, but becomes less and less  rigidly binding as we go upward in the scale, mount on the more  subtle rungs of the ladder of being. It is especially necessary for  us in dealing with material phenomena and forces; we have to  suppose them to be one thing at a time, to have one power at a  time and to be limited by their ostensible and practically effective  capacities and properties; otherwise we cannot deal with them.  But even there, as human thought is beginning to realise, the  distinctions made by the intellect and the classifications and  practical experiments of Science, while perfectly valid in their  own field and for their own purpose, do not represent the whole  or the real truth of things, whether of things in the whole or of  the thing by itself which we have classified and set artificially  apart, isolated for separate analysis. By that isolation we are indeed able to deal with it very practically, very effectively, and we  think at first that the effectiveness of our action proves the entire  and sufficient truth of our isolating and analysing knowledge.  Afterwards we find that by getting beyond it we can arrive at a  greater truth and a greater effectivity.<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">The isolation is certainly necessary for first knowledge. A  diamond is a diamond and a pearl a pearl, each thing of its  own class, existing by its distinction from all others, each distinguished by its own form and properties. But each has also  properties and elements which are common to both and others  &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 395<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n  <span lang=\"en-gb\">which are common to material things in general. And in reality  each does not exist only by its distinctions, but much more  essentially by that which is common to both; and we get back to  the very basis and enduring truth of all material things only when  we find that all are the same thing, one energy, one substance or,  if you like, one universal motion which throws up, brings out,  combines, realises these different forms, these various properties, these fixed and harmonised potentialities of its own being.  If we stop short at the knowledge of distinctions, we can deal  only with diamond and pearl as they are, fix their values, uses,  varieties, make the best ordinary use and profit of them; but  if we can get to the knowledge and control of their elements  and the common properties of the class to which they belong,  we may arrive at the power of making either a diamond or  pearl at our pleasure: go farther still and master that which all  material things are in their essence and we may arrive even at the  power of transmutation which would give the greatest possible  control of material Nature. Thus the knowledge of distinctions  arrives at its greatest truth and effective use when we arrive at  the deeper knowledge of that which reconciles distinctions in  the unity behind all variations. That deeper knowledge does not  deprive the other and more superficial of effectivity nor convict  it of vanity. We cannot conclude from our ultimate material  discovery that there is no original substance or Matter, only  energy manifesting<br \/>\nsubstance or manifesting as substance,&nbsp; \u2014  that diamond and pearl are non-existent, unreal, only true to  the illusion of our senses of perception and action, that the one  substance, energy or motion is the sole eternal truth and that  therefore the best or only rational use of our science would be  to dissolve diamond and pearl and everything else that we can  dissolve into this one eternal and original reality and get done  with their forms and properties for ever. There is an essentiality  of things, a commonalty of things, an individuality of things; the  commonalty and individuality are true and eternal powers of the  essentiality: that transcends them both, but the three together  and not one by itself are the eternal terms of existence.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">This truth which we can see, though with difficulty and  &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 396<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n\t<span lang=\"en-gb\">under considerable restrictions, even in the material world where  the subtler and higher powers of being have to be excluded from<br \/>\n\tour intellectual operations, becomes clearer and more powerful when we<br \/>\n\tascend in the scale. We see the truth of our classifications and distinctions, but also their limits. All things, even  while different, are yet one. For practical purposes plant, animal,  man are different existences; yet when we look deeper we see  that the plant is only an animal with an insufficient evolution of  self-consciousness and dynamic force; the animal is man in the  making; man himself is that animal and yet the something more  of self-consciousness and dynamic power of consciousness that  make him man; and yet again he is the something more which  is contained and repressed in his being as the potentiality of  the divine,&nbsp; \u2014 he is a god in the making. In each of these, plant,  animal, man, god, the Eternal is there containing and repressing  himself as it were in order to make a certain statement of his  being. Each is the whole Eternal concealed. Man himself, who  takes up all that went before him and transmutes it into the  term of manhood, is the individual human being and yet he  is all mankind, the universal man acting in the individual as a  human personality. He is all and yet he is himself and unique.  He is what he is, but he is also the past of all that he was and the  potentiality of all that he is not. We cannot understand him if we  look only at his present individuality, but we cannot understand<br \/>\n\thim either if we look only at his commonalty, his general term of manhood,<br \/>\n\tor go back by exclusion from both to an essentiality of his being in which his distinguishing manhood and his  particularising individuality seem to disappear. Each thing is the  Absolute, all are that One, but in these three terms always the  Absolute makes its statement of its developed self-existence. We  are not, because of the essential unity, compelled to say that all  God&#8217;s various action and workings are vain, worthless, unreal,  phenomenal, illusory, and that the best and only rational or  super-rational use we can make of our knowledge is to get away  from them, dissolve our cosmic and individual existence into the  essential being and get rid of all becoming as a futility for ever.