It may seem a truism to say that the
whole is made up of its parts, but all the same we
often lose sight of this in our outlook on life.
The reason we do so is because we
are apt to take too narrow a view of the whole; and
also because we do not sufficiently consider that it
is not the mere arithmetical sum of the parts that
makes the whole, but also the harmonious agreement
of each part with all the other parts. The extent
of the whole and the harmony of the parts is what we
have to look out for, and also its objective; this
is a universal rule, whatever the whole in question
may be.
Take, for instance, the case of the
artist. He must start by having a definite objective,
what in studio phrase is called a “motif”;
something that has given him a certain impression
which he wants to convey to others, but which cannot
be stated as an isolated fact without any surroundings.
Then the surroundings must be painted so as to have
a natural relation to the main motif; they must lead
up to it, but at the same time they must not compete
with it. There must be only one definite interest
in the picture, and minor details must not be allowed
to interfere with it. They are there only because
of the main motif, to help to express it. Yet
they are not to be treated in a slovenly manner.
As much as is seen of them must be drawn with an accuracy
that correctly suggests their individual character;
but they must not be accentuated in such a way as
to emphasize details to the detriment of the breadth
of the picture. This is the artistic principle
of unity, and the same principle applies to everything
else.
What, then, is the “Motif”
of Life? Surely it must be, to express its own
Livingness. Then in the True Order all modes of
life and energy must converge towards this end, and
it is only our short-sightedness that prevents us
from seeing this, from seeing that the greater
the harmony of the whole Life, the greater will be
the inflow of that Life in each of the parts that
are giving it expression. This is what we want
to learn with regard to ourselves, whether as individuals,
classes or nations. We have seen the cosmic workings
of the Law of Wholeness in the discovery of the planet
Neptune. Another planet was absolutely necessary
to complete the unity of our solar system, and it was
found that there is such a planet, and similarly in
other branches of natural science. The Law of
Unity is the basic law of Life, and it is our ignorant
or wilful infraction of this Law that is the root
of all our troubles.
If we take this Law of Unity as the
basis of our Thought we shall be surprised to find
how far it will carry us. Each part is a complete
whole in itself. Each inconceivably minute particle
revolves round the centre of the atom in its own orbit.
On its own scale it is complete in itself, and by
co-operation with thousands of others forms the atom.
The atom again is a complete whole, but it must combine
with other atoms to form a molecule, and so on.
But if the atom be imperfect as an atom, how could
it combine with other atoms?
Thus we see that however infinitesimal
any part may be as compared with the whole, it must
also be a complete whole on its own scale, if the
greater whole is to be built up. On the same principle,
our recognition that our personality is an infinitesimal
fraction of an inconceivably greater Life, does not
mean that it is at all insignificant in itself, or
that our individuality becomes submerged in an indistinguishable
mass; on the contrary, our own wholeness is an essential
factor towards the building up of the greater whole;
so that as long as we keep before us the building
up of the Great Whole as the “main motif,”
we need never fear the expansion of our own individuality.
The more we expand, the more effective units we shall
become.
We must not, however, suppose that
Unity means Uniformity. St. Paul puts this very
clearly when he says, if the whole body be an eye,
where would be the hearing, etc. (1 Cor.
xii, 14). How could you paint a picture without
distinction of form, colour, or tone? Diversity
in Unity is the necessity for any sort of expression,
and if it be the case in our own bodies, as St. Paul
points out, how much more so in the expressing of
the Eternal Life through endless ages and limitless
space! Once we grasp this idea of the unity and
progressiveness of Life going on ad infinitum,
what boundless vistas of possibility open before us.
It would be enough to stagger the imagination were
it not for our old friends, the Law and the Word.
But these will always accompany us, and we may rely
upon them in all worlds and under all conditions.
This Law of Unity is what in natural science is known
as the Law of Continuity, and the Ancient Wisdom has
embodied it in the Hermetic axiom “Sicut
superius, sicut inferius; sicut inferius,
sicut superius” As above, so
below; as below, so above. It leads us on from
stage to stage, unfolding as it goes; and to this
unfolding there is no end, for it is the Eternal Life
finding ever fuller expression, as it can find more
and more suitable channels through which to express
itself. It can no more come to an end than numbers
can come to an end.
But it must find suitable channels.
Let there be no mistake about this. Perhaps some
one may say: Cannot it make suitable channels
for any sort of expression that it needs? The
answer is, that it can, and it does so up to a certain
point. As we have seen, the Word, Thought, or
Initial Impulse of the Ever-Living Spirit starts a
centre of cosmic activity in which the mathematical
element of Law at once asserts itself; thenceforward
everything goes on according to certain broad principles
of sequence. This is a Generic Creation, creation
according to genera or classes, like the “archetypal
ideas” of Plato. This creation is governed
by a Law of Averages, and the legal maxim “De
minimis non curat lex” the Law cannot
trouble about minorities applies to it.
