The Puraņas tell us that Brahma created the worlds by the Tapas-Will, by the power of concentrated gathering-in of consciousness. In the present instance, Aswapati created the new world by the power of his yogic samkalpa, as an act of supreme will in the identification and union with the Divine. He had the knowledge, of the Eternal and the Eternal in Time, and he was carrying with him the desire of the world for its fulfilment. There was the problem of the two negations pulling the soul of man in two opposite directions, the rejection of the world by the exclusive God-seeker and the denial of the materialist dismissing the things of the spirit. More fundamentally, there is the entrenched antagonism to all that is high and noble and spiritually elevating, all that is fulfilling, hostility pitched against life, the extreme ill-will and nastiness of death and its stark malevolence. Contradictions have somehow entered into this creation and they have to be met and dealt with, removed, contradictions between falsehood and truth, evil and good, suffering and happiness, darkness and light. The world left behind continues to be governed by naked falsehood and ignorance and death. Aswapati accepts it not. Not only does he not accept it; he sets himself to resolve it.

...   more »