Philosophy of Franklin Merrell-Wolff
Franklin Merrell-Wolff's
Realizations
Franklin Merrell-Wolff grounds his philosophy in his Realizations, and
not in mere rational speculation. In his written report of his mystical
unfoldment, Dr. Wolff identifies three premonitory recognitions and two
fundamental, or transcendental, Recognitions.
First Premonitory Recognition: "I am Atman"
Wolff's first premonitory recognition took place in 1922,
approximately 14 years prior to his transcendental breakthroughs. Wolff
describes this first recognition as a noetic insight into the truth
of "I am Atman". The term "Atman" is a Sanskrit term that Wolff uses
to refer to the transcendental subject to consciousness (see the discussion
above of the second fundamental of the philosophy). Just prior to this
insight, Wolff had been engaged in the practice of discrimination of
subject (Atman) and object (world). This practice of discrimination
is fundamental to the teachings of Shankara, the founder of the Advaita
Vedanta school of nondual philosophy. The purpose of this practice is
to effect a disidentification and detachment from the objects of consciousness,
and a realization of identity with pure subjectivity. Although Wolff
previously had been intellectually convinced of the truth of the proposition
"I am Atman", this time he suddenly realized its truth at a deeper level
than the intellect. Although this was only a veiled Realization, it
nevertheless brought a sense of Light and Joy, and had persistent positive
effects, such as a certain change in the base of thought, bringing clarity
where there had previously been obscurity.
Second Premonitory Recognition: "I am Nirvana"
The second premonitory recognition took place in late 1935,
approximately 9 months prior to the first fundamental breakthrough.
Wolff describes this recognition as the realization that "I am Nirvana".
Prior to this noetic insight, his thought upon the subject of Nirvana
had been involved in the confusion that Nirvana is a kind of other-world
separate from the relative world of subject-object consciousness. While
meditating upon Nirvana, however, it suddenly dawned on him that "I
am Nirvana", where "I" is understood here to mean the inner core of
subjectivity. Like the Atman, Nirvana is never an object before consciousness.
It is therefore identical with the subject to consciousness, or the
true "I". As with the prior recognition, this insight was accompanied
by a sense of Joy and Illumination within the relative consciousness,
and had persistent effects. In addition, there was a sense of a Current
with profound depth.
Third Premonitory Recognition: "Substantiality is inversely proportional
to ponderability"
The third premonitory recognition took place in late July,
1936, about two weeks prior to the fundamental breakthrough. Prior to
this insight, Wolff experienced certain logical difficulties reconciling
Transcendent Being with the physical universe. These difficulties arise
from the habit of regarding objects of consciousness, i.e., any appearance
in consciousness that we can ponder or experience, as in some sense
substantial. Although Wolff had a prior intellectual conviction that
the Transcendent Being was more substantial, the intellectual idea alone
had failed to have a powerful transformative effect on his consciousness.
This third premonitory recognition, however, had a profound effect on
his consciousness that served to clear the way for the fundamental breakthrough
that would follow in a matter of days. Wolff expressed the insight with
the following proposition: "Substantiality is inversely proportional
to ponderability", or "Reality is inversely proportional to appearance".
In other words, the degree of true substance or reality is the inverse
or opposite of the degree of ponderability. Thus, concrete objects of
experience, which have a high degree of ponderability, are the least
substantial. Subtle or abstract objects of experience, on the other
hand, which are less ponderable, partake of a higher degree of substantiality
and reality. The effect of this insight upon Wolff was an acceptance
of substantial reality where the senses reported emptiness, and a greater
capacity to realize unreality, or merely dependent or derivative reality,
in the material given through the senses. This insight brought about
a more profound shift of identification with the transcendent supersensible
reality, and a correspondingly profound detachment from the objects
of consciousness. This shift was decisive in clearing the way for the
fundamental realizations that were to follow.
