The Divinization Of Matter -
Lurianic Kabbalah, Sri Aurobindo, and the New Physics
by,
M.Alan Kazlev
This essay first appeared in Esoterica (later Magick) magazine, issue no.7,
1996.
Contents
The Kabbalistic Cosmology
The Fall - Stage One
The Origin Of The Universe According To Modern Physics
The Cause Of Imperfection
The Restitution (Stage One), And The Fall (Stage Two)
A Lurianic-Physics Synthesis
Tikkun Or Restitution (Stage Two)
The Aurobindoan-Mirran Conception Of Supramentalisation
The Collective Transformation
Stages On The Path To Supramentalisation
The Universal Body
The Transcendence Of Life And Death
The Physics Of Supramentalisation
The Kabbalistic Cosmology
Of all the esoteric systems of thought that describe the various planes and
subdivisions of reality, Kabbalah (also spelt "Qabalah", "Cabala", etc) is
the most complex. Although there are many different schools of
interpretation, the general consensus refers to four (or in the case of the
Lurianic school, five) successive worlds or universes; each of which is
divided into ten sefirot: Divine Archetypes or Essences. The first world,
which emanates directly from the Absolute Godhead (or En Sof), forms the
basis for the second world, and so on. Thus there are forty (or in the
Lurianic system fifty) planes of existence altogether.
Each successive sefirot and each world or Universe represents a veiling or
diminishing of the original Divine Light, progressing from subtle to gross,
with each universe being "spirit" or "soul" relative to the one below it,
and "matter" or "body" relative to the one above it, until one comes to the
lowest sefirah of the lowest universe, Malkut of Asiyah (or "Malkuth of
Assiah" in the Hermetic transliteration), representing the physical creation
[Krakovsky, pp.83-84]. Reference is also made to the Klippot ("Qlippoth") or
"shells" or "husks" or in modern occultism "unbalanced forces", that exist
outside this divine sequence of creation.
The following Kabbalistic cosmology is based on the teachings of the
sixteenth century Kabbalists of Safed, northern Palestine, specifically the
two greatest figures of the time, Rabbi Moses Cordovero (1522-1570) and
Rabbi Isaac Luria (1534-1572) [1]. These kabbalists present an
interpretation of the nature of the four Universes a little different to
that preferred by modern occultists (Golden Dawn and later).
In Kabbalah, the Absolute Godhead is referred to as En Sof, literally "no
end", i.e., "The Infinite," which is not only infinite, eternal, and
unitary, but ineffable and indescribable as well. Most Kabbalists, being
good monotheists, identified the En Sof with the God of Revealed Religion
(the "God of Israel", etc). Rabbi Luria however was very perceptive in
allocating the Personal God to a lower station, the World of Atzilut, so
that the En Sof becomes the Transcendent Absolute, equivalent perhaps to the
Nirguna Brahman of Vedanta, and the original Tao of Taoism. Modern
occultists tend to understand the En Sof in this manner too.
The Lurianic system is unique for another reason too. Whereas his immediate
predecessor Cordovero refers to the conventional four Universes of Atzilut
(Emanation), Beriah (Creation), Yetzirah (Formation), and Asiyah (Making),
Luria adds a fifth world, "Adam Kadmon", that precedes Atzilut and is the
first to emanate from the En Sof or Infinite Light. In Kabbalah Adam Kadmon
or the "Primordial Man" is usually taken to mean the original spiritual
archetype of humanity - equivalent to the spiritual anthropos of Gnosticism
and Manichaeism. Luria however gave this term an eccentric meaning (hence my
use here of inverted commas); he made it refer to the original and ineffable
manifest Absolute itself. As such it constitutes the original transcendent
and ineffable archetypes, which are described as "Divine Names", and can
only be known by analogy with the four worlds of creation [Luzzatto,
pp.14-15].
Atzilut ("Atziluth") is the first Universes to exist apart from the
Absolute. Its ten Sefirot [2]are the ten archetypal manifestations of the
Godhead, analogous perhaps to the Christian three persons of the Trinity, or
the Hindu three-fold God(s) of Brahma (Creation), Vishnu (Preservation) and
Shiva (Dissolution). So we can contrast the Unmanifest Absolute - Nirguna
Brahman or En Sof - with the Manifest Absolute or Godhead - Saguna Brahman
or the Universe of Atzilut..
The next Universe to emanate is the Universe of Beriah ("Briah") or
Creation, which is the realm of the mystical ascent to the Throne of God,
and consists of ten archangelic sefirot. Here then we have the first grade
beneath the pure Godhead of Atzilut. Beriah corresponds not only to the
Throne of God (representing perhaps higher spiritual illumination), but also
to the Soul [Kaplan, p.209], and more specifically the Neshamah or "Divine
Soul" in Man, the inner divine Spark which emanated from the Divine
Intellect [Binah] of the Godhead [Scholem, 1961, p.241]
From the Universe of Beriah in turn there originates the Universe of
Yetzirah or Formation, made up of ten angelic Sefirot. This constitutes the
lowest of the "untainted" spiritual worlds. In the teachings of the Safed
Kabbalists, the angels or maggidim are spirit guides or thought-forms,
created through the prayers and actions of the Kabbalist himself [Kaplan,
p.223]. This universe also corresponds to the Ruah or "Spirit" in Man, which
is the source of moral consciousness [Scholem, 1974, p.156] (although modern
occultists identify it with the "Rational Soul" [Denning & Phillips, p.238;
Stoltz, p.78]).
