Psychology of Man- Part- IV
WE
SHALL begin today with a more detailed examination of centers. This is the
diagram of four centers.
Intellectual
Centre- Mid
Emotional
Centre- Solar Plexus
Moving
and Instinctive Center- Spinal Cord
Middle part of the body, chest, Lower part of the body
and back.
The diagram represents a man standing sideways, looking to the
left, and indicates the relative position of centers in a very schematic way.
In reality each center occupies the whole body, penetrates, so to speak, the whole organism. At the same time,
each center has what is called its 'center of gravity.' The center of gravity
of the intellectual center is in the brain; the center of gravity of the
emotional center is in the solar plexus; the centers of gravity of the moving
and instinctive centers are in the spinal cord.
It must be understood
that in the present state of scientific knowledge we have no means of verifying
this statement, chiefly because each center includes in itself many properties
which are still unknown to ordinary science and even to anatomy. It may sound
strange, but the fact is that the anatomy of the human body is far from being a
completed science.
So the study of
centers, which are hidden from us, must begin with the observation of their
functions, which are quite open for our investigation.
This is quite a usual
course. In the different sciences— physics, chemistry, astronomy,
physiology—when we cannot reach the facts or objects or matters we wish to
study, we have to begin with an investigation of their results or traces. In
this case we shall be dealing with the direct functions of centers; so all that
we establish about functions can be applied to centers.
All centers have much
in common and, at the same time, each center has its own peculiar
characteristics which must always be kept in mind.
One of the most
important principles that must be understood in relation to centers is the
great difference in their speed, that is, a difference in the speeds of their
functions.
The slowest is the
intellectual center. Next to it—although very much faster—stand the moving and
instinctive centers, which have more or less the same speed. The fastest of all
is the emotional center, though in the state of 'waking sleep' it works only
very rarely with anything approximating to its real speed, and generally works
with the speed of the instinctive and moving centers.
Observations can help
us to establish a great difference in the speeds of functions, but they cannot
give us the exact figures. In reality the difference is very great, greater
than one can imagine as being possible between functions of the same organism.
As I have just said, with our ordinary means we cannot calculate the difference
in the speed of centers, but, if we are told what it is, we can find many facts
which will confirm not the figures but the existence of the enormous
difference.
So before bringing in
figures, I want to speak about ordinary observations which can be made without
any special knowledge.
Try, for instance, to
compare the speed of mental processes with moving functions. Try to observe
yourself when you have to perform many quick simultaneous movements, as when
driving a car in a very crowded street, or riding fast on a bad road, or doing
any work requiring quick judgment and quick movements. You will see at once
that you cannot observe all your movements.
You will either have to slow them
down or miss the greater part of your observations; otherwise you will risk an
accident and probably have one if you persist in observing. There are many
similar observations which can be made, particularly on the emotional center which
is still faster. Everyone of us really has many observations on the different
speeds of our functions, but only very rarely do we know the value of our
observations and experiences. Only when we know the principle do we begin to
understand our own previous observations.
At the same time it
must be said that all the figures referring to these different speeds are
established and known in school systems. As you will see later, the difference
in the speed of centers is a very strange figure which has a cosmic meaning,
that is, it enters into many cosmic processes or, it is better to say it
divides many cosmic processes one from another. This figure is 30, 000. This
means that the moving and instinctive centers are 30, 000 times faster than the
intellectual center. And the emotional center, when it works with its proper
speed, is 30, 000 times faster than the moving and instinctive centers.
It is difficult to
believe in such an enormous difference in the speeds of functions in the same
organism. It actually means that different centres have a quite different time.
The instinctive and moving centres have 30, 000 times longer time than the
intellectual centre, and the emotional centre has 30, 000 times longer time
than the moving and instinctive centres.
Do you understand
clearly what 'longer time means?
It means that, for every kind of
work that a center has to do, it has so much more time. However strange it may
be, this fact of the great difference in the speed of centers explains many
well-known phenomena which ordinary science cannot explain and which it
generally passes over in silence, or simply refuses to discuss. I am referring
now to the astonishing and quite inexplicable speed of some of the
physiological and mental processes.
