Bringing William Blake into this dynamic landscape provides the missing psychological catalyst. If Goethe, Schelling, and Merleau-Ponty drafted the architectural blueprints for a living, unified cosmos, Blake is the prophet who lights the furnace. He injects the raw power of Divine Imagination (Poetic Genius) into the exact center of this metaphysical maze. [1, 2, 3, 4]
Blake did not write abstract treatises; he saw cosmic realities directly. His mythology acts as the ultimate psychological and spiritual bridge, aligning with the Western philosophy of nature while unlocking the gate to Sri Aurobindo’s Integral Yoga. [5, 6]
1. Slaying the "Single Vision" of Nominalism
Blake identified the root cause of the Western mind's fragmentation long before Feuerbach or modern materialism arrived. He violently attacked the British empiricism of Bacon, Newton, and Locke. He accused them of trapping humanity in what he called "Single Vision & Newton’s sleep"—the reductionist, nominalist trap of looking at a star or a flower and seeing only an isolated, material object. [5, 7]
To break this sleep, Blake declared: "The Imagination is not a State: it is the Human Existence itself." [8]
- When you look at a sunrise, a nominalist or a materialist sees a flat disc of fire.
- Blake looked at the exact same sunrise and saw "an Innumerable company of the Heavenly host crying 'Holy, Holy, Holy Is the Lord God Almighty!'" [7]
This is not a poet hallucinating; it is the exact execution of Goethe's Ur-Phänomen. It is the refusal to isolate the object from its continuous, living cosmic essence. [5, 8]
2. The Four Zoas: Blake’s Psychological Map of Involution
Blake constructed an intricate psychological cosmology in his prophetic books (like The Four Zoas) that mirrors Sri Aurobindo’s planes of consciousness and the Vedic battles with astonishing accuracy: [9]
Blake argued that the human soul fell into suffering because Urizen (the cold, abstract intellect) rebelled and tried to dominate the other three forces. Urizen built a rigid prison of laws, math, and concepts—creating the illusion of a dead, fragmented world of separate, lonely objects. [2, 9]
The only way to heal this fall is through Los (the eternal blacksmith of Cosmic Imagination). Los works tirelessly at his furnace to forge the fragmented pieces of reality back into a single, blazing, divine form. [3, 6, 9]
3. The Ultimate Synthesis: Cleansing the Doors of Perception
When you weave Blake into the labyrinth of Schelling and Merleau-Ponty, the complete solution to Western fragmentation crystallizes:
- Merleau-Ponty gave us the anatomy: The Flesh of the World, proving that our bodies and the cosmos are made of the same interactive substance.
- Schelling gave us the engine: Naturphilosophie, proving that nature is a single, continuous current of slumbering spirit waking up into mind.
- William Blake gives us the active faculty: The Divine Imagination. Imagination is not the ability to make up fictional stories; it is the absolute cleansing of the sensory apparatus. [1, 2, 10, 11]
As Blake famously wrote in The Marriage of Heaven and Hell: "If the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to man as it is, Infinite." [2]
This is the exact Western formulation of Sri Aurobindo’s transition from the ordinary mental consciousness to the Supermind. The Supermind is not a tool that invents names (Nominalism) or studies fragments; it is the supreme consciousness that experiences the absolute, unique individuality of every single object while simultaneously knowing it as an inseparable wave in the infinite ocean of the Divine.
Blake reminds us that the universe cannot be solved by a clever mathematical framework like Whitehead’s. It can only be solved by a total transformation of our vision. [2, 12, 13]
Since Blake has lit the cosmic furnace, should we look at how his concept of "Contraries" ("Without Contraries is no progression") matches the dialectic of Kashmir Shaivism, or look at his striking visual art as a form of spiritual vision? Which path should we step down next? [2]
[10] https://skemman.is
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This is an exceptionally profound connection. The structural and visual alignment between William Blake's prophetic paintings (specifically his iconic "Jacob’s Ladder" or The Ascent of the Mountain of Purgatory) and The Mother’s 1957 symbolic drama, The Ascent to Truth (L'Ascension vers la Vérité), is uncanny.
