There are ranges of consciousness beyond the mental and they have their own tools of cognition and operation. Surely, it means, the tools of the mental will prove to be blunt in those beyond-mind domains. But, fortunately, there is the mental rather the human potential to exceed itself by a conscious choice and effort. That is built into the very scheme of things and that is therefore our valid hope also. To be brief: we have a series: physical instruments of observation in the scientific sense, such as microscopes, telescopes, modern accelerators; physical organs of contact, eye-ear-taste-smell-touch; behind them manas, mind as the true sense; finally is sense in its purity samjňāna that exists behind and beyond mind. The knowledge of samjňāna has a wideness as well as penetration which physical mind is incapable of having. It is by a purposeful series of limiting transitions that the higher suffers diminution, and therefore what the lower conceives becomes an extremely partial view of things. To present to it the higher then becomes self contradictory. But let us quickly look at the Upanishadic insights about the instruments of cognition and their functions.
Kena Upanishad speaks of a Sight behind our sight and a Hearing behind our
hearing, not in general terms of a Sense behind our sense. It starts with a
series of questions and straightaway asserts a few things:
1. By whom missioned falls the mind shot to its mark? By whom yoked moves the
first life-breath forward on its paths? By whom impelled is this word that men
speak? What god set eye and ear to their workings?
2. That which is hearing of our hearing, mind of our mind, speech of our
speech, that too is life of our life-breath and sight of our sight. The wise
are released beyond and they pass from this world and become immortal.
3. There sight travels not, nor speech, nor the mind. We know It not nor can
distinguish how one should teach of It: for It is other than the known; It is
there above the unknown. It is so we have heard from men of old who declared
That to our understanding.
4. That which is unexpressed by the word, that by which the word is expressed,
know That to be the Brahman and not this which men follow after here.
5. That which thinks not by the mind, that by which the mind is thought, know
That to be the Brahman and not this which men follow after here.
6. That which sees not with the eye, that by which one sees the eye's seeings,
know That to be the Brahman and not this which men follow after here.
7. That which hears not with the ear, that by which the ear's hearing is heard,
know That to be the Brahman and not this which men follow after here.
8. That which breathes not with the breath, that by which the life-breath is
led forward in its paths, know That to be the Brahman and not this which men
follow after here.
Sri Aurobindo’s commentary in chapter IX (pp. 148-55) is reproduced in the
following:
Mind was called by Indian psychologists the eleventh and ranks as the supreme
sense. In the ancient arrangement of the senses, five of knowledge and five of
action, it was the sixth of the organs of knowledge and at the same time the
sixth of the organs of action. It is a commonplace of psychology that the
effective functioning of the senses of knowledge is inoperative without the
assistance of the mind; the eye may see, the ear may hear, all the senses may
act, but if the mind pays no attention, the man has not heard, seen, felt,
touched or tasted. Similarly, according to psychology, the organs of action act
only by the force of the mind operating as will or, physiologically, by the
reactive nervous force from the brain which must be according to materialistic
notions the true self and essence of all will. In any case, the senses or all
senses, if there are other than the ten,—according to a text in the Upanishad
there should be at least fourteen, seven and seven,—all senses appear to be
only organisations, functionings, instrumentations of the mind-consciousness,
devices which it has formed in the course of its evolution in living Matter.
Modern psychology has extended our knowledge and has admitted us to a truth
which the ancients already knew but expressed in other language. We know now or
we rediscover the truth that the conscious operation of mind is only a surface
action. There is a much vaster and more potent subconscious mind which loses
nothing of what the senses bring to it; it keeps all its wealth in an
inexhaustible store of memory, akshitam shravah. The surface mind may pay no
attention, still the subconscious mind attends, receives, treasures up with an
infallible accuracy. The illiterate servant-girl hears daily her master
reciting Hebrew in his study; the surface mind pays no attention to the
unintelligible gibberish, but the subconscious mind hears, remembers and, when
in an abnormal condition it comes up to the surface, reproduces those learned
recitations with a portentous accuracy which the most correct and retentive
scholar might envy. The man or mind has not heard because he did not attend;
the greater man or mind within has heard because he always attends, or rather
sub-tends, with an infinite capacity. So too a man put under an anaesthetic and
operated upon has felt nothing; but release his subconscious mind by hypnosis
and he will relate accurately every detail of the operation and its appropriate
sufferings; for the stupor of the physical sense-organ could not prevent the
larger mind within from observing and feeling.
