Loading ...
Sorry, an error occurred while loading the content.
Attention: Starting December 14, 2019 Yahoo Groups will no longer host user created content on its sites. New content can no longer be uploaded after October 28, 2019. Sending/Receiving email functionality is not going away, you can continue to communicate via any email client with your group members. Learn More

3897Ch 48 Part 3 of Real I and a clean sheet

Expand Messages
  • capstealth
    Oct 11 2:26 AM

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-m004Ia7Lyc


      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uKpOkZhYMac&t=8s


      CH 48 PART THREE of Real "I" and a CLEAN SHEET

      Chapter 48: From the author

      From the author

      PART THREE

      Beelzebub's Tales
      to His Grandson

      REAL "I"

      Here it will not be
      superfluous to point
      out that the Institute
      for the Harmonious Development
      of Man has among its fundamental
      tasks the aim, on the one hand,
      of educating in its pupils
      each of the independent
      personalities I spoke of,
      first separately and then
      in their reciprocal
      relationships,
      according to the
      needs of their
      subjective life
      in the future,
      and on the other
      hand, of begetting
      and fostering in each
      of its pupils what every
      bearer of the name of "man
      without quotation marks"
      should have—-his own
      "I."

      For a more exact, and
      so to speak scientific,
      definition of the difference
      between a real man, that is,
      a man as he ought to be,
      and a "man in quotation
      marks," such as almost
      all contemporary people
      have become, it is
      appropriate to
      quote here what
      was said about
      this by Gurdjieff
      himself in one of
      his lectures.

      What he said was this:

      "For the definition of man,
      according to our point of view,
      no contemporary knowledge, whether
      anatomical, physiological, or
      psychological, can help us,
      since each of the
      characteristics
      it describes is
      inherent to one
      degree or another
      in every man and
      applies equally
      to all, and
      consequently
      this knowledge
      does not enable
      us to determine
      the exact difference
      between people that
      we wish to establish.

      "The measure of this
      difference can only be
      formulated in the
      following terms:

      "'Man is a being who can
      'do,' and 'to do' means to
      act consciously and by
      one's own initiative.

      "And indeed every more or
      less sane-thinking man,
      capable of being at all
      impartial, must admit
      that never before has
      there been, nor could
      there be, a fuller or
      more exhaustive
      definition.

      "Suppose that we provisionally
      accept this definition, the
      question inevitably arises
      can a man who is a product
      of contemporary education
      and civilization do anything
      at all himself, consciously
      and by his own will?

      "No . . . we answer at
      once to this question.

      "And why not? . . .

      "Simply because, as the
      Institute for the Harmonious
      Development of Man categorically
      affirms and demonstrates on the
      basis of its experiments,
      everything without
      exception, from
      beginning to end,
      'does itself in
      contemporary man,
      and there is nothing
      that a contemporary 
      man himself does.

      "In personal, family, and
      social life, in politics,
      science, art, philosophy,
      and religion, in short, in
      everything entering into the
      process of the ordinary life
      of a contemporary man,
      everything from
      beginning to end
      does itself, and
      not a single one
      of these 'victims
      of contemporary
      civilization'
      can 'do'
      anything.

      "This experimentally proved,
      categorical affirmation of the
      Institute for the Harmonious
      Development of Man, namely,
      that the ordinary man can
      'do' nothing and that
      everything does itself
      in him, coincides with
      what is said of
      man by contemporary
      'exact positive science.'

      "Contemporary 'exact positive
      science' says that a man is a
      very complex organism developed
      by evolution from the simplest
      organisms, and now capable of
      reacting in a very complex
      manner to external
      impressions.

      "This capacity for reaction
      in man is so complex, and the
      reflex movements can be so far
      removed from the causes evoking
      and conditioning them, that to
      naive observation the actions
      of man, or at least some of
      them, seem quite 
      spontaneous.

      According to the ideas of
      Gurdjieff, the ordinary man
      is really incapable of the
      slightest independent or
      spontaneous action or
      word.

      "He is entirely the result
      of external influences.

      "Man is a transforming machine,
      a kind of transmitting station
      of forces.

      "Thus from the point of view of
      the totality of Gurdjieff's ideas
      and also according to contemporary
      'exact positive science,' a man
      differs from animals only in
      the greater complexity both
      of his reactions to external
      impressions and of the
      structure of his
      perceptive system.

      "And as for that which is
      attributed to man and is
      called 'will,' Gurdjieff
      completely denies the
      possibility of its
      existence in the
      common presence
      of the ordinary
      man.

      WILL

      "Will is a certain combination
      obtained from the results of
      definite properties specially
      elaborated in themselves by
      people who can 'do.'

      "In the presence of ordinary
      people what they call 'will'
      is exclusively the 
      resultant
      of desires.