Both creators bypass traditional narrative conventions to map out an architecture of human consciousness struggling toward the Divine. When you hold Blake’s vibrant, winding, vertical visual art next to the script and scenic movement of The Mother’s play, they reveal the exact same metaphysical map.
The striking parallels between Blake's visionary canvas and The Mother's stage reveal an identical spiritual journey:
1. The Twelve Archetypes vs. The Seven Stages
In The Mother's play, twelve characters representing human archetypes—including a Philanthropist, a Scientist, an Artist, an Ascetic, and Two Aspirants—attempt to scale a precipitous, sacred mountain to discover the ultimate Truth.
- The Mother's Drama: As the steep mountain tests them across seven stages, characters fall away one by one. The Philanthropist gets stuck in social moralism; the Scientist gets trapped in material data; the Ascetic stops near the top, falsely believing that a cold, world-denying void is the final destination. Only the Two Aspirants have the absolute surrender to push through into the dazzling Light of the New World.
- Blake's Painting: Look at Blake’s depiction of Jacob's Ladder or Dante climbing the Mountain of Purgatory. Humanity is presented as a swirling, vertical procession of figures ascending a coiled, spiral staircase into a blinding golden sun. Just like The Mother's characters, Blake's figures represent different states of the soul—some are heavy, collapsing under their own mental weight (Urizen), while others glide upward with the weightlessness of pure imagination (Los).
2. The Rejection of the Ascetic Escape
The thematic climax of The Mother's play and the ultimate core of Blake's mythology are identical: they both fiercely reject the idea that the soul must escape the earth to find God.
Near the summit of the mountain, the Ascetic stops and declares that everything below is an illusion, refusing to go any further. But the Second Aspirant cries out:
"No! That cannot be the Truth... The universal creation cannot be merely an illusion from which one has to escape... the creation has a meaning that we have yet to discover."
Blake painted this exact danger in his depictions of Urizen—the cold, bearded old creator who tries to freeze life into abstract laws and stone prisons. To Blake, the ascetic denial of life is a sin against the Divine Imagination. Both Blake and The Mother insist that the summit is not an exit door to leave reality, but a vantage point to see the earth transfigured into a "New Creation".
3. The Visual "Chiasm" (The Intertwining of Form)
If you look at the lines in Blake's paintings, everything is flowing, energetic, and muscular. He famously refused to paint soft, blurry backgrounds, insisting on firm, luminous outlines. This matches Merleau-Ponty's "Flesh of the World" and Schelling's concept of nature as a physical force waking up.
The Mother's play utilizes the same aesthetic. The mountain in The Ascent to Truth is not an abstract concept; it is an active, demanding material adversary that tests the physical "nerves of steel" and raw willpower of the climbers. The spiritual journey is treated by both as a muscular, kinetic, and intensely vivid physical climb.
4. The Summit and The "New World"
At the end of The Mother's play, the final two aspirants reach the top. There is nothing left but a tiny sliver of rock under their feet, hanging over a bottomless abyss. On the other side, they gaze upon a marvelous, radiant new dawn—the Promised Land of the Supramental Manifestation.
This matches Blake's ultimate visionary painting, The Ancient of Days or his depictions of the New Jerusalem, where human forms shatter their earthly shells and step out into a landscape of pure, unadulterated divine light.
Summary: The Prophetic Kinship
The Mother once remarked that Blake was a true visionary who had direct access to the higher, subtle-physical planes of consciousness. The Ascent to Truth is simply Blake's vertical canvas brought to life as a theatrical ritual. Both show that human evolution is a rigorous filtering process where our old mental, scientific, and ascetic attachments must be shed so that the pure psychic flame can step into the next cycle of the earth.
Would you like to examine how the specific dialogue of the Artist character in The Mother’s play matches Blake's theory of art, or see how Sri Aurobindo's poetry (like Savitri) echoes Blake's prophetic rhythm?
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Collated by Tusar Nath Mohapatra
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