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Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-1/Federated Humanity.htm
Federated Humanity
THE last great war, out of its bloody welter, threw up a
mantra for the human consciousness to contemplate and seize
and realise: it was self-determination. The present world-war
has likewise cast up a mantra that is complementary. The
problem of the unification of the whole human race has engaged the
attention of seers and sages, idealists and men of action, since time
immemorial; but only recently its demand has become categorically
imperative for a solution in the field of practical politics. Viewed
from another angle, one can say that it is also a problem Nature has
set before herself, has been dealing with through the ages,
elaborating and leading to a final issue.
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-1/In Quest of Reality.htm
In
Quest of Reality
THIS is, they say, the age of Positivism – no mystic
obfuscation, but clear light in the open sun. Let us enquire a little
into the nature of this modern illumination.
Positivists are those who swear by facts. Facts to them
mean naturally facts attested in the end by sense-experience. To a
positivist the only question that matters and that needs to be
answered and can be answered is whether a thing is or is
not physically: other questions are otiose, irrelevant,
misleading. So problems of the Good, of the Beautiful, of God are
meaningless. When one says this is good, that is bad, well, it is a
proposition that cannot be related to any fact, it is a subjective
p
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-1/Knowledge by Identy.htm
Knowledge
by Identity
SRI AUROBINDO says, knowledge –
true knowledge – comes always by identity, i.e., when you are
identified with the object, when the knower and the known are one. He
further adds that even ordinary knowledge, sense-perception, comes in
fact by that way, although it may look otherwise, viz., as a
process of logical induction or deduction or both. When I am angry,
he illustrates, I know I am angry because I become anger or when I
know I am existent, it is because I am one with my existence.
Prof. Das¹
seeks to controvert the position. He says, when there is complete
identity there is no knowledge. If I am wholly one with the object, I
get merged and lost in it. W
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-1/Darshana and Philosophy.htm
Darshana
and Philosophy
THERE
is a mental approach to spiritual truths and there is a direct
and immediate approach or rather contact. The mind sees as though
through a mist, a darkling glass, a more or less opaque veil, and the
thing envisaged presents a blurred and not unoften a deformed
appearance. The mind has its own pre-dispositions – its own
categories and terms, its own forms and figures-which it has to use
when it seeks to express that which is beyond it. Naturally the
object, the truth as it is, it cannot apprehend or represent; it
gives as it were the reverse side of an embroidery work. It goes
round about the thing, has to take recourse to all kinds of
contortions and gy
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/Ushasti Chakrayana.htm
Ushasti
Chakrayana
(Chhandogya Upanishad)
THIS is the story of Ushasti Chakrayana, Ushasti the son of
Chakra. But could it be that the name means one who drives a wheel, like
Shakatayana,the driver of sakata, the
bullockcart? Or is it something similar to Kamalayana, one who tends or enjoys
a kamala, the lotus, lotus-eater? The
Chakra or wheel here might be the potter's wheel, or it might as well be the
spinner's wheel or Charkha. Does the name then mean something like one who owns
or plies a Charkha, just as we term Kamliwalla an ascetic with a Kambal or
blanket? However that may be, here is the story.
The
Kuru country where Ushasti had his abode was
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/ Rig Veda.htm
APPENDIX - II
Original Texts of Translations
Vedic Hymns
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Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/The Story of Rishi Yajnavalkya.htm
The Story of Rishi Yajnavalkya
(I)
YAJNAVALKYA was one of the
great Brahmins and a supreme master of the Knowledge of Reality during the
Upanishadic age. But it was not that he was only a man of Knowledge,
deep and serious; he was also a fine humorist. That is, he combined his
Knowledge with a keen sense of irony and fun. Here are some stories about him.
King
Janaka was his contemporary. That would seem to place
his story in the Upanishads about the time of the Ramayana although Rama or Sita does not figure
anywhere there. King Janaka too was a man of
Knowledge, a sage king, rajarsi. But
he had not taken any disciples. The seekers would come to him
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/Indra Virochana and Prajapati.htm
Indra - Virochana and Prajapati
(Chhandogya Upanishad)
PRAJAPATI, the Lord and Creator, once declared himself
thus:
"The Self is the sinless, ageless and
deathless One; it has no sorrow nor hunger and thirst. The goal of all its
desire is the Truth, Truth is the one thing worthy of its resolve. It is this
Self that has to be sought after, it alone one should seek to know. And one who
seeks after the Self and knows it, gains possession of all the worlds, wins all
that is desirable."
The message of the Lord reached both the
gods and the demons. They discussed it among themselves. "If the Self is
such a thing as can win all the worlds and ev
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/The Two Chains of the Mother.htm
The Two Chains of the Mother*
Excuse me if I sit like
this with my feet in the air. That's my way of making myself
at home: I feel at home. ... So, you expect me to speak to you something?
Well,
I have talked a lot in my rather long life, have I not? I have talked a good
deal, written much more. All that forms now my Collected Works: eight volumes
in English and as many volumes in Bengali. ...
All of you are leaving our Centre of Education, a Centre
where you have been for so many years. To complete your Course and come out of
the Centre, it's all right; but to go where? It seems you have already come to
a decision, there are many amongst you who have made
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/Hymn to All Gods.htm
Hymn to All-Gods
RIGVEDA
Mandala I: Sukta 89
(I)
MAY the happy (blissful)
Sacrifices come to us from everywhere, indomitable, invincible, upsoaring. May the Gods be there for our increase, may they
never abandon us, may they protect us day after day.
(2)
May the perfect, the happy
Mind of the Gods who move in the straight path, and
their gifts be turned towards us. May we share the friendship of the Gods. May they carry forward our span of life.
(3)
With
the ancient mantra we invoke them all – Bhaga and Mitra and Aditi and the
unstumbling Daksha, Aryaman too, and Varuna and the twin Aswins. May Saraswati,
Mother of bliss, create happiness for us.