{"id":2221,"date":"2013-07-13T01:40:12","date_gmt":"2013-07-13T01:40:12","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/?p=2221"},"modified":"2013-07-13T01:40:12","modified_gmt":"2013-07-13T01:40:12","slug":"56-chapter-ii-the-integral-perfection-vol-23-24-the-synthesis-of-yoga","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/01-works-of-sri-aurobindo\/03-cwsa\/23-24-the-synthesis-of-yoga\/56-chapter-ii-the-integral-perfection-vol-23-24-the-synthesis-of-yoga","title":{"rendered":"-56_Chapter II The Integral Perfection.htm"},"content":{"rendered":"<p> <span lang=\"en-gb\"><\/p>\n<div align=\"center\">\n<table border=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" cellspacing=\"0\" width=\"100%\">\n<tr>\n<td width=\"100%\" valign=\"top\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\"><\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<b><font size=\"4\">Chapter II <\/font><\/b><\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<b><font size=\"4\">The Integral Perfection<br \/>\n<\/font><\/b><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<b><font size=\"5\">A<\/font><font size=\"4\"> <\/font>DIVINE<\/b> perfection of the human being is our aim. We<br \/>\nmust know then first what are the essential elements that constitute man&#8217;s total perfection; secondly, what we<br \/>\nmean by a divine as distinguished from a human perfection of our being. That man as a being is capable of self-development<br \/>\nand of some approach at least to an ideal standard of perfection which his mind is able to conceive, fix before it and pursue,<br \/>\nis common ground to all thinking humanity, though it may be only the minority who concern themselves with this possibility<br \/>\nas providing the one most important aim of life. But by some the ideal is conceived as a mundane change, by others as a religious<br \/>\nconversion. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\tThe mundane perfection is sometimes conceived of as something outward, social, a thing of action, a more rational dealing with our fellow-men and our environment, a better and more<br \/>\nefficient citizenship and discharge of duties, a better, richer, kindlier and happier way of living, with a more just and more<br \/>\nharmonious associated enjoyment of the opportunities of existence. By others again a more inner and subjective ideal is<br \/>\ncherished, a clarifying and raising of the intelligence, will and reason, a heightening and ordering of power and capacity in<br \/>\nthe nature, a nobler ethical, a richer aesthetic, a finer emotional, a much healthier and better-governed vital and physical being.<br \/>\nSometimes one element is stressed, almost to the exclusion of the rest; sometimes, in wider and more well-balanced minds, the<br \/>\nwhole harmony is envisaged as a total perfection. A change of education and social institutions is the outward means adopted<br \/>\nor an inner self-training and development is preferred as the true instrumentation. Or the two aims may be clearly united, the perfection of the inner individual, the perfection of the outer living. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\tBut the mundane aim takes for its field the present life<br \/>\n &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<font size=\"2\">Page <font face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 <\/font>616<\/font><br \/>\n&nbsp; <\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\tand its opportunities; the religious aim on the contrary fixes<br \/>\nbefore it the self-preparation for another existence after death, its commonest ideal is some kind of pure sainthood, its means<br \/>\na conversion of the imperfect or sinful human being by divine grace or through obedience to a law laid down by a scripture or<br \/>\nelse given by a religious founder. The aim of religion may include a social change, but it is then a change brought about by the<br \/>\nacceptance of a common religious ideal and way of consecrated living, a brotherhood of the saints, a theocracy or kingdom of<br \/>\nGod reflecting on earth the kingdom of heaven. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\tThe object of our synthetic Yoga must, in this respect too as<br \/>\nin its other parts, be more integral and comprehensive, embrace all these elements or these tendencies of a larger impulse of self-perfection and harmonise them or rather unify, and in order to do that successfully it must seize on a truth which is wider than<br \/>\nthe ordinary religious and higher than the mundane principle. All life is a secret Yoga, an obscure growth of Nature towards<br \/>\nthe discovery and fulfilment of the divine principle hidden in her which becomes progressively less obscure, more self-conscient<br \/>\nand luminous, more self-possessed in the human being by the opening of all his instruments of knowledge, will, action, life to<br \/>\nthe Spirit within him and in the world. Mind, life, body, all the forms of our nature are the means of this growth, but they find<br \/>\ntheir last perfection only by opening out to something beyond them, first, because they are not the whole of what man is,<br \/>\nsecondly, because that other something which he is, is the key of his completeness and brings a light which discovers to him the<br \/>\nwhole high and large reality of his being. