Praḷaya — The Cosmic Deluge

Praḷaya — The Cosmic Deluge

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Praḷaya — The Cosmic Deluge

Traditions tell us that a universe is created, then withdrawn into praḷaya, and then a new one comes; and according to them, ours is the seventh universe, and being the seventh universe, it is the one that will not return to pralaya but will go on progressing, without retreat. This is why, in fact, there is in the human being that need for permanence and for an uninterrupted progress—it’s because the time has come.

Can the manifestation come to its dissolution, its Pralaya?

A very old tradition, more ancient than the Vedas, says that the present manifestation is the seventh, and that the six preceding ones were followed by six pralayas, but this one will be transformed perpetually, without returning to the Creator.

3 September 1969

Agenda 4 of November 13, 1963: “Traditions tell us that a universe is created, then withdrawn into pralaya, and then a new one comes; and according to them, ours is the seventh universe, and being the seventh universe, it is the one that will not return to pralaya but will go on progressing, without retreat.” See also Agenda 7 of March 4, 1966, and Agenda 8 of May 6, 1967 

“…in the Truth-Creation the law is that of a constant unfolding without any Pralaya.” What is this constant unfolding?

The Truth-Creation… it is the last line? (Mother consults the book) I think we have already spoken about this several times. It has been said that in the process of creation, there is the movement of creation followed by a movement of preservation and ending in a movement of disintegration or destruction; and even it has been repeated very often: “All that begins must end”, etc., etc.

In fact in the history of our universe there have been six consecutive periods which began by a creation, were prolonged by a force of preservation and ended by a disintegration, a destruction, a return to the Origin, which is called Pralaya; and that is why this tradition is there. But it has been said that the seventh creation would be a progressive creation, that is, after the starting-point of the creation, instead of its being simply followed by a preservation, it would be followed by a progressive manifestation which would express the Divine more and more completely, so that no disintegration and return to the Origin would be necessary. And it has been announced that the period we are in is precisely the seventh, that is, it would not end by a Pralaya, a return to the Origin, a destruction, a disappearance, but that it would be replaced by a constant progress, because it would be a more and more perfect unfolding of the divine Origin in its creation.

And this is what Sri Aurobindo says. He speaks of a constant unfolding, that is, the Divine manifests more and more completely; more and more perfectly, in a progressive creation. It is the nature of this progression which makes the return to the Origin, the destruction no longer necessary. All that does not progress disappears, and that is why physical bodies die, it’s because they are not progressive; they are progressive up to a certain moment, then there they stop and most often they remain stable for a certain time, and then they begin to decline, and then disappear. It’s because the physical body, physical matter as it is at present is not plastic enough to be able to progress constantly. But it is not impossible to make it sufficiently plastic for the perfecting of the physical body to be such that it no longer needs disintegration, that is, death.

Only, this cannot be realised except by the descent of the Supermind which is a force higher than all those which have so far manifested and which will give the body a plasticity that will allow it to progress constantly, that is, to follow the divine movement in its unfolding.

It was really very interesting. Afterwards it’s just a memory, no longer the thing…. It concerned the creation of the material world, the material universe, in the light of the conception of the Supreme in love with His emanation. But the vision was all-embracing, as if I were on the other side—the side of the Supreme, not of the creation—and saw the creation as a whole, with the true sense of progress, the true sense of advance, of movement, and the true way in which all that doesn’t belong to the future creation will disappear in a kind of pralaya (it can’t really “disappear” but it will be withdrawn from the Manifestation). And it was very interesting: all that doesn’t collaborate (in the sense that it is a sufficient experience, an experience that has come to its end) was reabsorbed. It was like the true vision of what was rendered as the Last Judgment. It is something going on constantly, that mighty “gust” of manifestation, and there are things that have been, according to our vision of time, but that live on, that continue to exist in the future; there are things that exhaust themselves (that’s in the present), and there are things that have no more purpose, that cannot keep pace with the movement (I don’t know how to explain this) and enter the Non-Being—the pralaya, the Non-Being, the unmanifest—of course, not in their forms but in their essence; that is to say, the Supreme in them remains the Supreme but unmanifest.

“…It’s a highly superior equilibrium.

“It reminded me of Théon who said that the world had been put forth and reabsorbed six times; in other words, that there had been six creations and six pralayas. And that now we were in the seventh creation, the last. The world would find a new, higher equilibrium, not static but progressive, which means there would be unending progress in equilibrium and harmony, without pralaya.”

