Sri Aurobindo returned to the theme
“Man is a transitional being”
again and again,
as to sow in the earthly consciousness of mankind
the awareness of the passage needed…
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
1 [late 1920s to early 1930s]
Man is a transitional being, he is not final. He is a middle term of the
evolution, not its end, crown or consummating masterpiece.
2 [circa 1930]
Man is a transitional being, he is not final; for in him and high beyond him
ascend the radiant degrees which climb to a divine supermanhood.
The step from man to superman is the next approaching achievement in the
earth’s evolution. There lies our destiny and the liberating key to our
aspiring, but troubled and limited human existence — inevitable because it is
at once the intention of the inner Spirit and the logic of Nature’s process.
The appearance of a human possibility in a material and animal world was the
first glint of a coming divine Light, — the first far-off intimation of a
godhead to be born out of Matter. The appearance of the superman in the human
world will be the fulfillment of that distant shining promise.
The difference between man and superman will be the difference between mind and
a consciousness as far beyond it as thinking mind is beyond the consciousness
of plant and animal; the differentiating essence of man is mind, the
differentiating essence of superman will be supermind of a divine gnosis.
Man is a mind imprisoned, obscured and circumscribed in a precarious and
imperfect living but imperfectly conscious body. The superman will be a
supramental spirit which will envelop and freely use a conscious body, plastic
to spiritual forces. His physical frame will be a firm support and adequate
radiant instrument for the spirit’s divine play and work in Matter.
Mind, even free and in its own unmixed and unhampered element, is not the
highest possibility of consciousness; for mind is not in possession of Truth,
but only a minor vessel or an instrument and here an ignorant seeker plucking
eagerly at a mass of falsehoods and half-truths for the unsatisfying pabulum of
its hunger. Beyond mind is a supramental or gnostic power of consciousness that
is in eternal possession of Truth; all its motion and feeling and sense and
outcome are instinct and luminous with the inmost reality of things and express
nothing else.
Supermind or gnosis is in its original nature at once and in the same movement
an infinite wisdom and infinite will. At its source it is the dynamic
consciousness of the divine Knower and Creator. […]
The disk of a secret sun of Power and Knowledge is emerging out of the material
consciousness in which our mind works as a chained slave or a baffled and
impotent demiurge; supermind will be the formed body of that radiant
effulgence.
Superman is not man climbed to his own natural zenith, not a superior degree of
human greatness, knowledge, power, intelligence, will, character, genius,
dynamic force, saintliness, love, purity of perfection. Supermind is something
beyond mental man and his limits, a greater consciousness than the highest
consciousness proper to human nature. […]
Man in himself is hardly better than an ambitious nothing. He is a narrowness
that reaches towards ungrasped widenesses, a littleness straining towards
grandeurs which are beyond him, a dwarf enamoured of the heights. […] The
spirit is in course of birth rather than born in Matter. […]
There is something more that has yet to be brought down from above and is now seen
only by broken glimpses through sudden rifts in the giant wall of our
limitations. […]
Man’s greatness is not in what he is but in what he makes possible. His glory
is that he is the closed place and secret workshop of a living labour in which
supermanhood is made ready by a divine Craftsman.
But he is admitted to a yet greater greatness and it is this that, unlike the
lower creation, he is allowed to be partly the conscious artisan of his divine
change. His free assent, his consecrated will and participation are needed that
into his body may descend the glory that will replace him. His aspiration is
earth’s call to the supramental Creator.
3 [1940-42]
Man cannot be a final, he is a transitional being. This is very clear from the
incompleteness and imperfection of all his powers of consciousness; he can only
arrive at some limited form of temporary and unstable perfection by much labour
and struggle; and yet the search for perfection is ingrained in his nature.
There is something that he is not yet which he has to be; he is reaching always
towards the something yet unrealised; his whole life and nature is a
preparation, an endeavour of Nature towards what is beyond him.
