Book Title: Sacred Philosophy Author(s): Champat Rai Jain Publisher: Champat Rai JainPage 25
________________ ject of my knowledge. This will be clear to any one who has understood the nature of knowledge to consist in a sense or feeling of awareness, for one can but feel one's own being and the states or conditions of that being as occasioned or modified by the influence of another being or thing. These states or conditions, it should be further noticed, are not pure imaginary abstractions ; they inhere in the soul-substance and are actually its modifications. They are felt by the soul as such, and not as something different from or independent of its own being. Hence it is wrong to think that in knowing an object of knowledge the soul is only aware of the object, but not of itself. The fact is that only that which has a concrete existence can be felt by the soul, and as the states of consciousness, that is to say, of the soul-substance, have no existence apart from the soul-substance itself, they can only be felt along with and simultaneously with the soul's own being itself. This is so even with reference to the feelings of pleasure and pain with which all of us are familiar. When I say, 'I am feeling pain', or 'I feel pleasure,' I do not mean that pleasure and pain are concrete things outside my own being which I have alighted upon in some mysterious way. What I do mean is that I am aware of a state or modification of my being which is pleasant in one Jain Education International For Private & Personal Use Only www.jainelibrary.orgPage Navigation
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