Quotes from the Key of Knowledge by C.R.Jain

( written in 1919 )


Chapter 1 The Ideal

1.        They who have no central purpose in life fall an easy prey to petty worries, fears, troubles and self pitying- James Allen
2.       Be ye therefore perfect, even as your father which is in heaven is perfect- Jesus
3.       Ask and it shall be given you; seek and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you.
4.       The question , therefore , arises as to what is the proper ideal for mankind to cherish ? Money etc. are so many means to an end, not the end itself.
5.       Some people think that happiness is to be had in heaven because of the vision of glory of god which is to be had there. But this too is dependent on will and pleasure of god. Besides vision of another cannot confer real happiness on the soul. We find happiness in our own greatness and power.
6.       What do we say when we have had a happy day ? We say that we have enjoyed ourselves. Our happiness depends upon ourselves.
7.       We therefore hold that proper ideal for mankind is God, the ever living, all knowing , the most blissful. All other ideals fail to secure the full measure of happiness, and are unworthy of soul.
8.       All knowledge comes from meditation and deliberation. Nature is the open book of truth. He who would meditate over it would learn the secret.
9.       Those who believe in God can be divided into three groups.
a.        God as creator and sustainer of universe, but separate from nature and human soul. He is regarded as capricious, whimsical, despotic monarch, easily offended at slights, hard to please and always to be dreaded. The highest ideal of happiness provided by this system consists in life on heaven – a sort of boarding house, on a large scale, managed by God, where his children can indulge in their animal passions to the full, in eating, drinking and according to some, even in fornication. This is the lowest of the three classes.
b.        Second group believes that there is a God, but considers that universe cannot be separate from him. It maintains that creation took place in the sense in which it is understood in the west, that is making of something real out of nothing. According to this sect, God is himself the creator as well as the material of which beings and things are made. Accordingly , God, Nature and individual soul are the three aspects of one and the same things. Here we have the dissolution of personality i.e. separateness, in to one Absolute being or Life as the ideal of the soul.
c.        The third class  consists of those luminous souls who have dared to conceive the truth in its highest aspect. They regard the soul to be its own God and capable of attaining the full measure of perfection and bliss.

10.    Mankind wanted a cheap, simple recipe like a physician’s draught    which  could be taken once day to  prevent or cure the disorders of spirituality; and simpler the method the quicker were the people to respond to it. It was thus that every one who had a little smattering of religious lore managed or secure some followers to himself; and if he could perform a miracle or two in addition ,his success as the founder of a religion was at once put beyond dispute
11.      On each occasion that you think that your business matters ought not to suffer for devotion to Godhead, you seal your own doom and drive an additional nail into your own coffin with your own hands.
12.     You would be no where if in reply to your request for an admission ticket into the kingdom of heaven, the angel told you that he did not understand what you meant by that term. You must have a clear idea of the thing desired before you can ever expect to get it.
13.      Real bliss is  very different from pleasures of this world. It is that condition in which one experiences nothing but uninterrupted , peace, tranquility and joy, wave upon wave , as it were of life giving ecstasy, the becoming rather than enjoying bliss itself which is god’s eternal swabhava.
14.     Renunciation is giving up of base imitations, of false ideals, of worthless substitutes and acquisition of eternal life.
15.     Vast majority worship their god on account of a vague and indefinable sense of fear.
16.      It will not bring you any pleasure if all the ants in your house prostrate themselves before you , praise you up to the skies, and offer you a portion of a dead cricket, or some such insect.
17.     It is certainly the free appreciation of one’s equals which is pleasing to  ear , not the flattery or servile homage of inferiors.