Finally we have the Universe of Asiyah ("Assiah") or Making. In the Safed
teachings this corresponds not to the physical world (as it does in
contemporary occultism), but the creative archetypes behind the world [Scholem,
1961, p.272], or alternatively to the "Astral Plane", where good and evil,
or Truth and Falsehood, are intermixed and it is very difficult to separate
them [Kaplan, p.40]. Here the pure sefirot have been tainted by the klippot,
which, according to the Lurianic schema, has come about through the Fall of
the primordial Adam [Scholem, 1974, p.162]. Psychologically, Asiyah
corresponds to the Nefesh or lower soul, the seat of unrefined passions [Zalman,
pp.3-5 ], which has to be purified through the spiritual ascent [Krakovsky,
pp.29-30].
The Fall - Stage One
The conventional Kabbalistic cosmology - taught for example both by
Cordovero and in the modern Golden Dawn system, sees creation simply as a
series of emanations, with each successive emanation being more "dense" or
"material" than the preceding one. This is also the understanding of the
universe that one finds in the Neoplatonism of the Hellenistic, Islamic, and
Renaissance civilisations, in the Vedanta (especially the Pratyabijna or
Trika school of Kashmir Shaivism) of India, and in the Theosophy of the late
19th and early 20th centuries.
An alternative to the "neoplatonic" hypothesis is the "gnostic" hypothesis,
represented by occult cosmologies such as Hellenistic Gnosticism,
Manichaeism, and the Lurianic form of Kabbalah. This adds to the "vertical"
dimension of planes of existence a "temporal" dimension of Fall and
Restitution. These teachings interpret the origin of the cosmos in terms of
a sort of Pre-Creation "Fall" or Crisis in the lowest of the Divine planes.
To translate this concept into a familiar idiom: according to conventional
Christianity, the present unsatisfactory state of the universe is due to the
"fall" of Man (Adam and Eve and all that stuff). But according to Gnostic
and Lurianic speculation, it was not Man, but God (or at least an aspect
thereof), who fell (the Biblical fall being simply a later echo), and this
fall was the first stage in the formation of matter and the universe. The
whole of existence is then tied up with the rectification of this original
Crisis. The Gnostics, being radical dualists, were concerned only with the
salvation of the individual Divine Sparks (Souls). The more subtle teachings
of Lurianic Kabbalah, in contrast, were directed to the redemption (tikkun)
of the universe as a whole [3].
We have seen that the Lurianic cosmology refers to five successive Worlds -
"Adam Kadmon", Atzilut, Beriah, Yetzirah, and Asiyah - that emanated from
the En Sof or Infinite Light. The sefirot of the Worlds of "Adam Kadmon" are
of the nature of pure unmanifest Light. They only acquire a "vessel", or
manifest characteristics, in the lowest of the "Adam Kadmonic" worlds, the
Bound World, so called because all its ten Lights resided in a single
vessel. This was itself only a prelude to the "World of Chaos" (Olam ha-Tohu)
or "World of Points" (Nekudot), the first World to be emanated from "Adam
Kadmon" and thus have actual manifest existence [Luzzatto, pp.29-30]. The
word Tohu refers to the state of the original Sefirot, as unformed and
unordered points. It comes from Genesis 1:2, "And the earth was without
form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep." The "World of
Points" was so called because at this time the sefirot did not relate to
each other, but were in the form of unorganised (chaotic) atomistic
separateness (hence the term World of Points). The Sefirot, apart from the
first three, were not or-ganised in three columns as they are in the present
world of Atzilut, but in a single row, making it impossible for them to in-terrelate
[Luzzatto, pp.26, 30; Krakovsky, p.145] [4].
So when the pure Light of Adam Kadmon shone down into them, these atomistic
sefirot could not take the strain, and they shattered and fell (this is
called "the breaking of the vessels" or "the death of the kings"; the latter
term being derived from a reference in the book of Genesis to the "seven
kings of Edom who died"). The fallen vessels became the klippot or "husks"
of evil, which held trapped the sparks of sefirotic light [Luzzatto, Chapter
3; and Scholem, 1961, p.266, and 1974, pp.138-139].
The Origin Of The Universe According To Modern Physics
Now, some of this doctrine actually relates quite well to modern scientific
speculation regarding unified field theory. According to this, the original
vacuum state from which the universe emerged consisted of ten dimensions, in
which all the disparate forces of nature were united in a single "supersymmetric"
state.
