THE intuitive mind is an immediate
translation of truth into mental terms half transformed
by a radiant supramental substance, a translation of
some infinite self-knowledge that acts above mind in
the superconscient spirit. That spirit becomes conscient
to us as a greater self at once above and in and around
us of which our present self, our mental, vital and
physical personality and nature, is an imperfect portion
or a partial derivation or an inferior and inadequate
symbol, and as the intuitive mind grows in us, as our
whole being grows more moulded to an intuitive substance,
we feel a sort of half transformation of our members
into the nature of this greater self and spirit. All
our thought, will, impulse, feeling, even in the end
our more outward vital and physical sensations become
more and more direct transmissions from the spirit and
are of another and a more and more pure, untroubled,
powerful and luminous nature. This is one side of the
change: the other is that whatever belongs still to
the lower being, whatever still seems to us to come
from outside or as a survival of the action of our old
inferior personality, feels the pressure of the change
and increasingly tends to modify and transform itself
to the new substance and nature. The higher comes down
and largely takes the place of the lower, but also the
lower changes, transforms itself into material of the
action and becomes part of the substance of the higher
being.
The
greater spirit above the mind appears at first as a
presence, a light, a power, a source, an infinite, but
all that is knowable to us in it is at first an infinite
identity of being, consciousness, power of consciousness,
Ananda. The rest comes from it, but takes no determinate
shape of thought, will or feeling above us, but only
in the intuitive mind and on its level. Or we feel and
are manifoldly aware of a great and infinite Purusha
who is the eternally living truth of that being and
presence, a great and infinite knowledge which is the
potency of that light and consciousness, a great and
infinite will which is the potency of that power of
consciousness, a great and infinite love which is the
potency of that Ananda. But all these potencies are
only known to us in any definite manner, apart from
the strong reality and effect of their essential presence,
in so far as they are translated to our intuitive mental
being and on its level and within its limits. As however
we progress or as we grow into a more luminous and dynamic
union with that spirit or Purusha, a greater action
of knowledge and will and spiritual feeling manifests
and seems to organise itself above the mind and this
we recognise as the true supermind and the real native
play of the infinite knowledge, will and Ananda. The
intuitive mentality then becomes a secondary and inferior
movement waiting upon this higher power, responding
and assenting to all its illuminations and dictates,
transmitting them to the lower members, and, when they
do not arrive or are not in immediate evidence, often
attempting to supply its place, imitate its action and
do as best it can the works of the supramental nature.
It takes in fact the same place and relation with regard
to it as was taken with regard to itself by the ordinary
intelligence at an earlier stage of the Yoga.
This
double action on the two planes of our being at first
strengthens the intuitive mentality as a secondary operation
and assists it to expel or transform more completely
the survivals or invasions or accretions of the ignorance.
And more and more it intensifies the intuitive mentality
itself in its light of knowledge and eventually transforms
it into the image of the supermind itself, but at first,
ordinarily, in the more limited action of the gnosis
when it takes the form of what we might call a luminous
supra-mental or divine reason. It is as this divine
reason that the super-mind itself at the beginning may
manifest its action and then, when it has changed the
mind into its own image, it descends and takes the place
of the ordinary intelligence and reason. Meanwhile a
higher supramental power of a much greater character
has been revealing itself above which takes the supreme
lead of the divine action in the being. The divine reason
is of a more limited character because, although not
of the mental stamp and
although an operation of the direct truth and knowledge,
it is a delegated power for a range of purposes greater
in light, but still to a certain extent analogous to
those of the ordinary human will and reason; it is in
the yet greater supermind that there comes the direct,
altogether revealed and immediate action of the Ishwara
in the human being. These distinctions between the intuitive
mind, the divine reason and the greater supermind, and
others within these gradations themselves, have to be
made because eventually they become of great importance.
At first the mind takes all that comes from beyond it
without distinction as the sufficient spiritual illumination
and accepts even initial states and first enlightenments
as a finality, but afterwards it finds that to rest
here would be to rest in a partial realisation and that
one has to go on heightening and enlarging till at least
there is reached a certain completeness of divine breadth
and stature.
