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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Writings in Bengali_Translation/Letters to Mrinalini.htm
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Writings in Bengali_Translation/Our Religion.htm
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Writings in Bengali_Translation/The Old and The New.htm
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Writings in Bengali_Translation/Integrality.htm
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Writings in Bengali_Translation/Prison and Freedom.htm
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/Equality and Knowledge.htm
xx
EQUALITY AND KNOWLEDGE
YOGA AND knowledge are, in this early part of the Gita's teaching,
the two wings of the soul's ascent. By Yoga is meant union through
divine works done without desire, with equality of soul to all things
and all men, as a sacrifice to the Supreme, while knowledge is that on
which this desirelessness, this equality, this power of sacrifice is founded.
The two wings indeed assist each other's flight; acting together, yet with a subtle alternation of mutual aid, like the two eyes
in a man which see together because they see alternately, they increase one another mutually by interchange of substance. As the
works grow more
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/Sankhya yoga and Vedanta.htm
IX
SANKHYA, YOGA AND VEDANTA
THE WHOLE object of the first six chapters of the Gita is to synthetise
in a large frame of Vedantic truth the two methods, ordinarily supposed to be diverse and even opposite, of the Sankhyas and the Yogins.
The Sankhya is taken as the starting-point and the basis; but it is
from the beginning and with a progressively increasing emphasis
permeated with the ideas and methods of Yoga and remoulded in its
spirit. The practical difference, as it seems to have presented itself to the
religious minds of that day, lay first in this that Sankhya proceeded by knowledge and through the Yoga of the intelligence, while
Yog
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/The Process of Avatarhood.htm
XVI
THE PROCESS OF AVATARHOOD
WE
SEE that the mystery of the divine Incarnation in man, the
assumption by the Godhead of the human type and the human nature, is in the view of the Gita only the other side of the eternal mystery of
human birth itself which is always in its essence, though not in its
phenomenal appearance, even such a miraculous assumption. The eternal and universal self of every human being is God; even his
personal self is a part of the Godhead, mamaivāmśa.,—not a fraction
or fragment, surely, since we cannot think of God as broken up into
little pieces, but a partial consciousness of the one Consciousness,
a partial power of
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/Deva and Asura.htm
XVII
DEVA AND ASURA*
THE PRACTICAL difficulty of the change from the ignorant and
shackled normal nature of man to the dynamic freedom of a divine
and spiritual being will be apparent if we ask ourselves, more narrowly, how the transition can be effected from the fettered embarrassed functioning of the three qualities to the infinite action of
the liberated man who is no longer subject to the gunas. The transition is indispensable; for it is clearly laid down that he must be above
or else without the three gunas, trigunātīta, nistraigunya. On the
other hand it is no less clearly, no less emphatically laid down that in
every natural existence here o
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/Our Demand and need from the Gita.htm
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 systems. To these the many minds of a half-ripe knowledge or no
knowledge at all attach themselves with exclusiveness and passion and will have
it that this or the other hook is alone the eternal Word of God and all others
are either impostures or at best imperfectly inspired, that this or that
philosophy is the last word of the reasoning intellect and other systems are
either errors or saved only by such partial truth in them as links them to the
on