      REAL WILL

      "Real will is the sign of a
      very high degree of being
       in
      comparison with the being of
      the ordinary man. And only
      those who possess such
      being can 'do.'

      "All other people are simply
      automatons, machines, or mechanical
      toys set in motion by external forces,
      acting only insofar as the 'spring'
      placed in them acts in response to
      accidental surrounding conditions—-
      a spring that they can neither
      lengthen nor shorten, nor
      change in any way on
      their own initiative.

      "And so, while recognizing great
      possibilities in man, we deny him
      any value as an independent unit
      as long as he remains such as
      he is today.

      In order to emphasize the
      absence of any will whatsoever
      in the ordinary man, there can
      be added here a passage from
      another of Gurdjieff's talks,
      in which the manifestations
      of this famous will
      attributed to man
      are picturesquely
      described.

      Addressing one of the
      people present,
      Gurdjieff said:

      "You have plenty of money,
      luxurious conditions of existence,
      and universal esteem and respect.
      At the head of your well-
      established business
      concerns you have
      people who are
      absolutely
      reliable and
      devoted to you,
      in a word, your
      life is a bed of
      roses.

      "You dispose of your time
      as you please, you are a patron
      of the arts, you settle world
      questions over a cup of
      coffee, and you even take
      an interest in the development
      of the latent spiritual forces
      of man. You are not unfamiliar
      with matters of the spirit, and
      you are quite at home with
      philosophical questions.
      You are well educated
      and widely read. Having
      extensive knowledge in a
      variety of fields, you are
      reputed to be an intelligent
      man, adept at resolving any
      problem whatever. You are
      the very model of culture.

      "All who know you regard
      you as a man of great will,
      and most of them even ascribe
      your success to the result of
      the manifestations of this
      will of yours.

      "In short, from every point
      of view, you fully deserve
      to be imitated and are a
      man to be envied.

      "In the morning you wake
      up under the influence of
      some oppressive dream.

      "Your slightly depressed mood,
      though rapidly dispelled on
      awakening, has nevertheless
      left its mark a certain
      languidness and
      hesitancy in your
      movements.

      "You go to the mirror to
      brush your hair and carelessly
      drop the brush, you have only
      just picked it up, when you
      drop it again. You then pick
      it up with a shade of impatience,
      and so you drop it for the third
      time, you try to catch it in
      the air, but . . . an unlucky
      blow of your hand, and the
      brush makes for the mirror,
      in vain you try to grab it . . . too late!
      Crack! . . .
      There is a star of
      cracks on that antique
      mirror of which you were
      so proud.

      "Damn! Devil take it! You
      feel a need to vent your
      annoyance on someone or
      other, and not finding
      the newspaper beside your
      morning coffee, the servant
      having forgotten to put it
      there, the cup of your
      patience overflows and
      you decide that you
      cannot stand the
      fellow any longer
      in the house.

      "It is time for you to go out.
      As the weather is fine and you
      haven't far to go, you decide
      to walk. Behind you glides
      your new automobile of the
      latest model.

      "The bright sunshine somewhat
      calms you. A crowd that has
      collected at the corner
      attracts your attention.

      "You go nearer, and in the
      middle of the crowd you see
      a man lying unconscious on
      the pavement. A policeman,
      with the help of some of
      the 'bystanders,' puts the
      man into a taxi to take him
      to the hospital.

      "Thanks merely to the likeness,
      which has just struck you, between
      the face of the taxi driver and the
      face of the drunken monk you bumped
      into last year when you were
      returning, somewhat tipsy
      yourself, from a rowdy
      birthday party, you
      notice that the accident
      on the street corner is
      unaccountably connected
      in your associations
      with a cake you ate
      at that party.

      "Ah, what a cake that was!

      "That servant of yours,
      forgetting your newspaper
      today, spoiled your breakfast.
      Why not make up for it right
      now?

      "Here is a fashionable Café
      where you sometimes go with
      your friends.

      "But why did you suddenly
      remember the servant? Had
      you not almost entirely
      forgotten the morning's
      annoyances? But now . . .
      how very good the
      cake tastes with
      the coffee.

      "Look! There are two young
      women at the next table.
      What a charming blonde!

      "You hear her whispering to
      her companion, as she glances
      at you 'Now that's just the
      sort of man I like!'

      "Do you deny that on
      accidentally overhearing
      these words, perhaps said
      out loud for your benefit,
      the whole of you, as is
      said, 'inwardly
      rejoices'?

      "Suppose that at this moment
      you were asked whether it had
      been worth while getting worked
      up and losing your temper over
      the morning's annoyances, you
      would of course answer in the
      negative and promise yourself
      that nothing of the kind
      would ever occur again.

