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Philosophy of the Supermind or Truth
Consciousness
The philosophies which recognise Mind alone as the creator of the worlds or
accept an original principle with Mind as the only mediator between it and the
forms of the universe, may be divided into the purely noumenal and the
idealistic. The purely noumenal recognise in the cosmos only the work of Mind,
Thought, Idea: but Idea may be purely arbitrary and have no essential relation
to any real Truth of existence; or such Truth, if it exists, may be regarded as
a mere Absolute aloof from all relations and irreconcilable with a world of
relations. The idealistic interpretation supposes a relation between the Truth
behind and the conceptive phenomenon in front, a relation which is not merely
that of an antinomy and opposition. The view I am presenting goes farther in
idealism; it sees the creative Idea as Real-Idea, that is to say, a power of
Conscious-Force expressive of real being, born out of real being and partaking
of its nature and neither a child of the Void nor a weaver of fictions. It is
conscious Reality throwing itself into mutable forms of its own imperishable and
immutable substance. The world is therefore not a figment of conception in the
universal Mind, but a conscious birth of that which is beyond Mind into forms of
itself. A Truth of conscious being supports these forms and expresses itself in
them, and the knowledge corresponding to the truth thus expressed reigns as a
supramental Truth-Consciousness organising real ideas in a perfect harmony
before they are cast into the mental-vital-material mould. Mind, Life and Body
are an inferior consciousness and a partial expression which strives to arrive
in the mould of a various evolution at that superior expression of itself
already existent to the Beyond-Mind. That which is in the Beyond-Mind is the
ideal which in its own conditions it is labouring to realise.
From our ascending point of view we may say that the Real is behind all that
exists; it expresses itself intermediately in an Ideal which is a harmonised
truth of itself; the Ideal throws out a phenomenal reality of variable
conscious-being which, inevitably drawn towards its own essential Reality, tries
at last to recover it entirely whether by a violent leap or normally through the
Ideal which put it forth. It is this that explains the imperfect reality of
human existence as seen by the Mind, the instinctive aspiration in the mental
being towards a perfectibility ever beyond itself, towards the concealed harmony
of the Ideal, and the supreme surge of the spirit beyond the ideal to the
transcendental. The very facts of our consciousness, its constitution and its
necessity presuppose such a triple order; they negate the dual and
irreconcilable antithesis of a mere Absolute to a mere relativity.
Mind is not sufficient to explain existence in the universe. Infinite
Consciousness must first translate itself into infinite faculty of Knowledge or,
as we call it from our point of view, omniscience. But Mind is not a faculty of
knowledge nor an instrument of omniscience; it is a faculty for the seeking of
knowledge, for expressing as much as it can gain of it in certain forms of a
relative thought and for using it towards certain capacities of action. Even
when it finds, it does not possess; it only keeps a certain fund of current coin
of Truth — not Truth itself — in the bank of Memory to draw upon according to
its needs. For Mind is that which does not know, which tries to know and which
never knows except as in a glass darkly. It is the power which interprets truth
of universal existence for the practical uses of a certain order of things; it
is not the power which knows and guides that existence and therefore it cannot
be the power which created or manifested it.
But if we suppose an infinite Mind which would be free from our limitations,
that at least might well be the creator of the universe? But such a Mind would
be something quite different from the definition of mind as we know it: it would
be something beyond mentality; it would be the supramental Truth. An infinite
Mind constituted in the terms of mentality as we know it could only create an
infinite chaos, a vast clash of chance, accident, vicissitude wandering towards
an indeterminate end after which it would be always tentatively groping and
aspiring. An infinite, omniscient, omnipotent Mind would not be mind at all, but
supramental knowledge.