Now, the existence of ten, eleven, or even twenty-six dimensions of space,
or of space-time, is required by various forms of Unified Field Theory, such
as "Supersymmetry" and "Superstring Theory". Later some physicists,
including Michael Green, one of the original founders of the theory, had
second thoughts about this, and suggested that these higher dimensions "were
not really dimensions at all", and that "dimensions" as we understand them
only pertain to the ordinary macroscopic world, and not to the micro-quantum
world of superstrings [Peat, pp.320-321]. Other physicists however, such as
superstring theorist Michio Kaku, retain the idea of actual higher physical
dimensions. So the jury is still out on this one. But, in view of the
curious parallels between the Lurianic and the ten-dimensional Unified
Physics cosmology, I have decided to opt for an interpretation that these
hyperspace dimensions are real rather than imaginary.
So, this original ten-dimensional vacuum state may have been unstable, or
what physicists call a false vacuum. If so, it would inevitably make a
"quantum leap" to a more stable, but less symmetrical [5], vacuum energy
state. Current Unification Physics however gives no explanation is given as
to why the original vacuum was unstable to begin with, or what preceded this
unstable state.
According to Kaku and Trainer [p.158], the result of the collapse of the
false vacuum would have been a violent rupture in the ten dimensional fabric
of space-time - a truly Lurianic scenario! - which rapidly reformed into two
lower energy states or universes. One of these is made up of six of the
space-time dimensions, which had become contracted or curled up into
sub-atomic size. The other consists of the remaining four dimensions - three
of space and one of time - that define our mundane or ordinary reality.
However, F.D. Peat simply refers to the contraction of these higher
dimensions - the term used in physics is compactification - which then
coexist in and as part of our own universe, on a sub-atomic level, and are
responsible for the number of families of elementary particles, and the
existence of the forces of nature. Hence the six hidden dimensions are
necessary to fully explain phenomena in our four obvious dimensions [Peat,
p.161].
Apart from compactification, another result of the original "symmetry
breaking" would be that the original "E(8) x E(8)" supersymmetric state
would have broken into two lesser symmetry "E(8)" states, each representing
a different universe. (The notation E(8) x E(8) refers to a particular
mathematical symmetry group, used in modern Superstring Theory. E(8) is a
subset of this. There may well be a connection here with the 8 x 8 geometry
of the I Ching, with its 8 trigrams and 64 hexagrams, but I am not
knowledgable enough in this area to say).
Of these two "E(8)" universes, one is our own, the other is a parallel
"shadow universe." Both these universes coexist, but because the only force
they share is gravity, it is difficult for them to interact. Hence, we
cannot really know anything about what physical forces developed in the
"shadow universe" [Peat, pp.147-151]. Meanwhile, in our universe, further
"symmetry breaking" generates the strong and weak nuclear and the
electromagnetic forces, and the various subatomic particles [Peat, p.151].
The Cause Of Imperfection
If we assume the standpoint of the Lurianic gnosis, that this world is the
result of a pre-creation crisis, it may be asked why this whole situation
came about in the first place. Why wasn't the cosmos created or emanated in
an original pure state? The answer given is that the first sefirot were of
the nature of nefesh alone [Luzzatto, p.20], this being, as we have seen,
the lowest of the grades of soul in Kabbalistic theory.
This statement by itself is still meaningless. Why should the first sefirot
consist of nefesh? However, modern Astrophysics offers as one possible
theory an oscillating universe in which each successive cycle develops from
the accumulated radiation of the preceding one [Barrow & Silk, pp.70-71]. So
perhaps the "nefesh" in question is energy, or, to give a more esoteric
interpretation, the karmic energy residue - the Sanskrit term karma
literally means work, action or activity, hence the connection with "energy"
- of the preceding universe. So if the "karma" of the preceding universe
wasn't perfect, that of the present universe won't be either. Hence the
original "fall" or "symmetry breaking".
The Restitution (Stage One), And The Fall (Stage Two)
So far we have discussed tohu, or the formation of the universe. But what
about tikkun, its spiritual restitution?
According to Luria, immediately after the "breaking of the vessels", and
hence before the creation of the physical universe, a new emanation of the
World of Atzilut was required to rectify (tikkun) this situation. This
involved not Sefirot (which belonged to the old order) but Divine
Partzufim("faces" or "physiognomies"). The Universe of "Adam Kadmon" itself
is orientated according to Partzufim rather than Sefirot, each identified by
a Divine Name of a particular numerical value.
Within "Adam Kadmon" then, the "Name 72" and the "Name 63" (the higher
octaves of the Hokmah and Binah respectively) united in a mystical marriage
to give birth to the "Name 54" (= higher Tifaret) and "Name 45" (= higher
Malkut) [Luzzatto, p.68]. These two Divine Names descended into the Universe
of Atzilut, and transformed the defective sefirot there. Recall that the
"Breaking of the Vessels" had primarily affected the seven (or, if one
includes Daat, eight) lower sefirot. Keter of Atzilut, which, being the
closest to the En Sof had suffered least, became the Arik Anpin or "Macroposopus"
(greater countenance). Hokmah and Binah, which had suffered a defect, but
hadn't actually shattered, became the "Father" and "Mother" partzufim. The
essence of the next six or seven lower sefirot that had risen and returned
to their source, became the basis of Ze'er Anpin or "Microposopus" (lesser
countenance), the male polarity of Deity. And Malkut, which hadn't broken to
the degree of the six or seven above it, became Nukvah, the female polarity
of Deity [Luzzatto, pp.71-73].
