Showing posts with label God and I. Show all posts
Showing posts with label God and I. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Conflict between Science and Religion lies in our brain – but not necessarily for a follower of Hindu Thought!

Scientific studies done until now had shown that analytical thinking always discourages belief in God. As per this a scientist cannot be expected to be a believer of God whereas the available data shows that nearly 90% of the Nobel laureates had faith in God. It has always been believed or rather hypothesised that the brain has two conflicting centres of function, one that does analytical thinking and the other that makes one religious.

In this background the current study done by the researchers of Case Western Reserve University and Babson College had shown a marginally different result. This study shows that analytical thinking does not give rise to disbelief in God. On the contrary it was found that those who exhibited empathy happened to be more religious or spiritual. This means that one can be analytical and at the same time empathic and therefore spiritual. In other words there is no tension or conflict between those regions of the brain that support analytical ability and belief in God.


The confusion was due to the existent belief to some extent in the western countries and in agnostic and atheistic societies that religion and religious beliefs are absurd and unscientific. But coming from the background of Vedantha that forms the basis of Hinduism, we have no confusion between analytical approach and religious thoughts, for, Hinduism is based on logical concept of God and evolution of man to Godhood. The basic tenet is compassion which is signified as Sattwic Guna which is what the Almighty is personified as. The basic approach is analytical or what is known as inquiry into the nature of both material world (prakruthi) and consciousness (Purusha or the Individual self and the Universal Self known as God). So this requires the use of both parts of the brain that the researchers have subjected to analysis.

A nutshell of what this Vedanthic religion requires us to do has been given in the 1st verse of “Vedartha Sangraha” – a collection of Vedic thought given as lectures by Acharya Ramanuja in front of Lord Venkateswara in Thirumala. It runs as follows:

“The individual self is subject to beginning-less nesceince, which has brought about an accumulation of karma, of the nature of both merit and demerit. The flood of such karma causes his entry into four kinds of bodies – heavenly, human, animal and plant beginning with that of Brahma downwards. This ingression into bodies produces the delusion of identity with those respective bodies (and the consequent attachments and aversions). This delusion inevitably brings about all the fears inherent in the state of worldly existence. The entire body of Vedantha aims at the annihilation of these fears.

To accomplish their annihilation, they teach the following:

(1) The essential nature of the individual self as the transcending body.
(2) The attributes of the individual self.
(3) The essential nature of the Supreme that is the inmost controller of both the material universe and the individual selves.
(4) The attributes of the Supreme.
(5) The devout meditation upon the Supreme.
(6) The goal to which such meditation leads.

Vedantha aims at making known the goal attainable through such a life of meditation, the goal being the realisation, of the real nature of the individual self and after and through that realisation, the direct experience of the Brahman, which is the nature of bliss infinite and perfect.”

The conviction about these views and the practice of the same require a logical and analytical mind tinged with sattwic attitude of which compassion and empathy are supreme attributes. When one is tuned with compassion and empathy, one is indeed Godly at that moment.

Rama, the most adored God of the Hindus, had once expressed to Sita that compassion was his supreme Dharma. 
Sita expressed this to Hanuman in Ashoka Vana - आनृशंस्यम् परो धर्मः त्वत्त एव मया श्रुतः (Valmiki Ramayana – 5-38-41).
 (anR^ishamsyam parO dharmaH. Tvatta Eva mayA shrutaH.) 

Meaning “You yourself (Rama) told me (Sita) that kindness is the best Dharma” The part of the brain that induces one to be kind to others cannot run repellent to analytical thinking.

I wish these researchers take practicing Hindus for their study!


Related articles:-






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From


The conflict between science and religion lies in our brains


The conflict between science and religion may have its origins in the structure of our brains, researchers at Case Western Reserve University and Babson College have found. Clashes between the use of faith vs. scientific evidence to explain the world around us dates back centuries and is perhaps most visible today in the arguments between evolution and creationism.

To believe in a supernatural god or universal spirit, people appear to suppress the brain network used for analytical thinking and engage the empathetic network, the scientists say. When thinking analytically about the physical world, people appear to do the opposite.

"When there's a question of faith, from the analytic point of view, it may seem absurd," said Tony Jack, who led the research.

"But, from what we understand about the brain, the leap of faith to belief in the supernatural amounts to pushing aside the critical/analytical way of thinking to help us achieve greater social and emotional insight."

Jack is an associate professor of philosophy at Case Western Reserve and research director of the university's Inamori International Center of Ethics and Excellence, which helped sponsor the research. "A stream of research in cognitive psychology has shown and claims that people who have faith (i.e., are religious or spiritual) are not as smart as others. They actually might claim they are less intelligent.," said Richard Boyatzis, distinguished university professor and professor of organizational behavior at Case Western Reserve, and a member of Jack's team.

