Theosophy; The New Rock ‘n
Roll
Helena
Petrovna Blavatsky
1831
-1891
Theosophy
Megastar
______________________
More
from H P Blavatsky on
Remembering
Past Lives
ON RE-INCARNATION OR RE-BIRTH
WHAT IS MEMORY ACCORDING TO
THE THEOSOPHICAL TEACHING?
ENQ. The most difficult thing for you to do, will be to explain and
give reasonable grounds for such a belief. No Theosophist has ever yet
succeeded in bringing forward a single valid proof to shake my scepticism.
First of all, you have against this theory of re-incarnation, the fact that no
single man has yet been found to remember that he has lived, least of all who
he was, during his previous life.
THEO. Your argument, I see, tends to the same old objection; the
loss of memory in each of us of our previous incarnation. You think it
invalidates our doctrine ? My answer is that it does not, and that at any rate
such an objection cannot be final.
ENQ. I would like to hear your arguments.
THEO. They are short and few. Yet when you take into consideration (a)
the utter inability of the best modern psychologists to explain to the world
the nature of mind; and (b) their complete ignorance of its
potentialities, and higher states, you have to admit that this objection is
based on an a priori conclusion drawn from primâ facie and
circumstantial evidence more than anything else. Now what is "memory"
in your conception, pray?
ENQ. That which is generally accepted: the faculty in our mind of
remembering and of retaining the knowledge of previous thoughts, deeds and
events.
THEO. Please add to it that there is a great difference between the
three accepted forms of memory. Besides memory in general you have Remembrance,
Recollection and Reminiscence, have you not? Have you ever thought
over the difference? Memory, remember, is a generic name.
ENQ. Yet, all these are only synonyms.
THEO. Indeed, they are not -- not in philosophy, at all events.
Memory is simply an innate power in thinking beings, and even in animals, of
reproducing past impressions by an association of ideas principally suggested
by objective things or by some action on our external sensory organs. Memory is
a faculty depending entirely on the more or less healthy and normal functioning
of our physical brain; and remembrance and recollection
are the attributes and handmaidens of that memory. But reminiscence is an
entirely different thing. "Reminiscence" is defined by the modern
psychologist as something intermediate between remembrance and recollection,
or " a conscious process of recalling past occurrences, but without
that full and varied reference to particular things which characterises recollection."
Locke, speaking of recollection and remembrance, says: " When an idea
again recurs without the operation of the like object on the external
sensory, it is remembrance; if it be sought after by the mind, and with
pain and endeavour found and brought again into view, it is recollection."
But even Locke leaves reminiscence without any clear definition, because
it is no faculty or attribute of our physical memory, but an intuitional
perception apart from and outside our physical brain; a perception which,
covering as it does (being called into action by the ever-present knowledge of
our spiritual Ego) all those visions in man which are regarded as abnormal
-- from the pictures suggested by genius to the ravings of fever and
even madness -- are classed by science as having no existence outside of
our fancy. Occultism and Theosophy, however, regard reminiscence in an
entirely different light. For us, while memory is physical and
evanescent and depends on the physiological conditions of the brain -- a fundamental
proposition with all teachers of mnemonics, who have the researches of modern
scientific psychologists to back them -- we call reminiscence the memory
of the soul. And it is this memory which gives the assurance to almost
every human being, whether he under-stands it or not, of his having lived
before and having to live again. Indeed, as Wordsworth has it:
"Our birth is but a sleep and a
forgetting,
The soul that rises with us, our life's star,
hath elsewhere had its setting,
And cometh from afar."
ENQ. If it is on this kind of memory -- poetry and abnormal fancies,
on your own confession -- that you base your doctrine, then you will convince
very few, I am afraid.
THEO. I did not "confess" it was a fancy. I simply said
that physiologists and scientists in general regard such reminiscences as
hallucinations and fancy, to which learned conclusion they are welcome.
We do not deny that such visions of the past and glimpses far back into the
corridors of time, are not abnormal, as contrasted with our normal daily life
experience and physical memory. But we do maintain with Professor W. Knight,
that "the absence of memory of any action done in a previous state cannot
be a conclusive argument against our having lived through it." And every fair-minded
opponent must agree with what is said in
ENQ. But don't you think that these are too fine distinctions to be
accepted by the majority of mortals?