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\tMind is fulfilled by a greater knowledge of which it is only a<br \/>\nhalf-light, life discovers its meaning in a greater power and will of which it is the outward and as yet obscure functioning, body<br \/>\nfinds its last use as an instrument of a power of being of which it is a physical support and material starting-point. They have all<br \/>\nthemselves first to be developed and find out their ordinary possibilities; all our normal life is a trying of these possibilities and<br \/>\nan opportunity for this preparatory and tentative self-training. But life cannot find its perfect self-fulfilment till it opens to <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<font size=\"2\">Page <font face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 <\/font>617<\/font>&nbsp; <\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\tthat greater reality of being of which by this development of a<br \/>\nricher power and a more sensitive use and capacity it becomes a well-prepared field of working. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\tIntellectual, volitional, ethical, emotional, aesthetic and physical training and improvement are all so much to the good,<br \/>\nbut they are only in the end a constant movement in a circle without any last delivering and illumining aim, unless they<br \/>\narrive at a point when they can open themselves to the power and presence of the Spirit and admit its direct workings. This<br \/>\ndirect working effects a conversion of the whole being which is the indispensable condition of our real perfection. To grow<br \/>\ninto the truth and power of the Spirit and by the direct action of that power<br \/>\nto be made a fit channel of its self-expression, \u2014<br \/>\na living of man in the Divine and a divine living of the Spirit in humanity, \u2014 will therefore be the principle and the whole object<br \/>\nof an integral Yoga of self-perfection. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\tIn the process of this change there must be by the very<br \/>\nnecessity of the effort two stages of its working. First, there will be the personal endeavour of the human being, as soon as he<br \/>\nbecomes aware by his soul, mind, heart of this divine possibility and turns towards it as the true object of life, to prepare himself<br \/>\nfor it and to get rid of all in him that belongs to a lower working, of all that stands in the way of his opening to the spiritual truth<br \/>\nand its power, so as to possess by this liberation his spiritual being and turn all his natural movements into free means of<br \/>\nits self-expression. It is by this turn that the self-conscious Yoga aware of its aim begins: there is a new awakening and an upward<br \/>\nchange of the life motive. So long as there is only an intellectual, ethical and other self-training for the now normal purposes of<br \/>\nlife which does not travel beyond the ordinary circle of working of mind, life and body, we are still only in the obscure and yet<br \/>\nunillumined preparatory Yoga of Nature; we are still in pursuit of only an ordinary human perfection. A spiritual desire of the<br \/>\nDivine and of the divine perfection, of a unity with him in all our being and a spiritual perfection in all our nature, is the effective<br \/>\nsign of this change, the precursory power of a great integral conversion of our being and living. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<font size=\"2\">Page <font face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 <\/font>618<\/font>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;&nbsp;<br \/>\n\t\t\tBy personal effort a precursory change, a preliminary<br \/>\nconversion can be effected; it amounts to a greater or less spiritualising of our mental motives, our character and temperament, and a mastery, stilling or changed action of the vital and physical life. This converted subjectivity can be made the base of<br \/>\nsome communion or unity of the soul in mind with the Divine and some partial reflection of the divine nature in the mentality<br \/>\nof the human being. That is as far as man can go by his unaided or indirectly aided effort, because that is an effort of mind and<br \/>\nmind cannot climb beyond itself permanently: at most it arises to a spiritualised and idealised mentality. If it shoots up beyond that<br \/>\nborder, it loses hold of itself, loses hold of life, and arrives either at a trance of absorption or a passivity. A greater perfection can<br \/>\nonly be arrived at by a higher power entering in and taking up the whole action of the being. The second stage of this Yoga will<br \/>\ntherefore be a persistent giving up of all the action of the nature into the hands of this greater Power, a substitution of its influence, possession and working for the personal effort, until the Divine to whom we aspire becomes the direct master of the Yoga<br \/>\nand effects the entire spiritual and ideal conversion of the being. