Human Purpose and Destiny
Human Purpose and Destiny
Human Purpose and Destiny
Since the dawn of recorded history, human beings have pondered the most fundamental
questions of life: Who am I?, Why am I here?, What is life all about? Throughout the ages,
philosophers, scientists, mystics and ordinary people have contemplated these great questions
and wondered about the origin and nature of the universe, the meaning and purpose of human
life on earth, and the place of humanity in the great scheme of things. Professor of philosophy
Jacob Needleman explores these timeless questions and their relevance to our own individual
lives:
The universe? From where did it come? How? When? By what energies did
what we see only in tiny glimpses come into being? – the universe containing
infinities of organized, living worlds, earths, suns, galaxies – cells, organic life,
atmosphere – purpose, directions, and lawful order, fundamental forces at
work everywhere and in everything – all of which emerged out of what? By
what greater mind? By what intelligence did it all appear, an intelligence
that embraces even the automatisms of Darwinian evolution on the ground
of which everything from a mosquito to a Buddha appears on this earth? In
such a case, self-knowledge and experience would not be a passive recording
for manipulation of impressions from without, but a seminal generation of
realities within realities – just as in any organism the telos or purpose of the
whole generates the elements and organs and instrumentalities that maintain
the inner world of the organism. And man? Of all creatures we know of on
Earth, the intelligent self-regulating and self-creating force would have the
added attribute that completes the structure of the universe we know – and
that added attribute is conscious intelligence, consciousness as a force of na-
ture, a universal energy. Who, looking at “the starry sky above and the moral
law within” can really maintain that it all “just happened”? (1)
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Innovative thinkers such as Ervin Laszlo have also speculated on the existential meaning of
humanity in the cosmic drama: “The ultimate purpose of human existence is to consciously
foster and further the transmission of the underlying and all-encompassing intelligence of the
cosmos into the universe.” And, scientific researcher Christopher Hills opines: “The purpose of
life is to evolve consciousness until it becomes one with the light which created it.”
The search for our true identity as human beings and the nature of ultimate reality is at the
heart of the discovery of our purpose and destiny on earth. “As a plant grows toward the light,
so does humanity yearn for Spirit and greater awareness, because, like a plant’s inherent
capacity to receive and respond to light, there is a teleological design at work in us from the
start.”
In The Meeting of Science and Spirit, educator and author John White describes a two-way
cosmic process in which Spirit manifests the physical universe and humanity reaches for Spirit
in order to actualize its divine birthright through self-realization or enlightenment:
The meaning and purpose of human life on Earth has also been placed in an evolutionary
perspective in which the sense of a personal ego is transcended for a higher state of being.
Human history, both individually and collectively, is a process of ascent to a higher level of
consciousness and being: “Humanity is proceeding from a pre-personal state of simple animal
consciousness through the personalized state of self-reflective, egoic consciousness to the
transpersonal state of self-transcendence or consciousness beyond ego.” John White:
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The long evolutionary ascent of the human species can be described thus far
as a journey from a state of unconscious ignorance to conscious knowing. At
this point in our history humanity is characterized by a state of consciousness
called ego. But if evolution is still going on, what might come next in our
journey? From a spiritual perspective the answer is clear: The purpose of the
human journey is to regain heaven, our lost estate. Heaven is union with God.
Its opposite is the illusion of separateness. The self to be transcended is ego.
What is ego? It is essentially bound consciousness. It is the notion of separate
selfhood, personal autonomy, independence from the nurturing matrix of
society and environment which supports individualized life. It is limited iden-
tity. It is self-conceived as being apart from God or ultimate Reality or Cosmic
Wholeness. (4)
Gurdjieff taught that human beings, through self-study and conscious inner work, could
develop to a level where they were a complete reflection of the spiritual dimensions of the
greater cosmos: “Man is an image of the world. He was created by the same laws which
created the whole of the world. By knowing and understanding himself, he will know and
understand the whole world, all the laws that create and govern the world. And at the same
time by studying the world and the laws that govern the world he will learn and understand the
laws that govern him.”
