supplement

 

sri aurobindo

 

Contents

 

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Volume 1

BANDE MATARAM

 
  THE CONSTITUTION OF THE CONGRESS  
  RECONSTITUTION OF THE CONGRESS  
  THE NEW SITUATION  
  LOYALTY AND DISLOYALTY IN EAST BENGAL  
  PARTITION AND THE GOVERNMENT  
  PARTITION OF BENGAL  
  PARTITION AND PETITION  
  THE PRO - PETITION PLOT  
  A POINT OF HONOUR  
  CONGRESS AND DEMOCRACY  
  THE CONSPIRATORS AT WORK  
  LAST FRIDAY'S FOLLY  
  MORE LESSONS FROM COMILLA  
  LALA LAJPATRAJ DEPORTED  
  LALA LAJPATRAI  
  GOVERNMENT BY PANIC  
  THE BAGBAZAR MEETING  
  A TREACHEROUS STAB  
  NOT TO THE ANDAMANS !  
  NO COMMON IDEAL  
  POONA SPEECH  
  NATIONAL EDUCATION (Speech)  

 

 

Volume - 2

KARMAYOGIN

 
  SWADESHI MEETING (Speech)  
  SWADESHI  IN CALCUTTA   (Speech)  

 

 

Volume - 3

THE HARMONY OF VIRTUE

 

THE PROBLEM OF THE MAHABHARATA

 
  THE POLITICAL STORY  
  UDYOGAPARVA  
  ON TRANSLATING KALIDASA  
  MEDICAL DEPARTMENT  

 

 

Volume - 4

WRITING IN BENGALI

 
  KAAROTOYAR BARNANA  
  AIKYA O SWADHNATA  
  ARUNKUMARIR HARAN  
  KOREA O JAPAN  

 

 

Volume - 5

COLLECTED POEMS

 
  FRAGMENTS  
  SONNETS  
  WORLD'S DELIGHT  

 

 

Volume - 7

COLLECTED PLAYS

 
  FRAGMENT OF A PLAY  

 

 

Volume - 8

TRANSLATIONS

 
  SAYINGS FROM THE MAHABHARATA  

 

 

Volume - 9

THE FUTURE POETRY

 

AND LETTERS ON POETRY, LITERATURE AND ART

 
  TO MY BROTHER ( MANMOHAN GHOSE)  

 

 

Volume - 10

THE SECRET OF THE VEDA

 
  THE ORIGINS OF ARYAN SPEECH ( First draft)  
  A SYSTEM OF VEDIC PSYCHOLOGY - PREFATORY  

 

 

Volume - 11

HYMNS TO THE MYSTIC FIRE

 
  A HYMN TO AGNI  ( Mandala 1, Sukta 74)  
  A HYMN TO AGNI  ( Mandala IV, Sukta 6)  

 

 

Volume - 12

THE UPANISHADS

 
  THE KARMAYOGIN - A COMMENTARY ON THE ISHA UPANISHAD  
  ISHA UPANISHAD: ALL THAT IS WORLD IN THE UNIVERSE  
  THE LIFE DIVINE - A COMMENTARY ON THE ISHA UPANISHAD  

 

 

Volume - 15

SOCIAL AND POLITICAL THOUGHT

 
  PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION OF "THE IDEAL OF HUMAN UNITY"  

 

 

Volume - 17

THE HOUR OF GOD

AND OTHER WRITINGS

 
  BANKIM CHANDRA  
  SAPTA - CHATUSHTAYA  
  THE WAY OF WORKS  

 

 

Volume - 18 - 19

THE LIFE DIVINE

 
  ARGUMENT IN BRIEF AND S7OPSIS CHAPTER -I, THE HUMAN ASPIRATION  
  ARGUMENT TO THE LIFE DIVINE FROM THE ARYA, CHS. XIX - XXXIII  

 

 

Volume - 22--24

LETTERS ON YOGA

 
  LETTER ON YOGA  

 

 

Volume - 26

ON HIMSELF

 
  LETTER TO HIS FATHER, ( DR. K. D. GHOSE )  
  LETTER TO HIS SISTER, ( SAROJINI GHOSE )  
  LETTER TO HIS FATHER - IN -LAW,  ( BHUPAL CHANDRA BASU )  
  LETTER TO ANANDARAO  
  LETTER TO "M" ( MOTILAL ROY )  
  LETTER TO "THE HINDU"  

 

  MESSAGES  
  FOR NATIONAL EDUCATION WEKK  
  YOGA AND ITS PART IN THE DIVINE PLAN  

 

 

Volume - 29

SAVITRI

 
 

THE TALE OF SATYAVAN AND SAVITRI

 

 

SUPPLEMENT TO VOLUMES 18-19
THE LIFE DIVINE

ARGUMENTS TO "THE LIFE DIVINE"

In response to the desire of some of our subscribers we

    shall prefix henceforth a brief summary or argument to each 

                                               chapter of The Life Divine.
                                                                                                                   Arya, February, 1916


These Arguments were written by Sri Aurobindo for 

Chapters XIX to XXXIII of The Life Divine as it appeared originally

 in tl1e Arya (1914-1919).


