Thursday, 16 November 2017

38.REJECTING THE HERITAGE


38. REJECTING THE HERITAGE

ONE of the enduring objects of education has been to acquaint each generation with the best minds,thoughts, achievements and experiences of the past generations. These are formally recorded in books of history,portrayed in literature, and captured in the religious tradition and philosophical reflection. They are preserved and presented in the performing arts like dance, music, drama.They thus reach all sections of society. This represents a continuous, cumulative tradition , each generation adding its own contribution. The ancients took great care and pains to preserve and pass them on even in the absence of widespread literacy, written records, and formal libraries. Such was the importance attached to the preservation of heritage.


Kathak dance of Kerala- sublime confluence of literature, music, dance, drama, costume bringing alive themes from our history ( itihasa) and purana.





Where societies were subject to foreign invasion and attacks, or natural disasters, their monuments and records were destroyed. What historians and archaeologists now find are mere tiny fragments out of which they try to construct their own theories and weave their fancy webs.






Homer reciting his verses to the accompaniment of music

It is only societies which relied on oral transmission with a definite method that have succeeded in preserving their past chronicles. Homer's Iliad comes from such oral tradition. The old language is often not understood, and old practices  have been discontinued. The Greeks today do not continue their classical tradition, or practise their own philosophy! Their literature lives!

It is Hindus alone who have preserved both their religious and secular literary traditions in tact all these millennia- in spite of the waves of invasion. Ironically, it is in the modern age that these are threatened, by absence of true shraddha, excessive reliance on print, digital, and visual media, absence of sources of patronage, and the irreverent intrusion of  empty academics.But even today there are traditional scholars who preserve the oral tradition, though in a shrunken form. 


Oral recital, often with the accompaniment of music, is still in vogue, and has  good following. There are still scholars who recite the Ramayana, Bhagavatam, Mahabharata, Narayaneeyam, Bhagavad Gita, Devaram. Tiruvachakam, Divya Prabandam, from memory!
Sengalipuram Anantarama Dikshitar-
famous exponent of Ramayana, Bhagavatam, Narayaneeyam, all extempore


 Ancient  Secular States

Religion served as the focal point of the total heritage of societies.
Ancient Greece granted freedom of worship and belief to individuals, so long as the nation's ancient Gods were publicly honoured. This tradition was continued by the Romans, so that many cults flourished. Edward Gibbon writing on the fall of the Roman Empire recorded:


The various modes of worship, which prevailed in the Roman world, were all considered by the people, as equally true; by the philosopher, as equally false; and by the magistrate, as equally useful. And thus toleration produced not only mutual indulgence, but even religious concord.

 Thus in those ancient days, the State allowed multiple faiths. There were no battles on theological grounds. This truly amounted to a "secular" state. One can imagine the kinds of cultural currents that flowed.

Separation of Church and State

 This changed with the ascendancy of Christianity as the state religion in the 4th century AD.Religious intolerance began with the Christians. Other faiths were ruthlessly, often brutally, suppressed. Wherever Christians went, they destroyed the native religions, as in South America.  This continued  till the 18th century when with the rise of the Enlightenment movement in Europe there was first the separation of Church and State, when religion lost state protection and patronage. This is best exemplified in the First Amendment to the American Constitution.[1791]. The 'secular ' or neutral  state was born. Muslims have not followed this trend.

 With the rise of science, people came to devalue religion itself and its prescriptions and practices. Religion continues no doubt in some form, but it has ceased to be the motive for living (except in the case of fundamentalists). People do not now live for God. Society as a whole has become secular .  Religion has lost its role as the guardian of heritage or as guide to conduct. We go by civil law.

First, religion was hit. Now history and literature are being undermined.

Delink with heritage: 
History and Literature

History as formally taught has   usually been dull and uninspiring. And when the teacher is as dull and unenthusiastic. A good and inspiring teacher can enliven the subject, any subject. But even more than that, somethings are best learned in an informal atmosphere, in accounts given in informal, playful ways.

This is what good literature does. One can learn about English social conditions during the early industrial revolution  from text books. We can also learn them from the novels of Charles Dickens. Which is more interesting for the general reader?

Study v Education

Speaking to some youngsters who have just finished their +12 schooling, I found that  neither  history nor literature interested them! "Uncle, we have our entrance exams- so many of them; the portions to study are so heavy; the model papers to solve are so many. We have been preparing for the last three years. Who wants history or literature?"