(April 24, 1967)

Here Heraclitus brings in his formula of “One out of all and all out of One”, which is his account of the process of the cosmos just as his formula “All things are one” is his account of the eternal truth of the cosmos. One, he says, in the process of the cosmos is always becoming all things from moment to moment, hence the eternal flux of things; but all things also are eternally going back to their principle of oneness; hence the unity of the cosmos, the sameness behind the flux of becoming, the stability of measures, the conservation of energy in all changes. This he explains farther by his theory of change as in its character a constant exchange. But is there then no end to this simultaneous upward and downward motion of things? As the downward has so far prevailed as to create the cosmos, will not the upward too prevail so as to dissolve it back into the ever-living Fire? Here we come to the question whether Heraclitus did or did not hold the theory of a periodic conflagration or pralaya. “Fire will come on all things and judge and convict them.” If he held it, then we have again another striking coincidence of Heraclitus’ thought with our familiar Indian notions, the periodic pralaya, the Puranic conflagration of the world by the appearance of the twelve suns, the Vedantic theory of the eternal cycles of manifestation and withdrawal from manifestation. In fact, both the lines of thought are essentially the same and had to arrive inevitably at the same conclusions.

To be immortal was never held in the ancient spiritual teaching to consist merely in a personal survival of the death of the body: all beings are immortal in that sense and it is only the forms that perish. The souls that do not arrive at liberation, live through the returning aeons; all exist involved or secret in the Brahman during the dissolution of the manifest worlds and are born again in the appearance of a new cycle. Pralaya, the end of a cycle of aeons, is the temporary disintegration of a universal form of existence and of all the individual forms which move in its rounds, but that is only a momentary pause, a silent interval followed by an outburst of new creation, reintegration and reconstruction in which they reappear and recover the impetus of their progression. Our physical death is also a pralaya,—the Gita will presently use the word in the sense of this death, pralayaṁ yāti deha-bhṛt, “the soul bearing the body comes to a B.G.14.14 pralaya,” to a disintegration of that form of matter with which its ignorance identified its being and which now dissolves into the natural elements. But the soul itself persists and after an interval resumes in a new body formed from those elements its round of births in the cycle, just as after the interval of pause and cessation the universal Being resumes his endless round of the cyclic aeons. This immortality in the rounds of Time is common to all embodied spirits.

This Vedic imagery throws a clear light on the similar symbolic images of the Puranas, especially on the famous symbol of Vishnu sleeping after the pralaya on the folds of the snake Ananta upon the ocean of sweet milk. It may perhaps be objected that the Puranas were written by superstitious Hindu priests or poets who believed that eclipses were caused by a dragon eating the sun and moon and could easily believe that during the periods of non-creation the supreme Deity in a physical body went to sleep on a physical snake upon a material ocean of real milk and that therefore it is a vain ingenuity to seek for a spiritual meaning in these fables. My reply would be that there is in fact no need to seek for such meanings; for these very superstitious poets have put them there plainly on the very surface of the fable for everybody to see who does not choose to be blind. For they have given a name to Vishnu’s snake, the name Ananta, and Ananta means the Infinite; therefore they have told us plainly enough that the image is an allegory and that Vishnu, the all-pervading Deity, sleeps in the periods of non-creation on the coils of the Infinite. As for the ocean, the Vedic imagery shows us that it must be the ocean of eternal existence and this ocean of eternal existence is an ocean of absolute sweetness, in other words, of pure Bliss. For the sweet milk (itself a Vedic image) has, evidently, a sense not essentially different from the madhu, honey or sweetness, of Vamadeva’s hymn.

It is by the unity of this spiritual nature that the world is sustained, yayedaṁ dhāryate jagat, even as it is that from which B.G.7.5 B.G.7.6 it is born with all its becomings, etad-yonīni bhūtāni sarvāṇi, and that also which withdraws the whole world and its existences into itself in the hour of dissolution, ahaṁ kṛtsnasya jagataḥ prabhavaḥ pralayas tathā. But in the manifestation which is thus put forth in the Spirit, upheld in its action, withdrawn in its periodical rest from action, the Jiva is the basis of the multiple existence; it is the multiple soul, if we may so call it, or, if we prefer, the soul of the multiplicity we experience here. It is one always with the Divine in its being, different from it only in the power of its being,—different not in the sense that it is not at all the same power, but in this sense that it only supports the one power in a partial multiply individualised action. Therefore all things are initially, ultimately and in the principle of their continuance too the Spirit. The fundamental nature of all is nature of the Spirit, and only in their lower differential phenomena do they seem to be something else, to be nature of body, life, mind, reason, ego and the senses. But these are phenomenal derivatives, they are not the essential truth of our nature and our existence.

The idea that things are not in their place is something I understood even as a youngster, and it was eventually explained to me by Théon.

