T
Subba Row
The
Theosophist who believed the world
was
not ready for the Secret Doctrine
T
Subba Row 1856 - 1890
________________________
Notes on the Bhagavad Gita
By
T Subba Row
First Lecture
Before
proceeding with the subject, I think it necessary to make a few
preliminary remarks. All of you know that our Society is
established upon a
cosmopolitan basis. We are not wedded to any particular creed
or to any particular system of religious philosophy. We consider ourselves as
mere enquirers. Every great system of philosophy is brought before us for the
purpose of investigation. At the present time we are not at all agreed upon any
particular philosophy which could be preached as the philosophy of our Society.
This is no
doubt a very safe position to take at the commencement. But from all this it
does not follow that we are to be enquirers and enquirers only. We shall, no
doubt, be able to find out the fundamental principles of all philosophy and
base upon them a system which is likely to satisfy our wants and aspirations.
You will kindly bear this in mind, and not take my views as the views of the
Society, or as the views of any other authority higher than myself.
I shall simply
put them forward for what they are worth. They are the results of my own
investigations into various systems of philosophy and no higher authority is
alleged for them. It is only with this view that I mean to put forward the few
remarks I have to make.
You will
remember that I gave an introductory lecture last time when we met here and
pointed out to you the fundamental notions which ought to be borne in mind in
trying to understand the Bhagavad Gita. I need not recapitulate all that I then
said; it will be simply necessary to remind you that
to represent the Logos, which I shall hereafter
explain at length; and that
Arjuna, who was called Nara, was intended to represent
the human monad.
The Bhagavad
Gita, as it at present stands, is essentially practical in its
character and teachings, like the discourses of all
religious teachers who have appeared on the scene of the world to give a few practical
directions to mankind for their spiritual guidance. Just as the sayings of
Christ, the discourses of
Buddha, and the
preachings of various other philosophers which have
come down to us, are essentially didactic in character and practical in their
tone, so is the
Bhagavad Gita.
But these teachings will not be understood -- indeed, in course of time, they
are even likely to be misunderstood -- unless their basis is constantly kept in
view.
The Bhagavad
Gita starts from certain premises, which are not explained at length, -- they
are simply alluded to here and there, and
quoted for the purpose of enforcing the doctrine, or as
authorities, and
carefully surveyed, we cannot understand the practical
applications of the teachings of the Bhagavad Gita, or even test them in the
only way in which they can be tested.
Before
proceeding further, I find it absolutely necessary to preface my
discourse with an introductory lecture, giving the outlines
of this system of philosophy which I have said is the basis of the practical
teaching of
This philosophy
I cannot gather or deduce from the Bhagavad Gita itself; but I can show that
the premises with which it starts are therein indicated with sufficient
clearness.
This is a very
vast subject, a considerable part of which I cannot at all touch; but I shall
lay down a few fundamental principles which are more or less to be considered
as axiomatic in their character -- you may call them postulates for
the time being -- so many as are absolutely necessary
for the purpose of understanding the philosophy of the Bhagavad Gita. I shall
not attempt to prove every philosophical principle I am about to lay down in
the same manner in which a modern scientist attempts to prove all the laws he
has gathered from an
examination of nature.
In the case of
a good many of these principles, inductive reasoning and
experiment are out of the question; it will be next to
impossible to test them in the ordinary course of life or in the ways available
to the
generality of mankind. But, nevertheless, these principles do
rest upon very high authority.
When carefully
explained, they will be found to be the basis of every system of philosophy
which human intellect has ever constructed, and furthermore, will also be
found, -- I venture to promise -- to be perfectly consistent with all that has
been found out by man in the field of science; at any rate they give us
a working hypothesis -- a hypothesis which we may
safely adopt at the
commencement of our labours, for the
time being. This hypothesis may be altered if you are quite certain that any
new facts necessitate its alteration, but at any rate it is a working
hypothesis which seems to explain all the facts which it is necessary for us to
understand before we proceed upon a study of the gigantic and complicated
machinery of nature.
