You’ve hit the nail on the head. If Nishikanta is the "surging river," Pavitra (Philippe Barbier Saint-Hilaire) is the calm, structural engineer of the soul. A graduate of the École Polytechnique, he brought a rigorous, mathematical discipline to the Ashram that would indeed refuse any "mystical carry-away."
1. The Geometry of Consciousness
- Vector of Aspiration: He viewed the "prod" you mentioned as a directional force. If most people live in a 3D "flatland" of the ego, the Mother’s work was to introduce a vertical axis.
- Matter-of-Fact Mechanics: In his Conversations with Sri Aurobindo, he doesn't ask about "bliss"—he asks about the mechanism of the transformation. He treats the descent of the Force like a high-tension current entering a circuit that must be properly "grounded" and "insulated" (through equality and calm) to avoid blowing a fuse.
2. Pain as a Signal, Not a Sentiment
- The Physicist’s View: He looked at the body’s cells as vibratory fields. Pain was simply a dissonance or a "resistance" in the material conductor.
- The Resonance: Where Schopenhauer saw a "will to suffer," Pavitra saw a technical problem of receptivity. His "ontological internalisation" was the steady, quiet work of "tuning" the physical instrument to resonate with a higher frequency.
3. The Advantage of "Scientific Stoicism"
- No "Vital" Highs or Lows: By treating the Yoga as a science of the future, he avoided the emotional exhaustion that Nietzsche suffered. He didn't need to "stipple" his prose with exclamation points; the truth of the formula was enough.
- The Practicality of the Impossible: To him, the Supramental was as "inevitable" as a law of thermodynamics. It wasn't a miracle; it was the next logical phase of the evolutionary experiment.
Pavitra: The Mathematical Calm
- The Scientist's Distance: He treated spiritual progress like a long-term laboratory experiment. He wouldn't get "carried away" because he was busy observing the laws of the Force.
- The Physics of Yoga: To him, the "impossible" was a structural goal. If a bridge needs to be built to the Supermind, Pavitra was interested in the stress-strain tensors of the human instrument. His internalisation was a quiet, steady alignment with a higher geometry.
Udar: The Dynamic "Doer"
- The "Can-Do" Spirit: Where Pavitra might analyze the "current" of the Mother’s Force, Udar simply plugged in. He was the Mother’s "strong man," managing the Harpagon Workshop and the Press.
- A "Hard-Headed" Internalisation: Udar famously had no time for "misty-eyed" spirituality. He once said that if he couldn't see the results of Yoga in the quality of a machine's output or the discipline of the body, it wasn't real. For him, the "advantage" of internalisation was total efficiency.
- Physicality vs. Pain: Udar treated the body like a trusted machine. While he had deep mystical experiences, he spoke of them with a refreshing bluntness—often with a laugh—stripping away any lingering "religious" solemnity.
The Contrast in "The Prod"
- Pavitra prodded with Logic: He showed that the "impossible" is reasonable.
- Udar prodded with Action: He showed that the "impossible" is workable.
1. The "Legal" Internalisation
- The Blueprint of Auroville: He was instrumental in the early days of Auroville, handling the complex legal and administrative "scaffolding" required to manifest a "city of the future." To him, the "impossible" task of building a stateless, money-less society was a logistical problem to be solved through clear-eyed planning.
- Ontological Duty: He viewed the Mother's words with the weight of a statute. His internalisation was about aligning his will with the Divine Decree with the same meticulousness he once applied to the courtroom.
2. The "Doer" of Documentation
- No Mystical Fluff: Like a court stenographer of the Spirit, he recorded the Mother’s experiences regarding the "cellular transformation" with dry, forensic accuracy.
- The Advantage of Clarity: By stripping away the "floweriness," he made the most radical spiritual concepts—like the physical immortality of the cells—seem like a pending legal amendment to the laws of Nature.
3. Comparing the "Doers"
- Udar was the Kinetic Force (Workshop, Press, Physical Education). He prodded through Vigor.
- Shyam Sundar was the Structural Force (Auroville, Finance, Society). He prodded through Order.
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1. The Legal Mind and "Notes on the Way"
- Forensic Documentation: In his correspondence and notes, he recorded the Mother's insights with the accuracy of a court stenographer. He focused on the objective facts of her physical consciousness—such as how the cells reacted to light or pressure—treating these as precedents for a new law of nature.
- The Mother's "Policeman": The Mother once laughingly told him he could tell people he was "Mother’s policeman" because of his strictness in enforcing the discipline needed for Auroville. He saw "Truth" not as a vague concept, but as a constitutional requirement for living in the new city.
2. The Internalisation of the "Supreme Law"
- Constitutional Duty: He internalised the Mother’s guidance as a Supreme Decree. If the Mother said that wealth should be at the disposal of the Divine, he didn't see it as a poetic suggestion but as a psychological amendment that had to be implemented in his own life and Auroville's management.
- Normalization of the Miraculous: In his book On the Path, he recorded the Mother's direct answers to his technical questions about the soul and psychic being. He treated these spiritual realisations as verifiable facts of consciousness that were as solid as the legal statutes he once argued in the Supreme Court. [2, 3]
3. The "Doer" of Administrative Auroville
- Centralised Priority: He managed the details of land purchase, financial management, and admission discipline with a matter-of-fact efficiency that bridged the gap between the "impossible" spiritual city and the material legalities of the world. [4]
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Collated by Tusar Nath Mohapatra