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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter V The Instruments of the Spirit.htm
Chapter V
The Instruments of the Spirit
IF THERE is to be an active perfection of our being, the first
necessity is a purification of the working of the instruments which it now uses for a music of discords. The being itself, the
spirit, the divine Reality in man stands in no need of purification; it is for ever pure, not affected by the faults of its instrumentation
or the stumblings of mind and heart and body in their work, as the sun, says the Upanishad, is not touched or stained by the
faults of the eye of vision. Mind, heart, the soul of vital desire, the life in the body are the seats of impurity; it is they that must
be set right if th
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XIV The Passive and the Active Brahman.htm
Chapter XIV
The Passive and the Active Brahman
THE DIFFICULTY which the mental being experiences in
arriving at an integral realisation of true being and world-being may be met by following one or other of two different lines of his self-development. He may evolve himself from plane to plane of his own being and embrace on each successively
his oneness with the world and with Sachchidananda realised as the Purusha and
Prakriti, Conscious-Soul and Nature-Soul of that plane, taking into
himself the action of the lower grades of being as he ascends. He
may, that is to say, work out by a sort of inclusive process of
self-enl
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XVIII The Soul and Its Liberation.htm
Chapter XVIII
The Soul and Its Liberation
WE HAVE now to pause and
consider to what this acceptance of the relations of Purusha and
Prakriti commits us; for it means that the Yoga which we are
pursuing has for end none of the ordinary aims of humanity. It
neither accepts our earthly existence as it is, nor can be satisfied
with some kind of moral perfection or religious ecstasy, with a
heaven beyond or with some dissolution of our being by which we get
satisfactorily done with the trouble of existence. Our aim becomes
quite other; it is to live in the Divine, the Infinite, in God and
not in any mere egoi
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XVII The Soul and Nature.htm
Chapter XVII
The Soul and Nature
THIS IS the result of the integral knowledge taken in its
mass; its work is to gather up the different strands of our being into the universal oneness. If we are to possess
perfectly the world in our new divinised consciousness as the Divine himself possesses it, we have to know also each thing in
its absoluteness, first by itself, secondly in its union with all that completes it; for so has the Divine imaged out and seen its being
in the world. To see things as parts, as incomplete elements is a lower analytic knowledge. The Absolute is everywhere; it has
to be seen and found everywhere. Every finite is an
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XXIV Gnosis and Ananda.htm
Chapter XXIV
Gnosis and Ananda
THE ASCENT to the gnosis, the possession of something
of the gnostic consciousness must elevate the soul of man and sublimate his life in the world into a glory of light
and power and bliss and infinity that can seem in comparison with the lame action and limited realisations of our present
mental and physical existence the very status and dynamis of a perfection final and absolute. And it is a true perfection, such as
nothing before it has yet been in the ascension of the spirit. For even the highest spiritual realisation on the plane of mentality
has in it something top-heavy, one-sided and e
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter X The Realisation of the Cosmic Self.htm
Chapter X
The Realisation of the Cosmic Self
OUR FIRST imperative
aim when we draw back from mind, life, body and all else that is not
our eternal being, is to get rid of the false idea of self by which
we identify ourselves with the lower existence and can realise only
our apparent being as perishable or mutable creatures in a
perishable or ever mutable world. We have to know ourselves as the
self, the spirit, the eternal; we have to exist consciously in our
true being. Therefore this must be our primary, if not our first one
and all-absorbing idea and effort in the path of knowledge. But when
we have real
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter I The Principle of the Integral Yoga.htm
Part IV
The Yoga of Self-Perfection
The first page of "The Yoga of Self-Perfection"
as it appeared in the Arya of 15 December 1918
Chapter I
The Principle of the Integral Yoga
THE PRINCIPLE of Yoga is the turning of one or of all
powers of our human existence into a means of reaching divine Being. In an ordinary Yoga one main power of being or one group of its powers is made the means, vehicle, path. In a synthetic Yoga all powers will be combined and included in
the transmuting instrumentation.
In Hathayoga the instrument
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter V Renunciation.htm
Chapter V
Renunciation
IF DISCIPLINE of all the members of our being by purification and concentration may be described as the right arm of the body of Yoga, renunciation is its left arm. By discipline
or positive practice we confirm in ourselves the truth of things, truth of being, truth of knowledge, truth of love, truth of works
and replace with these the falsehoods that have overgrown and perverted our nature; by renunciation we seize upon the falsehoods, pluck up their roots and cast them out of our way so that they shall no longer hamper by their persistence, their resistance
or their recurrence the happy and harmonious growth of our divine li
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XI The Modes of the Self.htm
Chapter XI
The Modes of the Self
SINCE the Self which we come to realise
by the path of knowledge is not only the reality which lies behind
and supports the states and movements of our psychological being,
but also that transcendent and universal Existence which has
manifested itself in all the movements of the universal, the
knowledge of the Self includes also the knowledge of the principles
of Being, its fundamental modes and its relations with the
principles of the phenomenal universe. This was what was meant by
the Upanishad when it spoke of the Brahman as that which being known
all is known.¹ It has
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XIX The Planes of Our Existence.htm
Chapter XIX
The Planes of Our Existence
IF THE Purusha in us has
thus to become by union with its highest self, the Divine Purusha,
the knower, lord, free enjoyer of its Prakriti, it cannot be done,
evidently, by dwelling on the present plane of our being; for that
is the material plane in which the reign of Prakriti is complete;
there the divine Purusha is entirely hidden in the blinding surge of
her activities, in the gross pomp of her workings, and the
individual soul emerging from her involution of spirit in matter,
subject in all its activities to its entangling in the material and
vital instruments is u