I don't blame the poor children. The competitive pressure is so much. In our system, there are not many choices for career, or job, really.Most of these boys and girls come from middle class backgrounds, and a regular job is their ideal and necessity.. All their study is linked to the job ultimately. And their education stops with a job! I realised the true import of what G.K.Chesterton said long ago: Let not study stand in the way of your education!

Our  system has limited education to schooling ( and college) and a distaste is created for further learning!  Our vast literature in the various languages is perceived to be not important, because they are not relevant to a job or career., or even higher studies. People do not look up to literature like poetry as a source of learning or relaxation. The very word "learning" has lost its conventional meaning and significance. We have scholars and academics, but no more learned men!

Heroes no more!

I did not find this surprising. All over the world, there is a tendency on the part of entrenched academics to rubbish the past. On the American campuses, they are busy re-assessing their founding fathers, and finding that they are not heroes, after all! Their civilization is not so great, for it is the creation of the Caucasian White Male or the Protestant Anglo-Saxon concoction! Americans are not great! This is all driven by some political agenda.

Some American English teachers do not like to teach Shakespeare; they ask why "one English guy" should be given so much importance, when there is so much other interesting material! And even teenagers in England are asking why they should read Shakespeare, when his language is no more spoken  or understood! 

 The West has not been noble in some of the things they did. But it does not mean they were not great in some respects. We may not agree with many things they did- but it is now, after so many centuries! In their time, they did what they they thought was right  or  great! They did what no one else did, for whatever reason. Who prevented the Chinese or the Indians from going round the world and discovering new places? It does not make sense to rubbish the past of an entire civilization.

As a victim of British colonialism, I can surely blame them for many things. But then, who allowed them to colonise us? Why did we not resist them? We were witless, and blame them for their guile! The blame is not all on them! This is exactly what Mahatma Gandhi said in 1909: the British did not conquer India, Indians lost their swaraj! In fact we have lost it more after they left!

3 Gs - Then and now !

The big explorers who went out to discover the world are said to have been motivated by three Gs : God, Gold, and Glory. One went to America, another came to India. Both these guys changed the history of the world.They imposed their religion on native peoples; they plundered the gold; and they sought name for themselves. This is a historical event: iti ha asa, as we say- " thus indeed it was". Why should we call them villains now? We do not like them, but have we learnt any lessons? We have allowed global capitalism to rule us! Greed is the new God, Gold and Glory are still there! India is still plundered in the name of globalization! Our own people went and signed those agreements! This is because we did not learn or remember our history! Why blame others? Globalization is the biggest G which has swallowed all other Gs!

Is Shakespeare still relevant?


Part of this battle with heritage covers great literary figures.

Why should we study Shakespeare? He is no kith or kin.He was an Englishman- representative of a race who ruled us. He did not write our language. He wrote strange stories. His language is at times obscene/vulgar, He wrote for illiterate audiences. 



All this  is true. But all this is like the skin of our jack fruit. Remove it , and you get one of the sweetest and most nourishing tropical fruits. Shakespeare was English by birth, but he was universal or cosmic by sentiment. He wrote about matters which are universally valid. He gave many expressions  which have become part of the linguistic heritage. He wrote so much that amuse us, expressed so much lofty philosophy which can edify us. How many have been there in the world like him?

[As for the allegation that Shakespeare wrote for illiterate audiences,  let us remember that our own Panchatantra is supposed to have been written in the form of animal fables by Vishnu Sharma to educate the foolish children of a prince. That has not prevented us from enjoying the work, and drawing lessons! This is perhaps the one work from India that has been translated into many languages and entered the lore of many countries from ancient days!]

Dr. Samuel Johnson wrote in his preface to The Plays of Shakespeare (1765),:


 “His characters … are the genuine progeny of common humanity, such as the world will always supply, and observation will always find.”


The 400 years since his death have only added value to his words. Ben Jonson, contemporary poet and writer noted that 
Shakespeare was ‘not of an age, but for all time.’ 
This is the mark of a true master:  his works never get dated. Every generation and age can find new meaning and relevance in his works.

If English youngsters feel they need not study Shakespeare, they are English only by skin . Something vital is missing in their psyche.


