DISCOURSES ON
RADHASOAMI
FAITH
BY
MAHARAJ SAHAB
Pandit Brahm Sankar Misra,
M.A.
98. THE CAUSE OF SOME
GASES AND SUBSTANCES BEING ODOURLESS AND TASTELESS
148.
We would make a small digression here with the object of explaining the cause
of some gases and substances being odourless and tasteless respectively. We
have stated above that the minutest particle of each of the five conditions of
matter is at the centre of each of the five senses. These minutest particles
are in the same phase as the tattvas
they appertain to. Accordingly, a tattva
itself, so long as it is not subjected to some extraneous action or admixture,
does not produce any action upon the sense which contains its tanmatra. Vayu alone would not, therefore, affect the sense of smell, nor
would such of the permanent gases as approach it in subtlety of their
constitution. We have already said in Article 97 that the idea of five tattvas is the one appertaining to the
peculiar grouping of the molecules of each of them, and in considering the
subject, this conception should not be confounded with the gross forms of
gases, liquids, solids, etc. met with here. The above remarks apply mutatis mutandis to all the remaining
senses.
149.
To elucidate the matter further, we would, however, add another illustration.
So long as the condition of heat does not reach that stage of subtlety in which
atoms are fit to be associated with the kinetic energy which agitates the
ethereal plane, it merely affects the sense of touch by the action it produces
upon the physical body, but it is not seen as light. As soon as, however, the
subtle condition, referred to above, is reached, this condition affects the tanmatra of heat in the eye, and light
is perceived. In short, when the five conditions of matter are so agitated as
to affect their subtle planes, the sentient entities, who happen to be present
within the field of such agitation, receive the impression at the senses
concerned and feel it as sound, light, smell, taste, or touch, as the case may
be. It frequently happens that a single agitation, which is, of course,
produced by energy, may affect more than one sense. In tat case there might be
a concomitant experience to the different senses that are affected. A report
produced by a combustible substance, for example, affects the senses of hearing
and sight, and in some cases of smell too. The sense of hearing on the face of
it produces an impression that it is much grosser than the sense of sight, and
it will therefore be advantageous to explain clearly how the contrary of such a
notions holds good.
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