 "Our studies confirmed that statistical relationship, but at the same time showed that people with faith are more prosocial and empathic," he said.

In a series of eight experiments, the researchers found the more empathetic the person, the more likely he or she is religious. That finding offers a new explanation for past research showing women tend to hold more religious or spiritual worldviews than men. The gap may be because women have a stronger tendency toward empathetic concern than men.

Atheists, the researchers found, are most closely aligned with psychopaths—not killers, but the vast majority of psychopaths classified as such due to their lack of empathy for others.

The new study is published in the online journal PLOS ONE. The other authors are Jared Friedman, a research assistant and recent graduate in Philosophy and Cognitive Science who will begin his PhD in organizational behavior at Case Western Reserve in the fall, and Scott Taylor, assistant professor of organizational behavior at Babson College.

Brain structure

The research is based on the hypothesis that the human brain has two opposing domains in constant tension. In earlier research, Jack 's Brain, Mind & Consciousness lab used functional magnetic resonance imaging to show the brain has an analytical network of neurons that enables us to think critically and a social network that enables us to empathize. When presented with a physics problem or ethical dilemma, a healthy brain fires up the appropriate network while suppressing the other.
"Because of the tension between networks, pushing aside a naturalistic world view enables you to delve deeper into the social/emotional side," Jack explained.

 "And that may be the key to why beliefs in the supernatural exist throughout the history of cultures. It appeals to an essentially nonmaterial way of understanding the world and our place in it."

Friedman said, "Having empathy doesn't mean you necessarily have anti-scientific beliefs. Instead, our results suggest that if we only emphasize analytic reasoning and scientific beliefs, as the New Atheist movement suggests, then we are compromising our ability to cultivate a different type of thinking, namely social/moral insight."

"These findings," Friedman continued, "are consistent with the philosophical view, espoused by (Immanuel) Kant, according to which there are two distinct types of truth: empirical and moral."

Experiments and results

The researchers examined the relationship between belief in God or a universal spirit with measures of analytic thinking and moral concern in eight different experiments, each involving 159 to 527 adults. Consistently through all eight, the more religious the person, the more moral concern they showed. But no cause and effect was established.

They found that both spiritual belief and empathic concern were positively associated with frequency of prayer, meditations and other spiritual or religious practices, but neither were predicted by church dinners or other social contact associated with religious affiliation.

While others theorize that mentalizing—interpreting human behavior in terms of intentional mental states such as needs, desires or purposes—has a positive association with belief, the researchers found none.
Like other studies, these experiments showed that analytic thinking discourages acceptance of spiritual or religious beliefs. But the statistical analysis of data pooled from all eight experiments indicates empathy is more important to religious belief than analytic thinking is for disbelief.

So why can the conflict between science and religion become so strong?
"Because the networks suppress each other, they may create two extremes," Boyatzis said.

"Recognizing that this is how the brain operates, maybe we can create more reason and balance in the national conversations involving science and religion."

Using both networks

The researchers say humans are built to engage and explore using both networks. "Far from always conflicting with science, under the right circumstances religious belief may positively promote scientific creativity and insight," Jack said.

"Many of history's most famous scientists were spiritual or religious. Those noted individuals were intellectually sophisticated enough to see that there is no need for religion and science to come into conflict."

They refer to Baruch Aba Shalev's book 100 years of Nobel Prizes, which found that, from 1901 to 2000, 654 Nobel laureates, or nearly 90 percent, belonged to one of 28 religions. The remaining 10.5 percent were atheists, agnostics or freethinkers. "You can be religious and be a very good scientist," Jack said.

The researchers agree with the New Atheists that suspension of analytical thinking—at the wrong time—can be dangerous, and point to the historical use of religious differences to persecute or fight wars.

"Although it is simply a distortion of history to pin all conflict on religion," Jack said. "Non-religious political movements, such as fascism and communism, and quasi-scientific movements, such as eugenics, have also done great harm."

The researchers suggest, however, that taking a carefully considered leap of religious faith appears be an effective route to promoting emotional insight. Theirs and other studies find that, overall, religious belief is associated with greater compassion, greater social inclusiveness and greater motivation to engage in pro-social actions.

Jack said the conflict can be avoided by remembering simple rules: "Religion has no place telling us about the physical structure of the world; that's the business of science. Science should inform our ethical reasoning, but it cannot determine what is ethical or tell us how we should construct meaning and purpose in our lives."

To dig deeper into belief, the researchers are planning studies to learn if individuals who increase their empathy then increase their religious or spiritual belief, or vice versa.


