The War Within - Between Good and Evil by Bheemeswara Challa (e reader for manga .TXT) đ
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contingent on the âstate of mindâ of the mind. The mind manifests
as logic, reason, and intellect. They have played a huge role in human survival
and supremacy. But they have their own character and limits. The biggest of
the challenges mankind faces at this hinge of history was best summed up by
Alexis Carrel (Man, The Unknown, 1935): âThose who desire to rise as high as
our human condition allows, must renounce intellectual pride, the omnipotence
of clear thinking, belief in the absolute power of logicâ. The great 8th-century
Indian philosopher and theologian, Adi Sankara, assuredly one of the sharpest
human intellects ever and an unsurpassed spiritual master, expressed the same
skepticism when he asked, âhave we not exaggerated the power and role, the
clarity and reliability of reason?â He said that it is not âcold logicâ that can lead
to self-realization; it is insight that we need, which is âthe faculty of grasping
at once the essential out of the irrelevant, the eternal out of the temporal, the
whole out of the partâ.97 Voltaire said, âJudge a man by his questions rather than
his answersâ. A Chinese proverb adds: âHe who asks a question is a fool for five
minutes; he who does not ask a question is a fool foreverâ. The poet David Whyte
wrote about, âquestions that can make or unmake a life⊠questions that have
no right to go awayâ. They wonât âgo awayâ but cannot also be settled the way we
want it. After twenty years of what he himself called âpresumptuous researchâ,
Raimon Panikkar reached his âhumble conclusionâ and asked, âHow can human
thinking grasp the destiny of life itself, when we are not its owners?â98 Whether
our ânaturalâ destiny was to âsquat in caves and shiver, then dieâ99 or conquer
the stars and be immortal, as we dream to do, our task on earth ought to be
to make the planet a safe place for future generations to live upon. And, we
must acknowledge that all ultimate âquestionsâ have no infallible answers, and
all human ability to âknowâ is tightly circumscribed, for good, or godly, reasons.
We must also never allow ourselves to go soft on another central fact.
While perennial questions concerning the origin of evil, what is evil, and whom
we can call evil, and under what circumstances will never âdieâ, the reality is that
in the innermost recesses of our being there are seeds of both good and evil, and
that an epic struggle is constantly raging between the two for the conquest of
The War WithinâBetween Good and Evil
176
our consciousness. And yet, one cannot exist without the other. We must bear in
mind that even if it is a struggle we donât witness or feel or experience, it is real
and if we want to rise to our full âhumaneâ potential and become a more benign
being and seriously address any of the existential threats the world is facing, then
we must prevail in this mortal combatâat the least manage a positive stalemate.
In all of us there are two men, two personalities. One is one whom some call,
a bit unfairly, the âanimal manâ, or more accurately âself-centric manâ, slave of
the senses, driven by desire and pursuit of pleasure; the other is the âspiritual
manâ, essentially struggling or seeking to turn his existence into a tool to be
useful to others. What we call our âbehaviorâ, which often surprises, saddens
and maddens us so muchâhow could we, we wonderâ, is but an external
extension or reflection of the âstate of that struggleâ between these âtwo menâ.
Call it the karma of Kali Yuga, our current age, or whatever else, over the recent
past, the personality of âself-centric manâ has become the dominant force in our
consciousness. And that, we need to change, using every means at our disposal,
every trick or trade, to induce and bring about an internal âregime-changeâ, a
revolution in the psyche of every human being. But such a revolution cannot
be brought about solely by any external entity alone, be it religious, political, or
social. Yet context matters. To change something we must be open to change. In
fact, that is a central fact we tend to ignore. Nothing in nature, nothing in life
happens, or can happen, out of context, or in isolation. Everything that happens
in life has to happen for something else to happen, or has happened. All morality,
all virtue, all religions, all scriptures, all science, all thinking are contextual,
outcomes of space and time. We venerate scriptures as sacred, and a truly religious
person is expected to live by the Book. They might be the very word of God, but
the medium, even if he is a prophet, is the human consciousness. Some scholars
even say that different portions of the same Book have different things to say,
reflecting the ethos of the time of the specific part. For example, it has been
said that the peaceful Quran passages were revelations that began in Mecca, and
the war-like ones were from Medina. When context changes, content changes.
