The "Arya’s" Fourth Year
WE CLOSE this month
the fourth year of the "Arya", and bring to a conclusion at the same
time the "Psychology of Social Development", the "Ideal of Human
Unity" and the first series of the "Essays on the Gita." A few
more chapters will complete the "Life Divine." We are therefore well
in view of the completion of the first part of the work which we had proposed
to ourselves in starting this philosophical monthly, and we take the
opportunity to say a few words upon the principle which has governed our
writing and which the difficulty of a serial exposition on several lines at a
time, scattering and breaking up the total impression, may have prevented some
of our readers from grasping in its entirety. Page – 399
had to impose on ourselves, we were obliged to impose
also on our readers. This too is the reason why we have adopted the serial form
which in a subject like philosophy has its very obvious disadvantages, but was
the only one possible. Page – 400 manifestation . Man has to grow in knowledge till they cease to be disguises and grow in spiritual power and quality till they become in him its perfect instruments. To grow into the fullness of the divine is the true law of human life and to shape his earthly existence into its image manifestation is the meaning of his evolution. This is the fundamental tenet of the philosophy of the Arya This truth had to be worked out first of all from the meta- physical point of view; for in philosophy metaphysical truth is the nucleus of the rest, it is the statement of the last and most general truths on which all the others depend or in which they are gathered up. Therefore we gave the first place to the "Life Divine". Here we start from the Vedantic position, its ideas of the Self and mind and life, of Sachchidananda and the world, of Knowledge and Ignorance, of rebirth and the Spirit. But Vedanta is popularly supposed to be a denial of life, and this is no doubt a dominant trend it has taken. Though starting from the original truth that all is the Brahman, the Self, it has insisted in the end that the world is simply not-Brahman, not-Self; it has ended in a paradox. We have attempted on the contrary to establish from its data a comprehensive Adwaita. We have shown that mind and life and matter are derivations from the Self through a spiritual mind or supermind which is the real support of cosmic existence and by developing mind into that man can arrive at the real truth of the spirit in the world and the real truth and highest law of life. The Self is Sachchidananda and there is no incurable antinomy between that and the world; only we see the world through the eyes of the Ignorance and we have to see it through the eyes of the Knowledge. Our Ignorance itself is only knowledge developing out of its involution in the apparent nescience of Matter and on its way to a return to its conscious integrality. To accomplish that return and manifest the spiritual life in the human existence is the opportunity given by the successions of rebirth. We accept the truth of evolution, not so much in the physical form given to it by the West as in its philosophical truth, the involution of life and mind and spirit here in matter and their progressive manifestation. At the summit of this evolution is the spiritual life, the life divine. It was necessary to show that these truths were not incon- Page - 401 sistent with the old Vedantic truth, therefore We
included explanations from this point of view of
the Veda, two of the Upanishads
and the Gita. But the Veda has been obscured by the ritualists
and the scholiasts. Therefore we showed in a series of articles, initially only
as yet, the way of writing of the Vedic mystics, their system of symbols and
the truths they figure. Among the Upanishads we took the Isha
and the Kena; to be full we should have added the Taittiriya, but it is a long one and for it we had no
space. The Gita we are treating as a powerful application of truth of spirit to
the largest and most difficult part of the truth of life, to action, and a way
by which action can lead us to birth into the Spirit and can be harmonised with
the spiritual life. Truth
of philosophy is of a merely theoretical value unless it can be lived, and we
have therefore tried in the "Synthesis of Yoga" to arrive at a
synthetical view of the principles and methods of the various lines of
spiritual self-discipline and the way in which they can lead to an integral
divine life in the human existence. But this is an individual self-development,
and therefore it was necessary to show too how our ideal can work out in the
social life of mankind. In the "Psychology of Social Development" we have indicated how these truths
affect the evolution of
human society. In the "Ideal of Human Unity" we have taken the
present trend of mankind towards a closer unification and tried to appreciate
its tendencies and show what is wanting to them in order that real human unity
may be achieved. Page – 402 |