|
It
has often been repeatedbut except in certain cases very rarely
understoodthat only like knows like. If this were understood,
a great deal of ignorance would vanish.
Only
the soul can know the soul, and on each level of being, only the
equivalent level can recognise the other. Only the Divine can know
the Divine, and because we carry the Divine in ourselves we are
capable of seeing Him and recognising Him. But if we try to understand
something of the inner life by using our senses and external methods,
the result is sure to be total failure and we shall also deceive
ourselves totally.
So
when you imagine that you can know the secrets of Nature and still
remain in a purely physical consciousness, you are entirely deceived.
And this habit of demanding concrete, material proofs before accepting
the reality of something, is one of the most glaring effects of
ignorance. With that attitude any fool imagines that he can sit
in judgement on the highest things and deny the most profound experiences.
It
is certainly not by dissecting a body which is dead because the
soul has departed from it that the soul can be found. Had the soul
not departed, the body would not have been dead! It is to bring
home to us the absurdity of this claim that Sri Aurobindo has written
this aphorism.
It
applies to all judgement of the critical mind and to all scientific
methods when they would judge any but purely material phenomena.
The
conclusion is always the same: the only true attitude is one of
humility, of silent respect before what one does not know, and of
inner aspiration to come out of one's ignorance. One of the things
which would make humanity progress most would be for it to respect
what it does not know, to acknowledge willingly that it does not
know and is therefore unable to judge. We constantly do just the
opposite. We pass final judgement on things of which we have no
knowledge whatsoever, and say in a peremptory manner, "This
is possible. That is impossible", when we do not even know
what it is we are speaking of. And we put on superior airs because
we doubt things of which we have never had any knowledge.
Men
believe that doubt is a sign of superiority, whereas it is really
a sign of inferiority.
Scepticism
and doubt are two of the greatest obstacles to progress; they add
presumptuousness to ignorance.
21
November 1958
- The Mother
|