It
is difficult for the intellect to grasp at all what
is meant by these supramental distinctions: the mental
terms in which they can be rendered are lacking or inadequate
and they can only be understood after a certain sight
or certain approximations in experience. A number of
indications are all that at present it can be useful
to give. And first it will be enough to take certain
clues from the thinking mind; for it is there that some
of the nearest keys to the supramental action are discoverable.
The thought of the intuitive mind proceeds wholly by
four powers that shape the form of the truth, an intuition
that suggests its idea, an intuition that discriminates,
an inspiration that brings in its word and something
of its greater substance and a revelation that shapes
to the sight its very face and body of reality. These
things are not the same as certain movements of the
ordinary mental intelligence that look analogous and
are easily mistaken for the true intuition in our first
inexperience. The suggestive intuition is not the same
thing as the intellectual insight of a quick intelligence
or the intuitive discrimination as the rapid judgment
of the reasoning intellect; the intuitive inspiration
is not the same as the inspired action of the imaginative
intelligence, nor the intuitive revelation as the strong
light of a purely mental close seizing and experience.
It
would perhaps be accurate to say that these latter activities
are mental representations of the higher movements,
attempts of the ordinary mind to do the same things
or the best possible imitations the intellect can offer
of the functionings of the higher nature. The true intuitions
differ from these effective but insufficient counterfeits
in their substance of light, their operation, their
method of knowledge. The intellectual rapidities are
dependent on awakenings of the basic mental ignorance
to mental figures and representations of truth that
may be quite valid in their own field and for their
own purpose but are not necessarily and by their very
nature reliable. They are dependent for their emergence
on the suggestions given by mental and sense data or
on the accumulation of past mental knowledge. They search
for the truth as a thing outside, an object to be found
and looked at and stored as an acquisition and, when
found, scrutinise its surfaces, suggestions or aspects.
This scrutiny can never give a quite complete and adequate
truth idea. However positive they may seem at the time,
they may at any moment have to be passed over, rejected
and found inconsistent with fresh knowledge.
The
intuitive knowledge on the contrary, however limited
it may be in its field or application, is within that
scope sure with an immediate, a durable and especially
a self-existent certitude. It may take for starting-point
or rather for a thing to light up and disclose in its
true sense the data of mind and sense or else fire a
train of past thought and knowledge to new meanings
and issues, but it is dependent on nothing but itself
and may leap out of its own field of lustres, independent
of previous suggestion or data, and this kind of action
becomes progressively more common and adds itself to
the other to initiate new depths and ranges of knowledge.
In either case there is always an element of self-existent
truth and a sense of absoluteness of origination suggestive
of its proceeding from the spirit's knowledge by identity.
It is the disclosing of a knowledge that is secret but
already existent in the being: it is not an acquisition,
but something that was always there and revealable.
It sees the truth from within and illumines with that
inner vision the outsides and it harmonises, too, readily—provided
we keep intuitively awake—with whatever fresh
truth has yet to arrive. These characteristics become
more pronounced and intense in the higher, the proper
supramental ranges: in the intuitive mind they may not
be always recognisable in their purity and completeness
because of the mixture of mental stuff and its accretion,
but in the divine reason and greater supramental action
they become free and absolute.
The
suggestive intuition acting on the mental level suggests
a direct and illumining inner idea of the truth, an
idea that is its true image and index, not as yet the
entirely present and whole sight, but rather of the
nature of a bright memory of some truth, a recognition
of a secret of the self's knowledge. It is a representation,
but a living representation, not an ideative symbol,
a reflection, but a reflection that is lit up with something
of the truth's real substance. The intuitive discrimination
is a secondary action setting this idea of the truth
in its right place and its relation to other ideas.
