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10 October 1912 |
Although I was feeling indisposed this evening, yet owing to the
love I entertain for you I have attended this meeting. For I have
heard that this is an open forum, investigating reality; that you are
free from blind imitations, desiring to arrive at the truth of things,
and that your endeavors are lofty. Therefore, I have thought it
expedient to discourse upon the subject of philosophy, which is
alike interesting to the East and the West, enabling us to consider
the analogies and differences between the philosophical teachings
of the Orient and Occident.
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The criterion of judgment in the estimation of western philosophers
is sense perception. They consider that which is tangible or
perceptible to the senses to be a reality—that there is no doubt of its
existence. For example, we prove the existence of this light
through the sense of sight; we visualize this room; we see the sun,
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the green fields; we use our sense of sight to observe them. The
opinion of these philosophers is that such perception is reality, that
the senses are the highest standard of perception and judgment, in
which there can neither be doubt nor uncertainty. In the estimation
of the philosophers of the Orient, especially those of Greece and
Persia, the standard of judgment is the intellect. They are of the
opinion that the criterion of the senses is defective, and their proof
is that the senses are often deceived and mistaken. That which is liable
to mistake cannot be infallible, cannot be a true standard of
judgment.
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Among the senses the most powerful and reliable is that of sight.
This sense views a mirage as a body of water and is positive as to its
character, whereas a mirage is nonexistent. The sense of vision, or
sight, sees reflected images in a mirror as verities, when reason declares
them to be nonexistent. The eye sees the sun and planets revolving
around the earth, whereas in reality the sun is stationary,
central, and the earth revolves upon its own axis. The sense of sight
sees the earth as a plane, whereas the faculty of reason discovers it
to be spherical. The eye views the heavenly bodies in boundless
space as small and insignificant, whereas reason declares them to
be colossal suns. The sense of sight beholds a whirling spark of fire
as a circle of light and is without doubt as to it, whereas such a circle
is nonexistent. A man sailing in a ship sees the banks on either
side as if they were moving, whereas the ship is moving. Briefly,
there are many instances and evidences which disprove the assertion
that tangibilities and sense impressions are certainties, for the
senses are misleading and often mistaken. How, then, can we rightly
declare that they prove reality when the standard or criterion itself
is defective?
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The philosophers of the East consider the perfect criterion to be
reason or intellect, and according to that standard the realities of all
objects can be proved; for, they say, the standard of reason and intellect
is perfect, and everything provable through reason is veritable.
Therefore, those philosophers consider all philosophical deductions
to be correct when weighed according to the standard of
reason, and they state that the senses are the assistants and instruments
of reason, and that although the investigation of realities
may be conducted through the senses, the standard of knowing and
judgment is reason itself. In this way the philosophers of the East
and West differ and disagree. The materialistic philosophers of the
West declare that man belongs to the animal kingdom, whereas the
philosophers of the East—such as Plato, Aristotle and the Persians—divide the world of existence or phenomena of life into two general
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categories or kingdoms: one the animal kingdom, or world
of nature, the other the human kingdom, or world of reason.
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Man is distinguished above the animals through his reason. The
perceptions of man are of two kinds: tangible, or sensible, and
reasonable, whereas the animal perceptions are limited to the
senses, the tangible only. The tangible perceptions may be likened
to this candle, the reasonable perceptions to the light. Calculations
of mathematical problems and determining the spherical form of
the earth are through the reasonable perceptions. The center of
gravity is a hypothesis of reason. Reason itself is not tangible, perceptible
to the senses. Reason is an intellectual verity or reality. All
qualities are ideal realities, not tangible realities. For instance, we
say this man is a scholarly man. Knowledge is an ideal attainment
not perceptible to the senses. When you see this scholarly man,
your eye does not see his knowledge, your ear cannot hear his science,
nor can you sense it by taste. It is not a tangible verity. Science
itself is an ideal verity. It is evident, therefore, that the perceptions
of man are twofold: the reasonable and the tangible, or
sensible.