In his cosmogony, Theon accounted for the successive pralayas of the different universes by saying that each universe was an aspect of the Supreme manifesting itself: each universe was built upon one aspect of the Supreme, and all, one after the other, were withdrawn into the Supreme. He enumerated all the successively manifested aspects, and what an extraordinarily logical sequence it was! I have kept it some place, but I no longer know where. Nor do I remember exactly what number this universe has in the sequence, but this time it was supposed to be the universe which would not be withdrawn, which would, so to speak, follow an indefinite progression of Becoming. And this universe is to manifest Equilibrium, not a static but a progressive equilibrium. Equilibrium, as he explains it, is each thing exactly in its place: each vibration, each movement, each… and so on down the line—each form, each activity, each element exactly in its place in relation to the whole.

This is quite interesting to me because Sri Aurobindo says the same thing: that nothing is bad, simply things are not in their place—their place not only in space but in time, their place in the universe, beginning with the planets and stars, each thing exactly in its place. Then when each thing, from the most colossal to the most microscopic, is exactly in place, the whole Will PROGRESSIVELY express the Supreme, without having to be withdrawn and emanated anew. On this also, Sri Aurobindo based the fact that this present creation, this present universe, will be able to manifest the perfection of a divine world—what Sri Aurobindo calls the Supermind.

Equilibrium is the essential law of this creation—it is what permits perfection to be realized in the manifestation. …

Sri Aurobindo tells us that this perception of the world’s unreality need not exist for the supramental consciousness: only Falsehood is unreal , not the world. And this is most interesting—the world has its own reality, independent of Falsehood.

I suppose this will be the first effect of the Supermind—perhaps even its first effect in the individual, because it will begin in individuals first. …

But it’s so lovely when this Harmony comes. You know, puttering about, arranging papers, setting a drawer in order…. It all sings, it’s lovely, so joyous and luminous… so delightful! And all, all, all…. All material things, all activities, eating, dressing, everything becomes delightful when this harmony is there, delightful. Everything works out smoothly, it’s so harmonious, there’s no friction. You see… you see a joyous, luminous Grace manifesting in all things, ALL things, even those we normally regard as utterly unimportant. But then, if this Harmony withdraws, everything—exactly the SAME conditions, the SAME things, the SAME circumstances—becomes painful, tiresome, drawn out, difficult, laborious, oh!… It’s like this, and like that (Mother tilts her hand from side to side as on a narrow frontier) like this, like that.

It makes you sense so clearly that things in themselves don’t count. What we call ‘things in themselves’ are of no true importance! What really counts is the relationship of consciousness to these things. And there’s a formidable power in this, since in one instance you touch something and drop or mishandle it, while in the other it’s so lovely, it works so smoothly. Even the most difficult movements are made without difficulty. It’s an unheard-of power! We don’t give it importance because it has no grandiose effects, it’s not spectacular. Yes, there are indeed states of grace when one is in the presence of a great difficulty and suddenly has all the power needed to face it—yes, but that’s something else. I am speaking of a power active in ordinary life. …

And not only from here, but from far, far away on the earth and sometimes from far back in time, back into the past—things out of the past coming up, presenting themselves to the new Light to be put in their place. It’s always that: each thing wanting to be put in its place. And this work has to be done constantly…. It’s as if one keeps catching a new illness to be cured.

A fresh disorder to be straightened out.

Actually, we are very lazy.

Sri Aurobindo wrote that he was very lazy—that consoled me! We are very lazy. We would like (laughing) to settle back and blissfully enjoy the fruit of our labours!

Pralaya, in its essence, refers to the dissolution or disintegration of a universal form of existence at the end of a cosmic cycle. It is not an absolute annihilation but rather a temporary pause or withdrawal into the Supreme, followed by a new creation. This cyclical process reflects the rhythm of creation, preservation, and dissolution inherent in the universe.

  1. Cyclic Nature of Creation: Pralaya occurs when a creation has fulfilled its purpose or reached the limit of its possibilities. It is a return to the Origin, where the universe is reabsorbed into the Supreme before being re-manifested in a new form. This process has been described as occurring multiple times in the history of the cosmos, with our current creation being the seventh, which is believed to have the potential for progressive transformation without requiring dissolution [1 | cwm-Vol-07] [2 | cwm-Vol-06] [3 | agenda-Vol-07] .
  2. Purpose of Pralaya: It serves as a means to refine and perfect the manifestation. Elements that no longer serve the evolutionary purpose or cannot keep pace with the movement of consciousness are withdrawn into the unmanifest. This is not destruction in the conventional sense but a reabsorption into the Supreme’s essence [4 | agenda-Vol-04] [5 | agenda-Vol-04] .
  3. Progressive Creation: Unlike earlier cycles, the current creation is envisioned as one of progressive equilibrium, where transformation replaces the need for dissolution. This aligns with the idea of a universe capable of continuous evolution and perfection, guided by the descent of higher consciousness, such as the supramental force [7 | agenda-Vol-07] .

