Friedrich Nietzsche was not familiar with
Indian philosophy (much less even with Chinese philosophy), though he was in a position
to be fairly well-informed about Indian thought. This was a cornerstone of the
Indo-European philology then animating German intellectuals and progressing
fast under the hands of the Orientalists. G.W.F. Hegel already wrote a
philosophical discussion of the Bhagavad
Gītā in 1829. Even earlier, J.W. Goethe and Franz Schubert praised Kālidās’s play Śakuntalā. Arthur Schopenhauer practically built his philosophy on
the precedent of the Upaniṣads, the
“confidential teachings” of the Veda (“knowledge”) collections of hymns, and on Buddhism. So, through his knowledge of
German philosophy, Nietzsche must have been exposed to some conclusions of
Indian thought. But for his direct knowledge about it, he learned little from
the discipline of Orientalism, then very much flourishing in the German speech
community and certainly accessible to a professor of Classical Philology.
Instead he relied on the theories of colourful amateurs like Louis Jacolliot. Nietzsche
therefore didn’t know, or at any rate didn’t let on, that the godless
philosophy which he tried to found, already existed in India. He also didn’t
know that, centuries ago, this Indian atheism had ended up largely losing the
battle against a revitalized theism. His Christian critics must take heart from
this development, showing how history proves that religion is anchored in man’s
nature: if you chase it away, it returns with a vengeance. This paper deals
with what he missed, and how the Indian atheist schools of thought reflect
several typical Nietzschean themes.
A practical matter: since this is a survey
covering a lot of ground and addressing a non-Indologist audience, a few
background facts have to be explained at the outset. Writing appeared in India
ca. 300 BCE, after which a flood of writings come to our attention. It is a
common mistake to date the ideas expressed therein to the last centuries BC.
Some of them may be far older, but have appeared in writing only when that
medium became available. A fact of Indian intellectual life is the towering
position of the Veda (“knowledge”),
four collections of hymns dating to beyond 1000 BC, and their ancillary
literature. According to a now-common opinion, gradually developed as the memory
of their composition receded, the Veda-s
were divinely revealed at the beginning of time. In reality, the names of their
composers are known, elements of their genealogy, historical facts such as
battles and celestial configurations, and geographical data such as the names
of mountains and rivers. They take the form of man addressing the gods – the
reverse of the Ten Commandments or the Quran, where God addresses man. Either
way, the Vedas dominate the intellectual landscape. The orally transmitted
stories about human and divine history are collected in the Purāna-s (“antiquities”), a very large
body of literature written down in the 1st millennium CE or even
later. Though lip-service is paid to the Veda’s,
the Purāṇa stories have far more
influence on the life of the masses, together with the two epics, Rāmāyaṇa and Mahābhārata, written down around the time of Christ but their core
narratives much older. However, these stories have little relevance for our
history of philosophical atheism.
Free death
A lot of Hindus boast that one can call oneself
a Hindu and be other things besides, “even” an atheist. Thus, Vināyak Dāmodar Sāvarkar in his
epoch-making book Hindutva (“Hinduness”,
1923), the manifesto of Hindu nationalism, writes that even an agnostic or an
atheist can be a Hindu. And the current internet paper Centre Right India argues: “The Vedas in Hinduism are not absolute, and have been
criticized by people who did not subscribe to their view, since time
immemorial. This did not make the critics any less Hindu. Indeed, Hinduism is
not alien to atheism, or agnostic schools of thought.” (Pulakesh Upadhyaya: “Atheism and Hindutva –
Carvaka to Savarkar”, 3 July 2012) However, this view of matters only covers
exceptions. The typical modern Hindu, of Nietzsche’s day as well as of our own,
will use “atheist” as a swearword. His main religious practice consists in
offering worship through a devotional ritual (pūjā) to a “chosen deity” (iṣṭa
devatā).