Mind, as we know it, is a reflective mirror which receives presentations or
images of a pre-existent Truth or Fact, either external to or at least vaster
than itself. It represents to itself from moment to moment the phenomenon that
is or has been. It possesses also the faculty of constructing in itself possible
images other than those of the actual fact presented to it; that is to say, it
represents to itself not only phenomenon that has been but also phenomenon that
may be: it cannot, be it noted, represent to itself phenomenon that assuredly
will be, except when it is an assured repetition of what is or has been. It has,
finally, the faculty of forecasting new modifications which it seeks to
construct out of the meeting of what has been and what may be, out of the
fulfilled possibility and the unfulfilled, something that it sometimes succeeds
in constructing more or less exactly, sometimes fails to realise, but usually
finds cast into other forms than it forecasted and turned to other ends than it
desired or intended.
An infinite Mind of this character might possibly construct an accidental cosmos
of conflicting possibilities and it might shape it into something shifting,
something always transient, something ever uncertain in its drift, neither real
nor unreal, possessed of no definite end or aim but only an endless succession
of momentary aims leading, — since there is no superior directing power of
knowledge, — eventually nowhither. Nihilism or Illusionism or some kindred
philosophy is the only logical conclusion of such a pure noumenalism. The cosmos
so constructed would be a presentation or reflection of something not itself,
but always and to the end a false presentation, a distorted reflection; all
cosmic existence would be a Mind struggling to work out fully its imaginations,
but not succeeding, because they have no imperative basis of self-truth;
overpowered and carried forward by the stream of its own past energies, it would
be borne onward indeterminately for ever without issue unless or until it can
either slay itself or fall into an eternal stillness. That traced to its roots
is Nihilism and Illusionism and it is the only wisdom if we suppose that our
human mentality or anything at all like it represents the highest cosmic force
and the original conception at work in the universe.
But the moment we find in the original power of knowledge a higher force than
that which is represented by our human mentality, this conception of the
universe becomes insufficient and therefore invalid. It has its truth but it is
not the whole truth. It is law of the immediate appearance of the universe, but
not of its original truth and ultimate fact. For we perceive behind the action
of Mind, Life and Body, something that is not embraced in the stream of Force
but embraces and controls it; something that is not born into a world which it
seeks to interpret, but has created in its being a world of which it has the
omniscience; something that does not labour perpetually to form something else
out of itself while it drifts in the overmastering surge of past energies it can
no longer control, but has already in its consciousness a perfect Form of itself
and is here gradually unfolding it. The world expresses a foreseen Truth, obeys
a predetermining Will, realises an original formative self-vision, — it is the
growing image of a divine creation.
So long as we work only through the mentality governed by appearances, this
something beyond and behind and yet always immanent can be only an inference or
a presence vaguely felt. We perceive a law of cyclic progress and infer an
ever-increasing perfection of somewhat that is somewhere foreknown. For
everywhere we see Law founded in self-being and, when we penetrate within into
the rationale of its process, we find that Law is the expression of an innate
knowledge, a knowledge inherent in the existence which is expressing itself and
implied in the force that expresses it; and Law developed by Knowledge so as to
allow of progression implies a divinely seen goal towards which the motion is
directed. We see too that our reason seeks to emerge out of and dominate the
helpless drift of our mentality and we arrive at the perception that Reason is
only a messenger, a representative or a shadow of a greater consciousness beyond
itself which does not need to reason because it is all and knows all that it is.
And we can then pass to the inference that this source of Reason is identical
with the Knowledge that acts as Law in the world. This Knowledge determines its
own law sovereignly because it knows what has been, is and will be and it knows
because it is eternally, and infinitely cognises itself. Being that is infinite
consciousness, infinite consciousness that is omnipotent force, when it makes a
world, — that is to say, a harmony of itself, — its object of consciousness,
becomes seizable by our thought as a cosmic existence that knows its own truth
and realises in forms that which it knows.
But it is only when we cease to reason and go deep into ourselves, into that
secrecy where the activity of mind is stilled, that this other consciousness
becomes really manifest to us—however imperfectly owing to our long habit of
mental reaction and mental limitation. Then we can know surely in an increasing
illumination that which we had uncertainly conceived by the pale and flickering
light of Reason. Knowledge waits seated beyond mind and intellectual reasoning,
throned in the luminous vast of illimitable self-vision.