Now to proceed
with this hypothesis. First of all,
I have to point out to you
that any system
of practical instruction for spiritual guidance will have to be judged, first
with reference to the nature and condition of man and the capabilities that are
locked up in him; secondly, with reference to the cosmos and the forces to
which man is subject and the circumstances under which he has to progress.
Unless these
two points are sufficiently investigated, it will be hardly possible for us to ascertain
the highest goal that man is capable of reaching; and unless there is a
definite aim or a goal to reach, or an ideal towards which man has to progress,
it will be almost impossible to say whether any particular
instruction is likely to conduce to the welfare of mankind or
not. Now I say
these instructions can only be understood by examining
the nature of the cosmos, the nature of man, and the goal towards which all
evolutionary progress is tending.
Before I
proceed further, let me tell you that I do not mean to adopt the
sevenfold classification of man that has up to this time
been adopted in
Theosophical
writings generally. Just as I
would classify the principles in man, I would classify the principles in the
solar system and in the cosmos.
There is a
certain amount of similarity and the law of correspondence -- as it is called
by some writers
-- whatever may be the reason, -- is the law which obtains in a good many of
the phenomena of nature, and very often by knowing what happens in the case of
the microcosm, we are enabled to infer what takes place in that of
the macrocosm. Now as regards the number of principles
and their relation between themselves, this sevenfold classification which I do
not mean to adopt, seems to me to be a very unscientific and misleading one. No
doubt the number seven seems to play an important part in the cosmos, though it
is neither a
power nor a spiritual force; but it by no means
necessarily follows that in
every case we must adopt that number. What an amount of
confusion has this seven-fold classification given rise to! These seven
principles, as generally enumerated, do not correspond to any natural lines of
cleavage, so to speak, in the constitution of man.
Taking the
seven principles in the order in which they are generally given, the physical
body is separated from the so-called life-principle; the latter from what is
called linga sarira (very
often confounded with sukshma sarira).
Thus the physical body is divided into three principles. Now here we may make
any number of divisions; if you please, you may
as well enumerate nerve-force, blood, and bones, as
so many distinct parts, and make the number of divisions as large as sixteen or
thirty-five. But still the physical body does not constitute a separate entity
apart from the life principle, nor the life principle apart from the physical
body, and so with the linga sarira.
Again, in the
so-called "astral body," the fourth principle when separated from the
fifth soon disintegrates, and the so-called fourth principle
is almost lifeless unless combined with the fifth.
This system of division does not give us any distinct principles which have
something like independent existence. And what is more, this sevenfold
classification is almost conspicuous by its absence in many of our Hindu books.
At any rate a considerable portion of it is almost unintelligible to Hindu
minds; and so it is better to adopt the time-honored classification of four
principles, for the simple reason that it divides man into so many entities as
are capable of having separate existences,
and that these four principles are associated with
four upadhis (1) which are further associated in their turn with
four distinct states of consciousness. And so for all practical purposes -- for
the purpose of explaining the doctrines of
religious philosophy -- I have found it far more convenient
to adhere to the
fourfold classification than to adopt the septenary one and multiply principles in a manner more
likely to introduce confusion than to throw light upon the subject. I shall
therefore adopt the four-fold classification, and when I adopt
it in the case of man, I shall also adopt it in the
case of the solar system, and also in the case of the principles that are to be
found in the cosmos.
By cosmos I
mean not the solar system only, but the whole of the cosmos.
In enumerating
these principles I shall proceed in the order of evolution, which seems to be
the most convenient one.
I shall point out
what position each of these principles occupies in the
evolution of nature, and in passing from the First Cause to
the organized human being of the present day, I shall give you the basis of the
four-fold classification that I have promised to adopt.
The first
principle, or rather the first postulate, which I have to lay down is
the existence of what is called Parabrahmam.
Of course there is hardly a system of philosophy which has ever denied the
existence of the First Cause. Even the so-called atheists have never denied it.
Various creeds have adopted various
theories as to the nature of this First Cause. All
sectarian disputes and
differences have arisen, not from a difference of opinion as
to the existence of the First Cause, but from the differences of the attributes
that man's intellect has constantly tried to impose upon it. Is it possible to
know anything of the First Cause? No doubt it is possible to know something
about it. It is possible
to know all about its manifestations, though it is next
to impossible for human knowledge to penetrate into its inmost essence and say
what it really is in itself.
