Chapter 8
The Mental Faculties
The Power Of The Human Mind
If you closely study the action of mind upon mind, of mind over matter, of
mind over the human body, you will find that each man is a power in himself. You
will have to develop the potential faculties by self-restraint and mastery over
the passions. When mind is so much powerful, what to speak anything of the glory
of Atman, who is the storehouse of everything, who is the infinite,
inexhaustible central magazine of power, knowledge and bliss from whom the
little mind borrows its light and power!
Illustrations Of The Power Of Mind
Whenever any fire-accident or any other kind of accident occurs, how agile
and nimble you are! Do you not exhibit wonderful powers? You jump over a huge
wall, save many children, run amidst fire boldly and carry things. All psychic
faculties, memory, imagination, will, etc., are at play. Chivalry, intrepidity,
undaunted spirit, mercy and various other noble virtues are exhibited by you.
Wherefrom did you draw these faculties and powers? From this, you can conclude
that you are, in reality, all-powerful. There is a big, magnanimous magazine of
power inside. Go to the source by meditation and tap it. You will get
everything. Rely on the Self within.
If you get a telegram at 12 a.m. on a hot day in summer, which informs you
that your father is seriously ailing in your native village which is twenty
miles distant, at once you leave even your food and begin to gallop. Though you
yourself are not in good health at that time, you do not mind anything as you
are very anxious to see your loving father. You even run the whole distance and
reach the place within a couple of hours. Then you begin to wonder, "What! I was
myself very sick. The day was very hot. I have covered a distance of twenty
miles within two hours. What a marvel it is!" This clearly shows that you are,
in reality, all-powerful. The mind possesses various kinds of powers and
faculties. They lie dormant. You will have to awaken them.
The Six Important Powers Of Mind
There are three Saktis (powers, potencies) in the mind, viz., Ichha Sakti
(Will), Kriya Sakti (Action) and Jnana Sakti (Knowledge). A desire arises in the
mind. This is Ichha Sakti. The mind exerts to have this desire gratified. This
is Kriya Sakti. It plans, schemes and finds out methods, etc., for the
achievement of the desired object. This is Jnana Sakti.
Vedana-Sakti (power of perception), Smarana-Sakti or Smriti-Sakti (power of
memory), Bhavana-Sakti (Power of imagination), Manisha-Sakti (power of
judgment), Ichha-Sakti or Sankalpa-Sakti (will or volition) and Dharana-Sakti
(power to hold) are the six important powers of the mind.
Vedana-Sakti
Vedana-Sakti is power of cognition or sensation or power of perception and
knowing through Indriyas or senses (Indriya-Jnana or sense-knowledge).
Smriti-Sakti
The Smriti-Sakti does three things. It grasps. It holds. It brings to memory
whenever a thing is needed. Though the power of grasping is done by the
Vedana-Sakti of the mind (power of perception or cognition), the Smriti-Sakti
also participates in the act of grasping.
Suppose you hear the sound of a bell in the temple. The memory Sakti grasps
it. Then it retains it through Dharana. When you hear again the sound of the
temple bell, it at once reminds you, "This is the temple bell. This is not the
hostel bell."
In Dhyana, the mind grasps and takes possession of its perceptions or
judgments. It makes the content of the idea its own. It strengthens the
Samskaras so that a voluntary recall is rendered easy.
Bhavana-Sakti
You have never seen an elephant riding a cycle. When a man, who has actually
seen it, gives you a description, your mind forms a mental picture at once. This
is done by the Bhavana-Sakti (power of imagination) of the mind.
Manisha-Sakti
Power of comparing and contrasting, drawing inferences, discussion,
conclusion, all belong to Manisha-Sakti of the mind. The Manisha-Sakti (power of
judgment) has got two subdivisions, viz., Nirnaya (ascertainment) and Tarka
(logical reasoning).
A is mortal. B is mortal. C is mortal. Again, all men are mortal. Mr.
Choudhary is a man. Therefore, Choudhary is mortal. These sorts of drawing
conclusions through inductive and deductive logic with major and minor premises
and middle term or through the five parts of syllogistic reasoning of Gautama
Rishi's Indian Logic (Nyaya) are done by Manisha-Sakti of the mind with the help
of Nirnaya and Tarka.
Tarka has got two other subdivisions, viz., Anumana (inference) and Paramarsa
(discussion). When you see a river in full flood in the morning, you infer that
there ought to have been rain during previous night. When you see smoke on the
hills, you infer that there ought to be fire also on the hill. This is due to
Anumana.
Ichha-Sakti
Will is Atma-Sakti. It is the dynamic aspect of Brahman. Will is Brahman in
motion. In Vedanta, will plays a very conspicuous part.
Much has been said about the power of imagination in the West-that it is the
most tremendous power in the human mind and that in a conflict between the will
and the imagination, the imagination would invariably win the day.
Some people say that the will is greater than imagination. In the East,
amongst the Vedantins, will is regarded as a greater faculty than imagination.
What would the imagination do without the impelling power of the will to execute
with dynamic power the desires, wishes and ideals?
There is correlation, co-ordination and co-operation between the different
principles in the mind. Therefore, who can say which is great or small,
important or unimportant when each depends upon the other for its power? It
cannot be truly said that the one is greater than the other, for their
independence and power are derived from one another.
Dharana-Sakti
Dharana-Sakti (power to hold) is really a part of memory or Smarana-Sakti. In
common parlance, we say, "Mr. Ramakrishna is a man of good Dharana in Vedanta."
Here it means that Mr. Ramakrishna has got fixed and steady ideas in Vedanta. He
cannot be changed by anybody. He is not of a wavering nature. He sticks to
Vedanta alone. Nobody can shake him.
Apperception
Apperception is the mind's perception of itself as a conscious agent. The
principle of apperception is just like a mail clerk of consciousness receiving,
sorting out, correlating, arranging, pigeon-holing, associating and sending out
messages.
How To Unfold The Latent Powers Of Mind
There are many higher mental faculties latent in man. Mind is a magazine of
power. The unfoldment of these latent, psychic powers is possible through proper
Sadhana. The Sadhana should be systematic, constant and intense. The student
also must have reached the proper stage of development. There must be genuine
Sraddha also. Then only sanguine success is possible.