First Fundamental Recognition: Realization of Self, Liberation
The first of Wolff's two fundamental Realizations took place
on August 6, 1936. In contrast with the prior insights, which retained
objective elements in his own consciousness and thus fell short of genuine
identification, the fundamental Realizations unequivocally transcended
the subject-object or relative consciousness. Just prior to the first
Realization, Wolff had been meditating upon the teachings of Shankara,
particularly the discussion of Liberation. Upon meditative reflection,
he realized that his efforts to attain Liberation involved a seeking
after a subtle object of experience. But any new object of experience,
no matter how subtle, was something other than the objectless transcendent
consciousness. Thus, Liberation does not necessarily involve any new
object of experience or change in the content of consciousness. To seek
such a new object or experience, therefore, is a mistake. Genuine Realization,
therefore, is a recognition of Nothing -- but a Nothing that is absolutely
Substantial and identical with the SELF. The result of this profound
realization was the complete and instant cessation of expectation of
having any new experience or relative form of knowledge arise. The light
of consciousness then turned back upon itself, toward its source, and
the pure Atman was realized as absolute fullness and as identical with
himself. This Recognition was not an experience of any new content in
consciousness, but a Re-Cognition of a Truth that is, was, and always
will be. It is a nondual knowledge of identity that transcends space
and time. Nevertheless, there were various effects experienced within
the relative consciousness, that may be considered expressions of the
Recognition. Because the Recognition is not the recognition of any particular
effects or phenomena, they should not be confused with the Recognition
itself. Some of the effects Wolff experienced were: (1) A shift in the
base of reference in consciousness, transplanting the roots of identity
from the relative to the transcendent, (2) a transformation of the meaning
of self from a point-like principle opposed to objects of experience
to a space-like identity with the entire field of consciousness and
all its contents, (3) a sense of penetrating knowledge into the depths
of reality, (4) a transcendence of space, time, and causality, (4) complete
freedom and liberation from all bondage. Also experienced were qualities
of joy, felicity, serenity, peace, and benevolence.
Second Fundamental Recognition: High Indifference, Equilibrium
Although Wolff's first fundamental Realization was an unequivocal
transcendence of the subject-object consciousness, for a period of approximately
33 days there remained certain unresolved tensions preventing it from
being a full state of equilibrium. This tension consisted in the contrast
in valuation between the superlative Joy, Peace, Rest, Freedom and Knowledge
of the Transcendent and the emptiness of the relative world. There was
a distinction between being bound to embodied consciousness and not
being so bound, with a subtle attachment to being not bound. Counter-acting
this subtle attachment, however, was Wolff's prior acceptance of the
bodhisattva vow, a commitment to the value of relative manifestation
and embodiment, motivated by compassion for all sentient beings. With
this motivation, Wolff resisted his strong inclination to retreat into
the transcendent bliss of nirvanic consciousness. Instead, he sacrificed
his strictly personal enjoyment of those transcendent values in order
to maintain a relative embodiment and help liberate all sentient beings.
This act of compassion and ultimate renunciation led to an unexpected
second fundamental Recognition that resolved the residual tensions between
the universe and nirvana. The Realization represented a complete Equilibrium,
not only a relative equilibrium between objects, but also an ultimate
Equilibrium between relative and absolute levels of consciousness. Because
this realization does not give any more valuation to nirvana than to
the universe, and recognizes no ultimate difference between the two,
Wolff called it the High Indifference. It is the complete resolution
of tension between all opposites, the complete transcendence of all
distinctions, including the distinction between the transcendent and
the relative. At this profoundly deep level of Recognition, all self-identity,
both in the highest sense of the transcendental Self and the lower sense
of the ego self, was no more. In Wolff's words, "I was no more and God
was no more, but only the ETERNAL which sustains all Gods and Selves."
The Three Fundamentals of
the Philosophy of Franklin Merrell-Wolff
Based on his fundamental Realizations, Wolff developed a transcendental
philosophy which he distilled into three fundamental propositions. Wolff
emphasizes that these propositions, like his philosophy as a whole, are
conceptual symbols of an ineffable Reality. Moreover, Wolff acknowledges
that the Realizations upon which his philosophy is based are not necessarily
ultimate, and are authoritative only for Wolff and anyone who has had
similar Realizations. Nevertheless, the philosophy has value for others
who aspire to such Realization. The three fundamentals of his philosophy
are as follows.
1. Consciousness is original, self-existent, and constitutive of all
things.
Wolff's term "Consciousness" here does not mean consciousness
as opposed to unconsciousness. Nor does Wolff use the word "Consciousness"
here as a consciousness involving any particular structure or mode of
experience, such as the structure of intentionality, or the mode of
our typical experience based on the distinction between subject and
object. Rather, the meaning of the term "Consciousness" here is THAT
which is the primordial ground and essential nature of all modes and
forms of experience, both subjective and objective. In Wolff's words,
The One, nonderivative Reality, is THAT which I have symbolized
by 'Consciousness-without-an-object.' This is Root Consciousness,
per se, to be distinguished from consciousness as content or as state,
on the one hand, and from consciousness as an attribute of a Self
or Atman, in any sense whatsoever. It is Consciousness of which nothing
can be predicated in the privative sense save abstract Being. Upon
It all else depends, while It remains self-existent.
Thus, Consciousness is primary, i.e., it is first, prior to everything.
Not before or first in the sense of time or temporal sequence, but prior
in the sense of not being secondary to or derivative from anything else.