THEO. Say rather by the majority of materialists. And to them we
say, behold: even in the short span of ordinary existence, memory is too weak
to register all the events of a lifetime. How frequently do even most important
events lie dormant in our memory until awakened by some association of ideas,
or aroused to function and activity by some other link. This is especially the
case with people of advanced age, who are always found suffering from
feebleness of recollection. When, therefore, we remember that which we know
about the physical and the spiritual principles in man, it is not the fact that
our memory has failed to record our precedent life and lives that ought to
surprise us, but the contrary, were it to happen.
ENQ. You have given me a bird's eye view of the seven principles;
now how do they account for our complete loss of any recollection of having
lived before?
THEO. Very easily. Since those "principles" which we call
physical, and none of which is denied by science, though it calls them by other
names, [footnote: Namely, the body, life, passional and animal instincts, and
the astral eidolon of every man (whether perceived in thought or our mind's
eye, or objectively and separate from the physical body), which principles we
call Sthula sarira, Prana, Kama rupa, and Linga sarira (vide supra).
end of footnote] are disintegrated after death with their constituent elements,
memory along with its brain, this vanished memory of a vanished
personality, can neither remember nor record anything in the subsequent
reincarnation of the EGO. Reincarnation means that this Ego will be furnished
with a new body, a new brain, and a new memory. Therefore
it would be as absurd to expect this memory to remember that which it
has never recorded as it would be idle to examine under a microscope a shirt
never worn by a murderer, and seek on it for the stains of blood which are to
be found only on the clothes he wore. It is not the clean shirt that we have to
question, but the clothes worn during the perpetration of the crime; and if
these are burnt and destroyed, how can you get at them?
ENQ. Aye! how can you get at the certainty that the crime was ever
committed at all, or that the "man in the clean shirt" ever lived before?
THEO. Not by physical processes, most assuredly; nor by relying on
the testimony of that which exists no longer. But there is such a thing as
circumstantial evidence, since our wise laws accept it, more, perhaps, even
than they should. To get convinced of the fact of re-incarnation and past
lives, one must put oneself in rapport with one's real permanent Ego,
not one's evanescent memory.
ENQ. But how can people believe in that which they do not know,
nor have ever seen, far less put themselves in rapport with it?
THEO. If people, and the most learned, will believe in the Gravity,
Ether, Force, and what not of Science, abstractions "and working
hypotheses," which they have neither seen, touched, smelt, heard, nor
tasted -- why should not other people believe, on the same principle, in one's
permanent Ego, a far more logical and important "working hypothesis"
than any other ?
ENQ. What is, finally, this mysterious eternal principle ? Can you
explain its nature so as to make it comprehensible to all?
THEO. The EGO which re-incarnates, the individual and
immortal -- not personal -- "I"; the vehicle, in short, of the
Atma-Buddhic MONAD, that which is rewarded in Devachan and punished on earth,
and that, finally, to which the reflection only of the Skandhas, or
attributes, of every incarnation attaches itself. [footnote: There are five Skandhas
or attributes in the Buddhist teachings: "Rupa (form or body),
material qualities; Vedana, sensation; Sanna, abstract ideas; Samkhara,
tendencies of mind; Vinnana, mental powers. Of these we are formed; by
them we are conscious of existence; and through them communicate with the world
about us." end of footnote]
ENQ. What do you mean by Skandhas?
THEO. Just what I said: "attributes," among which is memory,
all of which perish like a flower, leaving behind them only a feeble perfume.
Here is another paragraph from H. S. Olcott's "Buddhist Catechism"
[footnote: By H. S. Olcott, President and Founder of the Theosophical Society.
The accuracy of the teaching is sanctioned by the Rev. H. Sumangala, High
Priest of the Sripada and
ENQ. Do you mean to infer that that which survives is only the
Soul-memory, as you call it, that Soul or Ego being one and the same, while
nothing of the personality remains?
