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Mind, Origin of Separative Consciousness
THE world is one, indissolubly and solidly one:
no part can be separated from any other. Any action anywhere affects the whole
and nothing can be moved even by a hair's breadth without changing the entire
balance. Each element literally lives, moves and has its being in every other
and the totality is a rigidly unified mass.
If
it is so, then there arises a difficulty, a dilemma. For the world to progress
at all, under the circumstances, it must progress as a whole, en masse; it
cannot progress piecemeal. The totality must advance in order that each element
may progress and each element must advance so that
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/Sri Aurobindo^s Gita.htm
-004_Sri Aurobindo^s Gita.htm
Sri Aurobindo's Gita
THE supreme secret of the
Gita, rahasyam uttamam, has presented itself to diverse minds in diverse
forms. All these however fall, roughly speaking, into two broad groups of which
one may be termed the orthodox school and the other the modem school.
The orthodox school as represented, for example, by Shankara or Sridhara,
viewed the Gita in the light of the spiritual discipline more or less current
in those ages, when the purpose of life was held out to be emancipation from
life, whether through desireless work or knowledge or devotion or even a
combination of the three. The Modern School, on the other
hand, represented by Bankim in Bengal and more
Lines of the Descent of Consciousness
1
THE world has been created by a descent of consciousness; it maintains
itself, it proceeds and develops through a series of descents. In fact,
creation itself is a descent, the first and original one, the descent of the
supreme Reality into Matter and as Matter. The supreme Reality – the fount and
origin of things and even that which is beyond – although essentially something
absolute, indescribable, ineffable, indeterminable, has been, for purposes of
the human understanding, signalised as a triune entity of Existence,
Consciousness and Bliss. That is to say, first of all, it is, it exists always
and fo
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/The Divine Man.htm
PART
FOUR
The Divine Man
THE core of Sri Aurobindo's teaching, the
central pivot on which his Yoga and his work rest is the mystery of the Divine
Descent-Spirit descending into Matter and becoming Matter, God coming down upon
earth and becoming human, and as a necessary and inevitable consequence, Matter
rising and being transformed into Spirit and man becoming God and Godlike.
This is a truth, a fact of creation – giving
the whole clue to the riddle of this world – that has not been envisaged at all
in the past or otherwise overlooked and not given the value and importance that
it has. Poets and seers, sages and saints along with common men from the very
birth of hum
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/Body, the Occult Agent.htm
Body, the Occult Agent
THE body
has an individuality of its own. It is an organised formation and acts as a
whole in each and all its parts. The human body is, par excellence, such
a formation; for it is moved and controlled by the consciousness which
overshadows or informs it, which is its master, whose will it executes scrupulously.
The
body is an epitome of the world. It encases within its frame the whole world,
particularly the earth – earth itself being an epitome of the world – on a
miniature scale, the mikros reproducing all the features and characters
of the makros. Such being the case, a wholly conscious body governed and
inspired by the supreme Consciousne
How to get Rid of
Troublesome Thoughts
THERE are
several ways and also it depends upon the case. The first and the easiest way is to think of something else. Concentrate your attention
upon a subject which has nothing to do with what troubles you. You can read
something interesting or take up a work that demands care and consideration.
Something creative would be more effective; writers and artists, for example,
when they are engaged in their particular occupation forget everything else,
their whole mind is engrossed in that one matter. But, of course, once the work
is done, the trouble begins again, if one has not learnt to control the
t40ughts in the m
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/Sectarianism or Loyalty.htm
Sectarianism
or Loyalty
MODERN culture demands that one should not be bound
to one creed or dogma, swear by one principle or rule
of life or be led blindly by one man. Truth, it is said, has many facets and
the human being is also not a Cyclops, a one-eyed creature. To fix oneself to one
mode of seeing and believing and even behaving is to be narrow, restricted,
sectarian. One must be able to see many standpoints, appreciate views of variance
with one's own, appraise the relativity of all standards. Not to be able to do
so leads to obscurantism and fanaticism. The Inquisitors were monomaniacs,
obsessed by an idée fixe. On the other hand, the wisest counsel seems to
hav
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/Specialisation.htm
Specialisation
You must
extend, enlarge, enrich your mind. It must be full of thoughts and ideas. It
must be stored with the results of your observation and study. It must not be a
"poor mind", a mind, that is to say, that has not many ideas nor the
capacity of reasoning and argument. Your mind must be capable of thinking of
many different things, gathering knowledge of different kinds, considering a
problem from many different sides, not following only a single line or track:
it must be somewhat like a Japanese fan opening out full circle in all
directions.
You
have, for example, several subjects to learn at school. Well, learn as many as
possible. If you study at home, r
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/A Yoga of the Art of Life.htm
PART ONE
A Yoga of the Art of Lift
1
WHEN Sri Aurobindo said, "Our Yoga is not for ourselves but for
humanity," many heaved a sigh of relief and thought that the great soul
was after all not entirely lost to the world, his was not one more name added
to the long list of Sannyasins that India has been producing age after age
without much profit either to herself or to the human society (or even perhaps
to their own selves). People understood his Yoga to be a modern one, dedicated
to the service of humanity. If service to humanity was not the very sum and
substance of his spirituality, it was, at least, the fruitful end and
consummation. His Yoga was a s
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/The Psychic Being.htm
The Psychic Being – Some Mysteries
Does the psychic being
progress always?
THERE are
two kinds of progress in the psychic and they are very different. One consists
in its formation and building and organisation; for the psychic begins by being
only a little divine spark hidden in the inner person and out of this spark
comes and gradually develops an independent conscious person who has his own
will and activity. As I say, the psychic being is originally like a spark from
the divine consciousness: it grows into a conscious individuality through the
experiences of successive lives. This progress then is like the progress of the
growing child. It is a thing in formatio