Upload
tahreem-gull
View
123
Download
1
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Topic:
Indian social thought
Submitted to:
Ma’am Asma younis
Group:
16
Submitted by:
Farheen Gull
Anam Saqib
Sara Qasim
Husnain Ali
Outline:
1. what is thought?
2. What is Indian thought?
3. History of Indian social thought
4. The origin of Vedic social thought
5. Later changes in vedic social thought
6. Brahmanism social significance
7. The distinctive social elements in Jainism
8. Social implication of early Buddhism
9. Comparison between Brahmanism and Buddhism
10.Comparison of Buddha ten commandments
11.New social emphasis in the laws of Manu
12.Krishna as a symbol of social thought
13.Gandhi’s social thought
14.Contrast in Gandhi and Tagore social thinking
15.The rise of sociology in India
16.Distinctive social aspects of east Indian social thought
What is thought?
Social thought is thinking about societary problems by one or a few persons here and there in
human history or at the present.
The thinking of person about social life falls into three categories:
1. That involving the advancement of human group as groups.
2. That referring to the manipulation of human beings to the gain of special clique or group.
3. That which aim to analyze the underlying social processes and laws irrespective of the
effect of such analyses or the uses to which they are put.
What is Indian thought?
The span from early vedic hymns to the writing of present day. Indian schorals is a long One
filled with a rich literature. Indian thought has been built largely on the pattern of negation of
world and life. It has definite and real social implications.
India is composed of people of many origins. i.e Dravidians,Aryans,Mongoloid,Turkish,Iraniah.
In recent decades North Europeans and Queen Victoria.
Hinduism,Brahmanism,Buddhism,muhammedism,parseeism,christianty.This list does begin to
tell the story, but is sufficient to indicate how social thought is entangled in our thinking.
Origin of vedic social thought
The Vedas are considered the earliest literary record of Indo-Aryan civilization, and the mostt
sacred books of India. They are the original scriptures of Hindu teachings, and contain spiritual
knowledge encompassing all aspects of our life. Vedic literature with its philosophical maxims
has stood the test of time and is the highest religious authority for all sections of Hindus in
particular and for mankind in general.
“Veda” means wisdom, knowledge or vision, and it manifests the language of the gods in human
speech. The laws of the Vedas regulate the social, legal, domestic and religious customs of the
Hindus to the present day. All the obligatory duties of the Hindus at birth, marriage, death etc.
owe their allegiance to the Vedic ritual. They draw forth the thought of successive generation of
thinkers, and so contain within it the different strata of thought.
Origin of the Vedas
The Vedas are probably the earliest documents of the human mind and is indeed difficult to say
when the earliest portions of the Vedas came into existence. As the ancient Hindus seldom kept
any historical record of their religious, literary and political realization, it is difficult to determine
the period of the Vedas with precision. Historians provide us many guesses but none of them is
free from ambiguity.
Structure of the Vedas
Each Veda consists of four parts – the Samhitas (hymns), the Brahmanas (rituals), the Aranyakas
(theologies) and the Upanishads (philosophies). The collection of mantras or hymns is called the
Samhita. The Brahmanas are ritualistic texts and include precepts and religious duties. Each
Veda has several Brahmanas attached to it. The Upanishads form the concluding portions of the
Veda and therefore called the “Vedanta” or the end of the Veda and contains the essence of
Vedic teachings. The Upanishads and the Aranyakas are the concluding portions of the
Brahmanas, which discuss philosophical problems. The Aryanyakas (forest texts) intend to serve
as objects of meditation for ascetics who live in forests and deal with mysticism and symbolism.
The Mother of All Scriptures
Although the Vedas are seldom read or understood today, even by the devout, they no doubt
form the bedrock of the universal religion or “Sanatana Dharma” that all Hindus follow. The
Vedas have guided our religious direction for ages and will continue to do so for generations to
come. And they will forever remain the most comprehensive and universal of all ancient
scriptures.
