A SERIES OF
Lessons
in Gnani Yoga
THE EIGHTH LESSON THE
ASCENT OF MAN
In our last lesson we
led you by successive steps from the
beginnings of Life in living forms
up to the creatures closely
resembling the family of
vertebrates--the highest family of
living forms on this planet. In this
present lesson we take up the story
of the "Ascent of Man" from the
lowly vertebrate forms.
The large sub-family of forms called
"The Vertebrates" are distinguished
from the Invertebrates by reason of
the former possessing an internal
bony skeleton, the most important
feature of which is the vertebra or
spinal column. The vertebrates, be
it remembered, possess practically
the same organs as the lower forms
of life, but differ from them most
materially by the possession of the
internal skeleton, the lower forms
having an external or outside
_skeleton_, which latter is merely a
hardening of the skin.
The flexibility of the vertebra
creates a wonderful strength of
structure, combined with an ease of
movement peculiar to the
vertebrates, and which renders them
the natural forms of life capable of
rapid development and evolution. By
means of this strength, and ease,
these forms are enabled to move
rapidly in pursuit of their prey,
and away from their pursuers, and
also to resist outside pressure or
attack. They are protected in a way
similar to the invertebrates having
shells, and yet have the additional
advantage of easy movement.
Differing in shape and appearance as
do the numerous members of the
sub-family of vertebrates, still
their structure is easily seen to
spring from a single form--all are
modifications of some common
pattern, the differences arising
from the necessities of the life of
the animal, as manifested through
the desire and necessities of the
species.
Science shows the direct
relationship between the
Vertebrates, and the Invertebrates
by means of several
connecting-links, the most
noticeable of which is the Lancelot,
a creature resembling the fish-form,
and yet also closely resembling the
lower (invertebrate) forms of life.
This creature has no head, and but
one eye. It is semi-transparent, and
possesses cilia for forcing in the
water containing its food. It has
something like gills, and a gullet
like the lower forms. It has no
heart, the blood being circulated by
means of contracting vessels or
parts. Strictly speaking, it has no
back-bone, or vertebra, but still
Science has been compelled to class
it among the vertebrates because is
has a gristly cartilage where the
back-bone is found in the higher
forms.
This gristle may be called an
"elementary spine." It has a nervous
system consisting of a single cord
which spreads into a broadened end
near the creature's mouth, and which
may therefore be regarded as
"something like a brain." This
creature is really a developed form
of Invertebrate, shaped like a
Vertebrate, and showing signs of a
rudimentary spine and nervous system
of the latter. It is a
"connecting-link."
The lowest forms of the true
Vertebrates are the great families
of Fishes. These Fish families
include fishes ofhigh and low
degree, some of the higher forms
being as different from the lowest
as they (the highest) are different
from the Reptile family. It is not
necessary to go into detail
regarding the nature of the fish
families, for every student is more
or less familiar with them.
Some peculiar forms of fish show a
shading into the Reptile family, in
fact they seem to belong nearly as
much to the latter as to their own
general family. Some species of fish
known as the Dipnoi or
"double-breathers," have a
remarkable dual system of breathing.
That is, they have gills for
breathing while in the water, and
also have a primitive or elementary
"lung" in the shape of an
air-bladder, or "sound," which they
use for breathing on land. The
Mud-fish of South America, and also
other forms in Australia and other
places, have a modification of fins
which are practically "limbs," which
they actually use for traveling on
land from pond to pond. Some of
these fish have been known to travel
enormous distances in search of new
pools of water, or new streams,
having been driven from their
original homes by droughts, or
perhaps by instincts similar to the
migrating instinct of birds. Eels
are fish (although many commonly
forget this fact) and many of their
species are able to leave the water
and travel on land from pond to
pond, their breathing being
performed by a peculiar modification
of the gills. The climbing perch of
India are able to live out of water,
and have modified gills for
breathing purposes, and modified
fins for climbing and walking. So
you see that without leaving the
fish family proper, we have examples
of land living creatures which are
akin to "connecting links."