For instance—a man
drinks a glass of brandy, and immediately in no more than a second, he
experiences many new feelings and sensations—a feeling of warmth, relaxation,
relief, peace, contentment, well-being, or on the other hand, anger,
irritation, and so on. What he feels may be different in different cases, but
the fact remains that the body responds to the stimulant very quickly, almost
at once.
There is really no need
to speak about brandy or any other stimulant; if a man is very thirsty or very
hungry, a glass of water or a piece of bread will produce the same quick
effect.
Similar phenomena
representing the enormous speed of certain processes can be
noticed, for instance, in observing dreams. I referred to some of these
observations in A New Model of the Universe.
The difference is again
either between the instinctive and the intellectual centers or between the
moving and the intellectual. But we are so accustomed to these phenomena that
we rarely think how strange and incomprehensible they are.
Of course, for a man
who has never thought about himself and never tried to study himself, there is
nothing strange in this or in anything else. But in reality, from the point of
view of ordinary physiology, these phenomena look almost miraculous.
A physiologist knows
how many complicated processes must be gone through between swallowing brandy
or a glass of water and feeling its effects. Every substance entering the body
by way of the mouth has to be analysed, tried in several different ways and
only then accepted or rejected. And all this happens in one second or less. It
is a miracle, and at the same time it is not. For, if we know the difference in
the speed of centers and remember that the instinctive center, which has to do
this work, has 30, 000 times more time than the intellectual center by which we
measure our ordinary time, we can understand how it may happen. It means that
the instinctive center has not one second, but about eight hours of its own
time for this work, and in eight hours this work can certainly be done in an
ordinary laboratory without any unnecessary haste. So our idea of the
extraordinary speed of this work is purely an illusion which we have because we
think that our ordinary time, or the time of the intellectual center, is the only
time which exists.
We shall return later
on to the study of the difference in speed of centers. Now we must try to
understand another characteristic of centers which will later give us very good
material for self-observation and for work upon ourselves.
It is supposed that
each centro is divided into two parts, positive and negative.
This division is
particularly clear in the intellectual center and
in the instinctive
center.
All the work of the
intellectual center is divided into two parts: affirmation and negation; yes and
no. In every moment of our thinking, either one outweighs the other or they
come to a moment of equal strength in indecision. The negative part of the
intellectual center is as useful as the positive part, and any diminishing of
the strength of the one in relation to the other results in mental disorders.
In the work of the
instinctive center the division is also quite clear, and both parts, positive
and negative, or pleasant and unpleasant, are equally necessary for a right
orientation in life.
Pleasant sensations of
taste, smell, touch, temperature, warmth, coolness, fresh air—all indicate
conditions which are beneficial for life; and unpleasant sensations of bad
taste, bad smell, unpleasant touch, feeling of oppressive heat or extreme cold,
all indicate conditions which can be harmful to life.
It may definitely be
said that no true orientation in life is possible without both pleasant and
unpleasant sensations. They are the real guidance of all animal life on the
earth and any defect in them results in a lack of orientation and a consequent
danger of illness and death. Think how quickly a man would poison himself if he
lost all sense of taste and smell, or if, in some unnatural way, he conquered
in himself a natural disgust of unpleasant sensations.
In the moving centre
the division into two parts, positive and negative, has only a logical meaning;
that is, movement as opposed to rest. It has no meaning for practical
observation.
In the emotional
center, at a first glance, the division is quite simple and obvious. If we take
pleasant emotions such as joy, sympathy, affection, self-confidence, as
belonging to the positive part, and unpleasant emotions such as boredom,
irritation, jealousy, envy, fear, as belonging to the negative part, things
will look very simple; but in reality they are much more complicated.