And if it doesnât, it becomes irrelevant and injurious. It is our constant failure
to accept and adapt this truism that is responsible for so much of what went
wrong in human history. We cling to ideal concepts, ideologies and beliefs that
demonstrably do more harm than good. What has thwarted our aspirations to
Musings on Mankind
177
lead happy, harmonious, and fruitful lives is due to another central fact. We have
been completely clueless and powerless to do anything about anything âwithinâ
and that âhelplessnessâ has a huge bearing on how we lead our lives in the karana
jagat, the causal world.
ManâNoble Savage, Civilized Brute, or Half-Savage?
If we are âmoralââor spiritual, for that matterâthen we wouldnât be so reflexively
self-righteous, a trait that rationality again rationalizes. After all, the line between
âself-belief â, or âself-esteemâ, which we deem a virtue, and self-righteousness,
which is bad, is very thin. It is rationality that draws the line. The âmoralâ state of
man at birth has long been a subject of scholarly and speculative debate. Some say
that âmen come into the world with their benevolent affections very inferior in
power to their selfish ones and it is the function of morals to invert this orderâ.100
Others aver that we are essentially âgoodâ at birth and it is culture and civilization
that corrupt us. Whether we are a âcivilized bruteâ, ânoble savageâ or, to borrow a
phrase from the American television serial Star Trek (Arena) âhalf-savageââthere
is hope. The fact is that we have always been, are and will always be, morally
mixed-up and messed up, although the make-up of the âmixâ varies from time to
time and person to person, even within the same person, sometimes dramatically
and drastically. Everything that is in natureâthe good, bad, and ugly, noble and
nastyâthey are all there within each of us. They constantly collide and fight
for supremacy. There is almost nothing that has always and everywhere been
deemed either âgoodâ or âbadâ. When the necessity and context change, the focus
of what is moral and what is not also changes. What might appear as immoral
or cruel now, like slavery, patricide or infanticide, for example, were at another
time conceived and viewed as acts of mercy and morality. Furthermore, if man
had been wholly selfish or selfless, he would have been extinct a long time ago.
And whether any such âeventâ would have been good or bad for life in general is
another question. Another point we must remember is that all morality heavily
hinges on the assumption that we have a good measure of freedom of choice
between good and evil. The point is that none of us is so right or righteous that
we can walk through our lives sniffing and mocking at others. Our âmoralityâ
too is double-faced. One for us and for our ânear and dearâ; another for others.
The War WithinâBetween Good and Evil
178
Although a bit too biting, in one sense, there is still some sense in Oscar Wildeâs
quip that âmorality is simply the attitude we adopt towards people whom we
personally dislikeâ. But even that âdouble-faceâ is a part of evolution. Had we
been entirely morally even-handed and treated everyone alike, we would again be
extinct by now. That is how generations succeeded each other in an uninterrupted
continuum.
What we should never lose sight of is the supreme, and subtle, secret of
nature. In fact, it is no secret; it is overt, open, and apparent. It is two-fold. To
harness nature we must first befriend it. Blavatskyâs The Voice of Silence (1889),
a translation of The Book of Golden Principles says, âHelp nature and work with
her, and nature will regard thee as one of her creators and make obeisance. And
she will open wide before thee the portals of her secret chambers; lay before thy
gaze the treasures hidden in the very depths of her pure virgin bosomâ. We have
been exploiting natureâs treasures, not by âworking with herâ but by âgropingâ
her âbosomâ. What we see is its backlash. The âsecondâ is that everything in the
cosmos and creation, comes as a dwanda, a pair of opposites, like light and
darkness, positive and negative, good and evil, leaving and clinging, hardship
and hope⊠And that, the great Sankara, the foremost exponent of the Advaita
philosophy, says, is also due to the power of maya, the cosmic illusion, sometimes
called the Indian Sphinx.101 Everything is dual, but knowing it is not, is wisdom.
