THE transition from mind to supermind
is not only the substitution of a greater instrument
of thought and knowledge, but a change and conversion
of the whole consciousness. There is evolved not only
a supramental thought, but a supramental will, sense,
feeling, a supramental substitute for all the activities
that are now accomplished by the mind. All these higher
activities are first manifested in the mind itself as
descents, irruptions, messages or revelations of a superior
power. Mostly they are mixed up with the more ordinary
action of the mind and not easily distinguishable from
them in our first inexperience except by their superior
light and force and joy, the more so as the mind greatened
or excited by their frequent coming quickens its own
action and imitates the external characteristics of
the supramental activity: its own operation is made
more swift, luminous, strong and positive and it arrives
even at a kind of imitative and often false intuition
that strives to be but is not really the luminous, direct
and self-existent truth. The next step is the formation
of a luminous mind of intuitive experience, thought,
will, feeling, sense from which the intermixture of
the lesser mind and the imitative intuition are progressively
eliminated: this is a process of purification, suddhi,
necessary to the new formation and perfection, siddhi.
At the same time there is the disclosure above the mind
of the source of the intuitive action and a more and
more organised functioning of a true supramental consciousness
acting not in the mind but on its own higher plane.
This draws up into itself in the end the intuitive mentality
it has created as its representative and assumes the
charge of the whole activity of the consciousness. The
process is progressive and for a long time chequered
by admixture and the necessity of a return upon the
lower movements in order to correct and transform them.
The higher and the lower power act sometimes alternately,—the
consciousness descending back from the heights it had
attained to its former level but always with some change,—but
sometimes together and with a sort of mutual reference.
The mind eventually becomes wholly intuitivised and
exists only as a passive channel for the supramental
action; but this condition too is not ideal and presents,
besides, still a certain obstacle, because the higher
action has still to pass through a retarding and diminishing
conscious substance,—that of the physical consciousness.
The final stage of the change will come when the supermind
occupies and supramentalises the whole being and turns
even the vital and physical sheaths into moulds of itself,
responsive, subtle and instinct with its powers. Man
then becomes wholly the superman. This is at least the
natural and integral process.
It
would be to go altogether outside present limits to
attempt anything like an adequate presentation of the
whole character of the supermind; and it would not be
possible to give a complete presentation, since the
supermind carries in it the unity, but also the largeness
and multiplicities of the infinite. All that need now
be done is to present some salient characters from the
point of view of the actual process of the conversion
in the Yoga, the relation to the action of mind and
the principle of some of the phenomena of the change.
This is the fundamental relation that all the action
of the mind is a derivation from the secret super-mind,
although we do not know this until we come to know our
higher self, and draws from that source all it has of
truth and value. All our thoughts, willings, feelings,
sense representations have in them or at their roots
an element of truth, which originates and sustains their
existence, however in the actuality they may be perverted
or false, and behind them a greater ungrasped truth,
which if they could grasp it, would make them soon unified,
harmonious and at least relatively complete. Actually,
however, such truth as they have is diminished in scope,
degraded into a lower movement, divided and falsified
by fragmentation, afflicted with incompleteness, marred
by perversion. Mental knowledge is not an integral but
always a partial knowledge. It adds constantly detail
to detail, but has a difficulty in relating them aright;
its wholes too are not real but incomplete wholes which
it tends to substitute for the more real and integral
knowledge. And even if it arrived at a kind of integral
knowledge, it would still be by a sort of putting together,
a mental and intellectual arrangement, an artificial
unity and not an essential and real oneness. If that
were all, the mind might conceivably arrive at some
kind of half reflection half translation of an integral
knowledge, but the radical malady would still be that
it would not be the real thing, but only at best an
intellectual representation. That the mental truth must
always be, an intellectual, emotional and sensational
representation, not the direct truth, not truth itself
in its body and essence.
The
supermind can do all that the mind does, present and
combine details and what might be called aspects or
subordinate wholes, but it does it in a different way
and on another basis. It does not like the mind bring
in the element of deviation, false extension and imposed
error, but even when it gives a partial knowledge, gives
it in a firm and exact light, and always there is behind
implied or opened to the consciousness the essential
truth on which the details and subordinate wholes or
aspects depend. The supermind has also a power of representation,
but its representations are not of the intellectual
kind, they are filled with the body and substance of
light of the truth in its essence, they are its vehicles
and not substituted figures. There is such an infinite
power of representation of the super-mind and that is
the divine power of which the mental action is a sort
of fallen representative. This representative supermind
has a lower action in what I have called the supramental
reason, nearest to the mental and into which the mental
can most easily be taken up, and a higher action in
the integral supermind that sees all things in the unity
and infinity of the divine consciousness and self-existence.