Chapter 2    Creation

1.     “Nothing existed” is a self contradictory assertion.
2.       Matter is only capable of making material bodies; it will never succeed in creating tenants to occupy and enjoy the products of its labour.
3.       In order that the indivisible idea of truth be result of activity of brain, either different parts of the idea  must belong to different parts of the brain or each part of the brain must be subject of an entire idea or the whole idea must pertain to a single part of the brain . If we accept the last then our thesis that the ultimate subject of thought is indivisible is established at once.
4.       Recollection , then would be impossible for a consciousness which is constantly generated from the physical matter of brain , and which does not, therefore persist through life.
5.       Soul cannot possibly be annihilated out of existence, and is an entity quite independent of the physical body.
6.       Perception is not a function of sense organs but of the soul, as we maintain, then there is no escape from the conclusion that the death of the body would not mean the destruction of the perceptive faculties of the soul.
7.       Careful observation will show that the organs of sense are merely channels for the passage of vibrations from the world. They do not in any sense constitute a factory for the manufacturing of will, consciousness and reason.
8.       The power of perception is not, in any sense, a product of sense organs but inheres in the soul.
9.       Consciousness or mind  must exist independently of matter; for it would be strange logic to say that mind is the product of substance which itself depends on mind for its perception. This is precisely what vedanta teaches. According to it, one universal consciousness or God whom it calls Brahman is the only real existence and all  else is an illusion.
10.    He alone who identifies himself with his inner reality attains immortality.
11.     To the vedantist, the whole thing is an illusion, and the only reality is one conscious Existence, his own self , which he calls Brahman and defines with the words, “ not that, not that”. The idea underlying this quite negative definition is that Brahman is so hopelessly beyond words that it can only be defined by negation of all things definable by language.
12.        As regards the number of souls in existence, Vedanta is rigidly monistic even as to that , maintaining that there is and can be only one soul in existence.
13.        The “ hama aust” “ all is he “ doctrine of Muslim Idealism is almost a copy of advaita vedanta. It also aims at the unification of things in the unity of God.
14.        Monism is possible only by throttling common sense since it is opposed to concrete facts.
15.        We are given the duality of Brahman and Maya to start with . Whether this Maya be a thing which actually exists or not ?
16.        If we say that it is an actuality of existence , then there is an end to our Monistic aspiration at once. But if it is not endowed with existence, then it is impossible that which has no existence whatsoever should ever be perceived. Vedanta has never been able to extricate itself of this dilemma.
17.        With ‘him’ alone in existence , it is inevitable that the world should be reduced to a simple dream, with ‘him’ as the dreamer all other living things being as phantoms of imagination . Summum Bonum is either the destruction of the reflection, or the merging in ‘him’ which also involves annihilation of the individual. What sort of consolation is the soul to derive from the idea of annihilation which stares it in the face , it is difficult to imagine.   
18.        Those who maintain that soul is only a reflection of a conscious reality, are unable also to explain how it happens to be endowed with consciousness.
19.        If there is only one soul in existence, and  be eternal, omnipresent and blissful, how are the feeling of pain and longing of individual soul to escape from bondage of samsara to be accounted for ?
20.       Since Brahman has never needed liberation, and since the individual souls , being pure, are debarred by their very nature , from its attainment. Hence no one can be said to have ever been benefitted by its teaching.
21.        The soul which approaches the Advaita Vedanta, with a view to obtain everlasting happiness, must prepare itself to be wiped out of existence.
22.       It is thus clear that the aspirations of idealism to attain a monistic culmination is foredoomed to failure.
23.       According to Mahomedan belief, man was made from a handful of dust. Just so : but what we want to know is this : did the dust exist independently of God , or was it also made by him some time prior to making of man ? We now reached a point of time when there was nothing else but God in existence, and are entitled to ask , who obeyed  the first “ kun” ( let it be done) uttered by the Creator, and from what material was the first thing manufactured.
24.       The answer to these questions can only be that God obeyed his own command and projected the material for manufacturing the thing he  desired to make for himself.
25.       What enables the creator to create the universe is his power of image making, that is, the faculty of Imagination. The Vedantist calls this image making faculty of mind “ Maya”; the Sufi calls it “ Kuwwat-i-khayal”, and in English it is termed imagination.
26.       If the matter was created from nothing , it must be endowed with a reality born out of nothingness.
27.       Thus the immediate and logical result of their belief about the origin of matter, would be the acceptance of the doctrine of Vedanta, which also describes the world as an illusion i.e. the reality born out of nothingness.
28.       As a result , we say that neither the Idealism nor any other system of philosophy can ever hope to succeed in solving the world mystery, without first recognising the existence of two fundamentally different kinds of substances , the conscious and unconscious.
29.       By reality we mean persistence in consciousness, a persistence which is either unconditional, as our consciousness of space, or which is conditional, as our consciousness of a body while grasping it.
30.       True Idealism , while describing the universe as an illusion, does not go the length of saying that it is altogether non existent; hence what it describes as an illusion is the same thing as it is called the material world by Realist.
31.        This is but another way of saying that they are composed of some kind of material, which, for the sake of lucidity and uniformity of thought , may be called matter.
Creation theories:
        A.     The Theistic account
First cause – God (as spirit)
Nature of world process- creation by word of a command of real material universe, or a making of something out of nothing
B.           The Hindu Theory
First Cause – God ( a spirit)
Nature of world process- Projection and final re-absorption of a real universe, in imitation of a spider’s web.
C.           The materialistic theory
Causes- (1) Dead , unconscious matter.
             (2) Forces of nature
Nature of world process- Evolution, in the course of which consciousness arises from the dead matter, as miraculously as the creation of world out of nothing.
D.          Vedanta theory
Cause – Sat-chit-ananda ( consciousness)
Nature of world process- creation is caused by Maya shakti ( the faculty of imagination) and is consequently possessed of a dreamlike reality only.

(A)       is wrong since it contradicts the daily human experience that out of nothing, nothing comes
(B)        is defective since it pushes the duality of seer and the seen in the spider like belly.
(C)        If defective since it loses sight of the subjective aspect
(D)       Its monistic aspiration is foredoomed to failure.
To sum up, consciousness is a reality independent of matter, and in no sense its product.