But there are real
"connecting-links"' between the Fish
and the Reptiles. Passing over the
many queer forms which serve as
links between the two families, we
have but to consider our common
frog's history for a striking
example. The Tadpole has gills, has
no limbs, uses its tail like a
fish's fin, eats plants, etc.
Passing through several interesting
stages the Tadpole reaches a stage
in which it is a frog with a
tail--then it sheds its tail and is
a full fledged Frog, with four legs;
web-feet; no tail; and feeding on
animals. The Frog is amphibious,
that is, able to live on land or in
water--and yet it is compelled to
come to the surface of the water for
air to supply its lungs. Some of the
amphibious animals possess both
lungs and gills, even when matured;
but the higher vertebrates living in
the water breathe through lungs
which are evolved from the
air-bladder of fishes, which in turn
have been evolved from the primitive
gullet of the lower forms. There are
fishes known which are warm-blooded.
Students will kindly remember that
the Whale is not a fish, but an
aquatic animal--a mammal, in fact,
bringing forth its young alive, and
suckling it from its breasts.
So we readily see that it is but a
step, and a short step at that,
between the land-traveling and
climbing fishes and the lower forms
of Reptiles. The Frog shows us the
process of evolution between the two
families, its life history
reproducing the gradual evolution
which may have required ages to
perfect in the case of the species.
You will remember that the embryo
stages of all creatures reproduce
the various stages of evolution
through which the species has
passed--this is true in Man as well
as in the Frog.
We need not tarry long in
considering the Reptile family of
living forms. In its varieties of
serpents, lizards, crocodiles,
turtles, etc., we have studied and
observed its forms. We see the
limbless snakes; the lizards with
active limbs; the huge, clumsy, slow
crocodiles and alligators--the
armor-bearing turtles and
tortoises--all belonging to the one
great family of Reptiles, and nearly
all of them being degenerate
descendants of the mighty Reptile
forms of the geological Age of
Reptiles, in which flourished the
mighty forms of the giant
reptiles--the monsters of land and
water. Amidst the dense vegetation
of that pre-historic age, surrounded
by the most favorable conditions,
these mighty creatures flourished
and lived, their fossilized skeleton
forms evidencing to us how far their
descendants have fallen, owing to
less favorable conditions, and the
development of other life-forms more
in harmony with their changed
environment.
Next comes the great family of
Birds. The Birds ascended from the
Reptiles. This is the Eastern
Teaching, and this is the teaching
of Western Science It was formerly
taught in the text-books that the
line of ascent was along the family
of winged reptiles which existed in
the Age of Reptiles, in the early
days of the Earth. But the later
writers on the subject, in the
Western world, have contradicted
this. It is now taught that these
ancient winged-reptiles were
featherless, and more closely
resembled the Bat family than birds.
(You will remember that a Bat is
neither a reptile nor a bird--it is
a mammal, bringing forth its young
alive, and suckling them at its
breast. The Bat is more like a
mouse, and its wings are simply
membrane stretched between its
fingers, its feet, and its tail.)
The line of ascent from Reptile to
Bird was along the forms of the
Reptiles that walked on land. There
are close anatomical and
physiological relations and
correspondences between the two
families (Reptiles and Birds) which
we need not refer to here. And, of
course, many modifications have
occurred since the "branching-out."
The scales of the reptiles, and the
feathers of the birds, are known to
be but modifications of the original
outer skin, as are also the hair,
claws, hoofs, nails, etc., of all
animals. Even teeth arose in this
way, strange as it may now
seem--they are all secreted from the
skin. What a wonderful field for
thought--this gradual evolution from
the filmy outer covering of the
lowest living forms to the beautiful
feathers, beaks, and claws of the
bird!
The evolving of wings meant much to
the ascending forms of life. The
Reptiles were compelled to live in a
narrow circle of territory, while
the Birds were able to travel over
the earth in wide flights. And
travel always develops the faculties
of observation, memory, etc., and
cultivates the senses of seeing,
hearing, etc. And the creature is
compelled to exercise its evolving
"thinking" faculties to a greater
extent. And so the Birds were
compelled by necessity of their
travels to develop a greater degree
of thinking organism. The result is
that among birds we find many
instances of intelligent thought,
which cannot be dismissed as "mere
instinct." Naturalists place the
Crow at the head of the family of
Birds, in point of intelligence, and
those who have watched these
creatures and studied the mental
processes, will agree that this is a
just decision. It has been proven
that Crows are capable of counting
up to several figures, and in other
ways they display a wonderful degree
of almost human sagacity.