      "Need I mention how your mood
      was transformed while you were
      making the acquaintance of the
      blonde you were interested in
      and who was interested in you,
      and what your state was during
      the whole time you spent with
      her?

      "You return home humming some
      gay tune, and even the sight
      of the broken mirror only
      elicits a smile from you.

      "But how about the business
      on which you had gone out
      this morning? . . . You
      only now remember it.
      Clever . . . well,
      never mind, you
      can telephone.

      "You go to the phone and
      the girl connects you with
      the wrong number.

      "You ring again, and get the
      same number. Some man informs
      you that you are bothering him,
      you tell him it is not your fault,
      and what with one word and another,
      you learn to your surprise that you
      are a boor and an idiot and that
      if you ring him up again . . . then . . .

      "A rug slipping under your feet
      provokes a storm of indignation,
      and you should hear the tone of
      voice in which you rebuke the
      servant who is handing you a
      letter!

      "The letter is from a man you
      esteem and whose good opinion
      you value highly.

      "Its contents are so flattering
      that, as you read, your irritation
      subsides and gives way to the
      'pleasant embarrassment' of a
      man listening to a eulogy of
      himself. You finish reading
      the letter in the happiest
      of moods.

      "I could go on with this
      picture of your day—-
      you free man!

      "Perhaps you think
      I am exaggerating?

      "No, it is a photographically
      exact snapshot, taken from life."

      While speaking of man's
      will and of the different
      aspects of its supposedly
      autonomous manifestations,
      which for contemporary so-
      called "inquiring minds"—-
      but in our view, naive
      minds—-serve only as
      material for wiseacring
      and self-adulation, it
      will do no harm to
      quote what Gurdjieff
      said in yet another of
      his talks, because the
      ideas he brought on that
      occasion may well throw
      light on the illusoriness
      of that will which every
      man is supposed to 
      have.

      A CLEAN SHEET

      He spoke as follows:

      "A man comes into the
      world like a clean sheet
      of paper,
       which immediately
      all around him begin vying
      with each other to dirty
      and fill up with education,
      morality, the information we
      call 'knowledge,' and with all
      kinds of ideas of duty, honor,
      conscience, and so on and
      so forth.

      "And each and all claim
      immutability and infallibility
      for the methods they employ for
      grafting these branches onto
      the main trunk, called man's
      'personality.'

      "The sheet of paper gradually
      becomes dirty,
       and the dirtier
      it becomes, that is to say, the
      more a man is stuffed with
      ephemeral information and
      notions of duty, honor, and
      so on, which are dinned into
      him or suggested to him by
      others, the more 'clever'
      and worthy he is
      considered by those
      around him.

      "And seeing that people look
      upon his dirt as merit, he
      himself inevitably comes to
      look upon the dirtied sheet
      of paper in the same light.

      "And so you have a model
      of what we call a 'man,'
      to whom such words as
      'talent' and 'genius'
      are frequently 
      applied.

      "And the temper of our
      'genius' when he wakes
      up in the morning is
      spoiled for the whole
      day if he does not
      find his slippers
      beside the bed.

      "The ordinary man is 
      not free in his life, in his
      manifestations, or in his
      moods.

      "He cannot be what he
      would like to be, and
      what he considers himself
      to be, he is not that.

      "Man—how mighty it sounds!
      The very name 'man' means
      the 'acme of creation', but
      how does this title fit
      contemporary man?

      "And yet man should indeed
      be the acme of creation, since
      he is formed with and has in
      himself all the possibilities
      for acquiring exactly similar
      data to those of the
      Actualizer of all that
      exists in the Universe.

      "To have the right to the
      name of man, one must 
      be one.

      "And to be a man, one
      must first of all, with
      an indefatigable persistence
      and an unquenchable impulse of
      desire issuing from all the
      separate independent parts
      constituting one's entire
      common presence, that is
      to say, with a desire
      issuing simultaneously
      from thought, feeling,
      and organic instinct,
      work on an all-round
      knowledge of oneself,
      while struggling
      unceasingly with
      one's subjective
      weaknesses, and
      afterward, taking
      one's stand upon the
      results thus obtained
      by one's consciousness
      alone regarding the
      defects in one's
      established subjectivity
      as well as the means for
      the possibility of
      combating them,
      strive for their
      eradication without
      mercy toward oneself.

      "Speaking frankly, contemporary
      man as we can know him if we are
      capable of impartiality is nothing
      more than a clockwork mechanism,
      though of a very complex
      construction.

      SENSE AND AIM OF
      ARISING AND EXISTENCE

      "A man must without fail think
      deeply about every aspect of his
      mechanicality and understand it
      thoroughly, in order to appreciate
      fully the meaning of this
      mechanicality and all the
      consequences and results
      it implies, both for his
      own further life and for
      the justification of the
      sense and aim of his
      arising and existence.