CHANGES IN THE LATER VEDIC
PHASE
During later Vedic phase, agriculture became the mainstay of the Vedic people. Many rituals
were introduced to initiate the process of agriculture. It also speaks of ploughing with yokes of
six and eight oxen. The buffalo had been domesticated for the agricultural purposes. This animal
was extremely useful in ploughing the swampy land. The god Indra acquires a new epithet ‘Lord
of the Plough’ in this period. The number and varieties of plant food increased. Apart from
barley, people now cultivated wheat, rice, pulses, lentils, millet,sugarcane etc. The items of dana
and dakshina included cooked rice. Thus with the beginning of food production agricultural
produce began to be offered in the rituals. Tila, from which the first widely used vegetable food-
oil was derived increasingly, came to be used in rituals. The main factor in the expansion of the
Aryan culture during the later Vedic period was the beginning of the use of iron around 1000
BC. The Rigvedic people knew of a metal called ayas which was either copper or bronze. In the
later Vedic literature ayas was qualified with shyama or krishna meaning black to denote iron.
Archaeology has shown that iron began to be used around 1000 BC which is also the period of
later Vedic literature. The northern and eastern parts of India to which the Aryans later migrated
receive more rainfall than the north-western part of India. As a result this region is covered with
thick rain forests which could not be cleared by copper or stone tools used by Rigvedic people.
The use of iron tools now helped people clear the dense rain forests particularly the huge stumps
left after burning, in a more effective manner. Large tracts of forestland could be converted into
cultivable pieces in relatively lesser time. The iron plough could turn the soil from deeper
portions making it more fertile. This process seems to have begun during the later part of the
Rigvedic period but the effect of iron tools and implements become evident only towards the end
of the Later Vedic period.
There has been a continuous increase in the population during the later Vedic period due to the
expansion of the economy based on agriculture. The increasing number and size of Painted Grey
Ware (PGW) settlements in the doab area shows this. With the passage of time the Vedic people
also acquired better knowledge of seasons, manuring and irrigation.
All these developments resulted in the substantial enlargement of certain settlements such as
Hastinapur and Kaushambi towards the end of the Later Vedic period. These settlements slowly
began to acquire characteristics of towns. Such rudimentary towns inhabited mainly by the
chiefs, princes, priests and artisans were supported by the peasants.
Brahmans
In Hinduism, Brahman ( ब्रह्मन्� brahman) is the one supreme, universal Spirit that is the origin and
support of the phenomenal universe.[1] Brahman is sometimes referred to as the Absolute or
Godhead[2] which is the Divine Ground[3] of all being. Brahman is conceived as personal ("with
qualities"), impersonal ("without qualities") and/or supreme depending on the philosophical
school.
The sages of the Upanishads teach that Brahman is the ultimate essence of material phenomena
(including the original identity of the human self) that cannot be seen or heard but whose nature
can be known through the development of self-knowledge (atma jnana).[4] According to
Advaita, a liberated human being (jivanmukta) has realised Brahman as his or her own true self
(see atman).
The Isha Upanishad says:
Auṃ - That supreme Brahman is infinite, and this conditioned Brahman is infinite. The infinite
proceeds from infinite. If you subtract the infinite from the infinite, the infinite remains alone.
Brahman is the Hindu god of ideal life. It is our ideal life in a highly condensed form.2. It is the
direction in which all Hindus should proceed.3. It is the Hindu god
Brahman is the infinite source of all creation. It is believed to be God's soul in Gaudiya
Vaisnavism. Om is one energy of Brahman. It is matter. BRAHMAN:Brahman is the state at
which we don't...that unites all activities...
Jainism
Jaina code of conduct
It has far-reaching influence for lasting peace order. It consists of five ethical virtues regulating
the life of an individual.
1. Non-violence or non-injury,
2. Truthfulness-not to tell lies,
3. Non-stealing-abstention from theft,
4. Self-control or celibacy or avoidance of illicit sexual relation. In other words-to preserve
chastity.
5. Non-possession or non-attachment to worldly possession, avoidance of greed for possession.
Religions in India have always upheld the sanctity of life. Almost all religions preach non-
violence but in Jainism it is more than a moral precept. It is for the removal of suffering of
people. In Jain tradition, non-violence is equated with deity and is described as the protector of
the whole universe; Jainism respects the dignity and sacredness of human life. ‘Respect for life’
implies rejection of communalism, not merely non-violence is a supreme religion; it is a way of
life. As a way of life non-violence prompts an attitude of tolerance, non-hatred and
harmlessness. Non-violence requires transformation of the individual through moral and
religious practices and also transformation of political, social and educational order.
Jainism is essentially a religion, which is moralistic and spiritual. Jaina Ethics is meant for men
of all position and for men in every walk of life. Its social ethics and its spiritualism have cosmic
significance in the context of global problem of peace.