Source: Case Western Reserve University [March 23, 2016] Posted by TANN on 4:00 PM. 

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Some thoughts on “Neene Doddavano” – the song Dr Kalam liked.


 Dr Kalam’s interest in Carnatic music is well known. 


His proficiency to play Veena and his specific interest in the song "Endaro Mahanubhavulu" would be known to many by now. This song is cast in raga Sreeragam. He must have been elated when he came to know that this was the favorite raga of Smt M.S.Subbulakshmi also. The occasion was the ceremony of receiving Bharat Ratna

Both Dr Kalam and M.S. Subbulakshmi received Bharat Ratna at the same ceremony. I very well remember the photo of Dr Kalam speaking to M.S. at the Bharat Ratna ceremony. From the narration of Dr Vidyasagar , a colleague of Dr Kalam, I came to know that Dr Kalam had asked M.S. Amma on that occasion what her favorite raga was and she had replied it was Sreeragam. On that occasion Dr Kalam had even touched the feet of M.S. Amma as a Vandanam to that great Athman.  These two remind me as the examples of “Hree” and “Lakshmi” expressed in "Hreescha te Lakshmischa Patnau"[i] of Purusha Sookhtham.



On the occasion of the final journey of Dr Kalam, I heard in the Podhigai TV, the great Musician Sri T.N. Seshagopalan revealing a song that Dr Kalam liked very much. Dr Kalam attended a concert of Sri TNS at Bangalore on which occasion he had expressed his admiration for the song "Neene Doddavano". It was a newly released record of Sri TNS, say, a year before that time. It was not a widely known song as “Endaro Mahanubhavulu”. Unless Dr Kalam was a regular listener of music of many doyens in the field, he could not have expressed his prior knowledge of that song and admiration for the same.


Sri TNS was surprised to know that Dr Kalam had known that song and its meaning – without knowing which it is not possible to appreciate that song. On hearing this, I was even more surprised because the meaning of that song was such that any scientist in the West could not have appreciated it. It was because Dr Kalam was imbibed with ‘civilisational values’ of our country and also a Hindu in thought due to logical temper, he could sense the “mind of God” in that song which even an Einstein could not grasp!


In this context it would do well to compare Einstein with Dr Kalam.


Both of them worked on destructive missile power. Both of them knew the value of human life that is threatened by that missile power. Both of them loved peace, but Dr Kalam did not consider peace as anathema to missile strength. He had rightly understood the civilisational message of the importance of Kshatriya activities. The core of the message was to be battle-prepared at all times and be expansionist. But there was a rule in that too - that expansionism did not go in the anti-clockwise direction.

The kings of different regions of ancient land of Bharat went round in clockwise direction. They started from east or south and went round clock-wise in succeeding directions. Muchukuntha and Raghu did so in their Digvijaya. Similarly in the Prashasthi of the inscriptions of Chola kings, the victories are mentioned in clock-wise directions. In this order, expeditions to North West and beyond had no place. Expeditions had not gone beyond river Saraswathi or Indus in times of yore. But the movement of people and expansionism had taken place in the east. That is how throughout the East, Hinduism had spread in its glory. West and North West were meant for exile as it is in the left side – Ida – Parsva. Since our ancients considered Bharat as the holiest of the holy places (Bheeshma Parva – chapter 9), they went round and round in this land and tried to bring the entire land under their control. Military prowess was given topmost priority so that others would not disturb them or they could bring others under them so that peace could be ensured.




Taking cue from this, Dr Kalam did not subscribe to Ashokan compromise on militariness. Instead he wanted military power as a necessity for peace. I don’t think Einstein had that much clarity on weaponisation. Dr Kalam clearly had a civilisational advantage and he grasped it right.

Both Kalam and Einstein were drawn to politics. While Einstein was not so popular in politics, Kalam became popular with the people but not as much with a section of politicians who were threatened by his uprightness.

Both of them talked about God. Einstein was drawn to the religion of his birth but his stance was not well received. But Dr Kalam’s inquiry was that of true Seeker and no wonder he found himself in God-synchronous orbit being put over there against the gravitational pull of identity issues of birth, by his Guru Pramukh Swamiji some 15 years ago. 




He readily accepted the Swamiji’s suggestion of adding ‘faith in God’ as the 6th idea to transform India in 'Vision 2020'. I don’t know how many scientists would have agreed to that. But Dr Kalam perceived it as the 6th sense and that is where we can read his mind.