But on whatever level, it is a different thing from
the corresponding mental action, direct, luminous, secure.
The whole inferiority of the mind comes from its being
the action of the soul after it has fallen into the
nescience and the ignorance and is trying to get back
to self-knowledge but doing it still on the basis of
the nescience and the ignorance. The mind is the ignorance
attempting to know or it is the ignorance receiving
a derivative knowledge: it is the action of Avidya.
The supermind is always the disclosure of an inherent
and self-existent knowledge; it is the action of Vidya.
A
second difference that we experience is a greater and
a spontaneous harmony and unity. All consciousness is
one, but in action it takes on many movements and each
of these fundamental movements has many forms and processes.
The forms and processes of the mind consciousness are
marked by a disturbing and perplexing division and separateness
of the mental energies and movements in which the original
unity of the conscious mind does not at all or only
distractedly appears. Constantly we find in our mentality
a conflict or else a confusion and want of combination
between different thoughts or a patched up combination
and the same phenomenon applies to the various movements
of our will and desire and to our emotions and feelings.
Again our thought and our will and our feeling are not
in a state of natural harmony and unison with each other,
but act in their separate power even when they have
to act together and frequently in conflict or to some
degree at variance. There is too an unequal development
of one at the expense of another. The mind is a thing
of discords in which some kind of practical arrangement
rather than a satisfying concord is established for
the purposes of life. The reason tries to arrive at
a better arrangement, aims at a better control, a rational
or an ideal harmony, and in this attempt it is a delegate
or substitute of the supermind and is trying to do what
only the supermind can do in its own right: but actually
it is not able wholly to control the rest of the being
and there is usually a considerable difference between
the rational or ideal harmony we create in our thoughts
and the movement of the life. Even at the best the arrangement
made by the reason has always in it something of artificiality
and imposition, for in the end there are only two spontaneous
harmonic movements, that of the life, inconscient or
largely subconscient, the harmony that we find in the
animal creation and in lower Nature, and that of the
spirit. The human condition is a stage of transition,
effort and imperfection between the one and the other,
between the natural and the ideal or spiritual life
and it is full of uncertain seeking and disorder. It
is not that the mental being cannot find or rather construct
some kind of relative harmony of its own, but that it
cannot render it stable because it is under the urge
of the spirit. Man is obliged by a Power within him
to be the labourer of a more or less conscious self-evolution
that shall lead him to self-mastery and self-knowledge.
The
supermind in its action is, on the contrary, a thing
of unity and harmony and inherent order. At first when
the pressure from above falls on the mentality, this
is not realised and even a contrary phenomenon may for
a time appear. That is due to several causes. First,
there may be a disturbance, even a derangement created
by impact of the greater hardly measurable power on
an inferior consciousness which is not capable of responding
to it organically or even perhaps- of bearing the pressure.
The very fact of the simultaneous and yet uncoordinated
activity of two quite different forces, especially if
the mind insists on its own way, if it tries obstinately
or violently to profit by the supermind instead of giving
itself up to it and its purpose, if it is not sufficiently
passive and obedient to the higher guidance, may lead
to a great excitation of power but also an increased
disorder. It is for this reason that a previous preparation
and long purification, the more complete the better,
and a tranquillising and ordinarily a passivity of the
mind calmly and strongly open to the spirit are necessities
of the Yoga.