Thus there came about the new or restored Universe of Atzilut, in which the
ten sefirot of the earlier Atzilut are replaced by the five Partzufim or
Divine Faces.
This appearance of successive Divine Partzufim as a result of the marriage
of two Divine Names in the World of Adam Kadmon has clear Gnostic overtones,
with the idea of the creation and emanation of transcendent divine entities
through the sexual union of even more transcendent Divine essences.
From this "Mystical Marriage" came about the World of Restitution, Olam ha-Tikkun,
the opposite of the World of Tohu, and the beginning of the spiritualisation
of Creation.
According to the Lurianic gnosis, the restoration of creation would then
have been assured, were it not for the Fall of Adam. As in the theology of
Paul of Tarsus and his successors (who gave us Christianity, the religion,
as opposed to the teachings of the historical Yeshua (Jesus)), this simple
Biblical myth is taken out of context and made the basis of an extended
cosmological drama. Adam is a cosmic supra-physical being, composed of al
the worlds and made up of 613 limbs or partzufim or "great roots", each of
which contains 613 - or in other accounts, 600,000 - "small roots" or "great
souls", each of which in turn consists of a further 600,000 "sparks" or
souls [Scholem p. 162]. The nature of Adam's sin was never agreed on by
different Kabbalistic writers; worshipping one sefirah (usually Malkut)
apart from the others ("the cutting of the shoots") and hurrying to complete
the tikkun before the appointed time (on the first Sabbath) being two common
versions [Scholem, 1974, pp.163-164].
Anyway, as a result, instead of uplifting and restoring creation, he caused
it to fall further. In Atzilut there was a separation (also called "the
cutting of the shoots") of the "Tree of Knowledge" from the "Tree of Life" [Scholem,
1974, p.124]. Because of this, the primordial Torah, residing in Hokmah of
Atzilut (as with the Muslims, the Jews see their Earthly Scripture as a
material copy of a pre-Creation celestial Scripture), is torn into white and
black letters, the white letters descending to Tifaret and becoming the
visible or unwritten Torah, and the black letters to Malkut to become the
written or manifest Torah, and corresponds to the exiled Shekinah or female
polarity of God, who fell from her supernal position as well [Marshall,
p.106].
Moreover, the entire spiritual universe of Asiyah, which had previously
stood securely on its own foundation, was now immersed in the realm of
klippot and subjected to their domination [Scholem, 1974, p.162]. This
entrapment of the lower hierarchies of the powers of Light (the higher
hierarchies being beyond reach) by the powers of Darkness is a very typical
Gnostic one.
As a result of the mixture of the World of Asiyah and the Klippot, Adam
acquired a material body, and the unity of his soul shattered into
fragments. The higher of these, who had refused to participate in Adam's
sin, immediately ascended to the spiritual realms above. The others though,
became subject to the klippot, and must achieve their tikkun through a long
process of reincarnation (in Kabbalah called gilgul - "return") [Scholem,
1974, p.163; pp.347-348].
But to this "Hindu-Buddhist" orientation another, unique, component must be
added. The group-soul theory means that souls descended from a single "root"
comprised "families" who had a special affinity and hence were able to help
each other [Scholem, 1974, p.163]. Moreover, before any one soul in a
particular family or root is able to develop beyond a certain point, all the
other souls in that family or root must also be raised up. So salvation
cannot be individual, as it is in much of the Indian tradition (with the
exception of Mahayana Buddhism); it becomes a collective affair.
A Lurianic-Physics Synthesis
It is interesting to consider the parallels between the quantum physical
ten-dimensional theory (assuming of course that these other dimensions are
actual dimensions in the same way that the ordinary four dimensions of
space-time are) and the "Breaking of the Vessels" of Lurianic Kabbalah. The
parallels can be set out as follows:
(1) Both begin with an unstable ten-fold state: in Kabbalah the ten sefirot
of the "World of Points"; and in physics a supercharged vacuum of the
original ten-dimensional hyperspace.
(2) Both referred to a "phase shift", a sort of cosmic fracturing, preceding
the present sequence of creation, whether a mythological "Breaking of the
Vessels" or a mathematical "breaking" of an original "supersymmetry". It was
this "phase shift" that defines the present nature of physical existence.
(3) Both refer to a resulting two-fold order; an undistorted and a distorted
series, so to speak. In Kabbalah the undistorted series constitutes the
three higher sefirot that did not shatter; in physics our familiar four
dimensions of space-time. As for the lower or contracted or hidden series,
in Kabbalah this is made up of the seven unstable lower sefirot; in physics
the six dimensions that were compacted to sub-atomic scale.
(4) In Kabbalah (as a result of the fall of Adam), the unmanifest or
unwritten Torah was torn into two; in Physics, as a result of the
afore-mentioned "symmetry breaking," the single "Superforce" that defined
all phenomena became the four distinct forces of nature.