Next above the Bird family comes the
highest form of all--the Mammals.
But before we begin our
consideration of these high forms,
let us take a hasty glance at the
"connecting-links" between the Birds
and the Mammals. The lowest forms of
the Mammals resemble Birds in many
ways. Some of them are toothless,
and many of them have the same
primitive intestinal arrangements
possessed by the birds, from which
arises their name, Monotremes. These
Monotremes may be called half-bird
and half-mammal. One of the most
characteristic of their family is
the _Ornithorhynchus_, or Duck-bill,
which the early naturalists first
thought was a fraud of the
taxidermists, or bird-stuffers, and
then, when finally convinced, deemed
it a "freak-of-nature." But it is
not a freak creature, but a
"connecting-link" between the two
great families of creatures. This
animal presents a startling
appearance to the observer who
witnesses it for the first time. It
resembles a beaver, having a soft
furry coat, but also has a horny,
flat bill like a duck, its feet
being webbed, but also furnished
with claws projecting over the edge
of the web-foot. It lays eggs in an
underground nest--two eggs at a
time, which are like the eggs of
birds, inasmuch as they contain not
only the protoplasm from which the
embryo is formed, but also the
"yolk." on which the embryo feeds
until hatched. After the young
Duck-bill is hatched, it feeds from
teatless glands in the mother's
body, the milk being furnished by
the mother by a peculiar process.
Consider this _miracle_--an animal
which lays eggs and then when her
young are hatched nourishes them
with milk. The milk-glands in the
mother are elementary "breasts."
The above-mentioned animal is found
in Australia, the land of many
strange forms and
"connecting-links," which have
survived there while in other parts
of the globe they have vanished
gradually from existence, crowded
out by the more perfectly evolved
forms. Darwin has called these
surviving forms "living fossils." In
that same land is also found the
Echidna or spiny ant-eater, which
lays an egg and then hatches it in
her pouch, after which she nourishes
it on milk, in a manner similar to
that of the Duck-bill. This animal,
like the Duck-bill, is a Monotreme.
Scientists are divided in theories
as to whether the Monotremes are
actually descended directly from the
Reptiles or Birds, or whether there
was a common ancestor from which
Reptiles and Birds and Mammals
branched off. But this is not
important, for the relationship
between Reptiles, Birds and Mammals
is clearly proven. And the
Monotremes are certainly one of the
surviving forms of the intermediate
stages.
The next higher step in the ascent
of Mammal life above the Monotreme
is occupied by the Marsupials, or
_milk-giving, pouched animals_, of
which family the opossum and
kangaroo are well known members. The
characteristic feature of this
family of creatures is the
possession of an external pouch in
the female, in which the young are
kept and nourished until they can
take care of themselves as the young
of other animals are able to do. The
young of the Marsupials are brought
forth, or born, in an imperfect
condition, and undeveloped in size
and strength. There are fossil
remains of Marsupials showing that
in past ages creatures of this kind
existed which were as large as
elephants.
In the more common form of Mammals
the young are brought forth fully
formed, they having received
"nourishment, before birth, from the
mother's body, through the
_placenta_, the appendage which
connects the fetus with the parent.
The Placental Mammals were the best
equipped of all the life-forms for
survival and development, for the
reason that the young were nourished
during their critical period, and
the care that the mammal must of
necessity give to her young operated
in the direction of affording a
special protection far superior to
that of the other forms. This and
other causes acted to place the
Placentals in the "Royal line" from
which Man was evolved.
The following families of Placental
Mammals are recognized by Science,
each having its own structural
peculiarities:
The _Edentata_, or Toothless
creatures, among which are the
sloths, ant-eaters, armadillos, etc.
