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Acronyms used in the website

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/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XV The Cosmic Consciousness.htm
Chapter XV   The Cosmic Consciousness   TO REALISE and unite oneself with the active Brahman is to exchange, perfectly or imperfectly according as the union is partial or complete, the individual for the cosmic consciousness. The ordinary existence of man is not only an individual but an egoistic consciousness; it is, that is to say, the individual soul or Jivatman identifying himself with the nodus of his mental, vital, physical experiences in the movement of universal Nature, that is to say, with his mind-created ego, and, less intimately, with the mind, life, body which receive the experiences. Less intimately, because of these he can say
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter VII Purification — Intelligence and Will.htm
Chapter VII   Purification — Intelligence and Will   TO PURIFY the buddhi we must first understand its rather complex composition. And first we have to make clear the distinction, ignored in ordinary speech, between the manas, mind, and buddhi, the discerning intelligence and the enlightened will. Manas is the sense mind. Man's initial mentality is not at all a thing of reason and will; it is an animal, physical or sense mentality which constitutes its whole experience from the impressions made on it by the external world and by its own embodied consciousness which responds to the outward stimulus of this kind of experience. The buddhi only
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter VIII The Mystery of Love.htm
Chapter VIII   The Mystery of Love   THE ADORATION of the impersonal Divine would not be strictly a Yoga of devotion according to the current interpretation; for in the current forms of Yoga it is supposed that the Impersonal can only be sought for a complete unity in which God and our own person disappear and there is none to adore or to be adored; only the delight of the experience of oneness and infinity remains. But in truth the miracles of spiritual consciousness are not to be subjected to so rigid a logic. When we first come to feel the presence of the infinite, as it is the finite personality in us which is touched by it, that may
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter V The Divine Personality.htm
Chapter V   The Divine Personality   ONE QUESTION rises immediately in a synthetic Yoga which must not only comprise but unify knowledge and devotion, the difficult and troubling question of the divine Personality. All the trend of modern thought has been towards the belittling of personality; it has seen behind the complex facts of existence only a great impersonal force, an obscure becoming, and that too works itself out through impersonal forces and impersonal laws, while personality presents itself only as a subsequent, subordinate, partial, transient phenomenon upon the face of this impersonal movement. Granting even to this Force a consciousness,
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XXIII The Supramental Instruments — Thought-Process.htm
Chapter XXIII   The Supramental Instruments — Thought-Process   THE SUPERMIND, the divine gnosis, is not something entirely alien to our present consciousness: it is a superior instrumentation of the spirit and all the operations of our normal consciousness are limited and inferior derivations from the supramental, because these are tentatives and constructions, that the true and perfect, the spontaneous and harmonious nature and action of the spirit. Accordingly when we rise from mind to supermind, the new power of consciousness does not reject, but uplifts, enlarges and transfigures the operations of our soul and mind and life. It exalts and
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter I The Object of Knowledge.htm
Part II   The Yoga of Integral Knowledge   Chapter I   The Object of Knowledge   ALL SPIRITUAL seeking moves towards an object of Knowledge to which men ordinarily do not turn the eye of the mind, to someone or something Eternal, Infinite, Absolute that is not the temporal things or forces of which we are sensible, although he or it may be in them or behind them or their source or creator. It aims at a state of knowledge by which we can touch, enter or know by identity this Eternal, Infinite and Absolute, a consciousness other than our ordinary consciousness of ideas and forms and things, a Knowledge that
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter III Self-Surrender in Works —  The Way of the Gita.htm
Chapter III Self-Surrender in Works —  The Way of the Gita   LIFE, NOT a remote silent or high-uplifted ecstatic Beyond-Life alone, is the field of our Yoga. The transformation of our superficial, narrow and fragmentary human way of thinking, seeing, feeling and being into a deep and wide spiritual consciousness and an integrated inner and outer existence and of our ordinary human living into the divine way of life must be its central purpose. The means towards this supreme end is a self-giving of all our nature to the Divine. Everything must be given to the Divine within us, to the universal All and to the transcendent Supreme. An absolute
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XIII The Supermind and the Yoga of Works.htm
Appendix to Part I   The following chapter was left unfinished. It was not included in the edition of The Synthesis of Yoga, Part I, that was published during Sri Aurobindo's lifetime.   Chapter XIII   The Supermind and the   Yoga of Works   AN INTEGRAL Yoga includes as a vital and indispensable element in its total and ultimate aim the conversion of the whole being into a higher spiritual consciousness and a larger divine existence. Our parts of will and action, our parts of knowledge, our thinking being, our emotional being, our being of life, all our self and n
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XII The Realisation of Sachchidananda.htm
Chapter XII   The Realisation of Sachchidananda   THE MODES of the Self which we have dealt with in our last Chapter may seem at first to be of a highly metaphysical character, to be intellectual conceptions more fit for philosophical analysis than for practical realisation. But this is a false distinction made by the division of our faculties. It is at least a fundamental principle of the ancient wisdom, the wisdom of the East on which we are founding ourselves, that philosophy ought not to be merely a lofty intellectual pastime or a play of dialectical subtlety or even a pursuit of metaphysical truth for its
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XII The Divine Work.htm
Chapter XII   The Divine Work   ONE QUESTION remains for the seeker upon the way of works, when his quest is or seems to have come to its natural end, — whether any work or what work is left for the soul after liberation and to what purpose? Equality has been seated in the nature or governs the whole nature; there has been achieved a radical deliverance from the ego-idea, from the pervading ego-sense, from all feelings and impulsions of the ego and its self-will and desires. The entire self-consecration has been made not only in thought and heart but in all the complexities of the being. A complete purity or tran