Supermind is the vast self-extension of the Brahman that contains and develops.
By the Idea it develops the triune principle of existence, consciousness and
bliss out of their indivisible unity. It differentiates them, but it does not
divide. It establishes a Trinity, not arriving like the Mind from the three to
the One, but manifesting the three out of the One, —for it manifests and
develops, —and yet maintaining them in the unity, — for it knows and contains.
By the differentiation it is able to bring forward one or other of them as the
effective Deity which contains the others involved or explicit in itself and
this process it makes the foundation of all other differentiations. And it acts
by the same operation on all the principles and possibilities which it evolves
out of this all-constituent trinity. It possesses the power of development, of
evolution, of making explicit, and that power carries with it the other power of
involution, of envelopment, of making implicit. In a sense, the whole of
creation may be said to be a movement between two involutions, Spirit in which
all is involved and out of which all evolves downward to the other pole of
Matter, Matter in which also all is involved and out of which all evolves
upwards to the other pole of Spirit.
Thus the whole process of differentiation by the Real-Idea creative of the
universe is a putting forward of principles, forces, forms which contain for the
comprehending consciousness all the rest of existence within them and front the
apprehending consciousness with all the rest of existence implicit behind them.
Therefore all is in each as well as each in all. Therefore every seed of things
implies in itself all the infinity of various possibilities, but is kept to one
law of process and result by the Will, that is to say, by the Knowledge-Force of
the Conscious-Being who is manifesting himself and who, sure of the Idea in
himself, pre-determines by it his own forms and movements. The seed is the Truth
of its own being which this Self-Existence sees in itself, the resultant of that
seed of self-vision is the Truth of self-action, the natural law of development,
formation and functioning which follows inevitably upon the self-vision and
keeps to the processes involved in the original Truth. All nature is simply,
then, the Seer-Will, the Knowledge-Force of the Conscious-Being at work to
evolve in force and form all the inevitable truth of the Idea into which it has
originally thrown itself.
This conception of the Idea points us to the essential contrast between our
mental consciousness and the Truth-Consciousness. We regard thought as a thing
separate from existence, abstract, unsubstantial, different from reality,
something which appears one knows not whence and detaches itself from objective
reality in order to observe, understand and judge it; for so it seems and
therefore is to our all-dividing, all-analysing mentality. The first business of
Mind is to render “discrete” to make fissures much more than to discern, and so
it has made this paralysing fissure between thought and reality. But in
Supermind all being is consciousness, all consciousness is of being, and the
idea, a pregnant vibration of consciousness, is equally a vibration of being
pregnant of itself; it is an initial coming out, in creative self-knowledge, of
that which lay concentrated in uncreative self-awareness. It comes out as Idea
that is a reality, and it is that reality of the Idea which evolves itself,
always by its own power and consciousness of itself, always self-conscious,
always self-developing by the will inherent in the Idea, always self-realising
by the knowledge ingrained in its every impulsion. This is the truth of all
creation, of all evolution.
In Supermind being, consciousness of knowledge and consciousness of will are not
divided as they seem to be in our mental operations; they are a trinity, one
movement with three effective aspects. Each has its own effect. Being gives the
effect of substance, consciousness the effect of knowledge, of the self-guiding
and shaping idea, of comprehension and apprehension; will gives the effect of
self-fulfilling force. But the idea is only the light of the reality illumining
itself; it is not mental thought nor imagination, but effective self-awareness.
It is Real Idea.
