THE PROBLEM OF EVIL
THE QUESTION WHY there is evil
in existence is the same as why there is imperfection, or, in other words, why
there is creation at all. We must take it for granted that it could not be
otherwise; that creation must be imperfect, must be gradual, and that it is
futile to ask the question, Why are we?
But this is the real question
we ought to ask: Is this imperfection the final truth, is evil absolute and
ultimate? The river has its boundaries, its banks, but is a river all banks? Or
are the banks the final facts about the river? Do not these obstructions
themselves give its water an onward motion? The towing rope binds a boat, but
is the bondage its meaning? Does it not at the same time draw the boat forward?
The current of the world has
its boundaries, otherwise it could have no existence, but its purpose is not
shown in the boundaries which restrain it, but in its movement, which is
towards perfection. The wonder is not that there should be obstacles and
sufferings in this world, but that there should be law and order, beauty and
joy, goodness and love. The idea of God that man has in his being is the wonder
of all wonders. He has felt in the depths of his life that what appears as
imperfect is the manifestation of the perfect; just as a man who has an ear for
music realizes the perfection of a song, while in fact he is only listening to
a succession of notes. Man has found out the great paradox that what is limited
is not imprisoned within its limits; it is ever moving, and therewith shedding
its finitude every moment. In fact, imperfection is not a negation of
perfectness; finitude is not contradictory to infinity: they are but
completeness manifested in parts, infinity revealed within bounds.
Pain, which is the feeling of
our finiteness, is not a fixture in our life. It is not an end in self, as joy
is. To meet with it is to know that it has no part in the true permanence of
creation. It is what error is in our intellectual life. To go through the
history of the development of science is to go through the maze of mistakes it
made current at different times. Yet no one really believes that science is the
one perfect mode of disseminating mistakes. The progressive ascertainment of
truth is the important thing to remember in the history of science, not its innumerable
mistakes. Error, by its nature, cannot be stationary; it cannot remain with
truth; like a tramp, it must quit its lodging as soon as it fails to pay its
score to the full.
As in intellectual error, so in
evil of any other form, its essence is impermanence, for it cannot accord with
the whole. Every moment it is being corrected by the totality of things and
keeps changing its aspect. We exaggerate its importance by imagining it as at a
standstill. Could we collect the statistics of the immense amount of death and
putrefaction happening every moment in this earth, they would appeal us. But
evil is ever moving; with all its incalculable immensity it does not
effectually clog the current of our life; and we find that the earth, water,
and air remain sweet and pure for living beings. All such statistics consist of
our attempts to represent statically what is in motion; and in the process
things assume a weight in our mind which they have not in reality. For this
reason a man, who by his profession is concerned with any particular aspect of
life, is apt to magnify its proportions; in laying undue stress upon facts he
loses his hold upon truth. A detective may have the opportunity of studying
crimes in detail, but he loses his sense of their relative place in the whole
social economy. When science collects facts to illustrate the struggle for
existence that is going on in the animal kingdom, it raises a picture in our
minds of 'nature red in tooth and claw.' But in these mental pictures we give a
fixity to colours and forms which are really evanescent. It is like calculating
the weight of the air on each square inch of our body to prove that it must be
crushingly heavy for us. With every weight, however, there is an adjustment,
and we lightly bear our burden. With the struggle for existence in nature there
is reciprocity.
There is the love for children
and for comrades; there is the sacrifice of self, which springs from love; and
this love is the positive element in life.
If we kept the search-light of
our observation turned upon the fact of death, the world would appear to us
like a huge charnel-house; but in the world of life the thought of death has,
we find, the least possible hold upon our minds. Not because it is the least
apparent, but because it is the negative aspect of life; just as, in spite of
the fact that we shut our eyelids ever)' second, it is the openings of the eyes
that count. Life as a whole never takes death seriously. It laughs, dances and
plays, it builds, hoards and loves in death's face. Only when we detach one
individual fact of death do we see its blankness and become dismayed. We lose
sight of the wholeness of a life of which death is part. It is like looking at
a piece of cloth through a microscope. It appears like a net; we gaze at the
big holes and shiver in imagination. But the truth is, death is not the
ultimate reality. It looks black, as the sky looks blue; but it does not
blacken existence, just as the sky does not leave its stain upon the wings of
the bird.