The Life Divine was revised in 1939-40 and divided into

two parts, the order of the chapters was rearranged in some places and several new chapters were written for it.

The "Argument in Brief" and a "Synopsis" of the first chapter of The Life Divine were written by Sri Aurobindo in the 1940's in response to pressing requests for a model indicating the lines upon which a - summary of The Life Divine could be attempted.


Where necessary a note is given indicating to what chapter of the (Centenary Edition) the Arya chapter and its argument correspond.  

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CHAPTER  I

The Human Aspiration


ARGUMENT  IN  BRIEF

            A SEARCH for God (for a spiritual or divine Reality within oneself and behind, above or within the phenomenon of existence), for perfection, for freedom, for an absolute Truth and Bliss, for immortality has been the persistent preoccupation of the highest human thought since the earliest times. This preoccupation seems to be a perpetual element in man's nature; for it survives the longest periods of scepticism.
             This aspiration is in contradiction with his present existence and normal experience of himself which is that of a mortal being, full of imperfections, ego-ridden, largely animal, subject to transitory joys and much pain and suffering, bound by mechanical necessity. But the direct contradiction between what he is and what he seeks to be need not be a final argument against the validity of his aspiration. For such contradictions are part of Nature's general method; the aspiration may be realisable either by a revolutionary individual effort or by an evolutionary general process.
            The problems of existence are problems of harmony. Discords and disorder of the materials, oppositions, demand a solution by accordance, by the discovery of a harmony. Thus the accordance of an inanimation and inertia in a containing Matter and the active indwelling stress of Life is Nature's first problem, its initial difficulty; its perfect solution would be immortality in a material body. The accordance of an unconscious Matter and an unconscious or half-conscious Life with a conscious Mind and Will is her second problem; the possession of a direct and perfect, instrumentation of knowledge in a living body would be its complete solution. The accordance of a mortal mind, life and body with a secretly indwelling immortal spirit is the final problem; the spiritualisation or divinisation of mind, life and body, a divine

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life, would be the perfect solution. The search after these solutions by the human being is not irrational; it is rather the very; effort and striving of Nature within him.
        Life appears in Matter, Mind in Life, because they are al. ready there. Matter is a form of veiled Life, Life a form of veiled. Mind; Mind may well be a form and veil of a higher power, the spirit, which is supramental in its nature. Nature has implanted an impulse towards life in certain forms of Matter and evolves it there, a similar evolutionary impulse towards mind in certain; forms of life, an impulse in certain minds towards what is beyond Mind, towards the unveiling of Spirit or the evolution of a spiritual being. Each impulse justifies itself by the creation of the necessary organs and faculties.
        There is therefore no reason to put a limit to evolutionary possibility by taking our present organisation or status of existence as final. The animal is a laboratory in which Nature has worked out man; man may very well be a laboratory in which she wills to work out superman, to disclose the soul as a divine being
, to evolve a divine nature.  

 

SYNOPSIS


Man's highest aspiration has been always a seeking for God, perfection, freedom, an absolute truth and bliss, immortality.

        A direct contradiction exists between this aspiration and his present state of mortality, imperfection, bondage to mechanical necessity, ego and animality.
        This contradiction between what he is now and what he
seeks to be is not a final argument against his aspiration. Contradictions are part of Nature's method; the aspiration may be achievable by individual effort or by an evolutionary progress.
        The problems of existence are problems of harmony.

        The accordance of an active life-principle with the inanimate Matter containing it is Nature's first evolutionary problem; its complete solution would be immortality in the body.

        The accordance of conscious Mind with an unconscious Matter and half-conscious Life is her second evolutionary prob-

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lem; a direct and perfect instrumentation of knowledge in a living body would be its complete solution.

        The accordance of immortal spirit with a mortal mind, life and body is her third and final problem; its complete solution could be the evolution of a divine being and a divine nature. 

        As Nature has implanted the impulse to life in Matter, to mind in life, so she has implanted in mind the impulse towards le evolution of what is beyond mind, spiritual, supramental. Each impulse justifies itself by the creation of the necessary organs and faculties.
       
The animal is a laboratory in which she has worked out man; man may be a laboratory in which she wills to work out the superman, the being of a divine nature.

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