The human consciousness is limited in every direction; it does not know itself,
it does not know the world around it, it does not know the origin and meaning
and use of its existence. But it strives always to know to find the truth of
its being, the right use of its life, the end towards which Nature in him is
tending; this it does with a seeking and blundering movement; man’s
consciousness is an ignorant struggling towards knowledge; it is a weakness
training itself for power; it is a thing of pleasure and suffering that tries
to lay hands on the true delight of existence. […]
Man is here not merely to utilise his world for the service of his individual
and collective ego; he is here as a medium in which the Spirit within, the
secret growing Consciousness can evolve farther its self-manifestation, arrive
from a partial to a complete consciousness, since life itself is there only as
a means of this evolution and an image of it, at a complete and perfect
individual and social life. If the psychological truth of our being is the real
and central truth, more central and important than the physical, this must be
its true nature, a conscious being growing towards its own completeness of
consciousness and growing too towards its expression and formation in a
complete individual and social life.
4 [circa 1942]
Man is a transitional being; he is not final. As it did not begin with him,
neither does it end with him. He is not its evident crown, not its highest
issue, nor the last clear sum of Nature. Nature has not brought out in man her
highest possibilities; she has not reached in him the supreme heights of
consciousness and being; as there was before him the infrahuman, the insect and
animal, so there shall be after him the superhuman, the superman.
Man may himself become the superman, he may become all that he is not now; but
for that he must exceed himself. It is not by clinging to his present imperfect
consciousness that he can take the next step in the evolution. He must discover
and release the spiritual godhead within him, realise his divine possibilities,
be himself the giant potential something, the divine someone who has been
struggling into emergence out of the original plasm that imprisoned it since
began the mystery of terrestrial Nature.
5 [circa 1947]
Man is not final, he is a transitional being. Beyond him waits formation the
diviner race, the superman.
6 [late 1940s]
The world we live in is not a meaningless accident that has unaccountably taken
place in the void of Space; it is the scene of an evolution in which an eternal
Truth has been embodied, hidden in a form of things, and is secretly in process
of unfoldment through the ages. […]
Man is a transitional being, he is not final. He is too imperfect for that, too
imperfect in capacity for knowledge, too imperfect in will and action, too
imperfect in his turn towards joy and beauty, too imperfect in his will for
freedom and his instinct for order. Even if he could perfect himself in his own
type, his type is too low and small to satisfy the need of the universe.
Something larger, more capable of a rich and all embracing universality is
needed, a greater being, a greater consciousness summing up in itself all that
the world set out to be. He has, as was pointed out by a half blind seer, to
excede himself; man must evolve out of himself the divine superman: he was born
for transcendence. Humanity is not enough, it is only a strong stepping stone;
the need of the world is a superhuman perfection of what the world can be, the
goal of consciousness is divinity. The inmost need of man is not to perfect his
humanity, but to be greater than himself, to be more than man, to be divine,
even to be the Divine.
To rest in humanity is to rest in imperfection; the perfect man would be a
self-contented finality of incompleteness. His nature is transitional and there
is therefore in it an innate tendency to strive towards something more.
7 [late 1940s]
Man is not final, he is a transitional being.
This imperfect thinker embarrassed by the limitations of his brain and senses,
this ignorant mind seeking after the truth of himself and things and never
arriving at a certain knowledge, this stumbling reasoner capable only of
speculation and stiff logical conclusions but not of indubitable conclusions or
of a complete or direct knowledge, this imperfect liver divided between his
reasoning will and his half-governed impulsions and instinctive desires, this
thing of bundles of ideas and sensations and lusts and longings, this hunter
after forms and formulas, this suffering and sorrowing mixture of wisdom and
imbecillity we call man is not the final essay of Nature, her last word, the
crown of her evolution, the summit of consciousness, her master creation.
8 [late 1940s]
Man [is a] transitional being, not the final end of the evolution and the crown
of terrestrial existence.
This ignorant, imperfect and divided being, with his labouring uncertain thought
and half-successful will, this toiling and fluctuating experiment, this field
of the attempt at emergence of a thousand things that are striving to be, is no
consummation of the struggle of cosmic Force; he is only a laboratory in which
Nature seeks for its own concealed secret, makes tentative efforts at what she
has been missioned to achieve.
As man arose out of the animal, so out of man superman shall come.
- Sri Aurobindo

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