Similarly we know that a large part of our physical action is instinctive and
directed not by the surface but by the subconscious mind. And we know now that
it is a mind that acts and not merely an ignorant nervous reaction from the
brute physical brain. The subconscious mind in the catering insect knows the
anatomy of the victim it intends to immobilise and make food for its young and
it directs the sting accordingly, as unerringly as the most skilful surgeon,
provided the mere limited surface mind with its groping and faltering nervous
action does not get in the way and falsify the inner knowledge or the inner
will-force. These examples point us to truths which western psychology,
hampered by past ignorance posing as scientific orthodoxy, still ignores or
refuses to acknowledge. The Upanishads declare that the Mind in us is infinite;
it knows not only what has been seen but what has not been seen, not only what
has been heard but what has not been heard, not only what has been
discriminated by the thought but what has not been discriminated by the
thought. Let us say, then, in the tongue of our modern knowledge that the
surface man in us is limited by his physical experiences; he knows only what
his nervous life in the body brings to his embodied mind; and even of those
bringings he knows, he can retain and utilise only so much as his surface
mind-sense attends to and consciously remembers; but there is a larger
subliminal consciousness within him which is not thus limited. That
consciousness senses what has not been sensed by the surface mind and its
organs and knows what the surface mind has not learned by its acquisitive
thought. That in the insect knows the anatomy of its victim; that in the man
outwardly insensible not only feels and remembers the action of the surgeon's
knife, but knows the appropriate reactions of suffering which were in the
physical body inhibited by the anaesthetic and therefore non-existent; that in
the illiterate servant-girl heard and retained accurately the words of an
unknown language and could, as Yogic experience knows, by a higher action of itself
understand those superficially unintelligible sounds.
To return to the Vedantic words we have been using, there is a vaster action of
the Sanjnana which is not limited by the action of the physical sense-organs;
it was this which sensed perfectly and made its own through the ear the words
of the unknown language, through the touch the movements of the unfelt
surgeon's knife, through the sense-mind or sixth sense the exact location of
the centres of locomotion in the victim insect. There is also associated with
it a corresponding vaster action of Prajnana, Ajnana and Vijnana not limited by
the smaller apprehensive and comprehensive faculties of the external mind. It
is this vaster Prajnana which perceived the proper relation of the words to
each other, of the movement of the knife to the unfelt suffering of the nerves
and of the successive relation in space of the articulations in the insect's
body. Such perception was inherent in the right reproduction of the words, the
right narration of the sufferings, the right successive action of the sting.
The Ajnana or Knowledge-Will originating all these actions was also vaster, not
limited by the faltering force that governs the operations directed by the
surface mind. And although in these examples the action of the vaster Vijnana
is not so apparent, yet it was evidently there working through them and
ensuring their co-ordination.
But at present it is with the Sanjnana that we are concerned. Here we should
note, first of all, that there is an action of the sense-mind which is superior
to the particular action of the senses and is aware of things even without
imaging them in forms of sight, sound, contact, but which also as a sort of
subordinate operation, subordinate but necessary to completeness of presentation,
does image in these forms. This is evident in psychical phenomena. Those who
have carried the study and experimentation of them to a certain extent, have
found that we can sense things known only to the minds of others, things that
exist only at a great distance, things that belong to another plane than the
terrestrial but have here their effects; we can both sense them in their images
and also feel, as it were, all that they are without any definite image proper
to the five senses.
This shows, in the first place, that sight and the other senses are not mere
results of the development of our physical organs in the terrestrial evolution.
