A Series of Lessons in Raja Yoga eBook

Yogi Ramacharaka
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 274 pages of information about A Series of Lessons in Raja Yoga.

A Series of Lessons in Raja Yoga eBook

Yogi Ramacharaka
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 274 pages of information about A Series of Lessons in Raja Yoga.
“live in their minds” as do some of their brothers.  They use their thinking powers for the gratification of their bodily desires and cravings, and really live on the plane of the Instinctive Mind.  Such a person may speak of “my mind,” or “my soul,” not from a high position where he looks upon these things from the standpoint of a Master who realizes his Real Self, but from below, from the point-of-view of the man who lives on the plane of the Instinctive Mind and who sees above himself the higher attributes.  To such people the body is the “I.”  Their “I” is bound up with the senses, and that which comes to them through the senses.  Of course, as Man advances in “culture” and “civilization,” his senses become educated, and are satisfied only with more refined things, while the less cultivated man is perfectly satisfied with the more material and gross sense gratifications.  Much that we call “cultivation” and “culture” is naught but a cultivation of a more refined form of sense gratification, instead of a real advance in consciousness and unfoldment.  It is true that the advanced student and Master is possessed of highly developed senses, often far surpassing those of the ordinary man, but in such cases the senses have been cultivated under the mastery of the Will, and are made servants of the Ego instead of things hindering the progress of the soul—­they are made servants instead of masters.

As Man advances in the scale, he begins to have a somewhat higher conception of the “I.”  He begins to use his mind and reason, and he passes on to the Mental Plane—­his mind begins to manifest upon the plane of Intellect.  He finds that there is something within him that is higher than the body.  He finds that his mind seems more real to him than does the physical part of him, and in times of deep thought and study he is able almost to forget the existence of the body.

In this second stage, Man soon becomes perplexed.  He finds problems that demand an answer, but as soon as he thinks he has answered them the problems present themselves in a new phase, and he is called upon to “explain his explanation.”  The mind, even although not controlled and directed by the Will, has a wonderful range, but, nevertheless, Man finds himself traveling around and around in a circle, and realizes that he is confronted continually by the Unknown.  This disturbs him, and the higher the stage of “book learning” he attains, the more disturbed does he become.  The man of but little knowledge does not see the existence of many problems that force themselves before the attention of the man of more knowledge, and demand an explanation from him.  The tortures of the man who has attained the mental growth that enables him to see the new problems and the impossibility of their answer, cannot be imagined by one who has not advanced to that stage.

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A Series of Lessons in Raja Yoga from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.