CBC-The Current

Changing values-sinister designs

This is the result of the maddening  pace of modern life, the changes in our lifestyle which devalues genuine leisure and promotes gadget culture, the hard conditions of living which do not allow us the time or inclination to devote to a great work of art. We hardly take time to pause and reflect. It is due to the change in our values. And it is also due to the sinister international forces which decry national cultures and exalt an amorphous pluralism. First went the open link with religion. Now the link with one's own linguistic and literary heritage , which is an essential part of culture, is sought to be cut!

It is said by some that Shakespeare's plays were meant to be performed, that his words were meant to be heard and enjoyed and not laboriously studied, and that what was meant for illiterate English audiences cannot be enjoyed by students drawn from different  ethnic and cultural backgrounds and languages. A little thinking will show what fantastic nonsense this argument is! All these boys and girls, from different language groups and ethnic and cultural backgrounds learn English for 10- 12 years, reach some level of proficiency and come to England for further study and work. And only when it comes to Shakespeare they are aware of their different background! If they are so fond of their background, why  leave their countries at all? Unfortunately, the rulers in the UK have lost their head too. They have forgotten what it takes to be an Englishman.

The US- not a civilization as yet!

The situation in the US is somewhat different. The US is not yet a true civilization. It is not yet a full country. It has been a 'melting pot'. The Americans are not one people. It is just 400 years old and has no culture of its own, except money making, and military adventure, which resulted from the two world wars.Their economy rolls on the military-industrial complex. It has no genuinely original achievement except its Constitution and the Atom Bomb. The UK is mature, older civilization, has been the cradle of the modern world, is still the mother of parliaments. And it is the home of the genuinely international language, English. And what is English without Shakespeare? Are the Englishmen who devalue Shakespeare in their senses?



Shakespeare is not for stories!

Cover of a Harper Perennial Book-2012



Shakespeare, or any classical literature for that matter, is not studied for the stories alone. It is not studied for mere pleasure or intellectual pride. It is studied in the process of growing up. The language is not familiar today, but therein lies its beauty. It takes some effort to master it, but with the Internet and books like No Fear Shakespeare, we can easily study the works . And the pleasure comes when we start reflecting on the stunning passages or usages, often induced by situations we face in real life, not necessarily what the characters faced in the plays. There is art, poetry, philosophy, fun in his works.Only, we must be suitably equipped. Appreciation of any genuine art takes deliberate effort and time.And some mentoring. And who knows, study of Shakespeare may in time make us wise! (may be, in spite of ourselves!)

 I started studying Shakespeare in 1959,[ only two plays were studied in college as part of the syllabus; others I read on my own.] It took time, because we had few guides and detailed notes.But we had excellent books like A.C.Bradley's. When I started marking the notable expressions and passages, I crossed two thousand! What range of ideas and expression! If an educated person says he has no time or mind for Shakespeare, I think he is just a buffalo in human shape!

Shakespeare-the Universal Man

 Each race produces its representative man. Shakespeare is the foremost Englishman. In his works he reveals himself as the Universal Man, if ever there can be one. He is not dead. He cannot die.  As Emerson observed:


Shakspeare knew that tradition supplies a better fable than any invention can. If he lost any credit of design, he augmented his resources; and, at that day, our petulant demand for originality was not so much pressed. There was no literature for the million. The universal reading, the cheap press, were unknown. A great poet who appears in illiterate times, absorbs into his sphere all the light which is any where radiating. Every intellectual jewel, every flower of sentiment it is his fine office to bring to his people; and he comes to value his memory equally with his invention


Shakspeare is as much out of the category of eminent authors, as he is out of the crowd. He is inconceivably wise; the others, conceivably. A good reader can, in a sort, nestle into Plato’s brain and think from thence; but not into Shakspeare’s. We are still out of doors. For executive faculty, for creation, Shakspeare is unique. No man can imagine it better. He was the farthest reach of subtlety compatible with an individual self,—the subtilest of authors, and only just within the possibility of authorship. 

Do we realise what we lose when we deny ourselves a dip into Shakespeare? We lose touch with an entire tradition of which he gave supremely varied and refined expression. We lose touch with a part of  total human experience. We lose touch with a part of ourselves.

Shakespeare- just an example

Shakespeare is just one example to show how our heritage is getting dumped. As educated Indians, we are more familiar with Shakespeare than with Kalidasa or Kamban or the other great regional poets. They also wrote in tongues which are today not understood, without translation and annotation.  Thanks to Macaulay's education, we have lost touch with them: there is not even a pretense of getting to study their works.They appear so remote! To that extent, our heritage is already as good as lost.