A theme pioneeringly dealt with in Nietzsche’s Zarathustra is “free death”, taking
one’s own life. Sāvarkar himself was
an atheist, he refused religious funeral rites, but in 1966 he chose to die by sallekhānā, i.e. fasting unto death, as
is fairly common since time immemorial among Jain and other monks. Nietzsche
probably didn’t realize that the “free death” he advocated was common not just
among the pre-Christian Romans
(advocated by Seneca) but was still alive as an ideal among Hindus, or
at least among their religious personnel. Another committer of fasting unto
death was Gandhian activist Vinobā Bhāve.
On his deathbed in 1982, under popular applause, he received a visit from the
Prime Minister Indīrā Gāndhī. But at
the same time, secularists in the media were fulminating that he should be
imprisoned and force-fed as he was “trespassing against the law of the land”. Strictly
speaking this was true, as the British colonizers had enacted a law against
suicide and euthanasia in the 19th century, which was still on the
statute books. This law was inspired by the purely Christian principle that man
is not the master of his own life and death, only God is. But the positive
reaction of the people to Bhāve’s
self-choice of his death showed the native sensibilities accurately: they were
convinced that if certain conditions are met (for this should of course not be
done lightly, e.g. out of youthful lovesickness), a free death is acceptable
and even the best course of action.
Atheism: heterodox
Meanwhile, “Hindu atheism” is mostly bygone
glory. Today’s Hindus use “atheist” as a swearword to designate the enemy or to
make the difference between themselves and “godless Buddhism”. Yet, Hinduism
has a powerful premodern tradition of atheism. It has been superseded by theist
philosophies at least from the 9th century CE, and by 1500 it was
not even a memory, as we shall explain.
On the one hand we have a number of schools deemed
heterodox, i.e. not in awe of the Veda-s.
Buddhism, famous for its doctrine
that all is suffering caused by desire, and that the way out of this vale of
tears is meditation upto the point of liberation, doesn’t altogether deny the
existence of the Vedic gods. These are narratively used in the Buddhist canon
to ask the Buddha, who has just reached Liberation, to teach his way to others.
The Buddha advised both his monks and lay politicians that a community
functions best if its religious traditions are upheld, e.g. its festivals and
pilgrimages associated with the Vedic gods. His monks would later take the
Vedic gods all the way to Japan and build temples for them there. However, the
gods play no role whatsoever in the Buddha’s analysis of the human condition
and method of remedy, neither in its moral nor in its meditative aspects. You
as an individual have earned your merits and demerits and you yourself have to
work them off and earn your liberation; no god or other being can do it in your
stead. In 2005 there was a textbook controversy in Thailand, where the Buddhist
clergy objected to the mentioning of God in schoolbooks, as this “illusion” had
no place in Buddhism and had allegedly been smuggled in by the Christian
missionaries.
However, from its early centuries there
developed a devotional Buddhism in which prayers are said to the Buddha or a
related entity in order to take away your demerits and your sorrows. Indian
Buddhism was finished off ca. 1194 by the Islamic invaders, so it could not
degenerate all the way, but in East Asia, varieties of the devotional “Pure
Land Buddhism” attract the loyalty of most lay Buddhists.
Lokāyata, ”worldliness”, a sceptical yet ascetic
sect, is popular among modern Marxists but despised by rivalling contemporaneous philosophers.
This school was radically anti-religious and rejected the concepts of
supernatural beings, eternal soul, life after death and reincarnation. Makkhali Gośāla, who preached
contemporaneously with the Buddha, compared life, considered a source of
endless suffering by the Buddhists, to a fish: alas, it has fishbones, but
these can be discarded, and then we can enjoy the fish’s flesh. Similarly, life
contains suffering, but this can be minimized and reasonably dealt with, and
the rest can be a great source of joy. This outlook can be likened to
Epicureanism.
