The Holy Men of India Jung
The Holy Men of India Jung
The Holy Men of India Jung
[Introduction to Heinrich ZImmer, Dcr Weg zum Selbst: Lehre und Leben des
i
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THE HOLY MEN OF INDIA
of the meaning
edge, but above all through his brilliant grasp
and content of Indian mythology. Unhappily, the early death of
those beloved of the gods was fulfilled in him, and it remains
for us to mourn the loss of a that overcame the limitations
spirit
of the specialist and, turning towards humanity, bestowed upon
it the joyous gift of "immortal fruit/'
be. Therefore was not necessary to seek him out. I saw him all
it
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PSYCHOLOGY AND RELIGION : EAST
"self" is not really psychological but one could well say just
as metaphysical as our "man and God." The Indian lacks the
its
competence to differentiate between the two. Psychology can
only establish that the empiricism of the "self" exhibits a re-
ligious symptomatology, just as does that category of assertions
associated with the term "God." Although the phenomenon of
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THE HOLY MEN OF INDIA
God, and that, so far as a man is in the self, he is not only con-
tained in God but actually is God. Shri Ramana is quite explicit
on this point. No doubt this equation, too, is an "'interpreta-
tion." Equally, it is an interpretation to regard the self as the
validity. The only thing that can decide here is the preponder-
ance of psychic facts.
95 8 Thegoal of Eastern religious practice is the same as that
of Western mysticism: the shifting of the centre of gravity from
the to the self, from man to God. This means that the ego
ego
disappears in the self, and man in God. It is evident
that Shri
Ramana has either really been more or less absorbed by the
self, or has at least struggled earnestly all his life to extinguish
his ego in it. The Exercitia spiritualia reveal a similar striving:
they subordinate "self-possession" (possession of an ego)
as much
as possible to possession by Christ. Shri Ramana's elder con-
temporary, Ramakrishna, had the same
attitude concerning
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in favour o the pneumatic man. Shri Ramana speaks of his
body as "this clod." As against this, and taking into considera-
tion the complex nature of human experience (emotion plus
interpretation), the critical standpoint admits the importance
of ego-consciousness, well knowing that without ahamkdra there
would be absolutely no one there to register what w as happen- T
sition to the needs of the evolving self. In reality, i.e., with few
a succession of
exceptions, the entelechy of the self consists in
endless compromises, ego and self laboriously keeping the scales
balanced if all is to well. Too great a swing to one side or the
go
other is often of how not to set about
no more than an example
it. This certainly does not mean that extremes, when they occur
in a natural way, are in themselves evil. We make the right use
of them when we examine their meaning, and they give us
ample opportunity to do this in a manner deserving our grati-
tude. Exceptional human beings, carefully hedged about and
secluded, are invariably a gift of nature, enriching and widening
the scope of our consciousness but only if our capacity for re-
flection does not suffer Enthusiasm can be a veritable
shipwreck.
which
gift of the gods or a monster from hell. With the hybris
attends sets in, even if the resultant clouding of
it, corruption
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PSYCHOLOGY AND RELIGION : EAST
ages, and the individual life and work of the Maharshi illustrate
once again the passionate striving of the Indian for the liberat-
ing "Ground." I say "once again/' because India is about to
take the fateful step of becoming a State and entering into a
community of nations whose guiding principles have anything
and everything on the programme except detachment and
peace of the soul.
9 2 The Eastern peoples are threatened with a rapid collapse
of their spiritual values, and what replaces them cannot always
be counted among the best that Western civilization has pro-
duced. From this point of view, one could regard Ramakrishna
and Shri Ramana as modern prophets, who play the same com-
direct our attention to the fate of the inner man, which we set
aside as trifling. The life and teaching of Shri Ramana are of
significance not only for India, but for the West too. They are
more than a document humain: they are a warning message to
a humanity which threatens to lose itself in unconsciousness and
anarchy. It is perhaps, in the deeper sense, no accident that
Heinrich Zimmer's last book should leave a testament, the
us, as
life-work of a modern Indian prophet who exemplifies so im-
pressively the problem of psychic transformation.
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