These animals seem to be closer to
the Monotremes than they are to the
Marsupials;
The _Sirenia_, so called by reason
of their fanciful resemblance to the
sirens of mythology, among which are
the sea-cows, manatees, dugongs,
etc., which are fish-like in
structure and appearance, the
fore-limbs being shaped like
paddles, or fins, and the hind-limbs
being absent or rudimentary;
The _Cetacea_, or Whale Family,
including whales, Porpoises,
dolphins, etc., which are quite
fish-like in appearance and
structure, their forms being adapted
for life in the sea, although they
are, of course, Mammals, bringing
forth matured young which are
suckled at the breast;
The _Ungulata_, or Hoofed Animals,
which comprise many varied forms,
such as the horse, the tapir, the
rhinoceros, the swine, the
hippopotamus, the camel, the deer,
the sheep, the cow, etc., etc.;
The _Hyracoidea_, which is a small
family, the principal member of
which is the coney, or rock rabbit,
which has teeth resembling those of
the hoofed animals, in some ways,
and those of the gnawing animals in
the others.
The _Proboscidea_, or Trunked
Animals, which family is represented
in this age only by the families of
elephants, which have a peculiar
appendage called a "trunk," which
they use as an additional limb;
The _Carnivora_, or Flesh-eaters,
represented by numerous and various
forms, such as the seal, the bear,
the weasel, the wolf, the dog, the
lion, the tiger, the leopard, etc.
The wolf and similar forms belong to
the sub-family of dogs; while the
lion, tiger, etc., belong to the
sub-family of cats;
The _Rodentia_, or Gnawers,
comprising the rat, the hare, the
beaver, the squirrel, the mouse,
etc., etc.;
The _Insectivora_, or Insect
Feeders, comprising the mole, the
shrew, the hedgehog, etc.;
The _Chiroptera_, or Finger-Winged
Animals, comprising the great family
of Bats, etc., which are very highly
developed animals;
The _Lemuroidea_, or Lemurs, the
name of which is derived from the
Latin word meaning a "ghost," by
reason of the Lemur's habits of
roaming about at night. The Lemur is
a nocturnal animal, somewhat
resembling the Monkey in general
appearance, but with a long, bushy
tail and sharp muzzle like a fox. It
is akin to a small fox having hands
and feet like a monkey, the feet
being used to grasp like a hand, as
is the case with the true Monkey
family. These creatures are classed
by some naturalists among the
Monkeys by reason of being
"four-handed," while others are
disposed to consider as still more
important their marked relationship
with, and affinity to, the
marsupials, gnawers and
insect-feeders. On the whole, these
creatures are strangely organized
and come very near to being a
"connecting-link" between other
forms. One of the Lemurs is what is
known as the _colugo_, or "flying
lemur," which resembles a squirrel
in many particulars, and yet has a
membranous web extending from its
hands, which enables it to make
flying leaps over great distances.
This last named variety seems to
furnish a link between the
insect-feeders and the Primates;
The _Primates_, which is a large
family comprising the various forms
of monkeys, baboons, man-apes, such
as the gibbon, gorilla, chimpanzee,
orang-outang, etc., all of which
have big jaws, small brains, and a
stooping posture. This family also
includes MAN, with his big brain and
erect posture, and his many races
depending upon shape of skull, color
of skin, character of hair, etc.
In considering the Ascent of Man
(physical) from the lowly forms of
the Monera, etc., up to his present
high position, the student is struck
with the continuity of the ascent,
development and unfoldment. While
there are many "missing-links,"
owing to the disappearance of the
forms which formed the connection,
still there is sufficient proof left
in the existing forms to satisfy the
fair-minded inquirer. The facts of
embryology alone are sufficient
proof of the ascent of Man from the
lowly forms. Each and every man
today has passed through all the
forms of the ascent within a few
months, from single cell to the
new-born, fully formed infant.
Embryology teaches us that the eggs
from which all animal forms evolve
are all practically alike so far as
one can ascertain by microscopic
examination, no matter how diverse
may be the forms which will evolve
from them, and this resemblance is
maintained even when the embryo of
the higher forms begins to manifest
traces of its future form. Von Baer,
the German scientist, was the first
to note this remarkable and
suggestive fact.
