ESSAYS IN PHILOSOPHY AND YOGA

 

CONTENTS

 

Pre-content

 

 

Part One

Essays from the Karmayogin (1909 – 1910)

 

The Ideal of the Karmayogin

Karmayoga

Man — Slave or Free?

Yoga and Human Evolution

Yoga and Hypnotism

The Greatness of the Individual

The Process of Evolution

Stead and the Spirits

Stead and Maskelyne

Fate and Free-Will

The Three Purushas

The Strength of Stillness

The Principle of Evil

The Stress of the Hidden Spirit

 

Part Two

The Yoga and Its Objects (circa 1912)

 

The Yoga and Its Objects

Appendix: Explanations of Some Words and Phrases

 

 

Part Three

Writings from the Arya (1914 – 1921)

 

Notes on the Arya

The “Arya’s” Second Year

Appendix: Passages Omitted from “Our Ideal”

The "Arya's" Fourth Year

 

On Ideals and Progress

On Ideals

Yoga and Skill in Works

Conservation and Progress

The Conservative Mind and Eastern Progress

Our Ideal

 

The Superman

The Superman

All-Will and Free-Will

The Delight of Works

 

Evolution

Evolution

The Inconscient

Materialism

 

Thoughts and Glimpses

Aphorisms

Thoughts and Glimpses

 

Heraclitus

Heraclitus

 

The Problem of Rebirth

Section I: Rebirth and Karma

Rebirth

The Reincarnating Soul

Rebirth, Evolution, Heredity

Rebirth and Soul Evolution

The Significance of Rebirth

The Ascending Unity

Involution and Evolution

Karma

Karma and Freedom

Karma, Will and Consequence

Rebirth and Karma

Karma and Justice

 

Section II: The Lines of Karma

The Foundation

The Terrestrial Law

Mind Nature and Law of Karma

The Higher Lines of Karma

Appendix I: The Tangle of Karma

Appendix II: A Clarification

 

Other Writings from the Arya

The Question of the Month

The Needed Synthesis

“Arya” — Its Significance

Meditation

Different Methods of Writing

Occult Knowledge and the Hindu Scriptures

The Universal Consciousness

 

The News of the Month

The News of the Month

 

South Indian Vaishnava Poetry

Andal: The Vaishnava Poetess

Nammalwar: The Supreme Vaishnava Saint and Poet

 

Arguments to The Life Divine

Arguments to The Life Divine

 

Part Four

From the Standard Bearer (1920)

 

Ourselves

 

 

Part Five

From the Bulletin of Physical Education (1949 – 1950)

 

The Supramental Manifestation upon Earth

Message

Perfection of the Body

The Divine Body

Supermind and the Life Divine

Supermind and Humanity

Supermind in the Evolution

Mind of Light

Supermind and Mind of Light

 

NOTE ON THE TEXTS

 

Occult Knowledge and the

Hindu Scriptures

 

Are any of the following queries touched in Sanatan Dharma books of philosophy?

1) The nature and formation of animal souls

2) The shape, size, formations, nature and colour of subtle bodies

3) The difference between the subtle bodies of saints and ordinary people and the process of developing one into the other

4) The rationale of the reincarnation theory

5) The nature, constituents and situation of invisible worlds.

 

The first three questions are of a curious interest, the last two cover a very wide field All except the fourth belong more or less to a kind of knowledge pursued with eager interest by a growing number of inquirers, but still looked on askance by the human mind in general, —the occult sciences The Hindu Scriptures and books of philosophy do not as a rule handle such questions very directly or in any systematic fashion They are concerned either with the great and central questions which have always occupied the human mind, the origin and nature of the universe, the why, whence and whither of life, the highest good and the means of attaining it, the nature of man and the destiny of the human soul and its relation with the Supreme, or else they deal with the regulation of ethics, society and the conduct of daily life Occult knowledge has been left to be acquired by occult teaching Nevertheless it was possessed by the ancient sages and our correspondent will find a great deal of more or less scattered information on these and cognate questions in the Veda, Upanishads and Puranas But it is doubtful whether he would obtain a satisfactory answer to his queries in the form in which he has put them He will find for instance a long description of invisible  

 

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worlds, —invisible, that is to say, to our physical senses, —in the Vishnu Purana, but it is picturesque rather than precise We do not think he will find much about the constituents of the worlds or the size of subtle bodies.

The form of the third question lends itself to misconception Obviously the method for an ordinary man to develop his subtle body into that of a saint, is to cease to be an ordinary man and to become a saint There can be no other means The subtle body is the mental case and reflects the changes of the mentality which is housed in it or the influence exercised on it by the activities and experiences of our physical existence.

Reincarnation is much more prominent and the ideas about it more systematised in Buddhist than in Hindu books But most of the Hindu philosophies took some kind of reincarnation for granted It was part of the ancient teaching which had come down to them from the earliest times They are more concerned with its causes and the method of escape from the obligation of rebirth; the thing itself was for them a fact beyond question But the nature of reincarnation is not the same for all the old thinkers The Upanishads, for instance, seem to teach that the physical self is dissolved at death into its principle, ether; it is the mental being that appears to be born and reborn, but in reality birth and death are merely semblances and operations of   Nature, —of Aditi full of the gods, Aditi devatāmayī; the spirit is really one in all bodies and is neither born nor dies Nachiketas in the Katha Upanishad raises the question whether the man as we know and conceive him really survives death and this seems to be the sense of the answer that he receives.

 

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