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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Social and Political Thought_Volume-15/A League of Nations.htm
A League of Nations
ANCIENT tradition believed in a golden age of mankind which
lay in the splendid infancy of a primeval past; it looked back to some type or
symbol of original perfection, Saturnian epoch, Satya Yuga, an age of
sincere being and free unity when the sons of heaven were leaders of the human
life and mind and the law of God was written, not in ineffective books, but on
the tablets of man's heart. Then he needed no violence of outer law or
government to restrain him from evil or to cut and force his free being into the
machine- made Procrustean mould of a social ideal; for a natural divine rule in
his members was the spontaneous and sufficient safegu
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Social and Political Thought_Volume-15/The Religion of Humanity.htm
CHAPTER
XXXIV
The
Religion of Humanity
A RELIGION of humanity may be either an intellectual and
sentimental ideal, a living dogma with intellectual, psychological and
practical effects, or else a spiritual aspiration and rule of living, and
partly the sign, partly the cause of a change of soul in humanity. The
intellectual religion of humanity already to a certain extent exists, partly as
a conscious creed in the minds of a few, partly as a potent shadow in the
consciousness of the race. It is the shadow of a spirit that is yet unborn, but
is preparing for its birth. This material world of ours, besides its fully
embodied t
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Social and Political Thought_Volume-15/Civilisation and Barbarism.htm
CHAPTER VIII
Civilisation and Barbarism
ONCE we have
determined that this rule of perfect individuality and perfect reciprocity is
the ideal law for the individual, the community and the race and that a perfect
union and even oneness in a free diversity is its goal, we have to try to see
more clearly what we mean when we say that self-realisation is the sense,
secret or overt, of individual and of social development. As yet we have not to
deal with the race, with mankind as a unity; the nation is still our largest
compact and living unit. And it is best to begin with the individual, both
because of his nature we have a completer and nearer knowledge and exper
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Social and Political Thought_Volume-15/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 reve
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Social and Political Thought_Volume-15/The Suprarational Good.htm
CHAPTER
XV
The Suprarational Good
WE
BEGIN to
see, through the principle and law of our religious being, through the principle
and law of our aesthetic being, the universality of a principle and law which
is that of all being arid which we must therefore hold steadily in view in
regard to all human activities. It rests on a truth on which the sages have
always agreed, though by the intellectual thinker it may be constantly
disputed. It is the truth that all active being is a seeking for God, a seeking
for some highest self and deepest Reality secret within, behind and above
ourselves and things, a seeking for the hidden Divinity; the truth which we
glimp
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Social and Political Thought_Volume-15/The Unseen Power .htm
The Unseen Power
A WAR has ended, a world has perished
in the realm of thought and begun to disappear in the order of outward Nature.
The war that has ended, was fought in physical trenches, with shel1 and shot,
with machine-gun and tank and aeroplane, with mangling of limbs and crash of
physical edifices and rude uptearing of the bosom of our mother earth; the new
war, or the old continued in another form, that is already beginning, will be
fought more with mental trenches and bomb- proof shelters, with reconnaissances
and batteries and moving machines of thought and word, propaganda and parties
and programmes, with mangling of the desire-souls of men and of nations, c
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Social and Political Thought_Volume-15/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
CHAPTER
XXII
The
Necessity of the Spiritual Trasnformation
OUR normal conduct
of life, whether the individual or the social, is actually governed by the
balance between two complementary powers, - first, an implicit will central to
the life and inherent in the main power of its action and, secondly, whatever
modifying will can come in from the Idea in mind - for man is a mental being -
and operate through our as yet imperfect mental instruments to give this
Life-Force a conscious orientation and a conscious method. Life normally finds
its own centre in our vital and physical being, in its cravings and its needs,
in its dem
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Social and Political Thought_Volume-15/Summary and Conclusion.htm
CHAPTER
XXXV
Summary
and Conclusion
IN
OTHER words, - and this is the conclusion at which we arrive, - while it is possible to construct a
precarious and quite mechanical unity by political and administrative means,
the unity of the human race, even if achieved, can only be secured and can only
be made real if the religion of humanity, which is at present the highest
active ideal of mankind, spiritualises itself and becomes the general inner law
of human life.
The outward unity may well achieve itself, - possibly,
though by no means certainly, in a measurable time, - because that is the inevitable final trend of the working o
CHAPTER I
The Turn towards Unity:
Its Necessity and Dangers
THE surfaces of life are easy to under- stand; their laws,
characteristic movements, practical utilities are ready to our hand and we can
seize on them and turn them to account with a sufficient facility and rapidity.
But they do not carry us very far. They suffice for an active superficial life
from day to day, but they do not solve the great problems of existence. On the
other hand, the knowledge of life's profundities, its potent secrets, its great,
hidden, all-determining laws is exceedingly difficult to us. We have found no plummet that can
fathom these depths;