When we watch a child trying to
walk, we see its countless failures; its successes are but few. If we had to
limit our observation within a narrow space of time, the sight would be cruel.
But we find that in spite of its repeated failures there is an impetus of joy in
the child which sustains it in its seemingly impossible task. We see it does
not think of its falls so much as of its power to keep its balance though for
only a moment.
Like these accidents in a
child's attempts to walk, we meet with sufferings in various forms in our life
every day, showing the imperfections in our knowledge and our available power,
and in the application of our will. But if these revealed our weakness to us
only, we should die of utter depression. When we select for observation a limited
area of our activities, our individual failures and miseries loom large in our
minds; but our life leads us instinctively to take a wider view. It gives us an
ideal of perfection which ever carries us beyond our present limitations.
Within us we have a hope which always walks in front of our present narrow
experience; it is the undying faith in the infinite in us; it will never accept
any of our disabilities as a permanent fact; it sets no limit to its own scope;
it dares to assert that man has oneness with God; and its wild dreams become
true every day.
We see the truth when we set
our mind towards the infinite. The ideal of truth is not in the narrow present,
not in our immediate sensations, but in the consciousness of the whole which
gives us a taste of what we should have in what we do have. Consciously or
unconsciously we have in our life this feeling of Truth which is ever larger
than its appearance; for our life is facing the infinite, and it is in
movement. Its aspiration is therefore infinitely more than its achievement, and
as it goes on it finds that no realization of truth ever leaves it stranded on
the desert of finality, but carries it to a region beyond. Evil cannot
altogether arrest the course of life on the highway and rob it of its possessions.
For the evil has to pass on, it has to grow into good; it cannot stand and give
battle to the All. If the least evil could stop anywhere indefinitely, it would
sink deep and cut into the very roots of existence. As it is, man does not
really believe in evil, just as he cannot believe that violin strings have been
purposely made to create the exquisite torture of discordant notes, though by
the aid of statistics it can be mathematically proved that the probability of
discord is far greater than that of harmony, and for one who can play the
violin there are thousands who cannot. The potentiality of perfection outweighs
actual contradictions. No doubt there have been people who asserted existence
to be an absolute evil, but man can never take them seriously. Their pessimism
is a mere pose, either intellectual or sentimental, but life itself is
optimistic: it wants to go on. Pessimism is a form of mental dipsomania, it
disdains healthy nourishment, indulges in the strong drink of denunciation, and
creates an artificial dejection which thirsts for a stronger draught. If
existence were an evil, it would wait for no philosopher to prove it. It is
like convicting a man of suicide, while all the time he stands before you in
the flesh. Existence itself is here to prove that it cannot be an evil.
An imperfection which is not
all imperfection, but which has perfection for its ideal, must go through a
perpetual realization. Thus, it is the function of our intellect to realize the
truth through untruths, and knowledge is nothing but the continually burning up
of error to set free the light of truth. Our will, our character, has to attain
perfection by continually overcoming evils, either inside or outside us, or
both; our physical life is consuming bodily materials every moment to maintain
the life fire; and our moral life too has its fuel to burn. This life process
is going on - we know it, we have felt it; and we have a faith which no
individual instances to the contrary can shake, that the direction of humanity
is from evil to good. For we feel that good is the positive element in man's
nature, and in every age and every clime what man values most is his ideal of
goodness. We have known the good, we have loved it, and we have paid our
highest reverence to men who have shown in their lives what goodness is.
