Lessons in Gnani YogaTheosophy / New ThoughtMystical / EsotericEnglishShareLessons in Gnani Yoga 34Project Gutenberg #13407 - EnglishMoreVersion - 1 availableProject Gutenberg #13407LanguageEnglishEspañol‹Lessons in Gnani Yoga 3Lessons in Gnani Yoga 5Lessons in Gnani Yoga 7Lessons in Gnani Yoga 8Lessons in Gnani Yoga 10Lessons in Gnani Yoga 11Lessons in Gnani Yoga 12Lessons in Gnani Yoga 14Lessons in Gnani Yoga 16Lessons in Gnani Yoga 18Lessons in Gnani Yoga 19Lessons in Gnani Yoga 20Lessons in Gnani Yoga 23Lessons in Gnani Yoga 24Lessons in Gnani Yoga 26Lessons in Gnani Yoga 28Lessons in Gnani Yoga 29Lessons in Gnani Yoga 30Lessons in Gnani Yoga 31Lessons in Gnani Yoga 32Lessons in Gnani Yoga 34Lessons in Gnani Yoga 35Lessons in Gnani Yoga 36Lessons in Gnani Yoga 38Lessons in Gnani Yoga 40Lessons in Gnani Yoga 41Lessons in Gnani Yoga 42›Spiritual Evolution.Lessons in Gnani Yoga 34ListenPlay this chapter in spoken English.Save chapterListen to chapter1One of the things that repel many persons who have had their attention directed to the subject of Metempsychosis for the first time, is the idea that they have evolved as a soul from individual lowly forms, for instance that they have at one time been an individual plant, and then an individual animal form, and then an individual higher animal form, and so on until now they are the particular individual human form contemplating the subject. This idea, which has been taught by many teachers, is repellent to the average mind, for obvious reasons, and naturally so, for it has no foundation in truth. 2While this lesson is principally concerned with the subject of the Spiritual Evolution of the human soul, since it became a human soul, still it may be as well to mention the previous phase of evolution, briefly, in order to prevent misconception, and to dispel previously acquired error. 3The atom, although it possesses life and a certain degree of mind, and acts as an individual temporarily, has no permanent individuality that reincarnates. When the atom is evolved it becomes a centre of energy in the great atomic principle, and when it is finally dissolved it resolves itself back into its original state, and its life as an individual atom ceases, although the experience it has gained becomes the property of the entire principle. It is as if a body of water were to be resolved into millions of tiny dew-drops for a time, and each dew-drop was then to acquire certain outside material in solution. In that case, each dew-drop when it again returned to the body of water, would carry with it its foreign material, which would become the property of the whole. And subsequently formed dew-drops would carry in their substance a particle of the foreign matter brought back home by the previous generation of dewdrops, and would thus be a little different from their predecessors. And this process, continuing for many generations of dew-drops, would ultimately cause the greatest changes in the composition of the successive generations. 4This, in short, is the story of the change and improving forms of life. From the atoms into the elements; from the lower elements into those forming protoplasm; from the protoplasm to the lower forms of animal life; from these lower forms on to higher forms--this is the story. But it is all a counterpart of the dew-drop and the body of water, until the human soul is evolved. 5The plants and the lower forms of animal life are not permanent individual souls, but each family is a group-soul corresponding to the body of water from which the dew-drop arose. From these family group-souls gradually break off minor groups, representing species, and so on into sub-species. At last when the forms reach the plane of man, the group-soul breaks itself up into permanent individual souls, and true Metempsychosis begins. That is, each individual human soul becomes a permanent individual entity, destined to evolve and perfect itself along the lines of spiritual evolution. 6And from this point begins our story of Spiritual Evolution. 7The story of Man, the Individual, begins amidst humble surroundings. Primitive man, but little above the level of the lower animals in point of intelligence, has nevertheless that distinguishing mark of Individuality--"Self-Consciousness," which is the demarkation between Beast and Man. And even the lowest of the lowest races had at least a "trace" of this Self-Consciousness, which made of them individuals, and caused the fragment of the race-soul to separate itself from the general principle animating the race, and to fasten its "I" conscious upon itself, rather than upon the underlying race-soul, along instinctive lines. Do you know just what this Self-Consciousness is, and how it differs from the Physical Consciousness of the lower animals? Perhaps we had better pause a moment to consider it at this place. 8The lower animals are of course conscious of the bodies, and their wants, feelings, emotions, desires, etc., and their actions are in response to the animating impulses coming from this plane of consciousness. But it stops there. They "know," but they do not "know that they know"; that is, they have not yet arrived at a state in which they can think of themselves as "I," and to reason upon their thoughts and mental operations. It is like the consciousness of a very young child, which feels and knows its sensations and wants, but is unable to think of itself as "I," and to turn the mental gaze inward. In another ‹Previous chapterLessons in Gnani Yoga 32Next chapterLessons in Gnani Yoga 35›Similar passagesBy tradition and source labelFind similarCompare selectedCompare with similarAsk Deep ThoughtSelect passages to search for parallels.Tap any verse to select it, then compare selected passages or ask Deep Thought. Public domain in the USA