To begin with, in the
emotional center there is no natural negative part. The greater part of
negative emotions are artificial; they do not belong to the emotional center
proper and are based on instinctive emotions which are quite unrelated to them
but which are transformed by imagination and identification. This is the real meaning
of the theory of James and Lange, at one time very well-known. They insisted
that all emotions were really sensations of changes in inner organs and
tissues, changes which took place before sensations, and were the actual cause
of sensations. That really meant that external events and inner realizations
did not produce emotions. External events and inner realizations produced inner
reflexes which produced sensations; and these were interpreted as emotions. At
the same time positive emotions such as 'love,' hope,' 'faith' in the sense in
which they are usually understood; that is, as permanent emotions, are
impossible for a man in the ordinary state of consciousness. They require
higher states of consciousness; they require inner unity, self-consciousness,
permanent 'I' and will.
Positive emotions are
emotions which cannot become negative. But all our pleasant emotions such as
joy, sympathy, affection, self-confidence, can, at any moment, turn into
boredom, irritation envy, fear and so on. Love can turn into jealousy or fear
to lose what one loves, or into anger and hatred; hope can turn into
day-dreaming and the expectation of impossible things, and faith can turn into
superstition and a weak acceptance of comforting non-sense.
Even a purely
intellectual emotion—the desire for knowledge, or an aesthetic emotion; that
is, a feeling of beauty or harmony—if it becomes mixed with identification,
immediately unites with emotions of a negative kind such as self-pride, vanity,
selfishness, conceit and so on.
So we can say without
any possibility of mistake that we can have no positive emotions. At the same
time, in actual fact, we have no negative emotions which exist without
imagination and identification. Of course it cannot be denied that besides the
many and varied kinds of physical suffering which belong to the instinctive
centre, man has many kinds of mental suffering which belong to the emotional
centre. He has many sorrows, griefs, fears, apprehensions and so on which
cannot be avoided and are as closely connected with man's life as illness, pain
and death. But these mental sufferings are very different from negative
emotions which are based on imagination and identification.
These emotions are a
terrible phenomenon. They occupy an enormous place in our life. Of many people
it is possible to say that all their lives are regulated and controlled, and in
the end ruined, by negative emotions, At the same time negative emotions do not
play any useful part at all in our lives. They do not help our orientation,
they do not give us any knowledge, they do not guide us in any sensible manner.
On the contrary, they spoil all our pleasures, they make life a burden to us
and they very effectively prevent our possible development
because there is
nothing more mechanical in our life than negative emotions.
Negative emotions can
never come under our control. People who think they can control their negative
emotions and manifest them when they want to, simply deceive themselves.
Negative emotions depend on identification; if identification is destroyed in
some particular case, they disappear. The strangest and most fantastic fact
about negative emotions is that people actually wor-ship them. I think that,
for an ordinary mechanical man, the most difficult thing to realise is that his
own and other people's negative emotions, have no value whatever and do not
contain anything noble, anything beautiful or anything strong. In reality
negative emotions contain nothing but weakness and very often the beginning of
hysteria, insanity or crime. The only good thing about them is that, being
quite useless and artificially created by imagination and identification, they
can be destroyed without any loss. And this is the only chance of escape that
man has.
If negative emotions
were useful or necessary for any, even the smallest purpose, and if they were a
function of a really existing part of the emotional centre, man would have no
chance because no inner development is possible so long as man keeps his
negative emotions. In school language it is said on the subject of the struggle
with negative emotions:
Man must sacrifice his
suffering.
'What could be easier
to sacrifice?' everyone will say. But in reality people would sacrifice
anything rather than their negative emotions. There is no pleasure and no
enjoyment man would not sacrifice for quite small reasons, but he will never
sacrifice his suffering. And in a sense there is a reason for this.
In a quite
superstitious way man expects to gain something by sacrificing his pleasures,
but he cannot expect anything for sacrifice of his suffering. He is full of
wrong ideas about suffering—he still thinks that suffering is sent to him by
God or by gods for his punishment or for his edification, and he will even be
afraid to hear of the possibility of getting rid of his suffering in such a
simple way. The idea is made even more difficult by the existence of many
sufferings from which man really cannot get rid, and of many other sufferings
which are entirely based on man's imagination, which he cannot and will not
give up, like the idea of injustice, for instance, and the belief in the
possibility of destroying injustice.