(5) As a result, according to Kabbalah, the world of opposites, including
good and evil, came into existence, and hence the existence of history with
its moment toward cosmic restitution. In physics, time and entropy (the
determinator of "the arrow of time", and hence history or sequence) came
about.
Does this mean then that a Kabbalist like Luria was somehow "intuitively"
able to perceive astrophysical cosmological events, which he then described
according to his own mystical and religious understanding? Fritjof Capra, in
his book The Tao of Physics, argues that modern physicists and ancient
mystics are actually describing the same reality, but approaching it in
different ways.
Yet even in this particular example (to say nothing of the Buddhistic
examples Capra deals with) there are still many clear differences between
the two. For example, Luria is concerned primarily with spiritual,
supra-physical events, accessible to the inner mystical intuition, and in
which the physical plane is only one aspect. Physics on the other hand deals
solely with external material reality. For Luria and his successors, time is
primarily redemptive, moving towards the final glorious tikkun or
restoration of the original unity; but in physics and materialistic science
all one has is a gloomy choice between an entropic "heat-death", in which
all the stars have expended their fuel, and no life is possible anywhere in
the universe, and a "big crunch," the reverse of the Big Bang, where
everything comes together and all matter is annihilated (or reconverted to
featureless energy).
So there are parallels, certainly, but not necessarily an identity of
doctrine. Perhaps one could say that Luria was intuitively attuned to a more
inner or subtle reality, whereas what physics is describing is the activity
of this phenomena on the gross or outer physical level.
Tikkun Or Restitution (Stage Two)
The Lurianic scheme sees the final tikkun as the uniting of all that was
previously rendered asunder. According to this, the conjunction or sacred
marriage of Father (Abba) and Mother (Imma) begins the task of
transformation. A further and very important conjunction involves Ze'er
Anpin and Nukvah (including the Shekinah), the Male and Female polarities of
God. These unite as the King (Melekh) and Queen (Malkah), which incidentally
is also a common alchemical metaphor [Marshall, p.112]. Through the union of
these two partzufim, the visible and invisible letters of the Torah are also
united, and rise once again to the home of the original Torah in Hokmah. The
exiled Shekinah then ascends to Binah and unites with the Supernal Shekinah.
The final conjunction involves the uniting of the male and female polarities
within Arik Anpin itself, which reunites the Tree of Life and the Tree of
Knowledge, and enables the Light of Keter to flow down to the lower worlds.
This in turn is a prelude to the final Messianic redemption - through a
downpouring of the Light of "Adam Kadmon" - and restitution of the Cosmos. [Krakovsky,
p.99; Marshall, pp.114-116].
Thus, according to Lurianic Kabbalah, and the various Messianic Sabbatean
and Hassidic schools it inspired and gave rise to in later centuries (one of
which, the Lubavitch sect of Hassidism still flourishes to this day),
mankind alone is able to repair the primal fault, and restore the connection
between the lower and higher worlds. Hence there is a shift from the
"external" Messiah of conventional religion to the "internal" Messiah of
occultism; a sort of "esoteric empowerment," if you will.
Yet how does one participate in this act of cosmic redemption? Here is where
things become very disappointing. It is achieved, so the Kabbalists and
Hassidics claim, through outward observance of the Torah and its precepts,
and inward prayer and meditation [Luzzatto, p.69; Scholem, 1974, p.165]. In
other words, through being an orthodox religious Jew. This of course applies
only to people of Jewish origin, and ultimately is nothing but an apology
for religious conservatism. That is why the Lurianic system is only really
of value through its incredible occult and mythopoeic insights, but is of
literal practical value as regards the actual transmutation of the Earth.
See however the effort of a current new Sabbatean movement that provide a
more universal teaching and system of tikkun (restitution) within the
Kabbalistic tradition.
There are also two other great spiritual adepts who have given a practical
side to the cosmology of cosmic redemption.
The Aurobindoan-Mirran Conception Of Supramentalisation
Sri Aurobindo (1872-1950) was an English-educated poet, philosopher, and
yogi, who settled in the French colony of Pondicherry, where he set up an
ashram, dedicated to the spiritual transformation of life on Earth.
The Mother (1878-1973 - not to be confused with a number of female gurus who
bear the same title), originally known as Mirra Alfassa, was a Parisian of
Egyptian descent, who, after many spiritual and occult experiences of her
own, encountered Sri Aurobindo, and worked with him at their ashram at
Pondicherry.
The Aurobindoan Cosmology is as follows:
The Supreme or Divine Reality consists of four planes or attributes: Sat or
Infinite Being, Chit-Tapas or Infinite Consciousness and
Consciousness-Force, Ananda or Infinite Bliss and Delight, and a fourth
plane. The three higher Planes together make up the eternal, unchanging,
reality of Sacchidananda (Sat-Chit-Ananda), the Supreme Absolute. But this
Absolute in its own intrinsic transcendence could not manifest or creates
anything. Hence the need for the fourth plane of the Absolute, the dynamic,
infinite Truth-Consciousness that is the cause or Source or First Principle
of all subsequent Creation [Aurobindo, pp. 125-6, 262]. Sri Aurobindo
referred to this as the "Supermind", as it is the principle beyond finite
mental existence [Aurobindo, pp.127ff].