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\tThis double character of our Yoga raises it beyond the<br \/>\nmundane ideal of perfection, while at the same time it goes too beyond the loftier, intenser, but much narrower religious<br \/>\nformula. The mundane ideal regards man always as a mental, vital and physical being and it aims at a human perfection well<br \/>\nwithin these limits, a perfection of mind, life and body, an expansion and refinement of the intellect and knowledge, of the will<br \/>\nand power, of ethical character, aim and conduct, of aesthetic sensibility and creativeness, of emotional balanced poise and<br \/>\nenjoyment, of vital and physical soundness, regulated action and just efficiency. It is a wide and full aim, but yet not sufficiently<br \/>\nfull and wide, because it ignores that other greater element of our being which the mind vaguely conceives as the spiritual element<br \/>\nand leaves it either undeveloped or insufficiently satisfied as merely some high occasional or added derivatory experience,<br \/>\nthe result of the action of mind in its exceptional aspects or dependent upon mind for its presence and persistence. It can<br \/>\n &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<font size=\"2\">Page <font face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 <\/font>619<\/font> <\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\tbecome a high aim when it seeks to develop the loftier and the<br \/>\nlarger reaches of our mentality, but yet not sufficiently high, because it does not aspire beyond mind to that of which our<br \/>\npurest reason, our brightest mental intuition, our deepest mental sense and feeling, strongest mental will and power or ideal aim<br \/>\nand purpose are only pale radiations. Its aim besides is limited to a terrestrial perfection of the normal human life. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\tA Yoga of integral perfection regards man as a divine spiritual being involved in mind, life and body; it aims therefore<br \/>\nat a liberation and a perfection of his divine nature. It seeks to make an inner living in the perfectly developed spiritual being<br \/>\nhis constant intrinsic living and the spiritualised action of mind, life and body only its outward human expression. In order that<br \/>\nthis spiritual being may not be something vague and indefinable or else but imperfectly realised and dependent on the mental<br \/>\nsupport and the mental limitations, it seeks to go beyond mind to the supramental knowledge, will, sense, feeling, intuition,<br \/>\ndynamic initiation of vital and physical action, all that makes the native working of the spiritual being. It accepts human life,<br \/>\nbut takes account of the large supraterrestrial action behind the earthly material living, and it joins itself to the divine Being from<br \/>\nwhom the supreme origination of all these partial and lower states proceeds so that the whole of life may become aware of<br \/>\nits divine source and feel in each action of knowledge, of will, of feeling, sense and body the divine originating impulse. It rejects<br \/>\nnothing that is essential in the mundane aim, but enlarges it, finds and lives in its greater and its truer meaning now hidden<br \/>\nfrom it, transfigures it from a limited, earthly and mortal thing to a figure of infinite, divine and immortal values. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\tThe integral Yoga meets the religious ideal at several points, but goes beyond it in the sense of a greater wideness. The religious ideal looks, not only beyond this earth, but away from it to a heaven or even beyond all heavens to some kind of Nirvana. Its<br \/>\nideal of perfection is limited to whatever kind of inner or outer mutation will eventually serve the turning away of the soul from<br \/>\nthe human life to the beyond. Its ordinary idea of perfection is a religio-ethical change, a drastic purification of the active and the<br \/>\n &nbsp; <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<font size=\"2\">Page <font face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 <\/font>620<\/font>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\temotional being, often with an ascetic abrogation and rejection<br \/>\nof the vital impulses as its completest reaching of excellence, and in any case a supraterrestrial motive and reward or result of a<br \/>\nlife of piety and right conduct. In so far as it admits a change of knowledge, will, aesthesis, it is in the sense of the turning of<br \/>\nthem to another object than the aims of human life and eventually brings a rejection of all earthly objects of aesthesis, will<br \/>\nand knowledge. The method, whether it lays stress on personal effort or upon divine influence, on works and knowledge or<br \/>\nupon grace, is not like the mundane a development, but rather a conversion; but in the end the aim is not a conversion of our<br \/>\nmental and physical nature, but the putting on of a pure spiritual nature and being, and since that is not possible here on earth, it<br \/>\nlooks for its consummation by a transference to another world or a shuffling off of all cosmic existence. