We feel swept into a movement of accelerated evolution. All structures of themodern world are changing fast. More new problems arise from advances inscience and technology than can be solved. Man's mind cannot keep up with themovement he has created. What does this crisis mean? Will old values breakdown? Or will a civilization of dread and despair, of soulless regimentation,turn the human race into a giant ant-hill? NO. The aspirations of man revealother possibilites. This book is an anthology of Sri Aurobindo's writtings onthis very subject - the meaning of terrestrial life and of the presentevolutionary crisis.
Sri Aurobindo (Bengali: শ্রী অরবিন্দ Sri Ôrobindo) was an Indian nationalist and freedom fighter, major Indian English poet, philosopher, and yogi. He joined the movement for India's freedom from British rule and for a duration (1905–10), became one of its most important leaders, before turning to developing his own vision and philosophy of human progress and spiritual evolution.
The central theme of Sri Aurobindo's vision is the evolution of life into a "life divine". In his own words: "Man is a transitional being. He is not final. The step from man to superman is the next approaching achievement in the earth evolution. It is inevitable because it is at once the intention of the inner spirit and the logic of Nature's process."
P.B. Saint-Hilaire, known as Pavitra, was a devotee living at Sri Aurobindo Ashram. He pulled extracts from several of Sri Aurobindo's major works, to systematically present the evolutionary direction as described by Sri Aurobindo. An excellent, well-organized book that provides a quick overview of Sri Aurobindo's thought.