From the Supermind arises the three planes of finite existence: Mind, then
Life, and finally Matter. Transitional between Mind and Supermind are a
number of Spiritual or Divine regions: Higher Mind, Illumined Mind,
Intuitive Mind, and Overmind [Aurobindo, pp.276ff, pp.938ff], which last is
the region of the Gods or Cosmic Creative powers [Aurobindo, pp.280-283]. It
is the Overmind that, up until now, has supervised the Creation.
Now, one could think of Sacchidananda as equivalent to the Kabbalistic En
Sof, and the Supermind, as the mediator between that Absolute and creation,
as similar to the Lurianic "Adam Kadmon." The Overmind seems to be pretty
similar to the universe of Atzilut, and the three spiritual grades of Mind
(above ordinary consciousness and pertaining to the spiritual-mental ascent)
can be compared with Beriah, the universe of the merkava ("chariot") and
hence likewise of the visionary ascent. Thus there are a number of parallels
between the Lurianic and the Aurobindoan systems.
Sri Aurobindo sees the world in which we exist, and not only the physical
world but all the subtle or psychic and spiritual worlds as well, is a world
dominated by ignorance and nonconsciousness; by what he called the
Inconscient, the utter lack of Consciousness in matter and in the lowest
existence. Again, this is more or less equivalent to the Kabbalistic
conception of Klippot. It is because of all this Ignorance and Incon-science
that the world is so imperfect, so ruled by negativity, so full of suffering
and disharmony.
And quite apart from agreement regarding the basic planes of existence, Sri
Aurobindo's teachings are in agreement with those of Lurianic Kabbalah
regarding the most central facet of his message, that of Supramentalisation.
Previous spiritual teachers, according to Sri Aurobindo, followed the Yoga
of Ascent. Correctly interpreting the nature of the world as one of
ignorance and suffering, saw the only solu-tion to be a radical
transcendence of this existence, through a return to the Absolute; what the
Hindus call "Liberation" and the Buddhists "Nirvana".
In contrast to this world-denying mysticism is the Yoga of Descent. This
involves drawing the Divine or Supramental Consciousness down into this
world, the gross physical world of matter, into one's physical body (the
individual centre of inconscience), and by doing so transform, perfect, and
Divinise it [Aurobindo pp.967ff; see also Mother's Agenda]. In other words,
the final state of Tikkun, the state of Divine Restitution.
The result of this would be a glorified Supramental Body, in which all
disharmony - all sickness, old age, death (there will still be
transformation, but not death as we know it), ignorance, and imperfection
disappear.
Here we see a clear parallel with the Zoroastrian and later Judaeo-Christian
idea of immortality as a sort of bodily resurrection or transcendence of
death. This was an idea popularised and beautifully expressed by Paul of
Tarsus. He spoke of a "Spiritual body" as opposed to the present "fleshly"
body. These terms refer not to spirit verses matter, as the modern reader
would assume, but rather of the transformation from the present imperfect
and corruptible physical and psychic condition to a incorruptible Christlike
psychophysical divinity [Cullmann, pp.25ff]. Reference is likewise made to a
glorified body: "At the end Christ will transform our lowly bodies into the
body of his own glory (doxa)" [Phil. 3:21], and that "We are being
transformed into his own likeness from glory to glory" [II Cor. 3:18; quoted
in Cullmann p.36].
The thesis of bodily transmutation and Divinization is in marked contrast to
the dualistic and spiritualistic idea of the body dying and the soul or
spirit continuing in some aetherial heaven or spirit-realm [Cullmann,
pp.12ff]. This is not to deny (as some unfortunately so often do) the
reality of higher or more subtle planes of existence in which consciousness
continues after death (and before rebirth), but only to suggest that what is
being referring to here is something other than that.
The Collective Transformation
As with the Lurianic theory of redemption of souls, the importance of
transforming every member of the group also appears in the Sri Aurobindo and
the Mother's teachings. According to the former, "this illumination and
change...must take form not only in the life of the individual but as a
collective life of gnostic beings..." [Aurobindo, p.1018]. Their ashram was
to be a "laboratory of Yoga" whereby the group as a whole had to be
transformed, if the "new creation" was to manifest itself.
Stages On The Path To Supramentalisation
Supramentalisation can be approached both in terms of the work of the
individual adept (the microcosm) and in terms of transformation of the world
as a whole (the macrocosm). Previously, the various spiritual and religious
teachers were obsessed with the macrocosmic vision, but utterly unable to
manifest or achieve anything on the microcosmic or individual level.
The yoga of Supramentalisation involves what Sri Aurobindo terms a "triple
transformation."