[ One aspect of the Macaulay scheme is the replacement of our own languages and subjects by English and new subjects; the second aspect is the linking of formal school education with jobs. It is this system that prevails today. Studying the old literature in the Indian languages won't get you a job today! Besides, they are highly didactic and do not appeal to the younger generation.]
It is an irony that while Sanskrit is not read and understood by many,unless they learn it deliberately, most Indians cannot also read and understand the ancient works in their own regional tongues, which are spoken, in spite of their schooling,  unless they are translated and annotated!
Look at the ironical situation. Shakespeare is supposed to have written for illiterate audiences, but they understood his philosophy and poetry. Today, our highly literate and 'educated' youngsters cannot follow the works in their own language!

 The tendency to disregard and discredit one's own cultural heritage is a growing malady today, in the amorphous  multiculturalism that is engulfing us. This is reinforced by commercial globalism.

Intentional misinterpretation

There is also the tendency to interpret ancient works in the light of today's opinions and theories, giving the words a meaning which they did not have, overlooking that secular works reflect the spirit of the times.  The old works influenced our character and conduct. Their facts might be wrong according to today's science; but their beliefs made for better beings. Today we may know that the earth is not flat; that it is not the centre of the universe; but has this knowledge made us better human beings? Or has it made the earth a better place to live? Scientific theories are like passing clouds; they do not precipitate rain. They do not constitute a tradition that can guide successive generations. The so called scientific culture is hardly two centuries old, but it is already making the world unfit for living.

Living tradition grows

 A living cultural tradition is a cumulative force; the scientific culture is ever changing theoretical fancy, that is only sustained by the fundamentalists occupying university chairs. Tradition does not stop with the present. We are also adding to it, we are continuing it- on different lines. A living tradition is ever evolving. For that we don't have to reject the whole heritage or dishonour the past. To reject the heritage is to commit cultural suicide.


Life every man holds dear; but the dear man holds honour far more precious-dear than life. 
Troilus and Cressida
Shakespeare


Friday, 10 November 2017

36. MAN AND NATURE


36. MAN AND NATURE



Peace by piece 
by Celia Berrell


The world is getting smaller
and its breaking into bits.
Let’s put it back together.
Peace by piece
the puzzle fits.

Repairs can all be tended
by the tiniest of friends.
As working all together
peace by piece
the puzzle mends.

Earth as seen from space.





THERE is a general view that nature is steady, while man is both unsteady and capricious. Poets express this in beautiful songs, as in the following from the 1954 movie Nastik.

Nature and man


देख तेरे संसार की हालत क्या हो गई भगवान
कितना बदल गया इनसान कितना बदल गया इनसान
सूरज न बदला चांद न बदला ना बदला रे आसमान
कितना बदल गया इनसान कितना बदल गया इनसान

Dekh tere sansar ki haalat kya hogayi bhagwan
Kitna badal gaya insaan, kitna badal gaya insaan
Suraj na badla chand na badla na badla rae aasman
Kitna badal gaya Insaan


O Lord, look at the state of your world!
How much has man changed, how much has man changed!
Sun has not changed, moon has not changed, 
nor has the sky changed,
How much has man changed !


आया समय बड़ा बेढंगा
आज आदमी बना लफ़ंगा
कहीं पे झगड़ा कहीं पे दंगा
नाच रहा नर हो कर नंगा
छल और कपट के हाथों अपना
बेच रहा ईमान, कितना …

Aaya samay bada bedanga
Aaj aadmi bana lafanga
Kahin pe jagda kahin pe dhanga
Naach raha nar hokar nanga
Chal aur kapat kae haathon apna
Baech raha imaan, kitna badal gaya insaan.

Times have come which are unsuitable
Today man has become unsettled.
There is fight somewhere, there is riot somewhere
Man is dancing naked!
With guile and pretense, men are selling their faith!
How much  has man changed !




This is from the celluloid poet Kavi Pradeep. Here he is contrasting the social environment created by man, and the natural environment. The natural environment is taken to be unchanging, while man is changing his social environment in unwholesome ways.



Does man change?