Besides that many people
have nothing but negative emotions. All their I's are negative. If you were to
take negative emotions away from them, they would simply collapse and go up in
smoke.
And what would happen
to all our life, without negative emotions? What would happen to what we call
art, to the theater, to drama, to most novels?
Unfortunately there is
no chance of negative emotions disappearing. Negative emotions can be conquered
and can disappear only with the help of school knowledge and school methods.
The struggle against negative emotions is a part of school training and is
closely connected with all school work.
What is the origin of
negative emotions if they are artificial, unnatural and useless? As we do not
know the origin of man we cannot discuss this question, and we can speak about
negative emotions and their origin only in relation to ourselves and our lives.
For instance, in watching children we can see how they are taught negative
emotions and how they learn them themselves through imitation of grown-ups and
older children.
If, from the earliest
days of his life, a child could be put among people who have no negative
emotions, he would probably have none, or so very few that they could be easily
conquered by right education. But in actual life things happen quite
differently, and with the help of all the examples he can see and hear, with
the help of reading, the cinema and so on, a child of about ten already knows
the whole scale of negative emotions and can imagine them, reproduce them, and
identify with them as well as any grown-up man.
In grown-up people
negative emotions are supported by the constant justification and glorification
of them in literature and art, and by personal self-justification and
self-indulgence. Even when we become tired of them we do not believe that we
can become quite free from them.
In reality, we have
much more power over negative emotions than we think, particularly when we
already know how dangerous they are and how urgent is the struggle with them.
But we find too many excuses for them, and swim in the seas of self-pity and
selfishness, as the case may be, finding fault in everything except ourselves. All
that has just been said shows that we are in a very strange position in
relation to our emotional center. It has no positive part, and no negative
part. Most of its negative functions are invented and there are many people who
have never in their lives experienced any real emotion, so completely is their
time occupied with imaginary emotions.
So we cannot say that
our emotional center is divided into two parts, positive and negative. We can
only say that we have pleasant emotions and unpleasant emotions, and that all
of them which are not negative at a given moment can turn into negative
emotions under the slightest provocations or even without any provocation.
This is the true
picture of our emotional life and if we look sincerely at ourselves we must
realise that so long as we cultivate and admire in ourselves all these poisonous
emotions we cannot expect to be able to develop unity, consciousness or will. If
such development were possible, then all these negative emotions would enter
into our new being and become permanent in us. This would mean that it would be
impossible for us ever to get rid of them. Luckily for us, such a thing cannot
happen.
In our present state
the only good thing about us is that there is nothing permanent in us. If
anything becomes permanent in our present state, it means insanity. Only
lunatics can have a permanent ego.
Incidentally this fact
disposes of another false term that crept into the psychological language of
the day from the so-called psycho-analysis: I mean the word 'complex.'
There is nothing in our
psychological make-up that corresponds to the idea of 'complex.' In the
psychiatry of the nineteenth century, what is now called 'complex' was called a
'fixed idea,' and 'fixed ideas' were taken as All that has just been said shows
that we are in a very strange position in relation to our emotional center. It
has no positive part, and no negative part. Most of its negative functions are
invented and there are many people who have never in their lives experienced
any real emotion, so completely is their time occupied with imaginary emotions.
So we cannot say that
our emotional center is divided into two parts, positive and negative. We can
only say that we have pleasant emotions and unpleasant emotions, and that all
of them which are not negative at a given moment can turn into negative
emotions under the slightest provocations or even without any provocation.
This is the true
picture of our emotional life and if we look sincerely at ourselves we must
realize that so long as we cultivate and admire in ourselves all these
poisonous emotions we cannot expect to be able to develop unity, consciousness or
will. If such development were possible, then all these negative emotions would
enter into our new being and become permanent in us. This would mean that it
would be impossible for us ever to get rid of them. Luckily for us, such a
thing cannot happen.
In our present state
the only good thing about us is that there is nothing permanent in us. If
anything becomes permanent in our present state, it means insanity. Only
lunatics can have a permanent ego.