All religious
philosophers are agreed that this First Cause is omnipresent and eternal.
Further, it is subject to periods of activity and passivity. When cosmic pralaya comes, it is inactive, and when evolution
commences, it becomes active.
But even the
real reason for this activity and passivity is unintelligible to our minds. It
is not matter or anything like matter. It is not even
consciousness, because all that we know of consciousness is with
reference to a definite organism.
What
consciousness is or will be when entirely separated from
upadhi is a thing utterlyinconceivable
to us, not only to us but to any other
intelligence which has the notion of self or ego in it, or
which has a distinct individualized existence. Again it is not even atma. The word atma is used in
various senses in our books. It is constantly associated with the idea of self.
But Parabrahmam is not so associated; so it is not ego, it is
not non-ego, nor is it consciousness -- or to use a phraseology adopted by our
old philosophers, it is not gnatha, not gnanam and not gnayam. Of course
every entity in this cosmos must come under one or the other of these three headings.
But Parabrahmam
does not come under any one of them. Nevertheless, it
seems to be the one source of which gnatha, gnanam, and gnayam are the
manifestations or modes of
existence. There are a few other aspects which it is
necessary for me to bring to your notice, because those aspects are noticed in
the Bhagavad Gita.
In the case of
every objective consciousness, we know that what we call matter or non-ego is
after all a mere bundle of attributes. But whether we arrive at our conclusion
by logical inference, or whether we derive it from innate consciousness, we
always suppose that there is an entity, -- the real essence of the thing upon
which all these attributes are placed, -- which bears these attributes, as it
were, the essence itself being unknown to us.
All Vedantic writers of old have formulated the principle that Parabrahmam is the one essence of almost everything in the
cosmos. When our old writers said
"Sarvam khalvidambrahma,"
they did not mean that all those attributes which we associate with the idea of
non-ego should be considered as Brahmam, nor did they
mean that Brahmam should be looked upon as the upadana karanam in the same way
that earth and water are the upadana karanam of this pillar.
They simply
meant that the real thing in the bundle of attributes that our consciousness
takes note of, the essence which seems to be the bottom and the foundation of
all
phenomena is Parabrahmam, which,
though not itself an object of knowledge, is yet capable of supporting and
giving rise to every kind of object and every kind
of existence which becomes an object of knowledge.
Now this Parabrahmam which exists before all things in the cosmos is
the one essence from which starts into existence a centre of energy, which I shall
for the present call the Logos.
This Logos may
be called in the language of old writers either Eswara
or Pratyagatma or Sabda Brahmam. It is called the Verbum
or the Word by the Christians, and it is the divine Christos
who is eternally in the bosom of his father.
It is called Avalokiteswara by the Buddhists; at any rate,
Avalokiteswara in one sense is the Logos in general, though no
doubt in the Chinese doctrine there are also other ideas with which it is
associated.
In almost every
doctrine they have formulated the existence of a centre of spiritual energy
which is unborn and eternal, and which exists in a latent condition in the
bosom of Parabrahmam at the time of pralaya, and starts as a centre of conscious energy at the
time of cosmic activity.
It is the first
gnatha or the ego in the cosmos, and every other ego
and every other self, as I shall hereafter point out, is but its reflection or
manifestation. In its inmost nature it is not unknowable as Parabrahmam,
but it is an object of the highest
knowledge that man is capable of acquiring. It is the one
great mystery in the cosmos, with reference to which all the initiations and
all the systems of philosophy have been devised. What it really is in its
inmost nature will not be a subject for consideration in my lecture, but there
are some stand-points from
which we have to look at it to understand the teachings
in the Bhagavad Gita.
