Book One, Chapter One, The Human Aspiration
...
These persistent ideals of the race are at once the contradiction of
its normal experience and the affirmation of higher and deeper
experiences which are abnormal to humanity and only to be attained, in
their organised entirety, by a revolutionary individual effort or an
evolutionary general progression. To know, possess and be the divine
being in an animal and egoistic consciousness, to convert our twilit or
obscure physical mentality into the plenary supramental illumination,
to build peace and a self-existent bliss where there is only a stress
of transitory satisfactions besieged by physical pain and emotional
suffering, to establish an infinite freedom in a world which presents
itself as a group of mechanical necessities, to discover and realise
the immortal life in a body subjected to death and constant mutation, -
this is offered to us as the manifestation of God in Matter and the
goal of Nature in her terrestrial evolution. To the ordinary material
intellect which takes its present organisation of consciousness for the
limit of its possibilities, the direct contradiction of the unrealised
ideals with the realised fact is a final argument against their
validity. But if we take a more deliberate view of the world's
workings, that direct opposition appears rather as part of Nature's
profoundest method and the seal of her completest sanction.
...
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