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INDIA'S PAST ACHIEVEMENTS: Sri Aurobindo in "Renaissance of India"
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“For three thousand years at least, — it is indeed much longer, — she has been creating abundantly and
incessantly, lavishly, with an inexhaustible many-sidedness, republics and kingdoms and empires, philosophies
and cosmogonies and sciences and creeds and arts and poems and all kinds of monuments, palaces and
temples and public works, communities and societies and religious orders, laws and codes and rituals, physical
sciences, psychic sciences, systems of Yoga, systems of politics and administration, arts spiritual, arts worldly,
trades, industries, fine crafts, — the list is endless and in each item there is almost a plethora of activity. She
creates and creates and is not satisfied and is not tired; she will not have an end of it, seems hardly to need a
space for rest, a time for inertia and lying fallow. She expands too outside her borders; her ships cross the ocean
and the fine superfluity of her wealth brims over to Judea and Egypt and Rome; her colonies spread her arts and
epics and creeds in the Archipelago; her traces are found in the sands of Mesopotamia; her religions conquer
China and Japan and spread westward as far as Palestine and Alexandria, and the figures of the Upanishads
and the sayings of the Buddhists are re-echoed on the lips of Christ. Everywhere, as on her soil, so in her works
there is the teeming of a super-abundant energy of life.
India has been pre-eminently the land of the Dharma and the Shastra. She searched for the inner truth and law of
each human or cosmic activity, its Dharma; that found, she laboured to cast into elaborate form and detailed law
of arrangement its application in fact and rule of life. Her first period was luminous with the discovery of the Spirit;
her second completed the discovery of the Dharma; her third elaborated into detail the first simpler formulation of
the Shastra; but none was exclusive, the three elements are always present.
Therefore the second long epoch of India's greatness was an age of the intellect, the ethical sense, the dynamic
will in action enlightened to formulate and govern life in the lustre of spiritual truth. After the age of the Spirit, the
age of the Dharma; after the Veda and Upanishads, the heroic centuries of action and social formation, typal
construction and thought and philosophy, when the outward forms of Indian life and culture were fixed in their
large lines and even their later developments were being determined in the seed. The great classical age of Sanskrit culture was the flowering of this intellectuality into curiosity of detail in the refinements of scholarship,
science, art, literature, politics, sociology, mundane life. We see at this time too the sounding not only of
aesthetic, but of emotional and sensuous, even of vital and sensual experience. But the old spirituality reigned
behind all this mental and all this vital activity, and its later period, the post-classical, saw a lifting up of the whole
lower life and an impressing upon it of the values of the Spirit. This was the sense of the Puranic and Tantric
systems and the religions of Bhakti. Later Vaishnavism, the last fine flower of the Indian spirit, was in its essence
the taking up of the aesthetic, emotional and sensuous being into the service of the spiritual. It completed the
curve of the cycle.
In this third period the curious elaboration of all life into a science and an art assumes extraordinary proportions.
The mere mass of the intellectual production during the period from Asoka well into the Mahomedan epoch is
something truly prodigious, as can be seen at once if one studies the account which recent scholarship gives of it,
and we must remember that scholarship as yet only deals with a fraction of what is still lying extant and what is
extant is only a small percentage of what was once written and known. There is no historical parallel for such an
intellectual labour and activity before the invention of printing and the facilities of modern science; yet all that mass
of research and production and curiosity of detail was accomplished without these facilities and with no better
record than the memory and for an aid the perishable palm-leaf. Nor was all this colossal literature confined to
philosophy and theology, religion and Yoga, logic and rhetoric and grammer and linguistics, poetry and drama,
medicine and astronomy and the sciences; it embraced all life, politics and society, all the arts from painting to
dancing, all the sixty-four accomplishments, everything then known that could be useful to life or interesting to the
mind, even, for instance, to such practical side minutiae as the breeding and training of horses and elephants,
each of which had its Shastra and its art, its apparatus of technical terms, its copious literature. In each subject
from the largest and most momentous to the smallest and most trivial there was expended the same allembracing,
opulent, minute and thorough intellectuality. On one side there is an insatiable curiosity, the desire of
life to know itself in every detail, on the other a spirit of organisation and scrupulous order, the desire of the mind to
tread through life with a harmonised knowledge and in the right rhythm and measure. Thus an ingrained and
dominant spirituality, an inexhaustible vital creativeness and gust of life and, mediating between them, a powerful,
penetrating and scrupulous intelligence combined of the rational, ethical and aesthetic mind each at a high
intensity of action, created the harmony of the ancient Indian culture.”
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