The conundrum is that nothing is âstandaloneâ, all by itself, and yet any action
should be performed as if it is. In a basic sense, they are not âoppositesâ; nothing
in nature is opposed to another; each is different; and that âdifferenceâ has a
cosmic purpose. Each is distinct, indeed exists, only because the âotherâ is out
there. In fact, they create each other; like âbeingâ and ânon-beingâ. Without
darkness there is no light; if there is no error there is no truth; without vice
or evil there is no virtue or goodness; without a road up there can be no road
down; and without death there is no life, and so on. Inside each of us and in life
at large there is a dwanda. In fact, the Jewish Kabala describes the Infinite God
as a âunity of oppositesâ. Lord Krishna says in the Bhagavad Gita that He is the
dwanda-atheetha, the One beyond any âpairâ, beyond any compound. He tells
Arjuna, âBy the delusion of the pairs of opposites, sprung from attraction and
revulsion, O Bharata, all beings walk this universe wholly deludedâ.102 Becoming
an âatheethaâ ought to be the goal of life. That, in effect, is a state of harmony. But
Musings on Mankind
179
then, what is the certainty that âdelusionâ itself is not an appearance of illusion?
The fact also is that even a ânegativeâ, properly used, can be positive. The same
snake venom kills but also saves. Context also changes the character of the same
action, positive or negative, virtuous or sinful, legal or illegal. The parent of all
paradoxes is that the âparentâ of all pairs, the dwanda, is the one within. The way
to âsupportâ it is by the way we âliveâ, which, in turn, is greatly influenced by the
balance in the internal âdwandaâ. Being different is good; being indifferent is
bad. Indeed, âwe are all equal in the fact that we are all different. We are all the
same in the fact that we will never be the same. We are united by the reality that
all colors and all cultures are distinct and individual. We are harmonious in the
reality that we are all held to this earth by the same gravityâ.103 People have lost
interest in people; it is things that matter. We may not even notice this about
ourselves, but none of us are truly interested in anyone; it is only that which we
think will be pleasurable and comfortable for us to be familiar with that we care
about. If we can grasp and comprehend this fundamental truth, everything falls
into its proper perspective, like looking at the earth from the moon, and will
give us what we need most in lifeâa launching pad for lift-off, an anchor to
wrap ourselves around. Even our existential experience in daily life tells us that
our cognitive capability is ânecessary but not necessarily sufficientâ even to lead
our mundane and meandering lives. We are creatures conditioned by context,
molded by space and place; so is knowledge.
Has God Gotten Weary of Man?
Three of the foundational questions that have long haunted humankind are:
âWho in the world am I?â, âWhy am I doing what I am doing?â, and âWhat
ought I to do to become what I ought to be?â More practically, how much of
what is amiss
as logic, reason, and intellect. They have played a huge role in human survival
and supremacy. But they have their own character and limits. The biggest of
the challenges mankind faces at this hinge of history was best summed up by
Alexis Carrel (Man, The Unknown, 1935): âThose who desire to rise as high as
our human condition allows, must renounce intellectual pride, the omnipotence
of clear thinking, belief in the absolute power of logicâ. The great 8th-century
Indian philosopher and theologian, Adi Sankara, assuredly one of the sharpest
human intellects ever and an unsurpassed spiritual master, expressed the same
skepticism when he asked, âhave we not exaggerated the power and role, the
clarity and reliability of reason?â He said that it is not âcold logicâ that can lead
to self-realization; it is insight that we need, which is âthe faculty of grasping
at once the essential out of the irrelevant, the eternal out of the temporal, the
whole out of the partâ.97 Voltaire said, âJudge a man by his questions rather than
his answersâ. A Chinese proverb adds: âHe who asks a question is a fool for five
minutes; he who does not ask a question is a fool foreverâ. The poet David Whyte
wrote about, âquestions that can make or unmake a life⊠questions that have
no right to go awayâ. They wonât âgo awayâ but cannot also be settled the way we
want it. After twenty years of what he himself called âpresumptuous researchâ,
Raimon Panikkar reached his âhumble conclusionâ and asked, âHow can human
thinking grasp the destiny of life itself, when we are not its owners?â98 Whether
our ânaturalâ destiny was to âsquat in caves and shiver, then dieâ99 or conquer
the stars and be immortal, as we dream to do, our task on earth ought to be
to make the planet a safe place for future generations to live upon. And, we
must acknowledge that all ultimate âquestionsâ have no infallible answers, and
all human ability to âknowâ is tightly circumscribed, for good, or godly, reasons.
We must also never allow ourselves to go soft on another central fact.