The 6th sense is something special to human beings. The world and the entire Universe that these two scientists were fascinated about are made up of just 5 elements (pancha bhootha) and the essence of the 5 elements. Even our body is made up of these 5 elements. But to activate it, we need an Athman. Only that Athman adds the 6th sense. For the activation of the body of 5 senses, an Athman is needed. When the Athman is absent, the human body of 5 elements is dead. In the same logic, for the activation of the Universe of huge conglomeration of 5 elements, a Great Athman is needed.

Athman is the Kshetrajan for the body which is the Kshetra. The knowledge that is developed when thinking about “Janma Mrithyu Jaraa, Vyadhi, Dhukha dosha” (BG 13-8, Kshetra- Kshetrajna Vipaka yoga) is what makes up the 6th sense. That 6th sense extends the same logic to the Universe of 5 elements that there must be a Great Athman to activate the Huge Universe. The Universe is still active and not dead. As it keeps expanding, there must an activating Athman in that. Since we the human beings are also part of the growing Universe, we are also being activated by that Great Athman.

In such a scenario, the Great Athman cannot lie outside the system of Universe (because activation is still continuing). Einstein believed in the existence of a Creator but did not find Him to be necessary for the Universe once it has been activated. But going by the logic of our body being activated by the Athman, the permeation of the Great Athman or the Paramathman throughout Creation and also in interaction with us (the numerous Athmans) sounds tenable. The constant interaction with the Paramathman must be there by virtue of It being the activating force of the human existence of the Universe. The ultimate 6th sense must tell man that He (Paramathman) is his Kshetrajan.


The kind of equation between the Paramathman and the Athman is more logically understood only in our Sanatana Dharma. As a product of this land, Dr Kalam was able to appreciate a lesser known song “Neene Doddavano, Ninna Dasaru Doddavaro?” The composer of this song, Sage Purandsaradasa asks whether God is great or his devotees are great. 



He goes on analyzing this question by the instances of how God heeded his devotee’s voice and appeared as Lion to save him. Does this not show that God is great?

At the same time is it not also true that the devotee is great by having pulled God to rush to his rescue? So who is great, God or his devotee?
Similarly God had responded to the wails of Draupadi. It is not just to human beings; God has heeded to the cries of even an elephant. This quality of God is also expressed by Meera bhai in "Hari tuma" song. The same idea is repeated in diverse ways by Azhwars in many verses of Nalayira Divya Prabhandam.


Here a question arises - why should the Great Activating Force, the Paramathman create these kinds of sufferings and allow the Athmans to wail?  Keeping aside the more mundane and better known ideas of karma, samsara, gunas, vasanas etc, let me look into the core question of why the Paramathman created the universe at all.

It was because It wanted to play! This may sound alarming, but scriptures say that Creation is a play for Him. Brahma Sutra says, “ Lokavanthu, leelaa kaivalyam”. (Brahma Sutra – 2-1-33) It means “Its (Brahman’s creative activity) is mere pastime as is seen in the world”. The clue is ‘as is seen in the world”. So what is seen in the world? To know that let's start from the beginning!

In the beginning there was Brahman.
Brahman is Brihat – huge and keeps growing.
Why did it grow in the first place?

Because without growth or before it started growing, It existed as an embodiment of all faculties and everything. It could see but it did not have an agent or an organ to see. It could hear but It did not have an organ to hear. Like this, It was capable of everything but could not actually exhibit anything. (It is like how we have the urge to express ourselves. That is a quality we have bequeathed from Brahman!). So It thought, “May I become many” and It became many. That is how creation began. In such scenario, Brahman (God) is not deviated from the created worlds or the “many” It became. In other words, It is in us as we are also part of the Many!


But we lost memory of It. That is where It has to somehow ‘bring us around’ towards It and make us eligible to be like That sometime or the other. That is why Nammazhwar said, “Vaikuntham puguvathu mannavar vidhiye” (All people are destined to enter Vaikuntham) (Thiruvaimozhi – 10-9-9).

This is like a play that we ourselves have played as kids. Imagine a kid – alone and having no one for company to play. What the kid will do? It will have the toys of a boy or a girl or an animal or anything that it has and make scenes of play by making someone hit or cry or laugh or succeed.

All these we are witnessing in the world. In all these we gain something in our 6th sense, and develop better understanding of how to play our parts.

So who is great in this equation, is it we?

We are like the toys that the kid is playing and we start enacting our role on our own (or we think so?).

Will the kid become more excited about it? Or the toy becomes more excited?
Will the kid try to outsmart the toy or the toy try to grab whatever it can to outsmart the moves of the kid?


This is the essence of "neene doddavano" (Is God great?) or "ninna dasaru doddavaro?" (Are devotees great?). The calls and wails for God from the devotees and the replies from God which these devotees can hear is what is meant by "as is seen in the world" that Brahma Sutra says. This interaction having dramatic elements of suffering and happiness, competition and excellence of one over the other makes it look like a play from a bird's eye view. 

