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Monthly Message - May 2013 |
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Excerpts from The Complete
Works of Swami Vivekananda (Vol. 1 - 8), published by
Advaita Ashrama, 5, Dehi Entally Road, Calcutta 14,
India.
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PRACTICAL VEDANTA
PART III
(Delivered in London, 12h November 1896)
In the Chhâdogya Upanishad we read that a sage called
Nârada came to another called Sanatkumâra, and asked him
various questions, of which one was, if religion was the
cause of things as they are. And Sanatkumara leads him,
as it were, step by step, telling him that there is
something higher than this earth, and something higher
than that, and so on, till he comes to Âkâsha, ether.
Ether is higher than light, because in the ether are the
sun and the moon, lightning and the stars; in ether we
live, and in ether we die. Then the question arises, if
there is anything higher than that, and Sanatkumara
tells him of Prâna. This Prana, according to the
Vedanta, is the principle of life. It is like ether, an
omnipresent principle; and all motion, either in the
body or anywhere else, is the work of this Prana. It is
greater than Akasha, and through it everything lives.
Prana is in the mother, in the father, in the sister, in
the teacher, Prana is the knower.
I will read another passage, where Shvetaketu asks
his father about the Truth, and the father teaches him
different things, and concludes by saying, "That which
is the fine cause in all these things, of It are all
these things made. That is the All, that is Truth, thou
art That, O Shvetaketu." And then he gives various
examples. "As a bee, O Shvetaketu, gathers honey from
different flowers, and as the different honeys do not
know that they are from various trees, and from various
flowers, so all of us, having come to that Existence,
know not that we have done so. Now, that which is that
subtle essence, in It all that exists has its self. It
is the True. It is the Self and thou, O Shvetaketu, are
That." He gives another example of the rivers running
down to the ocean. "As the rivers, when they are in the
ocean, do not know that they have been various rivers,
even so when we come out of that Existence, we do not
know that we are That. O Shvetaketu, thou art That." So
on he goes with his teachings.
Now there are two principles of knowledge. The one
principle is that we know by referring the particular to
the general, and the general to the universal; and the
second is that anything of which the explanation is
sought is to be explained so far as possible from its
own nature. Taking up the first principle, we see that
all our knowledge really consists of classifications,
going higher and higher. When something happens singly,
we are, as it were, dissatisfied. When it can be shown
that the same thing happens again and again, we are
satisfied and call it law. When we find that one apple
falls, we are dissatisfied; but when we find that all
apples fall, we call it the law of gravitation and are
satisfied. The fact is that from the particular we
deduce the general.
When we want to study religion, we should apply this
scientific process. The same principle also holds good
here, and as a fact we find that that has been the
method all through. In reading these books from which I
have been translating to you, the earliest idea that I
can trace is this principle of going from the particular
to the general. We see how the "bright ones" became
merged into one principle; and likewise in the ideas of
the cosmos we find the ancient thinkers going higher and
higher — from the fine elements they go to finer and
more embracing elements, and from these particulars they
come to one omnipresent ether, and from that even they
go to an all embracing force, or Prana; and through all
this runs the principle, that one is not separate from
the others. It is the very ether that exists in the
higher form of Prana, or the higher form of Prana
concretes, so to say, and becomes ether; and that ether
becomes still grosser, and so on.
The generalization of the Personal God is another
case in point. We have seen how this generalization was
reached, and was called the sum total of all
consciousness. But a difficulty arises — it is an
incomplete generalization. We take up only one side of
the facts of nature, the fact of consciousness, and upon
that we generalize, but the other side is left out. So,
in the first place it is a defective generalization.
There is another insufficiency, and that relates to the
second principle. Everything should be explained from
its own nature. There may have been people who thought
that every apple that fell to the ground was dragged
down by a ghost, but the explanation is the law of
gravitation; and although we know it is not a perfect
explanation, yet it is much better than the other,
because it is derived from the nature of the thing
itself, while the other posits an extraneous cause. So
throughout the whole range of our knowledge; the
explanation which is based upon the nature of the thing
itself is a scientific explanation, and an explanation
which brings in an outside agent is unscientific.
So the explanation of a Personal God as the creator
of the universe has to stand that test. If that God is
outside of nature, having nothing to do with nature, and
this nature is the outcome of the command of that God
and produced from nothing, it is a very unscientific
theory, and this has been the weak point of every
Theistic religion throughout the ages. These two defects
we find in what is generally called the theory of
monotheism, the theory of a Personal God, with all the
qualities of a human being multiplied very much, who, by
His will, created this universe out of nothing and yet
is separate from it. This leads us into two
difficulties.