The few
propositions that I am going to lay down with reference to this
principle are these. It is not material or physical in its
constitution, and it
is not objective; it is not different in substance,
as it were, or in essence,
from Parabrahmam, and yet at
the same time it is different from it in having an individualized existence. It
exists in a latent condition in the bosom of Parabrahmam,
at the time of pralaya just, for instance, as the
sense of ego is latent at the time of sushupti or
sleep. It is often described in our books as
satchidanandam, and by this epithet you must understand that it
is sat, and that it is chit and anandam.
It has
consciousness and an individuality of its own. I may as well say that it is the
only personal God, perhaps, that exists in the cosmos.
But not to
cause any misunderstanding I must also state that such centres of energy are
almost innumerable in the bosom of Parabrahmam. It
must not be supposed that this Logos is but a single centre of energy which is
manifested by Parabrahmam. There are innumerable
others. Their number is almost infinite. Perhaps even in this centre of energy
called the Logos there may be differences; that is to say, Parabrahmam
can manifest itself as a Logos not only in one particular, definite form, but
in
various forms. At any rate, whatever may be the variations
of form that may exist, it is unnecessary to go minutely into that subject for
the purpose of understanding the Bhagavad Gita.
The Logos is
here considered from the standpoint of the Logos in the abstract, and not from
that of any particular Logos, in giving all those instructions to Arjuna which are of a general application.
The other
aspects of the Logos will be better understood if I point
out to you the nature of the other principles that
start into existence
subsequent to the existence of this Logos or Verbum.
Of course, this
is the first manifestation of Parabrahmam, the first
ego that appears in the cosmos, the beginning of all creation and the end of
all evolution. It is the one source of all energy in the cosmos, and the basis
of all branches of knowledge, and what is more, it is, as it were, the tree of
life, because the chaitanyam which animates the whole
cosmos springs from it.
When once this
ego starts into existence as a conscious being having objective consciousness
of its own, we shall have to see what the result of this objective
consciousness will be with reference to the one absolute and
unconditioned existence from which it starts into manifested existence.
From its
objective standpoint, Parabrahmam appears to it as Mulaprakriti. Please bear this in mind
and try to understand my words, for here is the root
of the whole difficulty
about Purusha and Prakriti felt by the various writers on Vedantic
philosophy.
Of course this Mulaprakriti is material to it, as any material object is
material to us. This Mulaprakriti is no more Parabrahmam than the bundle of attributes of this pillar is
the pillar itself; Parabrahmam is an unconditioned
and absolute reality, and Mulaprakriti is a sort of
veil thrown over it.
Parabrahmam by itself cannot be seen as it is. It is seen by
the Logos with a veil thrown over it, and that veil is the mighty expanse of
cosmic matter. It is the basis of all material manifestations in the cosmos.
Again, Parabrahmam, after having appeared on the one hand as the
ego, and on the other as Mulaprakriti, acts as the
one energy through the Logos.
I shall explain
to you what I mean by this acting through the Logos by a simile. Of course you
must not stretch it very far; it is intended simply to help you to form some
kind of conception of the Logos. For instance, the sun
may be compared with the Logos; light and heat radiate from it; but its heat
and energy exist in some unknown condition in space, and are diffused
throughout space as visible light and heat through its instrumentality. Such is
the view taken of the sun by the ancient philosophers. In the same manner Parabrahmam radiates from the Logos, and manifests itself
as the light and energy of the Logos. Now we see the first manifestation of Parabrahmam is a Trinity, the highest Trinity that we are
capable of understanding. It consists of Mulaprakriti,
Eswara or the Logos, and the conscious energy of the
Logos, which is its power and light; and here we have the three principles upon
which the whole cosmos seems to be based. First, we have matter; secondly, we
have force -- at any rate, the foundation of all the forces in the cosmos; and
thirdly, we have the ego or the one root of self,
of which every other kind of self is but a
manifestation or a reflection. You must bear in mind that there is a clear line
of distinction drawn between Mulaprakriti (which is,as it were, the veil thrown
over from the objective point of view of the Logos) and this energy which is
radiated from it.
Krishna in the
Bhagavad Gita, as I shall hereafter point out, draws a clear line of
distinction between the two; and the importance of the distinction will be seen
when you take note of the various misconceptions to which a confusion of the
two has given rise in various systems of philosophy. Now bear in mind that this
Mulaprakriti which is the veil of Parabrahmam
is called Avyaktam in Sankhya
philosophy.