And so long as there is the habit of mental interference
and accretion it works also to separate the mental from
the higher seeing, to discrete the inferior mental stuff
that embarrasses with its alloy the pure truth substance,
and labours to unravel the mingled skein of ignorance
and knowledge, falsehood and error. As the intuition
is of the nature of a memory, a luminous remembering
of the self-existent truth, so the inspiration is of
the nature of truth hearing: it is an immediate reception
of the very voice of the truth, it readily brings the
word that perfectly embodies it and it carries something
more than the light of its idea; there is seized some
stream of its inner reality and vivid arriving movement
of its substance. The revelation is of the nature of
direct sight, pratyaksa-drsti, and makes evident
to a present vision the thing in itself of which the
idea is the representation. It brings out the very spirit
and being and reality of the truth and makes it part
of the consciousness and the experience.
In
the actual process of the development of the supramental
nature, supposing it to follow a regular gradation,
it may be seen that the two lower powers come out first,
though not necessarily void of all action of the two
higher powers, and as they increase and become a normal
action, they make a sort of lower intuitive gnosis.
The combination of the two together is necessary for
its completeness. If the intuitive discrimination works
by itself, it creates a sort of critical illumination
that acts on the ideas and perceptions of the intellect
and turns them on themselves in such a way that the
mind can separate their truth from their error. It creates
in the end in place of the intellectual judgment a luminous
intuitive judgment, a sort of critical gnosis: but it
is likely to be deficient in fresh illuminative knowledge
or to create only so much extension of truth as is the
natural consequence of the separation of error. On the
other hand, if the suggestive intuition works by itself
without this discrimination, there is indeed a constant
accession of new truths and new lights, but they are
easily surrounded and embarrassed by the mental accretions
and their connections and relation or harmonious development
out of each other are clouded and broken by the interference.
A normalised power of active intuitive perception is
created, but not any complete and coherent mind of intuitive
gnosis. The two together supply the deficiencies of
each other's single action and build up a mind of intuitive
perception and discrimination which can do the work
and more than the work of the stumbling mental intelligence
and do it with the greater light, surety and power of
a more direct and unfaltering ideation.
The
two higher powers in the same way make a higher intuitive
gnosis. Acting as separate powers in the mentality they
too are not in themselves sufficient without the companion
activities. The revelation may indeed present the reality,
the identities of the thing in itself and add something
of great power to the experience of the conscious being,
but it may lack the embodying word, the out-bringing
idea, the connected pursuit of its relations and consequences
and may remain a possession in the self but not a thing
communicated to and through the members. There may be
the presence of the truth but not its full manifestation.
The inspiration may give the word of the truth and the
stir of its dyna-mis and movement, but this is not a
complete thing and sure in its effect without the full
revelation of all that it bears in itself and luminously
indicates and the ordering of it in its relations. The
inspired intuitive mind is a mind of lightnings lighting
up many things that were dark, but the light needs to
be canalised and fixed into a stream of steady lustres
that will be a constant power for lucidly ordered knowledge.
The higher gnosis by itself in its two sole powers would
be a mind of spiritual splendours living too much in
its own separate domain, producing perhaps invisibly
its effect on the outside world, but lacking the link
of a more close and ordinary communication with its
more normal movements that is provided by the lower
ideative action. It is the united or else the fused
and unified action of the four powers that makes the
complete and fully armed and equipped intuitive gnosis.
A
regular development would at first, allowing for some
simultaneous manifestation of the four powers, yet create
on a sufficiently extensive scale the lower suggestive
and critical intuitive mind and then develop above it
the inspired and the revelatory intuitive mentality.
Next it would take up the two lower powers into the
power and field of the inspiration and make all act
as one harmony doing simultaneously the united—or,
at a higher intensity, indistinguishably as one light
the unified—action of the three. And last it would
execute a similar movement of taking up into a fusion
with the revelatory power of the intuitive gnosis. As
a matter of fact, in the human mind the clear process
of the development is likely always to be more or less
disturbed, confused and rendered irregular in its course,
subjected to relapses, incomplete advances, returns
upon things unaccomplished or imperfectly accomplished
owing to the constant mixture and intervention of the
existing movements of the mental half-knowledge and
the obstruction of the stuff of the mental ignorance.
In the end however a time can come when the process,
so far as it is possible in the mind itself, is complete
and a clear formation of a modified supramental light
is possible composed of all these powers, the highest
leading or absorbing into its own body the others. It
is at this point, when the intuitive mind has been fully
formed in the mental being and is strong enough to dominate
if not yet wholly to occupy the various mental activities,
that a farther step becomes possible, the lifting of
the centre and level of action above the mind and the
predominance of the supramental reason.