Jainism is an ascetic tradition that
upholds the “extremism” in ascetic practices which the Buddha as a moderate
ended up rejecting. It has remained confined to India until the modern age, and
to a few million adherents in the business class. The lay Jains chose this line
of work because it does not entail any form of violence, the gravest sin in
Jainism. This is a fully atheistic religion. It doesn’t believe in God
(singular or plural) in any form. However, they do practice religion and
worship in temples, but these are dedicated to human beings who have achieved
the state of liberation.
Atheism: orthodox
On the other hand we have several philosophies
deemed orthodox, which once were atheist in outlook. Later they disappeared or
conformed to the rising wave of theism. The Vedic school of philosophy par
excellence, the Mīmānsā,
“hermeneutics”, focused on the interpretation of Vedic ritual. Though working
in a context which was religious par excellence, it said that the gods invoked
are but labels of components of the ritual, existing only by the mental effort
of their worshippers. This school is regularly credited with being the first
articulately atheist school in the world, certainly the first one which takes
the human fact of religion into account but gives it a non-theistic
explanation. After a high tide, it was eclipsed in the early second millennium.
The Sāmkhya (“enumeration”, viz. of the 25
substances which make up the cosmos) school ended up classified as “orthodox”
but is in fact non-Vedic. The well-known philosopher Śaṅkara, really more of a Veda theologian than an autonomous
thinker, criticized it for never referring to the Vedas. It must have been in
existence for a long time, and Vedic literature also borrows from it.
Well-known is the Sāṁkhya simile from
the Śvetāśvatara Upaniṣad (300 BCE?)
that an unborn and three-coloured (black, red and white) woman waves goodbye to
an unborn man who has had his pleasure with her but has had enough, and
receives another unborn man who has his pleasure with her. The woman represents
nature, wherein three qualities can be discerned, represented by the colours
(more on these below). The men represent the different units of consciousness,
or persons. Some persons have enjoyed nature long enough, lose their interest
and seek liberation; other persons are still busy enjoying all that nature has
to offer. The one nature and the many consciousness units form the two poles
that make up the universe. The liberation of consciousness amounts to its
separation from nature. Note that God plays no role whatsoever in this system. However,
it lost its steam in the first millennium CE, and after a blip of revival in
ca. 1400, it ceased being a living school.
Vaiśeṣika (“distinction-making”, “focused on
particulars”) taught that the universe consists of a finite and unchangeable
number of smallest particles, and these are eternal. The universe has never
been created: either it is eternal or it has been created, but if so, it was
created by an eternal uncreated being, which only shifts the burden of
eternality to a purely supposed rather than an actual being. So we might as
well assume the eternality of the universe. However, later this school united
with the theistic Nyāya (“judgment”,
logic) school and became theistic.
Uttara-Mīmāṁsā (“later hermeneutics”), better
known as Vedānta (“final part of the
Veda”), forms a deliberate continuation of the Upaniṣad-s (“confidential teaching”), the philosophical closing
texts of the Veda-s. Unlike the Vedic
hymns and the ancillary Brāhmaṇa-s
(“priestly books”), concerned with ritual, the Upaniṣad-s deal with knowledge, i.e. knowledge of the Self (ātman), i.e. pure, unconditioned,
impersonal consciousness. Their central doctrine is that the Self is fully the
same as the Absolute (Brahman), like
the drop is made of the same substance as the ocean. It follows that the
unchanging and undying Absolute is nothing but consciousness. The different
subschools of Vedānta will try to
define the exact relationship between the Self and the Absolute. The best-known
worldwide, and the most popular in the modern West, is Advaitā Vedānta (“non-dualistic Vedānta”), thought up by Śaṅkara in ca. 800 CE. This teaches the
uncompromising unity of the Self and the Absolute. For Westerners tired of
Christian dualism, this is welcomed as a relief. However, in real life, Śaṅkara also worshipped the gods, just
as the Stoic philosopher Emperor Marcus Aurelius religiously observed his daily
sacrifice routine after his philosophical meditations. Śaṅkara is venerated in India for his debating skills and for the
institutions he founded, but his non-dualistic viewpoint has largely been
forgotten. It is at any rate much less representative for Indian thought than
his Western fans assume.