Mind, subconscious in all Matter and evolving in Matter, has developed these
physical organs in order to apply its inherent capacities of sight, hearing
etc., on the physical plane by physical means for a physical life; but they are
inherent capacities and not dependent on the circumstance of terrestrial
evolution and they can be employed without the use of the physical eye, ear,
skin, palate. Supposing that there are psychical senses which act through a
psychical body, and we thus explain these psychical phenomena, still that
action also is only an organisation of the inherent functioning of the
essential sense, the Sanjnana, which in itself can operate without bodily
organs. This essential sense is the original capacity of consciousness to feel
in itself all that consciousness has formed and to feel it in all the essential
properties and operations of that which has form, whether represented
materially by vibration of sound or images of light or any other physical
symbol.
The trend of knowledge leads more and more to the conclusion that not only are
the properties of form, even the most obvious such as colour, light etc.,
merely operations of Force, but form itself is only an operation of Force. This
Force again proves to be self-power of conscious-being in a state of energy and
activity. Practically, therefore, all form is only an operation of
consciousness impressing itself with presentations of its own workings. We see
colour because that is the presentation which consciousness makes to itself of
one of its own operations; but colour is only an operation of Force working in
the form of Light, and Light again is only a movement, that is to say an
operation of Force. The question is what is essential to this operation of
Force taking on itself the presentation of form? For it is this that must
determine the working of Sanjnana or Sense on whatever plane it may operate.
Everything begins with vibration or movement, the original kshobha or
disturbance. If there is no movement of the conscious being, it can only know
its own pure static existence. Without vibration or movement of being in
consciousness there can be no act of knowledge and therefore no sense; without
vibration or movement of being in force there can be no object of sense.
Movement of conscious being as knowledge becoming sensible of itself as
movement of force, in other words the knowledge separating itself from its own
working to watch that and take it into itself again by feeling,—this is the
basis of universal Sanjnana. This is true both of our internal and external
operations. I become anger by a vibration of conscious force acting as nervous
emotion and I feel the anger that I have become by another movement of
conscious force acting as light of knowledge. I am conscious of my body because
I have myself become the body; that same force of conscious being which has
made this form of itself, this presentation of its workings knows it in that
form, in that presentation. I can know nothing except what I myself am; if I
know others, it is because they also are myself, because my self has assumed
these apparently alien presentations as well as that which is nearest to my own
mental centre.
All sensation, all action of sense is thus the same in essence whether external
or internal, physical or psychical. But this vibration of conscious being is
presented to itself by various forms of sense which answer to the successive
operations of movement in its assumption of form. For first we have intensity
of vibration creating regular rhythm which is the basis or constituent of all
creative formation; secondly, contact or intermiscence of the movements of
conscious being which constitute the rhythm; thirdly, definition of the
grouping of movements which are in contact, their shape; fourthly, the constant
welling up of the essential force to support in its continuity the movement
that has been thus defined; fifthly, the actual enforcement and compression of
the force in its own movement which maintains the form that has been assumed.
In Matter these five constituent operations are said by the Sankhyas to
represent themselves as five elemental conditions of substance, the etheric,
atmospheric, igneous, liquid and solid; and the rhythm of vibration is seen by
them as shabda, sound, the basis of hearing, the intermiscence as contact, the
basis of touch, the definition as shape, the basis of sight, the upflow of
force as rasa, sap, the basis of taste, and the discharge of the atomic
compression as gandha, odour, the basis of smell. It is true that this is only
predicated of pure or subtle Matter; the physical matter of our world being a
mixed operation of force, these five elemental states are not found there
separately except in a very modified form. But all these are only the physical
workings or symbols. Essentially all formation, to the most subtle and most
beyond our senses such as form of mind, form of character, form of soul, amount
when scrutinised to this fivefold operation of conscious-force in movement.
