II - Universal Evolution: The Field of Unlimited Potentiality
Related References
3.) Cosmic Evolution The Dance Of
Life
(HPB, Key To Theosophy, p. 41)
THEOSOPHIST. Simply by demonstrating on logical, philosophical,
metaphysical, and even scientific grounds that: --
- All men have spiritually and physically the same origin,
which is the fundamental teaching of Theosophy.
- As mankind is essentially of one and the same essence, and
that essence is one -- infinite, uncreated, and eternal, whether
we call it God or Nature -- nothing, therefore, can affect one
nation or one man without affecting all other nations and all
other men. This is as certain and as obvious as that a stone
thrown into a pond will, sooner or later, set in motion every
single drop of water therein.
(HPB, Secret Doctrine, Vol. 1, Stanza 1)
The history of cosmic evolution, as traced in the Stanzas, is,
so to say, the abstract algebraical formula of that Evolution.
Hence the student must not expect to find there an account of
all the stages and transformations which intervene between the
first beginnings of "Universal" evolution and our present
state. To give such an account would be as impossible as it would
be incomprehensible to men who cannot even grasp the nature of
the plane of existence next to that to which, for the moment,
their consciousness is limited.
(Wm. Q. Judge, Articles, "Evolution")
THE word "evolution" is the best word from a theosophical
standpoint to use in treating of the genesis of men and things,
as the process which it designates is that which has been always
stated in the ancient books from whose perusal the tenets of
the wisdom religion can be gathered. In the Bhagavad Gita we
find Krishna saying that "at the beginning of the day of
Brahma all things come forth from the non-developed principle,
and at the coming on of Brahma's night they are resolved into
it again," and that this process goes on from age to age.
This exactly states evolution as it is defined in our dictionaries,
where it is said to be a process of coming forth or a development.
The "days and nights of Brahma" are immense periods
of time during which evolution proceeds, the manifestation of
things being the "day" and their periodical resolution
into the Absolute the "night."
..What is this inherent law of the Absolute? as nearly
as can be stated. Although we do not and cannot know the Absolute,
we have enough data from which to draw the conclusion that its
inherent law is to periodically come forth from subjectivity
into objectivity and to return again to the former, and so on
without any cessation. In the objective world we have a figure
or illustration of this in the rising and setting of the sun,
which of all natural objects best shows the influence of the
law. It rises, as H. P. Blavatsky says, from the (to us) subjective,
and at night returns to the subjective again, remaining in the
objective world during the day. If we substitute, as we must
when attempting to draw correspondences between the worlds, the
word "state" for locality or place, and instead of
the sun we call that object "the Absolute," we have
a perfect figure, for then we will have the Absolute rising above
the horizon of consciousness from the subjective state, and its
setting again for that consciousness when the time of night arrives
that is, the night of Brahma. This law of periodicity is the
same as that of the cycles, which can be seen governing in every
department of nature
.
Paramatma alone is self-existing, single, eternal, immutable,
and common to all creatures, high and low alike; hence it never
was and never will be created; that the soul of man evolves,
is consciousness itself, and is not specially created for each
man born on the earth, but assumes through countless incarnations
different bodies at different times. Underlying this must be
the proposition that, for each Manvantara or period of manifestation,
there is a definite number of souls or egos who project themselves
into the current of evolution which is to prevail for that period
or manvantara. Of course this subject is limitless, and the consideration
of the vast number of systems and worlds where the same process
is going on with a definite number of egos in each, staggers
the minds of most of those who take the subject up. And of course
I do not mean to be understood as saying that there is a definite
number of egos in the whole collection of systems in which we
may imagine evolution as proceeding, for there could be no such
definiteness considered in the mass, as that would be the same
as taking the measure of the Absolute. But in viewing any part
of the manifestation of the Absolute, it is allowable for us
to say that there are to be found such a definite number of egos
in that particular system under consideration; this is one of
the necessities of our finite consciousness.
in respect to theology we deny the propositions, first, that
there is any special creation of souls, second, that there is,
or was, or could be by any possibility any creation of this world
or of any other, and third, that the human race descended from
one pair.
(HPB, Secret Doctrine, Vol. 1, Proem)
PAGES FROM A PRE-HISTORIC PERIOD.
AN Archaic Manuscript -- a collection of palm leaves made impermeable
to water, fire, and air, by some specific unknown process --
is before the writer's eye. On the first page is an immaculate
white disk within a dull black ground. On the following page,
the same disk, but with a central point. The first, the student
knows to represent Kosmos in Eternity, before the re-awakening
of still slumbering Energy, the emanation of the Word in later
systems. The point in the hitherto immaculate Disk, Space and
Eternity in Pralaya, denotes the dawn of differentiation. It
is the Point in the Mundane Egg (see Part II., "The Mundane
Egg"), the germ within the latter which will become the
Universe, the ALL, the boundless, periodical Kosmos, this germ
being latent and active, periodically and by turns. The one circle
is divine Unity, from which all proceeds, whither all returns.
Its circumference -- a forcibly limited symbol, in view of the
limitation of the human mind -- indicates the abstract, ever
incognisable PRESENCE, and its plane, the Universal Soul, although
the two are one. Only the face of the Disk being white and the
ground all around black, shows clearly that its plane is the
only knowledge, dim and hazy though it still is, that is attainable
by man. It is on this plane that the Manvantaric manifestations
begin; for it is in this SOUL that slumbers, during the Pralaya,
the Divine Thought,* wherein lies concealed the plan of every
future Cosmogony and Theogony. |