His simple and radical scheme was soon
sidelined by the far more important dualistic (or nominally “qualified
non-dualistic” and “difference-yet-no-difference”) schools of Vedānta. These schools, which elbowed
out the remaining non-Vedānta viewpoints,
effectively became the framework of the religious wave at the mass level, Bhakti (devotion). Among the gods of
Hinduism, one was chosen, extolled and worshipped. In most Hindu temples, five
gods are worshipped of whom one is central: Viṣṇu
(“the all-pervader”), Śiva (“the
benefactor”, actually an apotropaic euphemism for the storm-god Rudra, “the red/furious one”), Devī (“the goddess”), Gaṇeśa (“lord of groups”) and Sūrya (“the sun”). By contrast, Brahma (“increase”) as the
personification of the Absolute is practically not worshipped. In devotional
Hinduism, as theorized by the dualistic Vedānta
philosophers, the situation is like in Christian mysticism: the supreme being
is mostly conceived as a person and one can ascend to God but never unite with
Him. One can contemplate Him but never be His equal.
This way, we have gotten modern Hinduism: a
landscape studded with temples and idols, a shrine or separate room in the
houses for devotional rituals (pūjā),
and but very rarely an odd intellectual who stands aloof from the belief in a
supernatural being. Atheism has been in the ascendant for some centuries, but
that was two thousand years ago.
Sāṁkhya
Buddhism describes Sāṁkhya as its own source, founded by the sage Kapila who gave the
Buddha’s wandering ancestors a domain where they could build the settlement Kapilavastu (“Kapila’s habitation”),
in which the future Buddha was to grow up. Patañjali’s
Yoga (“discipline, control”), now
reckoned as a separate philosophy, was anciently (and rightly) considered an
application-oriented subschool of Sāṁkhya.
Like Buddhism, it vaguely recognizes the
existence of the gods (unless our understanding of the Sanskrit words is
anachronistic) but gives them no place whatsoever in its analysis of the human
problem nor in its proposed way out. Only in the modern age have theistic
Hindus magnified the religious element in it and renamed it as Seśvara Sāṁkhya, i.e. Sāṁkhya-with-God. Even then, the
relative absence of God contrasts conspicuously with the really theistic
systems.
The monistic Vedānta philosophy, which won the day in Hinduism and is espoused
by most sects in its theistic form (Bhakti,
“devotion”), criticizes Sāṁkhya for
not basing itself on the Veda-s, i.e.
for being a real philosophy rather than a scripture-quoting theology. However, Vedic
texts refer to some typical concepts of Sāṁkhya,
which has its sources much earlier. Its dualism of consciousness vs. nature
(reminiscent of thinking vs. extension, res
cogitans vs. res extensa) is in
fact an elaboration of the common-sense view, contrasting with the mystical
attractiveness of the heady Vedānta
view. In the latter, everything is the Absolute, so all is one -- gee, that’s cosmic! In Sāṁkhya, by contrast,
the irreducible separateness of the different “persons” or units of
consciousness is taken for granted. Your memories make you unique and separate
from me with my memories, we are distinct persons, and there is no reason to
remedy this condition.
Had Nietzsche known it sufficiently, he could
have approved of Sāṁkhya’s atheism. It
is reminiscent of his beloved pre-Socratic philosophies. The great Sāṁkhya classic, the Sāṁkhya-Kārikā (2nd century?)
does not even mention a supreme being. In Patañjali’s
Yoga Sūtra (“aphorisms on control”),
some concessions are made to believers, but Yoga
is defined purely technically as the silencing of the mind, not as a “union
with God”. The late Sāṁkhya-Sutra (14th
century), operating in a religious landscape that had become completely
theistic, argues elaborately against the existence of God, and in favour of the
eternality of the universe. But perhaps its relative pessimism about the
world’s inherent suffering, radicalized in Buddhism (“all is suffering”), can
be reckoned as un-Nietzschean.
