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The
Seven Principles of Man
By
Annie
Besant
Principle V.
Manas, The Thinker, or Mind
We have
reached the most complicated part of our study, and some thought and attention
are necessary from the reader to gain even an elementary idea of the relation
held by the fifth principle to the other principles in man.
The word
Manas comes from the Sanskrit word – man, the root of the verb to think ; it is
the Thinker in us, spoken of vaguely in the West as mind. I will ask the reader
to regard Manas as Thinker rather than as mind, because the word Thinker
suggests some one who thinks, i.e., an individual, an entity. And this is
exactly the
Theosophical idea of Manas, for Manas is the immortal individual, the real
" I ," that clothes itself over and over again in transient
personalities, and itself endures for ever.
It is
described in the Voice of the Silence in the exhortation addressed to the
candidate for initiation: "Have perseverance as one who doth for evermore
endure. Thy shadows [personalities] live and vanish ; that which in thee shall
live for ever, that which in thee knows, for it is knowledge, is not of
fleeting life; it is the man that was, that is, and will be, for whom the hour
shall never strike" (p. 31). H.P.Blavatsky has described it very clearly
in the Key to Theosophy: "Try to imagine a ‘Spirit,’ a celestial being,
whether we call it by one name or another, divine in its essential nature, yet
not pure enough to be one with the ALL, and having, in order to achieve this,
to so purify its nature as finally to gain that goal.
It can do so
only be passing individually and personally, i.e., spiritually and physically,
through every experience and feeling that exists in the manifold or
differentiated universe. It has, therefore, after having gained such experience
in the lower kingdoms, and having ascended higher and still higher with every
rung on the ladder of being, to pass through every experience on the human
planes.
In its very
essence it is Thought, and is, therefore, called in its plurality Manasaputra,
‘the Sons of (universal) Mind.’ This individualised ‘Thought’ is what we
Theosophists call the real human Ego, the thinking entity imprisoned in a case
of flesh and bones. This is surely a spiritual entity, not matter (that is, not
matter as we know it, on the plane of the objective universe) – and such
entities are the incarnating Egos that inform the bundle of animal matter
called mankind, and whose names are Manasa or minds" (Key to Theosophy, p.
183-184).
This idea may
be rendered yet clearer perhaps by a hurried glance cast backward over man’s
evolution in the past. When the quaternary had been slowly built up, it was a
fair house without a tenant, and stood empty awaiting the coming of the one who
was to dwell therein.
The name
Mânasaputra (the sons of mind) covers many grades of intelligence, ranging from
the mighty "Sons of the Flame" whose human evolution lies far behind
them, down to those entities who gained individualisation in the cycle
preceding our own, and were ready to incarnate on this earth in order to
accomplish their human stage of evolution.
Some
superhuman intelligences incarnated as guides and teachers of our infant
humanity, and became founders and divine rulers of the ancient civilisations.
Large numbers
of the entities spoken of above, who had already evolved some mental faculties,
took up their abode in the human quaternary, in the mindless men. These are the
reincarnating Mânasaputra, who became the tenants of the human frames as then
evolved on earth, and these same Mânasaputra, reincarnating age after age, are
the Reincarnating Egos, the Manas in us, the persistent individual, the fifth
principle in man.
The remainder
of mankind through successive ages received from the loftier Mânasaputra their
first spark of mind, a ray which stimulated into growth the germ of mind latent
within them, the human soul thus having its birth in time there. It is these
differences of age, as we may call them, in the beginning of the individual
life, of the specialisation of the eternal Divine Spirit into a human soul,
which explain the enormous differences in mental capacity found in our present
humanity.
The
multiplicity of names given to this fifth principle has probably tended to
increase the confusion surrounding it in the minds of many who are beginning to
study Theosophy.
Mânasaputra
is what we call the historical name, the name that suggests the entrance into
humanity of a class of already individualised souls at a certain point of
evolution ; Manas is the ordinary name, descriptive of the intellectual nature
of the principle ; the Individual or the " I ," or Ego, recalls the
fact that this principle is permanent, does not die, is the individualising
principle, separating itself in thought from all that is not itself, the
Subject in Western terminology as opposed to the Object ; the Higher Ego puts
it into contrast with the Personal Ego, of which something is to be presently
said.