In essence, everything seems to be a play – but that was originally started by the Kid, here the Paramathman. The kid enjoys the play as it has no one else but only its toys to play with. 

Is the Kid (God) being cruel to the toys – in this context, we, the Athmans?

Brahma Sutra further addresses this question and gives answers.

But here – for the current topic, I think the song and the purport of God’s play behind it is something that no scientist can perceive or appreciate.

The same cannot be said of Dr Kalam.

His liking for the Neene Doddavaro song shows that he is indeed steeped into Vedanta, the source of the 6th sense!  


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[i] From Purusha Sookhtham:-
hreeshca te lakshmeeshca patnyau | ahorAtre pArshve |
nakshatrANi roopam | ashvinau vyAttam |

iSHTam maniSHANa |
amum maniSHANa |
sarvam maniSHANA ||

(hreeshca) Hree and (lakshmishca) Laskhmi are (patnyau) wives (te)
to you. (aho - rAtre) The day and the night (pArshve) your sides.
(nakshatrANi) the Stars (roopam) your brilliant form. (ashvinau)
the Healing Ashvins (vyAttam) your mouth


HrI is the Goddess that grants Modesty ( a reference to second stanza
of Sixteenth Chapter of Gita also shows this Hri as meaning modesty.

(ahimsaa satyam akrodhas
tyaagah saanthir apaisunam
dayaa bhuutesu aloeluptvam
maardavam hrir acaapalam)

And Lakshmi who grants Wealth. ( hreer-lajjAbhimAninee devata ,
lakshmee- raishvayAbhimAninee devatA – Commentary by SayanA) The Day and the
Night are even such opposites. Sriman Narayana is the conciliation of
all such opposites, even as Sesha, the snake, and garuda, the eagle,
worshipping him together signify. He is brilliant as the stars, and
healing comes from him.



Saturday, August 1, 2015

I am back! – My tribute to Dr Kalam.


Dr Kalam, the exalted Athman we are fortunate to have lived along with, is being remembered for having been an inspiration to many. My thoughts about him took me to the articles where I have written about him. One such article written soon after he became the President of India was lingering on my mind for long. It was about Karma and Destiny. Here I meant Karma in the meaning of action and destiny as the resultant action or Prarabdha Karma. Prarabdha Karma is what is going to happen whether we work towards it or not. But Karma is what we have to keep doing with our thoughts and decisions – which are of course motivated by our vasanas infused with the three gunas (sattwa, rajasa and tamasa). Under the spell of these gunas, and without being aware that we are indeed propelled by these gunas, we keep doing karma. (“na hi kaschit kshanamapi jaathu thishtatya karmakruth / kaaryathe hyavasha karma sarva prakruthi jair gunaihi//” BG – 3-5)


In that process, the kind of attitude that we develop – by the spell of gunas or by freewill – if it is there (!?) define how a person evolves. In a rejoinder to an article by Debarshi Sen highlighting the karmic angles in the lives of Dr Kalam and Mr Verghese Kurien, I wrote about the importance of attitude towards how an action needs to be done rather than the action (karma) itself. Reading those lines I thought – here lies the tribute that I have to offer to Dr Kalam!


I wrote, “These two (Dr Kalam and Mr Kurien) undoubtedly performed their karma in the new environs, but what fetched them rewards is their attitude — the mind to accept whatever comes in their way and perform with utmost commitment and dedication. Had they cast their eyes on the results of their karma, the disappointment from denial might have proved too much. They, instead, banked upon samathvam— treating failure and success alike — and went ahead with undiluted enthusiasm and dedication into what the Gita calls as karmasu kaushalam (dexterity in action). This attitude termed as samathvam, coupled with dexterity in action ensures that at no time failure bogs one down. A person with samathvam will care less about the results and instead start concentrating more on how to improve his performance.”


It is easier to write this and speak high about this virtue which is essentially the core of Sankhya yoga taught by Gitacharyan. But when we are actually facing a difficult situation – a crisis, this samathvam is just a word and not deed. When I myself faced tribulations in my life that put me offline for a year, I realized why Krishna specifically picked out King Janaka as an example for Karma yogi. It is easy to talk about karma and attitude, but to follow it when you are in the thick of the forest fire is something difficult.  May be you need a Divine help to regain your samathvam. The many thoughts on Dr Kalam that is around me at this moment of his departure made me think – should I allow my personal loss and pain derail my strive towards samathvam? This samathvam is not to do with results or expectations, but about how I am as always, in spite of the trials I am undergoing.


