Book One, Chapter One, The Human Aspiration
...
For all problems of existence are essentially problems of harmony. They
arise from the perception of an unsolved discord and the instinct of an
undiscovered agreement or unity. To rest content with an unsolved
discord is possible for the practical and more animal part of man, but
impossible for his fully awakened mind, and usually even his practical
parts only escape from the general necessity either by shutting out the
problem or by accepting a rough, utilitarian and unillumined
compromise. For essentially, all Nature seeks a harmony, life and
matter in their own sphere as much as mind in the arrangement of its
perceptions. The greater the apparent disorder of the materials offered
or the apparent disparateness, even to irreconcilable opposition, of
the elements that have to be utilised, the stronger is the spur, and it
drives towards a more subtle and puissant order than can normally be
the result of a less difficult endeavour. The accordance of active Life
with a material of form in which the condition of activity itself seems
to be inertia, is one problem of opposites that Nature has solved and
seeks always to solve better with greater complexities; for its perfect
solution would be the material immortality of a fully organised
mind-supporting animal body. The accordance of conscious mind and
conscious will with a form and a life in themselves not overtly
self-conscious and capable at best of a mechanical or sub-conscious
will is another problem of opposites in which she has produced
astonishing results and aims always at higher marvels; for there her
ultimate miracle would be an animal consciousness no longer seeking but
possessed of Truth and Light, with the practical omnipotence which
would result from the possession of a direct and perfected knowledge.
Not only, then, is the upward impulse of man towards the accordance of
yet higher opposites rational in itself, but it is the only logical
completion of a rule and an effort that seem to be a fundamental method
of Nature and the very sense of her universal strivings.
...
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