The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali - The Book of the Spiritual Man - The Essence of Practical Wisdom - An Interpretation by Charles Johnston The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali are in themselves exceedingly brief, less than ten pages of large type in the original.
Mental life grows up among these images, built on a measuring and comparing, on the massing of images together into general ideas; on the abstraction of new notions and images from these; till a new world is built up within, full of desires and hates, ambition, envy, longing, speculation, curiosity, self-will, self-interest..
Thus within the psychic realm of our life there grows up an imaged world wherein we dwell; a world of the images of things seen and heard, and therefore a world of memories; a world also of hopes and desires, of fears and regrets.
But this is a magic mirror; the images remain, and take a certain life of their own.
Some of the schools of India say that the psychic nature is, as it were, a looking-glass, wherein are mirrored the things seen by the physical eyes, and heard by the physical ears.
In reality, we have gone far indeed from pure physical life; for ages, our life has been psychical, we have been centred and immersed in the psychic nature.
We think of ourselves as living a purely physical life, in these material bodies of ours.
The theme, if the present interpreter be right, is the great regeneration, the birth of the Spiritual from the psychical man: the same theme which Paul so wisely and eloquently set forth in writing to his disciples in Corinth, the theme of all mystics in all lands.
Yet they contain the essence of practical wisdom, set forth in admirable order and detail.
The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali - The Book of the Spiritual Man - The Essence of Practical Wisdom - An Interpretation by Charles Johnston The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali are in themselves exceedingly brief, less than ten pages of large type in the original