In Supermind knowledge in the Idea is not divorced from will in the Idea, but
one with it—just as it is not different from being or substance, but is one with
the being, luminous power of the substance. As the power of burning light is not
different from the substance of the fire, so the power of the Idea is not
different from the substance of the Being which works itself out in the Idea and
its development. In our mentality all are different. We have an idea and a will
according to the idea or an impulsion of will and an idea detaching itself from
it; but we differentiate effectually the idea from the will and both from
ourselves. I am; the idea is a mysterious abstraction that appears in me, the
will is another mystery, a force nearer to concreteness, though not concrete,
but always something that is not myself, something that I have or get or am
seized with, but am not. I make a gulf also between my will, its means and the
effect, for these I regard as concrete realities outside and other than myself.
Therefore neither myself nor the idea nor the will in me are self-effective. The
idea may fall away from me, the will may fail, the means may be lacking, I
myself by any or all of these lacunae may remain unfulfilled.
But in the Supermind there is no such paralysing division because knowledge is
not self-divided, force is not self-divided, being is not self divided as in the
mind; they are neither broken in themselves, nor divorced from each other. For
the Supermind is the Vast; it starts from unity, not division, it is primarily
comprehensive, differentiation is only its secondary act. Therefore whatever be
the truth of being expressed, the idea corresponds to it exactly, the will-force
to the idea, — force being only power of the consciousness, —and the result to
the will. Nor does the idea clash with other ideas, the will or force with other
will or force as in man and his world; for there is one vast Consciousness which
contains and relates all ideas in itself as its own ideas, one vast Will which
contains and relates all energies in itself as its own energies. It holds back
this, advances that other, but according to its own preconceiving Idea-Will.
This is the justification of the current religious notions of the omnipresence,
omniscience and omnipotence of the Divine Being. Far from being an irrational
imagination they are perfectly rational and in no way contradict either the
logic of a comprehensive philosophy or the indications of observation and
experience. The error is to make an unbridgeable gulf between God and man,
Brahman and the world. That error elevates an actual and practical
differentiation in being, consciousness and force into an essential division.
But this aspect of the question we shall touch upon afterwards. At present we
have arrived at an affirmation and some conception of the divine and creative
Supermind in which all is one in being, consciousness, will and delight, yet
with an infinite capacity of differentiation that deploys but does not destroy
the unity, — in which Truth is the substance and Truth rises in the Idea and
Truth comes out in the form and there is one truth of knowledge and will, one
truth of self-fulfilment and therefore of delight; for all self-fulfilment is
satisfaction of being. Therefore, always, in all mutations and combinations a
self-existent and inalienable harmony.
We have started with the assertion of all existence as one Being whose essential
nature is Consciousness, one Consciousness whose active nature is Force or Will;
and this Being is Delight, this Consciousness is Delight, this Force or Will is
Delight. Eternal and inalienable Bliss of Existence, Bliss of Consciousness,
Bliss of Force or Will whether concentrated in itself and at rest or active and
creative, this is God and this is ourselves in our essential, our non-phenomenal
being. Concentrated in itself, it possesses or rather is the essential, eternal,
inalienable Bliss; active and creative, it possesses or rather becomes the
delight of the play of existence, the play of consciousness, the play of force
and will. That play is the universe and that delight is the sole cause, motive
and object of cosmic existence. The Divine Consciousness possesses that play and
delight eternally and inalienably; our essential being, our real self which is
concealed from us by the false self or mental ego, also enjoys that play and
delight eternally and inalienably and cannot indeed do otherwise since it is one
in being with the Divine Consciousness. If we aspire therefore to a divine life,
we cannot attain to it by any other way than by unveiling this veiled self in
us, by mounting from our present status in the false self or mental ego to a
higher status in the true self, the Atman, by entering into that unity with the
Divine Consciousness which something superconscient in us always enjoys,
—otherwise we could not exist, — but which our conscious mentality has
forfeited.
But when we thus assert this unity of Sachchidananda on the one hand and this
divided mentality on the other, we posit two opposite entities one of which must
be false if the other is to be held as true, one of which must be abolished if
the other is to be enjoyed. Yet it is in the mind and its form of life and body
that we exist on earth and, if we must abolish the consciousness of mind, life
and body in order to reach the one Existence, Consciousness and Bliss, then a
divine life here is impossible. We must abandon cosmic existence utterly as an
illusion in order to enjoy or re-become the Transcendent. From this solution
there is no escape unless there be an intermediate link between the two which
can explain them to each other and establish between them such a relation as
will make it possible for us to realise the one Existence, Consciousness,
Delight in the mould of the mind, life and body.