In summary, Pralaya is due to the inherent rhythm of the cosmos, where dissolution is a necessary phase for renewal and higher evolution. It reflects the Supreme’s dynamic play of manifestation and withdrawal, aimed at achieving greater harmony and perfection in creation.

The Biblical Deluge (or Noah’s Flood) is a catastrophic, global flood narrative found in Genesis 6-9. Because of human wickedness, God sends a massive flood to destroy all life, sparing only Noah, his family, and animals on a large ark. The flood lasts over a year, with rain falling for 40 days and waters covering the highest mountains for 150 days.

The flood is a reversal and renewal of God’s creation of the world. Bandstra pictures the destruction of creation as a return to the universe’s pre-creation state of watery chaos so that it can be remade through the microcosm of Noah’s Ark. In Genesis 1 God separated the “waters above the earth” from those below so that dry land can appear as a home for living things, but in the flood story the “windows of heaven” and “fountains of the deep” are opened so that the world is returned to the watery chaos of the time before creation. Even the sequence of flood events mimics that of creation, the flood first covering the earth to the highest mountains, then destroying, in order, birds, cattle, beasts, “swarming creatures”, and finally mankind. The Ark itself is likewise a microcosm of Solomon’s Temple. The flood is a reversal and renewal of God’s creation of the world. Bandstra pictures the destruction of creation as a return to the universe’s pre-creation state of watery chaos so that it can be remade through the microcosm of Noah’s Ark. In Genesis 1 God separated the “waters above the earth” from those below so that dry land can appear as a home for living things, but in the flood story the “windows of heaven” and “fountains of the deep” are opened so that the world is returned to the watery chaos of the time before creation. Even the sequence of flood events mimics that of creation, the flood first covering the earth to the highest mountains, then destroying, in order, birds, cattle, beasts, “swarming creatures”, and finally mankind. The Ark itself is likewise a microcosm of Solomon’s Temple.

Brahmapralaya

The Bhagavata Purana states that one kalpa (age), which consists of a thousand revolutions of the four ages, the Satya, Treta, Dvapara, and the Kali, and the reign of fourteen Manus, is one day in the life of the creator deity, Brahma. A pralaya is described to be an equal length of time, referred to as a night in the life of the deity. This form of the dissolution is caused by the sleep of Brahma, and is hence named after him. It is also called naimittika, which means, ‘occasional’. During this period, Narayana withdraws the universe within him, and also rests upon his serpent mount, Shesha. 

Prakritapralaya

The Vishnu Purana describes the Prakritapralaya. After the completion of 1,000 four-age cycles or a kalpa, a great flood is unleashed on Bhumi, the earth, by Prakriti, the personification of nature. When Jala (water) reaches the abode of the Saptarishis, the entire world is encompassed by a single ocean. The breath of Vishnu disperses all the clouds and reabsorbs them, after which he proceeds to sleep. When Agni destroys the world and nature, elemental dissolution begins. Jala swallows the gunas of the earth, and subsequently the universe, after which its rasa is devoured by Agni. When Akasha is consumed by the flames of Agni, Vayu and sound permeate throughout, becoming one with Agni by absorbing its guna. When Vayu comes into contact with ether, it loses its elemental potency, causing ether alone to occupy the vacuum. Consciousness, combined with darkness, take over the universe, which in turn is conquered by Buddhi. At this juncture, the seven components of Prakriti recombine. At that point Urvashi is impregnated by the pious seeds of those who dwell in Swarg lok and engage in passionate coitus. The Hiranyagarbha of Brahma dissolves in the waters that surround Prakriti. Prakriti fuses with Purusha, assimilating Buddhi, becoming Brahman.

 From Wikipedia/

19 responses to “Praḷaya — The Cosmic Deluge”

  1. sylviekabir Avatar
    sylviekabir

    “Only Falsehood is unreal, not the world.”

    The world is real. Matter can express the Divine. The manifestation can become more conscious. Evolution is not the production of perfection; it is the progressive revelation of what already is.

    The cosmology of pralaya describes the rhythm of manifestation: appearance, unfolding, dissolution. But the recognition of fundamental consciousness reveals something deeper: nothing essential is ever destroyed. The true transformation is therefore not cosmic before being inner. It begins with the recognition that the consciousness seeking truth is already the reality in which the world appears.

    The ego defines itself by exclusion: I am this and not that. It reduces the total experience to an imaginary center that declares itself its owner. Fundamental consciousness is neither an object nor an identity: it is that in which everything appears. To identify with it therefore means to be everything and nothing: everything, because every experience appears in it; nothing, because it is no particular form.

    This recognition dissolves the contraction of the ego. From this naturally emerge transparency, humility and plasticity: the person becomes a local expression of the totality.

    From this openness arises naked faith: not a belief, but an objectless trust in the reality that unfolds by itself. Thus action ceases to be guided by fear or by the defense of an identity. It becomes the direct response of consciousness to the situation.

