Philosophy in India has a heritage much
longer and perhaps profounder than
elsewhere. The several trends of
philosophy such as the darsanas, both
astika and nastika have had a long
interplay so as to leave us with no pure
philosophic system to-day. Whatever
darsanas today operate as independent
darsanas reveal one significant fact,
namely they appear to be abstractions.
The consideration of the extant sutras
of each darsana reveals the appalling
picture of ‘cold storage’ of the
darsanas other than two: namely
materialism (carvaka) and Vedanta.
The basic problem of philosophy to which
all philosophical thinking has been
directed has been the problem of freedom
which was recognized as more fundamental
in a sense than the problem of reality.
Reality and Freedom are the twin
fundamentals of Philosophic exploration
and attainment. Thus the essential
concept of Indian Philosophical thinking
(including the hedonistic freedom of the
Carvaka) has been Reality-Freedom, (or
expressed in the modern language,
essential axiological nature of truth.
Truth is something not merely to be
known but something to be lived and
entered into.
This being the general nature of Indian
Philosophical tradition, any attempt to
separate the two spheres as western
Philosophy has been trying to do is
foredoomed to failure. Psychologically
as well as humanly it is impossible to
speak of a reality that is static and is
claimed to be dynamic only in the sense
of static dynamism of the mechanical
view of life.
The mechanistic concept of materialism
is unhelpful in solving the problem of
freedom. The biological concept of
reality is equally helpless though it
also reveals some type of freedom only
one step removed from mechanistic
activity, for there is always a tendency
of biological activity to settle down to
mechanistic activity. It has been found
that even mental activities tend to
develop mechanistic tropisms in the
field of thought both individual and
social. Stereotyped behaviour is the
contradiction of freedom though it is
most valuable for the fixed patterns of
activity.
The search for freedom obviously defeats
itself at each one of the levels. Like
Indra in the great discourse of the
Chandogya Up. (8.vii.xv) one discovers
that each level though gained through
freedom becomes in its turn a bar to
higher progress. Thus the attainment of
absolute freedom is identical with the
attainment of that Reality which does no
longer bar a continual progress or
experience of liberty – these two being
realize to be synonymous.
This seems to be the ancient realization
in India revealed in the twin concepts
of Moksa and Reality which are integral
to each other.
Our present problem is whether this
knowledge is indeed helpful to us at
present. There is no doubt that somehow
the mechanical or mechanistic conception
of reality has caught the imagination of
the mass of the people. This is not
surprising at all because other factors
such as economic security and industrial
potential and possibility of economical
and social meliorisms through the
instrumentality of scientific inventions
have changed the attitude towards the
problems of Reality and Value. Indeed
even this is clearly seen to be linked
up with the concept of freedom. It is
freedom that is determining the concept
of reality and concept of value. Thus it
is through the concept of Freedom that
we could link up the two great
adventures of Reality-Value and
Scientifico-Economic-Value. This could
be but the reformulation of the ancient
dualism of Mukti-purushartha and
Kamyartha Purushartha. This duality has
the double power of integration and
disintegration – the dialectical
opposition being the lower integration
whereas dialectical subsumption through
law is the power of higher integration.
Reconstructions:- Reconstruction can
proceed either from the stand-point of
the materialistic mechanistic end or
from the idealistic freedom conserving
and promoting end.
Of course to-day we are confronted with
the double reconstruction. This is
something that cannot be helped, for
Philosophy aims at a comprehensive
understanding of the totality of
Reality, however variegated Reality may
be in itself.
The spiritual attitude is the experience
of the axiological status of Reality as
Freedom. The materialistic attitude is
equally an axiological one but it is
freedom of the materialistic hedonistic
life. The concepts of
Iha
and
Para
illustrate the double synthesis that is
being sought, through a two fold
realization of the value of Reality.
We claim that the goal of Philosophy is
the attainment of a consistent
explanation of Reality taken as a Whole
or Unit. All Vedantas are but
formulations of the Nature of Reality.
It would be fundamentally wrong to say
that there has never been any
reconstruction or reformulation, nor
need there be any reformulation or
reconstruction.
In the fields of Sastras – ethical and
social dynamics – we have evidence of
continuous reformulations of the ethical
codes and even practices. These have not
always been in the direction of a
superior of morality of freedom – more
often they have been dictated by the
secular needs of adjustment for survival
or the recognition of the imperfection
of man or rather his inability to pursue
the ‘nisus’ of the spiritual.
