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by William Quan Judge
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THE
OF
THEOSOPHY
A
Definitive Work on Theosophy
By
William
Quan Judge
CHAPTER 6
Kama – Desire
The author of
Esoteric Buddhism -- which book ought to be consulted by all students of
Theosophy, since it was made from suggestions given by some of the Adepts
themselves -- gave the name Kama rupa to the fourth principle of man's
constitution. The reason was that the word Kama in the Sanskrit language means
"desire," and as the idea intended to be conveyed was that the fourth
principle was the "body or mass of desires and passions," Mr. Sinnett
added the Sanskrit word for body or form which is Rupa, thus making the
compound word Kamarupa.
I shall call
it by the English equivalent -- passions and desires -- because those terms
exactly express its nature. And I do this also in order to make the sharp issue
which actually exists between the psychology and mental philosophy of the west
and those of the east. The west divides man into intellect, will, and feeling,
but it is not understood whether the passions and desires constitute a
principle in themselves
or are due entirely to the body. Indeed, most people consider them as being the
result of the influence of the flesh, for they are designated often by the
terms "desires of the flesh" and "fleshly appetites."
The ancients,
however, and the Theosophists know them to be a principle in themselves and not
merely the impulses from the body. There is no help to be had in this matter
from the western psychology, now in its infancy and wholly devoid of knowledge
about the inner, which is the psychical, nature of man, and from this point
there is the greatest divergence between it and Theosophy.
The passions
and desires are not produced by the body, but, on the contrary, the body is
caused to be by the former. It is desire and passion which caused us to be
born, and will bring us to birth again and again in this body or in some
other.* It is by passion and desire we are made to evolve through the mansions
of death
called lives on earth. It was by the arising of desire in the unknown first
cause, the one absolute existence, that the whole collection of worlds was
manifested, and by means of the influence of desire in the now manifested world
is the latter
kept in existence.
NOTE
[*W Q
Judge, in The Theosophical Forum, June, 1894, page 12, corrected this
to: "in some body on this earth or another globe."]
This fourth
principle is the balance principle of the whole seven. It stands in the middle,
and from it the ways go up or down. It is the basis of action and the mover of
the will. As the old Hermetists say: "Behind will stands desire."
For whether
we wish to do well or ill we have to first arouse within us the desire for
either course. The good man who at last becomes even a sage had at one time in
his many lives to arouse the desire for the company of holy men and to keep his
desire for progress alive in order to continue on his way.
Even a Buddha
or a Jesus had first to make a vow, which is a desire, in some life, that he
would save the world or some part of it, and to persevere with the desire alive
in his heart through countless lives. And equally so, on the other hand, the
bad man life after life took unto himself low, selfish, wicked desires, thus
debasing
instead of purifying this principle. On the material and scientific side of
occultism, the use of the inner hidden powers of our nature, if this principle
of desire be not strong the master power of imagination cannot do its work,
because though it makes a mould or matrix the will cannot act unless it is
moved, directed, and kept up to pitch by desire.
The desires
and passions, therefore, have two aspects, the one being low and the other
high. The low is that shown by the constant placing of the consciousness
entirely below in the body and the astral body; the high comes from the
influence of and aspiration to the trinity above, of Mind, Buddhi, and Spirit.
This fourth principle is like the sign Libra in the path of the Sun through the
Zodiac; when the Sun (who is the real man) reaches that sign he trembles in the
balance. Should he go back the worlds would be destroyed; he goes onward, and
the whole human race is lifted up to perfection.
During life
the emplacement of the desires and passions is, as obtains with the astral
body, throughout the entire lower man, and like that ethereal counterpart of
our physical person it may be added to or diminished, made weak or increased in
strength, debased or purified.
At death it
informs the astral body, which then becomes a mere shell; for when a man dies
his astral body and principle of passion and desire leave the physical in
company and coalesce. It is then that the term Kamarupa may be applied, as
Kamarupa is really made of astral body and Kama in conjunction, and this
joining of the two makes a shape or form which though ordinarily invisible is
material and may be brought into
visibility.
Although it is empty of mind and conscience, it has powers of its own that can
be exercised whenever the conditions permit.
These
conditions are furnished by the medium of the
spiritualists,
and in every seance room the astral shells of deceased persons are always
present to delude the sitters, whose powers of discrimination have been
destroyed by wonderment.
It is the
"devil" of the Hindus, and a worse enemy the poor medium could not
have. For the astral spook -- or Kamarupa -- is but the mass of the desires and
passions abandoned by the real person who has fled to "heaven" and
has no concern with the people left behind, least of all with seances and
mediums.
Hence, being
devoid of the nobler soul, these desires and passions work only on the very
lowest part of the medium's nature and stir up no good elements, but always the
lower leanings of the being. Therefore it is that even the
spiritualists
themselves admit that in the ranks of the mediums there is much fraud, and
mediums have often confessed, "the spirits did tempt me and I committed
fraud at their wish."
