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Evolution
by
William Quan Judge
THE word
"evolution" is the best word from a theosophical standpoint to use in
treating of the genesis of men and things, as the process which it
designates is that which has been always stated in the
ancient books from whose perusal the tenets of the wisdom religion can be gathered.
In the
Bhagavad Gita
we find
coming on of Brahma's night they are resolved into it
again," and that this process goes on from age to age. This exactly states
evolution as it is defined in our dictionaries, where it is said to be a
process of coming forth or a development.
The
"days and nights of Brahma" are immense periods of time during which
evolution proceeds, the manifestation of things being
the "day" and their periodical resolution into the Absolute the
"night."
If, then,
everything is evolved, the word creation can only be properly applied to any
combination of things already in existence, since the primordial matter or
basis cannot be created.
The basis of
the theosophical system is evolution, for in Theosophy
it is held that all things are already in esse, being
brought forth or evolved
from time to time in conformity to the inherent law
of the Absolute.
The very next
question to be asked is, What is this inherent law of
the Absolute? as nearly as can be stated. Although we
do not and cannot know
the Absolute, we have enough data from which to draw
the conclusion that its inherent law is to periodically come forth from
subjectivity into
objectivity and to return again to the former, and so on
without any cessation.
In the
objective world we have a figure or illustration of this in the rising and setting
of the sun, which of all natural objects best shows the influence of the law.
It rises, as H. P. Blavatsky says, from the (to us) subjective, and at night
returns to the subjective again, remaining in the objective world during the
day. If we substitute, as we must when attempting to draw correspondences
between the worlds, the word "state" for locality or place, and
instead of the sun we call that object
"the
Absolute," we have a perfect figure, for then we will have the Absolute
rising above the horizon of consciousness from the subjective state, and its
setting again for that consciousness when the time of night arrives that is,
the night of Brahma. This law of periodicity is the same as that of the cycles,
which can be seen governing in every department of nature.
But let us
assume a point of departure so as to get a rapid survey of evolution theosophically considered. And let it be at the time when
this
period of manifestation began. What was projected into
the objective world at that time must have been life itself, which under the
action of the law
of differentiation split itself up into a vast
number of lives, which we may call individual, the quantity of which it is not
possible for us of finite mind to count.
In the Hindu
system these are called Jivas and Jivatman.
Within these lives there is contained the entire plan to be pursued during the
whole period of manifestation, since each life is a small copy of the great All
from which it came. Here a difficulty arises for studious minds, calling for
some attention, for they may ask "What then do you do with that which we
call 'matter', and by and through which the lives manifest themselves?"
The reply is
that the so-called matter is an illusion and is not real matter, but that the
latter--sometime known in
It may then
be further asked, "Have we not been led to suppose that that which we
supposed was matter but which you now say is an illusion is
something absolutely necessary to the soul for acquiring
experience of nature?" To this I reply that such is not the case, but that
the matter
needed for the soul to acquire experience through is
the real unseen matter. It is that matter of which psychic bodies are composed,
and those
other "material" things all the way up to
spirit. It is to this that the Bhagavad Gita refers where it says that spirit (purusha) and matter (prakriti)
are coeternal and not divisible from each other.
That which we
and science are accustomed to designate matter is nothing more than our
limited and partial cognition of the phenomena of the
real or primordial matter. This position is not overturned by pointing to the
fact that all men in general have the same cognitions of the same objects, that
square objects are always square and that shadows fall in the same line for all
normal people, for even in our own experience we see that there is such a thing
as a collective change of cognition, and that thus it is quite possible that
all normal people are merely on the single plane of
consciousness where they are not yet able to cognize anything
else. In the case of hypnotizing everything appears to the subject to be
different at
the will of the operator, which would not be
possible if objects had any inherent actuality of their own apart from our
consciousness.
In order to
justify a discussion of the Theosophical system of evolution, it is necessary
to see if there be any radical difference between it and that which is accepted
in the world, either in scientific circles or among Theologians. That there is
such a distinction can be seen at once, and we will take first that between it
and Theology. Here, of course, this is in respect to the genesis of the inner
man more especially, although Theology makes some claim to know about race
descent.
The Church
either says that the soul of each man is a special creation in each case or
remains silent
on the
subject, leaving us, as it was once so much the fashion to say, "In the
hands of a merciful Providence," who after all says nothing on the
matter. But when the question of the
race is raised, then the priest points to the Bible, saying that we all come
from one pair, Adam and Eve.
On this point
Theology is more sure than science, as the latter has no data yet and does not
really know whether we owe our origin to one pair,
male and female, or to many. Theosophy,
on the other hand, differs from the Church, asserting that Paramatma
alone is self-existing, single, eternal, immutable, and common to all
creatures, high and low alike; hence it never was and never will be created;
that the soul of man evolves, is
consciousness itself, and is not specially created for each
man born on the earth, but assumes through countless incarnations different
bodies at
different times. Underlying this must be the proposition
that, for each Manvantara or period of manifestation, there is a definite
number of souls
or egos who project themselves into the current of
evolution which is to prevail for that period or manvantara.
Of course
this subject is limitless, and the consideration of the vast number of systems
and worlds where the same process is going on with a definite number of egos in
each, staggers the minds of most of those who take the subject up. And of
course I do not mean to be understood as saying that there is
a definite number of egos in the whole collection of systems in which we may
imagine
evolution as proceeding, for there could be no such
definiteness considered in the mass, as that would be the same as taking the
measure of the Absolute.
But in
viewing any part of the manifestation of the
Absolute, it
is allowable for us to say that there are to be found such a definite number of
egos in that particular system under consideration; this is one of the
necessities of our finite consciousness.
Following out
the line of our own argument we reach the conclusion that, included within
the great wave of evolution which relates to the
system of which this earth is a part, there are just so many egos either fully
developed or in a latent state. These have gone round and round the wheel of
rebirth, and will continue to do so until the wave shall meet and be
transformed into another.
Therefore
there could be no such thing as a special creation of souls for the different
human beings born on this earth, and for the additional reason that, if there
were, then spirit would be made
subservient to illusion, to mere human bodies.
So that in
respect to theology we deny the propositions, first, that there is any special
creation of souls, second, that there is, or was, or
could be by any possibility any creation of this world or of any other, and
third, that the human race descended from one pair.
In taking up
the difference existing between our theory and that of science we find the task
easy. Upon the question of progress, and how progress or civilization may be
attained by man, and whether any progress could be possible if the theories of
science be true, our position is that
there could be no progress if the law of evolution as
taught in the schools is true, even in a material sense.
In this
particular we are diametrically opposed to science. Its assumption is that the
present race
on the earth may be supposed to belong to a common
stock which in its infancy was rude and barbarous, knowing little more than the
animal,
living like the animal, and learning all it now knows
simply by experience gained in its contest with nature through its development.
Hence they give us the paleolithic age, the neolithic age, and so on. In this scheme we find no
explanation of how man comes to have innate ideas. Some, however,
seeing the necessity for an explanation of this
phenomenon, attempt it in various ways; and it is a phenomenon of the greatest
importance. It is
explained by Theosophy
in a way peculiar to itself, and of which more will be said as we go on.
William Quan
Judge
The Path
August 1890
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