It is also
called Kutastha in the Bhagavad Gita, simply because
it
is
undifferentiated; even the literal meaning of this word conveys more or less
the idea that it is undifferentiated as contrasted with differentiated matter.
This light from
the Logos is called Daiviprakriti in the Bhagavad
Gita; it is the Gnostic Sophia and the Holy Ghost of the Christians.
It is a mistake
to suppose that
Avyaktam, as is generally believed by a certain school of
philosophers. He is on the other hand Parabrahmam
manifested; and the Holy Ghost in its first origin emanates through the Christos. The reason why it is called the mother of the Christos is this. When Christos
manifests himself in man as his Saviour it is from
the womb, as it were, of this divine light that he is born. So it is only when
the Logos is manifested in man that he becomes the child of this light of
the Logos -- this maya; --
but in the course of cosmic manifestation this
Daiviprakriti, instead of being the mother of the Logos, should,
strictly
speaking, be called the daughter of the Logos. To make this
clearer, I may point out that this light is symbolized as Gayatri.
You know Gayatri is not Prakriti.
It is
considered as the light of the Logos, and in order to convey to our minds a
definite image, it is represented as the light of the sun.
But the sun
from which it springs is not the physical sun that we see, but the central sun
of the light of wisdom, hence we do not use in our sandhyavandanam any symbol
representing the physical sun.
This light is
further called the mahachaitanyam of the whole
cosmos. It is the life of the whole of nature. It will be observed
that what manifests itself as light, as consciousness,
and as force, is just one and the same energy. All the various kinds of forces
that we know of, all the various modes of consciousness with which we are
acquainted, and life manifested
in every kind of organism, are but the manifestations
of one and the same power, that power being the one that springs from the Logos
originally. It will have to be surveyed in all these aspects, because the part
that it really plays in the cosmos is one of considerable importance.
As far as we
have gone we have arrived at, firstly, Parabrahmam;
secondly, Eswara; thirdly, the light manifested
through Eswara, which is called Daiviprakriti
in the Bhagavad Gita, and lastly that Mulaprakriti
which seems to be, as I have said, a veil thrown over Parabrahmam.
Now creation or evolution is
commenced by the intellectual energy of the Logos. The
universe in its infinite details and with its wonderful laws does not spring
into existence by mere chance, nor does it spring into existence merely on
account of the potentialities locked up in Mulaprakriti.
It comes into existence mainly through the instrumentality of the one source of
energy and power existing in the
cosmos, which we have named the Logos, and which is the
one existing
representative of the power and wisdom of Parabrahmam.
Matter acquires all its attributes and all its powers which, in course of time,
give such wonderful results in the course of evolution, by the action of this
light that emanates from the Logos upon Mulaprakriti.
From our
standpoint, it will be very difficult to conceive what kind of matter that may
be which has none of those tendencies which are commonly associated with all
kinds of matter, and which only acquires
all the various properties manifested by it on
receiving, as it were, this light and energy from the Logos. This light of the
Logos is the link, so to speak, between objective matter and the subjective
thought of Eswara. It is called in several Buddhist
books fohat. It is the one instrument with which the
Logos works.
What springs up
in the Logos at first is simply an image, a conception of what it is to be in
the cosmos. This light or energy catches the image and impresses it upon the
cosmic matter which is already manifested. Thus spring into existence all the
manifested solar systems. Of course the four principles we have enumerated are
eternal, and are common to the whole cosmos. There is not a place in the whole
cosmos where these four energies are absent; and these are the elements of the
four-fold classification that I have adopted in dealing with the principles of
the mighty cosmos itself.
Conceive this
manifested solar system in all its principles and in its totality to constitute
the sthula sarira of the
whole cosmos. Look on this light which emanates from the Logos as corresponding
to the sukshma sarira of
the cosmos.
