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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/Magazines/English/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research (Vol 02)/The Heart of Nationalism.htm
The Heart of Nationalism         THE NICKNAMES of party warfare have often passed into the accepted terminology used by serious politicians and perpetuated by history, and it is possible that the same immortality may await the designations of Moderate and Extremist by which the two parties now contending for the mind of the nation are commonly known. The forward party       Nationalism: but what is Nationalism? The word has only recently begun to figure as an ordinary term of our politics and it has been brought into vogue by the new, forward or extreme party which, casting about for a convenient description of themselves, selected the name as the only one covering
Resource name: /E-Library/Magazines/English/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research (Vol 02)/precontent.htm
Resource name: /E-Library/Magazines/English/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research (Vol 02)/Hymns to the Mystic Fire.htm
Hymns to the Mystic Fire   HYMNS OF GOTAMA RAHUGANA Mandala I, Sukta 74   l. उपप्रयन्तो अध्वरं मन्त्रं वोचेमाग्नये | आरे अस्मे च शृण्वते ||      उपप्रयन्तः Sayana: उपेत्य प्रकर्षेण गच्छन्त:, which he considers equivalent to beginning and carrying out perfectly. I take अध्वरः in the sense of the sacrifice that travels to the gods by the divine path, that of the Truth; the offerings also so travel and the sacrificer. Therefore उपप्रयन्तो अध्वरं यज्ञम् means "entering upon (उप) and proceeding forward (प्र) with the sacrifice on its journey." The right performance of the sacrifice is a right progress to the godhead and the Truth .      मन्त्रम्. Sayana:
Resource name: /E-Library/Magazines/English/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research (Vol 02)/An Incomplete Work of Vedantic Exegesis.htm
An Incomplete Work of Vedantic Exegesis Book II THE NATURE OF GOD   Chapter I.   The VIEW of cosmic evolution which has been set forth in the first book of this exegesis,1 may seem deficient to the ordinary religious consciousness, which is limited and enslaved by its creeds and to which its particular way of worship is a master and not a servant, because it leaves no room for a "Personal" God. The idea of a Personal God is, however, a contradiction in terms. God is Universal, he is Omnipresent, Infinite, not subject to limits. This all religions confess, but the next moment they nullify their confession by assuming in Him a Personality.
Resource name: /E-Library/Magazines/English/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research (Vol 06 No 2)/precontent.htm
Resource name: /E-Library/Magazines/English/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research (Vol 06 No 2)/Addendum to Part One.htm
      FROM MAN TO SUPERMAN Notes on Philosophy, Psychology and Yoga   EDITORS' NOTE       In this volume of Archives and Research all of Sri Aurobindo's notes, drafts and fragments on yoga and yogic philosophy and psychology from the years 1910 to 1950 are being published. The pieces were not written in the sequence given here. They have been arranged by topic in three parts — Philosophy: God, Nature and Man; Psychology: The Science of Consciousness; Yoga: Change of Consciousness and Transformation of Nature. The first part was published in the previous number; parts two and three appear in the present number. See Notes on the Texts for details.
Resource name: /E-Library/Magazines/English/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research (Vol 06 No 2)/Integral Yoga.htm
Integral Yoga THE SUPRAMENTAL YOGA       INTEGRALITY   140       There are many Yogas, many spiritual disciplines, paths towards liberation and perfection, Godward ways of the spirit. Each has its separate aim, its peculiar approach to the One Reality, its separate method, its helpful philosophy and its practice. The integral Yoga takes up all of them in their essence and tries to arrive at a unification (in essence, not in detail) of all these aims, methods, approaches; it stands for an all-embracing philosophy and practice.       141       Most Yoga has for its aim one or other of two great ends, either the abandonment of the world and depa
Resource name: /E-Library/Magazines/English/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research (Vol 06 No 2)/The Way of Yoga.htm
      Part Three       YOGA       CHANGE OF CONSCIOUSNESS AND TRANSFORMATION OF NATURE The Way of Yoga       THE NEED AND THE CALL   109       Two things are needed if thou wouldst follow the steep and difficult way of Yoga, the need and will within thee and the call of the Spirit.       The need is the need of the soul, awakened or awaking or striving to come to the surface. For all other may be transitory or false; but the soul's need is lasting and true.       Thy soul's need of divine light and the spirit's perfection can alone bear thee across the darkness of the many nights through which thou must pass, beyo
Resource name: /E-Library/Magazines/English/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research (Vol 06 No 2)/Notes on the Texts.htm
Notes on the Texts       [The General Note on the texts of From Man to Superman published on pages 79-81 of the last issue applies to the pieces in this issue also. The data on manuscript sources and previous publication of these pieces, and the final totals (cf. the footnotes on pages 79 and 80) are as follows:       The 88 pieces printed in the present issue are taken from 39 manuscripts (34 notebooks and 5 loose sheets). The total number of manuscripts used for the 165 pieces printed in the two issues is 56 (42 notebooks and 14 loose sheets).       Of the 88 pieces printed in the present issue exactly half (44) are being published here for the first time. 29 app
Resource name: /E-Library/Magazines/English/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research/Sri Aurobindo - Archives and Research (Vol 06 No 2)/The Science of Consciousness.htm
The Science of Consciousness       VEDANTIC PSYCHOLOGY   96       The knowledge at which psychology arrives in its largest generalisations, is that there is one absolute and indefinable Reality which we call for psychological purposes the Self one, indivisible and common to all existence which manifests itself with an infinite variety in the universe and that every soul is an individual personality — we will use the word for want of a better — of that Self manifesting itself with a variety not precisely infinite, but indefinite, but in accordance with its individual nature which provides the principle of harmony, regulates the variety, casts it