The intermediate link exists. We call it the Supermind or the
Truth-Consciousness, because it is a principle superior to mentality and exists,
acts and proceeds in the fundamental truth and unity of things and not like the
mind in their appearances and phenomenal divisions. The existence of the
Supermind is a logical necessity arising directly from the position with which
we have started. For in itself Sachchidananda must be a spaceless and timeless
absolute of conscious existence that is bliss; but the world is, on the
contrary, an extension in Time and Space and a movement, a working out, a
development of relations and possibilities by causality — or what so appears to
us — in Time and Space. The true name of this Causality is Divine Law and the
essence of that Law is an inevitable self-development of the truth of the thing
that is, as Idea, in the very essence of what is developed; it is a previously
fixed determination of relative movements out of the stuff of infinite
possibility. That which thus develops all things must be a Knowledge-Will or
Conscious-Force; for all manifestation of universe is a play of the
Conscious-Force which is the essential nature of existence. But the developing
Knowledge-Will cannot be mental; for mind does not know, possess or govern this
Law, but is governed by it, is one of its results, moves in the phenomena of the
self-development and not at its root, observes as divided things the results of
the development and strives in vain to arrive at their source and reality.
Moreover this Knowledge-Will which develops all must be in possession of the
unity of things and must out of it manifest their multiplicity; but mind is not
in possession of that unity, it has only an imperfect possession of a part of
the multiplicity.
Therefore there must be a principle superior to the Mind which satisfies the
conditions in which Mind fails. No doubt, it is Sachchidananda itself that is
this principle, but Sachchidananda not resting in its pure infinite invariable
consciousness, but proceeding out of this primal poise, or rather upon it as a
base and in it as a continent, into a movement which is its form of Energy and
instrument of cosmic creation. Consciousness and Force are the twin essential
aspects of the pure Power of existence; Knowledge and Will must therefore be the
form which that Power takes in creating a world of relations in the extension of
Time and Space. This Knowledge and this Will must be one, infinite,
all-embracing, all-possessing, all-forming, holding eternally in itself that
which it casts into movement and form. The Supermind then is Being moving out
into a determinative self knowledge which perceives certain truths of itself and
wills to realise them in a temporal and spatial extension of its own timeless
and spaceless existence. Whatever is in its own being, takes form as
self-knowledge, as Truth-Consciousness, as Real-Idea, and, that self-knowledge
being also self-force, fulfils or realises itself inevitably in Time and Space.
This, then, is the nature of the Divine Consciousness which creates in itself
all things by a movement of its conscious-force and governs their development
through a self-evolution by inherent knowledge-will of the truth of existence or
real-idea which has formed them. The Being that is thus conscient is what we
call God; and He must obviously be omnipresent, omniscient, omnipotent.
Omnipresent, for all forms are forms of His conscious being created by its force
of movement in its own extension as Space and Time; omniscient, for all things
exist in His conscious-being, are formed by it and possessed by it; omnipotent,
for this all-possessing consciousness is also an all-possessing Force and
all-informing Will. And this Will and Knowledge are not at war with each other
as our will and knowledge are capable of being at war with each other, because
they are not different but are one movement of the same being. Nor can they be
contradicted by any other will, force or consciousness from outside or within;
for there is no consciousness or force external to the One, and all energies and
formations of knowledge within are not other than it, but are merely play of the
one all-determining Will and the one all-harmonising Knowledge. What we see as a
clash of wills and forces, because we dwell in the particular and divided and
cannot see the whole, the Supermind envisages as the conspiring elements of a
predetermined harmony which is always present to it because the totality of
things is eternally subject to its gaze.
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