NIRVANA
Nirvana
A Study in
Synthetic
Consciousness
by
George Sidney
Arundale
First published 1926
Dr Arundale was International President of
the Theosophical
Society (Adyar) from 1933 to 1945
__________
A Note By
Annie Besant
On Nirvana
FROM AN ADDRESS TO
THE
BRAHMAVIDYA
ASHRAMA ON
“PHILOSOPHY: OR
GOD
MANIFESTING AS
UNDERSTANDING”
AND this leads me to say one word which, I think, you will have
to keep as a steady thought right
through, in all the questions that you meet in the various philosophies as to the meaning of
“absorption,” the Nirvana of the Buddhist, and the various ideas of Moksha, the true Nirvana of the Hindu. In all of these, if
you wish to have the nearest approach to the truth that human limited
intelligence and consciousness can gain, you must not think of what is called
the drop merging in the ocean, that is, of the drop disappearing, which is the
idea that the western student of eastern Philosophy usually adopts. What you
have to think of (though it seems a contradiction) is the drop expanding into
the ocean, and still keeping its own centre. It would not be much use
building up individuality if, at the end, all was to be thrown away, and
the individual was to be the same on returning to “the bosom of the Father,” as
when he came from it. That is not the view which comes from an increasing
knowledge of the expansions of consciousness, which is, after all, all that we
have to guide us in our own experience. If you take the consciousness of the
Higher Ego, you have a very strongly marked Individuality, a very distinct
separating body - using that word for a kind of permanent enclosure of matter
in which resides a certain stage of consciousness, which is essentially the I
developing its I-ness, intensifying that sense of the I, by contrast with the
universe around, in which the I does not find that its own consciousness is
working.
He is looking at it from outside, not from within it; and so he
feels intensely the sharp separation between the I and
the Not-I. But when the I-ness drops his causal body, his material from the
higher mental plane, and passes on into the Buddhic, there is an immense
expansion of consciousness, but there is no loss of that centre; he expands so
as to include any of the consciousnesses which are acting on that plane. In a
sense, he becomes all of them, and yet he never loses the sense of his own
centre. He identifies himself with another with a closeness of identity that we
know nothing of below that plane.
But still there is the subtle memory of past experiences which
gives it a little different hue, or colour, or fragrance, or whatever delicate
word you can use to symbolise an existence which is
almost impalpable and yet that remains, colouring, as
it were, the Buddhic consciousness. There is that tremendous expansion; and if,
when you are studying the various philosophies, you keep that in mind, you will
find every now and then a phrase which becomes intelligible when you have that
thought in your mind. In Plotinus, you will find a
wonderful description of Buddhic consciousness, in which he speaks of the Star
which is itself and all the other Stars, as the striking fact of what we should
now call the Buddhic body - or rather, the Buddhic sheath, to make a
distinction between the enclosure and the appropriation of matter which does
not separate. The Buddhic sheath is a radiating Star, not an enclosure. If you
see a person in the Buddhic body on the Buddhic plane, you do not see an
enclosure; you see a Star radiating out in all directions, whose rays pierce
your consciousness so that you feel it to be a part of yourself, and yet not
quite.
It is almost impossible, except by a series of contradictions, to
describe states of consciousness to which our language does not adapt itself.
Of course, in Sanskrit, you get an enormously more developed form of language,
from the philosophical standpoint, than in English; yet in trying to make
people understand, you must use a language that they will understand, the
Sanskrit is known by comparatively few people in the West.
We are rather trying to eliminate the Sanskrit terms without loss
of accuracy. The experience of the Buddhic plane is not translatable into words
down here but you do get indications of it, and they are generally called (when
people read of them with no realisation of what they
mean) “obscure,”“vague,” “indeterminate,” etc. But it
is quite clear, and not vague to anyone who touches it. It is one of the great
facts of consciousness that you can never understand a stage which you have not
reached. You cannot understand consciousness by looking at it from outside. I
was answering a letter yesterday in which there was the question: “Why did God
make the universe?” I suggested that there were many possible reasons, but that
a kitten cannot understand why a man spends his time reading a book instead of
running after a leaf on the ground, because the consciousness of the kitten is
not developed enough to read a book; and we are all nearer to the kitten than
to Ishvara in one sense, in our comprehension of His
nature. It is quite true that
Closer is He than breathing
Nearer-than hands and feet;
but you have to stretch your consciousness to accept contradictions.On the other hand, when the consciousness
begins to dawn, as it has to dawn, through the help of some one greater than
yourself (otherwise it would shatter you), when, enveloped in the consciousness
of another, you may touch the next plane, then the sense of absolute unity
comes upon you, and you may say that the difference does disappear, but it
disappears by expansion and not by extinguishment. That is why I said that, if
you would think of the drop expanding into the ocean and sharing the
consciousness of the ocean, you would have a truer idea of Nirvana, which so
many western writers call annihilation, though it is the fulness
of Life.
I said the consciousness would be shattered. If you think for a
moment of films of matter, however fine they may be, you will find that they
have a certain limit of vibration, and that they can
answer to and reproduce certain other limits of vibration. You also find that,
if you take a very much more rapid rate of vibration, you break the enclosure,
shatter it to pieces. That is true of all aggregations of matter, so far as we
know them. There is a limit beyond which they cannot respond, and then they are
simply shattered. That would be the effect if you were suddenly to find
yourselves on the Nirvanic plane, if not prepared for
it. You would simply have to burst, like a bubble vanishing. It is a very long
job to build it again, the film of the bubble.
Therefore people are prevented from going into it, unless it may
happen that persons may be taken into it, to show them certain occurrences,
certain truths, and then they are shielded, just as a diving-dress is given to
the man who goes into water. Protective sheaths are possible all the way up.
There is, in the Buddhist Philosophy, a wonderful sentence of the
Lord Gautama Buddha, where He is
striving to indicate in human language something that would be intelligible
about the condition of Nirvana. You find it in the Chinese translation of the Dhammapada, and the Chinese edition has been translated
into English in the series of books known as “Trubner’s
Series”. He puts it there that, unless there was Nirvana, there could be
nothing; and He uses various phrases in order to indicate what He means, taking
the uncreated and then connecting with it the created; taking the real and then
connecting with it the unreal.
He sums it up by saying that Nirvana is; and that if it were not,
naught else could be. That is an attempt (if one may call it so with all
reverence) to say what cannot be said. It implies that unless there existed the Uncreated, the Invisible and the Real, we could
not have a universe at all. You have there, then, the indication that Nirvana
is a plenum, not a void. That idea should be fundamentally fixed in your mind,
in your study of every great system of Philosophy. So often the expressions used
may seem to indicate a void.
Hence the western idea of annihilation. If you think of
it as fulness, you will realise
that the consciousness expands more and more, without losing utterly the sense
of identity; if you could think of a centre of a circle without a
circumference, you would glimpse the truth.
__________
THEOSOPHY
NIRVANA
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