Incidentally this fact
disposes of another false term that crept into the psychological language of
the day from the so-called psycho-analysis: I mean the word 'complex.'
There is nothing in our
psychological make-up that corresponds to the idea of 'complex.' In the
psychiatry of the nineteenth century, what is now called 'complex' was called a
'fixed idea,' and 'fixed ideas' were taken as signs of insanity. And that
remains perfectly correct.
Normal man cannot have
'fixed ideas' 'complexes' or 'fixations'. It is useful to remember this in case
someone tries to find complexes in you. We have many bad features as it is and
our chances are very small even without complexes.
Returning now to the
question of work on ourselves we must ask ourselves what our chances actually
are. We must discover in ourselves functions and manifestations which we can,
to a certain extent, control, and we must exercise control, trying to increase
it as much as possible. For instance, we have a certain control over our
movements, and in many schools, particularly in the East, work on oneself
begins with acquiring as full a control over move-ments as possible. But this
needs special training, very much time and the study of very elaborate
exercises. Under the conditions of modern life we have more control over our
thoughts, and in connection with this there is a special method by which we may
work on the development of our consciousness using that instrument which is
most obedient to our will; that is, our mind, or the intellectual center.
In order to understand
more clearly what I am going to say, you must try to remember that we have no
control over our consciousness. When I said that we can become more conscious,
or that a man can be made conscious for a moment simply by asking him if he is
conscious or not, I used the words 'conscious' or 'consciousness' in a relative
sense. There are so many degrees of consciousness and every higher degree means
'consciousness' in relation to a lower degree. But, if we have no control over
consciousness itself, we have a certain control over our thinking about
consciousness, and we can construct our thinking in such a way as to bring
consciousness. What I mean is that by giving to our thoughts the direction
which they would have in a moment of consciousness, we can, in this way, induce
consciousness.
Now try to formulate
what you noticed when you tried to observe yourself.
You noticed three
things. First, that you do not remember yourself; that is, that you are not
aware of yourself at the time when you try to observe yourself. Second, that
observation is made difficult by the incessant stream of thoughts, images,
echoes of conversation, fragments of emotions, flowing through your mind and
very often distracting your attention from observation. And third, that the
moment you start self-observation something in you starts imagination, and
self-observation, if you really try it, is a constant struggle with
imagination.
Now this is the chief
point in work upon oneself. If one realizes that all the difficulties in the
work depend on the fact that one cannot remember oneself, one already knows
what one must do.
One must try to
remember oneself.
In order to do this one
must struggle with mechanical thoughts and one must struggle with imagination.
If one does this
conscientiously and persistently one will see results in a comparatively short
time. But one must not think that it is easy or that one can master this
practice immediately.
Self-remembering, as it
is called, is a very difficult thing to learn to practice. It must not be based
on an expectation of results, otherwise one can identify with one's efforts. It
must be based on the realization of the fact that we do not remember ourselves,
and that at the same time we can remember ourselves, if we try sufficiently
hard and in the right way.
We cannot become
conscious at will, at the moment when we want to, because we have no command
over states of consciousness. But we can remember ourselves for a short time,
at will because we have a certain command over our thoughts. And if we start
remembering ourselves, by the special construction of our thoughts; that is, by
the realization that we do not remember ourselves, that nobody remembers
himself, and by realizing all that this means, this will bring us to
consciousness.
You must remember that
we have found the weak spot in the walls of our mechanicalness. This is the
knowledge that we do not remember ourselves; and the realization that we can
try to remember ourselves. Up to this moment our task has only been self-study.
Now, with the understanding of the necessity for actual change in ourselves,
work begins.
Later on you will learn
that the practice of self-remembering, connected with self-observation and with
the struggle against imagination, has not only a psychological meaning, but it
also changes the subtlest part of our metabolism and produces definite
chemical, or perhaps it is better to say alchemical, effects in our body. So
today from psychology we have come to alchemy; that is, to the idea of the
transformation of coarse elements into finer ones.
- From Editor's Desk
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