He stated it in the following words:
"In my possession are two little
embryos, preserved in alcohol, whose
names I have omitted to attach, and
at present I am unable to state to
what class they belong. They may be
lizards, or small birds, or very
young mammals, so complete is the
similarity in the mode of the
formation of the head and trunk in
these animals. The extremities,
however, are still absent in these
embryos. But even if they had
existed in the earliest stage of
their development, we should learn
nothing, for the feet of lizards and
mammals, the wings and feet of
birds, no less than the hands and
feet of man, all arise from the same
fundamental form."
As has been said by Prof. Clodd,
"the embryos of all living creatures
epitomize during development the
series of changes through which the
ancestral forms passed if their
ascent from the simple to the
complex; the higher structures
passing through the same stages as
the lower structures up to the point
when they are marked off from them,
yet never becoming in detail the
form which they represent for the
time being. For example, the embryo
of man has at the outset gill-like
slits on each side of the neck, like
a fish. These give place to a
membrane like that which supersedes
gills in the development of birds
and reptiles; the heart is at first
a simple pulsating chamber like that
in worms; the backbone is prolonged
into a movable tail; the great toe
is extended, or opposable, like our
thumbs, and like the toes of apes;
the body three months before birth
is covered all over with hair except
on the palms and soles. At birth the
head is relatively larger, and the
arms and legs relatively longer than
in the adult; the nose is
bridgeless; both features, with
others which need not be detailed,
being distinctly ape-like. Thus does
the egg from which man springs, a
structure only one hundred and
twenty-fifth of an inch in size,
compress into a few weeks the
results of millions of years, and
set before us the history of his
development from fish-like and
reptilian forms, and of his more
immediate descent from a hairy,
tailed quadruped. That which is
individual or peculiar to him, the
physical and mental character
inherited, is left to the slower
development which follows birth."
This, then, in brief is the Western
theory of Evolution--the Physical
Ascent of Man. We have given it as
fully as might be in the small space
at our disposal in these lessons on
the Yogi Philosophy. Why? Because we
wish to prove to the Western mind,
in the Western way, that Western
Science corroborates the Ancient
Yogi Teachings of the Unfoldment of
Living Forms, from Monad to Man. The
Eastern teachers scorn to "prove"
anything to their pupils, who sit at
the feet of teachers and accept as
truth that which is taught them, and
which has been handed down from the
dim ages long past. But this method
will never do for the Western
student--he must have it "proven" to
him by physical facts and instances,
not by keen, subtle, intellectual
reasoning alone. The Eastern student
wishes to be "told"--the Western
student wishes to be "shown." Herein
lies the racial differences of
method of imparting knowledge. And
so we have recognized this fact and
have heaped up proof after proof
from the pages of Western Science,
in order to prove to you the
reasonableness, from the Western
point of view, of the doctrine of
Physical Unfoldment as taught for
ages past by the Yogi gurus to their
chelas. You have now the Eastern
Teachings on the subject, together
with the testimony of Western
Science to the reasonableness of the
idea.
But, alas! Western Science, while
performing a marvelous work in
piling up fact after fact to support
its newly-discovered theory of
Evolution, in a way utterly unknown
to the Oriental thinker who seeks
after principles by mental
concentration--within rather than
without--while actually proving by
physical facts the mental
conceptions of the Oriental
Teachings, still misses the vital
point of the subject-thought. In its
materialistic tendencies it has
failed to recognize the mental cause
of the physical unfoldment. It is
true that Lamark, the real Western
discoverer of Evolution, taught that
Desire and Mental Craving, was the
real force behind Evolution, but his
ideas were jeered at by his
contemporaries, and are not regarded
seriously by the majority of
Evolutionists even today. And yet he
was nearer to the truth than Darwin
or any other Western Evolutionist.
And time will show that Science has
overlooked his genius, which alone
throws the true light upon the
subject.
In order to see just this difference
between the Darwinian school and the
Yogi Teachings let us examine into
what causes the Western
Evolutionists give for the fact of
Evolution itself. We shall do this
briefly.
