The Yogi and the Commissar
The Yogi and the Commissar 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.
Using a metaphor of spectra of radiation, Koestler figures the Commissar at the infra-red end of the spectrum; the Yogi is ultra-violet. He suggested that neither end is in the realm of visible light. Consequently, the full dynamics of history and culture escape us.
Koesler preceded The Yogi and the Commissar with his 1943 essay The Birth of a Myth, an expanded version of which was later published in chapter VI of Part One of The Yogi and the Commissar as In Memory of Richard Hillary.