In Philosophy too, the metaphysical
problem unfortunately has been diverted
to one of Monism or Absolutism, and
Advaita has been exalted to the status
of the highest – the other formulations
being considered to be the compromises
with the imperfect. This necessarily
does not follow. The problem of Reality
is not the problem of pragmatism. This
has been clearly seen by the Vedantic
thinkers who have claimed that the other
schools of Vedanta have as consistent an
account of Reality as any absolutistic
view can be – especially when such
absolutism is fused with Illusionisms
and phenomenalisms.
Philosophy itself has had to turn
critical about its own instruments of
knowledge. This critical turn is indeed
the standing point of pramana-sastra.
The fixing of the limits of each
pramana, is the preliminary feature of
philosophical thinking; a training in
them is the condition of all types of
knowledge. The relatively present and
postulated in respect of the knowledge
granted by these different pramanas is
not to be taken as affecting the
validity of their synthesis a fatal
fallacy of the illusionist view being
precisely this assertion that truths of
the perceptual order are relative
truths. Once we grant that they are true
within limits, nothing should later be
done to deny them that too. Some
philosophers have realized this but
others have forgotten this healthy
restraint in their generalization of
illusion. That is the reason why
enthusiastic assertions of the
discoverers of the Intuitive Experience
have been met by equal vehemence from
the methodological realists, who
consider that Reality though One is
composite of all types of realities,
hierarchically arranged and integrated
to form a single system directed by the
Highest Spirits and maintained and
sustained by that Spirit.
The conflicts between the pramanas – and
therefore between the premeyas – is
referred to the nature of the pramanas
themselves – intellect versus intuition,
intellect versus perception and
perception versus intuition, and
intuition versus revelations etc.
The history of Indian Philosophy is a
series of movements of thought seeking
different formulations if not solutions
to the problem of Metaphysics on the one
hand and life on the other. Considered
in this way it would be possible to
reconstruct our entire conception of
reality not independent of experience –
experience being part and parcel of that
reality – but as exhibiting itself in
and through the different levels of
experience.
It is impossible to accept the view that
the last word has been uttered by
ancient Philosophy in India and no more
attempts are possible. This view is
shared by two classes of thinkers; (i)
that Absolutistic Mayavada which
considers that Reality being beyond
change and all predication not of course
limited to the rational approach alone
but all approach in the sense that our
human reason cannot go beyond and cannot
therefore formulate a different type of
metaphysical theory than the
Identity-view. To this school obviously
Professor G.S. Malkani belongs; and (ii)
the Dualistic Absolutism of the
Dvaita-vada which again considers that
no other formulation could justifiably
or competently or possibly regulate the
unity of the dualistic principles
experienced and distinguished as such by
all. To this school belongs Dr. R.
Nagaraja Sarma. The latter writer
concedes that a third formulation is
possible but is inconsistent
metaphysics, such possibilities may
indeed be many but not consistent
metaphysics. This too is the attitude of
the intellectual Reason that revels in a
sort of dialectical dualism having its
incentive in difference. According to
both these classes the tendency to
philosophize then at the present
movement which is obviously incurable
though not a disease is wrong. All that
we need to do is to make efforts to
realize or experience or abide by the
reality given to us by the great
teachers of Vedanta (Advaita or Dvaita).
Sadhana is necessary, that is all, for
we have understood our philosophy. This
sounds rather very much like that advice
which Karl Marx gave to the diligent
Lenin who had mastered Marxism, who had
asked him as to what next ‘Struggle’ was
the advice. Sadhana is the advice here.
We should very much incline to this
solution even at the cost of philosophy.
But here comes the rub.
We have seen that Sadhana involves
self-formulations however guided and
helped and canalized by the Sadhya:(the
goal) and these self-formulations
discover the planes and purposes of the
different facets of the one indivisible
Reality. Philosophizing and Sadhana
cannot be compartmentalized and rigidly
fixed to theoretical and the practical
spheres of Reality. It is precisely this
phenomenon that we witness in the lives
of the saints as well as Philosophers;
their theory and practice weave a
seamless garment.