Again
the mind, accustomed to act in limits, may try to supramentalise
itself on the line of any one of its energies. It may
develop a considerable power of intuitive half-supra-mentalised
thought and knowledge, but the will may remain untransformed
and out of harmony with this partial half-supramental
development of the thinking mind, and the rest of the
being too, emotional and nervous, may continue to be
equally or more unregenerate. Or there may be a very
great development of intuitive or strongly inspired
will, but no corresponding uplifting of the thought
mind or the emotional and psychic being, or only at
most so much as is specially needed in order not wholly
to obstrurct the will action. The emotional or psychic
mind may try to intuitivise and supramentalise itself
and to a great extent succeed, and yet the thinking
mind remain ordinary, poor in stuff and obscure in its
light. There may be a development of intuitivity in
the ethical or aesthetic being, but the rest may remain
very much as it was. This is the reason of the frequent
disorder or one-sidedness which we mark in the man of
genius, poet, artist, thinker, saint or mystic. A partially
intuitivised mentality may present an appearance of
much less harmony and order outside its special activity
than the largely developed intellectual mind. An integral
development is needed, a wholesale conversion of the
mind; otherwise the action is that of the mind using
the supra-mental influx for its own profit and in its
own mould, and that is allowed for the immediate purpose
of the Divine in the being and may even be considered
as a stage sufficient for the individual in this one
life: but it is a state of imperfection and not the
complete and successful evolution of the being. If however
there is an integral development of the intuitive mind,
it will be found that a great harmony has begun to lay
its own foundations. This harmony will be other than
that created by the intellectual mind and indeed may
not be easily perceptible or, if it is felt, yet not
intelligible to the logical man, because not arrived
at or analysable by his mental process. It will be a
harmony of the spontaneous expression of the spirit.
As
soon as we arise above mind to the supermind, this initial
harmony will be replaced by a greater and a more integral
unity. The thoughts of the supramental reason meet together
and understand each other and fall into a natural arrangement
even when they have started from quite opposite quarters.
The movements of will that are in conflict in the mind,
come in the supermind to their right place and relation
to each other. The supramental feelings also discover
their own affinities and fall into a natural agreement
and harmony. At a higher stage this harmony intensifies
towards unity. The knowledge, will, feeling and all
else become a single movement. This unity reaches its
greatest completeness in the highest supermind. The
harmony, the unity are inevitable because the base in
the super-mind is knowledge and characteristically self-knowledge,
the knowledge of the self in all its aspects. The supramental
will is the dynamic expression of this self-knowledge,
the supra-mental feeling the expression of the luminous
joy of the self and all else in supermind a part of
this one movement. At its highest range it becomes something
greater than what we call knowledge; there it is the
essential and integral self-awareness of the Divine
in us, his being, consciousness, Tapas, Ananda, and
all is the harmonious, unified, luminous movement of
that one existence.
This
supramental knowledge is not primarily or essentially
a thought knowledge. The intellect does not consider
that it knows a thing until it has reduced its awareness
of it to the terms of thought, not, that is to say,
until it has put it into a system of representative
mental concepts, and this kind of knowledge gets its
most decisive completeness when it can be put into clear,
precise and defining speech. It is true that the mind
gets its knowledge primarily by various kinds of impressions
beginning from the vital and the sense impressions and
rising to the intuitive, but these are taken by the
developed intelligence only as data and seem to it uncertain
and vague in themselves until they have been forced
to yield up all their content to the thought and have
taken their place in some intellectual relation or in
an ordered thought sequence. It is true again that there
is a thought and a speech which are rather suggestive
than definitive and have in their own way a greater
potency and richness of content, and this kind already
verges on the intuitive: but still there is a demand
in the intellect to bring out in clear sequence and
relation the exact intellectual content of these suggestions
and until that is done it does not feel satisfied that
its knowledge is complete. The thought labouring in
the logical intellect is that which normally seems best
to organise the mental action and gives to the mind
a sense of sure definiteness, security and completeness
in its knowledge and its use of knowledge. Nothing of
this is at all true of the supramental knowledge.
The
supermind knows most completely and securely not by
thought but by identity, by a pure awareness of the
self-truth of things in the self and by the self, ätmani
ätmänam ätmanä. I get the supramental
knowledge best by becoming one with the truth, one with
the object of knowledge; the supramental satisfaction
and integral light is most there when there is no further
division between the knower, knowledge and the known,
jnätä, jnänam, jneyam. I see
the thing known not as an object outside myself, but
as myself or a part of my universal self contained in
my most direct consciousness. This leads to the highest
and completest knowledge; thought and speech being representations
and not this direct possession in the consciousness
are to the supermind a lesser form and, if not filled
with the spiritual awareness, thought becomes in fact
a diminution of knowledge. For it would be, supposing
it to be a supramental thought, only a partial manifestation
of a greater knowledge existing in the self but not
at the time present to the immediately active consciousness.