As we have seen, it is not a sufficient
generalization, and secondly, it is not an explanation
of nature from nature. It holds that the effect is not
the cause, that the cause is entirely separate from the
effect. Yet all human knowledge shows that the effect is
but the cause in another form. To this idea the
discoveries of modern science are tending every day, and
the latest theory that has been accepted on all sides is
the theory of evolution, the principle of which is that
the effect is but the cause in another form, a
readjustment of the cause, and the cause takes the form
of the effect. The theory of creation out of nothing
would be laughed at by modern scientists.
Now, can religion stand these tests? If there be any
religious theories which can stand these two tests, they
will be acceptable to the modern mind, to the thinking
mind. Any other theory which we ask the modern man to
believe, on the authority of priests, or churches, or
books, he is unable to accept, and the result is a
hideous mass of unbelief. Even in those in whom there is
an external display of belief, in their hearts there is
a tremendous amount of unbelief. The rest shrink away
from religion, as it were, give it up, regarding it as
priestcraft only.
Religion has been reduced to a sort of national form.
It is one of our very best social remnants; let it
remain. But the real necessity which the grandfather of
the modern man felt for it is gone; he no longer finds
it satisfactory to his reason. The idea of such a
Personal God, and such a creation, the idea which is
generally known as monotheism in every religion, cannot
hold its own any longer. In India it could not hold its
own because of the Buddhists, and that was the very
point where they gained their victory in ancient times.
They showed that if we allow that nature is possessed of
infinite power, and that nature can work out all its
wants, it is simply unnecessary to insist that there is
something besides nature. Even the soul is unnecessary.
The discussion about substance and qualities is very
old, and you will sometimes find that the old
superstition lives even at the present day. Most of you
have read how, during the Middle Ages, and, I am sorry
to say, even much later, this was one of the subjects of
discussion, whether qualities adhered to substance,
whether length, breadth, and thickness adhered to the
substance which we call dead matter, whether, the
substance remaining, the qualities are there or not. To
this our Buddhist says, "You have no ground for
maintaining the existence of such a substance; the
qualities are all that exist; you do not see beyond
them." This is just the position of most of our modern
agnostics. For it is this fight of the substance and
qualities that, on a higher plane, takes the form of the
fight between noumenon and phenomenon. There is the
phenomenal world, the universe of continuous change, and
there is something behind which does not change; and
this duality of existence, noumenon and phenomenon, some
hold, is true, and others with better reason claim that
you have no right to admit the two, for what we see,
feel, and think is only the phenomenon. You have no
right to assert there is anything beyond phenomenon; and
there is no answer to this. The only answer we get is
from the monistic theory of the Vedanta. It is true that
only one exists, and that one is either phenomenon or
noumenon. It is not true that there are two — something
changing, and, in and through that, something which does
not change; but it is the one and the same thing which
appears as changing, and which is in reality
unchangeable. We have come to think of the body, and
mind, and soul as many, but really there is only one;
and that one is appearing in all these various forms.
Take the well-known illustration of the monists, the
rope appearing as the snake. Some people, in the dark or
through some other cause, mistake the rope for the
snake, but when knowledge comes, the snake vanishes and
it is found to be a rope. By this illustration we see
that when the snake exists in the mind, the rope has
vanished, and when the rope exists, the snake has gone.
When we see phenomenon, and phenomenon only, around us,
the noumenon has vanished, but when we see the noumenon,
the unchangeable, it naturally follows that the
phenomenon has vanished. Now, we understand better the
position of both the realist and the idealist. The
realist sees the phenomenon only, and the idealist looks
to the noumenon. For the idealist, the really genuine
idealist, who has truly arrived at the power of
perception, whereby he can get away from all ideas of
change, for him the changeful universe has vanished, and
he has the right to say it is all delusion, there is no
change. The realist at the same time looks at the
changeful. For him the unchangeable has vanished, and he
has a right to say this is all real.
