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CHAPTER 9 - Sri Aurobindo's Concept of Evolution of Consciousness: Exploration through the Paradigm of Health and Disease

from III - Building Bridges: Evolution, Consciousness and Healing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 March 2012

Rajni Vyas
Affiliation:
obstetrician by profession, is also a teacher
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Summary

This paper examines how Sri Aurobindo extended the concept of evolution as enunciated by Charles Darwin to consciousness and being (personality).

The genius of Charles Darwin pervaded the scientific West in the 1890s. Europe was gripped by the theory of evolution during the formative years of Sri Aurobindo's personality. When he returned to India in 1892 to take up his assignment at Vadodara (then Baroda) under Maharaja Sayaji Rao, the idealist Arvind Ghosh was already on the path to becoming Sri Aurobindo. He was to delve in the modern scientific theories of his time and study Indian philosophical concepts in depth. This was not to search for a synthesis. That would have been an elementary exercise for average minds. The sages and seers evolve their own visions of Reality that transcend the knowledge of their age by a quantum jump. Through the intuitive insight that penetrated the Upanishadic enunciation of Ultimate Reality, he saw that evolution also evolves (Aurobindo, 1921a, pp.1–8). He elaborated on this vision on both individual and universal scales.

This paper limits its scope to the evolution of consciousness of an individual in the unfolding of his/her personality and how it correlates with the expression of health and disease. Sri Aurobindo's philosophical postulates are then juxtaposed with modern science in terms of New Biology and advances in medicine in order to evaluate and establish that he indeed foresaw.

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Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2009

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