In the highest ranges of the infinite there need be
no thought at all because all would be experienced spiritually,
in continuity, in eternal possession and with an absolute
directness and completeness. Thought is only one means
of partially manifesting and presenting what is hidden
in this greater self-existent knowledge. This supreme
kind of knowing will not indeed be possible to us in
its full extent and degree until we can rise through
many grades of the supermind to that infinite. But still
as the supramental power emerges and enlarges its action,
something of this highest way of knowledge appears and
grows and even the members of the mental being, as they
are intuitivised and supramentalised, develop more and
more a corresponding action upon their own level. There
is an increasing power of a luminous vital, psychic,
emotional, dynamic and other identification with all
the things and beings that are the objects of our consciousness
and these transcendings of the separative consciousness
bring with them many forms and means of a direct knowledge.
The
supramental knowledge or experience by identity carries
in it as a result or as a secondary part of itself a
supra-mental vision that needs the support of no image,
can concretise what is to the mind abstract and has
the character of sight though its object may be the
invisible truth of that which has form or the truth
of the formless. This vision can come before there is
any identity, as a sort of previous emanation of light
from it, or may act detached from it as a separate power.
The truth or the thing known is then not altogether
or not yet one with myself, but an object of my knowledge:
but still it is an object subjectively seen in the self
or at least, even if it is still farther separated and
objectivised to the knower, by the self, not through
any intermediate process, but by a direct inner seizing
or a penetrating and enveloping luminous contact of
the spiritual consciousness with its object. It is this
luminous seizing and contact that is the spiritual vision,
drsti,—"pasyati", says the
Upanishad continually of the spiritual knowledge "he
sees"; and of the Self conceiving the idea of creation,
where we should expect "he thought", it says
instead "he saw". It is to the spirit what
the eyes are to the physical mind and one has the sense
of having passed through a subtly analogous process.
As the physical sight can present to us the actual body
of things of which the thought had only possessed an
indication or mental description and they become to
us at once real and evident, pratyaksa, so
the spiritual sight surpasses the indications or representations
of thought and can make the self and truth of all things
present to us and directly evident, pratyaksa.
The
sense can only give us the superficial image of things
and it needs the aim of thought to fill and inform the
image; but the spiritual sight is capable of presenting
to us the thing in itself and all truth about it. The
seer does not need the aid of thought in its process
as a means of knowledge, but only as a means of representation
and expression,—thought is to him a lesser power
and used for a secondary purpose. If a further extension
of knowledge is required, he can come at it by new seeing
without the slower thought processes that are the staff
of support of the mental search and its feeling out
for truth,—even as we scrutinise with the eye
to find what escaped our first observation. This experience
and knowledge by spiritual vision is the second in directness
and greatness of the supra-mental powers. It is something
much more near, profound and comprehensive than mental
vision, because it derives direct from the knowledge
by identity, and it has this virtue that we can proceed
at once from the vision to the identity, as from the
identity to the vision. Thus when the spiritual vision
has seen God, Self or Brahman, the soul can next enter
into and become one with the Self, God or Brahman.
This
can only be done integrally on or above the supra-mental
level, but at the same time the spiritual vision can
take on mental forms of itself that can help towards
this identification each in its own way. A mental intuitive
vision or a spiritualised mental sight, a psychic vision,
an emotional vision of the heart, a vision in the sense
mind are parts of the Yogic experience. If these seeings
are purely mental, then they may but need not be true,
for the mind is capable of both truth and error, both
of a true and of a false representation. But as the
mind becomes intuitivised and supramentalised, these
powers are purified and corrected by the more luminous
action of the supermind and become themselves forms
of a supramental and a true seeing. The supramental
vision, it may be noted, brings with it a supplementary
and completing experience that might be called a spiritual
hearing and touch of the truth,—of its essence
and through that of its significance,—that is
to say, there is a seizing of its movement, vibration,
rhythm and a seizing of its close presence and contact
and substance. All these powers prepare us to become
one with that which has thus grown near to us through
knowledge.
The
supramental thought is a form of the knowledge by identity
and a development, in the idea, of the truth presented
to the supramental vision. The identity and the vision
give the truth in its essence, its body and its parts
in a single view: the thought translates this direct
consciousness and immediate power of the truth into
idea-knowledge and will. It adds or need add otherwise
nothing new, but reproduces, articulates, moves round
the body of the knowledge. Where, however, the identity
and the vision are still incomplete, the supramental
thought has a larger office and reveals, interprets
or recalls as it were to the soul's memory what they
are not yet ready to give. And where these greater states
and powers are still veiled, the thought comes in front
and prepares and to a certain extent effects a partial
rending or helps actively in the removal of the veil.
