Cosmology
The cosmology of Ananda Marga philosophy
centers around the Cosmic Cycle – the Cycle of Creation, or
Brahmacakra. It is a cycle because the finishing point is the same
as the starting point, as will become apparent. Note that the cycle
is a continual and concurrent process of transformation, with different
parts of it at different stages at any one time.
The Cosmic Entity is Brahma. It
is everything. Everything exists within It, and nothing exists outside
It. It is the one infinite, eternal and intransmutable bliss.
Brahma is composed of two parts:
the Cognitive Principle (Consciousness), and the Operative Principle
(Force). They are inseparable, just as fire cannot be separated
from its burning characteristic.
For philosophical purposes, Consciousness
is arbitrarily assigned the male gender, and is known as Purusa,
or Shiva. He is the nucleus and witnessing entity of the universe.
His Force is assigned the female gender, and is known as Prakrti,
or Shakti. She is the force which – under Purusa's direction
– transforms a part of Him into the universe. She is a blind
force and is always under His control. He does not act but allows
Her to act. He is the witness and the witnessed, and She is the
action.
Prakrti has three attributes, or
binding principles (gunas): the sentient force (sattvaguna), mutative
force (rajoguna), and static force (tamoguna).
In the first phase of the cycle,
first a small portion of Purusa is metamorphosed into the cosmic
sense of existence (Mahattattva – feeling of "I am") by the
sentient force. Then a small portion of that "I am" feeling is transformed
into the Ahamtattva (feeling of "I do") by the mutative force. Then
part of the Ahamtattva is transformed into the Cittatattva ("I have
done" feeing) by the static force. The Cittatattva contains all
the previous states before it, and all three (Cosmic Mahat, Aham
and Citta) constitute the Cosmic Mind, existing within the original
Consciousness, Purusa.
Continued bondage by the static
force on the Cosmic Citta causes further metamorphosis of Purusa
into the fundamental factors of the universe.
The universe is composed of five
fundamental factors: ethereal factor (space), aerial (gas), luminous
(heat/light), liquid and solid. Each factor is formed from the subtler
factor preceding it – from the transformation of part of that
factor from which it comes – and as a consequence contains
the essence of that preceding factor. Hence the aerial factor comes
from (and contains) the ethereal factor, the luminous comes from
the aerial and so on. All factors exist within the Cosmic Mind from
which they came, and the Cosmic Mind in turn is inherent within
them all. The universe is thus a thought-projection of the Cosmic
Mind. And as the Cosmic Mind also exists within Purusa, everything
is a part of Him and He is within everything.
The dominance of Prakrti over Purusa
increases, with each successive stage being cruder and denser than
the one before it, the solid factor being the crudest stage of manifestation.
Energy (prana) is formed in each factor from the pressure of the
static force on that factor. Vital energy (pranah) is formed from
the combination of all the different pranas of each fundamental
factor within a solid body (the solid factor contains all previous
factors within it).
Due to the continued pressure of
the static force on the solid factor, eventually the pressure becomes
excessive and one of two things occurs:
Explosion (jadasphota):
If the factors are not in the right
balance, eventually the solid factor (as a celestial body) will
explode, and its constituent factors will merge back into their
respective factors of the universe.
Life:
If the environment is congenial,
and the factors are in the right balance, some portion of the solid
factor gets pulverized subtler than ether, and the Citta within
it manifests as mind-stuff, which gives the feeling of "Done-I"
to a new unit mind. That mind gets attached to an appropriate body
and controls the vital energy of that body, which in turn controls
the body's functions.
Because the individual mind comes
out of the solid factor from a small part of the Cosmic Mind latent
within that factor, it is said that "the microcosm is a miniature
of the Macrocosm." It can therefore be seen that mind comes from
matter, and matter – via the Cosmic Mind – in turn comes
from Consciousness.
Now the Witnessing Consciousness
(Purusa) begins to withdraw the power from His Operative Principle.
He has allowed Her to bind Him to the ultimate state of crudity
(this process is called Saincara), and He now gradually contracts
Her power until the unit mind merges back into Him. This returning
phase is known as Pratisaincara.