Marcus Aurelius


Some philosophers however hold that over the years, humanity is by and large what it has always been: seeing and doing things in the same way. For instance, Marcus Aurelius writes:






"Think by way of example the times of Vespasian, and you will see all these things: marrying,raising children, falling ill, dying, wars, holiday feasts, commerce, farming, flattering, pretending,suspecting, scheming, praying that others die, grumbling over one's lot, falling in love,amassing fortunes, lusting after office and power. Now that life of theirs is dead and gone.....the times of Trajan, again the same....."
 [ Meditations. 4.32  Translation by Stephen Hanselman ]

( Vespasian was the Roman Emperor from 69 to 79 AD. Trajan was the emperor from 98 to 117 AD. Marcus Aurelius was himself emperor from 161 to 180 AD)

Here, we are told that in about a century, humans had not changed their ways significantly. They had carried on in much the same way!

Things are not the same!

Those living now in the second decade of the 21st century can hardly agree with either assessment fully. We know that both the natural environment, and the social structure have undergone tremendous changes due to human intervention. Things may seem the same, but they are not. We may be doing the same things, but not in the same manner or spirit!

Basic human nature has not changed. We are as prone to love and war, hatred and strife, struggle for power and position, given to scheming and flattering, now as in the days of Marcus Aurelius. But our methods and weapons have changed. Love is not steady, marriage is not for life but a contract of convenience, children are with single parents, old people are dumped in -what are atrociously called - "old age homes" which are anything but homes! War is not confined to combatants. We have lost our sense of right and wrong, and an intense relativism dictates and guides our actions. Utilitarian calculations have replaced moral concerns. We continue with old names, but they do not mean now what they meant in the past.

Sun is changing

While society has changed, nature is also observed to be not so steady, after all. Scientists tell us that the sun for instance is steadily changing. They estimate its life to be about 8 billion years, and it is now half way through- in about its 4.5 billionth year. A stage will come when it will burn up its hydrogen, become a red-giant star,[ finally assuming 150 times its present size ] and engulf Mercury, Venus and   Earth.  Though this will happen  in another 3.5 billion years, earth will become unlivable in another billion years!


Sun as red-giant star: Image from NASA

 In the mean time, the sun too continues to behave in cycles,  causing disturbances on earth,through waves of heat and cold; though the effects may not last long, the cycles get repeated. This is quite apart from the changing seasons.

However these things do not unduly disturb us Hindus whose scriptures tell us that even the Universe will one day disintegrate!

Man is changing the earth!

While this is the natural progression based on the life of the sun as projected by scientists, earth is already becoming unlivable due to human activity- its nature and scale.'Progress' based on human economic and industrial activity  in the last two centuries has polluted all the surface water on earth; it has polluted the rivers and the oceans; it has destroyed forests which precipitate rain and protect the soil; it has polluted the air and atmosphere. It has invented products and processes which directly affect Nature adversely and permanently, and in ways which affect the quality of life. It has led to extinction , and seriously threatens the existence, of many life forms on earth, the true function and significance of which even the so called scientists do not fully know.Pollution , global warming,and the risks of  nuclear energy are distinctly modern phenomena, due to our 'scientific advance'. Thus the nature surrounding us is not what it was at the time of Marcus Aurelius, it is not what it was even a century ago! These have brought about radical changes in our social arrangements too.

While every other life form on earth lives in ways as intended by nature, in harmony with it, man alone does things which go against nature , and yet calls it 'progress'! Such progress has made our water undrinkable , and the air unbreathable!

In fact, those who are over 70 can easily see how fast, and how irreversibly things have changed all around us in the last 50 years in India. All aspects of life have changed simultaneously. Nothing that we use today is exactly what it was a fifty years ago! Even our traditional food has changed in content and composition, though it retains its name and form! The institutions which provided stability and strength in times of stress in the past , like  marriage and family, religious orders and arrangements, local communities, etc have also changed radically. Or, they no more fulfill their old functions. Even the pace of life has accelerated, and life style altered.

The net result is that man has simply failed to comprehend and relate to his environment- natural or social- meaningfully. Both are being manipulated by him continuously, in accelerated ,unceasing wave after wave. Commercial interests have taken control of the details of living. 

For serious students of literature, this does not come as a  surprise at all. Poets and philosophers have been warning us of the forces of change. But no one foresaw the furious pace of the change. 


