The Human Cycle


The Ideal of Human Unity


War and Self-Determination

 

CONTENTS

 

 

Pre-Content

 

Post-Content

 

 

THE HUMAN CYCLE

 

Chapter I

The Cycle of Society

 

Chapter II

The Age of Individualism and Reason

 

Chapter III

The Coming of the Subjective Age

 

Chapter IV

The Discovery of the Nation-Soul

 

Chapter V

True and False Subjectivism

 

Chapter VI

The Objective and Subjective Views of Life

 

Chapter VII

The Ideal Law of Social Development

 

Chapter VIII

Civilisation and Barbarism

 

Chapter IX

Civilisation and Culture

 

Chapter X

Aesthetic and Ethical Culture

 

Chapter XI

The Reason as Governor of Life

 

Chapter XII

The Office and Limitations of the Reason

 

Chapter XIII

Reason and Religion

 

Chapter XIV
The Suprarational Beauty

 

Chapter XV

The Suprarational Good

 

Chapter XVI

The Suprarational Ultimate of Life

 

Chapter XVII

Religion as the Law of Life

 

Chapter XVIII

The Infrarational Age of the Cycl

 

Chapter XIX

The Curve of the Rational Age

 

Chapter XX

The End of the Curve of Reason

 

Chapter XXI

The Spiritual Aim and Life

 

Chapter XXII

The Necessity of the Spiritual Transformation

 

Chapter XXIII

Conditions for the Coming of a Spiritual Age

 

Chapter XXIV

The Advent and Progress of the Spiritual Age

 

  THE IDEAL OF HUMAN UNITY
 

PART - I

 

Chapter I

The Turn towards Unity: Its Necessity and Dangers

 

Chapter II

The Imperfection of Past Aggregates

 

Chapter III

The Group and the Individual

 

Chapter IV

The Inadequacy of the State Idea

 

Chapter V

Nation and Empire: Real and Political Unities

 

Chapter VI

Ancient and Modern Methods of Empire

 

Chapter VII

The Creation of the Heterogeneous Nation

 

Chapter VIII

The Problem of a Federated Heterogeneous Empire

 

Chapter IX

The Possibility of a World-Empire

 

Chapter X

The United States of Europe

 

Chapter XI

The Small Free Unit and the Larger Concentrated Unity

 

Chapter XII

The Ancient Cycle of Prenational Empire-Building —

The Modern Cycle of Nation-Building

 

Chapter XIII

The Formation of the Nation-Unit — The Three Stages

 

Chapter XIV

The Possibility of a First Step towards International Unity —

Its Enormous Difficulties

 

Chapter XV

Some Lines of Fulfilment

 

Chapter XVI

The Problem of Uniformity and Liberty

 

  THE IDEAL OF HUMAN UNITY
  PART II
 

Chapter XVII

 Nature's Law in Our Progress —

Unity in Diversity, Law and Liberty

 

Chapter XVIII

The Ideal Solution — A Free Grouping of Mankind

 

Chapter XIX

The Drive towards Centralisation and Uniformity —

 Administration and Control of Foreign Affairs

 

Chapter XX

The Drive towards Economic Centralisation

 

Chapter XXI

The Drive towards Legislative and Social

Centralisation and Uniformity

 

Chapter XXII

World-Union or World-State

 

Chapter XXIII

Forms of Government

 

Chapter XXIV

The Need of Military Unification

 

Chapter XXV

War and the Need of Economic Unity

 

Chapter XXVI

The Need of Administrative Unity

 

Chapter XXVII

The Peril of the World-State

 

Chapter XXVIII

Diversity in Oneness

 

Chapter XXIX

The Idea of a League of Nations

 

Chapter XXX

The Principle of Free Confederation

 

Chapter XXXI

The Conditions of a Free World-Union

 

Chapter XXXII

Internationalism

 

Chapter XXXIII

Internationalism and Human Unity

 

Chapter XXXIV

The Religion of Humanity

 

Chapter XXXV

Summary and Conclusion

 

A Postscript Chapter

 

  WAR AND SELF-DETERMINATION
 

The Passing of War?

 

The Unseen Power

 

Self-Determination

 

A League of Nations

  1919
 

After the War

 

APPENDIXES

Appendix I

Appendix II

Note on the Texts

Note on the Texts

 

The chapters that make up the principal contents of  The Ideal of Human Unity and War and Self-Determination were first published in the monthly review Arya between 1915 and 1920. The three works subsequently were revised by the author and published as books.