By simultaneously studying the fundamental laws that govern both the universe and human
physiological and psychological functioning, a comprehensive understanding of the different
planes of reality and our relationship to them, can be developed: “The laws are the same
everywhere and on all planes. But the very same laws manifesting themselves in different
worlds, that is, under different conditions, produce different phenomena.” A fully developed
human being reflects the structure of the universe in both a material and metaphysical sense:
All the matter of the world that surrounds us, the food we eat, the water we
drink, the air we breathe, our own bodies – everything is permeated by all
the matters that exist in the universe. There is no need to study and investi-
gate the Sun in order to discover the matter of the solar world: this matter
exists in ourselves and is the result of the division of our atoms. In the same
way we have in us the matter of all other worlds. Man is, in the full sense of
the term, a ‘miniature universe’; in him are all the matters of which the uni-
verse consists; the same forces, the same laws that govern the life of the
universe, operate in him; therefore, in studying man we can study the whole
world, just as in studying the world we can study man. But a complete paral-
lel between man and the world can only be drawn if we take ‘man’ in the
full sense of the word, that is, a man whose inherent powers are developed.
An undeveloped man, a man who has not completed the course of his evo-
lution, cannot be taken as a complete picture or plan of the universe – he is
an unfinished world. (5)
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In his thought-provoking book The People of the Secret, Ernest Scott proposes that human
evolution and history are directed by the efforts of an Intelligence which is in harmony with and
responsible for the implementation of a ‘cosmic plan.’ The mandate of this Cosmic Intelligence
is to raise the level of consciousness of humanity in general, and of suitable individuals specifi-
cally. Far from being random, the evolution of life on earth represents the unfolding of a vast,
panoramic plan for humanity and the natural world, with cosmic goals stretching across millions
of years. These evolutionary gains are in harmony with corresponding growth on a planetary
and galactic scale beyond the earth.
History is not the equilibrant of chance and hazard. It does not just happen.
The script for the long human story was written by intelligences much greater
than our own. Certain gains and goals for mankind – and for the biosphere
of earth – must be attained within certain intervals of Earth time. These gains
are essential for the balance and growth of the solar system of which the
Earth is a part. The solar system may itself be subject to a similar pressure in
the interest of the galaxy of which it is a part. The direction, speed and end
of this process is “the Will of God.” The Will of God is the aspiration of Divinity
that the universal process shall proceed in a certain way to a certain end while
leaving open the possibility that it may elect to proceed quite otherwise to
quite else. Very high intelligences direct the evolution of the universe in an
attempt to ensure that the Divine aspiration shall be realized. These intelli-
gences are coercive in proportion as their material is unconscious. They are
persuasive in proportion as their material is conscious. (6)
Scott presents a picture of a universe in which free will and determinism coexist. “The life of
humanity is subject to direction by an Energy or Intelligence above – but not infinitely above –
the level of humanity itself. Such direction is implemented at the level of life by human agents:
that is, by exceptional men and women attuned to and partly identified with the level above.”
These specially selected individuals participate in a cosmic process that has been called the
“Magnum Opus” or “Great Work.” This spiritual effort is equivalent to a vertical ascent to a
higher level of consciousness as opposed to a gradual rise with the evolutionary tide:
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directed. Means have to be employed which do not outrage the integrity of
his potential nature. This is achieved by arranging a bias in favour of those
situations which contain developmental possibilities and by limiting man’s
opportunities for making involuntary choices. About this line there may be
marginal interplay of determinism and free will . . . Responsibility for this
process on Earth lies with an Intelligence which has been called the Hidden
Directorate. No grounds exist for an opinion as to whether this Intelligence
is, in any sense, comprehensible to man, a single or composite Intelligence,
or whether it is discarnate or corporeal. Below this level, certain members
of ordinary humanity, whom qualitative changes have taken place, are in
touch with the Directorate and may at intervals share its consciousness.