FUTURE SHOCK



Alvin Toffler in 2006. 
Photo: By Vern Evans (Flickr:AT 02)
CC BY-SA 2.0 Wikimedia commons)
 The author who best captured the situation was Alvin Toffler. In his 1970 book "Future Shock", he traced in sufficient detail the forces of change, their pace, direction and magnitude. He called 'Future Shock' that psychological state, based on a culture shock, where both individuals and societies were unable to cope with change- too much change in too short a time at too fast a pace. This is compounded by "information overload"- we have too much information for our understanding. The situation totally disorients both individuals and societies. Institutions and arrangements of the past would not help us. We are left dazed.


We must search out totally new ways to anchor ourselves, for all the old roots — religion, nation, community, family, or profession — are now shaking under the hurricane impact of the accelerative thrust.

Thus the present is not a smooth extension of the past,  the past is no sure guide to the future. Toffler also anticipated the era of personal computers, mobile communication ,internet and email, etc but warned us in 1998:


"Society needs people who take care of the elderly and who know how to be compassionate and honest. Society needs people who work in hospitals. Society needs all kinds of skills that are not just cognitive; they're emotional, they're affectional. You can't run the society on data and computers alone."

Disturbing trends




Cover of an old edition shown here for educational purpose.


I first read the book in 1974, and it has left a lasting and disturbing impression.Almost everything  that the author said has happened! This book is still relevant. Our youngsters would be shocked to know how relevant it is to India today! How mindlessly has India embraced 'future shock'!


Technological and natural environment
Toffler mainly deals with the  consequences of the industrial and technological changes created by man, during the three phases of the so called march of civilization: the agrarian, industrial and post-industrial society.[detailed in his book 'The Third Wave', 1980.] Other aspects of these changes have been studied by others like Lewis Mumford, Jacques Ellul. Man's capacity to adapt to change, individually and socially, has seriously lagged behind the pace of change. It is even more than the human mind can really absorb.

But since the days of 'Future Shock' which continues to be relevant, serious scientists have studied how man's activities in the name of progress have impacted the environment, and how unsuitable the earth is becoming as our habitat. The rising science of ecology since the days of Rachel Carson is revealing the serious nature of the damage, often irreversible, being caused by man, in the name of progress and development, with the aid of modern science! But this is yet to be fully acknowledged by the so called scientific community, and appreciated by the educated public and its leaders.

 India could have avoided many of the pitfalls if we had followed a different line of development, but our leaders lacked wisdom and courage; they merely followed the ways of the West as progress, and we have repeated and inherited all their mistakes, misdeeds and misery. Present PM Modi too is following the same route!

Ancient literature is full of accounts of people who have cried, in every age, that it has deteriorated, compared to the past! But what we are witnessing now is unprecedented by all objective standards. The earth and air, water and sky are not now what they were  a mere 50 years ago- as measured by scientific instruments! Even the chemical composition of our food has changed! There is now practically no food item which is not touched or treated by some chemical at some stage! There is no one power or authority which controls things or can call the shots. We in fact do not know for sure who runs the show! Things are going on pretty much as an orchestra without  a conductor!

 I do not like to conclude a piece on negative lines, but here I see no glimmer of light, unless we make bold to say that the answer to change is even more change, even faster change ! Let us keep travelling just for the fun of it, even if we do not know the direction or destination! Is it any consolation  that this is what is supposed to happen in this Kali Age, according to our own sacred books ? Relief in the form of an Avatar comes, but at the end! The age promises relief only to individuals who strive spiritually! How we wish we could return to  simpler ways, and say with the poet:


Therefore am I still 
A lover of the meadows and the woods 
And mountains; and of all that we behold 
From this green earth; of all the mighty world 
Of eye, and ear,—both what they half create, 
And what perceive; well pleased to recognise 
In nature and the language of the sense 
The anchor of my purest thoughts, the nurse, 
The guide, the guardian of my heart, and soul 
Of all my moral being. 

William Wordsworth.
Tintern Abbey Lines
July 13, 1798

Thursday, 9 November 2017

35. MAN: LONELY ISLAND ?


35. MAN: LONELY ISLAND ?

THIS world is a web of connections, inter-relatedness. No life form flourishes or thrives or even survives in isolation. There is something in nature which connects or unifies even apparently contradictory things in unseen ways. The modern science of ecology is just discovering some hidden relationships. 