Chapter 3 God

1.    It has already been established in the last chapter that the notion of creation of the world is unentertainable for rational thought; but it has not yet been ascertained whether God be creator of individuals or not ? Now this is investigated.
2.   Firstly why should God take the trouble of making anything at all ?
a.   Because it pleased him to do so ?
b.   He felt lonely and wanted company ?
c.   He wanted to create beings who would praise his glory and worship him .
d.   He did it in sport.
3.   It is necessary to note that if God is full and perfect in himself, he cannot have any desires or unsatisfied cravings in him. Blissfulness which must be an attribution of Godhood , only means a state of consciousness in which there is not only knowledge of perfection and fullness in one’s own self but an absence of all desires as well. Hence if God sought pleasure in homage of others , he could not be happy in himself.
4.   Anger cannot be an attribute of Godhood, since God must be presumed to be happy, and since anger is the antithesis of happiness, as it only arises when things do not happen as they should , hence he who is angry cannot be happy at the same time.
5.   If God sees all things every moment of his life, the full panorama of human wickedness and sin, and if he be an irritable God, he would hardly ever have a moment’s peace of mind. Himself in need of happiness, he certainly cannot confer it on others. Hence anger cannot have any place in the consciousness of God.
6.   Moreover, it is a blot on omniscience to say that it could not foresee that happiness could not be had from the company of unhappy mortals.
7.   If the creator be omnipotent, as he is supposed to be, why should it please him to create a world where sorrow and pain are the inevitable lot of his creatures.
8.   Gita endeavors to steer clear of difficulty of attributing desire to God by making creative activity a function of essence of God. The idea conveyed is that creation is not the outcome of a deliberate effort on part of the God, but results from his functional activity, so that no desire can be attributed to him for world making.
Note : This god becomes same as karmas as per Jains
9.   If a soul is born ignorant, it is not its fault, for it was so created by its God. But the question is : why should an omnipotent creator create ignorant soul and then be constantly sending down prophets and saviours for their enlightenment, and suffer contradictory doctrines to be circulated amongst them, so that ordinarily it should be well nigh impossible to know the truth ?
10.                Judgement Day : It would seem that plea of ignorance would not be allowed, the rewards and punishment shall be eternal. A soul could not plead that the teachings of Mahomed was entitled to greater credence than the doctrine of Christ or vice versa. And what of him who dies in his mother’s womb ? Alas! Even he must appear to be punished or rewarded on the judgement day, and to be sent to heaven or hell, for there is no third place for souls to go.
11.  We are constrained to observe that notions such as these might have passed for good sense or sound philosophy in the dark days of medieval period, but in 20th century of our civilization intelligent people have a right to expect consistent reason rather than a torrent of chaotic speech from those who set themselves up as spiritual teachers of men.
12.                If soul is spirit, either God manufactures it out of his own body, for he said to be the pure spirit, or out of a lump of spiritual clay which he might possess. The first act would go on to reduce the being of God which is absurd. In the second, the spiritual clay must be atomic or non atomic. If atomic then the attribution of its creation to God is purely gratuitous since spiritual atom already exists. If it is second then it cannot be broken into smaller spirits hence not tenable.
13.                The question is , is the death of fetal condition is due to God’s action or some other power, or did the Lord God change his mind in the middle of process of manufacturing.
14.                To what earthly –or, for that matter, even heavenly – purpose can he whose being is the purest expression of holiness of the most exalted type constitute himself a manager of the world ?
15.                Our conclusion, then is that the notion of the supreme Being as Governor of the universe is as baseless and irrational as wild conjecture that divinity consists in the creation of a world.
16.                We must distinguish between pleasure and joy. Former is merely a gratification of the senses, thus short term. Joy is an emotion and has the element of freedom in it. It is a state of gladness indicating exhilaration of spirits.
17.                Joy is a state of mind which has its roots in mental conviction , in other words, in faith. Joy is a state of exhilaration which is manifested in consequence of some lasting and permanent good i.e.  removal of some fetters from soul.
18.                Emotion of joy springs up in consequence of the belief that never again the same thing be striven for. The sense of freedom from future straining and striving therefore, is the direct and immediate cause of joy.
19.                Who can gauge the depth of feeling, or rather the emotion, of freedom which such an one, who has mastered all knowledge and annihilated all doubts, will feel in his emancipated state.
20.               Bliss is that beatific state of being in which joy wells up in the soul, as wave upon wave of pure ecstasy in unceasing succession.
21.                he who realises himself to be the all knowing , the ever free and very source , as it were of blissfulness itself must, therefore , necessarily enjoy bliss; for him there is an end of all anxieties and bondage.
22.               Consciousness is both infinite and simple and we have to recognise it as a whole. It means that we are the infinite ourselves; it means that the real nature of all living beings in the universe is unconditionally divine. It means that the soul is its own God.
23.               True divinity as constituted by perfection in respect of knowledge and bliss and Holiness, which are , undoubtedly, the essential and inalienable attributes of each and every soul. Hence the statement: “ He who knoweth his own self knoweth God “ sayings of Muhammad.





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