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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Synthesis of Yoga_Volume-20/Synthesis .htm
Chapter V
Synthesis
BY THE very nature of the
principal Yogic schools, each covering in its operations a part of the complex
human integer and attempting to bring out its highest possibilities, it will appear
that a synthesis of all of them largely conceived and applied might well result
in an integral Yoga. But they are so disparate in their tendencies, so highly
specialised and elaborated in their forms, so long confirmed in the mutual
opposition of their ideas and methods that we do not easily find how we can
arrive at their right union.
An undiscriminating
combination in block would not be a synthesis, but a confusion. Nor would a
successive practice of each of th
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Synthesis of Yoga_Volume-20/The Soul and Nature.htm
Chapter XVII
The Soul and Nature
THIS is the result of the integral knowledge
taken in its mass; its work is to gather up the different strands of our being
into the universal oneness. If we are to possess perfectly the world in our new
divinised consciousness as the Divine himself possesses it, we have to know also
each thing in its absoluteness, first by itself, secondly in its union with all
that completes it; for so has the Divine imaged out and seen its being in the
world. To see things as parts, as incomplete elements is a lower analytic
knowledge. The Absolute is everywhere; it has to be seen and found everywhere.
Every finite is an infinite and has
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Synthesis of Yoga_Volume-20/The Higher and the Lower Knowledge.htm
Chapter XXV
The Higher and the Lower Knowledge
WE
HAVE now completed our view of the path of
Knowledge and seen to what it leads. First, the end of Yoga of Knowledge is
God-possession, it is to possess God and be possessed by him through
consciousness, through identification, through reflection of the divine Reality.
But not merely in some abstraction away from our present existence, but here
also; therefore to possess the Divine in himself, the Divine in the world, the
Divine within, the Divine in all things and all beings. It is to possess oneness
with God and through that to possess also oneness with the universal, with the
cosmos and al
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Synthesis of Yoga_Volume-20/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. The
Purusha, the soul that knows and commands ha
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Synthesis of Yoga_Volume-20/The Ascent of the Sacrifice–1.htm
-12_The Ascent of the Sacrifice–1.htm
Chapter V
The
Ascent of the Sacrifice – 1
The Works of Knowledge – The Psychic
Being
THIS then is in its
foundations the integral knowledge of the Supreme and Infinite to whom we offer
our sacrifice, and this the nature of the sacrifice itself in its triple
character, – a sacrifice of works, a sacrifice of love and adoration, a
sacrifice of knowledge. For even when we speak of the sacrifice of works by
itself, we do not mean the offering only of our outward acts, but of all that is
active and dynamic in us; our internal movements no less than our external
doings are to be consecrated on the one altar. The inner heart of all work that
is made
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Synthesis of Yoga_Volume-20/Equality and the Annihilation of Ego.htm
Chapter
IX
Equality and
the Annihilation of Ego
AN ENTIRE
self-consecration, a complete equality, an unsparing effacement of the ego, a
transforming deliverance of the nature from its ignorant modes of action are the
steps by which the surrender of all the being and nature to the Divine Will can
be prepared and achieved, – a self-giving true, total and without reserve. The
first necessity is an entire spirit of self-consecration in our works; it must
become first the constant will, then the ingrained need in all the being,
finally its automatic but living and conscious habit, the self-existent turn to
do all action as a sacrifice to the Su
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Synthesis of Yoga_Volume-20/Renunciation.htm
Chapter V
Renunciation
IF DISCIPLINE of all the members of
our being by purification and concentration may be described as the right arm of
the body of Yoga, renunciation is its left arm. By discipline or positive
practice we confirm in ourselves the truth of things, truth of being, truth of
knowledge, truth of love, truth of works and replace with these the falsehoods
that have overgrown and perverted our nature; by renunciation we seize upon the
falsehoods, pluck up their roots and cast them out of our way so that they shall
no longer hamper by their persistence, their resistance or their recurrence the
happy and harmonious growth o
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Synthesis of Yoga_Volume-20/The Ladder of Self-Transcendence.htm
Chapter XXI
The Ladder of Self-Transcendence
THE transcendence of this lower triple being
and this lower triple world, to which ordinarily our consciousness and its
powers and results are limited, – a transcendence described by the Vedic seers
as an exceeding or breaking beyond the two firmaments of heaven and earth, –
opens out a hierarchy of infinitudes to which the normal existence of man even
in its highest and widest flights is still a stranger. Into that altitude, even
to the lowest step of its hierarchy, it is difficult for him to rise. A
separation, acute in practice though unreal in essence, divides the total being
of man, the microco
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Synthesis of Yoga_Volume-20/precontent.htm
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Synthesis of Yoga_Volume-20/The Status of Knowledge.htm
Chapter
II
The Status of
Knowledge
THE Self, the Divine, the
Supreme Reality, the All, the Transcendent, – the One in all these aspects is
then the object of Yogic knowledge. Ordinary objects, the external appearances
of life and matter, the psychology of our thoughts and actions, the perception
of the forces of the apparent world can be part of this knowledge, but only in
so far as it is part of the manifestation of the One. It becomes at once evident
that the knowledge for which Yoga strives must be different from what men
ordinarily understand by the word. For we mean ordinarily by knowledge an
intellectual appreciation