The
first character of this change is a complete reversal,
a turning over, one might almost say, upside down of
the whole activity. At present we live in the mind and
mostly in the physical mind, but still not entirely
involved like the animal in the physical, vital and
sensational workings. On the contrary we have attained
to a certain mental elevation from which we can look
down on the action of the life, sense and body, turn
the higher mental light on them, reflect, judge, use
our will to modify the action of the inferior nature.
On the other hand, we look up too from that elevation
more or less consciously to something above and receive
from it either directly or through our subconscient
or subliminal being some secret superconscient impulsion
of our thought and will and other activities. The process
of this communication is veiled and obscure and men
are not ordinarily aware of it except in certain highly
developed natures: but when we advance in self-knowledge,
we find that all our thought and will originate from
above though formed in the mind and there first overtly
active. If we release the knots of the physical mind
which binds us to the brain instrument and identifies
us with the bodily consciousness and can move in the
pure mentality, this becomes constantly clear to the
perception.
The
development of the intuitive mentality makes this communication
direct, no longer subconscient and obscure; but we are
still in the mind and the mind still looks upward and
receives the supramental communication and passes it
on to the other members. In doing so it no longer wholly
creates its own form for the thought and will that come
down to it, but still it modifies and qualifies and
limits them and imposes something of its own method.
It is still the receiver and the transmitter of the
thought and will,—though not formative of them
now except by a subtle influence, because it provides
them or at least surrounds them with a mental stuff
or a mental setting and framework and atmosphere. When
however the supramental reason develops, the Purusha
rises above the mental elevation and now looks down
on the whole action of mind, life, sense, body from
quite another light and atmosphere, sees and knows it
with quite a different vision and, because he is no
longer involved in the mind, with a free and true knowledge.
Man is at present only partly liberated from the animal
involution,—for his mind is partially lifted above,
partially immerged and controlled by the life, sense
and body,—and he is not at all liberated from
the mental forms and limits. But after he rises to the
supramental elevation, he is delivered from the nether
control and, governor of his whole nature,—essentially
and initially only at first and in his highest consciousness,
for the rest remains still to be transformed,—but
when or in proportion as that is done, he becomes a
free being and master of his mind, sense, life and body.
The
second character of the change is that the formation
of the thought and will can take place now wholly on
the supra-mental level and therefore there is initiated
an entirely luminous and effective will and knowledge.
The light and the power are not indeed complete at the
beginning because the supramental reason is only an
elementary formulation of the supermind and because
the mind and other members have yet to be changed into
the mould of the supramental nature. The mind, it is
true, no longer acts as the apparent originator, formulator
or judge of the thought and will or anything else, but
it still acts as the transmitting channel and therefore
in that degree as a recipient and to a certain extent
an obstructor and qualifier in transmission of the power
and light that comes from above. There is a disparateness
between the supramental consciousness in which the Purusha
now stands, thinks and wills and the mental, vital and
physical consciousness through which he has to effectuate
its light and knowledge. He lives and sees with an ideal
consciousness, but he has yet in his lower self to make
it entirely practical and effective. Otherwise he can
only act with a greater or less spiritual effectiveness
through an internal communication with others on the
spiritual level and on the higher mental level that
is most easily affected by it, but the effect is diminished
and is retarded by the inferiority or lack of the integral
play of the being. This can only be remedied by the
supermind taking hold of and supramentalising the mental,
the vital and the physical consciousness,—transforming
them, that is to say, into moulds of the supramental
nature. This is much more easily done if there has been
that Yogic preparation of the instruments of the lower
nature of which I have already spoken; otherwise there
is much difficulty in getting rid of the discord or
disparateness between the ideal supramentality and the
mental transmitting instruments, the mind channel, the
heart, the sense, the nervous and the physical being.
The supramental reason can do the first and a fairly
ample, though not the entire work of this transformation.