Therefore in the development out of the mental ignorance
into the supramental knowledge this illumined thought
comes to us often, though not always first, to open
the way to the vision or else to give first supports
to the growing consciousness of identity and its greater
knowledge. This thought is also an effective means of
communication and expression and helps to an impression
or fixation of the truth whether on one's own lower
mind and being or on that of others. The supramental
thought differs from the intellectual not only because
it is the direct truth idea and not a representation
of truth to the ignorance,—it is the truth consciousness
of the spirit always presenting to itself its own right
forms, the satyam and rtam of the
Veda,—but because of its strong reality, body
of light and substance.
The
intellectual thought refines and sublimates to a rarefied
abstractness; the supramental thought as it rises in
its height increases to a greater spiritual concreteness.
The thought of the intellect presents itself to us as
an abstraction from something seized by the mind sense
and is as if supported in a void and subtle air of mind
by an intangible force of the intelligence. It has to
resort to a use of the mind's power of image if it wishes
to make itself more concretely felt and seen by the
soul sense and soul vision. The supramental thought,
on the contrary, presents always the idea as a luminous
substance of being, luminous stuff of consciousness
taking significative thought form and it therefore creates
no such sense of a gulf between the idea and the real
as we are liable to feel in the mind, but is itself
a reality, it is real-idea and the body of a reality.
It has as a result, associated with it when it acts
according to its own nature, a phenomenon of spiritual
light other than the intellectual clarity, a great realising
force and a luminous ecstasy. It is an intensely sensible
vibration of being, consciousness and Ananda.
The
supramental thought, as has already been indicated,
has three elevations of its intensity, one of direct
thought vision, another of interpretative vision pointing
to and preparing the greater revelatory idea-sight,
a third of representative vision recalling as it were
to the spirit's knowledge the truth that is called out
more directly by the higher powers. In the mind these
things take the form of the three ordinary powers of
the intuitive mentality,—the suggestive and discriminating
intuition, the inspiration and the thought that is of
the nature of revelation. Above they correspond to three
elevations of the supramental being and consciousness
and, as we ascend, the lower first calls down into itself
and is then taken up into the higher, so that on each
level all the three elevations are reproduced, but always
there predominates in the thought essence the character
that belongs to that level's proper form of consciousness
and spiritual substance. It is necessary to bear this
in mind; for otherwise the mentality, looking up to
the ranges of the supermind as they reveal themselves,
may think it has got the vision of the highest heights
when it is only the highest range of the lower ascent
that is being presented to its experience. At each height,
sänoh sänum äruhat, the powers
of the supermind increase in intensity, range and completeness.
There
is also a speech, a supramental word, in which the higher
knowledge, vision or thought can clothe itself within
us for expression. At first this may come down as a
word, a message or an inspiration that descends to us
from above or it may even seem a voice of the Self or
of the Ishwara, väni, ädesa. Afterwards
it loses that separate character and becomes the normal
form of the thought when it expresses itself in the
form of an inward speech. The thought may express itself
without the aid of any suggestive or developing word
and only—but still quite completely, explicitly
and with its full contents—in a luminous substance
of supramental perception. It may aid itself when it
is not so explicit by a suggestive inward speech that
attends it to bring out its whole significance. Or the
thought may come not as silent perception but as speech
self-born out of the truth and complete in its own right
and carrying in itself its own vision and knowledge.
Then it is the word revelatory, inspired or intuitive
or of a yet greater kind capable of bearing the infinite
intention or suggestion of the higher supermind and
spirit. It may frame itself in the language now employed
to express the ideas and perceptions and impulses of
the intellect and the sense mind, but it uses it in
a different way and with an intense bringing out of
the intuitive or revelatory significances of which speech
is capable. The supramental word manifests inwardly
with a light, a power, a rhythm of thought and a rhythm
of inner sound that make it the natural and living body
of the supramental thought and vision and it pours into
the language, even though the same as that of mental
speech, another than the limited intellectual, emotional
or sensational significance. It is formed and heard
in the intuitive mind or supermind and need not at first
except in certain highly gifted souls come out easily
into speech and writing, but that too can be freely
done when the physical consciousness and its organs
have been made ready, and this is a part of the needed
fullness and power of the integral perfection.
The
range of knowledge covered by the supramental thought,
experience and vision will be commensurate with all
that is open to the human consciousness, not only on
the earthly but on all planes. It will however act increasingly
in an inverse sense to that of the mental thinking and
experience. The centre of mental thinking is the ego,
the person of the individual thinker. The supramental
man, on the contrary, will think more with the universal
mind or even may rise above it, and his individuality
will rather be a vessel of radiation and communication,
to which the universal thought and knowledge of the
Spirit will converge, than a centre. The mental man
thinks and acts in a radius determined by the smallness
or largeness of his mentality and of its experience.
