The post-condition: theory, texts, and contexts - Ranjit
Kaur Kapoor, Manjit
Inder Singh, Punjabi
University - 2001 - 247 pages - In the second part of my paper, I
offer a serious critique of postmodernist relativity or anomie from the point
of view of Indian critical thinkers like Gandhi and Aurobindo, The latter spoke of an "antinomian
tendency" that constantly ...
On Hinduism: reviews and reflections - Ram
Swarup - 2000 - 232 pages - But there were others like Gandhi and Aurobindo who saw and
acted differently. They did not feel that their Hinduism contradicted their
nationalism. In fact, it gave them strength to be great nationalists and great
humanists.
Recovering
Liberties: Indian Thought in the Age of Liberalism and ... - Page 347 - C.
A. Bayly - 2011 - 360 pages - Preview Well before the writings of Gandhi and Aurobindo, it was Indian
liberals who tried to marry individual liberty with the idea of spiritual
freedom (mukti). Islamic ideas of good society drawn from the akhlaq tradition
also subtly ...
Love, Life and Death
- Page 111 - D.P.
Chattopadhyaya - 2010 - 220 pages - Preview Thinkers like Thoreau, Tolstoy, Gandhi and Aurobindo strongly
believe in the essential goodness of the human nature. While they do recognize
at the factual level the undeniable reality of class struggle, inequality, and
conflict, ...
Capital,
Interrupted: Agrarian Development and the
Politics of ... - Page 69 - Vinay
K. Gidwani - 2008 - 337 pages - Preview His continuing “experiments with truth” (satya ka
prayog), as he calls them (after Gandhi), revolve around an evolving philosophy
of praxis that draws on the thought of both Gandhi and Aurobindo Ghosh and are continually tempered ...
Issues
of identity in Indian English fiction: a close reading of ... - Page 54 - H.
S. Komalesha - 2008 - 195 pages - Preview Though both Gandhi and Aurobindo agree on the spiritual and religious
dimensions of Nationalism in India, they differ in their opinions regarding the
origin of nationalism in India is concerned. In his Hind Swaraj, Gandhi gives
complete ...
Modernity and the
Problem of Cultural Identity - Page 101 - Dr.
A.P. Dubey - 2008 - 260 pages - Preview Nehru, Radhakrishnan, Tagore, Gandhi and Aurobindo all spoke of
regeneration and undogmatic seeking for a culture where regional and the local
is repeated and there is a great family of nations created living together in
Peace.
Indian Ethics: Classical traditions and contemporary challenges -
Page 333 - Puruṣottama Bilimoria, Joseph
Prabhu, Renuka
M. Sharma - 2007 - 431 pages -Preview One will find here a vast array of topics covered
from the theodical account of Hindu ethics suggested by Max Weber, through
historical accounts of the ethics of Gandhi
and Aurobindo and of cultural rights in British India to ...
Practical And Professional
Ethics (vol. 2 : Environmental Ethics - Page 101- Debashis
Guha - 2007 - Preview We have chosen Gandhi and Aurobindo to clarify the stance, particularly when
both have powerful visions on Gita's ecoethics, which has been touted as
failing to have any such ethic, and we are trying to ...
Indian English poetry and fiction: critical elucidations: Volume 2 - Page 2 - Amar
Nath Prasad, A.N.
Prasad Rajiv K.Malik - 2007 - 290 pages - Full view The
neo-Vedantism of Vivekananda, Gurudatta, Aurobindo, Ram Tirtha, Satyadeva,
Radhakrishnan, and DM Dutta, the concept of swaraj of Dayananda, Tilak, Gandhi and Aurobindo and this
integral humanism of Deen Dayal have their roots in the ...
Modern Indian political system: problems and prospects - Page 6 - B.
K. Verma - 2006 - 314 pages - Preview Gandhi and
Aurobindo were bitter critics of the commercialism, plutocracy and
imperialism of the modern West. ... Tilak, Gandhi and Aurobindo, either wholly or
partly, were stalwarts of some form of Vedic and Hindu revivalism.
Philosophical Humanism and Contemporary India - Page 190 - Vishwanath
Prasad Varma - 2006 - 211 pages - Preview The
neo-Vedantism of Vivekananda, Gurudatta Vidyarthi, Aurobindo, Rama Tirtha,
Satyadeva, Radhakrishnan and DM Datta, the concept of Swaraj of Dayananda,
Tilak, Gandhi and Aurobindo and
the integral humanism of Deendayal have their...
Pathways to Joy: The Master Vivekananda on the Four Yoga Paths
to God - Swami
Vivekananda, Dave
DeLuca - 2006 - 312 pages - Preview ... Aurobindo,
and Tagore, have grown, flowered, and borne fruit under the double
constellation of the Swan (Ramakrishna) and the Eagle (Vivekananda) –– a fact
publicly acknowledged by both Gandhi
and Aurobindo.
Explorations
in management thought: a festschrift honoring Ishwar ... - Page 195 - Ishwar
Dayal, Deepak
Dogra, Vinay
Auluck - 2006 - 298 pages - Preview It may be indicated that foundations of modern
India as a nation are rooted in V1GA (Vivekananda, Gandhi and Aurobindo) thoughts in addition to borrowing certain
western ideas. Thoughts of Vivekananda, Gandhi and I 195 ...