The question will be asked,
What is goodness; what does our moral nature mean? My answer is, that when a
man begins to have an extended vision of his true self, when he realizes that
he is much more than at present he seems to be, he begins to get conscious of
his moral nature. Then he grows aware of that which he is yet to be, and the
state not yet experienced by him becomes more real than that under his direct
experience. Necessarily, his perspective of life changes, and his will takes
the place of his wishes. For will is the supreme wish of the larger life, the
life whose greater portion is out of our present reach, whose objects are not
for the most part before our sight. Then comes the conflict of our lesser man
with our greater man, of our wishes with our will, of the desire for things
affecting our senses with the purpose that is within our heart. Then we begin
to distinguish between what we immediately desire and what is good. For good is
that which is desirable for our greater self. Thus the sense of goodness comes
out of a truer view of our life, which is the connected view of the wholeness
of the field of life, and which takes into account not only what is present
before us but what is not, and perhaps never humanly can be. Man, who is
provident, feels for that life of his which is not yet existent, feels much
more for that than for the life that is with him; therefore he is ready to
sacrifice his present inclination for the unrealized future. In this he becomes
great, for he realizes truth. Even to be efficiently selfish a man has to
recognize this truth, and has to curb his immediate impulses - in other words,
has to be moral. For our moral faculty is the faculty by which we know that
life is not made up of fragments, purposeless and discontinuous. This moral
sense of man not only gives him the power to see that the self has a continuity
in time, but it also enables him to see that he is not true when he is only
restricted to his own self. He is more in truth than he is in fact. He truly
belongs to individuals who are not included in his own individuality, and whom
he is never even likely to know. As he has a feeling for his future self which
is outside his present consciousness, so he has a feeling for his greater self
which is outside the limits of his personality. There is no man who has not
this feeling to some extent, who has never sacrificed his selfish desire for
the sake of some other person, who has never felt a pleasure in undergoing some
loss or trouble because it pleased somebody else. It is a truth that man is not
a detached being, that he has a universal aspect; and when he recognizes this,
he becomes great. Even the most evilly-disposed selfishness has to recognize
this when he seeks the power to do evil; for it cannot ignore truth and yet be
strong. So in order to claim the aid of truth, selfishness has to be unselfish
to some extent. A band of robbers must be moral in order to hold together as a
band; they may rob the whole world but not each other. To make an immoral
intention successful, some of its weapons must be moral. In fact, very often it
is our very moral strength which gives us most effectively the power to do
evil, to exploit other individuals for our own benefit, to rob other people of
their just rights. The life of an animal is unmoral, for it is aware only of an
immediate present; the life of a man can be immoral, but that only means that
it must have a moral basis. What is immoral is imperfectly moral just as what
is false is true to a small extent, or it cannot even be false. Not to see is
to be blind, but to see wrongly is to see only in an imperfect manner. Man's
selfishness is a beginning to see some connection, some purpose in life; and to
act in accordance with its dictates requires self-restraint and regulation of
conduct. A selfish man willingly undergoes troubles for the sake of the self,
he suffers hardship and privation without a murmur, simply because he knows
that what is pain and trouble, looked at from the point of view of a short
space of time, is just the opposite when seen in a larger perspective. Thus
what is a loss to the smaller man is a gain to the greater, and vice versa.
To the man who lives for an
idea, for his country for the good of humanity, life has an extented meaning,
and to that extent pain becomes important to him. To live the life of goodness
is to live the life of all. Pleasure is for one's own self, but goodness is
concerned with the happiness of all humanity and for all time. From the point of
view of the good, pleasure and pain appear in a different meaning; so much so,
that pleasure may be shunned, and pain be courted in its place, and death
itself be made welcome as giving a higher value to life. From these higher
standpoints of a man's life, the standpoints of the good, pleasure and pain
lose their absolute value. Martyrs prove it in history, and we prove it every
day in our life in our little martyrdoms. When we take a pitchersful of water
from the sea it has its weight, but when we take a dip into the sea itself a
thousand pitchersful of water flow above our head, and we do not feel their
weight. We have to carry the pitcher of self with our strength; and so, while
on the plane of selfishness pleasure and pain have their full weight, on the
moral plane they are so much lightened that the man who has reached it appears
to us almost super-human in his patience under crushing trials, and his
forbearance in the face of malignant persecution.
To live in perfect goodness is
to realize one's life in the infinite. This is the most comprehensive view of
life which we can have by our inherent power of the moral vision of the
wholeness of life. And the teaching of Buddha is to cultivate this moral power
to the highest extent, to know that our field of activities is not bound to the
plane of our narrow self. This is the vision of the heavenly kingdom of Christ.