Contrast in Hinduism and Buddhism
On God
Buddhism : The original Buddhist doctrine does not entail any godly figures, though the later
Buddhist sects introduced some Godly figures.
Hinduism : The Hindus believe in 300,000 Gods.
On Rituals
Buddhism : Buddhism do follow some rituals but only in the form of meditation, and bowing
and different forms of worship while offering prayer in the Buddhist temples. Buddhist practices
also do not require any priests.
Hinduism : The rituals, being followed by the Hindus are more complex and vary from birth to
death of a person. Besides, priests do play important role in all the rituals.
On Caste System
Buddhism : There are four major sub sects in Buddhism, but none of them follow the caste
system.
Hinduism : On the contrary, there are a number of castes and sub-castes in Hinduism, and the
Hindus follow them rigidly.
On Asceticism
Buddhism : As the middle way, Buddhism rejects extreme asceticism as well as great wealth.
Hinduism : Most of the Hindus believe in extreme asceticism.
On Vedas
Buddhism : The Buddhists do not believe in the Vedas. Rather they firmly believe in the
teachings of the Lord Buddha and the Buddhist scriptures.
Hinduism : Hinduism believes in the supremacy of four Vedas - Rigveda, Samveda, Yajurveda
and Atharvaveda.
On Stages of Life
Buddhism : The Buddhists do not believe in the stages of life. People can join any of the stages
any time depending upon their spiritual preparedness.
Hinduism : The Hindus believe in the four stages of life, also known as the 'ashramas' -
Brahamacharya Ashram or Student life, Grihastha Ashram or family life, Vanprastha Ashram or
the age at which a person leaves all the worldly desire and home, and Sanyasa Ashram - when a
person meditates and awaits for the ultimate truth, death.
Comparison of BUDDHA’s ten commandments
10 Commandments (Note: There are several versions a general purpose version is used)
1) I am the Lord thy God, ... Thou shalt have no other gods before me.
2) Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven images.
3) Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain.
4) Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy.
5) Honor thy father and thy mother: that thy days may be long.
6) Thou shalt not kill.
7) Thou shalt not commit adultery.
8) Thou shalt not steal.
9) Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor.
10) Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's house.
The 10 commandments are based on a deity giving instructions, the Eightfold Path is a list of
human activities developed by a human for other humans
The God specifies obedience and how you are supposed to act towards him, there is no Buddhist
equivalent section as Buddhism needs no deity
Human to God relations are most important in the 10 commandments, at least they come first.
Human to human relations take a lower position.
The 10 Commandments is based on negatives - don't do this or that. The Eightfold Path is
positive (Do's) with the exception of a general don't exert yourself to be evil.The Eightfold path
does not micromanage - specific examples of not being good are not spelled out.The 10
commandments gives no examples on how to be good except how to be good toward God and
your social superiors.. just how not to be bad. The list is limited to five wrong doings. The
Eightfold Path offers a wider spectrum of activities through its generality.
Laws of Manu:
The laws of Manu state that it is a crime to cause any damage or harm to any kind of living thing,
be it an animal or a plant. As we learned, the Hindus respected these laws for a long time but it is
only recently that some have come to ignore their rules set by The Laws of Manu. Why is it that
this happens? It might have something to do with the mentality that new modern generations are
now developing. As a modernized society, we have slowly moved away from believing/ having
faith in deities and have come to rely more on scientific research and proof, but there are others
who also have alternative beliefs. In the past, deities were absolute powers that set laws to
follow. People followed those laws because they adored them or feared them to a certain extent.
Although deities had the most power of a civilization through the influence of religion but
legendary figures also had influence due to the admiration they had of the people. Now, we
follow what we believe to be “common sense” and scientific ideology that is based on research
and facts, we follow it because we want to survive, we have come to fear unbalance in our
environments and our lives that is caused by bad decisions, lack of knowledge, and breakage of
rules or suggestions set by our common sense and scientific ideology. Our laws are set by
governments and are mostly based on these two; common sense and scientific ideology, but there
are also a few other things on which our laws are based off of. Of course though, the civilizations
before us, along with their religion and laws have had a huge impact on forming our present day
morality and in general, our way of life.
Although we don’t rely on deities to know what to do and what not to do, we have overtime
come to the realization that some of the things that were said by some religions actually make a
lot of sense and impact us a lot. The Laws of Manu are a great example of this. Environmentalist
seek to achieve the kind of society that the Hindus had achieved through the followment of the
Laws of Manu and the knowledge of need for balance and having to make a conscious effort to
sustain our environment. If only other societies/ civilizations would have decided to follow laws
similar to those of the Hindus, not necessarily to the extent of not eating meat, but the overall
idea of taking care of our local environment, a lot less damage would be made to the earth.