 

The Human Cycle. The twenty-four chapters making up this work appeared in the Arya under the title The Psychology of Social Development between August 1916 and July 1918. Sri Aurobindo began with a discussion of the psychological theory of social and political development put forward by the German historian Karl Lamprecht (1856 ­ 1915), about which he had read in an article published in the May/June 1916 issue of the Hindustan Review. Retaining some of Lamprecht's terminology, he went on to develop his own theory of "the cycle of society". During the 1930s, probably around 1937, he revised the Arya text of The Psychology of Social Development in two stages: the first revision was marked on a set of pages from the Arya, the second revision on a typed copy of the first. The revised text remained unpublished until 1949. At that time Sri Aurobindo considered making extensive alterations and additions to bring it up to date, but abandoned the idea and dictated only minor changes in the final stage of revision.

The book was published in 1949 by the Sri Aurobindo Ashram under the new title An American edition was brought out the next year. In 1962 a combined edition of The Human Cycle, The Ideal of Human Unity and War and Self-Determination was published by the Sri Aurobindo International Centre of Education. In 1971 the three works were published under the title Social and Political Thought as volume 15 of the Sri Aurobindo Birth Centenary Library. This has been reprinted several times under the combined titles of the constituent works. A separate edition of The Human Cycle was published in 1977.

Page 687


The Ideal of Human Unity first appeared in the Arya in thirty-five chapters between September 1915 and July 1918. At the time he commenced the series, Sri Aurobindo wrote to the Mother:

 

I have begun in the issue of the Arya which is just out a number of articles on the Ideal of Human Unity. I intend to proceed very cautiously and not go very deep at first, but as if I were leading the intelligence of the reader gradually towards the deeper meaning of unity — especially to discourage the idea that mistakes uniformity and mechanical association for unity.

 

The Arya text of The Ideal of Human Unity was brought out as a book by the Sons of India, Ltd., Madras, in 1919. Sri Aurobindo revised this during the late 1930s, apparently in 1938. (The date is inferred partly from a footnote he added while revising Chapter 5 — later replaced by a different footnote — referring to the "Anschluss", Germany's annexation of Austria in March 1938. Sri Aurobindo is unlikely to have worked on the revision after his accident in November 1938.) The revised text remained unpublished for more than a decade. In June 1949, asked about the possiblity of publishing this book and The Psychology of Social Development (which had not yet been renamed ), Sri Aurobindo answered that

 

they have to be altered by the introduction of new chapters and rewriting of passages and in The Ideal changes have to be made all through the book in order to bring it up to date, so it is quite impossible to make these alterations on the proofs. I propose however to revise these two books as soon as possible; they will receive my first attention.

 

Sri Aurobindo did not revise either book to the extent he had proposed. Although he made minor changes throughout The Ideal of Human Unity, his attempt to bring it up to date was largely confined to adding and revising footnotes (see the next paragraph). The only new chapter introduced was a long Postscript Chapter reviewing the book's conclusions in the light of recent international developments. The second edition of The Ideal of Human Unity was published by the Sri Aurobindo Ashram in 1950; it was followed by an American edition

Page 688


later the same year. (In the American edition the Postscript Chapter appeared as an Introduction.) In 1962, 1971 and subsequently this work was included in the combined editions mentioned above under

 

Footnotes to The Ideal of Human Unity. The seventy-eight footnotes in the present edition of The Ideal of Human Unity reflect the complex history of the text. Only three of these can be traced to the Arya (two other footnotes found in the Arya were deleted during revision). Sri Aurobindo added more than fifty footnotes in his first revision, many of them referring to political developments of the 1930s such as the rise of Fascism. In his second, lighter revision, undertaken more than ten years later, he also made extensive use of footnotes for updating the text. Some two dozen new footnotes were added at this time and an equal number of the earlier ones revised. Thus the majority of the footnotes in the final version may be taken to represent the standpoint of 1949 ­ 50. Detailed information on the dating of footnotes and other significant revision is provided in the reference volume (volume 35).

 

War and Self-Determination. Sri Aurobindo published five articles on current political topics in the Arya: "The Passing of War?" (April 1916), "Self-Determination" (September 1918), "The Unseen Power" (December 1918), "1919" (July 1919) and "After the War" (August 1920). In 1920 the first three of these, along with a Foreword and a newly written essay, "The League of Nations", were brought out as a book by S. R. Murthy & Co., Madras. A second edition was published by Sarojini Ghose (Sri Aurobindo's sister) in 1922. Sri Aurobindo dictated a few scattered revisions to these essays during the late 1940s or in 1950. A third edition of the book was brought out in 1957. "After the War", which had been published as a separate booklet in 1949, was added to this edition. Since 1962 War and Self-Determination has appeared in the combined editions mentioned above under The Human Cycle. "1919" was first reproduced in the 1962 edition, where it was placed at the end. In the present edition, "1919" and "After the War" are printed in the order in which they were written.

 

The present edition. This edition of The Ideal of Human Unity and War and Self-Determination has been thoroughly  

Page 689


checked against the Arya and the texts of all revised editions. A note written with reference to The Ideal of Human Unity and a fragment related thematically to War and Self-Determination have been included as Appendixes.

Page 690