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SECTION SIXTEEN
TRANSFORMATION OF THE PHYSICAL
BEING
I. OPENING THE PHYSICAL TO THE HIGHER
CONSCIOUSNESS
II. ILLNESS IN YOGA
III. REGULATION OF FOOD
IV. SLEEP AND DREAM IN SADHANA
V. REJECTION OF SEX
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Letters of Sri Aurobindo - First Series 1947/Foreword.htm
FOREWORD
THE letters of Sri Aurobindo are a vast literature of very great value. Written mostly to his disciples in answer to their specific inquiries they have also a wider bearing and are likely to prove of great benefit not only to those
who are interested in the things of the Spirit but also to all those who, not satisfied with the usual and the ordinary, strive for higher and greater values in life. For, the most significant and central idea of Sri Aurobindo's spiritual metaphysics as well as of his Yoga is that he does not consider human and spiritual values as totally distinct and basically incompatible, but, in their true significance, as related parts of an all-comprehending
VIII
Science, Reasoning and Yogic
Experience,
Avatar and Symbols, Yoga Force,
Beauty and Art, etc.
Reply to Leonard Woolf's Criticism of
Mysticism
I HAVE read Leonard Woolf's article, but I do
not propose to deal with it in my comments
on Professor Sorley's letter—for apart from the
ignorant denunciation and cheap satire in which it
deals, there is nothing much in its statement of the
case against spiritual thought or experience; its reasoning
is superficial and springs from an entire misunderstanding
of the case for the mystic. There are
four main arguments he sets against it and none
of them has any value.
Argument number one. Mysticism and mystic
III
Yoga;
Its Principle and Process
The Central Aim and Discipline of Yoga
TO find the Divine is indeed the first reason for
seeking the spiritual Truth and the spiritual
life; it is the one thing indispensable and all the rest is
nothing without it. The Divine once found, to manifest
Him,—that is, first of all to transform one's own
limited consciousness into the Divine Consciousness,
to live in the infinite Peace, Light, Love, Strength,
Bliss, to become that in one's essential nature and, as
a consequence, to be its vessel, channel, instrument
in one's active nature. To bring into activity the
principle of oneness on the material plane or to work
for humanity is
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Letters of Sri Aurobindo - First Series 1947/Consciousness.htm
IV
Parts of Total Consciousness
Consciousness
I
CONSCIOUSNESS is not, to my experience, a
phenomenon dependent on the reactions of
personality to the forces of Nature and amounting to no
more than a seeing or interpretation of these reactions.
If that were so, then when the personality becomes
silent and immoblie and gives no reactions, as there
would be no seeing or interpretative action, there would
therefore be no consciousness. That contradicts some of
the fundamental experiences of Yoga, e.g., a silent and
immoblie consciousness infinitely spread out, not
dependent on the personality but impersonal and universal,
not seeing and interpreting contacts but m
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Letters of Sri Aurobindo - First Series 1947/precontent.htm
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Letters of Sri Aurobindo - First Series 1947/The True Foundation of Love .htm
VI
Love: Human to Divine
The True Foundation of Love
TO bring the Divine Love and Beauty and Ananda into the world is, indeed, the whole crown
and essence of our Yoga. But it has always seemed
to me impossible unless there comes as its support
and foundation and guard the Divine Truth—what
I call the Supramental—and its Divine Power. Otherwise
Love itself blinded by the confusions of this
present consciousness may stumble in its human
receptacles and, even otherwise, may find itself unrecognised,
rejected or rapidly degenerating and lost
in the frailty of man's inferior nature. But when it
comes in the divine truth and power. Divine Love
descends first as
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Letters of Sri Aurobindo - First Series 1947/Spiritual Evolution .htm
I
Evolution :
Material - Spiritual - Supramental
Spiritual Evolution
THERE have been times when the seeking for
spiritual attainment was, at least in certain
civilisations, more intense and widespread than now or rather than it has been in the world in general
during the past few centuries. For now the curve
seems to be the beginning of a new turn of seeking
which takes its start from what was achieved in the
past and projects itself towards a greater future. But
always, even in the age of the Vedas or in Egypt,
the spiritual achievement or the occult knowledge
was confined to a few, it was not spread in the whole
mass of humanity. The mass of humanity evolves
slow
SECTION ONE
SYNTHETIC METHOD AND INTEGRAL YOGA
The Central
Aim
I DO not agree with the view that the world is an
illusion, mithya. The Brahman is here as well as in
the supracosmic Absolute. The thing to be overcome
is the Ignorance which makes us blind and prevents
us from realising Brahman in the world as well as
beyond it and the true nature of existences.
12-4-1936
The Object of Integral Yoga
THE object of the Yoga is to enter into and be
possessed by the Divine Presence and Consciousness,
to love the Divine for the Divine's sake alone, to b
SECTION FIFTEEN
PURPOSE AND PROCESS OF
DEATH & REBIRTH
Necessity of Death
DEATH is there because the being in the body is
not yet developed enough to go on growing in
the same body without the need of change and the
body itself is not sufficiently conscious. If the mind
and vital and the body itself were more conscious
and plastic, death would not be necessary.
3-12-1933
Immortality of the Body
THERE can be no immortality of the body without supramentalisation; the potentiality is there in
the Yogic force and Yogis can live for 200 or