Guest guest Posted October 10, 1994 Report Share Posted October 10, 1994 Thengalai/Vadagalai: about some historical settings related to the concepts as heard from elders. Part 3, contd. Previously I had been designating some spiritual groups as the 'bebes' and some others as the 'dodos'. Let me pick up the subject at that point. >From the days of the Ramayana to the days of the Mahabharata, a Yuga change happened. With it, followed changes in social structure, social values and social standards. The pristine simplicity of the Ramayana period gave rise to the intransigent intrigues of the Mahabharata epoch. Such a show of change in the Ithihasas was intended to imply something natural with the changing times. And so with all human activities in general even though we usually resist to accept the idea as something inevitable, without being fatalistic. The Acharyas prescribed the efforts needed to sail aganist this current with equanimity. Essentially, the change can be characterized as the 'be'-emphasized activity of the Dwapara Yuga transforming itself into the 'do'-emphasized activity of the Kali Yuga. The former is ego-free whereas the latter is ego-loaded by their very nature. And within the Yuga itself, this change seems to continue monotonically. Today, we are far more 'dodo's than 'bebe's than we were ever before. And one of the contemporary problems is this in itself. I hear a lot from young people: 'I just do not get the time to be myself'. With my life of seventy six years, I have been witnessing this change creeping on me unmistakably but insiduously. Even while many may think that I should now have a lot more of free time to be myself, the natural laws seem to intervene to make things difficult even to shift slightly the emphasis from the 'dodo' state to the 'bebe' state. Differently stated, whereas the Ramayana talks highly of the righteousness of 'to be' at all stages, the central theme of the Mahabharata was righteous action, the 'to do'. The Bhagavat Gita overplays Karma in relation to Jnana or for that matter, any other aspect of life taken singly. I am highlighting this rather elaborately as a pointer to the wisdom of Ramanujacharya in capturing this social response to nature as the object for spiritual reform. Buddhism went at it in a round-about way without a balance between the 'to be' and 'to do' and the religion had to walk out of India. The Vedic entity that forced this was Sankaracharya's Advaita. Most of his short life-time was dedicated to counter the Nagarjuna's (Buddhist) brand of 'to be' with the Advaithic brand of 'to be' proped up with the concept of Maya, a non-vedic principle. 'Neti', 'Neti' implying 'Tat Asat', 'Tat Asat' as the proof of Maya was used to support 'Tat Sat', 'Tat Sat'. This way of putting things may be challenged as too simplistic by the Advaithins. However it be, there is an element of the Epimenides paradox which, in the final analysis, cannot be denied. Sankaracharya himself asserts this when he said in his Bhashya on the Vedantha Sutra (II.iii.7), Ya eva hi niraakartaa tadeva tasya svaruupam: (the very denial affirms the denied.) The circular logic and the implied self-reference behind this assertion signify a great deal to the logicians of modern cognitive-science and classical epistemologists. If only Sankaracharya had a substancial fraction of the longivity of life the later Acharyas had, the emotion-free Advaita assertions could have been re-written by Sankaracharya himself. The introduction of the emotional elements into his latter statements and Granthas and his journey from the North to Kaladi specifically to perform his late mother's rites, in spite of his being a Sanyasi are evidences to this belief. The popular song 'Bhaja Govindam.. Bhaja Govindam... more than confirms it. Anyway it be, the force behind the Sankaracharya-way of 'to be' was losing ground together with the 'irrelevance' of 'to do', this Acharya's followers were trying to establish. Bhagavatha and the emotion-based and the social-based Vaishnavism was converting the ardent followers of 'bebes' to the 'dodos' camp. More of this was evident as centuries passed by To be continued... venkat v.rao, Oct.10, 1994 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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