The
Reincarnating Ego lays stress on the fact that it is the principle that
reincarnates continually, and so unites in its own experience all the lives
passed through on earth. There are various other names, but they will not be
met with in elementary treatises.
The above are
those most often encountered, and there is no real difficulty about them, but
when they are used interchangeably, without explanation, the unhappy student is
apt to tear his hair in anguish, wondering how many principles he has got hold
of, and what relation they bear to each other.
We must now
consider Manas during a single incarnation, which will serve as the type of
all, and we will start when the Ego has been drawn – by causes set a-going in
previous earth-lives – the family in which is to be born the human being who is
to serve as its next tabernacle. (I do not deal here with reincarnation, since
that great and most essential doctrine of Theosophy must be expounded
separately).
The Thinker,
then, awaits the building of the "house of life" which he is to
occupy ; and now arises a difficulty ; himself a spiritual entity living on the
mental or third plane upwards, a plane far higher than that of the universe, he
cannot influence the molecules of gross matter of which his dwelling is built
by the direct play upon them of his own most subtle particles.
So, he
projects part of his own substance, which clothes itself with astral matter,
and then with the help of etheric matter permeates the whole nervous system of
the yet unborn child, to form, as the physical apparatus matures, the thinking
principle in man. This projection from Manas, spoken of as its reflection, its
shadow, its ray, and by many another descriptive and allegorical name, is the
lower Manas, in contradistinction to the higher Manas – Manas, during every
period of incarnation, being dual.
On this,
H.P.Blavatsky says: "Once imprisoned, or incarnate, their (the Manas)
essence becomes dual; that is to say the rays of the eternal divine Mind,
considered as individual entities, assume a twofold attribute which is
(a) their
essential, inherent, characteristic, heaven-aspiring mind (higher Manas), and
(b) the human
quality of thinking, or animal cogitation, rationalised owing to the
superiority of the human brain, the Kâma-tending or lower Manas" (Key to
Theosophy, p. 184).
We must now
turn our attention to this lower Manas alone, and see the part which it plays
in the human constitution.
It is
engulfed in the quaternary, and we may regard it as clasping Kâma with one
hand, while with the other it retains its hold on its father, the higher Manas.
Whether it
will be dragged down by Kâma altogether and be torn away from the triad to
which by its nature it belongs, or whether it will triumphantly carry back to
its source the purified experiences of its earth-life – that is the
life-problem set and solved in each successive incarnation.
During earth-life,
Kâma and the lower Manas are joined together, and are often spoken of
conveniently as Kâma-Manas. Kâma supplies, as we have seen, the animal and
passional elements ; the lower Manas rationalises these, and adds the
intellectual faculties ; and so we have the brain-mind, the brain-intelligence,
i.e.., Kâma-Manas functioning in the brain and nervous system, using the
physical apparatus as its organ on the material plane.
In man these
two principles are interwoven during life, and rarely act separately, but the
student must realise that "Kâma-Manas " is not a new principle, but
the interweaving of the fourth with the lower part of the fifth.
As with a
flame we may light a wick, and the colour of the flame of the burning wick will
depend on the nature of the wick and of the liquid in which it is soaked, so in
each human being the flame of Manas set alight the brain and Kâmic wick, and
the colour of the light from that wick will depend on the Kâmic nature and the
development of the brain-apparatus.
If the Kâmic
nature be strong and undisciplined it will soil the pure manasic light, lending
it a lurid tinge and fouling it with noisome smoke. If the brain-apparatus be
imperfect or undeveloped, it will dull the light and prevent it from shining
forth to the outer world.
As was
clearly stated by H.P.Blavatsky in her article on "Genius" ;
"What we call ‘the manifestations of genius’ in a person are only the more
or less successful efforts of that Ego to assert itself on the outward plane of
its objective form – the man of clay – in the matter-of-fact daily life of the
latter.
The Egos of a
Newton, an Æschylus, or a Shakespeare are of the same essence and substance as
the Egos of a yokel, an ignoramus, a fool, or even an idiot ; and the
self-assertion of their informing genii depends on the physiological and
material
construction of the physical man. No Ego differs from another Ego in its
primordial or original essence and nature.