Hence, Consciousness is self-existent, i.e., it does not depend upon
anything else for its being and is entirely self-sufficient and complete.
In particular, Consciousness does not depend upon, and is not derivative
from, matter, energy, or any other substance. On the contrary, all experience
and all objects are derivative from Consciousness. Thus Consciousness
is constitutive of all things, i.e., all things are, in their ultimate
nature, nothing but this Primordial Consciousness itself.
2. The Subject to Consciousness transcends the object of Consciousness.
To understand this philosophical proposition, we need to first
clarify Wolff's use of the terms subject and object. Our experience
is normally conditioned or structured by the distinction between a subject
to consciousness and objects of consciousness. The subject to consciousness
is that which is aware of objects or appearances in consciousness. Objects
of consciousness are distinct states or appearances in consciousness,
ranging from the most concrete to the most subtle. A concrete object
in consciousness might be a visual perception of a chair or a sensation
of pain in our foot. More subtle objects are appearances in consciousness
such as a thought or memory, an intuition about something, or a state
of consciousness such as an experience of the world that is permeated
by a subtle sense of bliss. It is important to note that the term "object"
as used here by Wolff includes our thoughts, feelings, and other inner
experiences. Such inner phenomena are still objects in consciousness
just as much as outer phenomena are.
In contrast to objects in consciousness, the subject to consciousness
is the principle or aspect of consciousness by which there is awareness
of objects. Because an object cannot be reasonably said to be in consciousness
if it is not an object of awareness, the existence of any object in
consciousness necessarily implies a subject to consciousness. At the
basis of our relative experience, therefore, is a distinction between
subject and object. The second fundamental of the philosophy states
that the subject transcends the object, i.e., that the subjective
principle or aspect of consciousness is more fundamental to consciousness
than the objective appearances in consciousness. This philosophical
proposition derives from the insight that, on the one hand, the objective
appearances of consciousness vanish in the transcendent nirvanic state
of consciousness, while, on the other hand, the subjective principle
of consciousness, i.e., the capacity of awareness, is common to both
relative and transcendent levels of consciousness. The subjective
principle is therefore transcendental, while the objective principle
is not.
3. There are three, not two, organs of knowledge: perception, conception,
and introception.
The third fundamental of Wolff's philosophy is an affirmation
of a third way of knowing, or a third organ of knowledge. Secular philosophy
in the west admits only two modes of knowledge: perception and conception.
Perception includes all sensory knowledge we derive from seeing, hearing,
feeling, smelling, and tasting. Conception includes all knowledge we
derive from thought, memory, imagination, and the like. If we admit
only these two forms of knowledge, then our knowledge of reality is
forever limited to our hypothetical, conceptual speculations about what
reality might be "behind" our perceptual appearances. If we are limited
to conception and perception alone, any certain, categorical knowledge
of reality and truth is not possible, and there is no rational way to
understand the possibility of mystical realization or transcendental
consciousness. The third fundamental, however, affirms the existence
of a third way of knowing, which Wolff calls "introception". The introceptive
capacity is normally latent or partially latent, but can be activated
partially or fully, through intentional effort, spontaneously or both.
When activated, introception provides immediate, categorical knowledge
that transcends the subject-object distinction, i.e., it is not a relational
knowledge of something by something else, but a knowledge through identity
in which there is only knowledge itself that includes and transcends
both knower and known. The third fundamental, in short, affirms that,
in addition to the capacity of perception and conception, there is also
a capacity for transcendental knowledge.
Franklin Merrell-Wolff's Aphorisms
In addition to using more traditional forms of philosophic expression,
Wolff also expressed his Realization in the form of poetry and aphorisms.
Regarding his Aphorisms, Wolff writes:
There are two lines of approach to, and employment of, the
aphorisms. They may be regarded as seeds to be taken into the meditative
state, in which case they will tend to arouse the essentially inexpressible
Meaning and Realization which they symbolize. This we may call their
mystical value. On the other hand, they may be regarded as primary indefinables
upon which a systematic philosophy of the universe and its negation,
Nirvana, may be developed. In this case, they may be viewed as a base
of reference from which all thought and experience may be evaluated.
In the following aphorisms, Wolff uses the terms "Consciousness-without-an-object"
to refer to "the Sole Reality upon which all objects and all selves depend
and derive their existence" (aphorism 54).
APHORISMS ON CONSCIOUSNESS-WITHOUT-AN-OBJECT
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- Consciousness-without-an-object is.
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- Before objects were, Consciousness-without-an-object is.
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- Though objects seem to exist, Consciousness-without-an-object
is.