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As to the animal: It is endowed only with sense perception. It is
lacking the reasonable perception. It cannot apprehend ideal
realities. The animal cannot conceive of the earth as a sphere. The
intelligence of an animal located in Europe could never have
planned the discovery of the continent of America. The animal
kingdom is incapable of discovering the latent mysteries of
nature—such as electricity—and bringing them forth from the invisible
to the plane of visibility. It is evident that the discoveries
and inventions transcend the animal intelligence. The animal cannot
penetrate the secrets of genesis and creation. Its mind is incapable
of conceiving the verity of ether. It cannot know the mysteries
of magnetism because the bestowals of abstract reason and
intellect are absent in its endowment. That is to say, the animal in
its creation is a captive of the senses. Beyond the tangibilities and
impressions of the senses it cannot accept anything. It denies everything.
It is incapable of ideal perception and, therefore, a captive
of the senses.
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Virtue, or perfection, belongs to man, who possesses both the
capacity of the senses and ideal perception. For instance, astronomical
discoveries are man’s accomplishments. He has not
gained this knowledge through his senses. The greater part of it has
been attained through intellect, through the ideal senses. Man’s
inventions have appeared through the avenue of his reasonable
faculties. All his scientific attainments have come through the faculty
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of reason. Briefly, the evidences of intellect or reason are
manifest in man. By them he is differentiated from the animal.
Therefore, the animal kingdom is distinct and inferior to the human
kingdom. Notwithstanding this, the philosophers of the West have
certain syllogisms, or demonstrations, whereby they endeavor to
prove that man had his origin in the animal kingdom; that although
he is now a vertebrate, he originally lived in the sea; from thence he
was transferred to the land and became vertebrate; that gradually
his feet and hands appeared in his anatomical development; then he
began to walk upon all fours, after which he attained to human
stature, walking erect. They find that his anatomy has undergone
successive changes, finally assuming human form, and that these
intermediate forms or changes are like links connected. Between
man and the ape, however, there is one link missing, and to the
present time scientists have not been able to discover it. Therefore,
the greatest proof of this western theory of human evolution is
anatomical, reasoning that there are certain vestiges of organs
found in man which are peculiar to the ape and lower animals, and
setting forth the conclusion that man at some time in his upward
progression has possessed these organs which are no longer functioning
but appear now as mere rudiments and vestiges.
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For example, a serpent has a certain appendage which indicates
that at one time it was possessed of long limbs, but as this creature
began to find its habitation in the holes of the earth, these limbs, no
longer needed, became atrophied and shrunk, leaving but a vestige,
or appendage, as an evidence of the time when they were
lengthy and serviceable. Likewise, it is claimed man had a certain
appendage which shows that there was a time when his anatomical
structure was different from his present organism and that there has
been a corresponding transformation or change in that structure.
The coccyx, or extremity of the human spinal column, is declared
to be the vestige of a tail which man formerly possessed but which
gradually disappeared when he walked erect and its utility ceased.
These statements and demonstrations express the substance of
western philosophy upon the question of human evolution.
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The philosophers of the Orient in reply to those of the western
world say: Let us suppose that the human anatomy was primordially
different from its present form, that it was gradually transformed
from one stage to another until it attained its present likeness,
that at one time it was similar to a fish, later an invertebrate
and finally human. This anatomical evolution or progression does
not alter or affect the statement that the development of man was
always human in type and biological in progression. For the human
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embryo when examined microscopically is at first a mere germ or
worm. Gradually as it develops it shows certain divisions; rudiments
of hands and feet appear—that is to say, an upper and a
lower part are distinguishable. Afterward it undergoes certain distinct
changes until it reaches its actual human form and is born into
this world. But at all times, even when the embryo resembled a
worm, it was human in potentiality and character, not animal. The
forms assumed by the human embryo in its successive changes do
not prove that it is animal in its essential character. Throughout this
progression there has been a transference of type, a conservation of
species or kind. Realizing this we may acknowledge the fact that at
one time man was an inmate of the sea, at another period an invertebrate,
then a vertebrate and finally a human being standing erect.
Though we admit these changes, we cannot say man is an animal.
