Bhagavad-Gītā
14th Chapter
Continued
In summary, then, our involvement with these different
qualities or modes of nature colors and conditions our experience in the
material world.
The evolution from complete spiritual awareness to hazy
consciousness to embodied soul takes place with the mediation of these elemental
forces or laws of nature, called sattva,
raja, and tama.
No value is judgment
is made about the “good” or “evil” of these modes. They are simply universal
elements influencing consciousness, a kind of color theory of light and shadow.
By themselves the so-called “modes” are neither good nor bad. They do not
provoke action any more than a powerful drug like opium forces someone to
become addicted. But once under the influence of a particular mode
consciousness becomes further bewildered. The “modes” are inherent aspects of prakṛti
elemental in the devolution of consciousness from aware spiritual
energy to conditioned embodied soul, according to the Vedic analysis.
While the modes are not “causal,” attachment with them provokes
certain effects. Attachment in sattva
conditions one to happiness, raja
conditions one to the fruits of action, and tamas
to madness. From sattva, real
knowledge develops; from raja, grief
develops; and from the tama,
foolishness, madness and illusion. In Sattva-guna,
a man becomes attached to happiness and knowledge. Raja increases libido and sexual desire, and binds through attachment.
Tama binds through inertia.
While the 3 qualities, sattva,
raja, and tama are inherent in prakṛti conjoined with atma, they
interact according to karmic conditions, gradually producing a myriad
variety of shapes, forms, colors, and qualities.
The Vedic universe is not an empty time-space continuum
constructed from atoms and a void: it is an organic cosmos where puruṣa and prakṛti combine in an
endless dance of evolutionary character. The interplay between positive and
negative forces include not only quantum particles of matter, but of conscious
energy as well. The cosmic principles known as “gunas” are the substratum or
background of the physical universe, responsible in their turn for the material
elements of earth, water, fire, air, and ether, according to how they are
balanced.
Normally we think of the mind-body problem as a kind of
“ghost in a machine.” Since we can’t find the ghost in the machine, we decide
to study only the machine. But our obsession with analyzing the mechanics of the
physical world forces us, as a kind of scientific discipline, to wall off the
organic cosmos as incapable of analysis.
It’s difficult to locate life or its
source and we ignore it entirely as a philosophical problem in the name of
scientific integrity. Since only concrete matter bears scrutiny, we focus our
studies on its physical properties and are satisfied when this bears fruit in
the form of technology.
And yet this emphasis lacks integrity since it ignores the
organic cosmos. The Vedic philosophy takes a different view: the organic world
matters.
A true analysis of reality must take prakṛti and puruṣa into consideration. The relationship between consciousness, intelligence, mind, and the physical universe is essential and cannot be ignored.
A true analysis of reality must take prakṛti and puruṣa into consideration. The relationship between consciousness, intelligence, mind, and the physical universe is essential and cannot be ignored.
One may define sattva,
rajas, and tama as “purpose, movement, and inertia.” These
different qualities of material nature are rarely found in pure, distilled, isolation:
purpose, movement, and inertia combine as do all natural
elements of the physical universe.
Krishna explains that where movement and inertia are
weak, purpose may be strong. Where purpose is weak, movement
or inertia may predominate. One
may see the relative dominance of sattva,
raja, or tama by analyzing their effects.
For example, when knowledge is present sattva predominates. When action and sensuality, rajas. When ignorance and inertia are present, then tamas predominates.
The three modes are present in all human beings, though in
different degrees. No one is free from them and in each soul one or the other
predominates at any given moment. We may be sāttvika,
rājasa, or tāmasa according to the mode
which prevails. In traditional medicine before the 20th century, scientists took quite seriously the theory of the “humours” of physiology.
Metabolisms were sanguine, bilious, lymphatic or nervous, according to the balance of four humours. Where the “humours” were an attempt by ancient medical science at explaining certain physiological conditions, the “modes” attempt to take spiritual, conscious, or psychic characteristics nto account. A sāttvika nature aims at light and knowledge;
the rājasa nature wants action, sense-gratification.