While perennial questions concerning the origin of evil, what is evil, and whom
we can call evil, and under what circumstances will never âdieâ, the reality is that
in the innermost recesses of our being there are seeds of both good and evil, and
that an epic struggle is constantly raging between the two for the conquest of
The War WithinâBetween Good and Evil
176
our consciousness. And yet, one cannot exist without the other. We must bear in
mind that even if it is a struggle we donât witness or feel or experience, it is real
and if we want to rise to our full âhumaneâ potential and become a more benign
being and seriously address any of the existential threats the world is facing, then
we must prevail in this mortal combatâat the least manage a positive stalemate.
In all of us there are two men, two personalities. One is one whom some call,
a bit unfairly, the âanimal manâ, or more accurately âself-centric manâ, slave of
the senses, driven by desire and pursuit of pleasure; the other is the âspiritual
manâ, essentially struggling or seeking to turn his existence into a tool to be
useful to others. What we call our âbehaviorâ, which often surprises, saddens
and maddens us so muchâhow could we, we wonderâ, is but an external
extension or reflection of the âstate of that struggleâ between these âtwo menâ.
Call it the karma of Kali Yuga, our current age, or whatever else, over the recent
past, the personality of âself-centric manâ has become the dominant force in our
consciousness. And that, we need to change, using every means at our disposal,
every trick or trade, to induce and bring about an internal âregime-changeâ, a
revolution in the psyche of every human being. But such a revolution cannot
be brought about solely by any external entity alone, be it religious, political, or
social. Yet context matters. To change something we must be open to change. In
fact, that is a central fact we tend to ignore. Nothing in nature, nothing in life
happens, or can happen, out of context, or in isolation. Everything that happens
in life has to happen for something else to happen, or has happened. All morality,
all virtue, all religions, all scriptures, all science, all thinking are contextual,
outcomes of space and time. We venerate scriptures as sacred, and a truly religious
person is expected to live by the Book. They might be the very word of God, but
the medium, even if he is a prophet, is the human consciousness. Some scholars
even say that different portions of the same Book have different things to say,
reflecting the ethos of the time of the specific part. For example, it has been
said that the peaceful Quran passages were revelations that began in Mecca, and
the war-like ones were from Medina. When context changes, content changes.
And if it doesnât, it becomes irrelevant and injurious. It is our constant failure
to accept and adapt this truism that is responsible for so much of what went
wrong in human history. We cling to ideal concepts, ideologies and beliefs that
demonstrably do more harm than good. What has thwarted our aspirations to
Musings on Mankind
177
lead happy, harmonious, and fruitful lives is due to another central fact. We have
been completely clueless and powerless to do anything about anything âwithinâ
and that âhelplessnessâ has a huge bearing on how we lead our lives in the karana
jagat, the causal world.
ManâNoble Savage, Civilized Brute, or Half-Savage?
If we are âmoralââor spiritual, for that matterâthen we wouldnât be so reflexively
self-righteous, a trait that rationality again rationalizes. After all, the line between
âself-belief â, or âself-esteemâ, which we deem a virtue, and self-righteousness,
which is bad, is very thin. It is rationality that draws the line. The âmoralâ state of
man at birth has long been a subject of scholarly and speculative debate. Some say
that âmen come into the world with their benevolent affections very inferior in
power to their selfish ones and it is the function of morals to invert this orderâ.100
Others aver that we are essentially âgoodâ at birth and it is culture and civilization
that corrupt us. Whether we are a âcivilized bruteâ, ânoble savageâ or, to borrow a
phrase from the American television serial Star Trek (Arena) âhalf-savageââthere
is hope. The fact is that we have always been, are and will always be, morally
mixed-up and messed up, although the make-up of the âmixâ varies from time to
time and person to person, even within the same person, sometimes dramatically
and drastically. Everything that is in natureâthe good, bad, and ugly, noble and
nastyâthey are all there within each of us. They constantly collide and fight
for supremacy. There is almost nothing that has always and everywhere been
deemed either âgoodâ or âbadâ. When the necessity and context change, the focus
of what is moral and what is not also changes. What might appear as immoral
or cruel now, like slavery, patricide or infanticide, for example, were at another
time conceived and viewed as acts of mercy and morality. Furthermore, if man
had been wholly selfish or selfless, he would have been extinct a long time ago.
And whether any such âeventâ would have been good or bad for life in general is
another question. Another point we must remember is that all morality heavily
hinges on the assumption that we have a good measure of freedom of choice
between good and evil. The point is that none of us is so right or righteous that
we can walk through our lives sniffing and mocking at others. Our âmoralityâ
too is double-faced. One for us and for our ânear and dearâ; another for others.