Most of the articles on Dr Kalam at this moment are about his connect with students or him as a People’s President. But not many seem to think how he had to wade through the aversion of the Sonia dispensation and Karunanidhis’ 'Kalam is kalagam' remark  that denied him a 2nd term.  Dr Kalam did not aspire for the position but he did want to become the President as that would give him another opportunity to make himself heard well and all around. When that opportunity was denied he did not get stuck, but instead found other ways to reach out to the youth – which he did till he breathed his last.


This is the message I read from him at this juncture in my life. As I go through the comments that have been piling up for a year – and numerous mails and phone calls that are asking me why I am silent, I am asking myself - Why am I silent? Am I lost into myself and in my pains? At the same time I know that nothing is going to be lost if a Jayasree does not write. Or can I allow myself to rust, or write whatever I know whether it is useful or not to others.


With these kinds of numerous thoughts, I thought of the remark of Dr Kalam as being on the God-synchronous orbit – a never ending travel that can only be stopped when God sucks you. Perhaps by getting back to writing till I am exhausted, I can pay him the best tribute that I can.




Friday, December 20, 2013

Riddle of Fate and Free-will


From


The Riddle of Fate and Free-Will Solved

(A dialogue between His Holiness Shri Chandrashekhara Bharati

Mahaswami and a Disciple): [His Holiness was the Sringeri Mathadhipati

1912-1954.]

H.H. : I hope you are pursuing your studies in the Vedanta as usual?
D. : Though not regularly, I do make some occasional study.
H.H. : In the course of your studies, you may have come across many doubts.
D. : Yes, one doubt repeatedly comes up to my mind.
H.H. : What is it?
D. : It is the problem of the eternal conflict between fate and free-will.
What are their respective provinces and how can the conflict be
avoided?
H.H. : If presented in the way you have done it, the problem would baffle
even the highest of thinkers.
D. : What is wrong with my presentation? I only stated the problem and
did not even explain how I find it to be a difficult one.
H.H. : Your difficulty arises in the very statement of the problem.
D. : How?
H.H. : A conflict arises only if there are two things. There can be no
conflict if there is only one thing.
D. : But here there are two things, fate and free-will.
H.H. : Exactly. It is this assumption of yours that is responsible for your
problem.
D. : It is not my assumption at all. How can I ignore the fact that the
two things exist as independent factors, whether I grant their
existence or not?
H.H. : That is where you are wrong again.
D. : How?
H.H. : As a follower of our Sanatana Dharma, you must know that fate is
nothing extraneous to yourself, but only the sum total of the
results of your past actions.
As God is but the dispenser of the fruits of actions, fate,
representing those fruits, is not his creation but only yours.
Free-will is what you exercise when you act now.
D. : Still I do not see how they are not two distinct things.
H.H. : Have it this way. Fate is past karma; free-will is present karma.
Both are really one, that is, karma, though they may differ in the
matter of time. There can be no conflict when they are really one.
D. : But the difference in time is a vital difference which we cannot
possibly overlook.
H.H. : I do not want you to overlook it, but only to study it more deeply.
The present is before you and, by the exercise of free-will, you can
attempt to shape it.

The past is past and is therefore beyond your vision and is
rightly called adrishta, the unseen. You cannot reasonably attempt
to find out the relative strength of two things unless both of them
are before you. But, by our very definition, free-will, the present
karma, alone is before you and fate, the past karma, is invisible.
Even if you see two wrestlers right in front of you, you cannot
decide about their relative strength. For, one may have weight, the
other agility; one muscles and the other tenacity; one the benefit of
practice and the other coolness of judgment and so on. We can go on
building arguments on arguments to conclude that a particular
wrestler will be the winner.

But experience shows that each of these qualifications may fail
at any time or may prove to be a disqualification. The only practical
method of determining their relative strength will be to make them
wrestle.

While this is so, how do you expect to find by means of
arguments a solution to the problem of the relative value of fate
and free-will when the former by its very nature is unseen!

D. : Is there no way then of solving this problem?
H.H. : There is this way. The wrestlers must fight with each other and prove
which of them is the stronger.
D. : In other words, the problem of conflict will get solved only at the
end of the conflict. But at that time the problem will have ceased to
have any practical significance.
H.H. : Not only so, it will cease to exist.
D. : That is, before the conflict begins, the problem is incapable of
solution; and, after the conflict ends, it is no longer necessary to
find a solution.
H.H. : Just so. In either case, it is profitless to embark on the enquiry
as to the relative strength of fate and free-will.