This group of advanced human individuals is the reality behind all legends of
“masters” and “initiates” from earliest historical times to the present. (7)
Certain spiritual teachings propose that there is a holographic design or pattern in life and
the natural environment which is imperceptible to most people. However, it is possible to
sense and, to some extent, harmonize and work with this archetypal pattern. “The Design, of
its very nature, excludes indoctrination or forcible direction of any kind. Man is not compelled
to evolve; he may only be shown the evolutionary road and assisted along it when, of his own
volition, he takes this option. When he rejects it, the overseeing power can only work to
mitigate the consequences – sometimes over centuries – and to amplify the effects of a right
choice whenever this is made.” In Journeys with a Sufi Master, H.B.M. Dervish suggests that
humanity is an integral part and conscious instrument of a ‘cosmic plan’:
Sufis claim that there is an evolutionary plan for the planet Earth and that his-
tory, seemingly haphazard and random, is not the blind, accidental process it
seems. The evolution of organic life was supervised, and in the same way, the
human race continues to be guided, encouraged or restrained into alignment
with a universal plan. The Sufis, who have been known by different names in
different ages, are said to be agents of this Supervision and, to the extent
which is necessary for their ministry, they are given access to the plan. The
plan is known as the Naqsh, the design . . . Sufi influence on history has never
been by physical or mental duress, and is almost always indirect, little seen and
tangential. Promising laymen (known as Receivers) may be influenced to start
an organization and may do so under the impression that the idea was their
own. Sufi experiences indicate a huge number of movements for human welfare
have been unobtrusively guided in this way. Sometimes notable figures in such
organizations have suspected that certain sympathizers, advisers – sometimes
philanthropists – have been in some way ‘not ordinary.’ Historically, for example,
the Saracen armies which came through North Africa to invade Spain in 711 A.D.
were accompanied by a Sufi presence and it was this which, through the cultural
centres of Fez, Cordoba, Seville, Granada and elsewhere helped arrange for the
renewal of learning in a Europe which was emerging from the Dark Ages. The
migration from Europe to the New World was similarly ‘accompanied.’ (8)
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Self-Knowledge and Inner Development
The world’s great spiritual traditions, teachings and teachers provide a path to a higher state
of consciousness and being that reflect the next stage of human evolution and development:
Gurdjieff taught that each human being is potentially a complete cosmos with the possibility
of developing and transforming himself to a higher level of existence through a process of
‘inner transmutation.’ By conscious inner work on oneself (‘conscious labour and intentional
suffering’) one can learn how to serve a higher purpose, rather than remaining only as an un-
conscious mechanism for the transfer of energy for the use of other domains of the natural
world.
Higher knowledge of our place in the cosmos is transmitted to humanity through authentic
spiritual teachings. This practical knowledge of human transformation develops self-knowledge
and harmony with the spiritual dimensions of existence through conscious effort and the
awakening of higher levels of consciousness. Jacob Needleman:
Higher knowledge exists. Not only does it bring us facts of an entirely different
nature and scale than can be brought by external empiricism, external experi-
ence, but such knowledge also is and can become a force of self-creation by
which worlds are born and live and die – and among such worlds are we human
beings, such as we are meant to be. We need a new language, or perhaps the
old language carrying the current of being, in order to begin to understand the
experiences that are granted to us as human beings, experiences that need to
be cultivated, intentionally and precisely, in order to serve as a force not only
for self-knowledge but for self-transformation. We know there are experiences
that transform us in a moment – moments that are then forgotten or that
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depend on infrequent accident. But what if we could become more available
to such experiences, live in a way that could invite them more into our lives?
What if we could, in Gurdjieff’s words, remember ourselves always and every-
where. The question remains: There exist in our lives experiences of oneself
that need to be understood as a call. But a call . . . to what? And a call from
what? (10)
In the vast realm of the inner world of man there exists, in miniature as it
were, the entire great world around and above us, the entire universal order.
The dominance of the school of external empiricism is based on the assump-
tion that man is only a tiny fragment of the whole of nature and the universal
world. But what if it were otherwise? What if human beings were in some
real sense unique creations containing in their essential being all the laws and
elements, all the forces and energies – from the most conscious to the most
inert – that are at play in the great universe? If that were so, then self-know-
ledge would be – could be – far, far more than information about our psycho-
logical moods, emotions, memories, thoughts and behavior. Self-knowledge
would be far more than the results of looking at ourselves from “outside,” as
it were – that is, from our everyday conceptual mind by which we try to or-
ganize the world as it is received by our senses. If a human being were really
as it was understood in very ancient times, a microcosm, a miniature universe,
then self-knowledge not only would be the knowledge of reality so longed for
in the hopes and dreams of science, but also could be a means itself of inner
self-creation – inner self-creation parallel in its way to the creation of worlds
that takes place in the universe itself. (11)
A fully developed and realized human being has the possibility and capacity to embody the
higher levels of cosmic energy inherent in the universe: “As human beings we can know that a
single creative energy connects everything and that we are integral to it. We are one with the
Whole.”
