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Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Science Materialism Mysticism/Matter Life Mind.htm
Matter, Life,
Mind
1
Our
scrutiny of scientific opinions has deals so far with the
problem of matter and mind and the problem of with the life. We
have examined these problems in indent" and each other, thus
giving the fullest scope possible
scientific features
peculiar to either of them and not subduing them in the interests
of a theory derived from outside? field concerned. Both our
surveys have reached a corn conclusion which is all the stronger
because reached along two independent lines: namely, that
matter is not the basic reality. We have discovered, on strictly
scientific grounds, that mind cannot be reduced to matter and
that matter can
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Science Materialism Mysticism/Mysticism and Einstein^s Relativity Physics .htm
Mysticism and
Einstein's Relativity Physics
I
When Archbishop
Davidson, in the early days of relativity theory, asked Einstein
what effect his theory would have on religion, Einstein answered:
"None. Relativity is a purely scientific theory and has
nothing to do with religion." This answer seems to give
short shrift to any attempt at aligning with a mystical view of
the universe the revolution in scientific thought which Einstein
brought about. But Eddington suggests that Einstein's remark must
be under- stood in the context of the times in which it was made.
In those days, Eddington, explains, one had to become expert in
dodging p
APPENDIX
LETTERS OF SRI AUROBINDO
My aim in writing or in encouraging others to write
is not personal
glory, but to arrive at the expression of spiritual truth and experience of all kinds in poetry.... You are right
when you say that up till now the English people have not favoured Indian poets writing
verse in English; but the mind of the future will be more
international than it is today. In that case the expression of various
temperaments in English poetry will have a chance.
*
(In reply to a highbrow critic friend. A.)... It is not true in all
cases that one can't write first-class things in a learned language.
Both in French and English peo
PREFACE
It all happens in Navadwip, the
hallowed town of Bengal, where Sri Chaitanya was born in 1486. At an early age,
he felt an irresistible call to give up his hearth and home, his mother and young
wife — in short, everything that man holds dear — for the love of Sri Krishna, his one love and dream on earth.
A Vaishnava friend of mine wrote to me pointing out certain,
what he calls historical, errors in the play. In one point, however,
he was mistaken: he wrote that Sri Chaitanya had never had his
mother's permission before he decided to take to the path of renunciation. In Amiya Nimai Charita — the most authentic life of Sri
Chaitanya — it is written that he had persu
Act Three
A month later. In Mira's temple she is seen again
dancing. On her right Ajit is revealed seated with
folded hands, the proud pedant transformed now into a
humble devotee. On her right are seated Mira's Guru,
Sri Sanatan and the temple-priest, Pundarik. After a
time she breaks forth into song.
MIRA (sings as tears course down her cheeks)
They ask: "For whom do you sing your songs
For ever, endlessly ?
Whether one harks or no —you go on
Pouring your melody /"
For whom does the heart still brood and
long,
Sweet koels warble the boughs among,
Blossom the buds in hues' display,
The rivers dance on — who can say
?
And
MIRA
PLAY IN THREE ACTS
DEDICATION
To
Dear Nani Palkivala
Who'll sing with the marvellous Minstrel rapturously
the mystic prophecy in Savitri:
"Oh, surely one day he shall come to our cry,
One day he shall create our life anew
And utter the magic formula of peace
And bring perfection to the scheme of things."*
With love
10.5.77 DADA DILIP KUMAR
* Cent. Vol. 28, Bk. II, C. 6
chaitanya and mira
Dilip Kumar Roy
CONTENTS
Pre content
SRI CHAITANYA
Dedication
Preface
Act One:
Aspiration
Act Two
Act Three; Illumination
MIRA
Dedication
Preface
Act One
Act Two
Act Three
APPENDIX
Letters of Sri Aurobindo
Notes by the Author
Act Two
In her temple at Brindavan, on the full-moon night of Ras,
Mira is seen singing before her beloved Image of Gopal.
The windows on one side of the temple open on the rippling
Yamuna. A number of pilgrims and devotees listen on, in
rapture. On her left Ajit, a Brahmin pedant, frowns on her as she starts
dancing. On her right sits her Gurudev, Sri Sanatan, and the temple-priest, Pundarik.
MIRA (Sings in a half-trance of ecstasy)
Blessed art thou, 0 soul, to be born,
May not thy days glide by in vain.
Remember: priceless is this life:
Aspire His lotus-feet to attain.
The Vedas are mere words, if thou
Stay blind to His
SRI CHAITANYAA DRAMA IN
THREE ACTS
DEDICATION
To
Indira, maid of Krishna,
Who even in this dark age through dust and din
Has won to the certitude no storm shall quell:
"That the Light of the heart, pledged to His Love evergreen
No demon power of Night shall countervail."
July, 1977