A Guide

D. : Does Yor Holiness then mean to say that we must resign ourselves to
fate?
H.H. : Certainly not. On the other hand, you must devote yourself to free-
will.
D. : How can that be?
H.H. : Fate, as I told you, is the resultant of the past exercise of your
free-will. By exercising your free-will in the past, you brought on
the resultant fate.
By exercising your free-will in the present, I want you to wipe
out your past record if it hurts you, or to add to it if you find it
enjoyable.
I any case whether for acquiring more happiness or for reducing
misery you have to exercise your free-will in the present.
D. : But the exercise of free-will however well-directed, very often
fails to secure the desired result, as fate steps in and nullifies
the action of free-will.
H.H. : You are again ignoring our definition of fate. It is not an
extraneous and a new thing which steps in to nullify your free-will.
On the other hand, it is already in yourself.
D. : It may be so, but its existence is felt only when it comes into
conflict with free-will. How can we possibly wipe out the past
record when we do not know nor have the means of knowing what it is?
H.H. : Except to a very few highly advanced souls, the past certainly
remains unknown. But even our ignorance of it is very often an
advantage to us.

For, if we happen to know all the results we have accumulated
by our actions in this and our past lives, we will be so much
shocked as to give up in despair any attempt to overcome or mitigate
them. Even in this life, forgetfulnes is a boon which the merciful
God has been pleased to bestow on us, so that we may not be burdened
at any moment with a recollection of all that has happened in the
past.

Similarly, the divine spark in us is ever bright with hope and
makes it possible for us to confidently exercise our free-will. It
is not for us to belittle the significance of these two boons--
forgetfulness of the past and hope for the future.

D. : Our ignorance of the past may be useful in not deterring the exercise
of the free-will, and hope may stimulate that exercise. All the
same, it cannot be denied that fate very often does present a
formidable obstacle in the way of such exercise.
H.H. : It is not quite correct to say that fate places obstacles in the way
of free-will. On the other hand, by seeming to oppose our efforts,
it tells us what is the extent of free-will that is necessary now to
bear fruit.

Ordinarily for the purpose of securing a single benefit, a
particular activity is prescribed; but we do not know how
intensively or how repeatedly that activity has to be pursued or
persisted in.

If we do not succeed at the very first attempt, we can easily
deduce that in the past we have exercised our free-will just in the
opposite direction, that the resultant of that past activity has
first to be eliminated and that our present effort must be
proportionate to that past activity.

Thus, the obstacle which fate seems to offer is just the gauge
by which we have to guide our present activities.

H.H. : The obstacle is seen only after the exercise of our free-will; how
can that help us to guide our activities at the start?
H.H. : It need not guide us at the start. At the start, you must not be
obsessed at all with the idea that there will be any obstacle in
your way.

Start with boundless hope and with the presumption that there
is nothing in the way of your exercising the free-will.

If you do not succeed, tell yourself then that there has been
in the past a counter-influence brought on by yourself by exercising
your free-will in the other direction and, therefore, you must now
exercise your free-will with re-doubled vigour and persistence to
achieve your object.

Tell yourself that, inasmuch as the seeming obstacle is of your
own making, it is certainly within your competence to overcome it.
If you do not succeed even after this renewed effort, there can
be absolutely no justification for despair, for fate being but a
creature of your free-will can never be stronger than your free-will.
Your failure only means that your present exercise of free-will
is not sufficient to counteract the result of the past exercise of
it.

In other words, there is no question of a relative proportion
between fate and free-will as distinct factors in life. The relative
proportion is only as between the intensity of our past action and
the intensity of our present action.

D. : But even so, the relative intensity can be realised only at the end
of our present effort in a particular direction.
H.H. : It is always so in the case of everything which is adrishta or
unseen. Take, for example, a nail driven into a wooden pillar. When
you see it for the first time, you actually see, say, an inch of it
projecting out of the pillar. The rest of it has gone into the wood
and you cannot now see what exact length of the nail is imbedded in
the wood. That length, therefore, is unseen or adrishta, so far as
you are concerned. Beautifully varnished as the pillar is, you do
not know what is the composition of the wood in which the nail is
driven. That also is unseen or adrishta.

Now, suppose you want to pull that nail out, can you tell me
how many pulls will be necessary and how powerful each pull has to
be?