At the highest level of human development, according to Indian philosophy, the light of
consciousness can be expressed through the balance or equilibrium of the three creative gunas
(primary qualities or modes of nature): rajas (energy), tamas (inertia) and sattva (intelligence).
When these are balanced and in harmony an individual can creatively manifest himself in all
aspects of life: “Such a being is the enjoyer of all the worlds, from the earthly experience of
good food, material beauty, sex, etc., to the highest octaves of spiritual consciousness.
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To such a one the whole creation is the body of God, and matter and spirit become one cosmic
vibration of AUM.”
The concept of a ‘human being as a microcosm’ refers to a person who has fully developed
and harmonized all aspects of himself – physical, emotional, mental and spiritual – through the
refinement of consciousness. In The Third Striving Keith Buzzell, a student of Gurdjieff’s Fourth
Way teaching, writes: “Man becomes truly an image of the Megalocosmos if he evolves to the
level of having a Real I with a triune ‘nature’ of higher intellect (third brain), emotional being
(second brain) and physical body (first brain) in a true harmonious relationship.”
Human beings have a special role, by virtue of our capacity for consciousness,
but we do not necessarily fulfill it. While the body is a well-functioning cosmos,
at least for a time, the psyche generally is not. Our inner lives are buffeted
here and there by random associations and reactions to external stimuli. We
start out with a particular purpose, and wind up creating the opposite effect of
what we intended. A perceived criticism changes our mood for the day. We
tend to live in an inner chaos of daydreams, partially digested notions, and half
formulated plans. But the possibility exists for the development of attention,
awareness, and intentionality, for the growth of presence . . . In the end a finer
body of attention, of presence, can exist within the physical body. It has all the
characteristics of another cosmos: it is relatively independent, self-contained,
and selectively permeable to the outside. While the nature of the materiality
of this entity is unclear, for some this is the soul, which can exist independently
of the body if it is sufficiently formed. This body of attention and awareness
may play a different role from the physical body in the larger cosmoses of which
it is a part. The physical body is part of the ecology of the earth, transforming
biochemical substances; the soul is part of the ecology of consciousness, trans-
forming perceptions. The real meaning of coming home to God may be the
establishment of a home in oneself, which permits one to share in, and contri-
bute to, the universal consciousness. (12)
It is important to emphasize that the idea of ‘man as a microcosm’ only refers to those
human beings who are fully developed and conscious in terms of spiritual knowledge and
qualities; to those who have travelled and completed the path of inner transformation in the
fullest sense. Jacob Needleman offers a sober reflection on this important point:
What does it mean that [the universe] is in man? And not only in man as sepa-
rate processes in all their variety, but as a cosmos, an ordered whole under the
rule of a ladder of governing, lawful intelligence? The response seems clear: In
whatever sense and whatever way all this is in man, it is not in my life or in my
awareness. I, this individual person, pursue my life nowhere near an awareness
in myself of this incredible spectrum of time, force and structure, not to mention
the intelligence that governs it from without and within. This realization is the
key to the idea of the microcosm. And it is precisely this key that is missing or
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unemphasized in almost every account of it that we may come upon. Man is a
microcosm, but I am not that man. (13)
The transformation of a human being to a higher state of consciousness and the creation of a
stable inner unity requires the production of a finer psychic energy, through inner work and the
development of conscious attention:
There is something about the body that is absolutely essential to the develop-
ment of man’s possibilities, of why we are here on earth. If we are on earth
for a reason, for a purpose, then the body must be there to serve that purpose.
