V
CONCERNING THE NATURE OF
SPIRITUAL PERCEPTION
Perceptions in the field of noetic reality do not persist
within the psyche in the same way as do representations gained through
sense-perception. While it is true that such perceptions may be usefully
compared with the ideas of memory, on the lines indicated in Section II,
their station within the psyche is nevertheless not the same as that of
its memories. This is because what is experienced as spiritual perception
cannot be preserved there in its immediate form. If a man wishes to have
the same noetic perception over again, he must occasion it anew within
the psyche. In other words the psyche's relation to the corresponding
noetic reality must be deliberately re-established. And this renewal is
not to be compared with the remembering of a sense impression, but solely
with the bringing into view once more of the same sense object as was
there on the occasion of the former impression.
What can, within the memory, be retained of an actual
spiritual perception is not the perception itself but the disposition
of soul through which one attained to that perception. If my object is
to repeat a spiritual perception which I had some while back, it is no
use my trying to remember it. What I should try to remember is something
that will call back the psychic preparations that led me to the perception
in the first place. Perception then occurs through a process that does not
depend on me.
It is important to be very conscious of this dual nature of
the whole proceeding, because it is only in that way that one gains authentic
knowledge of what is in fact objective spirit. Thereafter, it is true, the
duality is modified for practical purposes, through the circumstance that
the content of the spiritual perception can be carried over from the
intuitive into ordinary-level consciousness. Then, within the latter, it
becomes an abstract idea. And this can be later recollected in the ordinary
manner. Nevertheless, in order to acquire a reliable psychic relation to the
spiritual world, it is a very great advantage to cultivate assiduously the
knowledge of three rather subtly differentiated mental processes:
1, psychic, or soul, processes leading up to a spiritual perception;
2, spiritual perceptions themselves;
3, spiritual perceptions translated into the concepts of ordinary
consciousness.