That which
makes one mortal a great man and of another a vulgar silly person is, as said,
the quality and make-up of the physical shell or casing, and the adequacy or
inadequacy of brain and body to transmit and give expression to the light of
the real inner man ; and this aptness or inaptness is, in its turn, the result of
Karma.
Or, to use
another simile, physical man is the musical instrument, and the Ego the
performing artist. The potentiality of perfect melody of sound is in the former
– the instrument – and no skill of the latter can awaken a faultless harmony
out of a broken or badly made instrument.
This harmony
depends on the fidelity of transmission, by word and act, to the objective
plane, of the unspoken divine thought in the very depths of man’s subjective or
inner nature. Physical man may – to follow our simile – be a priceless
Stradivarius, or a cheap and cracked fiddle, or again a mediocrity between the
two, in the hands of the Paganini who ensouls him" (Lucifer November,
1889, p.228).
Bearing in
mind these limitations and idiosyncrasies ([Limitations and idiosyncrasies due
to the action of the Ego in previous earth-lives, be it remembered ] imposed on
the manifestations of the thinking principle by the organ through which it has
to function, we shall have little difficulty in following the workings of the
lower Manas in man ; mental ability, intellectual strength, acuteness, subtlety
– all these are its manifestations ; these may reach as far as what is often
called genius, what H.P. Blavatsky speaks of as "artificial genius, the
outcome of culture and of purely intellectual acuteness." Its nature is
often demonstrated by the presence of Kâmic elements in it, of passion, vanity
and arrogance.
The higher
Manas can but rarely manifest itself at the present stage of human evolution.
Occasionally a flash from those loftier regions lightens the twilight in which
we dwell, and such flashes alone are what the Theosophist calls true genius ;
"Behold in every manifestation of genius, when combined with virtue, the
undeniable presence of the celestial exile, the divine Ego whose jailer thou
art, O man of matter."
For theosophy
teaches "that the presence in man of various creative powers" –
called genius in their collectivity – is due to no blind chance, to no innate
qualities through hereditary tendencies – though that which is known as atavism
may often intensify these faculties – but to an accumulation of individual
antecedent experiences of the Ego in its preceding life and lives.
For,
omniscient in its essence and nature, it still requires experience, through its
personalities, of the things of earth, earthly on the objective plane, in order
to apply the fruition of that abstract experience to them. And, adds our
philosophy, the cultivation of certain aptitudes through out a long series of
past incarnations must finally culminate, in some one life, in a blooming forth
as genius, in one or another direction" – ( Lucifer November, 1889, p.
229-30). For the manifestation of true genius, purity of life is an essential
condition.
Kâma-Manas is
the personal self of man ; we have already seen that the quaternary, as a
whole, is the personality, "the shadow," and the lower Manas gives
the individualising touch that makes the personality recognise itself as "
I ". It becomes intellectual, it recognises itself as separate from all
other selves ; deluded by the separateness it feels, it does not realise a
unity beyond all that it is able to sense.
And the lower
Manas, attracted by the vividness of the material-life impressions, swayed by
the rush of the Kâmic emotions, passions and desires, attracted to all material
things blinded and deafened by the storm voices among which it is plunged – the
lower Manas is apt to forget the pure and serene glory of its birthplace, and
to throw itself into the turbulence which gives rapture in lieu of peace.
And, be it
remembered, it is this very lower Manas that yields the last touch of delight
to the senses and to the animal nature ; for what is passion that can neither
anticipate nor remember, where is ecstasy without the subtle force of
imagination, the delicate colours of fancy and of dream?
But there may
be chains yet more strong and constraining, binding the lower Manas fast to the
earth. They are forged of ambition, of desire for fame, be it for that of the
statesman’s power, or of supreme intellectual achievement. So long as any work
is wrought for sake of love, or praise, or even recognition that the work is
"mine" and not another’s ; so long as in the heart’s remotest
chambers one subtlest yearning remains to be recognised as separate from all ;
so long, however grand the ambition, however far reaching the charity, however
lofty the achievement, Manas is tainted with Kâma, and is not pure as its
source.
____________________________
Annie
Besant with Mahatma Gandhi
___________________________
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