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Title:
-06_The Invasion~Theory and the Alleged Aryan~Dravidian Difference.htm
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Chapter Three
THE INVASION-THEORY AND THE ALLEGED
ARYAN-DRAVIDIAN DIFFERENCE
The conclusion at which we have arrived is exactly that of Sri Aurobindo who was a multi-linguist and a cultural exponent, besides being a political guide, a philosophical thinker, a literary critic, a poet on a grand scale and a master of integral spirituality.
As far back as 1914, after mentioning how the old conceptions of the recent emergence of civilized man from the mere savage had been shaken by our increasing knowledge of remarkable civilizations many thousands of years ago, he wrote:
"If the Vedic Indians do not get the bene
Title:
-24_Probable Historical Implications of the Archaelogical work at Dwaraka.htm
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SUPPLEMENT IV
PROBABLE HISTORICAL IMPLICATIONS OF THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL WORK AT DWARAKA
Reports have been appearing at various times in Indian newspapers about the archaeological work of Dr. S.R. Rao. One of them, after touching on his past discoveries, says:1
"His recent discovery centres around the excavations at Dwaraka, the famed city mentioned in the MahaBhārata, which interests the historian, scientist and common man alike. While Dwaraka arouses reverence in the common man, it also inspires curiosity among scientists and historians, who wish to know whether there really existed a port town... Did it reall
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Aspects of Sri Aurobindo/A Gross Misunderstanding of sri aurobindo.htm
A GROSS MISUNDERSTANDING OF SRI AUROBINDO
1. A LETTER FROM PRADIP BHATTACHARYA
Here is something for the Editor of Mother India: I have been in correspondence with Dr. K. K. Nair (Krishna Chaitanya), the eminent philosopher and litterateur, apropos his comment apropos the Peter Brook film on the Mahabharata, "Anticipating Buber, he (Vyasa) saw history as the encounter of the temporal and the eternal, the empirical and the transcendental; and anticipating Berdyaev, he saw in history a divine programme for divinising human existence." I had asked Nair why he had to refer to Berdyaev when India's very own Sri Aurobindo h
Title:
-019_A Perplexing question About Sri Auroboindo and Its answer.htm
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A PERPLEXING QUESTION ABOUT SRI AUROBINDO AND ITS ANSWER
While reading Sri Aurobindo's Bengali book of jail-reminiscences Karakahini (Tales of Prison-life), many readers have been puzzled by certain passages depicting the distressed state of mind in which Sri Aurobindo found himself.
Knowing that already before going to jail he had the experience of Nirvana shortly after his meeting with the Maharashtrian Yogi Lele in Baroda, one is apt to wonder how the distressed state could ever occur.
The answer can be derived from a statement of Sri Aurobindo's in the course of the talks which Nirodbaran has recorded. On Dec
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Aspects of Sri Aurobindo/Two lines from sri Aurobindo's savitri.htm
-014_Two lines from sri Aurobindo's savitri.htm
TWO LINES FROM SRI AUROBINDO'S SAVITRI
AN EXPLANATORY LETTER
May I proceed as in a classroom, taking nothing for granted?
The lines you wish me to explain in brief —
Akin to the march of unaccomplished Powers
Beyond life's arc in spirit's immensities1 —
occur in a passage where the soul of Aswapati (Savitri's royal father) is released from Ignorance and his mind and body undergo their "first spiritual change" by a Knowledge drawn from above and within. What pours down from the overhead planes is called "a wide self-knowledge" and what broadens out from the subliminal and the psychic depths is termed "a new
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Aspects of Sri Aurobindo/MR.Alvars and sri aurobindo.htm
MR. ALVARES AND SRI AUROBINDO
WEIGHING IN THE BALANCE OR RUNNING AMUCK?
( This article, which is a rejoinder by the
editor of Mother India to an attack published in the
Bombay bi-monthly Quest, was originally offered to that
very periodical. Professor A. B. Shah, co-editor of Quest,
had been eager from the beginning to have a counter-attack by a
member of the Sri Aurobindo Ashram. But he wanted it to be about
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Aspects of Sri Aurobindo/Sri Aurobindo's Interpretation of the Rig-veda.htm
-008_Sri Aurobindo's Interpretation of the Rig-veda.htm
SRI AUROBINDO'S INTERPRETATION
OF THE RIG-VEDA
A CRUCIAL QUESTION AND ITS POSSIBLE ANSWER
Sri Aurobindo has given a symbolic interpretation to the Rigveda with a great deal of penetrating analysis, showing it to be a powerfully imaged story of the soul's adventure towards Light, Freedom, Infinity, Immortality — a mystical adventure in which Gods are helpers and Demons hinderers. Objects of the physical world are spoken of in such a way that to the initiates they represent realities of the inner life while to the common herd they appear in a literal sense.
This sense is associated with a ritualistic reli
Title:
-017_The Mind of light In sri aurobindo's Philosophy and yoga.htm
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-017_The Mind of light In sri aurobindo's Philosophy and yoga.htm
"THE MIND OF LIGHT" IN SRI AUROBINDO'S PHILOSOPHY AND YOGA
"
AN ATTEMPT AT A SCHEMATIC SUMMARY
1)"The Mind of Light" is a coinage of Sri Aurobindo's, applicable not to all the levels of mental being where Light (Divine Knowledge) has open play in various degrees, but only to the human mental level — which we may designate broadly as the physical-mental — when its ignorance essentially ceases and it becomes a plane in which, even within all measures and limits, withholdings and gradualities, there is no obscurity at all: everything is a self-chosen process of Light.
2)Ignorance of the human physical-mer
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Aspects of Sri Aurobindo/Questions And Answers on Savitri.htm
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ON SAVITRI
(With acknowledgements to Srinvantu, August 1986)
(A few of us have been trying to read and study
Savitri in a group. We requested Amal Kiran (K. D.
Sethna) to kindly give us a guide-line, so that our u
nderstanding as well as enjoyment of Savitri might
be enhanced and enriched. We put some specific
questions which would show him the trend of our
mind. Given below are the first two of them along
with his answers. — Ed. Srinvantu)
Q. One may approach Savitri (1) with a devotee's attitude as the
spiritual autobiography of the Master, (2) as a book or st
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Aspects of Sri Aurobindo/our Denstiny Human And Divine.htm
OUR DESTINY HUMAN AND DIVINE
LETTER TO A LAY NUN
Your account of your new life in Bihar is a bit of an eye-opener to us. Your own eyes too must have opened somewhat — but it must have been a good thing for all around you to receive so much of their fine blue in the midst of a rather grey existence.
I am sure you have managed to adjust yourself as a soldier of God is bound to do. The only thing which may keep you unadjusted is the absence of a typewriter! Well, this absence will help keep my presence actively remembered — if at all I am in danger of being swallowed up
In the dark backward and abysm of Time,
as Shakespe