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Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/Buddha and Shankara.htm
Buddha and Shankara
(1)
To
escape from life is a teaching based on the view that life is an illusion. The
teaching began with Buddha. Buddha said that life or existence is the fruit of
desire and that there was only one way of getting out of the misery, namely, to
go out of existence. Shankara continued in that line. He added, however, that
existence was not merely the fruit of desire, but that it was altogether an
illusion and that so long as one lives in that illusion, one cannot realise the
Divine. For him the Divine – the Supreme Divine – did not exist. I believe his
view was something to that effect. In any case, for the Buddha there was no
God.
Both
of
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/In these Fateful Days.htm
In these Fateful Days
To destroy is easy; to create, it is difficult.
The vital force destroys in its violence, it is the spirit that creates in its energy of
consciousness.
The vital force is easily available to man.
The spirit is a far cry.
And yet there is no other way out: if man is
to be saved, that is the only way left before him.
If
man's destiny is to fulfil – fulfil the purpose of creation, he will have to
find out the way of the spirit. If in his present mood of perversity, he
pursues blindly the urge that has possessed him, he will surely annihilate
himself – willingly or unwillingly he will commit hara-kiri.
Fortunately
for man, souls
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/The Moral and the Spiritual.htm
The Moral and
the Spiritual
Is there anything essentially wrong, evil in its very being and nature? Some
religious traditions say, there is: Satan is such a thing,
Ahriman
is such a thing, and what else is maya
or mara?
However that may be, the sense of something essentially wrong is the fount and
origin of the moral sense. The moral sense stems
from and lives on the
sense of sin and guilt.
The sense of sin is the fundamental inspiration behind some religious
disciplines, even the sense of something irrevocably bad or something
irreparable; for that gives a stronger impetus, a more dynamic urge to the spur
of the religious consciousness. Th
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/The Origin of Desire.htm
The Origin of Desire
FROM where
does desire come? Buddha said that it came from Ignorance. It is almost that.
Desire is something in the being which imagines that it requires an object
other than itself for its satisfaction. This is sheer ignorance, proved by the
fact that in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred when one has the thing desired,
one no more cares for it.
At
its very origin, I think, it was an obscure need for growth or increase. In the
lowest forms of life we find love transformed into an instinctive and
irresistible need for enlarging, swelling, absorbing, adding to it another
body. This need to take in is desire. So perhaps if you go back far enoug
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/Love and Death.htm
Love and Death
ONE of the earliest poems
of Sri Aurobindo – a juvenile work – has the title Love and Death. This
is indeed the central theme, the core of the inspiration running through the
whole of his poetic world culminating in the grand symphony of Savitri. As
a matter of fact his vision and the mission of his life are epitomised
in those three words, namely 'Love conquering Death.'
I
shall leave aside his other works and take up his dramas, his five complete
major dramas in which the theme has been developed and the problem set and
solved in somewhat different ways but always leading to the same conclusion
'Love conquering Death.'
Death
according to Sri Aurobindo is
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/The Hero and the Nymph.htm
“The Hero and the Nymph”
A
note on Kalidasa's "The Hero and the Nymph" (translated by Sri
Aurobindo), staged at the Ashram Theatre on December 1st and December 3rd 1971.
The story of Kalidasa's
"The Hero and the Nymph" is the eternal legend of the marriage of heaven
and earth upon earth. The Heavenly Beauty can descend upon earth and be united
to a human soul only, as it appears, under a malediction; for heaven and earth
are normally understood to be opposites and contradictories. The malediction
means that the union can happen under certain limitations. First of all, there
is the limitation of time, that is to say, the union does not last long, it can
be onl
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/The Story of Love.htm
The Story of Love
(1)
LOVE, in its essence, is the joy of identity. It finds its final expression
in the felicity of union. Between the two there are all the phases that make up
the universal manifestation.
Love comes from the very origin of the universe.
Love in its essence, I say, that is, before the manifestation, is the delight
of identity. Something there was which became conscious of the identity. And
that is precisely Love. Afterwards comes the manifestation of Love. In its
highest form, when it comes back to its origin across all its history of
manifestation, it becomes the felicity of union. The sense of union comes as a
consequence of the sense of separat
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/The Mother on Herself.htm
The Mother on Herself
(1)
You must be very very persevering. I will
tell you a story – my own story.
When I began to practise occultism, as I started
working with my nights, making them conscious, I found that between the subtle
physical level and the most material vital there was a small region, very small
indeed, that was not developed well enough to serve as a conscious link between
the two. So what happened in the most material vital was not being accurately translated
into the consciousness of the most subtle physical. Something was lost in the
passage which was however not quite empty but only half-conscious, not
adequately developed. I knew there was only
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/The Labours of the Gods.htm
The Labours of the Gods:
The five Purifications
NOWDAYS we
hear much of brain-washing. The other day, instead of brain-washing, I spoke of
brain-ignition. That is to say, for a total reconstitution of the brain, for a
new building of the physique of the new man, one has to transform the cells of
grey matter into particles of fire, packets of burning energy. I said, the
cranium being the control-room of physical existence and the brain being the
controlling agent – the brain extending its range down the spinal column to its
end at the last vertebra – this is the element that has to be treated and
reorganised first and foremost if a physical reorganisation
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/Two Equations.htm
Two
Equations
I
Einstein's equation.
E=mc²
that is, Matter becomes
energy when its mass is multiplied by the square of the velocity of light.
The new equation:
M=mc°°
that
is, Matter is transformed into spiritualised energy (not merely mechanical energy
as in Einstein) when its mass is multiplied by consciousness raised to the
power of infinity.
II
Buddha's equation:
D°=O
that
is, Desire raised to the power zero is zero=Nirvana.
Shankara's
equation:
Dº= I (Sachchidananda)
Note: any quantity raised to the zero power is not
zero but I.
X ª
Ex: xº=xª¯ª = – = I.
X ª
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