CHAPTER 20
The sensation of infinity. The first test of a Neophyte. Intolerable sadness. Loss of
everything real. What would an animal experience on becoming a man? Transition to
a new logic. Our logic as based on the observation of laws of the phenomenal world.
Its unsuitability for the study of the noumenal world. The need of a new logic.
Analogous axioms in logic and mathematics.
TWO
MATHEMATICS
. The mathematics
of real magnitudes (infinite and variable); and mathematics of unreal imaginary
magnitudes (finite and constant). Transfinite numbers -numbers lying
BEYOND
INFINITY
. The possibility of different infinities.
There exists an idea which a man should always try to remember when he finds himself
too engrossed in the sense of the reality of the
unreal
visible world in which everything
has a beginning and an end. It
is the idea of infinity, the fact of infinity.
In his book A
New Era of Thought,
in the chapter 'Space the Scientific Basis of
Altruism and Religion', Hinton says:
When we come upon infinity in any mode of our thought, it is a sign that that mode of
thought is dealing with a higher
reality than it is adapted for, and in struggling to
represent it, can only do so by an infinite number of terms [realities of a higher order],
And, indeed, what is infinity as an ordinary man pictures it?
It is the only reality, and at the same time it is the abyss,
the bottomless pit into
which our mind falls after having risen to a height where it cannot keep a foothold.
Now, let us imagine for a moment that a man
begins to sense infinity in everything,
every thought, every idea leads him to the sensation of infinity.
This is bound to happen to a man who passes to the understanding of a higher order
of reality.
What will he feel then?
He is bound to feel an abyss and a bottomless pit wherever he looks. And this feeling
is bound to bring with it
a sense of incredible fear, terror and sadness, until this terror
and sadness become transformed into the joy of feeling new reality. 'An intolerable
sadness is the very first experience of the Neophyte in occultism,' says the author of
Light on the Path.
We have previously examined the way in which
a two-dimensional being
might come to the understanding of the third dimension. But we have not
asked ourselves what such a being would
feel
when it begins to sense the
third dimension, begins to be conscious of the 'new world' around itself.
The first feeling is bound to be surprise and fear - a fear
approaching terror,
for before it finds the new world it must
lose the old.
Let us imagine an animal in which flashes of
human understanding
begin to
appear.
What will be its
first
sensation? The first sensation will be that its old
world,
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