The Darwinians start out to explain
the causes of the "Origin of
Species," with the statement that
"no two individuals of the same
species are exactly alike; each
tends to vary." This is a
self-evident fact, and is very
properly used as a starting point
for Variation. The next step is then
stated as "variations are
transmitted, and therefore tend to
become permanent," which also is
self-evident, and tends to prove the
reasonableness of the gradual
evolution of species. The next step
in the argument is "as man produces
new species and forms, by breeding,
culture, etc., so has Nature in a
longer time produced the same
effect, in the same way." This also
is reasonable, although it tends to
personify Nature, and to give it a
mind before the evolutionists admit
"mind" was evolved.
It will be as well to quote Darwin
himself on this point. He says; "As
man can produce, and certainly has
produced, a great result by his
methodical and unconscious means of
selection, what may not natural
selection effect? Man can act only
on external and visible characters,
while Nature, if I may be allowed to
personify the natural preservation
or survival of the fittest, cares
nothing for appearances except in so
far as they are useful to any being.
She can act on every internal organ,
on every shade of constitutional
difference, on the whole machinery
of life. Man selects only for his
own good; Nature only for the good
of the being which she tends. Every
selected character is fully
exercised by her, as is implied by
the fact of their selection. Man
keeps the natives of many climates
in the same country; he seldom
exercises each selected character in
some peculiar and fitting manner; he
feeds a long-beaked and a
short-beaked pigeon on the same
food; he does not exercise a
long-backed or long-legged quadruped
in any peculiar manner; he exposes
sheep with long hair and short wool
in the same climate. He does not
allow the most vigorous males to
struggle for the females. He does
not rigidly destroy all inferior
animals, but protects during each
varying season, so far as lies in
his power, all his productions. He
often begins his selection by some
half-monstrous form, or at least by
some modification prominent enough
to catch the eye or to be plainly
useful to him. Under Nature the
slightest differences of structure
or constitution may- well turn the
nicely balanced scale in the
struggle for life, and so be
preserved. How fleeting are the
wishes and efforts of man! how short
his time! and consequently how poor
will be his results, compared with
those accumulated by nature during
whole geological periods! Can we
wonder, then, that Nature's
productions should be far 'truer' in
character than man's productions;
that they should be infinitely
better adapted to the most complex
conditions of life, and should
plainly bear the stamp of far higher
workmanship?"
Darwin's theory of survival of the
fittest is begun by the statement of
the fact that the number of
organisms that survive are very
small compared with the number that
are born. To quote his own words,
"There is no exception to the rule
that every organic being naturally
increases at so high a rate that, if
not destroyed, the earth would soon
be covered by the progeny of a
single pair. Even slow-breeding man
has doubled in twenty-five years,
and at this rate in less than a
thousand years there would literally
not be standing room for the
progeny." It has been computed that
if the offspring of the elephant,
which is believed to be the slowest
breeding animal known, were to
survive, there would be about
20,000,000 elephants on the earth in
750 years.
The roe of a single cod contains
eight or nine millions of eggs, and
if each egg were to hatch, and the
fish survive, the sea would shortly
become a solid mass of codfish. The
house fly is said to have 20,000,000
descendants in a season, counting
several generations of progeny, from
its several broods. And some
scientist has computed that the
_aphis_, or plant-louse, breeds so
rapidly, and in such enormous
quantity, that the tenth generation
of one set of parents would be so
large that it would contain more
ponderable animal matter than would
the population of China, which is
estimated at 500,000,000! And this
without counting the progeny
preceding the tenth generation!
The result of the above conditions
is very plain. There must ensue a
Struggle for Existence, which
necessitates the Survival of the
Fittest. The weak are crushed out by
the strong; the swift out-distance
the slow. The individual forms or
species best adapted to their
environment and best equipped for
the struggle, be the equipment
physical or mental, survive those
less well equipped or less well
adapted to environment. Animals
evolving variations in structure
that give them even a slight
advantage over others not so
favored, naturally have a better
chance to survive. And this,
briefly, is what Evolutionists call
"The Survival of the Fittest."