In the course of Pratisaincara the
unit mind gradually evolves over many different births, in many
different bodies. It adopts more complex physical structures as
it evolves, appropriate to its desire of expression. Note that there
is a clear distinction here between body and mind. The body is the
vehicle that the mind adopts according to its degree of evolution
– life being the existence of mind in association with a particular
body, and death being the temporary loss of the physical structure
until a new one is attained by the mind.
The mind develops as the bondage
of the binding principles decreases. At first the static force within
the mind dominates, and citta (instinct) is the predominant tendency.
In the course of development, the mutative force eventually becomes
dominant, and the unit aham ("doer I") evolves out of the citta.
The dominance of aham over citta manifests as the intellect, or
ego. Finally, the sentient force dominates the mutative, and unit
mahat (existential "I-feeling") evolves out of the aham. The dominance
of mahat over aham manifests as intuition.
So we may find creatures and plants
with only instinct, or with intellect as well, or with all three
(instinct, intellect and intuition). In undeveloped beings it is
instinct which dominates. In developing beings there is an increase
of intellect over instinct. But it is only at the human stage that
intellect is predominant.
At this stage the mind starts to
question the nature of its own existence and the spiritual quest
begins. The desire for spiritual practice increases as the ego is
gradually eclipsed by intuition and the attraction for the Supreme
Nucleus. This attraction is called devotion, or bhakti. Devotion
is love for the Infinite. It is said that when devotion is attained,
everything is attained, because it leads to final merger with the
Supreme.
"Knowing oneself is the real knowledge;
serving all with the ideation of God the real action;
and the vow to please God the real devotion."
Shrii Shrii Anandamurti
Attraction towards the Cosmic Nucleus accelerates as the mind expands
and becomes more subtle. One begins to experience the merger of
mind in the Goal. This is called samadhi, which literally means
"sameness (absorption, or oneness) with the Goal." Although there
are different types of samadhi, they can all be classified into
two general categories: savikalpa and nirvikalpa.
Savikalpa means "with vikalpa,"
or "with mental thought or feeling." So Savikalpa Samadhi is the
state of absorption in the Cosmic Mind. Because the essence of mind
(even the Cosmic Mind) is the "I am" feeling (the existential "I-feeling"),
there remains in this samadhi the feeling of existence, or "I am."
Nirvikalpa Samadhi is the state
of non-qualified absorption, where the tendencies of mind are completely
suspended. Nirvikalpa means "without vikalpa," or "without mental
thought or feeling." It is the state of absolute bliss – complete
absorption in Cosmic Consciousness. It is not possible to come even
close to thinking about this state, let alone describing it, because
it is beyond the mind. One's mind exists in and of Consciousness.
We cannot think about it simply because it is not possible to think
of anything beyond the boundary of one's own mind. The only way
of recognizing that one has been in that supreme state is the experience
of waves of bliss in the mind that follow it.
"I do not say that I know Him; nor do I say
that I do not know Him.
Because I know that He is beyond all knowing and not knowing."
Shrii Shrii Anandamurti
Savikalpa Samadhi of permanent nature is called liberation, or mukti.
It is the dissolution of mind into the Cosmic Mind. Nirvikalpa Samadhi
of permanent nature is called salvation, or moksa. It is the permanent
absorption of mind in Cosmic Consciousness.
Spiritual practice, therefore, is
the process of transcending the mind into the Consciousness within
which it exists: the Cosmic Consciousness. It is this transcendence
of the "I-feeling" that results in the supreme experience of the
Absolute: "Where 'I' is, 'He' is not; where 'He' is, 'I' is not."
"Cosmic Consciousness abides in the very sense
of existence,
in one's very heart's desire."
Shrii Shrii Anandamurti
Where Consciousness exists both as the nucleus Witnessing Entity
and the metamorphosed Cosmic Mind (and universe), that state of
Brahma is known as Saguna Brahma. Where Consciousness exists only
in its un-metamorphosed state (Prakrti here is dormant), that state
is known as Nirguna Brahma.
Taraka Brahma is the common point
between the two. In this state Brahma adopts a physical body of
the five fundamental factors (Mahasambhuti) and manifests as Sadguru
(the highest guru). It is said that when the desire for liberation
arises in the mind, one attains one's Sadguru. He is the guru in
the real sense of the term because He is the bridge between Nirguna
and Saguna Brahma, and is able to teach the proper method of transcendence
from the manifested worldly state to the unmanifested state of Supreme
Bliss. This is essentially a devotional process.
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