When we attain to that universal life, which is the moral life, we become free
from bonds of pleasure and pain, and the place vacated by our self becomes
filled with an unspeakable joy which springs from measureless love. In this
state the soul's activity is all the more heightened, only its motive power is
not from desires, but in its own joy. This is the Karma-yoga of the Gita, the
way to become one with the infinite activity by the exercise of the activity of
disinterested goodness.
When Buddha meditated upon the
way of releasing mankind from the grip of misery he came to this truth: that
when man attains his highest end by merging the individual in the universal, he
becomes free from the thraldom of pain. Let us consider this point more fully.
A student of mine once related
to me his adventure in a storm, and complained that all the time he was
troubled with the feeling that this great commotion in nature behaved to him as
if he were no more than a mere handful of dust. That he was a distinct
personality with a will of his own had not the least influence upon what was
happening.
I said, 'If consideration for
our individuality could sway nature from her path, then it would be the
individuals who would suffer most.'
But he persisted in his doubt,
saying that there was this fact which could not be ignored - the feeling that I
am. The 'I' in us seeks for a relation which is individual to it.
I replied that the relation of
the 1' is with something which is 'not-I.' So we must have a medium which is
common to both, and we must be absolutely certain that it is the same to the
'I' as it is to the 'not-I'.
This is what needs repeating
here. We have to keep in mind that our individuality by its nature is impelled
to seek for the universal. Our body can only die if it tries to eat its own
substance, and our eye loses the meaning of its function if it can only see
itself.
Just as we find that the
stronger the imagination the less is it merely imaginary and the more is it in
harmony with truth, so we see the more vigorous our individuality the more does
it widen towards the universal. For the greatness of a personality is not in
itself but in its content, which is universal, just as the depth of a lake is
judged not by the size of its cavity but by the depth of its water.
So, if it is a truth that the
yearning of our nature is for reality, and that our personality cannot be happy
with a fantastic universe of its own creation, then it is clearly best for it
that our will can only deal with things by following their law, and cannot do
with them just as it pleases. This unyielding sureness of reality sometimes
crosses our will, and very often leads us to disaster, just as the firmness of
the earth invariably hurts the falling child who is learning to walk.
Nevertheless it is the same firmness that hurts him which makes his walking
possible. Once, while passing under a bridge, the mast of my boat got stuck in
one of its girders. If only for a moment the mast would have bent an inch or
two, or the bridge raised its back like a yawning cat, or the river given in,
it would have been all right with me. But they took no notice of my
helplessness. That is the very reason why I could make use of the river, and
sail upon it with the help of the mast, and that is why, when its current was
inconvenient, I could rely upon the bridge. Things are what they are, and we
have to know them if we would deal with them, and knowledge of them is possible
because our wish is not their law. This knowledge is a joy to us, for the
knowledge is one of the channels of our relation with the things outside us; it
is making them our own, and thus widening the limit of our self.
At every step we have to take
into account others than ourselves. For only in death are we alone. A poet is a
true poet when he can make his personal idea joyful to all men, which he could
not do if he had not a medium common to all his audience. This common language
has its own law which the poet must discover and follow, by doing which he
becomes true and attains poetical immortality.
We see then that man's
individuality is not his highest truth; there is that in him which is
universal. If he were made to live in a world where his own self was the only
factor to consider, then that would be the worst prison imaginable to him, for
man's deepest joy is in growing greater and greater by more and more union with
the all. This, as we have seen, would be an impossibility if there were no law
common to all. Only by discovering the law and following it, do we become
great, do we realize the universal; while, so long as our individual desires
are at conflict with the universal law, we suffer pain and are futile.