Karma: beyond good and evil
A very prominent doctrine in Indian thought is
that of reincarnation and karma. In the Vedic hymns (pre-1000 BC), the word karma still had its etymological meaning
"do, make", whence "action, ritual". Therefrom, it came to connote “action at a
distance”, viz. between the ritual and its intended fruits, e.g. restoration of
health, victory on the battlefield, a woman saying yes etc. Even the Mīmāṁsā philosophers, sceptical of the
involvement of any divine persons in the ritual, believed in the magical
“action at a distance” of the Vedic rituals.
In the Bhagavad-Gītā
(200 BC?), the word karma-mārga, “the
way of ritual action”, still has this meaning (and not “doing your duty”,
“ethical living” “the yoga of action in the daily life”, as is often said since
Swami Vivekananda gave it this meaning in ca. 1895): it refers to Vedic ritual.
There, it contrast with jñāna-mārga,
“the way of knowledge”, developed in the Upaniṣads
after and in reaction against the emphasis on ritual action in the Vedic
period; and with bhakti-mārga, “the
way of devotion”, chiefly devotion to the deified hero Kṛṣṇa, the proper and innovative message of the book, hugely
influential in popular Hinduism. The way of knowledge is chiefly concerned with
meditation, as the path to knowledge of the Self, i.e. pure consciousness, the
object of most philosophies and the goal of most Hindu monks. The way of
devotion means the religious practice maintained by the vast majority of
Hindus, viz. worship of the gods, mainly one’s own “chosen deity”.
Meanwhile, without letting it give a new
meaning to the term karma, the Gītā introduces the notion of reincarnation.
It attaches no moral sense to rebirth yet, just like the reincarnation beliefs
attested elsewhere, e.g. among the Levantine Druze and many Amerindians, but
affirms that dying is like undressing before going to sleep and getting dressed
again tomorrow. It is part of Kṛṣṇa’s exhortation to the hesitant hero Arjuna,
that it is alright to do battle: you need not be afraid to die, nor have scruples
to kill, because if you die or if your enemy dies, it is only a temporary phase
while moving on to a next life. No specific link, moral or otherwise, between
this life and the next is posited here. It is the naked theory of reincarnation
that we find here, without the moralistic interpretative apparatus which later
Hinduism and Buddhism have attached to it.
We should be careful not to amalgamate this doctrine
too easily with Nietzsche’s “eternal return”. The reason for this eternal
return is that the number of possible causes is finite while time is infinite,
so that the chain of causes effecting the present state of affairs will
necessarily repeat itself. Reincarnation is distantly akin, it may stem from a
similar intuition, but any non-superficial comparison will find them different.
Then, “action at a distance” is reinterpreted
and applied to the successive incarnations. The moralistic version, popular
among the masses east of the Indus, including the East-Asian countries where
Buddhism has spread it, views the contents of the next life as a reward or
punishment for one’s acts in a previous life. Good and evil get a very
prominent place here. Unlike Immanuel Kant’s notion of doing the good for its
own sake, and virtue being its own reward, good and evil acts here get the
power to determine one’s apparent “fate” in the next life. A secular view of
life posits no link between one’s fate and the moral quality of one’s acts:
even a saint can get robbed or killed. Here, by contrast, morality controls the
universe, which is inherently moral.
However, there exists a more subtle version of
the karma doctrine. When we die, the motive
force that spurs us on to return to this world in a new body is desire. Our
deeds and experiences have shaped a pattern of non-satisfaction due to preference
and aversion, and this leads to seeking new
chances to satisfy these. Therefore, if the desire is
quelled, and neutrality takes the place of preferences and aversion, there is
no motive force anymore that drives you to a new birth. That is how desire
leads to rebirth, while the cessation of desire leads to liberation or nirvāṇa (“blowing out”). But outside the
circle of ascetics, this more subtle version of the karma doctrine is little known. Note that this version is “beyond
good and evil”.