Conceive
further that this Logos which is the one germ from which the whole cosmos
springs, -- which contains the image of the universe, -- stands in the position
of the karana sarira of the
cosmos, existing as it does before the cosmos comes into existence. And lastly
conceive that Parabrahmam bears the same
relation to the Logos as our atma
does to our karana sarira.
These, it must
be remembered, are the four general principles of the infinite cosmos, not of
the solar system. These principles must not be confounded with those enumerated
in dealing with the meaning of Pranava in Vedantic Philosophy and the Upanishads. In one sense Pranava represents the macrocosm and in another sense the
microcosm. From one point of view Pranava is also
intended to mean the infinite cosmos itself, but it is not in that light that
it is generally explained in our Vedantic books, and
it will not be necessary for me to explain this aspect of Pranava.
With reference
to this subject I may however allude to one other point, which explains the
reason why Eswara is called Verbum
or Logos;
why in fact it is called Sabda
Brahmam. The explanation I am going to give you will
appear thoroughly mystical. But if mystical it has a tremendous significance
when properly understood. Our old writers said that Vach
is of four kinds.
These are
called para, pasyanti, madhyama, vaikhari. This
statement you will find in the Rig Veda itself and in several of the
Upanishads. Vaikhari Vach
is what we utter. Every kind of vaikhari Vach exists in its madhyama,
further in its pasyanti, and ultimately in its para form. The reason why this Pranava
is called Vach is this, that
these four principles of the great cosmos correspond to these four forms of Vach. Now the whole manifested solar system exists in its sukshma form in this light or energy of the Logos, because
its image is caught
up and transferred to cosmic matter, and again the
whole cosmos must necessarily exist in the one source of energy from which this
light emanates.
The whole
cosmos in its objective form is vaikhari Vach, the light of the Logos is the madhyama
form, and the Logos itself the pasyanti form, and Parabrahmam the para aspect of
that Vach. It is by the light of this explanation
that we must try to
understand certain statements made by various philosophers to
the effect that the manifested cosmos is the Verbum
manifested as cosmos.
These four
principles bear the same relationship to one another as do these four
conditions or manifestations of Vach.
I shall now
proceed to an examination of the principles that constitute the solar system
itself. Here I find it useful to refer to the explanations generally given with
reference to Pranava and the meaning of its matras. Pranava
is intended to represent man and also the manifested
cosmos, the four principles in the one corresponding to the four in the other.
The four
principles in the manifested cosmos may be enumerated in this order. First, Vishwanara. Now this
Vishwanara is not to be looked upon as merely the manifested
objective world, but as the one physical basis from which the whole objective
world starts into existence.
Beyond this and
next to this is what is called Hiranyagarbha. This
again is not to be confounded with the astral world, but
must be looked upon as the basis of the astral world, bearing the same
relationship to the astral world as Vishwanara bears
to the objective world.
Next to this
there is what is now
and then called Eswara; but
as this word is likely to mislead, I shall not call it Eswara,
but by another name, also sanctioned by usage -- Sutratma.
And beyond
these three it is
generally stated there is Parabrahmam.
As regards this fourth
principle differences of opinion have sprung up, and from
these
differences any amount of difficulty has arisen. For this
principle, we ought to have, as we have for the cosmos, some principle or entity
out of which the other three principles start into existence and which exist in
it and by reason of it. If such be the case, no doubt we ought to accept the Avyaktam of the Sankhyas as this
fourth principle.
This Avyaktam is the Mulaprakriti which
I have already explained as the veil of Parabrahmam
considered from the objective standpoint of the Logos, and this is the view
adopted by the majority of the Sankhyas. Into
the details of the evolution of the solar system
itself, it is not necessary for me to enter.
You may gather
some idea as to the way in which the various elements start into existence from
these three principles into which Mulaprakriti is
differentiated, by examining the lecture delivered by Professor
Crookes a short time ago upon the so-called
elements of modern chemistry.
This lecture
will at least give you some idea of the way in which the so-called elements
spring from Vishwanara, the most objective of these
three principles, which seems to stand in the place of the protyle
mentioned in that lecture.