The
supramental reason is of the nature of a spiritual,
direct, self-luminous, self-acting will and intelligence,
not mental, manasa buddhi, but supramental,
vijnana buddhi. It acts by the same four powers
as the intuitive mind, but these powers are here active
in an initial fullness of body not modified by the mental
stuff of the intelligence, not concerned mainly with
an illumining of the mind, but at work in their own
proper manner and for their own native purpose. And
of these four the discrimination here is hardly recognisable
as a separate power, but is constantly inherent in the
three others and is their own determination of the scope
and relations of their knowledge. There are three elevations
in this reason, one in which the action of what we may
call a supramental intuition gives the form and the
predominant character, one in which a rapid supramental
inspiration and one in which a large supramental revelation
leads and imparts the general character, and each of
these raises us to a more concentrated substance and
a higher light, sufficiency and scope of the truth will
and the truth knowledge.
The
work of the supramental reason covers and goes beyond
all that is done by the mental reason, but it starts
from the other end and has a corresponding operation.
The essential truths of self and the spirit and the
principle of things are not to the spiritual reason
abstract ideas or subtle unsubstantial experiences to
which it arrives by a sort of overleaping of limits,
but a constant reality and the natural background of
all its ideation and experience. It does not like the
mind arrive at, but discloses directly both the general
and total and the particular truths of being and consciousness,
of spiritual and other sensation and Ananda and of force
and action,—reality and phenomenon and symbol,
actuality and possibility and eventuality, that which
is determined and that which determines, and all with
a self-luminous evidence. It formulates and arranges
the relations of thought and thought, offeree and force,
of action and action and of all these with each other
and throws them into a convincing and luminous harmony.
It includes the data of sense, but gives to them another
meaning in the light of what is behind them, and treats
them only as outermost indications: the inner truth
is known to a greater sense which it already possesses.
And it is not dependent on them alone even in their
own field of objects or limited by their range. It has
a spiritual sense and sensation of its own and it takes
and relates to that the data too of a sixth sense, the
inner mind sense. And it takes also the illuminations
and the living symbols and images familiar to the psychic
experience and relates these too to the truths of the
self and spirit.
The
spiritual reason takes also the emotions and psychic
sensations, relates them to their spiritual equivalents
and imparts to them the values of the higher consciousness
and Ananda from which they derive and are its modifications
in an inferior nature and it corrects their deformations.
It takes similarly the movements of the vital being
and consciousness and relates them to the movements
and imparts to them the significances of the spiritual
life of the self and its power of Tapas. It takes the
physical consciousness, delivers it from its darkness
and Tamas of inertia and makes it a responsive recipient
and a sensitive instrument of the supramental light
and power and Ananda. It deals with life and action
and knowledge like the mental will and reason, but not
starting from matter, life and sense and their data
and relating to them through the idea the truth of higher
things, but it starts on the contrary from truth of
self and spirit and relates to that through a direct
spiritual experience assuming all other experience as
its forms and instruments the things of mind and soul
and life and sense and matter. It commands a far vaster
range than the ordinary embodied mind shut up in the
prison of the physical senses and vaster too than the
pure mentality, even when that is free in its own ranges
and operates with the aid of the psychical mind and
inner senses. And it has that power which the mental
will and reason do not possess, because they are not
truly self-determined and originally determinative of
things, the power of transforming the whole being in
all its parts into a harmonious instrument and manifestation
of the spirit.
At
the same time the spiritual reason acts mainly by the
representative idea and will in the spirit, though it
has a greater and more essential truth as its constant
source and supporter and reference. It is, then, a power
of light of the Ishwara, but not the very self-power
of his immediate presence in the being; it is his surya-sakti,
not his whole atma-sakti or para sva prakrtih,
that works in the spiritual reason. The immediate self-power
begins its direct operation in the greater supermind,
and that takes up all that has hitherto been realised
in body, life and mind and in the intuitive being and
by the spiritual reason and shapes all that has been
created, all that has been gathered, turned into stuff
of experience and made part of the consciousness, personality
and nature by the mental being, into a highest harmony
with the high infinite and universal life of the spirit.