Krishna
The Supreme Lord
Lord Krishna is the symbol of many virtues. He is one of the most widely revered and most
popular of all Hindu divinities, worshipped as the eighth incarnation (avatar, or avatara) of
Vishnu and also as a supreme god in his own right. Krishna became the focus of numerous
bhakti (devotional) cults, which over the centuries have produced a wealth of religious poetry,
music, and painting.
Symbol
Krishna is the symbol of an able statesman, a warior, a great philospher and a teacher. He is the
symbol of love, devotion and joy.
Flute used as a symbol:
The flute is called Venu in Sanskrit. Venu is the word for bamboo. Venu is an instrument made
of bamboo reeds. Krishna and flute go together! Therefore another name for Lord Krishna is
“Venugopal”.
Flute used in South India has nine holes. It represents human body with nine “openings” namely,
nostril (1), mouth (1), skin (1), eyes (2), ears (2), two for excretion. Flute is hollow to represent
the human being who is free of ego and arrogance. It represents human being with humility. Lord
Krishna is asking us to become hollow just like the flute, hollow and free of ego.
The flute represents us. He is always holding the flute (us) in his hands. If He is to play His
Divine music through us, we have to get rid of our ego, become humble, and let Him play His
music through us. That is the teaching in this form of Lord Krishna as Venugopal.
Now, how do we explain the north Indian flute (bansuri) with only 7 holes? This is always a
problem with trying to find meanings in art, music and symbols without some documentation
from the originator of the idea. One of the modern artists (Mr. Walead Beshty) points out “……
how meaning is produced after a work leaves an artist’s studio”.
Gandhi’s social thought
Truth & Non-violence
To Gandhi, nothing was more sacred than truth and non- violence. Originally he believed that
God is Truth. Later he changed this a little and maintained that Truth is God. "Generally
speaking", Gandhi said, "observation of the law of truth is understood merely to mean that we
must speak the truth but we ...should understand the word 'satya' or truth in a much wider sense.
There should be truth in thought, truth in speech and truth in action".
For seeking as well as for finding truth, Ahimsa - non-violence - love for all beings - was a
necessity. Although Ahimsa - non-violence - is a negative word, Gandhi certainly did not
consider it as a negative force. His concept of Ahimsa is not confined to human beings but
includes the entire creation. He says, "In spite of the negative particle 'non', it is no negative
force. Superficially we are surrounded in life by strife and blood- shed, life living upon life. But
some seer, who ages ago penetrated the centre of truth, said, 'It is not through strife and violence
that man can fulfill his destiny and his duty to his fellow creatures'. It is a force which is more
positive than electricity and more powerful than even ether". It is essential to under- stand the
implications of non-violence as Gandhi understood them as it was the creed to which he rendered
life-long service.
1.Non-violence is the law of human race and is infinitely greater than and superior to brute
force.
2.In the last resort it is of no avail to those who do not posses a living faith in the God of love.
3.Non-violence affords the fullest protection to one's self-respect and sense of honour, but not
always to possession of land or money, though its habitual practice does prove a better bulwark
than the possession of armed men to defend them.
4.Non-violence is a power which can be wielded equally by all - children, young men and
women or grown-up people, provided they have a living faith in the God of love and have
therefore equal love for all mankind...
5.It is a profound error to suppose that whilst the law is good enough for individuals, it is not for
the masses of mankind.
According to Gandhi, Ahimsa is a necessity for seeking, as well as, for finding Truth. To him
both are so intertwined that it is almost impossible to disentangle them. He calls Truth and
Ahimsa two sides of' a smooth unstamped metallic disc', nevertheless, to Gandhi ahimsa is the
means and Truth the end. Gandhi's non-violence was not a weapon of the weak and cowardly. It
was meant for the fearless and the brave.
It was on these two rock-like pillars of truth and non-violence that Gandhi strove all his life to
build the edifice of social reconstruction for 'Sarvodaya'. Of course, he believed that it was only
by individual reformation through his famous eleven vows that an ideal society could be
built.Since Rabindranath Tagore and Mohandas Gandhi were two leading Indian thinkers in the
twentieth century, many commentators have tried to compare their ideas
Gandhi and Tagore
"Gandhi and Tagore. Two types entirely different from each other, and yet both of them typical
of India, both in the long line of India's great men ... It is not so much because of any single
virtue but because of the tout ensemble, that I felt that among the world's great men today
Gandhi and Tagore were supreme as human beings. What good fortune for me to have come into
close contact with them."