    That is why right action can only emerge from this free space, at the service of Reality.

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    1. RY Deshpande Avatar
      RY Deshpande

      “… the person becomes a local expression of the totality.” That is the whole real-idea behind the manifestation, each person with his own individuality, uniqueness, its soul-quality, indivisualisation, one not against another, but in the joy of variation and exploration. In it nothing is lost but everything is gained for its aṃsha-divinity, dazzle of the great Fire, sparks and sparks in the whole sky, the stars fulfilling their presence in the density of darkness for the illumination of the blazing diamonds. He was alone, he wanted to be many, bahusyāma, for companionship. That is the original Kāma, Desire, or one may say, will, saṃkalpa

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  2. RY Deshpande Avatar
    RY Deshpande

    Six creations were made and dissolved. They could not achieve what they were meant for. Was that a trial-and-error approach? Could not their failure foreseen? Or was the full play of forces and possibilities allowed? Seems so. There is the delight of the unexpected!

    “The present earth in its turn appears as the scene of life, Mars being its last theatre. In the Bhumi Agni Twashta is again the first principle, Matariswan the second, finally, Prajapati appears in the form of the four Manus, chatváro manavah.” Today earth is the “significant centre” for the divine manifestation. Why did Mars fail? The necessary Yoga-Tapasyā has now ben done on earth, and in it is the assuring realisation.

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  3. RY Deshpande Avatar
    RY Deshpande

    Perfection is not a maximum or an extreme. It is an equilibrium and a harmonisation.

    The Mother

    (CWM 15:78)

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    1. sylviekabir Avatar
      sylviekabir

      If each individual is truly an expression of the totality, then the totality cannot depend on the success or failure of the expression to be complete. The sparks do not add to the fire; they reveal it. In that perspective, evolution does not produce the Divine or complete it. It reveals, through forms and experiences, what is already the ground of everything. The movement of manifestation may unfold endlessly (exploring variation, relation, harmony), but the fundamental reality is not waiting for fulfillment.This is why the recognition of the underlying consciousness is so central. When the ego relaxes its claim to be the separate owner of experience, individuality does not disappear; it becomes transparent. The person is then truly a local expression of the whole, not a fragment competing with others. From there, harmony and equilibrium arise naturally, not as a final achievement of the universe, but as the spontaneous order that appears when consciousness is no longer contracted around a separate center. In that sense, what you call perfection as equilibrium and harmonisation resonates deeply. It is not the extreme of a process, but the natural balance that appears when each expression is aligned with the whole.

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  4. RY Deshpande Avatar
    RY Deshpande

    Brahma’s four mind-born sons, (manasaputras) the Four Kumaras—Sanaka, Sanandana, Sanatana, and Sanat Kumara—were instructed to go ahead and create progeny; but they wished to observe strict celibacy and refused to obey the advice. That is the extreme Freedom available to the creature. In their wisdom and call to themselves they focused themselves only on bhakti, devotion to Vishnu.

    Freedom is the boundless grandest feature available in this creation, a wonderful gift and a responsibility also. It can even go against God himself, the Divine, the Supreme, antagonism and enmity creeping in.

    The Biblical story of some of the Angels revolting against God himself is a creative myth based on this wonderful Freedom. “Every man hath a good and a bad angel attending on him. On my back, I have the cross and angel wings: rise above it, no matter what life throws at you.”

    Praḷaya has its seeds in this Freedom.

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    1. sylviekabir Avatar
      sylviekabir

      The idea that the original powers separated from their Source and became their opposites expresses something that many traditions try to describe: the appearance of division within the One.

      But it may also be helpful to look at what such myths are pointing to in lived experience. Freedom indeed seems central in this creation. Yet if the creature were truly separate from the Divine, its freedom would threaten the unity of the whole.

      The deeper paradox is that the freedom we experience arises within the very consciousness that is the ground of everything. In other words, the apparent separation is part of the play of manifestation, not a real rupture in the Absolute. Consciousness can appear as fragmentation, opposition, even ignorance, yet the underlying reality remains untouched. Seen from that perspective, the “fall” of the powers, the rebellion of angels, or the distortion of the original qualities are symbolic ways of describing the contraction of consciousness into limited identities.

      The ego claims autonomy, as if it were the owner of experience, and from that contraction come conflict, fear and division. But when that contraction relaxes and consciousness recognizes itself as the field in which all experience appears, the situation changes completely. Individuality does not disappear; it becomes transparent. Freedom then is no longer the freedom to oppose the Divine, but the freedom of the Divine expressing itself through countless forms.

