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" Life Served as You Order It"
Blog
The Study of Man
Posted on May 2, 2020 at 10:26 AM |
THE STUDY OF MAN A FEW men have cherished life-long
visions of cheating death, though without that belief in their hopes that would
prompt them to search for a continuance of life in a way likely to lead to the
desired result. There have been many Ponce de Leons in the world. History is strewed thick with them.
Writers have embodied their hopes, half disguised, in many writings.
Bulwer-Lytton, Hawthorne and others I can recall. Elixirs have been concocted
as life protractors, and have sold readily until found to be failures. There
has been more than one Brown Sequard who deceived others by being honestly
deceived himself. But before all these comparatively
modern searchers for the fountain of perpetual youth, there existed in the long
past many men, who believed with all their minds that the time would come when
the race would conquer death. The thought was the goal to all their hopes. They
did not seem to expect this conquest to happen in their time, but they believed
that the race was gradually growing toward a period when it could be done. Has the Bible student observed that
the Old Testament does not treat of the soul of man? If it does, I have not
found it out, either from my own reading or from my talk with other Bible
students. From one end of it to the other it seems to consider man in the light
of a bodily creature, as if his life were purely external, and related to the
external world alone; in other words, as if man had no soul, but looked forward
to the time when he would conquer death in the body. If this is true, it seems
astonishing, in the light of present knowledge, that these prophets of the old
time should have so correctly predicted the course that future events would
take. But they were natural men; they were at one with the law of growth—the
Principle of Attraction—as it manifested itself in them. They were simply a
part of Nature, like the trees and animals; and it was Nature itself that shone
through their sayings, and prophesied its own power when men should have
ripened to an understanding of them. This is the true explanation
concerning the power of those old seers to predict coming events. They were in
the direct line of growth, and the growth principle made utterance through
them. They did not talk of their souls; at least, it is my belief that they did
not. They seemed to be unconscious of their souls, even if they possessed them.
They did not project their thoughts and hopes into another sphere beyond and
outside of the present world; the full force of their entire being was centered
in the world in which they lived; and what was the result? Why this—they lived hundreds of
years here in strength and health. I know how the claim to longevity
as related of these men in the Old Testament is now scouted and rejected by
persons who consider themselves thinkers; but if these thinkers would think
farther on the subject, they would see no folly in accepting the statement as
recorded. For my part, I perceive the
probability that these accounts are true; and I perceive it—not because the
Bible has recorded it, but because the study of evolution shows the possibility
of it, and, indeed, confirms the fact that this strange phenomenon was one of
the natural periods of growth through which the race would necessarily pass. It
begins to be
seen that there
are two distinctly marked periods
in the hist ory of Man. One of these periods I call the period of his
unconscious growth, and the other period that of his conscious growth. Man has ascended from the forms of
life that lie below him, and, though he stands at the head of them, he is
nevertheless composed of the same material that they are, and partakes of their
nature. The animals and plants all belong
to the unconscious plane of life; and man, so long as he remains in his
condition of animal-hood, belongs to this plane also. It is only recently that
man is beginning to emerge from this plane, and step forth into the plane of
conscious existence, where his deviation from his previous condition of
animal-hood is showing forth in an increased intelligence, so marked as to
change the entire basis of his life from physical to mental. The difference between conscious
life, and life on the unconscious plane, is in the use of the reasoning powers.
