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Title:
XVI
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Fullness of Spiritual Action.htm
XVI
The Fullness of Spiritual Action
THE DEVELOPMENT of the idea of the Gita has reached
a point at which one question alone remains for solution, — the question of our nature bound and defective and
how it is to effect, not only in principle but in all its movements, its evolution from the lower to the higher being and from the
law of its present action to the immortal Dharma. The difficulty is one which is implied in certain of the positions laid down
in the Gita, but has to be brought out into greater prominence than it gets there and to be put into a clearer shape before our
intelligence. The Gita proceeded on a psychological knowledge which
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Gunas, Faith and Works.htm
'Essays on the Gita' by Sri Aurobindo— Page 1 of 50
XVIII
The Gunas, Faith and Works 1
THE GITA has made a distinction between action according to the licence of personal desire and action done
according to the Shastra. We must understand by the latter the recognised science and art of life which is the outcome
of mankind's collective living, its culture, religion, science, its progressive discovery of the best rule of life,
— but mankind
still walking in the ignorance and proceeding in a half light towards knowledge. The action of personal desire belongs to the
unregenerated state of our nature and is dictated by ignorance or false knowledge a
Title:
XXI
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Determinism of Nature.htm
XXI
The Determinism of Nature
WHEN we can live in the higher Self by the unity of
works and self-knowledge, we become superior to the method of the lower workings of Prakriti. We
are no longer enslaved to Nature and her gunas, but, one with the Ishwara, the master of our nature, we are able to use her
without subjection to the chain of Karma, for the purposes of the Divine Will in us; for that is what the greater Self in us is, he
is the Lord of her works and unaffected by the troubled stress of her reactions. The soul ignorant in Nature, on the contrary, is
enslaved by that ignorance to her modes, because it is identified there, not felicitousl
Title:
VII
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Creed of the Aryan Fighter.htm
VII
The Creed of the Aryan Fighter
1
THE ANSWER of the divine Teacher to the first flood of Arjuna's passionate self-questioning, his shrinking from
slaughter, his sense of sorrow and sin, his grieving for an empty and desolate life, his forecast of evil results of an evil deed,
is a strongly-worded rebuke. All this, it is replied, is confusion of mind and delusion, a weakness of the heart, an unmanliness,
a fall from the virility of the fighter and the hero. Not this was fitting in the son of Pritha, not thus should the champion
and chief hope of a righteous cause abandon it in the hour of crisis and peril or suffer the sudden amazement
Title:
XI
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Vision of the World-Spirit The Double Aspect.htm
XI
The Vision of the World-Spirit 1
The Double Aspect
EVEN WHILE the effects of the terrible aspect of this vision are still upon him, the first words uttered by Arjuna after the Godhead has spoken are eloquent of a greater
uplifting and reassuring reality behind this face of death and this destruction. "Rightly and in good place," he cries, "O Krishna,
does the world rejoice and take pleasure in thy name, the Rakshasas are fleeing from thee in terror to all the quarters and the
companies of the Siddhas bow down before thee in adoration. How should they not do thee homage, O great Spirit? For thou
art the original Creator and Doer
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Synthesis of Devotion and Knowledge.htm
'Essays on the Gita' by Sri Aurobindo— Page 1 of 50
II
The Synthesis of
Devotion and Knowledge 1
THE GITA is not a treatise of metaphysical philosophy, in
spite of the great mass of metaphysical ideas which arise incidentally in its pages; for here no metaphysical truth
is brought into expression solely for its own sake. It seeks the highest truth for the highest practical utility, not for intellectual
or even for spiritual satisfaction, but as the truth that saves and opens to us the passage from our present mortal imperfection
to an immortal perfection. Therefore after giving us in the first fourteen verses of this chapter a leading ph
Title:
XV
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Possibility and Purpose of Avatarhood.htm
XV
The Possibility and Purpose
of Avatarhood
IN SPEAKING of this Yoga in which action and knowledge become one, the Yoga of the sacrifice of works with knowledge, in which works are fulfilled in knowledge, knowledge supports, changes and enlightens works, and both are offered to
the Purushottama, the supreme Divinity who becomes manifest within us as Narayana, Lord of all our being and action seated
secret in our hearts for ever, who becomes manifest even in the human form as the Avatar, the divine birth taking possession
of our humanity, Krishna has declared in passing that this was the ancient and original Yoga which he gave to Vivasvan,
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/Our Demand and Need from the Gita.htm
Sri Aurobindo in Pondicherry, c. 1915
A page of the Arya as revised by Sri Aurobindo
Essays on the Gita
First Series
I
Our Demand and Need
from the Gita
THE
WORLD abounds with scriptures sacred and profane, with revelations and
half-revelations, with religions and philosophies, sects and schools and
system
Title:
III
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Supreme Divine.htm
III
The Supreme Divine 1
ALREADY what has been said in the seventh
chapter provides us with the starting-point of our new and fuller
position and fixes it with sufficient precision. Substantially it
comes to this that we are to move inwardly towards a greater
consciousness and a supreme existence, not by a total exclusion of
our cosmic nature, but by a higher, a spiritual fulfilment of all
that we now essentially are. Only there is to be a change from our
mortal imperfection to a divine perfection of being. The first idea
on which this possibility is founded, is the conception of the
individual s
Title:
X
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Vision of the World-Spirit Time the Destroyer.htm
X
The Vision of the World-Spirit
Time the Destroyer
THE VISION of the universal Purusha is one of the best known and most powerfully poetic passages in the Gita,
but its place in the thought is not altogether on the surface. It is evidently intended for a poetic and revelatory symbol
and we must see how it is brought in and for what purpose and discover to what it points in its significant aspects before we can
capture its meaning. It is invited by Arjuna in his desire to see the living image, the visible greatness of the unseen Divine, the very
embodiment of the Spirit and Power that governs the universe. He has heard the highest spiritua