Few people realize (and many Hindus will be
startled if not angry to hear us assert it) that the karma doctrine is inherently linked with atheism, even in its
vulgar moralistic version. Because the world is deemed inherently just, with a
certain type of deeds automatically leading to a certain type of experiences,
there is no need for a Father in heaven to dispense justice. In history, the
most atheistic schools, especially Jainism, have had the most radical and
uncompromising conception of karma.
You are deemed stuck with your own karmic record, you have to work it off
yourself and bear all the consequences yourself for any karma you incur
further. No other being, whether human or divine, can relieve you of even the
smallest quantity of karma. By
contrast, in theistic Hinduism, lip-service is paid to the notion of karma, but
in fact it is very watered down. People pray to a divine being for the
diminution of karma, somewhat like
Catholics can buy indulgences to be freed from so many years of purgatory.
The parable of the three stages
A
detail worth analyzing is how the age-old Sāṁkhya
cosmological scheme of triguṇa,
“three qualities”, authentically fits the famous parable of Camel-Lion-Child.
Like we have a yin/yang bipolarity in
Chinese thought, we have a tripolarity in Indian thought. Every
society of gods or men was deemed to be divided in three parts, having to do
with order, action and sustenance: (1) sattva, “beingness, truth,
goodness”, the pole of calm, clarity and order, symbolized by the daylight, the
white colour and the majestic heavens; (2) rajas, “turbulence”, the pole
of dynamism and passion, symbolized by the twilight, the red colour and the
stormy atmosphere; (3) tamas, “darkness”, the pole of inertia,
materiality, quantity and sustenance, symbolized by the night, the dark colours
and the all-bearing earth. (To complicate
matters and take the equivocity of symbolism into account, the twilight with
its moderate temperature and sacral mood can also count as sattva, the
daytime with its heat can also count as rajas.)
In society, the three poles correspond
to three social functions and the classes performing them: (1) order and
legitimacy are the province of judges, poets, priests and of the king in his
sacral role as embodiment of a nation’s sovereignty; (2) action is the province
of administrators and soldiers, and of the king in his role as
commander-in-chief; (3) sustenance is the province of the farmers, craftsmen
and other producing classes, of healthcare providers and entertainers, and of
all members of society in so far as they partake in the process of fertility
and multiplication. The scheme corresponds as follows with the Puranic divine
trinity (trimūrti):
the creator Brahma corresponds to the
dawn, or rajas; the sustainer and solar deity Viṣṇu to the daylight, or sattva;
the leveller and moon-god Śiva to the night, tamas.
In Nietzsche’s Zarathustra, in the protagonist’s first sermon, he discusses the
three transformations, the three phases of growth. Firstly, the human mind
becomes a camel, slow and eager for heavy loads, obedient but strong, labouring
and blindly following. This is evidently the pole tamas. Secondly, it becomes a lion, full of fury and passion, not
obeying the “you should” commandment, but asserting his “I will” volition and
his freedom. This is visibly the pole rajas.
Finally, it becomes a child, light and innocent. This is the
stage of transparency, of the third pole, sattva.
This way, Nietzsche’s newfound simile actually corresponds to an age-old
thought model, best articulated in Sāṁkhya.
The note on subtle version of the karma doctrine was very interesting. The possibility the series of actions and experiences of this life will create a sort of a pattern of though that drives the "choice" of the next was very thought provoking and refreshing. And to think that some sages thousands of years ago had such a thought process in mind, heart warming and wonderful.
ReplyDeleteReminds me of the time when I was reminded of Neitzsche as I first read translations of Agnipurana, of Mahabharata and few other Hindu texts. These ancient Hindu thinkers write...