There was a time when we prayed
for special concessions, we expected that the laws of nature should be held in
abeyance for our own convenience. But now we know better. We know that law
cannot be set aside, and in this knowledge we have become strong. For this law
is not something apart from us; it is our own. The universal power which is
manifested in the universal law is one with our own power. It will thwart us
where we are small, where we are against the current of things; but it will
help us where we are great, where we are in unison with the all. Thus, through
the help of science, as we come to know more of the laws of nature, we gain in
power; we tend to attain a universal body. Our organ of sight, our organ of
locomotion, our physical strength becomes world-wide; steam and electricity
become our nerve and muscle. Thus we find that, just as throughout our bodily
organisation there is a principle of relation by virtue of which we can call
the entire body our own, and can use it as such, so all through the universe
there is that principle of uninterrupted relation by virtue of which we can
call the whole world our extended body and use it accordingly. And in this age
of science it is our endeavour fully to establish our claim to our world-self.
We know all our poverty and sufferings are owing to our inability to realize
this legitimate claim of ours. Really, there is no limit to our powers, for we
are not outside the universal power which is the expression of universal law.
We are on our way, to overcome disease and death, to conquer pain and poverty;
for through scientific knowledge we are ever on our way to realize the
universal in its physical aspect. And as we make progress we find that pain,
disease, and poverty of power are not absolute, but that it is only the want of
adjustment of our individual self to our universal self which gives rise to
them.
It is the same with our
spiritual life. When the individual man in us chafes against the lawful rule of
the universal man we become morally small, and we must suffer. In such a
condition our successes are our greatest failures, and the very fulfilment of
our desires leaves us poorer. We banker after special gains for ourselves, we
want to enjoy privileges which none else can share with us. But everything that
is absolutely special must keep up a perpetual warfare with what is general. In
such a state of civil war man always lives behind barricades, and in any
civilization which is selfish our homes are not real homes, but artificial
barriers around us. Yet we complain that we are not happy, as if there were
something inherent in the nature of things to make us miserable. The universal
spirit is waiting to crown us with happiness, but our individual spirit would
not accept it. It is our life of the self that causes conflicts and
complications everywhere, upsets the normal balance of society and gives rise
to miseries of all kinds. It brings things to such a pass that to maintain
order we have to create artificial coercions and organized forms of tyranny,
and tolerate infernal institutions in our midst, whereby at every moment
humanity is humiliated.
We have seen that in order to
be powerful we have to submit to the laws of the universal forces, and to
realize in practice that they are our own. So, in order to be happy, we have to
submit our individual will to the sovereignty of the universal will, and to
feel in truth that it is our own will. When we reach that state wherein the
adjustment of the finite in us to the infinite is made perfect, then pain
itself becomes a valuable asset. It becomes a measuring rod with which to gauge
the true value of our joy.
The most important lesson that
man can learn from his life is not that there is pain in this world, but that
it depends upon him to turn it into good account, that it is possible for him
to transmute it into joy. That lesson has not been lost altogether to us, and
there is no man living who would willingly be deprived of his right to suffer
pain, for that
is his right to be a man. One day the wife of a poor labourer complained
bitterly to me that her eldest boy was going to be sent away to a rich
relative's house for part of the year. It was the implied kind intention of
trying to relieve her of her trouble that gave her the shock, for a mother's
trouble is a mother's own by her inalienable right of love, and she was not
going to surrender it to any dictates of expediency. Man's freedom is never in
being saved troubles, but it is the freedom to take trouble for his own good,
to make the trouble an element in his joy. It can be made so only when we
realize that our individual self is not the highest meaning of our being, that
in us we have the world-man who is immortal, who is not afraid of death or
sufferings, and who looks upon pain as only the other side of joy. He who has
realized this knows that it is pain which is our true wealth as imperfect
beings, and has made us great and worthy to take our seat with the perfect. He
knows that we are not beggars; that it is the hard coin which must be paid for
everything valuable in this life, for our power, our wisdom, our love; that in
pain is symbolised the infinite possibility of perfection, the eternal
unfolding of joy; and the man who loses all pleasure in accepting pain sinks
down and down to the lowest depth of penury and degradation. It is only when we
invoke the aid of pain for our self-gratification that she becomes evil and
takes her vengeance for the insult done to her by hurling us into misery. For
she is the vestal virgin consecrated to the service of the immortal perfection,
and when she takes her true place before the altar of the infinite she casts
off her dark veil and bares her face to the beholder as a revelation of supreme
joy.
RABINDRANATH TAGORE