Here we are faced with the age-old drama of human freedom. Man is free,
which means there is a certain freedom that makes it possible to become what
we are meant to be. It has to do with the possible freedom of our attention,
which is perhaps the only free element in human beings. Such as we are, the
possibility of human freedom exists in the attention, and that can carry an in-
fluence down into our bodies and into the life of the earth. We become instru-
ments of God. And in the process, we become truly human. (14)
Spiritual teachings throughout the world stress that human beings have a unique role and
purpose in the universal order which is dependent on the development of a refined quality of
conscious attention and awareness: “The universe is ordered and aligned in the mysteriously
perfect intelligibility that is given to the human mind to know and the human soul to incarnate
in its freely chosen act of attention.” Jacob Needleman:
Wherever the process of cosmic creation is taking place, there is, and must be,
a specifically human energy, filling as it were, the stages and steps in the descent
and manifestation of what it is that originally emanates from the Source. It is at
these everywhere-appearing junctures in the cosmic and planetary world that
Man is created and needed as the microcosmic God, the “image and likeness of
God,” whose work it is to “make straight the ways of the Lord.” Man must choose;
that power and gift is his essence. And the instrument, the principal instrument
of his choice is his uniquely human attention. But as he is now, man on earth is
a being without Attention. His body, the cells and tissues of his body obey only
the attention of the animal or the plant or the mineral within him. Man’s being,
as he is now, cannot obey his mind; it is his mind that obeys his body . . . One of
the names of God is Attention, the Attention that fills the world and the universe
and that Man is created to incarnate in himself so that he can freely obey and be
as God in the created world of his own body and therefore manifest toward man
and nature what is needed from him. This means that it is the essence of Man to
incarnate the highest energy of the universe. (15)
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In many of the world’s spiritual traditions, the state of consciousness characterized by
awareness and presence is said to be the master key to unlocking our latent human potential;
the point demarcating the intersection between the phenomenal and spiritual worlds:
“This presence is like a passport to greater life. Presence is our connection to that greater
Being to which we belong, but which is often buried beneath mundane concerns, bodily
desires, emotional disturbances, and mental distractions. Through knowledge, practice and
understanding, this presence can be awakened.” In Living Presence, Kabir Helminski speaks to
the importance of presence in spiritual development:
Higher levels of consciousness enhance the quality of attention and presence, thereby
opening up the possibility of connecting with deeper levels of reality. Spiritual voyager James
George: “Only when I am fully present is it possible for a human being to be united with the
Source of All, and be the vehicle for the action of a higher force in our world.” And in Markings,
Dag Hammarskjöld writes:
With a developed level of consciousness, it is possible to control and direct one’s attention,
being aware of what attracts and moves it moment by moment. Kabir Helminski: “It is not until
we come to true consciousness that we find a capacity that allows a wide field of awareness
and thus a global comprehensiveness to our perception and state of being. True consciousness
opens us to wholeness, allowing a total experience of body, thought and emotion.”
Self-realization leads to a transformation of one’s total being – both inner awareness and
outer behaviour – and a commitment to devoted service to the world. Sri Aurobindo, the great
20th century Indian sage, believed that individual spiritual development foreshadows the evo-
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lutionary future of the human race, as expressed by higher qualities such as unconditional love,
compassion, empathy, insight and mystical states of consciousness. John White highlights the
importance of humility and selfless service as concomitants of self-realization:
One of the most significant consequences of inner development is an enhanced social aware-
ness and full engagement with all aspects of life. The importance of a holistic, integral vision of
life is stressed by Allan Combs in The Radiance of Being: “We are compelled to broaden our
notions of what it is to live an integral life, to include our personal relationships with others as
well as our styles of participating in the social and natural worlds around us. We can no longer
live spiritual lives that are detached from the human and natural worlds in which we move. Nor
can we engage in wise political action without the inner compass that comes only with spiritual
development and insight.”
Human beings, both individually and collectively, have the possibility of transformation and
expansion of consciousness through conscious evolution, leading to self-transcendence and an
enlightened state of being which regards humanity as one organic whole. Such an evolutionary
advance has the potential of creating a new world culture, based on the perennial wisdom
articulated by spiritual traditions throughout the ages. It would embody life-affirming values
such as equality, peace, harmony, freedom, tolerance and compassionate action and service.
“Changing consciousness changes thought; changing thought changes behaviour; and changing
behaviour changes society. Personal evolution becomes social evolution. By changing yourself,
you help to change the world.” Only a transformation of consciousness will allow humanity to
discover the knowledge, practices and wisdom to meet the many challenges facing the world.
Some contemporary thinkers believe that the evolutionary process is now developing a new
stage in the human journey. John White: “A new global society will be created, a civilization
founded on love and the perennial wisdom of sacred traditions. The change of consciousness
underlying this passage involves the transcendence of ego and the recognition of the unity of
life in all its kingdoms – mineral, plant, animal, human and spirit.” As one’s own spiritual life
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matures and deepens it is realized on every plane of reality. White presents a useful schematic
map of these levels of reality (18):
• In physical terms, spirituality is recognizing the miraculous nature of matter and the
creative source behind the mystery of matter.
• In biological terms, spirituality is realizing that a divine intelligence underlies all life-
change and that such change is evolving all creation to ever greater degrees of
wholeness in order to perfectly express itself.