The War WithinâBetween Good and Evil
178
Although a bit too biting, in one sense, there is still some sense in Oscar Wildeâs
quip that âmorality is simply the attitude we adopt towards people whom we
personally dislikeâ. But even that âdouble-faceâ is a part of evolution. Had we
been entirely morally even-handed and treated everyone alike, we would again be
extinct by now. That is how generations succeeded each other in an uninterrupted
continuum.
What we should never lose sight of is the supreme, and subtle, secret of
nature. In fact, it is no secret; it is overt, open, and apparent. It is two-fold. To
harness nature we must first befriend it. Blavatskyâs The Voice of Silence (1889),
a translation of The Book of Golden Principles says, âHelp nature and work with
her, and nature will regard thee as one of her creators and make obeisance. And
she will open wide before thee the portals of her secret chambers; lay before thy
gaze the treasures hidden in the very depths of her pure virgin bosomâ. We have
been exploiting natureâs treasures, not by âworking with herâ but by âgropingâ
her âbosomâ. What we see is its backlash. The âsecondâ is that everything in the
cosmos and creation, comes as a dwanda, a pair of opposites, like light and
darkness, positive and negative, good and evil, leaving and clinging, hardship
and hope⊠And that, the great Sankara, the foremost exponent of the Advaita
philosophy, says, is also due to the power of maya, the cosmic illusion, sometimes
called the Indian Sphinx.101 Everything is dual, but knowing it is not, is wisdom.
The conundrum is that nothing is âstandaloneâ, all by itself, and yet any action
should be performed as if it is. In a basic sense, they are not âoppositesâ; nothing
in nature is opposed to another; each is different; and that âdifferenceâ has a
cosmic purpose. Each is distinct, indeed exists, only because the âotherâ is out
there. In fact, they create each other; like âbeingâ and ânon-beingâ. Without
darkness there is no light; if there is no error there is no truth; without vice
or evil there is no virtue or goodness; without a road up there can be no road
down; and without death there is no life, and so on. Inside each of us and in life
at large there is a dwanda. In fact, the Jewish Kabala describes the Infinite God
as a âunity of oppositesâ. Lord Krishna says in the Bhagavad Gita that He is the
dwanda-atheetha, the One beyond any âpairâ, beyond any compound. He tells
Arjuna, âBy the delusion of the pairs of opposites, sprung from attraction and
revulsion, O Bharata, all beings walk this universe wholly deludedâ.102 Becoming
an âatheethaâ ought to be the goal of life. That, in effect, is a state of harmony. But
Musings on Mankind
179
then, what is the certainty that âdelusionâ itself is not an appearance of illusion?
The fact also is that even a ânegativeâ, properly used, can be positive. The same
snake venom kills but also saves. Context also changes the character of the same
action, positive or negative, virtuous or sinful, legal or illegal. The parent of all
paradoxes is that the âparentâ of all pairs, the dwanda, is the one within. The way
to âsupportâ it is by the way we âliveâ, which, in turn, is greatly influenced by the
balance in the internal âdwandaâ. Being different is good; being indifferent is
bad. Indeed, âwe are all equal in the fact that we are all different. We are all the
same in the fact that we will never be the same. We are united by the reality that
all colors and all cultures are distinct and individual. We are harmonious in the
reality that we are all held to this earth by the same gravityâ.103 People have lost
interest in people; it is things that matter. We may not even notice this about
ourselves, but none of us are truly interested in anyone; it is only that which we
think will be pleasurable and comfortable for us to be familiar with that we care
about. If we can grasp and comprehend this fundamental truth, everything falls
into its proper perspective, like looking at the earth from the moon, and will
give us what we need most in lifeâa launching pad for lift-off, an anchor to
wrap ourselves around. Even our existential experience in daily life tells us that
our cognitive capability is ânecessary but not necessarily sufficientâ even to lead
our mundane and meandering lives. We are creatures conditioned by context,
molded by space and place; so is knowledge.
Has God Gotten Weary of Man?
Three of the foundational questions that have long haunted humankind are:
âWho in the world am I?â, âWhy am I doing what I am doing?â, and âWhat
ought I to do to become what I ought to be?â More practically, how much of
what is amiss
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