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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/Other Editions/The Human Cycle_SAICE_1962 Edn/True And False Subjectivism.htm
Chapter V   TRUE AND FALSE SUBJECTIVISM         The subjective stage of human development is that critical juncture in which, having gone forward from symbols, types, conventions, having turned its gaze superficially on the individual being to discover his truth and right law of action and its relation to the superficial and external truth and law of the universe, our race begins to gaze deeper, to see and feel what is behind the outside and below the surface and therefore to live from within. It is a step towards self-knowledge and towards living in and from the self, away from knowledge of things as the not-self and from the living according to this objective idea of life and the
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Human Cycle_SAICE_1962 Edn/The Advent And Progress Of The Spiritual Age.htm
Chapter XXIV   THE ADVENT AND PROGRESS OF THE SPIRITUAL AGE         If a subjective age, the last sector of a social cycle, is to find its outlet and fruition in a spiritualised society and the emergence of mankind on a higher evolutionary level, it is not enough that certain ideas favourable to that turn of human life should take hold of the general mind of the race, permeate the ordinary motives of its thought, art, ethics, political ideals, social effort, or even get well into its inner way of thinking and feeling. It is not enough even that the idea of the kingdom of God on earth, a reign of spirituality, freedom and unity, a real and inner equality and harmony —and not merel
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Human Cycle_SAICE_1962 Edn/The End Of The Curve Of Reason.htm
Chapter XX   THE END OF THE CURVE OF REASON         The rational collectivist idea of society has at first sight a powerful attraction. There is behind it a great truth, that every society represents a collective being and in it and by it the individual lives and he owes to it all that he can give it. More, it is only by a certain relation to the society, a certain harmony with this greater collective self that he can find the complete use for his many developed or developing powers and activities. Since it is a collective being, it must, one would naturally suppose, have a discoverable collective reason and will which should find more and more its right expression and right worki
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Human Cycle_SAICE_1962 Edn/Reason And Religion.htm
Chapter XIII   REASON AND RELIGION         It would seem then that reason is an insufficient, often an inefficient, even a stumbling and at its best a very partially enlightened guide for humanity in that great endeavour which is the real heart of human progress and the inner justification of our existence as souls, minds and bodies upon the earth. For that endeavour is not only the effort to survive and make a place for ourselves on the earth as the animals do, not only having made to keep it and develop its best vital and egoistic or communal use for the efficiency and enjoyment of the individual, the family or the collective ego, substantially as is done by the animal families
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Human Cycle_SAICE_1962 Edn/The Cycle Of Society.htm
Chapter I   THE CYCLE OF SOCIETY         Modern Science, obsessed with the greatness of its physical discoveries and the idea of the sole existence of Matter, has long attempted to base upon physical data even its study of Soul and Mind and of those workings of Nature in man and animal in which a knowledge of psychology is as important as any of the physical sciences. Its very psychology founded itself upon physiology and the scrutiny of the brain and nervous system. It is not surprising therefore that in history and sociology attention should have been concentrated on the external data, laws, institutions, rites, customs, economic factors and developments, while the deeper psychologi
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Human Cycle_SAICE_1962 Edn/The Suprarational Ultimate Of Life.htm
Chapter XVI   THE SUPRARATIONAL ULTIMATE OF LIFE   In all the higher powers of his life man may be said to be seeking, blindly enough, for God. To get at the Divine and Eternal in himself and the world and to harmonise them, to put his being and his life in tune with the Infinite reveals itself in these parts of his nature as his concealed aim and his destiny. He sets out to arrive at his highest and largest and most perfect self, and the moment he at all touches upon it, this self in him appears to be one with some great Soul and Self of Truth and Good and Beauty in the world to which we give the name of God. To get at this as a spiritual presence is the aim of religion, to grow
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Human Cycle_SAICE_1962 Edn/The Spiritual Aim And Life.htm
Chapter XXI   THE SPIRITUAL AIM AND LIFE   A society society founded upon spirituality will differ in two essential points from the normal human society which begins from and ends with the lower nature. The normal human society starts from the gregarious instinct modified by a diversity and possible antagonism of interests, from an association and clash of egos, from a meeting, combination, conflict of ideas, tendencies and principles; it tries first to patch up an accommodation of converging interests and a treaty of peace between discords, founded on a series of implied contracts, natural or necessary adjustments which become customs of the aggregate life, and to these contract
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Human Cycle_SAICE_1962 Edn/The Suprarational Beauty.htm
Chapter XIV   THE SUPRARATIONAL BEAUTY         Religion is the seeking after the spiritual, the suprarational and therefore in this sphere the intellectual reason may well be an insufficient help and find itself, not only at the end but from the beginning, out of its province and condemned to tread either diffidently or else with a stumbling presumptuousness in the realm of a power and a light higher than its own. But in the other spheres of human consciousness and human activity it may be thought that it has the right to the sovereign place, since these move on the lower plane of the rational and the finite or belong to that border-land where the rational and the infrarational mee
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Human Cycle_SAICE_1962 Edn/Conditions For The Coming Of A Spiritual Age.htm
Chapter XXIII   CONDITIONS FOR THE COMING OF A SPIRITUAL AGE         A change of this kind, the change from the mental and vital to the spiritual order of life; must necessarily be accomplished in the individual and in a great number of individuals before it can lay any effective hold upon the community. The Spirit in humanity discovers, develops, builds into form in the individual man : it is through the progressive and formative individual that it offers the discovery and the chance of a new self-creation to the mind of the race. For the communal mind holds things subconsciently at first or, if consciously, then in a confused chaotic manner : it is only through the individual m
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Human Cycle_SAICE_1962 Edn/The Infrarational Age Of The Cycle.htm
Chapter XVIII   THE INFRARATIONAL AGE OF THE CYCLE         In spirituality then would lie our ultimate, our only hope for the perfection whether of the individual or of the communal man; not the spirit which for its separate satisfaction turns away from the earth and her works, but that greater spirit which surpasses and yet accepts and fulfils them. A spirituality that would take up into itself man's rationalism, aestheticism, ethicism, vitalism, corporeality, his aspiration towards knowledge, his attraction towards beauty, his need of love, his urge towards perfection, his demand for power and fullness of life and being, a spirituality that would reveal to these ill-accorded f