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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/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-1/Rationalism.htm
Rationalism WHAT is Reason, the faculty that is said to be the proud privilege of man, the sovereign instrument he alone possesses for the purpose of knowing? What is the value of knowledge that Reason gives? For it is the manner of knowing, the particular faculty or instrument by which we know, that determines the nature and content of knowledge. Reason is the collecting of available sense-perceptions and a certain mode of working upon them. It has three component elements that have been defined as observation, classification and deduction. Now, the very composition of Reason shows that it cannot be a perfect instrument of knowledge; the limitations are the inherent limitations of t
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-1/Sweet Adversity.htm
Sweet Adversity "So long we lived in anxiety, now at last we are going to live in hope." So said the delicious French playwright Tristan Bernard when the Germans came in, occupied Paris, arrested and imprisoned him (in the World War No. I). A noble truth nobly said by a noble soul thrown into the very midst of danger and calamity. Indeed, a danger is a danger so long as it is away and has not reached us. It is the menace, the imminence that causes more fright and upsetting than the thing itself. For it is imagination that enlarges and intensifies the object and makes of us craven cowards. The uncertainty hangs like a pall and casts a disabling influence upon the mind and nerves: one do
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-1/The Way to Unity.htm
The Way to Unity COMMON love, common labour and, above all, as the great French thinker, Ernest Renan,* pointed out, common suf­fering – that is the cement which welds together the disparate elements of a nation-a nation is not formed otherwise. A nation means peoples differing in race and religion, caste and creed and even language, fused together into a composite but indivisible unit. Not pact nor balancing of interests nor sharing of power and profit can permanently combine and unify conflicting groups and collectivities. Hindus and Muslims, the two major sections that are at loggerheads today in India, must be given a field, indeed more than one field, where they can, work togeth
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-1/Matter Aspires.htm
Matter Aspires MATTER holds and expresses material energy, the subtlest and highest form of which is electric energy. Should Matter be confined to that alone or can it express or create, by and out of itself, non-material energy also? What about mental energy and thought movements-can they too be made a function of Matter? For example, the computing machine. It has been developed to a marvellous extent. Not only big but complicated calculations are done by it, not only the four major arithmetical operations, but higher algebraic and trigonometrical problems too are tackled successfully. The electronic computer seems to possess a veritable mathematical brain. It is asked now i
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-1/Vansittartism.htm
Vansittartism GERMANY is considered now, and naturally with great reason, as the arch criminal among nations. Such megalomania, such lust for wanton cruelty, such wild sadism, such abnormal velleities no people, it is said, have ever evinced anywhere on the face of the earth: the manner and the extent of it all are appalling. Hitler is not the malady; removal of the Fuehrer will not cure Germany. The man is only a sign and a symbol. The whole nation is corrupt to the core: it has been inoculated with a virus that cannot be eradicated. The peculiar German character that confronts and bewilders us now, is not a thing of today or even of yesterday; it has been there since Tacitus remark
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-1/The Sanctity of the Individual.htm
The Sanctity of the Individual THE sanctity of the individual, the value of the human person is one of the cardinal articles of faith of the modern consciousness. Only it has very many avatars. One such has been the characteristic mark of the group of philosophers (and mystics) who are nowadays making a great noise under the name of Existentialists. The individual personality exists, they say, and its nature is freedom. In other words, it chooses, as it likes, its course of life, at every step, and Creates its destiny. This freedom, however, may. lead man and will inevitably lead him, according to one section of the group, to the perception and realisation of God, an infinite in which
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-1/Evolution of the Spiritual Consciousness.htm
Evolution of the Spiritual Consciousness EVEN the Vedic Rishis used to refer to the ancients, more ancient than they themselves. "The ancients", they said, "worshipped Agni, we too the moderns in our turn worship the same godhead". Or again, "Thus spoke our forefathers"; or, "So have we heard from those who have gone before us" and so on. Indeed, the tradition in the domain of spiritual discipline seems to have been always to realise once again what has already been realised by others, to rediscover what has already been discovered, to re-establish ancient truths. Others have gone before on the Path, we have only to follow. The teaching, the realisation is handed down uninterrupted
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-1/The Ideals of Human Unity.htm
The Ideals of Human Unity THE unification of humanity is also a thing decreed. For it is the goal towards which Nature is proceeding slowly but inevitably, bringing into play factors and forces that work out that consummation. Man is a gregarious animal, a social being. He forms groups and collectivities and lives as a member among others with whom he is related and connected in various ways. These groupings are the units round which man's life crystallises and develops, the nuclei of a growing, an increasingly com­plex and unified organism.   The earliest and the most persistent unit is the family: it may be called the atomic unit of the social body, ultimate and unbr
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-1/Independece and its Sanction.htm
Independence and its Sanction INDEPENDENCE is not a gift which one can receive from another, it is a prize that has to be won. In the words of the poet Bhasa, used in respect of empire, we can say also of liberty:   Talloke na tu yacyate na tu punardinaya diyate it is not a thing to be got for the mere asking, nor is it a thing to be made over to a weakling.   The lead Sri Aurobindo gave in this connection has not, sad to say, sufficiently attracted the attention of our people. Indeed what he suggested was exactly, (under the circumstances, the best way to acquire the necessary fitness, organised strength, capacity, the might and consequently the right just
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-1/The Revealer and the Revelation.htm
The Revealer and the Revelation How the horizontal view limits and maims one's spiritual perception is further illustrated in the case of the famous Gloomy Dean. Dean Inge is a divine and as spiritual a person as one can hope to be in the modern world. He has, however, voluntarily clipped his wings and in the name of a surer rational knowledge and saner spirituality prefers a lower flight among known, familiar and nameable ranges to a transcendent soaring in mystic regions beyond. He has made a somewhat trenchant distinction between the Revelation and the Revealer. He says we can know God only by his qualities: what he is, if anything, besides his qualities none can define. In the