"...(T)here must first be the psychic change, the conversion of our whole
present nature into a soul-instrumentation; ...along with that there must be
the spiritual change, the descent of higher Light, Knowledge, Power, Force,
Bliss, Purity into the whole being,...even into the darkness of our
subconscience; last, there must supervene the supramental
transformation....as the crowning movement the ascent into the Supermind and
the transforming descent of the supramental Consciousness into our entire
being and nature." [Aurobindo, p.891]
The terminology is a little confusing: "psychic" refers not to the psychic
planes, but do what Aurobindo and Mirra call the "Psychic Being", the
immortal reincarnating Divine self, pretty much equivalent to the Qabalistic
and Thelemite "Holy Guardian Angel." This is an inward movement, an
awakening of the inner being [Aurobindo, p.907].
Moreover the "spiritual change" involves not only a descent, but, as a
necessary precursor to that, a spiritual ascent as well:
"...(T)he mind rises into a higher plane of pure Self,...or...into regions
of Light...or into planes where it feels an infinite Power or a divine
Presence..." [Aurobindo, p.911]
So even before the supramental transformation, there has to be an inward
movement, and ascending movement, and a descent of higher Spirit.
This same theme of ascent and descent, of integrating above and below, is
referred to in the famous Emerald Tablet of Hermes Trismegistus:
"It ascends from the earth into the heaven, and again descends into the
earth and receives the power of the superiors and inferiors." [Taylor, p.78]
The interesting thing about the Aurobindoan path is that it starts where
most other teachings leave off. Usually it is Enlightenment that is the
goal; but in the way of Supramentalisation it is only one of the beginning
stages.
Sri Aurobindo talks about his own spiritual development in terms of three
realisations: the first being the realisation of the "silent Self" or
Brahman, the second (while in prison for sedition against the British) of
the personal Divine or Vasudeva, and the third being the realisation of the
Overmind.
It seems then that the higher regions of the Absolute are, paradoxically,
easier to attain than the lower. This is because to attain the higher
Absolute nothing is added; one simply Realises that one always was, is, and
will be that very same Absolute Reality. It is harder to realise one's
identity with the Godhead possessing qualities, and harder again to
actualise these qualities within one's being; to oneself become Divine.
Neither Sri Aurobindo nor the Mother left a specific set of techniques that
everyone had to follow. They worked on the principle that each spiritual
aspirant is an individual with specific strengths and weaknesses, who will
obviously pursue the spiritual path in different ways. Hence they left a
huge body of teachings behind that the aspirant that peruse and select from
according to his or her own inclination.
The Universal Body
Having attained this Supramental state, the physical body becomes universal
in extent (comparable perhaps to the primordial Adam or Anthropos), and this
universal body has a constant restoring or healing task. Says the Mother:
"I am conscious of my body, but I don't mean this (Mother touches her body):
I am conscious of THE body - it could be anyone's body! I am conscious of
these vibrations of disorder, which come most often in the form of
suggestions of disorder: a suggestion of haemorrhage for example....The
battle begins to be fought...between what we can call "the will to
haemorrhage" and the reaction of the cells of the body....But suddenly, the
body is seized with a very strong determination and proclaims an order, an
immediately the effect begins to be felt and everything returns gradually to
normal. All this happens in the material consciousness. My body has all the
physical sensations except the (actual) haemorrhage....A few days later, I
receive a letter from someone, and in the letter is the whole story: the
attack, the haemorrhage, and suddenly the being is seized with an
overpowering determination and hears the words - the very words uttered
HERE. In the end he is cured, saved. In the end he is cured, saved....And so
I began to realise that my body is everywhere! You see, it is not just a
matter of these cells: they are cells in, who knows how many, perhaps
hundreds or thousands of people...It is THE body..."
[Mother's Agenda vol.4, pp.109-110]
It would seem that the universal body is a body that has incorporated (or is
in the process of incorporating) not only the higher, spiritual dimensions
and Universes of existence, but also the lower, "inconscient" dimensions.
Because the Supramental, or Manifest Absolute, includes and transcends both
the highest and the lowest Universes, the Supramentalised body is
transformed in both these dimensions. And it is precisely because the body
becomes universalised in this way, that it brings about a collective or
global evolutionary transformation, rather than the purely individual
transformation of conventional mysticism.
The Transcendence Of Life And Death
Perhaps the most amazing thing of all (at least to mundane consciousness)
about this new state of being is that there is no longer the dichotomy
between life and death that so characterises our present existence. As the
Mother explained in 1962:
"I spent at least two hours in a world...the subtle physical, where the
living and the dead are side by side without feeling the difference!...There
were...what WE call "living people", and what WE call "dead people": they
were there together, moved together, played together. And all that was in a
lovely light, quiet, very pleasant indeed..." [Mother's Agenda, vol.3,
pp.373-4]
Ponders her associate and biographer Satprem:
"Could there be a place in physical, material consciousness - let's say the
next earthly consciousness - where life and death change in nature? That
would really mean a new state on earth: not life as we know it nor death as
we know it."
[Satprem, p.170.]
Again, there are remarkable parallels with Christianity and other religions.
