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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/The Spiritual Aim and Life.htm
Chapter XXI
The Spiritual Aim and Life
A SOCIETY founded upon spirituality will differ in two essential points from the normal human society which
begins from and ends with the lower nature. The normal human society starts from the gregarious instinct modified by a diversity and possible antagonism of interests, from an
association and clash of egos, from a meeting, combination, conflict of ideas, tendencies and principles; it tries first to patch
up an accommodation of converging interests and a treaty of peace between discords, founded on a series of implied contracts,
natural or necessary adjustments which become customs of the aggr
Title:
'The Human Cycle„The Ideal of Human Unity„War and Self-Determination' by Sri Aurobindo - Page 1 of 50
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/The Cycle of Society.htm
'The Human Cycle„The Ideal of Human Unity„War and Self-Determination' by Sri Aurobindo - Page 1 of 50
The Human Cycle
Chapter I
The Cycle of Society
MODERN Science, obsessed with the greatness of its physical discoveries and the idea of the sole existence
of Matter, has long attempted to base upon physical
data even its study of Soul and Mind and of those workings of Nature in man and animal in which a knowledge of psychology
is as important as any of the physical sciences. Its very
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/The Coming of the Subjective Age.htm
Chapter III
The Coming of the Subjective Age
THE INHERENT aim and effort and justification, the
psychological seed-cause, the whole tendency of development of an individualistic age of mankind, all go back
to the one dominant need of rediscovering the substantial truths of life, thought and action which have been overlaid by the
falsehood of conventional standards no longer alive to the truth of the ideas from which their conventions started. It would seem
at first that the shortest way would be to return to the original ideas themselves for light, to rescue the kernel of their truth from
the shell of convention in which it has become incrus
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/Ancient and Modern Methods of Empire.htm
Chapter VI
Ancient and Modern
Methods of Empire
A CLEAR distinction must be made between two political aggregates which go equally in current language by the
name of empire. For there is the homogeneous national and there is the heterogeneous composite empire. In a sense,
all empires are composites, at any rate if we go back to their origins; but in practice there is a difference between the imperial
aggregate in which the component elements are not divided from each other by a strong sense of their separate existence in the
whole and the imperial aggregate in which this psychological basis of separation is still in vigour. Ja
The Human Cycle
The Ideal of Human Unity
War and Self-Determination
Publisher's Note
The Human Cycle was first published in monthly instalments in
the review Arya between August 1916 and July 1918 under the title The Psychology of Social Development. Each chapter was
written immediately before its publication. The text was revised during the late 1930s and again, more lightly, in 1949. That year
it was published as a book under the title The Human Cycle.The Publishe
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/Some Lines of Fulfilment.htm
Chapter XV
Some Lines of Fulfilment
WHAT FAVOURED form, force, system among the many that are possible now or likely to emerge hereafter will be entrusted by the secret Will in things
with the external unification of mankind, is an interesting and to those who can look beyond the narrow horizon of passing
events, a fascinating subject of speculation; but unfortunately it can at present be nothing more. The very multitude of the
possibilities in a period of humanity so rife with the most varied and potent forces, so fruitful of new subjective developments
and objective mutations creates an impenetrable mist in which only vague forms of giants can
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/The Problem of Uniformity and Liberty.htm
Chapter XVI
The Problem of Uniformity and Liberty
THE QUESTION with which we started has reached some kind of answer. After sounding as thoroughly as our lights
permit the possibility of a political and administrative unification of mankind by political and economic motives and
through purely political and administrative means, it has been concluded that it is not only possible, but that the thoughts
and tendencies of mankind and the result of current events and existing forces and necessities have turned decisively in this
direction. This is one of the dominant drifts which the WorldNature has thrown up in the flow of human development and it
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/The End of the Curve of Reason.htm
Chapter XX
The End of the Curve of Reason
THE RATIONAL collectivist idea of society has at first sight a powerful attraction. There is behind it a great
truth, that every society represents a collective being and
in it and by it the individual lives and he owes to it all that he can give it. More, it is only by a certain relation to the society,
a certain harmony with this greater collective self that he can find the complete use for his many developed or developing
powers and activities. Since it is a collective being, it must, one would naturally suppose, have a discoverable collective reason
and will which should find more and mo
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/Nature's Law in Our Progress.htm
The Ideal of Human Unity
Part II
Chapter XVII
Nature's Law in Our Progress —
Unity in Diversity, Law and Liberty
FOR MAN alone of terrestrial creatures to live rightly involves the necessity of knowing rightly, whether, as rationalism pretends, by the sole or dominant instrumentation of his reason or, more largely and complexly, by the sum of his
faculties; and what he has to know is the true nature of being and its constant self-effectuation in the values of life, in l
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/The Human Cycle/Reason and Religion.htm
Chapter XIII
Reason and Religion
IT WOULD seem then that reason is an insufficient, often an
inefficient, even a stumbling and at its best a very partially enlightened guide for humanity in that great endeavour which
is the real heart of human progress and the inner justification of our existence as souls, minds and bodies upon the earth.
For that endeavour is not only the effort to survive and make a place for ourselves on the earth as the animals do, not only
having made to keep it and develop its best vital and egoistic or communal use for the efficiency and enjoyment of the individual,
the family or the collective ego, substantiall