THEO. Not quite; something of each personality, unless the latter
was an absolute materialist with not even a chink in his nature for a
spiritual ray to pass through, must survive, as it leaves its eternal impress
on the incarnating permanent Self or Spiritual Ego. [footnote: Or the Spiritual,
in contradistinction to the personal Self. The student must not confuse
this Spiritual Ego with the "HIGHER SELF" which is Atma, the
God within us, and inseparable from the Universal Spirit. end of footnote] (See
On post mortem and post natal Consciousness.) The personality
with its Skandhas is ever changing with every new birth. It is, as said before,
only the part played by the actor (the true Ego) for one night. This is why we
preserve no memory! on the physical plane of our past lives, though the real
"Ego " has lived them over and knows them all.
ENQ. Then how does it happen that the real or Spiritual man does not
impress his new personal "I" with this knowledge ?
THEO. How is it that the servant-girls in a poor farm-house could
speak Hebrew and play the violin in their trance or somnambulic state, and knew
neither when in their normal condition ? Because, as every genuine psychologist
of the old, not our modern, school, will tell you, the Spiritual Ego can act
only when the personal Ego is paralysed. The Spiritual "I" in man is
omniscient and has every knowledge innate in it; while the personal self is the
creature of its environment and the slave of the physical memory. Could the
former manifest itself uninterruptedly, and without impediments, there would be
no longer men on earth, but we should all be gods.
ENQ. Still there ought to be exceptions, and some ought to remember.
THEO. And so there are. But who believes in their report? Such
sensitives are generally regarded as hallucinated hysteriacs, as crack-brained
enthusiasts, or humbugs, by modern materialism. Let them read, however, works
on this subject, pre-eminently "Reincarnation, a Study of Forgotten
Truth" by S. D. Walker, F.T.S., and see in it the mass of proofs which the
able author brings to bear on this vexed question. One speaks to people of
soul, and some ask "What is Soul?" "Have you ever proved its
existence?" Of course it is useless to argue with those who are
materialists. But even to them I would put the question: "Can you remember
what you were or did when a baby? Have you preserved the smallest recollection
of your life, thoughts, or deeds, or that you lived at all during the first
eighteen months or two years of your existence ? Then why not deny that you
have ever lived as a babe, on the same principle?" When to all this we add
that the reincarnating Ego, or individuality, retains during the
Devachanic period merely the essence of the experience of its past earth-life
or personality, the whole physical experience involving into a state of in
potentia, or being, so to speak, translated into spiritual formulae; when
we remember further that the term between two rebirths is said to extend from
ten to fifteen centuries, during which time the physical consciousness is
totally and absolutely inactive, having no organs to act through, and therefore
no existence, the reason for the absence of all remembrance in the
purely physical memory is apparent.
ENQ. You just said that the SPIRITUAL EGO was omniscient. Where,
then, is that vaunted omniscience during his Devachanic life, as you call it ?
THEO. During that time it is latent and potential, because, first of
all, the Spiritual Ego (the compound of Buddhi-Manas) is not the Higher
SELF, which being one with the Universal Soul or Mind is alone omniscient; and,
secondly, because Devachan is the idealized continuation of the terrestrial
life just left behind, a period of retributive adjustment, and a reward for
unmerited wrongs and sufferings undergone in that special life. It is
omniscient only potentially in Devachan, and de facto exclusively
in Nirvana, when the Ego is merged in the Universal Mind-Soul. Yet it rebecomes
quasi omniscient during those hours on earth when certain abnormal
conditions and physiological changes in the body make the Ego free from
the trammels of matter. Thus the examples cited above of somnambulists, a poor
servant speaking Hebrew, and another playing the violin, give you au
illustration of the case in point. This does not mean that the explanations of
these two facts offered us by medical science have no truth in them, for one
girl had, years before, heard her master, a clergyman, read Hebrew works aloud,
and the other had heard an artist playing a violin at their farm. But neither
could have done so as perfectly as they did had they not been ensouled by THAT
which, owing to the sameness of its nature with the Universal Mind, is
omniscient. Here the higher principle acted on the Skandhas and moved them; in
the other, the personality being paralysed, the individuality manifested
itself. Pray do not confuse the two.
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