ReplyDeleteEach is alone. We are strangers to strangers. We are cut off from dearest and nearest, none knows the other, and the Self belongs to only to the Self. Man is born alone. Alone he lives. Alone he dies. Alone he tastes the fruits of his actions. His true company is he and his work. He comes from darkness, goes into darkness. His body changes. His spirit changes. Who is he? What belongs to him? Nothing. Nothing lasts. He has no teacher. But himself. He must go along the road to knowledge alone, to happiness alone, to inner peace alone. Only he is his constant friend. Only he is his constant enemy. From others nothing comes to him, nothing is owed to him. That is why he must honor himself. Revere himself. Assert himself. Each is alone.
Renounce living in others. Renounce needing others. Renounce everything he must, everything he has been told. Then know, and recreate. When he does not struggle, when he cares about nothing, everything belongs to him. Each is alone.
Morality is a means the weak use to manipulate the strong. The great is cruel, so he seems to some. (Compare that to "grausam" and Neitzsche's Geneology of Morals and Cruelty).
On atheism and Hindus... while there are many schools, one constant is that it does not force one school or other on anyone. Each is left to choose his own deity, or no deity; this path or that path; this way, or that way, or discover your own way. The implicit premise in such religious flexibility is Atheism, or at least respect for Agnosticism and Atheism.
(ps: I must credit Johann Meyer's work for his interesting introduction to Agnipurana).
One of your best essays, Dr. Elst. Thank you.
ReplyDelete"No specific link, moral or otherwise, between this life and the next is posited here."
ReplyDeleteI am not convinced : the Bhagavad Gita does say that the yogi who has fallen from his efforts (yogabhrashta) will, after enjoying a period in the heaven, be born in the family of pure and prosperous people (shucheenaam shreemataam gehe) and then strive toward liberation thence. Clearly there is a correlation between attempting yoga in this life (a moral virtue), and the next birth.
I was referring to the oft-quoted locus classicus of the reincarnation doctrine. The Gita as a whole contains quite a few contradictory statements as it draws upon different Hindu philosophies. That is why my supervisor at BHU called it a "hodge-podge".
ReplyDeleteI have been reflecting on KE's analysis of Atheism in Indian philosophy. I wonder if someone has looked into the following: what were the potential causes that triggered an increase or decrease, over various eras, of atheism in Indian philosophies? I would be interested in any leads to literature that answer that question.
ReplyDeleteIn other words, a religion can be studied in isolation, as a closed system. Or, it can be studied as an open system, as an evolving philosophy that is affected by major events beyond the control of those who practice that philosophy. This is like understanding evolution of species, in a given region, with or without predators present.
Atheism, pluralism and diversity of thought is more likely in a prosperous, mature and secure society. External events that traumatize, that threaten the very existence of society, can and is likely to influence beliefs, cause extinctions, trigger change.
In case of Indian philosophies, one such event would be the arrival of violent Islam, starting about 9th century AD and its establishment in India by 12th. Islamic armies burnt towns, destroyed temples, looted property, enslaved the Hindus and the Buddhists of Indian subcontinent. Islam did something similar in Spain, Levant and Eastern Europe. Such trauma can be expected to affect everything, including Atheism in Indian philosophy.
There were other events too, from arrival of Alexander from Greece to many more through the centuries to colonialism after Aurangzeb. All these traumatic events, to varying degrees, are likely to have affected Atheism in Indian philosophy.
The title of the paper is actually rather unassuming. It is a survey of entire philosophical landscape of India. Excellent reading. However, i have following points to make. Gita, with regard to Karma, gives symbolic meaning in 4th chapter, by equating breathing and eating to various oblations given to sacrificial fire. Gita also, in Chapter 16 speaks of vicked and violent people being born in lower births, after suffering in the hell. Therefore, it is not merely naked rebirth unconnected to the deeds of past life. On the whole, excellent paper.