• In psychological terms, spirituality is discovering within yourself the ultimate source of
meaning and happiness, which is love.
• In sociological terms, spirituality is giving selfless service to others, regardless of race,
creed, color, gender, caste, or nationality.
• In ecological terms, spirituality is showing respect for all the kingdoms in the community
of life – mineral, vegetable, animal, human, spirit, and angelic.
• In cosmological terms, spirituality is being at one with the universe, in tune with the
infinite, flowing with the Tao.
• In theological terms, spirituality is seeing God in all things, all events, and all circum-
stances, indwelling as infinite light and unconditional love, and seeing all things, events,
and circumstances in God as the matrix or infinite ocean in which the universe occurs.
Human beings can consciously participate in the evolution of consciousness within the
universe. By embracing values and qualities such as unity, empathy, compassion and service,
we can be part of a universal co-evolving process which gives meaning and purpose to human
existence: “Our essential nature is identical to the essential nature of the cosmos – pure
consciousness, or love, or spirit. We are here to access, embody, and transmit this divine
consciousness into the word until material reality is made sacred.” In The Intelligence of the
Cosmos, Ervin Laszlo writes:
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The sacredness of being human is that we each have a role in bringing the
unfinished material reality into greater coherence, and thus completion. If
enough localized consciousnesses awake on this planet we can catalyze a
localized planetary field into conscious awareness. That is, a planetary matrix
is sufficiently prepared to receive, “bring in,” the greater consciousness per-
vasive in the cosmos . . . In this case we are each a conscious agent of cosmic
realization and immanence. We each have an obligation in our existence on
this planet to raise our individual, localized expressions of consciousness. In
doing so, we both infect and inspire others in our lives to raise theirs, as well
as reflecting back our conscious contribution into the source That Is. In this
way, we can act as both citizens of the cosmos as well as caretakers for the
sacred cosmic order. This sacred cosmic order informs us that our reality is
not a static state but an active, fluid realm that makes demands on us. We are
on a path of completion – of conscious completion and communion – that is
the eternal path of the sacred. Through this sacred journey of completion, we
connect and commune with everything else in our reality matrix – and beyond.
We can achieve this through our small acts of conscious participation, and re-
gain our communion with the cosmos. (20)
Expanded Consciousness
Both Eastern and Western thinkers have described the evolution of human consciousness as
passing through a sequence of stages from the more primitive (archaic, magical, mythical) to
more subtle (intuitive, archetypal, holistic), culminating in the highest state of consciousness
termed ‘superconsciousness’ (Sri Aurobindo), ‘integral consciousness’ (Jean Gebser) or
‘ultimate consciousness’ (Ken Wilber). In Science and the Akashic Field, Ervin Laszlo speculates
about the next evolution of human consciousness:
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Albert Einstein recognized that the future of the human race lay in the transformation from
the sense of an isolated self to a deeper, expanded level of awareness that encompasses all
living beings:
Both modern science and traditional spiritual teaching support a new, comprehensive vision
of reality that encompasses an expanded awareness of the nature of consciousness and the
meaning and purpose of human existence on earth. This expanded viewpoint is accomplished
by a process of conscious co-creation and co-evolution between humanity and the cosmos. In
their thought-provoking book CosMos, Ervin Laszlo and Jude Currivan write: “In the new vision
of the nature of integral reality, human existence is not an accidental by-product, nor the
outcome of the blind play of genetic mutation and natural selection. Our existence has
meaning and a human, a planetary, and even a cosmic purpose.”
We are the co-creators as well as the creation of the world. Our human mission
is to facilitate and empower the dynamic journey of exploration and evolution
of the universe: toward the coherence of each with all, and of all with each. Our
consciousness is the key to fulfilling our human mission. Our consciousness is
far deeper and wider than most of us had hitherto thought. Until quite recently,
scientists had generally considered that our consciousness is confined within our
bodies and our sense of self within our personalities. But if this were so, then
our skin-enclosed brain and ego-bound consciousness would set the ultimate
limit of our awareness and our ability to comprehend the world. But if our aware-
ness, as scientific research is now revealing and as the mystics of all traditions
have discerned, transcends our physical form and is more – much more – than
our human persona, then we have the innate ability to envisage, understand, and
experience the Cosmos at levels far beyond the limitations of our ego-selves . . .