The mind can have the touch of the infinite and the
universal and can reflect and even lose itself in them,
but the supermind alone can enable the individual to
be completely one in action with the universal and transcendent
Spirit.
Here
the one thing that is always and constantly present,
that which one has grown to and in which one lives always,
is infinite being and all that is is seen, felt, known,
existed in as only substance of the one being; it is
infinite consciousness and all that is conscious and
acts and moves is seen, felt, received, known, lived
in as self-experience and energy of the one being; it
is infinite Ananda and all that feels and is felt is
seen and felt and known, received and lived in as forms
of the one Ananda. Everything else is only manifestation
and circumstance of this one truth of our existence.
This is no longer merely the seeing or knowing, but
the very condition of the self in all and all in the
self, God in all and all in God and all seen as God,
and that condition is now not a thing offered to the
reflecting spiritualised mind but held and lived by
an integral, always present, always active realisation
in the supramental nature. There is thought here and
will and sensation and everything that belongs to our
nature, but it is transfigured and elevated into a higher
consciousness. All thought is here seen and experienced
as a luminous body of substance, a luminous movement
of force, a luminous wave of Ananda of the being; it
is not an idea in the void air of mind, but experienced
in the reality and as the light of a reality of the
infinite being. The will and impulsions are similarly
experienced as a real power and substance of the Sat,
the Chit, the Ananda of the Ishwara. All the spiritualised
sensation and emotion are experienced as pure moulds
of the consciousness and Ananda. The physical being
itself is experienced as a conscious form and the vital
being as an outpouring of the power and possession of
the life of the spirit.
The
action of the supermind in the development is to manifest
and organise this highest consciousness so as to exist
and act no longer only in the infinite above with some
limited or veiled or lower and deformed manifestations
in the individual being and nature, but largely and
totally in the individual as a conscious and self-knowing
spiritual being and a living and acting power of the
infinite and universal spirit. The character of this
action, so far as it can be expressed, may be spoken
of more fitly afterwards when we come to speak of the
Brahmic consciousness and vision. In the succeeding
chapters we shall only deal with so much of it as concerns
the thought, will and psychic and other experience in
the individual nature. At present all that is necessary
to note is that here too there is in the field of the
thought and the will a triple action. The spiritual
reason is lifted and broadened into a greater representative
action that formulates to us mainly the actualities
of the existence of the self in and around us. There
is then a higher interpretative action of the supramental
knowledge, a greater scale less insistent on actualities,
that opens out yet greater potentialities in time and
space and beyond. And lastly there is a highest knowledge
by identity that is a gate of entrance to the essential
self-awareness and the omniscience and omnipotence of
the Ishwara.
It
must not however be supposed that these superimposed
stages are shut off in experience from each other. I
have placed them in what might be a regular order of
ascending development for the better possibility of
understanding in an intellectual statement. But the
infinite even in the normal mind breaks through its
own veils and across its own dividing lines of descent
and ascension and gives often intimations of itself
in one manner or another. And while we are still in
the intuitive mentality, the things above open and come
to us in irregular visitations, then form as we grow
a more frequent and regularised action above it. These
anticipations are still more large and frequent the
moment we enter on the supramental level. The universal
and infinite consciousness can always seize on and surround
the mind and it is when it does so with a certain continuity,
frequency or persistence that the mind can most easily
transform itself into the intuitive mentality and that
again into the supramental movement. Only as we rise
we grow more intimately and integrally into the infinite
consciousness and it becomes more fully our own self
and nature. And also, on the other, the lower side of
existence which it might seem would then be not only
beneath but quite alien to us, even when we live in
the supramental being and even when the whole nature
has been formed into its mould, that need not cut us
off from the knowledge and feeling of others who live
in the ordinary nature. The lower or more limited may
have a difficulty in understanding and feeling the higher,
but the higher and less limited can always, if it will,
understand and identify itself with the lower nature.
The supreme Ishwara too is not aloof from us; he knows,
lives in, identifies himself with all and yet is not
subjugated by the reactions or limited in his knowledge,
power and Ananda by the limitations of the mind and
life and physical being in the universe.
-Sri
Aurobindo