As appertaining to the Struggle for
Existence, color and mimicry are
important factors. Grant Allen, in
his work on Darwin, says concerning
this, and also as illustrating
"Natural Selection": "In the desert
with its monotonous sandy coloring,
a black insect or a white insect,
still more a red insect or a blue
insect, would be immediately
detected and devoured by its natural
enemies, the birds and the lizards.
But any greyish or yellowish insects
would be less likely to attract
attention at first sight, and would
be overlooked as long as there were
any more conspicuous individuals of
their own kind about for the birds
and lizards to feed on.
Hence, in a very short time the
desert would be depopulated of all
but the greyest and yellowest
insects; and among these the birds
would pick out those which differed
most markedly in hue and shade from
the sand around them. But those
which happened to vary most in the
direction of a sandy or spotty color
would be more likely to survive, and
to become the parents of future
generations. Thus, in the course of
long ages, all the insects which
inhabit deserts have become
sand-colored, because the less sandy
were perpetually picked out for
destruction by their ever-watchful
foes, while the most sandy escaped,
and multiplied and replenished the
earth with their own likes."
Prof. Clodd, remarking upon this
fact, adds: "Thus, then, is
explained the tawny color of the
larger animals that inhabit the
desert; the stripes upon the tiger,
which parallel with the vertical
stems of bamboo, conceal him as he
stealthily nears his prey; the
brilliant green of tropical birds;
the leaf-like form and colors of
certain insects; the dried,
twig-like form of many caterpillars;
the bark-like appearance of
tree-frogs; the harmony of the
ptarmigan's summer plumage with the
lichen-colored stones upon which it
sits; the dusky color of creatures
that haunt the night; the bluish
transparency of animals which live
on the surface of the sea; the
gravel-like color of flat-fish that
live at the bottom; and the gorgeous
tints of those that swim among the
coral reefs."
All this does not run contrary to
the Yogi Philosophy, although the
latter would regard these things as
but the secondary cause for the
variation and survival of species,
etc. The Oriental teachings are that
it is the desire of the animal that
causes it to assume the colors and
shapes in accordance with its
environment, the desire of course
operating along sub-conscious lines
of physical manifestation. The
mental influence, which is the real
cause of the phenomena, and which is
taught as such by the Yogis, is
almost lost sight of by the Western
Evolutionists, who are apt to regard
Mind as a "by-product" of matter. On
the contrary, the Yogis regard
Matter as the product of Mind. But
there is no conflict here as far as
regards the law of the Survival of
the Fittest. The insects that most
desired to become sand-colored
became so, and were thus protected,
while their less "desireful"
brethren were exterminated. The
Western scientist explains the
outward phenomena, but does not look
for the cause behind it, which is
taught by the Oriental sages.
The doctrine of "Sexual Selection"
is another of the leading tenets of
the Darwinists. Briefly, it may be
expressed as the theory that in the
rivalry and struggle of the males
for the females the strongest males
win the day, and thus transmit their
particular qualities to their
offspring. Along the same lines is
that of the attraction exerted by
bright colors in the plumage of the
males of birds, etc., which give
them an advantage in the eyes of the
females, and thus, naturally, the
bright colors are perpetuated.
This, then, is the brief outline of
the Story of Man's Physical
Evolution, as stated by Western
Science, and compared with the Yogi
Teachings. The student should
compare the two ideas, that he may
harmonize and reconcile them. It
must be remembered, however, that
Darwin did not teach that Man
descended from the monkeys, or apes,
as we know them now. The teaching of
Western Evolution is that the apes,
and higher forms of monkey life
descended from some common ancestral
form, which same ancestor was also
the ancestor of Man. In other words,
Man and Apes are the different
branches that emerged from the
common trunk ages ago. Other forms
doubtless emerged from the same
trunk, and perished because less
adapted to their environments. The
Apes were best adapted to their own
environments, and Man was best
adapted to his. The weaker branches
failed.