Our awareness is rapidly expanding beyond the limitations of the past. In this
unfolding Shift of consciousness – a shift in our individual consciousnesses as
well as in the global mind our nearly seven billion consciousnesses are now con-
stituting – we are gaining deeper insights into the nature and purpose of the
whole-world than ever before. (23)
The development of consciousness and being is accompanied by a movement away from the
grosser laws of physical existence to the more subtle laws of spiritual reality. In Science and the
Sacred, professor of comparative religion Ravi Ravindra writes: “The spiritual and the natural
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realms may be distinguished by different sorts of laws, but they are not separated by an
abundant lawfulness in one realm and an absence in the other. There may in fact be more of a
continuity in practice between these realms than suspected.” He further elaborates:
At the level where most of us live, practically all our behavior and everything
else about us is completely determined by ordinary laws. At higher levels of
spiritual development, one develops increasingly those aspects of being that
are free of the lower laws and subject to the higher laws. Whether we follow
the essentialist metaphor, as used in most religions, and say that we can dis-
cover our deepest spiritual Self or God which is already in us, or whether we
follow the existentialist metaphor so that a person has to create this spiritual
part, the important point is that some purposeful action, an intentional under-
taking, is required from human beings . . . However, not everything in a devel-
oped human being becomes free of the usual laws of birth, change, and decay.
The physical body still obeys the laws of its own level; but one discovers or
creates and progressively lives from a more subtle part of oneself that itself
is relatively freer of the laws to which the body is subject. Only at the highest
possible inner development of a person could one say that the most spiritual
part – God, the Absolute, Brahman – is beyond all laws and is therefore com-
pletely and absolutely free. (24)
Spiritual teacher Eckhart Tolle places pure consciousness or being at the centre of his
teaching of human development and transformation: “Being points to the essence of who you
are as timeless, formless, and unconditioned consciousness. Human and being, form and
essence, are ultimately not separate, in the same way that a wave or ripple on the surface of
the ocean is not separate from the ocean or from any other wave or ripple, although it may
appear to be so.” He speaks to this from an evolutionary perspective:
Being, or pure consciousness, emanates from the Universal Source of all life –
God – as light emanates from the sun. Unlike the sun, however, the Source
does not exist in space and time. It is unmanifested and therefore inconceiv-
able, so there is nothing you can say about it. However, your consciousness
emanates from the Source, so you can never be separate from it, just as a ray
of sunlight cannot be separate from the sun but always remains connected to
it. The Source emanation pervades the entire cosmos – which is to say, our
dimension of space and time – and it is the intelligence underlying and guiding
the evolution of what we perceive as the physical universe. So the universe,
including human beings, was not just created in the distant past but is still in
the process of being created . . . There is direction and purpose behind the
evolutionary process. Where it is going, however, is beyond all imagination.
What we can say is that the evolutionary impulse behind the process is the
growth of consciousness. The universe wants to become more conscious, and
the main life purpose for all human beings is to come into alignment with that
universal purpose. Entering into conscious alignment with universal purpose
is an amazing evolutionary leap. (25)
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It is becoming increasingly clear that humanity is now at a critical stage of its evolution and is
undergoing a profound shift in consciousness, both on the individual and collective level. Each
human being is an integral part of an intelligent, evolving universe in which all parts are inter-
related to form an integral co-evolving whole. “We participate in its structure and order, we
access its intrinsic and constantly accumulating intelligence, and we contribute to the growth of
its consciousness. Our life, our existence, then, cannot be without purpose and meaning. In
the simplest terms, humanity’s mission is to advance the evolution of the Cosmos.”
One of the functions of the inner world of human consciousness, according to Gurdjieff’s
teachings, is to “reunite, on many levels, what has been separated and dispersed.” In this way,
the smaller, individual consciousness joins with the universal consciousness to impart order and
harmony to the larger world, thus preventing its decay over time: “A human being’s perceptual
capacities, if harmonized and honed, allow a merging of each individual consciousness with the
consciousness of the universe. Consciousness needs first to be separate for this joining to be
meaningful. The higher nature needs the lower, and individuation precedes transcendence.
When properly harmonized and developed, human capacities can complete the cosmic cycle.”