ReplyDeleteRefer American's comment dated 2nd October. Notwithstanding the violent characteristic of Islam and its followers, Islam was not violent in Spain barring the deaths that occur in a conquest. It brought urban life, civilization, art and architecture to Spain. Granada was one of the best developed regions in the medieval Europe. It brought with it books of science and medicine through Arabic which were translated into Hebrew and then into Latin. Reconquista of 15th century promoted by the Church through Ferdinand and Isabella was ruthless and drove both the Jews and Muslims violently out of Spain generally and Granada in particular. The Muslims and Hebrews had to either embrace Christianity or leave everything behind and leave the country. This was as bad as the migration of the Jews after 70AD. Ref: Story of Civilization by Prof. Will Durant, Vol IV and VI.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteB.N. Gururaj - Will Durant is a romantic, whose words are flowery, whose prose is dreamy. His synthesis and flowing imagination has been criticized, as interesting but more poetic than driven by data, facts and evidence. He credits science, art, philosophy and many things to Islam in Spain but does not cite verifiable examples. Durant sounds like some revisionists who feel it is not necessary to provide facts that can be verified, who feel sweeping claims of grandeur and excellence are enough, like fairy tales and a sleeping pill. Do you know of any specific facts, or science, or art in Spain that can be verifiably credited to Islam, and only Islam?
There is Al-Biruni, whose works were indeed sought in Spain and rest of Europe; but those books were largely the product of his 16 years in India, with some original ideas he derived on his own. Islamic rulers did not like him, he was declared a bad Muslim, and killed.
If you want to study Islam and Jewish history in Spain, read scholarly papers and books about Sephardi Jews. According to these sources, Jews were persecuted by Muslims in Spain, just like Hindus in India. Arranged child marriages accelerated, when Islam arrived. Jizya and other Islamic taxes on dhimmis were crippling. Slavery and rape of slave women was common in Spain, and Morocco as elsewhere in Sultanates. Jewish quarters, called 'mellahs' were routinely pillaged, and such looting was encouraged by the keepers of Islam. Don't get me wrong - I am not praising Christianity or any other religion. Human history is complex. There is more, lot more to human history than what is in the pages of Will Durant.
One of the best, perspicacious essays of Dr. Elst. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteIt is quite unfortunate that someone like KE gets such a fundamental topic so fundamentally wrong, whose result is visible in several of his essays. Dr KE, in India theology (not theism) and philosophy are orthogonal and not parallel or opposite. Why do you try to pit them against each other or as agnostic of each other?
ReplyDeleteDear Dr. Elst You donot know ow much your posts have helped regarding defending hHinduism from neo-Buddhists from various countries who suddenly after converting have some axe to rind against Hinduism...You are a true Jewel for Sanatana Dharma..Now I will proceed to read this post of yours..A thousand pranams to you
ReplyDeleteInstead of 'hodge podge', calling the Gita the first great attempt of synthesis of the different Hindu schools of philosophy and spirituality would be more apt. The spirit and teaching of this synthesis has been carried forward by many great modern Hindu yogis like Vivekanand, Sri Aurobindo, Shivanand and Chinmayanand.
ReplyDeleteDear American,
ReplyDeleteKindly provide some links or references to : "Each is alone. We are strangers to strangers. ...... Assert himself. Each is alone". Which part of Agnipurana, any links available on net?
Thanks and Regards.
"According to a now-common opinion, gradually developed as the memory of their composition receded, the Veda-s were divinely revealed at the beginning of time. In reality, the names of their composers are known, elements of their genealogy,...". I inherited the view that the essence of the Vedas are eternal and they were discovered(realized?) by the great seers. And that's what was meant by they being not composed.
ReplyDeleteAs I said, I inherited this view and I have not formed an opinion on this yet. So I am not making any statement about correctness of any view..Just putting it out there.