D. : How can I? The number and the intensity of the pulls will depend
upon the length which has gone into the wood.
H.H. : Certainly so. And the length which has gone into the wood is not
arbitrary, but depended upon the number of strokes which drove it in
and the intensity of each of such strokes and the resistance which
the wood offered to them.
D. : It is so.
H.H. : The number and intensity of the pulls needed to take out the nail
depend therefore upon the number and intensity of the strokes which
drove it in.
D. : Yes.
H.H. : But the strokes that drove in the nail are now unseen and unseeable.
They relate to the past and are adrishta.
D. : Yes.
H.H. : Do we stop from pulling out the nail simply because we happen to be
ignorant of the length of the nail in the wood or of the number and
intensity of the strokes which drove it in? Or, do we persist in
pulling it out by increasing our effort?
D. : Certainly, as practical men we adopt the latter course.
H.H. : Adopt the same course in every effort of yours. Exert yourself as
much as you can. Your will must succeed in the end.


Function of Shastras:

D. : But there certainly are many things which are impossible to attain
even after the utmost exertion.
H.H. : There you are mistaken. There is nothing which is really
unattainable. A thing, however, may be unattainable to us at the
particular stage at which we are, or with the qualifications that we
possess.

The attainability or otherwise of a particular thing is thus
not an absolute characteristic of that thing but is relative and
proportionate to our capacity to attain it.

D. : The success or failure of an effort can be known definitely only at
the end. How are we then to know beforehand whether with our
present capacity we may or may not exert ourselves to attain a
particular object, and whether it is the right kind of exertion for
the attainment of that object?
H.H. : Your question is certainly a pertinent one. The whole aim of our
Dharma Shastras is to give a detailed answer to your question.
Religion does not fetter man's free-will. It leaves him quite
free to act, but tells him at the same time what is good for him and
what is not.

The resposibility is entirely and solely his. He cannot escape it by
blaming fate, for fate is of his own making, nor by blaming God, for
he is but the dispenser of fruits in accordance with the merits of
actions. You are the master of your own destiny. It is for you to
make it, to better it or to mar it. This is your privilege. This is
your responsibility.

D. : I quite realise this. But often it so happens that I am not really
master of myself. I know, for instance, quite well that a particular
act is wrong; at the same time, I feel impelled to do it. Similarly,
I know that another act is right; at the same time, however, I feel
powerless to do it. It seems that there is some power which is able
to control or defy my free-will. So long as that power is potent,
how can I be called the master of my own destiny? What is that power
but fate?
H.H. : You are evidently confusing together two distinct things. Fate is a
thing quite different from the other one which you call a power.
Suppose you handle an instrument for the first time. You will do it
very clumsily and with great effort.
The next time, however, you use it, you will do so less
clumsily and with less effort. With repeated uses, you will have
learnt to use it easily and without any effort. That is, the facility
and ease with which you use a particular thing increase with the
number of times you use it.

The first time a man steals, he does so with great effort and
much fear; the next time both his effort and fear are much less. As
opportunities increase, stealing will become a normal habit with him
and will require no effort at all. This habit will generate in him a
tendency to steal even when there is no necessity to steal. It is
this tendency which goes by the name vasana. The power which makes
you act as if against your will is only the vasana which itself is of
your own making. This is not fate.

The punishment or reward, in the shape of pain or pleasure,
which is the inevitable consequence of an act, good or bad, is alone
the province of fate or destiny.

The vasana which the doing of an act leaves behind in the mind
in the shape of a taste, a greater facility or a greater tendency for
doing the same act once again, is quite a different thing. It may be
that the punishment or the reward of the past act is, in ordinary
circumstances, unavoidable, if there is no counter-effort; but the
vasana can be easily handled if only we exercise our free-will
correctly.

D. : But the number of vasanas or tendencies that rule our hearts are
endless. How can we possibly control them?
H.H. : The essential nature of a vasana is to seek expression in outward
acts. This characteristic is common to all vasanas, good and bad.
The stream of vasanas, the vasana sarit, as it is called, has two
currents, the good and the bad.
If you try to dam up the entire stream, there may be danger.
The Shastras, therefore, do not ask you to attempt that. On the
other hand, they ask you to submit yourself to be led by the good
vasana current and to resist being led away by the bad vasana
current.

When you know that a particular vasana is rising up in your
mind, you cannot possibly say that you are at its mercy. You have
your wits about you and the responsibility of deciding whether you
will encourage it or not is entirely yours.

The Shastras enunciate in detail what vasanas are good and
have to be encouraged and what vasanas are bad and have to be
overcome.

>When, by dint of practice, you have made all your vasanas
good and practically eliminated the charge of any bad vasanas
leading you astray, the Shastras take upon themselves the function
of teaching you how to free your free-will even from the need of
being led by good vasanas.

You will gradually be led on to a stage when your free-will
be entirely free from any sort of coloring due to any vasanas.
At that stage, your mind will be pure as crystal and all
motive for particular action will cease to be. Freedom from the
results of particular actions is an inevitable consequence. Both
fate and vasana disappear. There is freedom for ever more and that
freedom is called Moksha.