All these operations, then, the Sanjnana or essential sense must be able to
seize, to make its own by that union in knowledge of knower and object which is
peculiar to itself. Its sense of the rhythm or intensity of the vibrations
which contain in themselves all the meaning of the form, will be the basis of
the essential hearing of which our apprehension of physical sound or the spoken
word is only the most outward result; so also its sense of the contact or
intermiscence of conscious force with conscious force must be the basis of the
essential touch; its sense of the definition or form of force must be the basis
of the essential sight; its sense of the upflow of essential being in the form,
that which is the secret of its self-delight, must be the basis of the
essential taste; its sense of the compression of force and the self-discharge
of its essence of being must be the basis of the essential inhalation grossly
represented in physical substance by the sense of smell. On whatever plane, to
whatever kind of formation these essentialities of sense will apply themselves
and on each they will seek an appropriate organisation, an appropriate
functioning.
This various sense will, it is obvious, be in the highest consciousness a
complex unity, just as we have seen that there the various operation of
knowledge is also a complex unity. Even if we examine the physical senses, say,
the sense of hearing, if we observe how the underlying mind receives their
action, we shall see that in their essence all the senses are in each other.
That mind is not only aware of the vibration which we call sound; it is aware
also of the contact and interchange between the force in the sound and the nervous
force in us with which that intermixes; it is aware of the definition or form
of the sound and of the complex contacts or relations which make up the form;
it is aware of the essence or outwelling conscious force which constitutes and
maintains the sound and prolongs its vibrations in our nervous being; it is
aware of our own nervous inhalation of the vibratory discharge proceeding from
the compression of force which makes, so to speak, the solidity of the sound.
All these sensations enter into the sensitive reception and joy of music which
is the highest physical form of this operation of force,—they constitute our
physical sensitiveness to it and the joy of our nervous being in it; diminish
one of them and the joy and the sensitiveness are to that extent dulled. Much
more must there be this complex unity in a higher than the physical
consciousness and most of all must there be unity in the highest. But the
essential sense must be capable also of seizing the secret essence of all
conscious being in action, in itself and not only through the results of the
operation; its appreciation of these results can be nothing more than itself an
outcome of this deeper sense which it has of the essence of the Thing behind
its appearances.
If we consider these things thus subtly in the light of our own deeper
psychology and pursue them beyond the physical appearances by which they are
covered, we shall get to some intellectual conception of the sense behind our
senses or rather the Sense of our senses, the Sight of our sight and the
Hearing of our hearing. The Brahman-consciousness of which the Upanishad speaks
is not the Absolute withdrawn into itself, but that Absolute in its outlook on
the relative; it is the Lord, the Master-Soul, the governing Transcendent and All,
He who constitutes and controls the action of the gods on the different planes
of our being.
Since it constitutes them, all our workings can be no more than psychical and
physical results and representations of something essential proper to its supreme
creative outlook, our sense a shadow of the divine Sense, our sight of the
divine Sight, our hearing of the divine Hearing. Nor is that divine Sight and
Hearing limited to things physical, but extend themselves to all forms and
operations of conscious being.
The supreme Consciousness does not depend on what we call sight and hearing for
its own essential seeing and audition. It operates by a supreme Sense, creative
and comprehensive, of which our physical and psychical sight and hearing are
external results and partial operations. Neither is it ignorant of these, nor
excludes them; for since it constitutes and controls, it must be aware of them
but from a supreme plane, param dhama, which includes all in its view; for its
original action is that highest movement of Vishnu which, the Veda tells us,
the seers behold like an eye extended in heaven. It is that by which the soul
sees its seeings and hears its hearings; but all sense only assumes its true
value and attains to its absolute, its immortal reality when we cease to pursue
the satisfactions of the mere external and physical senses and go beyond even
the psychical being to this spiritual or essential which is the source and
fountain, the knower, constituent and true valuer of all the rest.
This spiritual sense of things, secret and superconscient in us, alone gives
their being, worth and reality to the psychical and physical sense; in
themselves they have none. When we attain to it, these inferior operations are
as it were taken up into it and the whole world and everything in it changes to
us and takes on a different and a non-material value. That Master-consciousness
in us senses our sensations of objects, sees our seeings, hears our hearings no
longer for the benefit of the senses and their desires, but with the embrace of
the self-existent Bliss which has no cause, beginning or end, eternal in its
own immortality.
RY Deshpande