On the unconscious plane men do not reason to any great extent. It is this fact
that gives us the right to call them unconscious; and the word
"unconscious," as I use it, only relates to their power, or lack of
power, to examine the operation of their own minds as the law of growth
operates in them. In one sense all life is conscious;
but in the sense I speak of there is a growth which proceeds without being
observed by the person or persons in whom it is going on. This is what I call
growth on the unconscious plane. A man grows; he lives
his allotted number of years and dies; he may have been a thinker on many
subjects, and may have brought forth great truths, but until he turns his
attention to himself—to the study of man, to the law of growth as it proceeds
in his own body, he will not have ascended to what I call the conscious plane
of life. This conscious plane is that plane
where the man no longer lives the vegetable life of his predecessors, but uses
his reasoning powers to the extent of their development, and from the animal
stage of life on to the thinking, reasoning stage; and this ascent may not only
be called an ascent from unconscious to conscious life, but from a condition of
ignorance to one of intelligence; from animal to human; from physical to
mental. Life on the unconscious
plane, the plane where man is ignorant of himself and his powers, may fitly be
called the vegetable plane. It is true that even on this plane
a man has advanced a long way above the vegetable, but he is still under what
he calls the law of heredity, which holds him in the path his fathers trod, and
which he accepts as an inevitable necessity, just as the vegetable does. This
feature of growth marks the unconscious plane—the unreasoning or ignorant
plane; the plane where men accept things as they find them, without examining
themselves to discover whether they have not the power within themselves to
project entirely new conditions, which shall forever obliterate the old ones. Ascension – the change
from unconscious to conscious life. On the unconscious or comparatively
unthinking plane, man is stationary and helpless as compared with man when he
has ascended to the conscious or reasoning plane. On the former plane he
accepts his condition as final, or nearly so. It is true that he sees some
chance of improvement now and then, and tries to develop this chance. In this
way there has been a slow but sure upward movement, from the unconscious or
ignorant plane to the conscious or intelligent plane; so that, as the ages have
passed, the race has kept slowly becoming more intelligent, until there comes
to be among its numbers a few who perceive that the source of all power lies
embodied in man himself, and that the great study by which race advancement may
be quickened a hundred-fold is the study of man. The study of man has begun, and as
it proceeds the change from unconscious to conscious life proceeds. The condition
of the animal man is no longer such a compact and formidable state of ignorance
as it once was; it is being broken into by the new thought of the few
independent thinkers, who are investigating themselves and their wonderful
powers, and whose freshly acquired knowledge is filtering down among the
masses, where it promises to make great changes in the thoughts and beliefs of
the unconscious multitude. The conscious life into
which we are entering by the simple unfoldment of our reasoning faculties is called
the mental life. And all nature, everything, is on
its way upward from the unconscious or animal plane to the conscious or mental
plane. In strict truth, the animal or
unconscious plane is mental also, the same as the conscious plane; but it is a
more ignorant form of mentality than the high, reasoning, or conscious plane.
The word "mental" is as applicable to one plane as the other. All the
expressions of life from low to high are mental, as I have constantly
endeavored to prove to the reader; and the difference I am attempting to
explain exists only in the quality of the mentality, as manifested by different
creatures on different planes of development. The transposition from what is
called the physical forms of life to the mental forms of life is in the
different degrees of intelligence that the creatures on the different planes
are capable of showing forth. It is on this account that Mental Science makes
the statement that "all is mind"; mind in a state of unconsciousness
with regard to itself, and mind with sufficient knowledge to be conscious of
itself and the faculties it possesses. Therefore, the difference between
conscious life and unconscious life is a difference in the degrees of
intelligence manifested between different classes of beings. Man in his early stages of growth
makes a closer approach to the conscious state than the animals below him in
development. Thus the human being, even in his most savage state, is more
conscious of himself and his power than the monkeys or other animals. All is mind, of which every
creature and plant from the lowest form of life up to the most gifted human
being is a mental expression, and the form that each creature or plant shows
forth marks the degree of its mentality. Each creature or plant, no matter how
small and inferior, has aspirations or desires that reach higher than its
present conditions. These aspirations or desires ascend higher than the
environment of its life will permit it to realize in the undeveloped state of
its intelligence; so the mere fact of the existence of these aspirations or
desires calls for a higher grade of creatures in which to become embodied. They
form a basis of life, as it were, or serve as a demand upon nature for the next
higher type, which shall show forth more intelligence than the former one; and
thus the chain of being is preserved, even though the forms of being are always
changing. And so evolution proceeds. I will repeat this idea, which I
consider very important, as showing the march of mind as expressed in desire. Every sane desire of every creature
is finally attained. If this attainment fails to show forth in the creature
itself, it goes on to development in some other ego. In the scale of evolution
it is the un-gratified desire of the lower creature that produces another grade
of creature higher than itself—so mighty is desire, and so unerring is the
fulfillment. It is the desire for food in the
first jelly-like forms of life that prompts their development on a higher
plane. These little forms of translucent jelly, having neither hands nor feet
nor mouth nor eyes, are nevertheless attracted to some tiny bit of food
floating in the water, about which they put forth parts of themselves until the
object is enveloped within their bodies. After the nutriment in the food has
been absorbed, the body unfolds and lets the residue pass out. Here is the
beginning of hands and feet and eyes and ears and a brain and a digestive
system. This development was by desire; desire for food. The desire for food
being gratified led to a thousand other desires; the number and greatness of
desires kept increasing, and the higher grades of life increased in consequence
until man came. The increase of desires in the creature added link after link
to the chain of being from the atom to the man. And what is man but a bundle of
desires? His desires are much more numerous and far reaching than those of any
of his predecessors. And as he is the culmination of all the desires of all his
predecessors, not one single desire of which has failed to be gratified, he has
a perfect right to believe that his own desires, great as they are getting to
be, will be gratified also. It is evident that desire is the
mainspring of all growth. It is also evident that no desire can exist that
cannot be met by the object desired; and thus a new marriage is formed; new
desires are begotten, and growth proceeds. |
Categories: Study of Man
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