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  1. He was instrumental in making Ramana Maharshi known all over the world. In the 1930s he asked permission to visit the Sri Aurobindo Ashram. He was allowed on the condition that he would write nothing on Sri Aurobindo: the Ashram did not want publicity.

  2. Paul Brunton included Sri Aurobindo's term of the "Intermediate Zone" as a name for a psychological and immature mystical level of delusion and subtle ego. [7] Brunton uses several terms, such as astral plane, the intermediate zone, the hall of illusion.

  3. e. Sri Aurobindo (born Aurobindo Ghose; 15 August 1872 – 5 December 1950) was an Indian philosopher, yogi, maharishi, poet, and Indian nationalist. [3] He was also a journalist, editing newspapers such as Bande Mataram. [4] He joined the Indian movement for independence from British colonial rule, until 1910 was one of its influential leaders ...

  4. Though his work is still relatively unknown to the general and even the scholarly reader, it displays a wide-ranging influence in India and in writers on traditional wisdom such as Mircea Eliade, Paul Brunton, and Rene Guenon. Scholarship on Sri Aurobindo is often associated with his collaborator, Mirra Alfassa (also known as “the Mother”).

  5. Podemos recordar aquí la actitud de Sri Ramakrinsha hacia el cáncer de garganta del que murió, la actitud de santa Bernardita de Lourdes hacia su tuberculosis fatal, dolorosa y prolongada, el fatalismo de Ramana Maharashi hacia sus dolores y dolencias físicas, y la respuesta de Sri Aurobindo al médico que lo atendió debido a una rodilla ...