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SABCL - Sri Aurobindo Birth Centenary Library

CWSA - Complete Works of Sri Aurobindo

CWM - Collected Works of The Mother

Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Record of Yoga/26 November_31 December 1912.htm
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Record of Yoga/SAPTA CHATUSTHAYA SCRIBAL VERSION.htm
1467 SAPTA CHATUSTHAYA SCRIBAL VERSION   I. Samata Chatusthaya Samata, Shanti, Sukha, Hasya (Atmaprasada)   Negative Samata Positive Samata Titiksha Sama Rasa—mind and intellect Udasinata Sama Bhoga—prana Nati Sama Ananda—spirit Samata is accepting everything in the same way without any disturbance in any part of the being. Disturbance is caused [by]1 the want of harmony between the Chit-shakti in myself and the contacts of Chit-shakti outside. Pain, grief, dislike etc. are merely the system's way of saying that it objects to a particular contact because of w
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter V The Synthesis of the Systems.htm
Chapter V   The Synthesis of the Systems   BY THE very nature of the principal Yogic schools, each covering in its operations a part of the complex human integer and attempting to bring out its highest possibilities, it will appear that a synthesis of all of them largely conceived and applied might well result in an integral Yoga. But they are so disparate in their tendencies, so highly specialised and elaborated in their forms, so long confirmed in the mutual opposition of their ideas and methods that we do not easily find how we can arrive at their right union. An undiscriminating combination in block would not be a synthesis, but a
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter II The Integral Perfection.htm
Chapter II   The Integral Perfection   A DIVINE perfection of the human being is our aim. We must know then first what are the essential elements that constitute man's total perfection; secondly, what we mean by a divine as distinguished from a human perfection of our being. That man as a being is capable of self-development and of some approach at least to an ideal standard of perfection which his mind is able to conceive, fix before it and pursue, is common ground to all thinking humanity, though it may be only the minority who concern themselves with this possibility as providing the one most important aim of life. But by some the ideal is concei
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter VI The Synthesis of the Disciplines of Knowledge.htm
Chapter VI   The Synthesis of the Disciplines   of Knowledge   IN THE last chapter we have spoken of renunciation in its most general scope, even as we spoke of concentration in all its possibilities; what has been said, applies therefore equally to the path of Works and the path of Devotion as to the path of Knowledge; for on all three concentration and renunciation are needed, though the way and spirit in which they are applied may vary. But we must now turn more particularly to the actual steps of the Path of Knowledge on which the double force of concentration and renunciation must aid us to
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter II Self-Consecration.htm
Chapter II   Self-Consecration   ALL YOGA is in its nature a new birth; it is a birth out of the ordinary, the mentalised material life of man into a higher spiritual consciousness and a greater and diviner being. No Yoga can be successfully undertaken and followed unless there is a strong awakening to the necessity of that larger spiritual existence. The soul that is called to this deep and vast inward change, may arrive in different ways to the initial departure. It may come to it by its own natural development which has been leading it unconsciously towards the awakening; it may reach it through the influence of a religion or the attracti
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XXIII The Conditions of Attainment to the Gnosis.htm
Chapter XXIII   The Conditions of Attainment   to the Gnosis   KNOWLEDGE is the first principle of the Vijnāna, but knowledge is not its only power. The Truth-consciousness, like every other plane, founds itself upon that particular principle which is naturally the key of all its motions; but it is not limited by it, it contains all the other powers of existence. Only the character and working of these other powers is modified and moulded into conformity with its own original and dominant law; intelligence, life, body, will, consciousness, bliss are all luminous, awake, instinct with divine knowledge. This is indeed
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter IX The Release from the Ego.htm
Chapter IX   The Release from the Ego   THE FORMATION of a mental and vital ego tied to the body-sense was the first great labour of the cosmic Life in its progressive evolution; for this was the means it found for creating out of matter a conscious individual. The dissolution of this limiting ego is the one condition, the necessary means for this very same Life to arrive at its divine fruition: for only so can the conscious individual find either his transcendent self or his true Person. This double movement is usually represented as a fall and a redemption or a creation and a destruction, — the kindling of a ligh
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XX The Lower Triple Purusha.htm
Chapter XX   The Lower Triple Purusha   SUCH is the constituent principle of the various worlds of cosmic existence and the various planes of our being; they are as if a ladder plunging down into Matter and perhaps below it, rising up into the heights of the Spirit, even perhaps to the point at which existence escapes out of cosmic being into ranges of a supra-cosmic Absolute, — so at least it is averred in the world-system of the Buddhists. But to our ordinary materialised consciousness all this does not exist because it is hidden from us by our preoccupation with our existence in a little corner of the materi
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter VI The Delight of the Divine.htm
Chapter VI   The Delight of the Divine   THIS THEN is the way of devotion and this its justification to the highest and the widest, the most integral knowledge, and we can now perceive what form and place it will take in an integral Yoga. Yoga is in essence the union of the soul with the immortal being and consciousness and delight of the Divine, effected through the human nature with a result of development into the divine nature of being, whatever that may be, so far as we can conceive it in mind and realise it in spiritual activity. Whatever we see of this Divine and fix our concentrated effort upon it, that we can become or grow into s