The tāmasa nature is inert; a tamasic being lives in ignorance, reacting only to the world around it.
The Four "Humours of the Body" |
Metabolisms were sanguine, bilious, lymphatic or nervous, according to the balance of four humours. Where the “humours” were an attempt by ancient medical science at explaining certain physiological conditions, the “modes” attempt to take spiritual, conscious, or psychic characteristics nto account. A sāttvika nature aims at light and knowledge;
the rājasa nature wants action, sense-gratification.
The tāmasa nature is inert; a tamasic being lives in ignorance, reacting only to the world around it.
Kṛṣṇa says (BG 14.10), “Sometimes purpose stands over action
and inertia; O son of Bharata, sometimes action defeats purpose, and at other
times inertia overcomes both purpose and action. There is a constant dynamic between
purpose, action and inertia, or goodness, passion and ignorance.
When raja increases
the symptoms are attachment, desire, hankering, and action. As for the time of
death: When one dies in sattva, he
attains the pure higher worlds. One who dies in raja, is born again within the world of karma; and when he dies in
ignorance, he takes birth in the animal kingdom.
The fruit of sattvik
action is purity. Rajasik karma
brings pain, where the fruit of laziness and inertia is ignorance.
The psychological effects of the three modes are as follows:
from goodness arises knowledge and from passion greed; negligence and error
arise from dullness, as also ignorance. Those who are established in goodness rise
upwards; the passionate remain in the karmic world of struggle the dull sink
downwards. In this way the soul evolves through various stages, rising from
dull inertia and subjection to ignorance through the struggle for material
enjoyments within various biological frameworks to the pursuit of divine knowledge
and eternal happiness.
As long as the living being is attached, even to noble
objects, we are limited and conditioned. Tamas
and rajas so integrally saturate the experience of the mundane world it
is difficult to end their influence entirely.
Transcending the world of inertia, karmic energy, and mundane knowledge
should be the goal of the conditioned living entity.
Kṛṣṇa says that one who transcends material knowledge sees
that the organic cosmos is a fusion of
these elemental forces, sattva, rajas, and
tamas. An enlightened soul perceives that apart from these modes
of nature there is no cause of action. He knows that the Supreme is
transcendental. Such a great soul can
know the true spiritual nature and understand his personal relationship with
God Himself. When the embodied being is
able to transcend these three modes, he can become free from birth, death, old
age and their distresses and can enjoy the sweet exilir of divine love even in
this life.
Arjuna said: O Lord, what are the symptoms of such a great
soul who is transcendental to these three modes? How does he act? And how does
he transcend the modes of nature?
The Lord replies:
“A realized soul understands the influences of the modes of
nature. He knows that their influences come and go. And so he doesn’t resent
purpose, action or inertia. He knows that illumination and attachment come and
go. Desire and illusion are constants as are understanding. The wise man
neither treasures these when they are present, nor does he long for them for
them when they are absent.
"He is indifferent to the actions and reactions of purpose,
activity and inertia. The modal effects bring happiness and distress, but the
enlightened man knows these effects are impermanent and fugitive. He sees a
lump of coal a diamond, and a piece of gold equally.
"To a wise man, praise and blame, honor and dishonor are the
same. He treats friend and foe alike, for he has no enemies.
"An enlightened soul who has abandoned all karmic endeavors
has transcended the · modes
of nature. One who engages in full
devotional service to Me in my form of Shyamasundara the Lord of Vṛṇdāvana,
free from the tendencies for exploitation and renunciation at once transcends
the modes of material nature and thus comes to the level of spiritual
realization o his internal divine identity. And I am the basis of the undivided
Divinity, the inexhaustible nectar, the timeless pastimes and the sweetness of
the ambrosia of profound love divine; this is the constitutional position of ultimate
happiness, immortal, imperishable and eternal.”
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