This generic law keeps the class going, and slowly
advancing, simply as a class, but it can take no notice
of individuals as such. As Tennyson puts it in
“In Memoriam,” speaking of Nature:
“So careful of the type
she seems,
So careless of the single
life.”
This mode of creation reaches its
highest level, at any rate in our world, in Genus
Homo, or the human race. We also, as a race, are
under the Law of Averages. The race continues
to exist, but from the moment of birth the individual
life is liable to be cut short in a hundred different
ways. In producing man, however, Generic Creation
has produced a type having a mental and physical
constitution capable of perceiving the underlying
principle of all creation, that is, of seeing
the relation between the Word and the Law. We
cannot conceive creation by type going further than
this. By the nature of this type every human
being has the potential of a further evolution, which
will set it free from bondage to an impersonal Law
of Averages, by specializing it through the Power
of the Word, that is, by bringing the Personal Factor
to bear upon the Impersonal Factor, and so unfolding
the possibilities which can be achieved by their united
activities. We have the power of using the Word
so as to specialize the action of the Law, not by
altering the Law, which is impossible, but by realizing
its principle, and enabling it to work under conditions
which are not spontaneously provided by Nature, but
are provided by our own selection. The capacity
for this exists in all human beings, but the practical
application of this capacity depends on our recognition
of the principles involved; and it is for this reason
that I commenced this book by citing instances of
the combined working of Law and Personality in purely
physical science. I wanted first to convince the
reader from well ascertained facts, that the Law contains
infinite possibilities, but that this can only be
brought out through the operation of the mind of man.
It is here that we find the value
of the maxim “Nature unaided fails.”
The more we consider this maxim and the principle of
Unity and Continuity, the clearer it will become,
that Limitation is no part of the Law itself, but
results only from our own limited comprehension of
it; and that St. James uses no meaningless phrase,
but is stating a logical and scientific truth, when
he speaks of “The perfect Law of Liberty”
(Jas. i, 25). What we have to do is, to follow
this up, not by petulant self-assertion, but by quietly
considering the why and wherefore of the whole thing.
In doing so we can fortify ourselves with another
maxim, that “Principle is not limited by Precedent.”
When we spread the wings of thought and speculate
as to future possibilities, our conventionally-minded
friends may say we are talking bosh; but if you ask
them why they say so, they can only reply that the
past experience of the whole human race is against
you. They do not speak like this in the matter
of flying-machines or carriages that go without horses;
they say these are scientific discoveries. But
when it comes to the possibilities of our own souls,
they at once set a limit to the expansion of ideas,
and do not see that the scientific principle of discovery
is not confined to laboratory experiments. Therefore,
we must not let ourselves be discouraged by such arguments.
If our friends doubt our sanity, let them doubt it.
The sanity of such men as Galileo and George Stephenson
was doubted by their contemporaries, so we are in good
company. At the same time we must not neglect
to look after our own sanity. We must know some
intelligible reason for our conclusions, and realize
that however unexpected, they are the logical carrying
out of principles which we can recognize in the Creation
around us. If we do this we need not fear to
spread the wings of fancy, even though some may not
be able to accompany us; only we must remember that
we are using wings. Fancy, in the ordinary acceptation
of the word, has really no wings; it is like a balloon
that just floats wherever any passing current of air
may drive it. The possession of wings implies
power to direct our flight, and fancy must be converted
into trained Imagination, just as the helpless balloon
has been superseded by navigable air-craft. It
must be “the scientific imagination”; and
the “scientific imagination” carried into
the world of spiritual causation becomes the Word
of Power, and its Power is derived from the fact that
it is always working according to Law. Then we
may go on confidently, because we are following the
same universal principles by which all creation has
been evolved, only now we are specializing its action
from the standpoint of our own individuality, according
to the ancient teaching that Man, the Microcosm, repeats
in himself all the laws of the Macrocosm, or great
world, around him.
As we begin to see the truth of these
things, we begin to transcend the simply generic stage.
That first stage is necessary to provide a starting-point
for the next. The first stage is that of Bondage
to Law. It could not be otherwise for the simple
reason that you must learn the law before you can
use it. Then from the stage of Generic Creation
we emerge into that of individual Creation, in which
we attain liberty through Knowledge of the Law of
our own Being; so that it is not a mere theological
myth to talk of a New Creation, but it is the logical
outcome of what we now are, if, to our recognition
of the Power of the Law we add the recognition of
the Power of the Word.