One must remember that the most
savage races known to us today are
practically as far different from
the highest American, European or
Hindu types of Man as from the
highest Apes. Indeed, it would seem
far easier for a high Ape to evolve
into a Kaffir, Hottentot, or Digger
Indian, than for the latter to
evolve into an Emerson, Shakespeare,
or Hindu Sage. As Huxley has shown,
the brain-structure of Man compared
with that of the Chimpanzee shows
differences but slight when compared
with the difference between that of
the Chimpanzee and that of the
Lemur. The same authority informs us
that in the important feature of the
deeper brain furrows, and intricate
convolutions, the chasm between the
highest civilized man and the lowest
savage is far greater than between
the lowest savage and the highest
man-like ape. Darwin, describing the
Fuegians, who are among the very
lowest forms of savages, says:
"Their very signs and expressions
are less intelligible to us than
those of the domesticated animal.
They are men who do not possess the
instinct of those animals, nor yet
appear to boast of human reason, or
at least of arts consequent upon
that reason."
Professor Clodd, in describing the
"primitive man," says: "Doubtless he
was lower than the lowest of the
savages of today--a powerful,
cunning biped, with keen sense
organs always sharper, in virtue of
constant exercise, in the savage
than in the civilized man (who
supplements them by science), strong
instincts, uncontrolled and fitful
emotions, small faculty of wonder,
and nascent reasoning power; unable
to forecast tomorrow, or to
comprehend yesterday, living from
hand to mouth on the wild products
of Nature, clothed in skin and bark,
or daubed with clay, and finding
shelter in trees and caves; ignorant
of the simplest arts, save to chip a
stone missile, and perhaps to
produce fire; strong in his needs of
life and vague sense of right to it
and to what he could get, but slowly
impelled by common perils and
passions to form ties, loose and
haphazard at the outset, with his
kind, the power of combination with
them depending on sounds, signs and
gestures."
Such was the ancestral man. Those
who are interested in him are
referred to the two wonderful tales
of the cave-man written in the form
of stories by two great modern
novelists. The books referred to are
(1) "_The Story of Ab_," by Stanley
Waterloo, and (2) "_Before Adam_,"
by Jack London. They may be obtained
from any bookseller. Both are works
of fiction, with the scientific
facts cleverly interwoven into them.
And now in conclusion before we pass
on the subject of "Spiritual
Evolution," which will form the
subject of our next lesson, we would
again call your attention to the
vital difference between the Western
and the Eastern Teachings. The
Western holds to a mechanical theory
of life, which works without the
necessity of antecedent Mind, the
latter appearing as a "product" at a
certain stage. The Eastern holds
_that Mind is back of, under, and
antecedent to all the work of
Evolution_--the _cause_, not the
effect or product. The Western
claims that Mind was produced by the
struggle of Matter to produce higher
forms of itself. The Eastern
claims that the whole process of
Evolution is caused by Mind
striving, struggling and pressing
forward toward expressing itself
more fully--to liberate itself from
the confining and retarding
Matter--the struggle resulting in an
Unfoldment which causes sheath after
sheath of the confining material
bonds to be thrown off and
discarded, in the effort to release
the confined Spirit which is behind
even the Mind. The Yogi Teachings
are that the Evolutionary Urge is
the pressure of the confined Spirit
striving to free itself from the
fetters and bonds which sorely
oppress it.
The struggle and pain of Evolution
is the parturition-pangs of the
Spiritual deliverance from the womb
of Matter. Like all birth it is
attended by pain and suffering, but
the end justifies it all. And as the
human mother forgets her past
suffering in the joy of witnessing
the face, and form, and life, of her
loved child, so will the soul forget
the pain of the Spiritual birth by
reason of the beauty and nobility of
that which will be born to and from
it.
Let us study well the story of
Physical Evolution, but let us not
lose ourselves in it, for it is but
the preliminary to the story of the
Unfoldment of the Soul.
Let us not despise the tale of the
Body of Man--for it is the story of
the Temple of the Spirit which has
been built up from the most humble
beginnings, until it has reached the
present high stage. And yet even
this is but the beginning, for the
work will go on, and on, and on, in
the spirit of those beautiful lines
of Holmes:
"Build thee more stately mansions,
oh, my soul! As the swift seasons
roll! Leave thy low-vaulted past!
Let each new temple, nobler than the
last, Shut thee from heaven with a
dome more vast, Till thou at last
_art free_, Leaving thine outgrown
shell by life's unresting sea."
Mind
Page authored by David West.
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