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">In our practical dealings with life we have to arrive at the  &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 397<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n  <span lang=\"en-gb\">same truth. For certain practical ends we have to say that a thing  is good or bad, beautiful or ugly, just or unjust and act upon that  statement; but if we limit ourselves by it, we do not get at real  knowledge. The law of contradictions here is only valid in so far  as two different and opposite statements cannot be true of the  same thing at the same time, in the same field, in the same respect,  from the same point of view and for the same practical purpose.  A great war, destruction or violent all-upheaving revolution, for  example, may present itself to us as an evil, a virulent and catastrophic disorder, and it is so in certain respects, results, ways  of looking at it; but from others, it may be a great good, since it  rapidly clears the field for a new good or a more satisfying order.  No man is simply good or simply bad; every man is a mixture of  contraries: even we find these contraries often inextricably mixed  up in a single feeling, a single action. All kinds of conflicting  qualities, powers, values meet together and run into each other  to make up our action, life, nature. We can only understand  entirely if we get to some sense of the Absolute and yet look at  its workings in<br \/>\nall the relativities which are being manifested,&nbsp; \u2014  look not only at each by itself, but each in relation to all and to  that which exceeds and reconciles them all. In fact we can only  know by getting to the divine view and purpose in things and  not merely looking at our own, though our own limited human  view and momentary purpose have their validity in the cadre of  the All. For behind all relativities there is this Absolute which  gives them their being and their justification. No particular act  or arrangement in the world is by itself absolute justice; but there  is behind all acts and arrangements something absolute which  we call justice, which expresses itself through their relativities  and which we would realise if our view and knowledge were  comprehensive instead of being as they are partial, superficial,  limited to a few ostensible facts and appearances. So too there  is an absolute good and an absolute beauty: but we can only  get a glimpse of it if we embrace all things impartially and get  beyond their appearances to some sense of that which, between  them, all and each are by their complex terms trying to state  and work out; not an indeterminate,&nbsp;<br \/>\n\u2014 for the indeterminate,  &nbsp;  <\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 398<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n\t<span lang=\"en-gb\">being only the original stuff or perhaps the packed condition  of determinations, would explain by itself nothing at all,&nbsp; \u2014 but  the Absolute. We can indeed follow the opposite method of  breaking up all things and refusing to look at them as a whole  and in relation to that which justifies them and so create an  intellectual conception of absolute evil, absolute injustice, the  absolute hideousness, painfulness, triviality, vulgarity or vanity  of all things; but that is to pursue to its extreme the method of  the Ignorance whose view is based upon division. We cannot  rightly so deal with the divine workings. Because the Absolute  expresses itself through relativities the secret of which we find  it difficult to fathom, because to our limited view everything  appears to be a purposeless play of oppositions and negatives  or a mass of contradictions, we cannot conclude that our first  limited view is right or that all is a vain delusion of the mind and  has no reality. Nor can we solve all by an original unreconciled  contradiction which is to explain all the rest. The human reason  is wrong in attaching a separate and definitive value to each  contradiction by itself or getting rid of one by altogether denying  the other; but it is right in refusing to accept as final and as the  last word the coupling of contradictions which have in no way  been reconciled together or have not found their source and  significance in something beyond their opposition.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">We cannot, either, effect a reconciliation or explanation of  the original contradictions of existence by taking refuge in our  concept of Time. Time, as we know or conceive it, is only our  means of realising things in succession, it is a condition and cause  of conditions, varies on different planes of existence, varies even  for beings on one and the same plane: that is to say, it is not  an Absolute and cannot explain the primary relations of the  Absolute. They work themselves out in detail by Time and seem  to our mental and vital being to be determined by it; but that  seeming does not carry us back to their sources and principles.  We make the distinction of conditioned and unconditioned and  we imagine that the unconditioned became conditioned, the Infinite became finite at some date in Time, and may cease to be finite  at some other date in Time, because it so appears to us in details,  &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 399<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n  <span lang=\"en-gb\">particulars or with regard to this or that system of things. But  if we look at existence as a whole, we see that infinite and finite  coexist and exist in and by each other. Even if our universe were  to disappear and reappear rhythmically in Time, as was the old  belief, that too would be only a large detail and would not show  that at a particular time all condition ceases in the whole range  of infinite existence and all Being becomes the unconditioned,  at another it again takes on the reality or the appearance of  conditions. The first source and the primary relations lie beyond  our mental divisions of Time, in the divine timelessness or else  in the indivisible or eternal Time of which our divisions and  successions are only figures in a mental experience.