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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter VII The Ananda Brahman.htm
Chapter VII
The Ananda Brahman
THE WAY of devotion in the integral synthetic Yoga will
take the form of a seeking after the Divine through love and delight and a seizing with joy on all the ways of his
being. It will find its acme in a perfect union of love and a perfect enjoyment of all the ways of the soul's intimacy with God. It may
start from knowledge or it may start from works, but it will then turn knowledge into a joy of luminous union with the being of
the Beloved and turn works into a joy of the active union of our being with the will and the power of being of the Beloved. Or it
may start directly from love and delight; it w
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter II The Three Steps of Nature.htm
Chapter II
The Three Steps of Nature
WE RECOGNISE then, in the past developments of
Yoga, a specialising and separative tendency which, like all things in Nature, had its justifying and even
imperative utility and we seek a synthesis of the specialised aims and methods which have, in consequence, come into being.
But in order that we may be wisely guided in our effort, we must know, first, the general principle and purpose underlying
this separative impulse and, next, the particular utilities upon which the method of each school of Yoga is founded. For the
general principle we must interrogate the universal workings of Nature herself, r
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XVIII Faith and Shakti.htm
'The Synthesis of Yoga' by Sri Aurobindo - Page 1 of 50
Chapter XVIII
Faith and Shakti
THE THREE parts of the perfection of our instrumental
nature of which we have till now been reviewing the general features, the perfection of the intelligence, heart,
vital consciousness and body, the perfection of the fundamental soul powers, the perfection of the surrender of our instruments
and action to the divine Shakti, depend at every moment of their progression on a fourth power that is covertly and overtly the
pivot of all endeavour and action, faith, śraddhā. The perfect faith is an assent of the whole being to the truth seen by it or
offered to its ac
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter VII Standards of Conduct and Spiritual Freedom.htm
Chapter VII
Standards of Conduct and
Spiritual Freedom
THE KNOWLEDGE on which the doer of
works in Yoga has to found all his action and development has for
the keystone of its structure a more and more concrete perception of
unity, the living sense of an all-pervading oneness; he moves in the
increasing consciousness of all existence as an indivisible whole:
all work too is part of this divine indivisible whole. His personal
action and its results can no longer be or seem a separate movement
mainly or entirely determined by the egoistic "free" will of an
individual, himself separate in the m
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter VII The Release from Subjection to the Body.htm
Chapter VII
The Release from Subjection
to the Body
OUR FIRST step in this path of
knowledge, having once determined in our intellect that what seems
is not the Truth, that the self is not the body or life or mind,
since these are only its forms, must be to set right our mind in its
practical relation with the life and the body so that it may arrive
at its own right relation with the Self. This it is easiest to do by
a device with which we are already familiar, since it played a great
part in our view of the Yoga of Works; it is to create a separation
between the Prakriti and the Purusha. T
Chapter VI
The Ascent of the Sacrifice 2
The Works of Love — The Works of Life
IT IS therefore through the sacrifice of love, works and knowledge with the psychic being as the leader and priest of the
sacrifice that life itself can be transformed into its own true spiritual figure. If the sacrifice of knowledge rightly done is easily
the largest and purest offering we can bring to the Highest, the sacrifice of love is not less demanded of us for our spiritual
perfection; it is even more intense and rich in its singleness and can be made not less vast and pure. This pure wideness
is brought into the intensity of the sacrifice of
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XVI Oneness.htm
Chapter XVI
Oneness
WHEN, then, by the withdrawal of the centre of consciousness from identification with the mind, life and body, one has discovered one's true self, discovered the
oneness of that self with the pure, silent, immutable Brahman, discovered in the immutable, in the Akshara Brahman, that by
which the individual being escapes from his own personality into the impersonal, the first movement of the Path of Knowledge
has been completed. It is the sole that is absolutely necessary for the traditional aim of the Yoga of Knowledge, for immergence,
for escape from cosmic existence, for release into the absolute and ineffable Par
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XXVIII Rajayoga.htm
Chapter XXVIII
Rajayoga
AS THE body and the Prana are the key of all the closed
doors of the Yoga for the Hathayogin, so is the mind the key in Rajayoga. But since in both the dependence of the
mind on the body and the Prana is admitted, in the Hathayoga totally, in the established system of Rajayoga partially, therefore
in both systems the practice of Asana and Pranayama is included; but in the one they occupy the whole field, in the other each is
limited only to one simple process and in their unison they are intended to serve only a limited and intermediate office. We
can easily see how largely man, even though in his being an em
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter XV The Cosmic Consciousness.htm
Chapter XV
The Cosmic Consciousness
TO REALISE and unite oneself with the active Brahman
is to exchange, perfectly or imperfectly according as the union is partial or complete, the individual for the cosmic
consciousness. The ordinary existence of man is not only an individual but an egoistic consciousness; it is, that is to say, the
individual soul or Jivatman identifying himself with the nodus of his mental, vital, physical experiences in the movement of
universal Nature, that is to say, with his mind-created ego, and, less intimately, with the mind, life, body which receive the experiences. Less intimately, because of these he can say
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-23-24_The Synthesis of Yoga/Chapter VII Purification — Intelligence and Will.htm
Chapter VII
Purification — Intelligence and Will
TO PURIFY the buddhi we must first understand its rather
complex composition. And first we have to make clear the distinction, ignored in ordinary speech, between the
manas, mind, and buddhi, the discerning intelligence and the enlightened will. Manas is the sense mind. Man's initial mentality is not at all a thing of reason and will; it is an animal, physical or sense mentality which constitutes its whole experience from
the impressions made on it by the external world and by its own embodied consciousness which responds to the outward
stimulus of this kind of experience. The buddhi only