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Details of the Book:
Name: The Concept of
Personality in Sri Aurobindo’s Integral Yoga Psychology and A. Maslow’s
Humanistic/Transpersonal Psychology
Page: 224
ISBN: 81-215-0647-6
Price: INR 275
Cover: Hard bound
Edition: 1995
Publisher: Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt. Ltd. Post Box 5715, 54 Rani Jhansi
Road, New Delhi 110 055, INDIA
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ABSTRACT:
The aim of this work is,
in the first place, to make a comparison between the psycho-logical insights
underling Sri Aurobindo's Integral Yoga and the Humanistic and Transpersonal
psychologies developed by Abraham Maslow, together
with their respective views on the various levels of human consciousness; in the
second place, the intention is to pinpoint and reveal hitherto unexplored
features in the works of both – a very extensive task of which only a little has
been done - with reference to the writings of some other authors who have
interpreted the psychological aspects of either Sri Aurobindo or Abraham Maslow.
In attempting to measure some of the basic postulates of these two thinkers it
is essential to bear in mind that the psychologies of Sri Aurobindo and Maslow
are founded on two different kinds of knowledge. Both based their psychology on
authentic experience, but Sri Aurobindo expressed his insights largely in the
language of Indian metaphysics, while Maslow used the Western empirical
approach, struggling with the language of science.
Maslow’s metaphysical assumptions do not go beyond the intellect; they are based
on speculations about the ultimate reality and have only limited spiritual
value. For Sri Aurobindo, it is only by going beyond mind that each of us can
contact and know the ultimate reality; only spiritual intuition and experience
can reveal the nature of truth. Intellectual thinking, as an instrument for
expressing the nature of truth, comes in only secondarily, as a judge of
generalised statements drawn from supra-intellectual experience.
Throughout this work we are dealing with two different but often overlapping
philosophies, and a crucial element in this comparison is the language that each
employs. It is not immediately evident at any given point whether an apparent
similarity or opposition in their views is a matter of ideas or simply of
terminology.
Sri Aurobindo, born in the 19th century and educated in the classical tradition
of the Occident as well as self-educated in the tradition of his native cultural
heritage, employs the English of the intelligentsia of his time supplemented by
the specific terminology of the Hindu tradition, sometimes in the original
Sanskrit and sometimes in various translations.
Maslow, on the other hand, although he had read a great deal on eastern
thinkers, was a citizen of the United States of America, where the development
of language was diverging from the British mainstream. He thus employed a syntax
and nomenclature which was far more idiomatic, colloquial and immediate in its
impact than that of his predecessors in the field of psychology: his language
had almost nothing in common with the language of Sri Aurobindo, classical
scholar and mystic seer in the Hindu tradition.
It should be emphasised here that this thesis is not a comprehensive study of
the complete works of the two thinkers, but rather a critical survey of some of
their points of agreement and divergence; care has been taken not to lose sight
at any point of what is essential in their respective visions.
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Details of the Book:
Name: The
Quest for the Inner Man: Transpersonal
Psychology and Integral
Sadhana
Page: 282
ISBN: 81-208-1502-5
Price: INR 200
Cover: Paperback
Edition: April 1996
Publisher:
Motilal Banarsidass, New Delhi, INDIA
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ABSTRACT:
Transpersonal psychotherapy is
characterised by the acceptance of the spiritual and cosmic dimensions of the
personality, and the possibility of the development of higher states of
consciousness.
The transpersonal psychotherapist examines
the negative influence of psychological conflicts on spiritual development, and
the positive influence of spiritual practices on intrapersonal and
interpersonal conflicts. By including spiritual development in the
therapeutical level the transpersonal psycho-therapist moves towards the dynamic
process of self-transcendence where the individual is seen against his cosmic
background. Sadhana,
the spiritual practice or discipline of Yoga, is related to the gradual
unfoldment of the divine consciousness present in each and every being and
which ultimately leads to the Divine life. Sri Aurobindo’s integral sadhana
aims at the growth of a new consciousness and new inner life in which the
surface personality, if looked at from the true and larger consciousness,
becomes an instrument for its own perfection. It is not an escape from the world to God,
but a transformation of the seeker’s integral being into the terms of
God-existence, i.e., to transform one’s entire being into God, ‘so that in a
sense God Himself, the real person in us, becomes the Sadhaka (spiritual
practitioner) of the Sadhana’. In this critical survey the author tries to
reveal unexplored features of two different but often overlapping approaches. It is not always evident whether apparent
similarities or divergences in their views are a matter of ideas or simply of
terminology, and this work attempts to give the reader
a clear insight and a deep
appreciation of their respective psychological views.
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Details of the Book:
Name: The Perennial
Quest for a Psychology with a Soul : An inquiry into the relevance of Sri
Aurobindo’s metaphysical yoga psychology in the context of Ken Wilber’s
integral psychology
Page: 568
ISBN: 81-208-1932-2
Price: INR 895
Cover: Hard bound
Edition: 2002
Publisher: Motilal Banarsidass 41 U.A. Bungalow Road, Jawahar Nagar, Delhi 110 007
INDIA
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ABSTRACT:
This
work aims at creating an impetus for a wider and richer understanding of Sri
Aurobindo's and Ken Wilber's views, without jumping to general conclusions
concerning 'essential' differences and ‘ultimate’ identities; it endeavours to
maintain the autonomy and multi-dimensional richness of each discipline. The
reflections and critical comments aim to analyse and to clarify various
discrepancies between them. The author does not assert the superiority of one
view over the other and does not want to argue whose thought is the correct
one. He goes beyond allegiance to any one approach, as each model contributes
something of value to the understanding of the complexity of Being. The author
has broad sympathy with the aims and intentions of both thinkers, and tries to
supplement this sympathy with a critical impartiality.
The subject matter of this book is so
vast that it would be presumptuous to attempt to deal with it comprehensively
and it would be pre-posterous to pretend a final solution to a set of ideas
as comprehensive as these worldviews. The author is aware that the contents of
this comparative study may appear offensive to the followers of Sri Aurobindo,
or be interpreted by Ken Wilber as a mis-representation of his works, but this
study only aims at indicating some possible potentials of both integral thinkers
that are not being utilised. He tries to stimulate a fruitful dialogue and evaluates
this dialogue in a sympathetic manner when he refers to the intentions of both
thinkers.
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