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February 08, 2010

Sri Aurobindo hardly wrote about mundane earthly realities of modem life

Esalen: America and the religion of no religion JJ Kripal - 2007 - books.google.com
We need no more avoid the use of these things than a poet should avoid the use of his poetical genius which is also a siddhi unattainable by ordinary men or an artist renounce the use of his pencil. SRI AUROBINDO in his private diaries, Record of Yoga Page 8. ... 
Ethics in Public Administration: Classical Insights and Current Practices N Vittal - Journal of Human Values, 2001 - jhv.sagepub.com
Sri Aurobindo carried on that spiritual tradition and showed how human beings can rise above themselves. He identified the basic purpose and significance of life as follows: The earliest preoccupation of man in his awakened thoughts and, as it seems, his inevitable and ... 
The Mahabharata in Kathakali dance drama NK Singh - 2006 - books.google.com
This is what Mother Mirra of Sri Aurobindo Ashram, Pondicherry writes about fear of death: "Generally speaking perhaps the greatest obstacle in the way of man's progress is fear, a fear that is many-sided, multiform, self-contradictory, illogical, unreasoning and often ... 
Experience of Schooling S Advani - Economic and Political Weekly, 2003 - jstor.org
In the second are Meenakshi Thapan's Life At School (1991) which makes a study of Rishi Valley school to show the conflicts which arise when the visionary ideology of Sri Aurobindo which animates the school structure, attempts to coexist with the contemporary impetus for ... 
 Nissim Ezekiel: A Poetic Birdwatcher D Trivedi - Studies in Indian English Fiction and Poetry, 2003 - books.google.com
Indian mythology. The earlier pre-
Independence poets like Tagore, Sri Aurobindo or Mchael Madhusudan Dutt talk about great heritage of Indian culture. They hardly wrote about mundane earthly realities of modem life. Ezekiel ... 
Inaugral Address-Symposium'Science and Beyond: Cosmology, Consciousness … K Singh - International Journal of Humanities and Peace, 2003 - questia.com
the path of liberation. The whole question of consciousness and its evolution is one that has attracted some of the best minds in the world, including the great evolutionary philosopher Sri Aurobindo. In
India we have developed ... 
International Relations in South Asia State of the Art  NC Behera - International Relations in South Asia: Search for …, 2008 - books.google.com
... Savarkar, Bankim Chandra Chatterjee, Sri Aurobindo Ghosh were at play in the political arena in pre-independence
India. Most of these were not territorial in their vision nor conceptualized in rationalist terms as understood in the modern instrumental sense. ... 
INDIAN FICTION IN ENGLISH TRANSLATION: PROBLEMS AND PERSPECTIVES RN RAI - Indian Fiction in English Translation, 2005 - books.google.com
new language. Sri Aurobindo is in favour of following the spirit of the text, as the literal translation often becomes flat and lifeless. Even Voltaire, while talking about literal translation, said:'Letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life'. (iv ... 
Ancestral voices: reflections on vedic, classical and bhakti poetry  RC Shah - 2006 - books.google.com
Sri Aurobindo, who approached the 'The Rg Veda. Text and Interpolation' in Philosophy & Religion, JL Mehta, p. 275. Page 14. ... teacher. Working his way, step by step in 7. Cited in ' The Secret of the Vedas', Sri Aurobindo. Page 17. ... 
Neoplatonism and Indian philosophy P Gregorios - 2002 - books.google.com
The Sadhana of Plotmus and Sri Aurobindo 153 Arabinda Basu Plotinus' Neoplatonism and the Thought of Sri Aurobindo 163 John RA Mayer The Theoria of Nature in Plotmus and the Yoga of the Earth Consciousness in Aurobindo 173 Daniel Kealey The Four Dimensional ... 
The Categorial Logic of a Colonial Nationalism: Swadeshi Bengal, 1904-1908 A Sartori - Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the …, 2003 - Duke Univ Press
Led by a new generation of leaders such as Aurobindo Ghosh, Bipin Chandra Pal and Brahmabandhab Upadhyay, Swadeshi nationalists, calling for a boycott of British manufactures and the promotion of the nation's economic, social and spiritual autonomy, quickly shifted the ... 
 Freedom and desire in the Bhagavad Gītā EJ Briggs - 2008 - repositories.lib.utexas.edu
Abhinavagupta (11th century CE), a voluntarist and sophisticated thinker, and Aurobindo (early 20th century CE), whose work is one of the more sensitive ... 5 Śrī Rāmānuja, Gītā Bhā
ya, trans. Svāmī Adidevānanda (Mylapore: Sri Ramakrishna Math, 1991) 9. ... 
Abstract:      This study addresses constitutional secularism in India by examining how the Supreme Court of India has defined and demarcated religion, religious practice, religious organizations, and religious freedom. The Court not only plays an important adjudicatory role in a host of areas related to religious freedom and the intervention of the state in religious institutions and practice, but also actively intervenes in and shapes public discourse. One of the reasons the judiciary can play this role is the legitimacy it enjoys in public perception. Based on an analysis of Supreme Court rulings, this monograph argues that the Indian state has pushed its reformist agenda at the expense of religious freedom and neutrality. There are two broad claims made: First, through its rulings the Supreme Court consistently has sought to homogenize and rationalize religion and religious practices, particularly of Hinduism. Second, although the impetus for the Court's decisions has its origins in a liberal-democratic conception of secularism and the nation-state, there is a significant overlap between the judicial discourse and the evolution of Hindu nationalism. This development has significantly narrowed the space for religious freedom and strengthened the hand of Hindu nationalists, whose ideology is based on a monolithic conception of Hinduism and intolerance of minorities.

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