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Once
again I must repeat that the form of these aphorisms is purposely
paradoxical in order to give the mind a little shock and awaken
it enough for it to make an effort to understand. One must not take
this aphorism literally. Some people seem worried by the idea that
reason must disappear for one to become wise. It is not that, it
is not that at all.
Reason
must no longer be the summit and the master.
For
a very long time in life, until one possesses anything resembling
Knowledge, it is indispensable that reason be the master, otherwise
one is the plaything of one's impulses, one's fancies, one's more
or less disordered emotional imaginings, and one is in danger of
being very far removed not merely from wisdom but even from the
knowledge needed for conducting oneself acceptably. But when one
has managed to control all the lower parts of the being with the
help of reason, which is the apex of ordinary human intelligence,
then if one wants to go beyond this point, if one wants to liberate
oneself from ordinary life, from ordinary thought, from the ordinary
vision of things, one must, if I may say so, stand upon the head
of reason, not trampling it down disdainfully, but using it as a
stepping stone to something higher, something beyond it, to attain
to something which concerns itself very little with the decrees
of reason; something which can allow itself to be irrational because
it is a higher irrationality, with a higher light; something which
is beyond ordinary knowledge and which receives its inspirations
from above, from high above, from the divine Wisdom.
That
is what this means.
As
for the knowledge of which Sri Aurobindo speaks here, it is ordinary
knowledge, it is not Knowledge by identity; it is knowledge that
can be acquired by the intellect through thought, through ordinary
means.
But
once againand in any case we shall have occasion to return
to this when we study the next aphorismdo not be in a hurry
to abandon reason in the conviction that you will immediately attain
to Wisdom, because you must be ready for Wisdom; otherwise, by abandoning
reason, you run a great risk of falling into unreason, which is
rather dangerous.
Many
times in his writings, particularly in The Synthesis of Yoga,
Sri Aurobindo warns us against the imaginings of those who believe
they can do sadhana without rigorous self-control and who heed all
sorts of inspirations, which lead them to a dangerous imbalance
where all their repressed, hidden, secret desires come out into
the open under the pretence of liberation from ordinary conventions
and ordinary reason.
One
can be free only by soaring to the heights, high above human passions.
Only when one has achieved a higher, selfless freedom and done away
with all desires and impulses does one have the right to be free.
But
neither should people who are very reasonable, very moral according
to ordinary social laws, think themselves wise, for their wisdom
is an illusion and holds no profound truth.
One
who would break the law must be above the law. One who would ignore
conventions must be above conventions. One who would despise all
rules must be above all rules. And the motive of this liberation
should never be a personal, egoistic one: the desire to satisfy
an ambition, aggrandise one's personality, through a feeling of
superiority, out of contempt for others, to set oneself above the
herd and regard it with condescension. Be on your guard when you
feel yourself superior and look down on others ironically, as if
to say, "I'm no longer made of such stuff." That's when
you go off the track and are in danger of falling into an abyss.
When
one truly attains wisdom, the true wisdom, the wisdom Sri Aurobindo
is speaking of here, there is no longer higher and lower; there
is only a play of forces in which each thing has its place and its
importance. And if there is a hierarchy it is a hierarchy of surrender
to the Supreme. It is not a hierarchy of superiority with regard
to what is below.
And
with human understanding, human reason, human knowledge, one is
unable to discern this hierarchy. Only the awakened soul can recognise
another awakened soul, and then the sense of superiority disappears
completely.
True
wisdom comes only when the ego disappears, and the ego disappears
only when you are ready to abandon yourself completely to the supreme
Lord without any personal motive and without any expectation of
profitwhen you do it because you cannot do otherwise.
17
October 1958
- The Mother
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