The range of the supramental man will be all the earth
and all that lies behind it on other planes of existence.
And finally the mental man thinks and sees on the level
of the present life, though it may be with an upward
aspiration, and his view is obstructed on every side.
His main basis of knowledge and action is the present
with a glimpse into the past and ill-grasped influence
from its pressure and a blind look towards the future.
He bases himself on the actualities of the earthly existence
first on the facts of the outward world,—to which
he is ordinarily in the habit of relating nine-tenths
if not the whole of his inner thinking and experience,—then
on the changing actualities of the more superficial
part of his inner being. As he increases in mind, he
goes more freely beyond these to potentialities which
arise out of them and pass beyond them; his mind deals
with a larger field of possibilities: but these for
the most part get to him a full reality only in proportion
as they are related to the actual and can be made actual
here, now or hereafter. The essence of things he tends
to see, if at all, only as a result of his actualities,
in a relation to and dependence on them, and therefore
he sees them constantly in a false light or in a limited
measure. In all these respects the supramental man must
proceed from the opposite principle of truth vision.
The
supramental being sees things from above in large spaces
and at the highest from the spaces of the infinite.
His view is not limited to the standpoint of the present
but can see in the continuities of time or from above
time in the indivisibilities of the Spirit. He sees
truth in its proper order first in the essence, secondly
in the potentialities that derive from it and only last
in the actualities. The essential truths are to his
sight self-existent, self-seen, not dependent for their
proof on this or that actuality; the potential truths
are truths of the power of being in itself and in things,
truths of the infinity of force and real apart from
their past or present realisation in this or that actuality
or the habitual surface forms that we take for the whole
of Nature; the actualities are only a selection from
the potential truths he sees, dependent on them, limited
and mutable. The tyranny of the present, of the actual,
of the immediate range of facts, of the immediate urge
and demand of action has no power over his thought and
his will and he is therefore able to have a larger will-power
founded on a larger knowledge. He sees things not as
one on the levels surrounded by the jungle of present
facts and phenomena but from above, not from outside
and judged by their surfaces, but from within and viewed
from the truth of their centre; therefore he is nearer
the divine omniscience. He wills and acts from a dominating
height and with a longer movement in time and a larger
range of potencies, therefore he is nearer to the divine
omnipotence. His being is not shut into the succession
of the moments, but has the full power of the past and
ranges seeingly through the future: not shut in the
limiting ego and personal mind, but lives in the freedom
of the universal, in God and in all beings and all things;
not in the dull density of the physical mind, but in
the light of the self and the infinity of the spirit.
He sees soul and mind only as a power and a movement
and matter only as a resultant form of the spirit. All
his thought will be of a kind that proceeds from knowledge.
He perceives and enacts the things of the phenomenal
life in the light of the reality of the spiritual being
and the power of the dynamic spiritual essence.
At
first, at the beginning of the conversion into this
greater status, the thought will continue to move for
a shorter or a longer time to a greater or a less extent
on the lines of the mind but with a greater light and
increasing flights and spaces and movements of freedom
and transcendence. Afterwards the freedom and transcendence
will begin to predominate; the inversion of the thought
view and the conversion of the thought method will take
place in different movements of the thought mind one
after the other, subject to whatever difficulties and
relapses, until it has gained on the whole and effected
a complete transformation. Ordinarily the supramental
knowledge will be organised first and with the most
ease in the processes of pure thought and knowledge,
jnäna, because here the human mind has
already the upward tendency and is the most free. Next
and with less ease it will be organised in the processes
of applied thought and knowledge because there the mind
of man is at once most active and most bound and wedded
to its inferior methods. The last and most difficult
conquest, because this is now to his mind a field of
conjecture or a blank, will be the knowledge of the
three times, trikäladrsfi. In all these
there will be the same character of a spirit seeing
and willing directly above and around and not only in
the body it possesses and there will be the same action
of the supramental knowledge by identity, the supramental
vision, the supramental thought and supramental word,
separately or in a united movement.
This
then will be the general character of the supramental
thought and knowledge and these its main powers and
action. It remains to consider its particular instrumentation,
the change that the supermind will make in the different
elements of the present human mentality and the special
activities that give to the thought its constituents,
motives and data.
-Sri
Aurobindo