What is the outcome of this philosophy? It is that
the idea of Personal God is not sufficient. We have to
get to something higher, to the Impersonal idea. It is
the only logical step that we can take. Not that the
personal idea would be destroyed by that, not that we
supply proof that the Personal God does not exist, but
we must go to the Impersonal for the explanation of the
personal, for the Impersonal is a much higher
generalization than the personal. The Impersonal only
can be Infinite, the personal is limited. Thus we
preserve the personal and do not destroy it. Often the
doubt comes to us that if we arrive at the idea of the
Impersonal God, the personal will be destroyed, if we
arrive at the idea of the Impersonal man, the personal
will be lost. But the Vedantic idea is not the
destruction of the individual, but its real
preservation. We cannot prove the individual by any
other means but by referring to the universal, by
proving that this individual is really the universal. If
we think of the individual as separate from everything
else in the universe, it cannot stand a minute. Such a
thing never existed. |
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.to be
continued.... |
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Excerpts from The Complete
Works of Swami Vivekananda (Vol. 1 - 8), published by
Advaita Ashrama, 5, Dehi Entally Road, Calcutta 14,
India.
PRACTICAL VEDANTA
PART IV
(Delivered in London, 18th November 1896)
Of course we know that the Advaita holds that this
cannot be the goal or the ideal; bodilessness must be
the ideal. The ideal cannot be finite. Anything short of
the Infinite cannot be the ideal, and there cannot be an
infinite body. That would be impossible, as body comes
from limitation. There cannot be infinite thought,
because thought comes from limitation. We have to go
beyond the body, and beyond thought too, says the
Advaita. And we have also seen that, according to
Advaita, this freedom is not to be attained, it is
already ours. We only forget it and deny it. Perfection
is not to be attained, it is already within us.
Immortality and bliss are not to be acquired, we possess
them already; they have been ours all the time.
If you dare declare that you are free, free you are
this moment. If you say you are bound, bound you will
remain. This is what Advaita boldly declares. I have
told you the ideas of the dualists. You can take
whichever you like.
The highest ideal of the Vedanta is very difficult to
understand, and people are always quarrelling about it,
and the greatest difficulty is that when they get hold
of certain ideas, they deny and fight other ideas. Take
up what suits you, and let others take up what they
need. If you are desirous of clinging to this little
individuality, to this limited manhood, remain in it,
have all these desires, and be content and pleased with
them. If your experience of manhood has been very good
and nice, retain it as long as you like; and you can do
so, for you are the makers of your own fortunes; none
can compel you to give up your manhood. You will be men
as long as you like; none can prevent you. If you want
to be angels, you will be angels, that is the law. But
there may be others who do not want to be angels even.
What right have you to think that theirs is a horrible
notion? You may be frightened to lose a hundred pounds,
but there may be others who would not even wink if they
lost all the money they had in the world. There have
been such men and still there are. Why do you dare to
judge them according to your standard? You cling on to
your limitations, and these little worldly ideas may be
your highest ideal. You are welcome to them. It will be
to you as you wish. But there are others who have seen
the truth and cannot rest in these limitations, who have
done with these things and want to get beyond. The world
with all its enjoyments is a mere mud-puddle for them.
Why do you want to bind them down to your ideas? You
must get rid of this tendency once for all. Accord a
place to everyone.
I once read a story about some ships that were caught
in a cyclone in the South Sea Islands, and there was a
picture of it in the Illustrated London News. All
of them were wrecked except one English vessel, which
weathered the storm. The picture showed the men who were
going to be drowned, standing on the decks and cheering
the people who were sailing through the storm (H.M.S.
Calliope and the American men-of-war at Samoa. — Ed).
Be brave and generous like that. Do not drag others down
to where you are. Another foolish notion is that if we
lose our little individuality, there will be no
morality, no hope for humanity. As if everybody had been
dying for humanity all the time! God bless you! If in
every country there were two hundred men and women
really wanting to do good to humanity, the millennium
would come in five days. We know how we are dying for
humanity! These are all tall talks, and nothing else.
The history of the world shows that those who never
thought of their little individuality were the greatest
benefactors of the human race, and that the more men and
women think of themselves, the less are they able to do
for others. One is unselfishness, and the other
selfishness. Clinging on to little enjoyments, and to
desire the continuation and repetition of this state of
things is utter selfishness. It arises not from any
desire for truth, its genesis is not in kindness for
other beings, but in the utter selfishness of the human
heart, in the idea, "I will have everything, and do not
care for anyone else." This is as it appears to me. I
would like to see more moral men in the world like some
of those grand old prophets and sages of ancient times
who would have given up a hundred lives if they could by
so doing benefit one little animal! Talk of morality and
doing good to others! Silly talk of the present time!