      "For a man who wishes to study
      human mechanicality in general
      and make it clear to himself,
      the very best object of study
      is certainly himself with his
      own mechanicality, but to study
      this practically and to understand
      it intelligently with all one's being,
      and not 'psychopathically,' that is,
      with only one part of one's entire
      presence, is possible solely by
      means of correctly conducted
      self-observation.

      "And as regards the possibility
      of conducting self-observation
      correctly, without the risk of
      incurring any of the maleficent
      consequences that have resulted
      all too often from people's
      attempts to do this without
      proper knowledge, it is
      necessary to warn you, in
      order to avoid excessive zeal,
      that our experience, supported
      by a great deal of exact information,
      has shown that this is not as simple
      a thing as it may appear at first
      glance. That is why we take as
      the groundwork for correctly
      conducted self-observation
      the study of the mechanicality
      of contemporary man.

      "Before beginning to study this
      mechanicality and all the principles
      of correctly conducted self-observation,
      a man must decide, once and for all,
      that he will be unconditionally
      sincere
       with himself, that he
      will shut his eyes to nothing,
      will shun no results wherever
      they may lead him, fear no
      inferences, and impose no
      limits upon himself in
      advance, furthermore, in
      order that these principles
      may be properly perceived and
      assimilated by each of the
      followers of this new
      teaching, an appropriate
      form of 'language' must be
      established, since we find
      the existing form quite
      unsuitable for such a
      study.

      "As regards the first condition,
      it is necessary at the very outset
      to give warning that a man,
      unaccustomed to thinking and
      acting along lines that
      correspond to the
      principles of self-
      observation, will need
      great courage to accept
      sincerely the conclusions
      reached and not lose heart,
      but submit to them and continue
      to follow these principles with
      the crescendo of persistence
      that this study obligatorily
      demands.

      "These conclusions may, as is
      said, 'upset' all the convictions
      and beliefs deep-rooted in a man,
      as well as the whole order of his
      usual thinking, and in that event,
      he may be robbed, perhaps forever,
      of all the pleasant 'values dear
      to his heart' which have
      hitherto made up his
      calm and serene life.

      "Thanks to correctly conducted
      self-observation, a man, from
      the very first days, will
      clearly grasp and recognize
      without question his complete
      powerlessness and helplessness
      in the face of literally
      everything around 
      him.

      "With the whole of his being
      he will be convinced that
      everything governs him,
      everything directs him.
      He neither governs nor
      directs anything at all.

      "He is attracted or repelled
      not only by everything animate
      which has in itself the capacity
      of arousing one or another
      association in him, but even
      by entirely inert and
      inanimate things.

      "If he frees himself of all
      imagination about himself and
      of all self-calming—-impulses
      which have become inherent in
      contemporary people—-he will
      recognize that his whole life
      is nothing but a blind reacting
      to these attractions and
      repulsions.

      "He will see clearly how his
      so-called 'world outlook,' his
      opinions, character, taste, and
      so on, have been molded—-in short,
      how his individuality has been
      formed and under what
      influences it is liable
      to be changed.

      "And as regards the second
      condition, that is, the
      establishment of a
      correct language,
      this is indispensable
      because our recently
      adopted language, which
      has acquired, as it were,
      'rights of citizenship,'
      and in which we speak,
      write books, and convey
      our knowledge and ideas
      to others has, in our view,
      become quite worthless for
      any more or less exact 
      exchange of opinions.

      "The words that make up our
      contemporary language, owing
      to the arbitrary meaning people
      put into them, convey only
      indefinite and relative
      notions, and are thus
      taken by ordinary people
      'elastically.'

      EDUCATION

      "In producing this abnormality
      in the life of man, a large part
      was played, in our opinion, BY
      THAT SAME ABNORMAL SYSTEM 
      OF EDUCATION
       OF THE RISING
      GENERATION.

      "And it played a large part
      because by compelling the young,
      as we have already said, to repeat
      like parrots the greatest possible
      number of words, teaching them to
      differentiate one from another
      only by their sound, as though
      the real pith of their meaning
      had no importance, this system
      of education has resulted in the
      gradual loss in people of the
      capacity to ponder and reflect
      upon what they are talking
      about and upon what is
      being said to them.

      "Having lost this capacity and
      at the same time needing to
      convey their thoughts more
      or less exactly to others,
      they are obliged, in spite
      of the endless number of
      words already existing in
      each of the contemporary
      languages, either to borrow
      from other languages or to
      invent always more and
      more words, so that
      finally, when a
      contemporary man
      wishes to express
      an idea for which
      he knows many apparently
      suitable words, and chooses
      one that seems according to

      (Message over 64 KB, truncated)