English Social And Cultural
History An Introductory Guide And Glossary
- Page 254 - Bibhash
Choudhury - 2005 - 385 pages - Preview Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi and Aurobindo are two striking examples of how the
Western model of education and experience of European life contributed to the
harnessing of the nationalistic spirit in colonies like India.
Empire,
the National, and the
Postcolonial, 1890-1920: Resistance ... - Page 63 - Elleke
Boehmer - 2005 - 239 pages - Preview Both Gandhi
and Aurobindo, to quote only two examples, first read the Gita in
English translation (Sir Edwin Arnold's influential The Song Celestial (1882)
in Gandhi's case, and just possibly in Aurobindo's).70 With the rise of ...
Sri Aurobindo -
Page 89 - Purnima
Majumdar - 2005 - 128 pages - Preview In Swaraj in Madras, Subba Rao's articles on
Mahatma Gandhi and Aurobindo were
also talked about. Theosophy was discussed. Suggestions were given on devotion.
Photograph of future ascetics. Relations between teacher and student were ...
Against Empire: Feminisms, Racism, and the West - Page xvii - Zillah
R. Eisenstein - 2004 - 236 pages - Preview I
work backwards to the slave trade, and across to Mahatma Gandhi and Aurobindo Ghose and
WEI3. DuBois and Ida 13. Wells who tell the stories of resistance, and forward
to Afghanistan and Iraq and the next 'elsewhere'.
Global Peace And Anti-Nuclear
Movements - Page 232 - Badruddin -
2003 - 273 pages - Preview Peace advocates and thinkers like Luther King,
Tolstoy, Thompson, Galtung Wallestein, Gandhi and Aurobindo always dreamed of a society based on
freedom, human equality and social justice. Today, Galtung can be the ...
In
Another Country: Colonialism, Culture, and the English Novel in ... - Page 10 - Priya
Joshi - 2002 - 363 pages - Preview ... the
extent to which the Indian alternative, articulated in practical and cultural
politics by figures such as MK Gandhi
and Aurobindo Ghose, visibly seeped back and began to shape crucial
aspects of the "internal culture of Britain.
Living With Siva: Hinduism's Contemporary Culture - Page 124
- Subramuniya -
2001 - 945 pages - Full view Others, such as Buddha, Gandhi and Aurobindo, became celibate
after a period of marriage. For the individual preparing for monastic life,
brahmacharya is essential in harnessing and transmuting the powerful sexual
life energies into ...
From
Mission to Church: The Reformed Church in America Mission to ... - Page 218
- Eugene
P. Heideman - 2001 - 748 pages - Preview ... that
continued for the next century through persons such as Rabindranath Tagore,
Vivekananda, MK Gandhi, and
Aurobindo. They declared that the corrupt elements were not ^8 French
and Sharma, Religious Ferment, 22. 39 Ibid, 22-23.
Approaches to the study of religion - Page 252 - Peter
Connolly - 1999 - 286 pages - Preview For example, leading Hindus have learnt from Christian
theology, men such as Ram Mohan Roy, Keshub Chander Sen, Vivekananda,
Radhakrishnan, Gandhi and
Aurobindo.36 Undoubtedly Christians have deepened their own theology in
dialogue with ...
The
Other Half of My Soul: Bede Griffiths and the Hindu-Christian ... - Page 203 - Beatrice
Bruteau, Bede
Griffiths - 1996 - 397 pages - Preview The two contemporaries most influential upon
Griffiths' life and thought were Mohandas Gandhi and Aurobindo Chose. On the impact of the latter upon
his thinking, Griffiths
said, "For many years I studied his writings — they have a ...
Hindu-Christian Dialogue: Perspectives and Encounters - Page 106 - Harold
Coward - 1993 - 285 pages - Preview Keshab Chunder Sen had come to Europe to
learn; Gandhi and AurobindoGhosh
and Nehru to acquire an education; Radhakrishnan, like Vivekananda before him,
came to teach. Throughout his career Radhakrishnan waged tireless war
against ... Indian critiques of Gandhi
- Harold
G. Coward, Harold
G. Coward - 2003 - 287 pages - Though both Gandhi and Aurobindo would claim
"experience" as their authorities, their experiences were quite
different and Aurobindo understood Gandhi's as inferior, lower level. Thus,
from his understanding of the yogic experience he ...
Ascetic culture: renunciation and worldly engagement - Page 114 - Karigoudar
Ishwaran - 1999 - 160 pages - Preview ... who,
nevertheless, is a monastic, supports the point with which I began this paper:
Hindus identify modernity with certain monastics or ascetics, such as
Dayananda, Gandhi and Aurobindo,
but most importantly with Vivekananda, ...
The Political Thourght of Annie Besant - Page 102 - K.
S. Bharathi - 1998 - 143 pages - Preview Like Mazzini, Gandhi and Aurobindo, Besant with all her eloquent rhetoric in the
exaltation of the nation, accepted it as a stage — the stage of individuality.
The second or higher stage was the consummation of a commonwealth of ...
Rabindranath Tagore: A centenary: Volumes 1861-1961 - Page 229
- Dr.
S. Radhakrishnan - 1992 - 531 pages - Preview One cannot fail to notice in this connexion that
while men like Bankimchandra, Tilak, Gandhi and Aurobindo went to the Gita for their ideological
sustenance and emotional and intellectual inspiration, Tagore sought out the Upanishads ...
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