This Kamarupa
spook is also the enemy of our civilization, which permits us to execute men
for crimes committed and thus throw out into the ether the mass of passion and
desire free from the weight of the body and liable at any moment to be
attracted to any sensitive person. Being thus attracted, the deplorable images
of crimes committed and also the picture of the execution and all the
accompanying curses and wishes for revenge are implanted in living persons,
who, not seeing the evil, are unable to throw it off. Thus crimes and new ideas
of crimes are wilfully propagated every day by those countries where capital
punishment
prevails.
The astral
shells together with the still living astral body of the medium, helped by
certain forces of nature which the Theosophists call "elementals," produce
nearly all the phenomena of non-fraudulent spiritualism. The medium's
astral body
having the power of extension and extrusion forms the framework for what are
called "materialized spirits," makes objects move without physical
contact, gives reports from deceased relatives, none of them anything more than
recollections
and pictures from the astral light, and in all this using and being used by the
shells of suicides, executed murderers, and all such spooks as are naturally
near to this plane of life. The number of cases in which any communication
comes from an actual spirit out of the body is so small as to be
countable
almost on one hand. But the spirits of living men sometimes, while their bodies
are asleep, come to seances and take part therein.
But they
cannot recollect it, do not know how they do it, and are not distinguished by
mediums from the mass of astral corpses. The fact that such things can be done
by the inner man and not be recollected proves nothing against these theories,
for the
child can see
without knowing how the eye acts, and the savage who has no knowledge of the
complex machinery working in his body still carries on the process of digestion
perfectly. And that the latter is unconscious with him is exactly in line with
the theory, for these acts and doings of the inner man are the unconscious
actions of the subconscious mind.
These words
"conscious" and "subconscious" are of course used
relatively, the unconsciousness being that of the brain only. And hypnotic
experiments have conclusively proved all these theories, as on one day not far
away will be fully admitted. Besides this, the astral shells of suicides and
executed criminals are the most coherent, longest lived, and nearest to us of
all the shades of hades, and hence must, out of the necessity of the case, be
the real "controls" of the seance room.
Passion and
desire together with astral model-body are common to men and animals, as also
to the vegetable kingdom, though in the last but faintly developed. And at one
period in evolution no further material principles had been developed, and all
the three higher, of Mind, Soul, and Spirit, were but latent. Up to this point
man and animal were equal, for the brute in us is made
of the
passions and the astral body. The development of the germs of Mind made man
because it constituted the great differentiation. The God within begins with
Manas or mind, and it is the struggle between this God and the brute below
which Theosophy speaks of and warns about. The lower principle is called bad
because by comparison with the higher it is so, but still it is the basis of
action.
We cannot
rise unless self first asserts itself in the desire to do better. In this
aspect it is called rajas or the active and bad quality, as distinguished from
tamas, or the quality of darkness and indifference. Rising is not possible
unless rajas is present to give the impulse, and by the use of this principle
of passion all the higher qualities are brought to at last so refine and
elevate our desires that they may be continually placed upon truth and spirit.
By this Theosophy does not teach that the passions are to be pandered to or
satiated, for a more pernicious doctrine was never taught, but the injunction
is to make use of the activity given by the fourth principle so as to ever rise
and not to fall under the dominion of the dark quality that ends with
annihilation, after having begun in selfishness and indifference.
Having thus
gone over the field and shown what are the lower principles, we find Theosophy
teaching that at the present point of man's evolution he is a fully developed
quaternary with the higher principles partly developed. Hence it is taught that
today man shows himself to be moved by passion and desire. This is
proved by a
glance at the civilizations of the earth, for they are all moved by this
principle, and in countries like France, England, and America a glorification
of it is exhibited in the attention to display, to sensuous art, to struggle
for power and place, and in all the habits and modes of living where the
gratification of the senses is sometimes esteemed the highest good.
But as Mind
is being evolved more and more as we proceed in our course along the line of
the race development, there can be perceived underneath in all countries the
beginning of the transition from the animal possessed of the germ of real mind
to the man of
mind complete. This day is therefore known to the Masters, who have given out
some of the old truths, as the "transition period." Proud science and
prouder religion do not admit this, but think we are as we always will be.
But believing
in his teacher, the theosophist sees all around him the evidence that the race
mind is changing by enlargement, that the old days of dogmatism are gone and
the "age of inquiry" has come, that the inquiries will grow louder
year by year and the answers be required to satisfy the mind as it grows more
and more,
until at last, all dogmatism being ended, the race will be ready to face all problems,
each man for himself, all working for the good of the whole, and that the end
will be the perfecting of those who struggle to overcome the brute. For these
reasons the old doctrines are given out again, and Theosophy asks every one to
reflect whether to give way to the animal below or look up to and be governed
by the God within.
A fuller
treatment of the fourth principle of our constitution would compel us to
consider all such questions as those presented by the wonder workers of the
east, by spiritualistic phenomena, hypnotism, apparitions, insanity, and the
like, but they must be reserved for
separate handling.
______________________
THE
OF
THEOSOPHY
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