Sadhana indeed helps reorientation or
reconstruction. Ages of speculative
activity are succeeded by ages of
spiritual activity and practical
reconstruction of spiritual and economic
life depends on this two-fold continuity
of processes.
Whether we like it or not there is going
on reconstruction of a kind in the field
of philosophical speculation. The only
question then is this philosophical
speculation something subordinate to a
priori
concepts or regulated by the infinite
process of subjective experiences,
however universal or uniform they may be
finally apprehended to be?
The reconstruction of experience has
become necessary not only because of its
inevitability, thanks to the constant
impact of the two worlds or planes of
the theoretical and the practical or
ideal and the actual or Jnana and Karma
(dharma),
but also because no concept however
eminent can just stand unmodified or
unmodifiably during history.
We can show how our concepts (our words)
have undergone transformations in
connotation and as well as denotation.
We could have several papers of research
on the several crucial concepts or words
used in philosophy such as Maya, Avidya
Karma, Sesa, Visesa, vijnana and so on.
Our basic concepts of mind, (manas),
atman, prakrti etc., also have undergone
serious changes or evolution. Indeed the
two dominant terms in evolution such as
pravrtti and nivrtti have developed a
history of their own. Indeed as Dr.
Alfred North Whitehead had stated,
echoing the words of Wallace: “The use
of Philosophy is to maintain an active
novelty of fundamental ideas
illuminating a social system. Philosophy
is mystical for mysticism is direct
insight into depths as yet unknown. But
the purpose of philosophy is to
rationalize mysticism not by explaining
it away but by introduction of novel
verbal characteristics rationally
coordinated”. But this is not all. It is
impossible to introduce novel verbal
characteristics just for the sake of
introducing novelty in order to attract
individuals to a new jargon. It is
precisely because it is not easy to do
so without what we call experience that
is basic and real that we recognize a
new philosophy as a New System when we
recognize that experience.
The charge that such reconstructions
with new verbal characteristics could be
either old wine in new bottles or
self-delusive cannot be avoided in all
those cases where there is new insight
into reality – a new vision of reality
or the perception of a new factor in
reality.
For the large mass of mankind
insensitive to any new development,
trying to adapt the world to their old
fangled notions or struggling to adapt
to the new world, it is perhaps
unnecessary to toy with the idea of
philosophies. But we now are witnessing
quite a new tempo of human activity and
this is universal and inevitable. The
shape of the development of the mind has
now become such that it is uncomfortable
except when it becomes aware of the
larger challenges. We cannot dismiss the
problem of Reality as the Unreal.
We may yet take our inspiration from the
ancient Seer who spoke about the
practice of togetherness of contraries
(opposites) – vidyan cavidyanca yas tad
vedo ubhayam saha: or sambhutimca
vinasamca yas tad vedo ubhayam saha –
and follow up our spiritual philosophic
endeavour.
This will lead to the real
Reconstruction of Indian Philosophy.
Has this been attempted? Has this been
successful?
These two questions are to us very
important.
The writers to the volume entitled
Contemporary Indian Philosophy edited by
Dr. S. Radhakrishnan show us one way by
which they had reinterpreted to
themselves the philosophies of Ancient
India mainly the Vedanta. This
reinterpretation though made by the
Indian mind was in the main through the
western medium of intellectual
philosophy. These philosophies are in a
profound sense
impact–philosophies
rather than integrative philosophies
which draw their sustenance if not
inspiration from the depths of inner
spiritually – the depths of spiritual
freedom sought and chosen as such.
This ‘impact-conscious philosophies’
hardly arrive at a true integral
apprehension and thought or what Sri
Aurobindo calls the Real Idea of
Reality.
The Philosophy of Sri Aurobindo can be
said to have taken its stand on what we
may call the integral realization of the
Reality in all its planes of expression
and experience. It may well be
experienced in a single pulse of
Spiritual Anubhava. It is the experience
that has been prophesied and inculcated
by the Vedic Seer and more. It is not
merely a restatement but a
reconstruction of the ancient unity of
experience of the One-Many, Changeless –
Change, Process and Progress and
Purpose, Individual – Universal, and
Social, Nirguna and Saguna, Personal and
Impersonal, Ethical and the
Supraethical, and so on.