Every human being has the possibility and potentiality of becoming a conscious agent of
evolutionary unfolding and cosmic realization. Such an individual evolutionary purpose is said
to be “woven into the fabric of nature” in order to help the universe fulfill its purpose and
destiny“ Ervin Laszlo: “We each have an obligation in our existence on this planet to raise our
individual, localized expressions of consciousness. In doing so, we inspire others in our lives to
raise theirs, as well as reflecting back our conscious contribution into the source THAT IS. The
hidden treasure that is at the very core of our existence wishes to be known – for us to be
known – by our individual journeys of self-realization.” Shamik Desai provides an eloquent
perspective on this Great Work:
All the great wisdom traditions agree that every “thing” is a manifestation of a
larger Oneness. They hint regarding the meaning of existence: the One Source
yearns deeply to know and love Itself. Hence, it has manifested in a material
form (at a higher level of vibration) with the intention of realizing itself through
a process of re-spiritualization. This process unfolds as each sentient being in
the universe “opens the spiritual eye” and perceives the universe through the
lens of Oneness, and then turns its super-perceptions into reality through loving,
mindful engagement . . . The meaning and purpose of existence is to align and
harmonize our relations with the unseen order, the Ultimate Reality, as indivi-
duals – and those among us with an evolved consciousness are to seek such
alignment also at the societal and planetary levels. (26)
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References
(1) Jacob Needleman What is God? (New York: Penguin Books, 2009), pp. 144-145.
(2) John White The Meeting of Science and Spirit (New York: Paragon House, 1990), p. 63.
(3) John White The Meeting of Science and Spirit (New York: Paragon House, 1990),
pp. xiii-xiv.
(4) John White The Meeting of Science and Spirit (New York: Paragon House, 1990), p. 4.
(5) P.D. Ouspensky In Search of the Miraculous (New York: Harcourt, 2002), p. 88.
(6) Ernest Scott The People of the Secret (London: Octagon Press, 1983), pp. 250-251.
(7) Ernest Scott The People of the Secret (London: Octagon Press, 1983), pp. 251-252.
(8) H.B.M. Dervish Journeys with a Sufi Master (London: Octagon Press, 1982), pp. 147-148.
(9) John White The Meeting of Science and Spirit (New York: Paragon House, 1990),
pp. 166-167.
(10) Jacob Needleman What is God? (New York: Penguin Books, 2009), pp. 145-146.
(11) Jacob Needleman What is God? (New York: Penguin Books, 2009), pp. 143-144.
(12) Christian Wertenbaker Man in the Cosmos (United States: Codhill Press, 2012), pp. 96-97.
(13) Jacob Needleman A Sense of the Cosmos (New York: E.P. Dutton, 1975), p. 24.
(14) Jacob Needleman “The True Human Body” in Jacob Needleman (ed.) The Inner Journey:
Views from the Gurdjieff Work (Sandpoint, Idaho: Morning Light Press, 2008), p. 343.
(15) Jacob Needleman What is God? (New York: Penguin Books, 2009), pp. 278-280.
(16) Kabir Helminski Living Presence (New York: Jeremy P. Tarcher, 1992), pp. viii-ix.
(17) John White The Meeting of Science and Spirit (New York: Paragon House, 1990),
pp. 209-210.
(18) John White The Meeting of Science and Spirit (New York: Paragon House, 1990),
pp. 239-240.
(19) John White The Meeting of Science and Spirit (New York: Paragon House, 1990), p. 46.
(20) Ervin Laszlo The Intelligence of the Cosmos (Rochester, Vermont: Inner Traditions, 2017),
pp. 61-62.
(21) Ervin Laszlo Science and the Akashic Field (Rochester, Vermont: Inner Traditions, 2007),
pp. 117-118.
(22) Walt Martin and Magda Ott (eds.) The Cosmic View of Albert Einstein (New York: Sterling,
2013), p. 3.
(23) Ervin Laszlo and Jude Currivan CosMos (Carlsbad, California: Hay House, 2008), pp. xiv-xv.
(24) Ravi Ravindra Science and the Sacred (Wheaton, Illinois: Quest Books, 2002), pp. 132-133.
(25) Eckhart Tolle “Foreword” in Steve Taylor The Leap: The Psychology of Spiritual Awakening
(Novato, California: New World Library, 2017), pp. ix-x.
(26) Shamik Desai “Meaning and Purpose in the New Map of Reality and in the Wisdom
Traditions” in Ervin Laszlo What is Reality? (New York: Select Books, 2016), pp. 265-267.
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