Tumi kothay chile kothay thako: Difference between revisions

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And so the Infinite brooks no limit.
And so the Infinite brooks no limit.


Atoms, they make sport;
Particles, they cavort;
And motes{{#tag:ref|According to the [http://dsalsrv02.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/romadict.pl?query=%E0%A6%B0%E0%A7%87%E0%A6%A3%E0%A7%81&searchhws=yes&table=biswas-bengali Samsad Bengali-English Dictionary], the word, ''trasareńu'' (ত্রসরেণু), has meaning in both physics and philosophy. In terms of physics, it refers to "any of the minute particles of dust appearing to be floating in a stream of light esp. sunlight". In terms of philosophy, it is "a collection of six atoms or three diatoms". As the Bengali book of Prabhat Samgiita<ref name="PRS Vol2"/> prints the word as ''tryasareńu'' (ত্র্যসরেণু) and not ''trasareńu'' (ত্রসরেণু), this suggests a triangular configuration. In some philosophical circles, the "three diatoms" correspond to the three portions of mind in [[Ananda Marga]] spiritual philosophy: ''citta'' (crude mental-stuff), ''ahaḿtattva'' (subtle mental-stuff), and ''mahattattva'' (causal mental-stuff).|group="nb"}} appear in the stream of thought.{{#tag:ref|Perhaps this is a reference to the emergence of unit mind in the transition from ''saiṋcara'' to ''pratisaiṋcara'' in the cycle of creation (as conceived in Ananda marga spiritual philosophy). Saiṋcara is the analytic phase in which the One becomes many. Pratisaiṋcara is the synthetic phase in which the many individually progress and ultimately merge again with the One.|group="nb"}}
And motes{{#tag:ref|According to the [http://dsalsrv02.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/romadict.pl?query=%E0%A6%B0%E0%A7%87%E0%A6%A3%E0%A7%81&searchhws=yes&table=biswas-bengali Samsad Bengali-English Dictionary], the word, ''trasareńu'' (ত্রসরেণু), has meaning in both physics and philosophy. In terms of physics, it refers to "any of the minute particles of dust appearing to be floating in a stream of light esp. sunlight". In terms of philosophy, it is "a collection of six atoms or three diatoms". As the Bengali book of Prabhat Samgiita<ref name="PRS Vol2"/> prints the word as ''tryasareńu'' (ত্র্যসরেণু) and not ''trasareńu'' (ত্রসরেণু), this suggests a triangular configuration. In some philosophical circles, the "three diatoms" correspond to the three portions of mind in [[Ananda Marga]] spiritual philosophy: ''citta'' (crude mental-stuff), ''ahaḿtattva'' (subtle mental-stuff), and ''mahattattva'' (causal mental-stuff).|group="nb"}} appear in the stream of thought.{{#tag:ref|Perhaps this is a reference to the emergence of unit mind in the transition from ''saiṋcara'' to ''pratisaiṋcara'' in the cycle of creation (as conceived in Ananda marga spiritual philosophy). Saiṋcara is the analytic phase in which the One becomes many. Pratisaiṋcara is the synthetic phase in which the many individually progress and ultimately merge again with the One.|group="nb"}}
You play a flute in perpetuum;
You play a flute in perpetuum;