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- When objects vanish, yet remaining through all unaffected,
Consciousness-without-an-object is.
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- Outside of Consciousness-without-an-object nothing is.
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- Within the bosom of Consciousness-without-an-object lies
the power of awareness that projects objects.
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- When objects are projected, the power of awareness as subject
is presupposed, yet Consciousness-without-an-object remains
unchanged.
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- When consciousness of objects is born, then, likewise, consciousness
of absence of objects arises.
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- Consciousness of objects is the Universe.
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- Consciousness of absence of objects is Nirvana.
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- Within Consciousness-without-an-object lie both the Universe
and Nirvana, yet to Consciousness-without-an-object these
two are the same.
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- Within Consciousness-without-an-object lies the seed of
Time.
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- When awareness cognizes Time then knowledge of Timelessness
is born.
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- To be aware of Time is to be aware of the Universe, and
to be aware of the Universe is to be aware of Time.
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- To realize Timelessness is to attain Nirvana.
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- But for Consciousness-without-an-object there is no difference
between Time and Timelessness.
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- Within Consciousness-without-an-object lies the seed of
the world-containing Space.
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- When awareness cognizes the world-containing Space then
knowledge of the Spatial Void is born.
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- To be aware of the world-containing Space is to be aware
of the Universe of Objects.
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- To realize the Spatial Void is to awaken to Nirvanic Consciousness.
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- But for Consciousness-without-an-object there is no difference
between the world-containing Space and the Spatial Void.
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- Within Consciousness-without-an-object lies the Seed of
Law.
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- When consciousness of objects is born the Law is invoked
as a Force tending ever toward Equilibrium.
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- All objects exist as tensions within Consciousness-without-an-object
that tend ever to flow into their own complements or others.
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- The ultimate effect of the flow of all objects into their
complements is mutual cancellation in complete Equilibrium.
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- Consciousness of the field of tensions is the Universe.
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- Consciousness of Equilibrium is Nirvana.
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- But for Consciousness-without-an-object there is neither
tension nor Equilibrium.
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- The state of tensions is the state of ever-becoming.
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- Ever-becoming is endless-dying.
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- So the state of consciousness of objects is a state of ever-renewing
promises that pass into death at the moment of fulfillment.
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- Thus when consciousness is attached to objects the agony
of birth and death never ceases.
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- In the state of Equilibrium where birth cancels death the
deathless Bliss of Nirvana is realized.
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- But Consciousness-without-an-object is neither agony nor
bliss.
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- Out of the Great Void, which is Consciousness-without-an-object,
the Universe is creatively projected.
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- The Universe as experienced is the created negation that
ever resists.
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- The creative act is bliss, the resistance, unending pain.
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- Endless resistance is the Universe of experience, the agony
of crucifixion.
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- Ceaseless creativeness is Nirvana, the Bliss beyond human
conceiving.
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- But for Consciousness-without-an-object there is neither
creativeness nor resistance.
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- Ever-becoming and ever-ceasing-to-be are endless action.
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- When ever-becoming cancels the ever-ceasing-to-be then Rest
is realized.
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- Ceaseless action is the Universe.
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- Unending Rest is Nirvana.
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- But Consciousness-without-an-object is neither Action nor
Rest.
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- When consciousness is attached to objects it is restricted
through the forms imposed by the world-containing Space, by
Time, and by Law.
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- When consciousness is disengaged from objects, Liberation
from the forms of the world-containing Space, of Time, and
of Law is attained.
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- Attachment to objects is consciousness bound within the
Universe.
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- Liberation from such attachment is the State of unlimited
Nirvanic Freedom.
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- But Consciousness-without-an-object is neither bondage nor
freedom.
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- Consciousness-without-an-object may be symbolized by a SPACE
that is unaffected by the presence or absence of objects,
for which there is neither Time nor Timelessness, neither
a world-containing Space nor a Spatial Void, neither Tension
nor Equilibrium, neither Resistance nor Creativeness, neither
Agony nor Bliss, neither Action nor Rest, and neither Restriction
nor Freedom.
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- As the GREAT SPACE is not to be identified with the Universe,
so neither is It to be identified with any Self.
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- The GREAT SPACE is not God, but the comprehender of all
Gods, as well as of all lesser creatures.
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- The GREAT SPACE, or Consciousness-without-an-object, is
the Sole Reality upon which all objects and all selves depend
and derive their existence.
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- The GREAT SPACE comprehends both the Path of the Universe
and the Path of Nirvana.
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- Beside the GREAT SPACE there is none other.
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OM TAT SAT
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Thank you to Tom McFarland for the commentaries
on Dr. Wolff's Philosophy.
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