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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Human Cycle_1950 Edn/The Suprarational Ultimate of Life.htm
CHAPTER XVI
THE SUPRARATIONAL ULTIMATE OF LIFE
IN ALL the higher powers of his life man may be said to
be seeking, blindly enough, for God. To get at the Divine and
eternal in himself and the world and to harmonise them, to put
his being and his life in tune with the Infinite reveals itself
in these parts of his nature as his concealed aim and his destiny.
He sets out to arrive at his highest and largest and most perfect
self, and the moment he at all touches upon it, this self in him
appears to be one with some great Soul and Self of Truth and
Good and Beauty in the world to which we give the name of God.
To get at this as a spiritual presence is the aim of religion, to gr
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Human Cycle_1950 Edn/The office and limitations of the reason.htm
CHAPTER XII
THE OFFICE AND LIMITATIONS OF THE REASON
IF
THE reason is not the sovereign master of our being nor even intended to be more
than an intermediary or minister, it cannot succeed in giving a perfect law to
the other estates of the realm, although it may impose on them a temporary and
imperfect order as a passage to a higher perfection. The rational or
intellectual man is not the last and highest ideal of manhood, nor would a
rational society be the last and highest expression of the possibilities of an
aggregate human life,—unless indeed we give to the word, "reason," a wider
meaning than it now possesses and include in it the combined wisdom of all our
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Human Cycle_1950 Edn/The Infrarational age of the Cycle.htm
CHAPTER XVIII
THE INFRARATIONAL AGE OF THE CYCLE
IN SPIRITUALITY then would lie our ultimate, our only
hope for the perfection whether of the individual or of the communal man; not the spirit which for its separate satisfaction
turns away from the earth and her works, but that greater spirit
which surpasses and yet accepts and fulfils them. A spirituality
that would take up into itself man's rationalism, aestheticism, ethicism, vitalism, corporeality, his aspiration towards knowledge, his attraction towards beauty, his need of love, his urge
towards perfection, his demand for power and fullness of life
and being, a spirituality that would reveal to these ill-accorded
force
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Human Cycle_1950 Edn/The Reason as Governor of life.htm
CHAPTER XI
THE REASON AS GOVERNOR OF LIFE
REASON using the intelligent will for the ordering of the
inner and the outer life is undoubtedly the highest developed faculty of man at his present point of evolution; it is the sovereign,
because the governing and self-governing faculty in the complexities of our human existence. Man is distinguished from
other terrestrial creatures by his capacity for seeking after a rule
of life, a rule of his being and his works, a principle of order and
self-development, which is not the first instinctive, original,
mechanically self-operative rule of his natural existence. The
principle he looks to is neither the unchanging, unprogressive
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Human Cycle_1950 Edn/Aesthetic and Ethical Culture.htm
CHAPTER X
AESTHETIC AND ETHICAL CULTURE
THE idea of culture begins to define itself for us a little
more clearly, or at least it has put away from it in a clear contrast
its natural opposites. The unmental, the purely physical life is
very obviously its opposite, it is barbarism; the unintellectualised
vital, the crude economic or the grossly domestic life which looks only to
money-getting, the procreation of a family and its maintenance, are equally its opposites; they are another and even
uglier barbarism. We agree to regard the individual who is dominated by them and has no thought of higher things as an
uncultured and undeveloped human being, a prolongation of the
s
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Sri Aurobindo and His Ashram/Sri Aurobindo and His Ashram.htm
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Sri Aurobindo and His Ashram/Publishers Note.htm
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Synthesis of Yoga_1950 Edn/THE MASTER OF THE WORK.htm
CHAPTER XI
THE MASTER OF THE WORK
THE Master and Mover of our works is the One, the Universal and Supreme, the Eternal and the Infinite. He is the transcendent unknown or unknowable Absolute, the unexpressed and unmanifested Ineffable above us; but he is also the Self of all beings, the Master of all worlds, transcending all worlds, the Light and the Guide, the All-Beautiful and All-Blissful, the Beloved and the Lover. He is the Cosmic Spirit and all this creative Energy around us; he is the Immanent within us. All that is is he, and he is the More than all that is, and we ourselves, though we know it not, are being of his being, force of his force, conscious with a consc
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Synthesis of Yoga_1950 Edn/THE THREE MODES OF NATURE.htm
CHAPTER X
THE THREE MODES OF NATURE
To transcend the natural action of the lower Prakriri is indispensable to the soul, if it is to be free in its self and free in its works. Harmonious subjection to this actual universal Nature, a condition of good and perfect work for the natural instruments, is not an ideal for the soul, which should rather be subject to God and his Shakti, but master of its own nature. As agent or as channel of the Supreme Will it must determine by its vision and sanction or refusal the use that shall be made of the storage of energy, the conditions of environment, the rhythm of combined movement which are provided by Prakriti for the labour
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Synthesis of Yoga_1950 Edn/precontent.htm
THE SYNTHESIS OF YOGA
The Synthesis of Yoga
SRI AUROBINDO
THE SRI AUROBlNDO LIBRARY, INC. • NEW YORK
Copyright, 1950
BY THE SRI AUROBINDO LIBRARY, INC.
Copyright in Canada, 1950
BY THE SRI AUROBINDO LIBRARY, INC.
All Rights Reserved
under International and Pan-American Copyright
conventions. This book, or parts thereof, may not
be reproduced in any form without the written
permission of The Sri Aurobindo Library, Inc.,
82 Wall Street, New York City.
Published by THE SRI AUROBINDO LIBRARY, 82 Wall Street,
New York City
First Printing