I would like to see moral men like Gautama Buddha,
who did not believe in a Personal God or a personal
soul, never asked about them, but was a perfect
agnostic, and yet was ready to lay down his life for
anyone, and worked all his life for the good of all, and
thought only of the good of all. Well has it been said
by his biographer, in describing his birth, that he was
born for the good of the many, as a blessing to the
many. He did not go to the forest to meditate for his
own salvation; he felt that the world was burning, and
that he must find a way out. "Why is there so much
misery in the world ?" — was the one question that
dominated his whole life. Do you think we are so moral
as the Buddha?
The more selfish a man, the more immoral he is. And
so also with the race. That race which is bound down to
itself has been the most cruel and the most wicked in
the whole world. There has not been a religion that has
clung to this dualism more than that founded by the
Prophet of Arabia, and there has not been a religion
which has shed so much blood and been so cruel to other
men. In the Koran there is the doctrine that a man who
does not believe these teachings should be killed; it is
a mercy to kill him! And the surest way to get to
heaven, where there are beautiful houris and all sorts
of sense-enjoyments, is by killing these unbelievers.
Think of the bloodshed there has been in consequence of
such beliefs!
In the religion of Christ there was little of
crudeness; there is very little difference between the
pure religion of Christ and that of the Vedanta. You
find there the idea of oneness; but Christ also preached
dualistic ideas to the people in order to give them
something tangible to take hold of, to lead them up to
the highest ideal. The same Prophet who preached, "Our
Father which art in heaven", also preached, "I and my
Father are one", and the same Prophet knew that through
the "Father in heaven" lies the way to the "I and my
Father are one". There was only blessing and love in the
religion of Christ; but as soon as crudeness crept in,
it was degraded into something not much better than the
religion of the Prophet of Arabia. It was crudeness
indeed — this fight for the little self, this clinging
on to the "I", not only in this life, but also in the
desire for its continuance even after death. This they
declare to be unselfishness; this the foundation of
morality! Lord help us, if this be the foundation of
morality! And strangely enough, men and women who ought
to know better think all morality will be destroyed if
these little selves go and stand aghast at the idea that
morality can only stand upon their destruction. The
watchword of all well-being, of all moral good is not
"I" but "thou". Who cares whether there is a heaven or a
hell, who cares if there is a soul or not, who cares if
there is an unchangeable or not? Here is the world, and
it is full of misery. Go out into it as Buddha did, and
struggle to lessen it or die in the attempt. Forget
yourselves; this is the first lesson to be learnt,
whether you are a theist or an atheist, whether you are
an agnostic or a Vedantist, a Christian or a Mohammedan.
The one lesson obvious to all is the destruction of the
little self and the building up of the Real Self.
Two forces have been working side by side in parallel
lines. The one says "I", the other says "not I". Their
manifestation is not only in man but in animals, not
only in animals but in the smallest worms. The tigress
that plunges her fangs into the warm blood of a human
being would give up her own life to protect her young.
The most depraved man who thinks nothing of taking the
lives of his brother men will, perhaps, sacrifice
himself without any hesitation to save his starving wife
and children. Thus throughout creation these two forces
are working side by side; where you find the one, you
find the other too. The one is selfishness, the other is
unselfishness. The one is acquisition, the other is
renunciation. The one takes, the other gives. From the
lowest to the highest, the whole universe is the
playground of these two forces. It does not require any
demonstration; it is obvious to all.
What right has any section of the community to base
the whole work and evolution of the universe upon one of
these two factors alone, upon competition and struggle?
What right has it to base the whole working of the
universe upon passion and fight, upon competition and
struggle? That these exist we do not deny; but what
right has anyone to deny the working of the other force?
Can any man deny that love, this "not I", this
renunciation is the only positive power in the universe?
That other is only the misguided employment of the power
of love; the power of love brings competition, the real
genesis of competition is in love. The real genesis of
evil is in unselfishness. The creator of evil is good,
and the end is also good. It is only misdirection of the
power of good. A man who murders another is, perhaps,
moved to do so by the love of his own child. His love
has become limited to that one little baby, to the
exclusion of the millions of other human beings in the
universe. Yet, limited or unlimited, it is the same
love.
Thus the motive power of the whole universe, in what
ever way it manifests itself, is that one wonderful
thing, unselfishness, renunciation, love, the real, the
only living force in existence. Therefore the Vedantist
insists upon that oneness. We insist upon this
explanation because we cannot admit two causes of the
universe. If we simply hold that by limitation the same
beautiful, wonderful love appears to be evil or vile, we
find the whole universe explained by the one force of
love. If not, two causes of the universe have to be
taken for granted, one good and the other evil, one love
and the other hatred. Which is more logical? Certainly
the one-force theory.
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to be continued |
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