      In that sense, what restores harmony is not primarily an external intervention but the recognition of the underlying reality. Love, Light or Truth are not introduced into matter from outside; they are revealed as its deepest nature.Then evolution can be seen as the gradual unveiling of what has always been present. Sorry for repetitions ☺️

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  5. RY Deshpande Avatar
    RY Deshpande

    The Mother’s Story of Creation narrated in several places, based on what she got from Théon, is an articulate example of the beauty of this Freedom. It tells how Four Powers separated themselves from their Origin and became their own opposites.

    The Story unfolds as a symbolic and evocative account of the cosmic drama. It begins with the Supreme delegating the creative power to the universal Mother, who emanates four beings to develop the universe. These emanations represent Consciousness and Light, Ananda and Love, Life, and Truth. However, these beings, conscious of their immense power, sever their connection with the Supreme and act independently. This separation leads to a distortion of their original qualities: Consciousness becomes unconsciousness, Light turns into darkness, Ananda transforms into suffering, Love becomes hate, Life turns into death, and Truth becomes falsehood. These distortions result in the creation of Matter and the emergence of the Asuras, embodying these negative forces.

    Seeing the chaos, the universal Mother appeals to the Supreme for intervention. The Supreme responds by emanating Love directly into Matter, bypassing the intermediate worlds. This descent of Love becomes the primordial source of the Divine within material substance, initiating the process of uplifting Matter from within. Alongside this, the gods are created to inhabit intermediary zones and assist in restoring order. These gods, fashioned with care to avoid the mistakes of the first emanations, preside over the creation of the material universe, including Earth, which serves as a symbolic representation of the entire cosmos.

    The Earth, though astronomically insignificant, holds profound occult significance as a concentrated symbol of the universe. Transforming the Earth is seen as a means to transform the entire cosmos through analogy and contagion. The Mother herself descends into the obscurity of Matter, bearing its pain and suffering, to lead it toward Light, Truth, and Ananda. This act is described as the great sacrifice of the Divine Mother, who takes upon herself the burden of creation’s imperfections to uplift it to its divine potential.

    This narrative, while symbolic and simplified for human understanding, encapsulates profound spiritual truths about the interplay of freedom, choice, and divine intervention in the cosmic evolution. It highlights the transformative power of Love and the Mother’s role as the guiding force in the journey from darkness to Light.

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    1. sylviekabir Avatar
      sylviekabir

      “That is whole; this is whole. From the Whole the whole universe has come.When the whole is taken from the Whole, the Whole remains the Whole.”

      ॐ पूर्णमदः पूर्णमिदं पूर्णात् पूर्णमुदच्यते ।पूर्णस्य पूर्णमादाय पूर्णमेवावशिष्यते ॥ Īśā Upaniṣad Invocation (pūrṇam adaḥ pūrṇam idam)“..

      The Divine Himself is something absolute, someone self-existent… not existing by his aspects, but they existing because of Him.” Sri Aurobindo, letters on yoga

      “This Divine by his power has created the world or rather manifested it in his own infinite Being.”

      “But here in the material world… he has hidden himself in what seem to be his opposites, Non-Being, Inconscience and Insentience.”

      “The Being which is hidden in what seems to be an inconscient void emerges in the world first in Matter, then in Life, then in Mind and finally as the Spirit.”. Sri Aurobindo, On Himself and on the Mother

      But Théon’s cosmology introduces a rupture. In the narrative taken up by Mother:- 4 original powers, – a separation from the Divine, – a transformation into their opposites, – the birth of unconsciousness, suffering, and falsehood.

      “They separated themselves from the Divine and wanted to exist independently; and that is how they became the adverse forces.”Questions and Answers 1957–1958

      If these powers can truly separate, then only two possibilities exist:

      – the separation is real,then the Absolute is not truly absolute.

      – the separation is apparent,then there has never been a real rupture.

      Chāndogya Upaniṣad 6.2.1:“In the beginning, my dear, this was Being alone, one only without a second.”

      “All this indeed is Brahman. From It does the universe arise, in It does it dissolve, and in It does it breathe.” Chāndogya Upaniṣad “sarvaṁ khalv idaṁ brahma”

      “The world is therefore not a figment of conception in the universal Mind, but a conscious birth of that which is beyond Mind into forms of itself.”. ..“Mind, Life and Body are an inferior consciousness and a partial expression which strives… at that superior expression of itself already existent to the Beyond-Mind.” Sri Aurobindo, The Life Divine

      “This Ignorance is… really a power of the Knowledge to limit itself, to concentrate itself on the work in hand… an exclusive concentration… which does not prevent the full existence and working of the whole conscious being behind.”… “The beginning of Ignorance is a limitation of Knowledge…” Sri Aurobindo “Evolution has not been merely something material… it has been an evolution of consciousness.” Sri Aurobindo, The Future Poetry

      Thus the cosmic drama: fall, separation, redemption, is symbolic or phenomenological. It describes the experience of limited consciousness.

