The Yogi and the Commissar
- Soviet Union
- Communism
The Yogi and the Commissar (1945) is a collection of essays of Arthur Koestler, divided in three parts: Meanderings, Exhortations and Explorations. In the first two parts he has collected essays written from 1942 to 1945 and the third part was written especially for this book.
In the title essay, Koestler proposes a continuum of philosophies for achieving "heaven on earth", from the Commissar at the materialist, scientific end of the spectrum, to the Yogi at the spiritual, metaphysical end. The Commissar wants to change society using any means necessary, while the Yogi wants to change the individual, with an emphasis on ethical purity instead of on results.[1]
"Between these two extremes are spread out in a continuous sequence the spectral lines of the more sedate, human attitudes. The more we approach its centre, the more the spectrum becomes blurred and woolly. On the other hand, this increase of wool on the naked spectral bodies makes them look more decent and intercourse with them more civilized."[2]
Using a metaphor of spectra of radiation, Koestler figures the Commissar at the infra-red end of the spectrum; the Yogi is ultra-violet. Neither are in the realm of visible light, he suggests, and just so the full dynamics of history and culture escape us.
One essay, “The Birth of a Myth” published in Horizon, April 1943, appeared as “In Memory of Richard Hillary” in a longer version, pp46–67.
References
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- t
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- The Gladiators
- Darkness at Noon
- Arrival and Departure
- Thieves in the Night
- The Call-Girls
- The Encyclopœdia of Sexual Knowledge
- The Yogi and the Commissar
- The Sleepwalkers
- The Lotus and the Robot
- The Act of Creation
- The Ghost in the Machine
- The Roots of Coincidence
- The Heel of Achilles: Essays 1968–1973
- The Thirteenth Tribe
- Janus: A Summing Up
- Arthur Koestler (book)
- Koestler Arts
- Living with Koestler: Mamaine Koestler's Letters 1945–51
- Arthur Koestler: The Story of a Friendship