In each one of these stages are signs and evidences of his human
existence and destination. Proof of this lies in the fact that in the
embryo man still resembles a worm. This embryo still progresses
from one state to another, assuming different forms until that which
was potential in it—namely, the human image—appears. Therefore,
in the protoplasm, man is man. Conservation of species demands
it.
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The significance is this: that the world of humanity is distinct
from the animal kingdom. This is the teaching of the philosophers
of the Orient. They have a proof for it. The proof is that the animals
are captives of nature. All existence and phenomena of the lower
kingdoms are captives of nature; the mighty sun, the numberless
stars, the kingdoms of the vegetable and mineral, none of these can
deviate one hair’s breadth from the limitation of nature’s laws.
They are, as it were, arrested by nature’s hands. But man breaks
the laws of nature and makes them subservient to his uses. For instance,
man is an animate earthly being in common with the animals.
The exigency of nature demands that he should be restricted
to the earth; but he, by breaking the laws of nature, soars in the atmosphere
high above it. By the application of his intellect he overcomes
natural law and dives beneath the seas in submarines or sails
across them in ships. He arrests a mighty force of nature such as
electricity and imprisons it in an incandescent lamp. According to
the law of nature he should be able to communicate at a distance of,
say, one thousand feet; but through his inventions and discoveries
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he communicates with the East and with the West in a few moments.
This is breaking the laws of nature. Man arrests the human
voice and reproduces it in a phonograph. At most his voice should
be heard only a few hundred feet away, but he invents an instrument
which transmits it one thousand miles. In brief, all the present
arts and sciences, inventions and discoveries man has brought
forth were once mysteries which nature had decreed should remain
hidden and latent, but man has taken them out of the plane of the
invisible and brought them into the plane of the visible. This is
contrary to nature’s laws. Electricity should be a latent mystery,
but man discovers it and makes it his servant. He wrests the sword
from nature’s hand and uses it against nature, proving that there is a
power in him which is beyond nature, for it is capable of breaking
and subduing the laws of nature. If this power were not supernatural
and extraordinary, man’s accomplishments would not have
been possible.
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Furthermore, it is evident that in the world of nature conscious
knowledge is absent. Nature is without knowing, whereas man is
conscious. Nature is devoid of memory; man possesses memory.
Nature is without perception and volition; man possesses both. It is
evident that virtues are inherent in man which are not present in the
world of nature. This is provable from every standpoint.
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If it be claimed that the intellectual reality of man belongs to the
world of nature—that it is a part of the whole—we ask is it possible
for the part to contain virtues which the whole does not possess?
For instance, is it possible for the drop to contain virtues of
which the aggregate body of the sea is deprived? Is it possible for a
leaf to be imbued with virtues which are lacking in the whole tree?
Is it possible that the extraordinary faculty of reason in man is animal
in character and quality? On the other hand, it is evident and
true, though most astounding, that in man there is present this
supernatural force or faculty which discovers the realities of things
and which possesses the power of idealization or intellection. It is
capable of discovering scientific laws, and science we know is not
a tangible reality. Science exists in the mind of man as an ideal
reality. The mind itself, reason itself, is an ideal reality and not
tangible.
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Notwithstanding this, some of the sagacious men declare: We
have attained to the superlative degree of knowledge; we have
penetrated the laboratory of nature, studying sciences and arts; we
have attained the highest station of knowledge in the human world;
we have investigated the facts as they are and have arrived at the
conclusion that nothing is rightly acceptable except the tangible,
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which alone is a reality worthy of credence; all that is not tangible
is imagination and nonsense.
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Strange indeed that after twenty years training in colleges and
universities man should reach such a station wherein he will deny
the existence of the ideal or that which is not perceptible to the
senses. Have you ever stopped to think that the animal already has
graduated from such a university? Have you ever realized that the
cow is already a professor emeritus of that university? For the cow
without hard labor and study is already a philosopher of the superlative
degree in the school of nature. The cow denies everything
that is not tangible, saying, “I can see! I can eat! Therefore, I believe
only in that which is tangible!”
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