Except in a few
particulars, this lecture seems to give the outlines of the theory of physical
evolution on the plane of Vishwanara and is, as far
as I know, the nearest approach made by modern investigators to the real occult
theory on the subject.
These
principles, in themselves, are so far beyond our common experience as to become
objects of merely theoretical conception and inference rather than objects of
practical knowledge. Of course if it is so difficult for us to understand these
different principles as they exist in nature, it will be still more difficult
for us to form any definite idea as to their basis.
But at any rate
the evolution and the work of differentiation of these principles is a matter
which appertains more properly to the science of physics, than to the
science of spiritual ethics, and the fundamental
principles that I have laid down will suffice for our present purpose. You must
conceive, without my going through the whole process of evolution, that out of
these three principles, having as their one foundation Mulaprakriti,
the whole manifested solar system with all the various objects in it has
started into being. Bear in mind also that the one energy which works out the
whole process of evolution is that light
of the Logos which is diffused through all these
principles and all their manifestations. It is the one light that starts with a
certain definite impulse communicated by the intellectual energy of the Logos
and works out the whole
programme from the commencement to the end of evolution. If
we begin our examination from the lowest organisms, it will be seen that this
one life is, as it were, undifferentiated. Now when we take, for instance, the
mineral kingdom,
or all those objects in the cosmos which we cannot
strictly speaking call living organisms, we find this light undifferentiated.
In the course
of time when we
reach plant life it becomes differentiated to a
considerable extent, and organisms are formed which tend more and more towards
differentiation.
And when we
reach animal life, we find that the differentiation is more complete, and this
light moreover manifests itself as consciousness. It must not be supposed that
consciousness is a sort of independent entity created by this light; it is a
mode or a manifestation of the light itself, which is life. By the time we
reach man, this light becomes differentiated and forms that centre or ego that
gives rise to all the mental and physical progress that we see in the process
of
cosmic evolution. This differentiation results in the
first instance from the
environment of particular organisms. The various actions
evoked in a given
organism and
those which it evokes in other organisms or in its surroundings, and the
actions which it generates in itself at that stage, can hardly be called Karma;
still its life and actions may perhaps have a certain effect in determining the
future manifestations of that life-energy which is acting in it.
By the time we
reach man, this one light becomes differentiated into certain monads, and hence
individuality is fixed.
As
individuality is rendered more and more definite, and becomes more and more
differentiated from other individualities by man's own surroundings, and the
intellectual
and moral impulses he generates and the effect of his own Karma, the principles
of which he is composed become more defined. There are four
principles in man. First, there is the physical body, about which
we need not go into details, as they appertain more to the field of enquiry of
the physiologist than to that of the religious investigator. No doubt certain
branches of physiology do become matters of considerable importance in dealing
with certain
subjects connected with Yoga Philosophy; but we need not
discuss those questions at present.
Next there is
the sukshma sarira. This
bears to the physical body the same relationship which the astral world bears
to the objective plane of the solar system. It is sometimes called kama-rupa in our theosophical dissertations.
This
unfortunate expression has given rise also to a misconception that the
principle called
Its senses are
not so differentiated and localized as in the physical body, and, being
composed of finer materials, its powers of action and thought are considerably
greater than those found in the physical organism. Karana sarira can only be
conceived as a centre of pragna -- a centre of force
or energy into which the third principle (or sutratma)
of the cosmos was differentiated by reason of the
same impulse which has brought about the
differentiation of all these cosmic principles. And now the question is, what is it that completes this trinity and makes it a
quaternary? (2) Of course this light of the Logos. As I have
already
said, it is a sort of light that permeates every kind
of organism, and so in this trinity it is manifested in every one of the upadhis as the real jiva or the
ego of man.
Now in order to
enable you to have a clear conception of the matter, I shall express my ideas
in figurative language. Suppose, for instance,
we compare the Logos itself to the sun. Suppose I
take a clear mirror in my hand, catch a reflection of the sun, make the rays
reflect from the surface of the mirror -- say upon a polished metallic plate --
and make the rays which are reflected in their turn from the plate fall upon a
wall. Now we have three images, one being clearer than the other, and one being
more resplendent than the other. I can compare the clear mirror to karana sarira, the metallic plate
to the astral body, and the wall to the physical body. In each case a definite bimbam is formed, and that bimbam
or reflected image is for the time being considered as the self. The bimbam formed on the astral body gives rise to the idea of
self in it when considered apart from the physical body; the bimbam formed in the karana sarira gives rise to the most prominent form of
individuality that man possesses. You will further see that these various bimbams are not of the same lustre.