As one theologian proposes, through Christ's resurrection, death has already
been overcome (death, be it noted, not the body); there is already a new
creation, not a [spiritual] immortality which the soul has always possessed,
and the resurrection age is already inaugurated [Cullmann, p.31].
Yet although early Christianity says so much that is in tune with Mirra's
experiences, it are also bound by an attitude of ignorance. We read for
example that Christ has conquered death, that death will be conquered as the
last enemy, that it will be cast into a pool of fire, etc [Cullmann, p.37].
Yet all this is really missing the point of what Satprem suggested: a new
state of existence where both life as they are and death as they are
transcended in some higher state, an "overlife".
The Physics Of Supramentalisation
Since the Supramental transformation involves the Physical Reality, is it
possible to explain it in terms of physics? I would suggest that it is.
Basically, the process of Supramentalisation, or what the Christian would
call "the victory over death", pertains to the overcoming of entropy.
Entropy, or the Second Law of Thermodynamics, which says that heat always
flows from a hot to a cold object, but never the reverse. Assuming the
oscillating universe theory is true, the present universe will end in a "big
crunch" in which everything is contracted to a single point or
"singularity". If this isn't the case, then after countless billions of
years all the stars will have exhausted their fuel and be cold and dead, and
the entire universe will be exactly the same temperature (a few degrees
above absolute zero. In such a universe, all life, and all activity would be
impossible (because activity or work can only occur if there is a difference
in temperature).
In terms of physical structures or organisation, entropy means the breakdown
of complex ordered systems (e.g. a living organism) into disordered
equilibrium ones, (e.g. inanimate matter). Hence a building will eventually
crumble into rubble, but rubble by itself won't reform itself into a
building.
Although it has been argued that the existence of life itself indicates a
principle opposite to entropy - "negative entropy" or "negentropy" - since
living organisms grow and evolve from simple to complex structures, this
statement is not correct. For life on Earth still depends on the energy from
the sun; life involves a local reversal of entropy, but not an absolute
reversal. The overall energy in the universe is still "running down".
I would suggest that Supramentalisation is the only way to escape the
tyranny of entropy, and in fact in a supramentalised universe, there
automatically would be no such thing as entropy, except as part of the
overall yin-yang anabolic-catabolic diastole-systole cycle of existence.
The conquest of entropy, and hence of death, can also be understood on a
deeper level through the unified field theory. We have seen that according
to modern Scientific quantum cosmology, originally all the forces of nature
existed as a single unified super-force. This original mathematical
"supersymmetry" was broken, resulting in the compactification of six of the
original ten space-time dimensions, and a division of the original unity
into two universes, our own, and a parallel "shadow universe," and into the
four fundamental forces of physical reality we know today.
Now, suppose that through the process of Supramentalisation - i.e. the
descent of the Manifest-Absolute or Supramental Consciousness into the
physical and subphysical, and its integration into the material realm - this
process is somehow reversed, and the original "supersymmetry" is
re-established, this time in a more stable form. There would then be a
single quantum-physical law determining all physical existence. Phenomena
that characterise our present universe, such as entropy, and the limitation
of each consciousness to a single body or brain, as by-products of the
present physical conditions, would not then be the case. Hence there would
no longer be illness or old age, or limited individual existence. And the
world in which "the living" and "the dead" exist together could be the
result of the re-unification of the gross or outer Physical and the Subtle
or Inner Physical.
Assuming the existence of a cyclic universe (and indeed this seems by far
the most reasonable theory of the nature of things), we have to admit that
Supramentalisation has never been achieved in any previous cycle (or kalpa).
Why? Because if Supramentalisation had been achieved in a previous cycle,
then we wouldn't be in our present imperfect state now, because that state,
once attained, can never be lost. And even if it had been achieved on some
distant world karmically unconnected to the Earth, the present universe
would have still turned out better than it did. So we have to assume that
what is being described as "Supramentalisation" is something totally new, at
least as far as the cyclic evolution of this series of universes is
concerned. Indeed, Supramentalisation - and following that even greater and
greater states of Supreme Divinization - could be the logical goal towards
which all oscillating universes (our own and an infinite number of other
ones) are evolving.
Notes
[1] Luria himself wrote very little down, so his teachings were transmitted
via his disciples, the most important of which was Rabbi Hayyim Vital
(1542-1620). back
[2] the word sefirah (sing. of sefirot) can be roughly translated as
"sphere" or "number". It is worth mentioning one good reference: The Golden
Dawn Journal - Qabalah: Theory and Magic, edited by C. and S.T. Cicero
(reviewed in Esoterica no.6). back
[3] The Lurianic system is extremely complex, and only some parts of it have
been translated into English. What follows is of course a simplified
account. back
[4] Thus Modern Hermetic or "Magical" Kabbalah (Qabalah) relates to the
present Atzilut and its subsequent emanated worlds, and not the original
"World of Points". back
[5] The word "symmetry" is here used in an abstract mathematical sense. It
refers to complex mathematical equations that allow elementary particles to
be grouped together into families, and explain how one elementary particle
can be transformed into another. back
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