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\tBut the integral Yoga founds itself on a conception of the spiritual being as an omnipresent existence, the fullness of which<br \/>\ncomes not essentially by a transference to other worlds or a cosmic self-extinction, but by a growth out of what we now are<br \/>\nphenomenally into the consciousness of the omnipresent reality which we always are in the essence of our being. It substitutes<br \/>\nfor the form of religious piety its completer spiritual seeking of a divine union. It proceeds by a personal effort to a conversion<br \/>\nthrough a divine influence and possession; but this divine grace, if we may so call it, is not simply a mysterious flow or touch coming from above, but the all-pervading act of a divine presence which we come to know within as the power of the highest Self<br \/>\nand Master of our being entering into the soul and so possessing it that we not only feel it close to us and pressing upon our mortal<br \/>\nnature, but live in its law, know that law, possess it as the whole power of our spiritualised nature. The conversion its action will<br \/>\neffect is an integral conversion of our ethical being into the Truth and Right of the divine nature, of our intellectual into the<br \/>\nillumination of divine knowledge, our emotional into the divine love and unity, our dynamic and volitional into a working of<br \/>\nthe divine power, our aesthetic into a plenary reception and a creative enjoyment of divine beauty, not excluding even in<br \/>\n &nbsp; <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<font size=\"2\">Page <font face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 <\/font>621<\/font>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<hr>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\tthe end a divine conversion of the vital and physical being. It<br \/>\nregards all the previous life as an involuntary and unconscious or half-conscious preparatory growing towards this change and<br \/>\nYoga as the voluntary and conscious effort and realisation of the change, by which all the aim of human existence in all its parts is<br \/>\nfulfilled, even while it is transfigured. Admitting the supracosmic truth and life in worlds beyond, it admits too the terrestrial as a<br \/>\ncontinued term of the one existence and a change of individual and communal life on earth as a strain of its divine meaning. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;text-indent: 25pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\tTo open oneself to the supracosmic Divine is an essential condition of this integral perfection; to unite oneself with the<br \/>\nuniversal Divine is another essential condition. Here the Yoga of self-perfection coincides with the Yogas of knowledge, works<br \/>\nand devotion; for it is impossible to change the human nature into the divine or to make it an instrument of the divine knowledge, will and joy of existence, unless there is a union with the supreme Being, Consciousness and Bliss and a unity with<br \/>\nits universal Self in all things and beings. A wholly separative possession of the divine nature by the human individual, as<br \/>\ndistinct from a self-withdrawn absorption in it, is not possible. But this unity will not be an inmost spiritual oneness qualified, so<br \/>\nlong as the human life lasts, by a separative existence in mind, life and body; the full perfection is a possession, through this<br \/>\nspiritual unity, of unity too with the universal Mind, the universal Life, the universal Form which are the other constant terms<br \/>\nof cosmic being. Moreover, since human life is still accepted as a self-expression of the realised Divine in man, there must be<br \/>\nan action of the entire divine nature in our life; and this brings in the need of the supramental conversion which substitutes the<br \/>\nnative action of spiritual being for the imperfect action of the superficial nature and spiritualises and transfigures its mental,<br \/>\nvital and physical parts by the spiritual ideality. These three elements, a union with the supreme Divine, unity with the universal<br \/>\nSelf, and a supramental life action from this transcendent origin and through this universality, but still with the individual as the<br \/>\nsoul-channel and natural instrument, constitute the essence of the integral divine perfection of the human being.<br \/>\n &nbsp; <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"line-height: 150%;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<font size=\"2\">Page <font face=\"Times New Roman\">\u2013 <\/font>622<\/font><\/p>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/table>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Chapter II &nbsp; The Integral Perfection &nbsp; A DIVINE perfection of the human being is our aim. We must know then first what are the&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[46],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-2221","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-23-24-the-synthesis-of-yoga","wpcat-46-id"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2221","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2221"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2221\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2221"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2221"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2221"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}