Metempsychosis
Reincarnation of 'Anti-religion'
Sri Aurobindo was an Indian nationalist, freedom fighter, philosopher, yogi, Maharishi, guru and poet.He joined the Indian movement for freedom from British rule, for a while became one of its influential leaders and then turned into a spiritual reformer, introducing his visions on human progress and spiritual evolution.He believed in a spiritual realisation that not only liberated man but also transformed his nature, enabling a divine life on earth.
Sri Aurobindo had begun the practice of Yoga in 1905 in Baroda. In 1908 he had the first of several fundamental spiritual realisations. In 1910 he withdrew from politics and went to Pondicherry in order to devote himself entirely to his inner spiritual life and work. During his forty years in Pondicherry he evolved a new method of spiritual practice, which he called the Integral Yoga. Its aim is a spiritual realisation that not only liberates man's consciousness but also transforms his nature. In 1926, with the help of his spiritual collaborator, the Mother, he founded the Sri Aurobindo Ashram. Among his many writings are The Life Divine, The Synthesis of Yoga and Savitri. Sri Aurobindo left his body on 5 December 1950.
His Philosophy:
His way is much jnana -based and has subtle differences with traditional Sankara approach(he considers world as equally real and not a thing to be shunned).He takes up Bhakti Yoga shows how it works with respect to his Integral Yoga.Major task he undertook was that he tried to bring the Sat-chit-ananda or Supramental consciousness unto the world in the form of an Avatar(that was his socio-spiritual work).He also introduced evolution and involution as way to explain creationism and aimed his yoga in transforming every aspect of his being(gross,astral,mental,psychic).His writings shows Sankya,Tantra and Vedanta in light of modern theory of (material)evolution.He is one of scholars in comparative philosophy and he had good knowledge Western(greek) mysticism and modern western philosophy. Aurobindo is much more concerned about the impact/descent of Supramental consciousness on physical and day to day aspects of people's life.For him,escaping the phenomenal world realizing the impersonal Brahman is just a part of overall process as it does not directly help in removing suffering of other living beings.
Aurobindo's Adwaitic view is as follows:
Brahman becomes many through the principle of exclusive concentration.
His Cosmology:
Sri Aurobindo had begun the practice of Yoga in 1905 in Baroda. In 1908 he had the first of several fundamental spiritual realisations. In 1910 he withdrew from politics and went to Pondicherry in order to devote himself entirely to his inner spiritual life and work. During his forty years in Pondicherry he evolved a new method of spiritual practice, which he called the Integral Yoga. Its aim is a spiritual realisation that not only liberates man's consciousness but also transforms his nature. In 1926, with the help of his spiritual collaborator, the Mother, he founded the Sri Aurobindo Ashram. Among his many writings are The Life Divine, The Synthesis of Yoga and Savitri. Sri Aurobindo left his body on 5 December 1950.
His Philosophy:
His way is much jnana -based and has subtle differences with traditional Sankara approach(he considers world as equally real and not a thing to be shunned).He takes up Bhakti Yoga shows how it works with respect to his Integral Yoga.Major task he undertook was that he tried to bring the Sat-chit-ananda or Supramental consciousness unto the world in the form of an Avatar(that was his socio-spiritual work).He also introduced evolution and involution as way to explain creationism and aimed his yoga in transforming every aspect of his being(gross,astral,mental,psychic).His writings shows Sankya,Tantra and Vedanta in light of modern theory of (material)evolution.He is one of scholars in comparative philosophy and he had good knowledge Western(greek) mysticism and modern western philosophy. Aurobindo is much more concerned about the impact/descent of Supramental consciousness on physical and day to day aspects of people's life.For him,escaping the phenomenal world realizing the impersonal Brahman is just a part of overall process as it does not directly help in removing suffering of other living beings.
Aurobindo's Adwaitic view is as follows:
Truth of existence is an omnipresent Reality that both transcends the manifested universe and is inherent in it. This Reality, referred to as Brahman, is an Absolute: it is not limited by any mental conception or duality, whether personal or impersonal, existent or nonexistent, formless or manifested in form, timeless or extended in time, spaceless or extended in space. It is simultaneously all of these but is bound by none of them. It is at once the universe, each individual being and thing in the universe, and the Transcendent beyond the universe. In its highest manifested poise, its nature may be described as Sachchidananda—infinite existence, infinite consciousness, and infinite delight or bliss—a triune principle in which the three are united in a single Reality.The importance of this concept for humanity lies in its implication that Brahman is our deepest and secret Reality, it is our true Self, and it is possible to recover this Reality of our being by removing the veil of ignorance that hides it from us and imprisons us in a false identification with an apparently divided and limited egoistic movement on the surface of our being.
Brahman becomes many through the principle of exclusive concentration.
This principle is best explained through the example of our own ability to narrow our conscious awareness on a particular idea or perception, putting behind in the background of our focused awareness the rest of our conscious existence. When an author concentrates in writing a story—developing the characters, the scene, the action—their own personal identity becomes for the moment lost to their conscious awareness. Their consciousness enters into the story and identifies with it. They do not cease to be what he or she is, or lose their knowledge of identity, but practically their awareness is narrowed and identified at a point. This ability to focus awareness and put into the background all else is inherent in consciousness. It is through a similar process that the One and Infinite Being becomes the many, apparently separate, individual beings and things we see manifested in the universe. The separation is in appearance only, for in truth all individuals are constituted by the One, are That in their Reality, for there is nothing outside the Absolute. They are forms and appearances of its Being, expressions of its Consciousness, movements of its Delight.
His Cosmology:
The oldest Vedantic knowledge tells us of five degrees of our being, the material, the vital, the mental, the ideal, the spiritual or beatific and to each of these grades of our soul there corresponds a grade of our substance, a sheath as it was called in the ancient figurative language. A later psychology found that these five sheaths of our substance were the material of three bodies, gross physical, subtle and causal, in all of which the soul actually and simultaneously dwells, although here and now we are superficially conscious only of the material vehicle
Explanation on different sheaths
Sachchidananda
The triple worlds which embody the principles of Existence(Sat), Consciousness(Chit), Ananda(Bliss)
Supramental world
The power which creates and upholds manifestation.
Golden Lid
This is the dividing line, the golden lid, between the Higher worlds and the Lower worlds.
Overmental World
The world of the Cosmic Powers (Gods), all aspects of the Divine.
Mental Worlds
The Universal Mind which is the channel for telepathy, the storehouse of our thoughts, the record of world history.
Vital Worlds
The region which influences our creative endeavours as well as our lusts and desires.
Physical worlds
Example is the Earth, a place for evolution.
Subconscient
Repository of all dead thoughts and formations.
Inconscient
Region of inconscience
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