Among modern scientists Fritjof Capra has written about it. In his book "The Web of Life", he sets forth

" a new scientific language to describe interrelationships and interdependence of psychological, biological, physical, social, and cultural phenomena--the "web of life." 

Book cover shown here for educational purpose.
Published by Anchor, 1997.







However, this is not so much an entirely  new insight,  as recovery of the old wisdom, of which modern man has lost sight. In the name of analytical science, man dissected and disconnected everything. It takes new science to see the connections so sundered. It takes a philosopher to see their true significance. Luckily for us, Capra is both scientist and philosopher. 
Photo of Fritjof Capra: By Zenobia Barlow
CC BY-SA 3.0 Creativecommons via Wikimedia Commons.



Man: part of Nature


All pre-Christian religions regarded man as part of the larger Nature. They did not make man its master, but guardian or trustee, because he was endowed with superior intelligence. They did not regard Nature as made for man's convenience or pleasure. Man was expected to live obeying Nature's laws, not to bend them to serve his immediate purpose or pleasure. The world was like a transit camp for man, on his way towards his permanent home.

Christianity changed this, saying the world was made by God for man's purposes. It asked man to "subdue " the earth. After nearly 15 centuries of this shibboleth, Enlightenment and Scientific revolution took over. They obscured the old wisdom even more, and toppled old ideas and approaches.They refused to recognize any purpose or concede anything sacred in Nature. Economic, Industrial and commercial interests immediately took advantage of the situation to engineer a new economic system. Exploitation of Nature was its core element. The rise of Western imperialism and colonialism spread the ideas and arrangements worldwide, so that it now reigns as default. Exploitation has turned destruction.

Threefold Connection:

The ancient wisdom recognised a threefold connection for man:
- his innate connection with Nature and all living systems
- his connection with the human society, though it was conceived as being structured and hierarchical, with fixed relations and mutual obligations
- his connection with a Higher Power which ordained the Universe and its natural and social systems.
These were the three pillars on which the structure of life in the world rested. They were three strands of one Great Truth.

The rise of science and the resultant industrial  and commercial culture obscured this ancient insight and the discipline it enforced. It made life wholly materialistic and secular.

The first to react to this were the great poets of the Romantic movement, and the great social critics like Carlyle , Matthew Arnold and John Ruskin.

The immediate result of the rise of science was a brutal assault on nature. It disconnected man from his roots in nature, made him an economic animal, seeking bodily comfort and satisfaction in the name of progress. Carlyle dubbed economics "the dismal science". No one described the situation better than William Wordsworth.





The World Is Too Much With Us

[ 1802 ]












The world is too much with us; late and soon, 
Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers;— 
Little we see in Nature that is ours; 
We have given our hearts away, a sordid boon! 
This Sea that bares her bosom to the moon; 
The winds that will be howling at all hours, 
And are up-gathered now like sleeping flowers; 
For this, for everything, we are out of tune; 
It moves us not. Great God! I’d rather be 
A Pagan suckled in a creed outworn;
 So might I, standing on this pleasant lea, 
Have glimpses that would make me less forlorn; 
Have sight of Proteus rising from the sea; 
Or hear old Triton blow his wreathèd horn.

This sums up neatly how man is to regard nature: it is not something owned,but experienced . We coexist. Wordsworth indicates here how the so called "Pagan" religions had a more intimate sense of connection with Nature- something lost in the Christian and subsequent Industrial civilizations. Written two centuries ago, in the first flush of the Industrial Revolution, it shows how prescient the great poet was! Humanity has not heeded the call of the poet, but slid further and faster on the path of alienation from Nature, in the days since.

No Man is an Island!

As the industrial civilization advanced, all relationships became commercial. Everything came to be exploited for immediate commercial or economic gain. 
Our social relationships became the next victim.
John Donne had written in 1624 how no man exists alone - how we are all interconnected.



NO MAN IS AN ISLAND

No man is an island,
Entire of itself,
Every man is a piece of the continent,
A part of the main.
If a clod be washed away by the sea,
Europe is the less.
As well as if a promontory were.
As well as if a manor of thy friend's
Or of thine own were:
Any man's death diminishes me,
Because I am involved in mankind,
And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls;
It tolls for thee

Though John Donne was a Christian, he is expressing here the core of all ancient religions which always considered man as part of society, considered society as anterior to the individual. In fact, this interconnectedness embraces all forms of life on this planet: just think how essential the insects and birds are for agriculture ! Somehow, humans are not complete without the plants,insects, birds and animals!