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      1. RY Deshpande Avatar
        RY Deshpande

        “Thus the cosmic drama: fall, separation, redemption, is symbolic or phenomenological.”

        That would make the whole thing a sham, not worth pursuing, based on limited consciousness with no door of escape out of it. Or else, `a la Shankara, False, Mithyā, dismissing it altogether. I will not knock off the factuality of Separation, of the appearance of Shunya, Void, for a creative gain. Separation is a strong recognition of Freedom, a functional Recognition with a purpose. Give Freedom a free hand. The absolute Absolute remains beyond all that, just That, Tat, beyond any description.

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      2. sylviekabir Avatar
        sylviekabir

        The separation is genuinely experienced, but it is not an ontological rupture. It is indeed a contraction of consciousness within its own freedom. “citiḥ svatantrā viśva-siddhi-hetuḥ”

        Consciousness, being absolutely free, manifests the universe.“svātantryāt saṅkoca-vikāsa-rūpaḥ” Through its freedom it assumes the forms of contraction and expansion.

        Therefore separation is not a sham, nor a fall that would require repair.

        It is the experiential mode through which consciousness explores its own freedom.The contraction is real as experience, but it never becomes a real division in the nature of consciousness itself. “yasya unmeṣa-nimeṣābhyām jagataḥ pralaya-udayau ” The universe appears and disappears through the pulsation of that consciousness.

        Thus the cosmic drama is not the correction of a primordial rupture but the unfolding of freedom itself.

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  6. RY Deshpande Avatar
    RY Deshpande

    We have this Story of Creation in Savitri at a few places, for instance:

    In the enigma of the darkened Vasts,

    In the passion and self-loss of the Infinite

    When all was plunged in the negating Void,

    Non-Being’s night could never have been saved

    If Being had not plunged into the dark

    Carrying with it its triple mystic cross. ||40.30||

    Invoking in world-time the timeless truth,

    Bliss changed to sorrow, knowledge made ignorant,

    God’s force turned into a child’s helplessness

    Can bring down heaven by their sacrifice. ||40.31||

    A contradiction founds the base of life:

    The eternal, the divine Reality

    Has faced itself with its own contraries;

    Being became the Void and Conscious-Force

    Nescience and walk of a blind Energy

    And Ecstasy took the figure of world-pain. ||40.32||

    In a mysterious dispensation’s law

    A Wisdom that prepares its far-off ends

    Planned so to start her slow aeonic game. ||40.33||

    A blindfold search and wrestle and fumbling clasp

    Of a half-seen Nature and a hidden Soul,

    A game of hide and seek in twilit rooms,

    A play of love and hate and fear and hope

    Continues in the nursery of mind

    Its hard and heavy romp of self-born twins. ||40.34||

    At last the struggling Energy can emerge

    And meet the voiceless Being in wider fields;

    Then can they see and speak and, breast to breast,

    In a larger consciousness, a clearer light,

    The Two embrace and strive and each know each

    Regarding closer now the playmate’s face. ||40.35||

    Even in these formless coilings he could feel

    Matter’s response to an infant stir of soul. ||40.36||

    In Nature he saw the mighty Spirit concealed,

    Watched the weak birth of a tremendous Force,

    Pursued the riddle of Godhead’s tentative pace,

    Heard the faint rhythms of a great unborn Muse. ||40.37||

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  7. RY Deshpande Avatar
    RY Deshpande

    An inert Soul and a somnambulist Force

    Have made a world estranged from life and thought;

    The Dragon of the dark foundations keeps

    Unalterable the law of Chance and Death;

    On his long way through Time and Circumstance

    The grey-hued riddling nether shadow-Sphinx,

    Her dreadful paws upon the swallowing sands,

    Awaits him armed with the soul-slaying word:

    Across his path sits the dim camp of Night. ||89.29||

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  8. sylviekabir Avatar
    sylviekabir

    The lines you quote describe the appearance of contradiction within manifestation: “A contradiction founds the base of life: The eternal, the divine Reality Has faced itself with its own contraries.”

    The text itself says that the eternal Reality “has faced itself with its own contraries.” In other words, the opposition appears within the manifestation of the same Reality. The language of “Being became the Void” and “Conscious-Force Nescience” expresses a paradox of manifestation: the Divine appearing under conditions that conceal its own nature. Sri Aurobindo repeatedly describes evolution as the progressive emergence of what is already involved or concealed.

    So the drama described in Savitri—ignorance, suffering, apparent division—can be read as the experiential condition of consciousness involved in matter, rather than a literal metaphysical separation from the Divine.

    The poem itself hints at this when it speaks of a “Wisdom that prepares its far-off ends” and of the “slow aeonic game.” The opposition is therefore part of a process in which the hidden Spirit gradually reveals itself.

