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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/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/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 spiritua
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/The Ancient Cycle of Prenational Empire-Building.htm
Chapter XII   The Ancient Cycle of Prenational Empire-Building — The Modern Cycle of Nation-Building   WE HAVE seen that the building of the true national unit was a problem of human aggregation left over by the ancient world to the mediaeval. The ancient world started from the tribe, the city state, the clan, the small regional state — all of them minor units living in the midst of other like units which were similar to them in general type, kin usually in language and most often or very largely in race, marked off at least from other divisions of humanity by a tendency towards a common civilisation and p
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/War and Self-Determination.htm
War and Self-Determination Foreword to the First Edition   THE FOUR essays published in this volume1 were not written at one time or conceived with any intentional connection between them in idea or purpose. The first was written in the early months of the war, two others when it was closing, the last recently during the formation and first operations of that remarkably ill-jointed, stumbling and hesitating machine, the League of Nations. But still they happen to be bound to
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/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 its formations first 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 chaoti
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/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 w
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/Civilisation and Culture.htm
Chapter IX   Civilisation and Culture   NATURE starts from Matter, develops out of it its hidden Life, releases out of involution in life all the crude material of Mind and, when she is ready, turns Mind upon itself and upon Life and Matter in a great mental effort to understand all three in their phenomena, their obvious action, their secret laws, their normal and abnormal possibilities and powers so that they may be turned to the richest account, used in the best and most harmonious way, elevated to their highest as well as extended to their widest potential aims by the action of that faculty which m
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/The Turn towards Unity- Its Necessity and Dangers.htm
The Ideal of Human Unity   Part I     Chapter I   The Turn towards Unity: Its Necessity and Dangers   THE SURFACES of life are easy to understand; 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 th
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/After the War.htm
After the War   THE GREAT war has for some time been over: it is already receding into the near distances of the past. Around us is a black mist and welter of the present, before us the face of a dim and ambiguous future. It is just possible, however, to take some stock of the immediate results of the war, although by no stretch of language can the world situation be called clear, for it is marked rather by chaotic drift and an unexampled confusion. The ideals which were so loud of mouth during the collision -mainly as advertising agents of its conflicting interests -are now discredited and silent: an uneasy locked struggle of
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/The Creation of the Heterogeneous Nation.htm
Chapter VII   The Creation of the Heterogeneous Nation   THE PROBLEM of a federal empire founded on the sole foundation that is firm and secure, the creation of a true psychological unity, — an empire that has to combine heterogeneous elements, — resolves itself into two different factors, the question of the form and the question of the reality which the form is intended to serve. The former is of great practical importance, but the latter alone is vital. A form of unity may render possible, may favour or even help actively to create the corresponding reality, but it can never replace it. And, as we have seen, the true reali
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/Internationalism and Human Unity.htm
Chapter XXXIII   Internationalism and Human Unity   THE GREAT necessity, then, and the great difficulty is to help this idea of humanity which is already at work upon our minds and has even begun in a very slight degree to influence from above our actions, and turn it into something more than an idea, however strong, to make it a central motive and a fixed part of our nature. Its satisfaction must become a necessity of our psychological being, just as the family idea or the national idea has become each a psychological motive with its own need of satisfaction. But how is this to be done? The family idea had the advantage of growing out of a