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">There we see that all meets and all principles, all persistent  realities of existence,&nbsp; \u2014 for the finite as a principle of being is  as persistent as the infinite,&nbsp;<br \/>\n\u2014 stand in a primary relation to  each other in a free, not an exclusive unity of the Absolute,  and that the way they present themselves to us in a material  or a mental world is only a working out of them in secondary,<br \/>\n\ttertiary or yet lower relativities. The Absolute has not become the contrary<br \/>\n\tof itself and assumed at a certain date real or un real relativities of which it was originally incapable, nor has  the One become by a miracle the Many, nor the unconditioned  deviated into the conditioned, nor the unqualitied sprouted out  into qualities. These oppositions are only the conveniences of  our mental consciousness, our divisions of the indivisible. The  things they represent are not fictions, they are realities, but they  are not rightly known if they are set in irreconcilable opposition to or separation from each other; for there is no such  irreconcilable opposition or separation of them in the all-view  of the Absolute. This is the weakness not only of our scientific  divisions and metaphysical distinctions, but of our exclusive  spiritual realisations which are only exclusive because to arrive  at them we have to start from our limiting and dividing mental  consciousness. We have to make the metaphysical distinctions  in order to help our intelligence towards a truth which exceeds  it, because it is only so that it can escape from the confusions  of our first undistinguishing mental view of things; but if we  &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 400<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n\t<span lang=\"en-gb\">bind ourselves by them to the end, we make chains of what  should only have been first helps. We have to make use too of  distinct spiritual realisations which may at first seem contrary to  each other, because as mental beings it is difficult or impossible  for us to seize at once largely and completely what is beyond  our mentality; but we err if we intellectualise them into sole  truths,&nbsp; \u2014 as when we assert that the Impersonal must be the one  ultimate realisation and the rest creation of Maya or declare the  Saguna, the Divine in its qualities, to be that and thrust away the  impersonality from our spiritual experience. We have to see that  both these realisations of the great spiritual seekers are equally  valid in themselves, equally invalid against each other; they are  one and the same Reality experienced on two sides which are  both necessary for the full knowledge and experience of each  other and of that which they both are. So is it with the One and  the Many, the finite and the infinite, the transcendent and the  cosmic, the individual and the universal; each is the other as well  as itself and neither can be entirely known without the other and  without exceeding their appearance of contrary oppositions.<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:25pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">We see then that there are three terms of the one existence,<br \/>\n\ttranscendent, universal and individual, and that each of these always<br \/>\n\tcontains secretly or overtly the two others. The Transcendent possesses itself always and controls the other two as the basis of<br \/>\n\tits own temporal possibilities; that is the Divine, the eternal all-possessing God-consciousness, omnipotent, omniscient,  omnipresent, which informs, embraces, governs all existences.<br \/>\n\tThe human being is here on earth the highest power of the third term, the<br \/>\n\tindividual, for he alone can work out at its critical turning-point that movement of self-manifestation which  appears to us as the involution and evolution of the divine<br \/>\n\tconsciousness between the two terms of the Ignorance and the Knowledge. The<br \/>\n\tpower of the individual to possess in his consciousness by self-knowledge his unity with the Transcendent  and the universal, with the One Being and all beings and to live  in that knowledge and transform his life by it, is that which  makes the working out of the divine self-manifestation through  the individual possible; and the arrival of the individual&nbsp;<br \/>\n\u2014 not  &nbsp;  <\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 401<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n  <span lang=\"en-gb\">in one but in all&nbsp;<br \/>\n\u2014 at the divine life is the sole conceivable object  of the movement. The existence of the individual is not an error  in some self of the Absolute which that self afterwards discovers;  for it is impossible that the absolute self-awareness or anything  that is one with it should be ignorant of its own truth and its  own capacities and betrayed by that ignorance either into a false  idea of itself which it has to correct or an impracticable venture  which it has to renounce. Neither is the individual existence a  subordinate circumstance in a divine play or Lila, a play which  consists in a continual revolution through unending cycles of  pleasure and suffering without any higher hope in the Lila itself or any issue from it except the occasional escape of a few  from time to time out of their bondage to this ignorance. We  might be compelled to hold that ruthless and disastrous view  of God&#8217;s workings if man had no power of self-transcendence  or no power of transforming by self-knowledge the conditions  of the play nearer and nearer to the truth of the divine Delight.  In that power lies the justification of individual existence; the<br \/>\n\tindividual and the universal unfolding in themselves the divine light,<br \/>\n\tpower, joy of transcendent Sachchidananda always manifest above them, always secret behind their surface appearances,  this is the hidden intention, the ultimate significance of the divine<br \/>\n\tplay, the Lila. But it is in themselves, in their transformation but also<br \/>\n\ttheir persistence and perfect relations, not in their self annihilation that that must be unfolded. Otherwise there would  be no reason for their ever having existed; the possibility of the  Divine&#8217;s unfolding in the individual is the secret of the enigma;  his presence there and this intention of self-unfolding are the key  to the world of Knowledge-Ignorance.  &nbsp;<br \/>\n\t<\/span>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n  &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0;text-indent:0pt;margin-left:0pt\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"2\">Page <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 402<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Chapter III &nbsp; The Eternal and the Individual &nbsp; &nbsp; He am I. Isha Upanishad.1 &nbsp; It is an eternal portion of Me that has&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[45],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-2101","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-21-22-the-life-divine","wpcat-45-id"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2101","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2101"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2101\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2101"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2101"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2101"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}