    Seen in that light, the imagery of fall, darkness, and struggle does not contradict the deeper unity of Being. It dramatizes the experience of consciousness discovering itself within the conditions of ignorance.

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  9. RY Deshpande Avatar
    RY Deshpande

    “Sri Aurobindo repeatedly describes evolution as the progressive emergence of what is already involved or concealed.”

    Evolution is not the reverse of Involution, tracing back all that gradually involved. It has another creative wonder, necessitating even the appearance of Avatars not at all present in Involution. It is the “holocaust of Prakriti” and not of the supreme Being, Purusha that must be admitted.

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    1. sylviekabir Avatar
      sylviekabir

      If evolution has a real creative dimension, it indeed concerns transformations within nature. And nothing demonstrates that these transformations move toward any intrinsic perfection.

      What we observe are differences and changes, not a demonstrable progression from the dense to the subtle, from the ugly to the beautiful, or from ignorance to knowledge. Much ancient beauty has disappeared; much new ugliness has appeared. At the same time, new forms of beauty have emerged and certain former forms of ugliness have vanished.The same can be said about knowledge and human capacities.

      What we can observe is transformation and variation, not an unequivocal movement toward perfection. Realization or perfection, therefore cannot depend on the cosmic process.Transformations may occur within the unfolding of nature, but they are not the condition for recognition of perfection nor for the realization of the Absolute Divine.

      This perspective does not diminish the value of the world; it lightens the whole question.The possibility remains open, not as a distant promise of future perfection, but as a living possibility of glory and joy fully present in each moment.

      And this is what should not be missed: “the living possibility of glory and joy fully present in each moment”.

      If the emphasis shifts toward a hypothetical supramental realization that would one day transform the world, and that would depend on a présent and future collective participation of humanity, then the immediate recognition of what already is risks being overlooked.

      no..?

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  10. RY Deshpande Avatar
    RY Deshpande

    AI Answers:

    What is perfection? Can the perfect be more perfect? Ontologically is there an ascending scale of perfection?

    Perfection, as explored in the teachings of Sri Aurobindo and The Mother, is a profound and dynamic concept that transcends static definitions. It is not a fixed apex or an extreme state but rather a progressive, dynamic equilibrium—a harmony that evolves continuously. This understanding of perfection is deeply tied to the evolutionary nature of existence and the unfolding of consciousness.

    Can the Perfect Be More Perfect?

    Yes, the perfect can indeed become more perfect. Perfection is not a finality but an ongoing process of refinement and growth. The possibility of something better is intrinsic to the very nature of progress. This dynamic aspect of perfection reflects the infinite potential of the Divine, where each realization opens the door to greater heights of harmony and expression [1 | cwm-Vol-04] [2 | cwm-Vol-15] .Ontological Scale of Perfection

    Ontologically, there is an ascending scale of perfection that corresponds to the evolution of consciousness. Each plane of existence—Matter, Life, Mind, Supermind, and Spirit—has its own inherent perfection. However, these perfections are not static absolutes but are part of a larger, interconnected hierarchy. For instance, the perfection of the material world, with its beauty and order, is distinct from the perfection of the mental or spiritual realms. Yet, these are not in competition but are expressions of the Divine in different modes and degrees [3 | cwsa-Vol-27] [4 | cwsa-Vol-25] .

    The ultimate perfection is described as a state where the receptivity of the being is perfectly aligned with the Divine Force that seeks to manifest. This supreme equilibrium is not a cessation of progress but a realization in constant evolution, where the higher perfection integrates and transforms the lower without negating it [5 | cwm-Vol-04] [6 | cwm-Vol-04] .The Integral Perspective

    From the perspective of integral yoga, perfection involves the divinization of all aspects of existence—physical, vital, mental, and spiritual. It is not merely about individual attainment but encompasses the collective, the earthly, and the universal. True perfection is achieved when every part of the being and every aspect of life becomes a harmonious expression of the Divine Truth [7 | cwsa-Vol-24] [8 | cwsa-Vol-24] .

    In summary, perfection is a journey rather than a destination, an ever-expanding realization of the Divine’s infinite potential. It is both a state of being and a process of becoming, where each step forward reveals new horizons of harmony and beauty. This understanding invites us to embrace progress as the essence of perfection and to aspire toward the highest possibilities of our existence.

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  11. RY Deshpande Avatar
    RY Deshpande

    About Perfection, I will give a parallel quote from Physics:

    Thermodynamics has a strange reputation among physicists.

    Arnold Sommerfeld once joked about it perfectly:

    Thermodynamics is a funny subject. The first time you go through it, you don’t understand it at all. The second time you go through it, you think you understand it, except for one or two small points. The third time you go through it, you know you don’t understand it, but by that time you are so used to it, it doesn’t bother you any more.

    – Arnold Sommerfeld (1868-1951)

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