The integralism of Sri Aurobindo reveals
an insight into the integral Nature of
Reality as Existence, as Intelligence
and as Delight. It is possible to show
that Sri Aurobindo’s reconstructive
insight is richer and profounder than
the best of he modern Eastern and the
Western thinkers. Indeed it may well be
clear to any one that all the past is
conserved and transformed in the context
of the Integral Philosophy. Dr. S.K.
Maitra (of the Benares Hindu University)
had indeed demonstrated the advances and
modifications made in the several
concepts of Western philosophy by Sri
Aurobindo and how it shows the
universalism of Sri Aurobindo’s thought.
It may be possible to show this to be
the case with regard to the darsanas
(both astika and nastika) too.
Similarly we could clearly see that
certain lines of thinking have been
advanced by Dr. S. Radhakrishnan. The
merit of Sri Aurobindo’s approach is
that this insight is claimed to be
derived from the dynamic status of the
Supermind. This transcendental concept
of evolutionary power and plenitude is
lacking in the others, for this power is
granted in a transmutive sense to the
Ultimate Spirit or Person in the other
and earlier philosophies and sadhanas.
Prof. Malkani apparently holds that
there is no need to assume the
Supermind, as the Absolute Spirit or
intellectual intuition is enough to
explain transcendence, Intellectual
intuition is a hybrid however, since it
cannot dispense with the two fold forms
of Reality as noumenal and phenomenal.
It would not be correct to create a
fundamental dichotomy between intellect
and intuition merely because the
intellect has taken the route of
analysis and the principle of
contradiction and has later attempted
the synthesis on the basis of dialectic.
This is of course inherently a vicious
process or as the ancient Indian thought
has stated it is intellect that operates
on the basic structure of avidya. It is
perhaps the greatest merit of
Aurobindonian analysis of the human mind
to show up this nature as the biological
or evolutionary result rather than a
fundamental function of the intellect
when it operates from the structure of
the Supermind. This is definitely to
assert that the future of Philosophy
lies not in the annihilation of
Intellect (and its fulgurative functions
–
prapancikarana
or
nisprapancikarana)
but its transformation as the instrument
of the Supermind.
It is necessary to emphasize this aspect
of the future possibility. The position
taken by the exponents of the opposition
between intellect and intuition is that
philosophy is the attempt to explain
reality in terms of the intellect and
its accidental mode of finite
intelligibility through the logic of the
principle of contradiction, coherence
and so on. The metaphysics of finite
logic has been found to lead one no
where. It is a dragon that slays the
action, the creative being. It is
necessary to instruct intellect with the
logic of the Infinite – the Real – the
thing-in-itself – which is grasped
undoubtedly by the knowledge of the
transcendental
Saccidananda.
But where many see the end of
philosophy, (indeed this is said to be
the highest of Experience) we have to
see the beginnings of a new philosophy
reconstructed by the intellect now laden
with the logic of the Infinite.
Indeed it was suggested by me several
years ago at this Congress in 1947 that
what we need is the spirit of
philosophizing proceeding from the logic
of the Infinite to evaluate and
understand the darsanas from the point
of view from which they were formulated
(namely, the supramental). This mode of
evaluation seems to have been lost sight
of and finally abandoned by most or all
of the commentators of the darsanas, who
have left us expositions based on the
logic of the finite ostensibly for the
purpose of intelligibility to the finite
pragmatic mind. It is necessary to
reconstruct the darsanas too in the
light of the supramental logic of the
Infinite.
It must have been some thing of a clear
insight into this status of the
Intellect that was at the back of the
exposition of its nature by Rene Guenon,
the French Orientalist, in his
Study of the Hindu doctrines
(p 41). In India also the word Buddhi as
vijnana is essentially different from
the mental for its activity is a
liberating one; it reflects the Eternal
and the Infinite’ and goes beyond the
limiting and dichotomizing principle of
contradiction.
Therefore it is clear that we are today
in a position to undertake a careful
reconstruction of the Indian
Philosophical schools or Indian
Philosophy itself that is based on the
Logic of the Infinite and the Infinite
Experience. Though Vedanta may well
claim that all has been said
theoretically about the matter, it would
yet be necessary to attain the Being
that is creative Eternity.
Not merely has Knowledge not come to an
end with Being but it is itself Being
that is the creative Infinite. This is
the inner dynamics of the Supermind.
Philosophy in this New Key is yet to be
fully articulated.