Contributions from a Potential Corpse, Book 1
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'We must wake up. To dream is to be involved in a vortex of form. To wake up is to see the dream for what it is and to see beyond it, to infinity.' Meditations on the meaning of death, the nature of mind, feeling, spirit and Love, bring insight into the human condition with a p
Eugene Halliday
Eugene Halliday, artist and writer, was founder of two educational charities. A prolific writer and charismatic teacher, his published works include Reflexive Self-Consciousness, The Tacit Conspiracy, and Contributions from a Potential Corpse. His psychotherapeutic work enabled the recovery of many troubled minds and souls, yet he almost never gave advice, teaching people, rather, how to advise themselves. His work was founded in Love, which he defined as 'working for the development of the highest potentialities of being'. Those who were taught by him regard him in affectionate reverence as a man of great wisdom, humour and compassion.
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Contributions from a Potential Corpse, Book 1 - Eugene Halliday
The Collected Works of Eugene Halliday
Volume 4
Contributions from a Potential Corpse
Book 1
Melchisedec Press
Second edition (revised) published in the UK by Melchisedec Press in 2020
Edited by David Mahlowe (1990) and Hephzibah Yohannan (2020)
The rights of Eugene Halliday (1911–1987) to be identified as author of this work have been asserted in accordance with Copyright Designs and Patents Act.
The moral right of the author is asserted.
© Hephzibah Yohannan 2015
Cover illustration by Eugene Halliday
Cover design © Hephzibah Yohannan
All rights reserved.
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. Nor shall any part of this publication be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior permission in writing of the publisher.
Permission can be obtained through Melchisedec Press
ISBN 978-1-872240-03-9 (1990 hardback)
ISBN 978-1-872240-44-2 (2020 ebook)
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
The Melchisedec Press was founded by David Mahlowe to publish the works of Eugene Halliday
melchisedecpress.net
Dedication
Dedicated to the memory of David Mahlowe with grateful thanks for his loving and unstinting labour in the furtherance of the work of Eugene Halliday
Editors’ Notes
David Mahlowe 1990
The first book of Contributions From a Potential Corpse was written in the late 1950s as the beginning of the author’s magnum opus. The opening five chapters are conventional in form, if not in content. Thereafter, the remainder of this Book and all succeeding Books become more episodic in form.
Over the years, right up to his death in 1987, Eugene Halliday continued to write ‘Contrib’, as he called it, as time allowed. The result may be called a Day Book of Wisdom. It contains the essence of his teaching, clearly set down and copiously illustrated in a manner fondly familiar to those who worked with him.
The separate Books of ‘Contrib’ will be presented as they were received, each in a separate folder. The only significant amendment to the material is a re-drawing of the original sketches and diagrams in the more precise manner which the author himself would have required.
The Foreword to the Book is, in fact, part of the MS. It is placed at the beginning as a fitting reminder of the author’s purpose.
Contributions From a Potential Corpse is a manual of self-development for Everyman; and a unique treasury of wisdom.
Hephzibah Yohannan 2020
David Mahlowe, Halliday’s Literary Executor, founded The Melchisedec Press to publish Halliday’s work. Although Halliday was working on this book from the 1950s, and there had been discussions about its publication at early stage, its first publication was not until after his death. This was the hardback edition, published by David Mahlowe in 1990.
This ebook edition gives the text of Mahlowe’s 1990 edition. A small number of minor typographical errors have been corrected. Words in square brackets within the text have been inserted by the current editor if they are needed to clarify the text, or to suggest that they may have been missed from the original text.
Single quotation marks have been chosen for this edition rather than double, for consistency of style across the new series of books published by Melchisedec Press since 2015.
Numbers placed centrally in square brackets within the text, indicate the page numbers of the hardback edition, e.g. [page 1]. They are placed as close as possible to the end of each page, without breaking paragraphs (for ease of reading). This has been done so that students of Halliday’s work who are discussing, or citing the work, may be able to refer to the pages of the hardback. In addition, each paragraph has been given a number in square brackets, to further facilitate this process.
Titles listed on the Contents page of the hardback have been inserted into the book’s text, in order to create the ebook’s Table of Contents (TOC).
Author’s Foreword
[1] What drives me incessantly to think, to read, to write? The will to love. Nietzsche says, ‘the will to power’. But I say that the will to power is perverted love, and that love wills to love, and that love is work for the development of the functional potentialities of being, infinitely. Not power as such, but functionality is the aim. Power has no significance unless it is expended in function. But function has significance even if power as power is never felt to be present in it.
[2] And all function is interfunction. Petrol in the car interfunctioning with electrical sparks, cylinders, pistons, crankshaft, transmission, road wheels, roads, journeys; men seeing new sights, hearing new sounds, constructing new patterns of significance.
[3] There is no function that is not interfunction, though isolating fools may believe or hope otherwise.
[4] Involve ever more interfunctions with each other, and so create ever more complex and higher interfunctions. This is love ever-expanding, love with no ceiling to its attainings.
[page iii]
[5] I see that people who believe that function can be function without interfunction are leading very narrow and shallow lives. I am determined to broaden them, and deepen them. How I shall do this is through the word, written and/or spoken. Let the Word of God help me, or help Himself through me. For surely men are an irritant to God as long as they try to function without interfunction.
[6] Is it possible for men to impede God? Yes, but He is not without power of response to their impeding activities. He has His prophets, His messengers and His Son, by the sacrifice of whom He can present men with a stimulus they will find it hard to assimilate without reaction of some kind. God has the whip-handle. Man, each man, is the whip-lash wherewith God can scourge all men, until they of themselves will to co-operate.
Eugene Halliday
[page iv]
Chapter One
[7] With the possible exception of some few persons mentioned in tradition as having passed from this world without being dead at their time of departure, it appears that most people who have been born have later died, and that on statistical grounds alone it is probable that most people born and now living will also die at some time in the future.
[8] For most practical purposes, then, it is probably not too foolish to accept the Buddha’s observation, and to assume that we shall, having been born, at some point of time die. For myself the idea of dying holds no terrors, because in the sense that I use the term, dying is a process that can apply only to compound bodies held together, not of necessity, but of temporal pattern processes which might well have been other than they are.
[9)]To die is to disintegrate, to fall apart, to undo a pattern of elements once brought together in time past by forces having their origin in the ultimate field of power which creates, sustains and dissolves all things.
[10] That my body, having been assembled from various sources, from food, from radiation and so on, will probably at some time dissemble does not surprise me in the least. Assembling and dissembling processes are both equally understandable.
[page 1]
[11] What is important is not the probability of my death but the contributing by myself of whatever is valuable from my experience during the period of my assembling. If death is highly probable for born beings, it may be asked of what value is the experience of life to anyone? I must answer from my experience of life.
[12] Life, between birth and death, is a process, a series of actualisings of being, experienced by what I shall call sentient power.
[13] By sentience I mean the principle of all consciousness, awareness, knowing-feeling. The Latin word ‘Sentire’ to know, to feel, the origin of words like ‘sense’, ‘sensitivity’, etc., expresses the general idea of the function which exists in us as the ground of all our self-consciousness and knowledge, whether of thought, feeling, will or action, physical or otherwise.
[14] ‘Sentience’ is a word used less often than the words consciousness, knowingness or awareness, and therefore will serve to express the general activity which the other words express more precisely.
[15] Consciousness, for instance, has the rather precise meaning of knowing things in a patterned way. It is used of knowing when it is fairly clearly defined; knowing in which sense elements, the data of the five senses, are cut