THE HOUR OF GOD

 

SRI AUROBINDO

 

Contents

 

Pre Content

 

Post Content

 

 

I. The Hour of God

4. The Simultaneous and Successive Teaching

The Hour of God

5. The Training of the Senses

Certitudes

6. Sense-Improvement by Practice

Hymn to The Mother of Radiances

7. The Training of the Mental Faculties

 

8. The Training of the Logical Faculty

II. Evolution - Psychology - The Supermind

The National Value of Art

Man a Transitional Being

 

Evolution

VII. Premises of Astrology

Psychology

Chapter I - Elements

Consciousness - Psychology

Chapter II

The Supermind

Chapter III - The Planets

The Seven Suns of the Supermind

 

The Divine Plan

VIII. Reviews

The Tangle of Karma

Mr. Tilak's Book on the Gita

 

Hymns to The Goddess

III. On Yoga

South Indian Bronzes

The Way

About Astrology

The Web of Yoga

Sanskrit Research

Purna Yoga

Rupam

The Supramental Yoga

The Feast of Youth

The Divine Superman

Shama'a

 

God, The Invisible King

IV. Thoughts and Aphorisms

 

Jnana

IX. Dayananda - Bankim - Tilak - Andal - Nammalwar

Karma

Dayananda

Bhakti

Rishi Bankim Chandra

Words of The Master

Bal Gangadhar Tilak

 

A Great Mind, A Great Will

V. Essays Divine And Human

The Men that Pass

Sat

Andal

The Secret of Life - Ananda

Nammalwar

Life

 

The Silence Behind Life

X. Historical Impressions

The Secret Truth

The French Revolution

The Real Difficulty

Napoleon

Towards Unification

Notes on Bergson

The Psychology of Yoga

 

China, Japan and India

XI. Notes From the "Arya"

 

"Arya" - Its Significance

VI. Education and Art

The "Arya's" Second Year

A Preface on National Education

The "Arya's" Fourth Year

A System of National Education :

The News of the Month

1. The Human Mind

 

2. The Powers of the Mind

Bibliographical Notes

3. The Moral Nature

 

 

 

VIII

REVIEWS

Mr. Tilak's Book on the Gita

               IN AN interview with the representative of an Indian journal Mr. Bal Gangadhar Tilak has given a brief account of the work on the Gita which he has been writing during his six years internment in Mandalay. He begins: —

"You know that the Gita is regarded generally as a book inculcating quietistic Vedanta or Bhakti. For myself, I have always regarded it as a work expounding the principles of human conduct from a Vedantic ethical point of view, that is, reconcil­ing the philosophy of active life with the philosophy of knowledge and the philosophy of devotion to God."

Mr. Tilak then expresses his belief that before Shankara and Ramanuja, the great Southern philosophers, wrote their com­mentaries, the Gita was understood in its natural sense, but from that time forward artificial and sectarian interpretations prevailed and the element of Karmayoga in the Song Celestial was disre­garded. His book is intended to restore this natural sense and central idea of the famous Scripture. It will contain a word for word rendering preceded by an introduction of some fifteen chapters in which he discusses the Vedanta and the ethics of the Gita and compares the ethical philosophy of Western thinkers with that of the Indian schools of thought. Although the book will be published first in Marathi, we are promised a version also in English.

We look forward with interest to a work which, proceeding from a scholar of such eminence and so acute an intellect, one especially whose name carries weight with all Hindus, must be considered an event of no small importance in Indian religious thought. We welcome it all the more because it seems to be con­ceived in the same free and synthetic spirit as animates this Review. It is a fresh sign of the tendency towards an increasingly liberal movement of religious opinion in orthodox India, the dissolution of the old habit of unquestioning deference to great authorities and the consequent rediscovery of the true catholic 

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sense of the ancient Scriptures.

                    Those who have studied the Gita with a free mind, still more those who have tried to live it, cannot doubt for a moment the justice of Mr. Tilak's point of view. But is not the tendency of the Gita towards a supra-ethical rather than an ethical activity? Ethics is, usually, the standardising of the highest current social ideas of conduct; the Song Celestial while recognising their importance, seeks to fix the principle of action deeper in the cen­tre of a man's soul and points us ultimately to the government of our outward life by the divine self within. 

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