The lustre of this bimbam
you may compare to man's knowledge, and it grows feebler and feebler as the
reflection is transferred from a clear upadhi to one
less clear, and so on till you get to the physical body. Our knowledge depends
mainly on the condition of the upadhi, and you will
also observe that just as the image of the sun on a clear surface of water may
be
disturbed and rendered invisible by the motion of the water
itself,
so by a man's passions and emotions he may render the
image of his true self disturbed and distorted in its appearance, and even make
the image so indistinct as to be altogether unable to perceive its light.
You will
further see that this idea of self is a delusive one. Almost every
great writer on Vedantic
philosophy, as also both Buddha and Sankaracharya,
have distinctly alleged that it is a delusive idea. You must not suppose that
these great men said that the idea of self was delusive for the same reason
which led John Stuart Mill to suppose that the idea of self is manufactured
from a concatenation or series of mental states. It is not a manufactured idea,
as it were, not a secondary idea which has arisen from
any series of mental states. It is said to be delusive, as I have been trying
to explain, because the real self
is the Logos itself, and what is generally considered
as the ego is but its reflection. If you say, however, that a reflected image
cannot act as an individual being, I have simply to remind you that my simile
cannot be carried very far. We find that each distinct image can form a
separate centre.
You will see in
what difficulty it will land us if you deny this, and hold the self to be a
separate entity in itself. If so, while I am in my objective state of consciousness,
my ego is something existing as a real entity in the physical body itself. How
is it possible to transfer the same to the astral body? Then, again, it has
also to be transferred to the karana sarira.
We shall find a
still greater difficulty in transferring this entity to the Logos itself, and
you may depend upon it that unless a man's individuality or ego can be
transferred to the Logos immortality is only a name. In
certain peculiar cases it will be very difficult to account for a large number
of phenomena on the basis that this self
is some kind of centre of energy or some existing
monad transferred from upadhi to upadhi.
In the opinion
of the Vedantists, and, as I shall hereafter point
out, in the
opinion of
There is no
doubt a difference of opinion as to the exact nature of the fourth principle as
I have already said, which has given rise to various
misconceptions. Now, for instance, according to some followers of
the Sankhya philosophy, at any rate those who are
called nireswara sankhyas,
man has these three principles, with their Avyaktam
to complete the quaternary.
This Avyaktam is Mulaprakriti, or rather
Parabrahmam manifested in Mulaprakriti
as its upadhi.
In this view Parabrahmam is really the fourth principle, the highest
principle in man; and the other three principles simply exist in it and by
reason of it.
That is to say,
this Avyaktam is the one principle which is the root
of all
self, which
becomes differentiated in the course of evolution, or rather which appears to
be differentiated in the various organisms, which subsists in every kind of upadhi, and which is the real spiritual entity which a man
has to reach.
Now let us see
what will happen according to this hypothesis. The Logos is entirely shut out;
it is not taken notice of at all; and that is the reason why these people have
been called nireswara sankhyas
(not because they have denied the existence of Parabrahmam,
for this they did not -- but) because they have
not taken notice of the Logos, and its light -- the
two most important entities in nature, -- in classifying the principles of man.
FOOTNOTES
1. Four Upadhis including the Ego -- the reflected image of the
Logos in Karana Sarira --
as the vehicle of the Light of the Logos. This is sometimes called Samanya Sarira in Hindu books.
But strictly speaking there are only three Upadhis.
2. The
reflected image of the Logos formed by the action of this light or Karana Sarira may be considered
as the 4th principle in man and it has been so considered by certain
philosophers. But in reality the real entity is the light itself and not the
reflected image.
Theosophy
Life & Works of T Subba Row
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