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Acronyms used in the website

SABCL - Sri Aurobindo Birth Centenary Library

CWSA - Complete Works of Sri Aurobindo

CWM - Collected Works of The Mother

Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Teilhard de Chardin and our Time/Faith in the world,the concept of omega,the vision of Christ^s Parousia.htm
-005_Faith in the world,the concept of omega,the vision of Christ's Parousia.htm Faith in the World, the Concept of Omega, the Vision of Christ's Parousia       Perhaps the champions of Christian Orthodoxy will bring up the confession Teilhard makes in the Phenomenon of Man when, towards the close of the book, he considers "The Christian Phenomenon", The confession is apropos of his concept of Omega.   We may first summarise this concept. According to Teilhard, evolution produces, in the course of time, systems ever more complex in the sense that a larger and larger variety of elements are organised around a more and more distinct centre: the atom, the mega-molecule, the virus, th
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Teilhard de Chardin and our Time/Teilhard^s Christianity and the Ancient Vedanta.htm
-008_Teilhard's Christianity and the Ancient Vedanta.htm Teilhard's Christianity and the Ancient Vedanta       Our task of comparison will be all the more interesting because one of the cross-purposes in Teilhard's life was just that he found himself simultaneously attracted by and at variance with old Indian thought. As he has explained in his essay, How 1 Believe,1 he recognised in this thought "an abundant sense of the Whole", which chimed with his own faith, but he saw in it (1) a suppression of the individual and the rich dynamism of life in a "homogeneous unity" and (2) a vision of matter as "dead weight and illusion". If anything in the modern Orient struck him as a sign of hope, it was
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Teilhard de Chardin and our Time/Roman Catholicism and Pantheism.htm
Part One THE REAL RELIGION OF TEILHARD       DE CHARDIN His Version of Christianity and Sri Aurobindo's Expose of the Ancient Vedanta           Roman Catholicism and Pantheism       The Roman Catholic Church has shown deep concern over the real religion behind the scientific-spiritual philosophy of the Jesuit priest and palaeontologist Teilhard de Chardin. Apropos of some declarations of his, a very disturbing question has arisen for it: "Was Teilhard a pantheist?"   According to pantheism, the universe is a single infinite Being manifesting all that is phys
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Teilhard de Chardin and our Time/What is Basic Teilhardism What Place has his Christianity in it.htm
II What is Basic Teilhardism? What Place has his Christianity in it?       (1)       In Rideau's book we have found from his Teilhard-quota-tions that Teilhard's Christianity has no vital concern for any traditional dogmas of the Roman Catholic Church but concentrates solely on preserving "Christ on the scale of and at the head of creation".1 According to Teilhard, such an exclusive regard is "the most essential aim and criterion of Christian orthodoxy"2 and, "since St. John and St. Paul, the fundamental rule of theology".3 The divine power so figured is the Cosmic or Universal Christ and, naturally, his
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Teilhard de Chardin and our Time/Supplementry Note.htm
Supplementary Note       We may press some further statements of Teilhard into service of our contention that he subscribes to panpsychism not only in the sense that life is present in all matter even where it is not apparent but also in the sense that one single life, an identical vital presence, is active in various degrees throughout the universe - a sense which would be a natural and logical step towards pantheism.   A pronouncement at some length in our support meets us on pp. 98-100 of The Vision of the Past (Collins, London, 1966). The article where it occurs is called "The Transformist Paradox" and refers to "the new perspectives of discontinuity and p
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Teilhard de Chardin and our Time/Pantheistic Christianity and Panentheism.htm
Pantheistic Christianity and Panentheism       The issue over the equation of the natural Omega with a natural Christ being settled, we may move on to the other -namely, that, like Pantheos, Teilhard's Cosmic Christ is a World-God who precedes his own particular concentrated historical manifestation known as Jesus. In short, what Teilhard is announcing is a genuine pantheism sub specie Christi. And such a thesis emerges if we rightly gauge several of his pronouncements:   "The concentration of the Multiple in the supreme organic unity of Omega represents a most arduous task. Every element, according to its degree, shares in this laborious
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Amal Kiran Poet and Critc/Little Known Facets of the  Immortal Diamond.htm
-40_Little Known Facets of the  Immortal Diamond.htm Little Known Facets of the Immortal Diamond IF THE term "myriad-minded" could be applied to anybody with justice, Amal richly deserves it. It is not uncommon to find jacks of all trades with a kind of shallow omniscience.  To be a first-rate poet uttering overhead notes, a superb critic with a mastery over "the heart and art of poetry", a rare type of historian with imagination and insight, a keen student of scientific thought and for some time even a commentator on the contemporary political scene is to be only in the truest sense of the term an Aurobindonian. On the occasion of his ninetieth birthday it is good t
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Amal Kiran Poet and Critc/The Legend of Amal Kiran.htm
The Legend of Amal Kiran FROM the time I came to Pondicherry as a small boy in the year 1946, I had heard the name of Amal Kiran together with that of Harindranath Chattopadhyaya, of Dilip Kumar Roy, Arjava and a few others as the poets inspired and moulded by Sri Aurobindo himself. Those were indeed the halcyon days of the Ashram at least as far as the Arts and Culture were concerned, for then it was a case of turn but a corner and start a poet. One could not take a step without brushing against a famous poet or painter or musician or thinker or scholar. Nolinikanto, Nishikanto, Dilip Kumar, Bhismadev, Sahana Devi, Monod-Herzen, Sanjivan,
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Amal Kiran Poet and Critc/Amal-Kiran Full Name as Written by Sri Aurobindo.htm
Section One A Content of Warm Sunshine Page-3 Blessing from The Morher Page-5 ( A letter from Sri Aurobindo) Page - 7 N. B: The Letter was written to Amal Kiran on 28. 2. 28 - Editors Page - 8 ( Diary record of an interview and two letters ) Page - 9 Sri Aurobindo's reply written in pencil: Your account of the conversation with Mother is quite accurate. Mother is letting you go now because she t
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Amal Kiran Poet and Critc/My Wonderful Teacher.htm
My Wonderful Teacher THE MOTHER arranged my reading Savitri with Amal Kiran (K.D. Sethna) in 1962. Sri Aurobindo had first introduced Savitri to Amal in private drafts and written to him most of the letters that are now published along with the epic. For the first time Amal and I met in 1961 upstairs in the passage which connects the Mother's and Sri Aurobindo's rooms. I casually asked him about a chessboard, because the Mother and I were doing something on the theme. He drew it and made me understand it. When we started our reading of Savitri, some interested people warned Amal against me and asked him to discontinue. A