But the rising science and industrial society obscured this aspect of man's connectedness. Means of communication have multiplied, and new gadgets have been invented. Man now lives in huge residential complexes and  urban conurbations,involving physical proximity,  and not in isolated huts and houses. But people communicate less, even within modern families; they would talk to a phone, rather than to one another! We have truly become little islands! This was recognised by social philosopher, critic and poet Matthew Arnold as early as in 1852 when he wrote:

To MARGUERITE: CONTINUED

Yes! in the sea of life enisled, 
With echoing straits between us thrown, 
Dotting the shoreless watery wild, 
We mortal millions live alone. 
The islands feel the enclasping flow, 
And then their endless bounds they know. 

Yet, man feels a deep sense of despair and longs for the restoration of the original connection:

Oh! then a longing like despair 
Is to their farthest caverns sent; 
For surely once, they feel, we were 
Parts of a single continent! 
Now round us spreads the watery plain— 
Oh might our marges meet again! 

But it seems that this longing will not be fulfilled!

Who order'd, that their longing's fire 
Should be, as soon as kindled, cool'd? 
Who renders vain their deep desire?— 
A God, a God their severance ruled! 
And bade betwixt their shores to be 
The unplumb'd, salt, estranging sea.


Matthew Arnold

This God is the god of Science, and it will not let humans relate to each other as humans!
We are actually witnessing how in spite of all the modern gadgets, we are still distancing ourselves from each other! There is a phoney feeling to all  forms of modern association. 



A Higher Power?

With two pillars fallen, what about the third- our connection to a Higher Power?
There is some hope here. Science as it developed in the West, assaulted Christian theology and rejected its notion of God. Organised religion was increasingly given up by the educated class. Unfortunately, this was extended to all religions other than Christianity too, which had different theologies  or even no theologies! Religions which did not deny or contradict science in any way !
There is realisation now among true scientists [ as distinguished from the vast army of professional mercenaries] that the world is much more mysterious than can be comprehended by science and its instruments ! Whether it is the atom or the cosmos, the more scientists explore, the less they feel they know ! Science does not have the last word on the Universe, however spectacular its findings may seem. They are all but interim statements. Science is thus as incomplete now, as religion was once supposed to be imperfect!

There is also the realisation   that  true religion is more than theology. The spiritual instinct is natural to man who refuses to accept death as the true end of life!  True religion or spirituality is not necessarily concerned with God, however conceived, but with eternal life or a state transcending the cycle of birth and death! This is stated succinctly by Swami Chidananda ( of Divine Life Society):

Wisdom alone, Self-realisation, Self-knowledge, brahma-jnana, alone can liberate one, not ritualistic worship, outer ceremonials, not sacraments, not pilgrimage, nor vows, disciplines, charity or merits. These are good, but even if you engage in such meritorious, pious religious activity for a hundred births, nay a hundred thousand births, unless you have illumination or gnosis or jnana there is no liberation

 Thus we have movements like "spiritual but not religious". The dramatic revival of the religious spirit in Russia after the fall of the USSR clearly demonstrates that the religious instinct in the human breast cannot be extinguished by the most brutal organised assault and inhuman suppression!There is also a revival world wide of old Pagan religions, Mother Goddess cults, etc which emphasize both man's inter-connectedness to Nature and to one another! [This is in spite of nearly two millennia of sustained Christian hostility!]The Higher Power is the ground of both!


There is the growing realisation among the thoughtful that unchecked exploitation of nature is not sustainable, that its consequences cannot be adequately dealt with by human science or ingenuity. This has however not yet come to the mainstream which  continues to be ruled by vested interests.

Let us conclude with the thoughts of Albert Einstein, the greatest scientist of the last century.



Every one who is seriously involved in the pursuit of science becomes convinced that a spirit is manifest in the laws of the Universe-a spirit vastly superior to that of man, and one in the face of which we with our modest powers must feel humble.

The scientists’ religious feeling takes the form of a rapturous amazement at the harmony of natural law, which reveals an intelligence of such superiority that, compared with it, all the systematic thinking and acting of human beings is an utterly insignificant reflection.


Pictures are taken from various Web sites, for which I record my thanks.