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El. knyga: Mother of the Sri Aurobindo Ashram: Co-Creator of the Integral Yoga

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The Mother of the Sri Aurobindo Ashram: Co-Creator of the Integral Yoga analyzes the contributions of the Mother (née Mirra Alfassa, 1878-1973) to the Integral Yoga that she and Sri Aurobindo (né Aurobindo Ghose, 1872-1950) co-created for his ashram. Scholars have ignored Mirra for Aurobindo, which prevents a full understanding of their spiritual practice. Scholars have also avoided examining work Aurobindo produced after they began their partnership in 1920 until his death in 1950, and privileged the written output in his journal Arya from 1914 to 1921. In this initial fertile period, he put forth his innovative teaching about what he called the Supermind, an emergent human faculty that he said would manifest a new humanity and a new earth through Mirras body. Mirra claimed that after his death in 1956 this manifestation happened as he foretold. Mirras work in the ashram from his death until hers in 1973 reveals important ways that she both fulfilled and changed Aurobindos initial vision. These developments are chiefly based on her experiences of mental dissolution while her body gained a new supramental form and consciousness.

Recenzijos

Patrick Beldios creative and pioneering study, The Mother of the Sri Aurobindo Ashram: Co-Creator of the Integral Yoga, examines the various ways that Mirra Alfassa helped to shape, and further develop, the Integral Yoga tradition inaugurated by Sri Aurobindo. Combining scholarly acumen with a disarmingly personal approach, the book breaks new ground in our understanding of the spiritual and philosophical contours of Integral Yoga and provides an urgently needed corrective to the tendency in scholarship to emphasize Aurobindo at the expense of the Mother. -- Swami Medhananda, UCLA and University of Southern California In a work that is both structured by systematic scholarship and suffused with spiritual sensibility, Patrick Beldio explores the teachings and practices of Sri Aurobindo and Mirra Alfassa. He highlights certain synergies with respect to their visions of the transfiguration of humanity and also delineates certain clarifications and amplifications developed by Mirra. Sketching the distinctiveness of Mirras search on yogic and aesthetic pathways, Beldio correlates it to some contemporary quests for truth in contexts of religious diversity. Through Beldios sagely guidance, the reader is directed towards landscapes of Integral Yoga animated by the power of the divine feminine. -- Ankur Barua, University of Cambridge The Mother of the Sri Aurobindo Ashram is a welcome and needed addition to the library of Aurobindo studies, as Patrick Beldio gently but insistently restores to Mother Mirra Alfassa her rightful place in the story of the integral yoga. We are shown too a panoramic view of the remarkable community of spiritual masters east and west to which Mirra and Aurobindo truly belong. Indeed, Beldio himself turns out to be not just an observer but a welcome participant pilgrim, artist in the spiritual awakening of our times. -- Francis X. Clooney, SJ, Harvard Divinity School This original study offers significant new research and insights into an often-overlooked figure. As the first extensive academic exploration of Mirra Alfassa, The Mother of the Sri Aurobindo Ashram rectifies her longstanding marginalisation in the field of Aurobindo Studies. Beldio highlights her critical role in formalising Aurobindos innovative "Integral Yoga" while also re-establishing her significance as a spiritual leader in her own right. -- Alex Wolfers, University of Cambridge

Daugiau informacijos

This groundbreaking book in comparative theology analyzes the contributions of the Mother to the Integral Yoga that she and Sri Aurobindo co-created. The book reveals important ways that she both fulfilled and changed his initial vision that are based on her experiences of what they called the Supermind.
Acknowledgements

Preface: The Divine Mother & The Men Who Revealed Her to Me

Introduction: State of the Field and My Comparative Theological Method

Part I: Sri Aurobindo, The Mother, and the New Being

Chapter 1: Divine Madness: Sri Aurobindos Intellectual and Spiritual
Development

Chapter 2: Spiritual Dualité: Mirra Joins Aurobindo to Universalize
Supermind

Chapter 3: The New Being: Mirras and Aurobindos Posthuman Ideal of
Wholeness

Part II: The Four Personalities of Mahakti

Chapter 4: The Wisdom of Mahevar: Mental Annihilation and the Integral
Yoga

Chapter 5: The Strength of Mahkal: Progress through Opposition in the
Integral Yoga

Chapter 6: The Harmony of Mahlakm: The Yoke of Beauty and Love in the
Integral Yoga

Chapter 7: The Perfection of Mahsarasvat: The Integral Yoga as a Descendant
Path to God Realization

Conclusion: Divine Revelation Across Creation and History

Appendix 1: Timeline

Appendix 2: Two Periods of Mirras and Aurobindos Written and Creative
Production

Bibliography

About the Author
Patrick Beldio is visiting assistant professor of the Theology/Religious Studies department at the University of Scranton.