Romain Rolland was fascinated by the contrast between them, and when he completed his book
on Gandhi, he wrote to an Indian academic, in March 1923: "I have finished my Gandhi, in
which I pay tribute to your two great river-like souls, overflowing with divine spirit, Tagore and
Gandhi." The following month, he recorded in his diary an account of some of the differences
between Gandhi and Tagore written by Reverend C.F. Andrews, the English clergyman and
public activist who was a close friend of both men (and whose important role in Gandhi's life in
South Africa as well as India is well portrayed in Richard Attenborough's film Gandhi [1982]).
Andrews described to Rolland a discussion between Tagore and Gandhi, at which he was
present, on subjects that divided them:
"The first subject of discussion was idols; Gandhi defended them, believing the masses incapable
of raising themselves immediately to abstract ideas. Tagore cannot bear to see the people
eternally treated as a child. Gandhi quoted the great things achieved in Europe by the flag as an
idol; Tagore found it easy to object, but Gandhi held his ground, contrasting European flags
bearing eagles, etc., with his own, on which he has put a spinning wheel. The second point of
discussion was nationalism, which Gandhi defended. He said that one must go through
nationalism to reach internationalism, in the same way that one must go through war to reach
peace."4
Tagore greatly admired Gandhi but he had many disagreements with him on a variety of
subjects, including nationalism, patriotism, the importance of cultural exchange, the role of
rationality and of science, and the nature of economic and social development. These differences,
I shall argue, have a clear and consistent pattern, with Tagore pressing for more room for
reasoning, and for a less traditionalist view, a greater interest in the rest of the world, and more
respect for science and for objectivity generally.
Rabindranath knew that he could not have given India the political leadership that Gandhi
provided, and he was never stingy in his praise for what Gandhi did for the nation (it was, in fact,
Tagore who popularized the term "Mahatma"—great soul—as a description of Gandhi). And yet
each remained deeply critical of many things that the other stood for. That Mahatma Gandhi has
received incomparably more attention outside India and also within much of India itself makes it
important to understand "Tagore's side" of the Gandhi-Tagore debates.
In his prison diary, Nehru wrote: "Perhaps it is as well that [Tagore] died now and did not see the
many horrors that are likely to descend in increasing measure on the world and on India. He had
seen enough and he was infinitely sad and unhappy." Toward the end of his life, Tagore was
indeed becoming discouraged about the state of India, especially as its normal burden of
problems, such as hunger and poverty, was being supplemented by politically organized
incitement to "communal" violence between Hindus and Muslims. This conflict would lead in
1947, six years after Tagore's death, to the widespread killing that took place during partition;
but there was much gore already during his declining days. In December 1939, he wrote to his
friend Leonard Elmhirst, the English philanthropist and social reformer who had worked closely
with him on rural reconstruction in India (and who had gone on to found the Dartington Hall
Trust in England and a progressive school at Dartington that explicitly invoked Rabindranath's
educational ideals):5
"It does not need a defeatist to feel deeply anxious about the future of millions who, with all their
innate culture and their peaceful traditions are being simultaneously subjected to hunger, disease,
exploitations foreign and indigenous, and the seething discontents of communalism."
Current Indian thought (modern east Indian thought)
Ram Mohan ray(1772-1833) was a social reformer. He opposed the caste system. Urged the
abolition of the custom of the burning windows.
Mahatma Gandhi, born in 1869,Studied Law in London and went in 1983 to South Africa as a
lawyer, where he learned how East Indians living in the Province of Natal had almost no rights.
He was treated as one of them and cast out of the train on which he was traveling. There and then
he developed the doctrine of passive resistance. His Hindu religion would not permit him to take
a more active stand. His passive resistance method succeeded. He was the forerunner of the sit-
down striker. He protected women from early marriges. He sought to control alcohol and
harmful drugs. Gandhi’s social strength illustrates the surprising effectiveness that can be
achieved under the theories of life and world negation.
Rabindranath Tagore was born in 1861,India has a representative who is trying to reconcile the
two doctrines of the world negation and world affirmation. “He criticizes both the eastern
ascetics and the western leaders who have lost inner spiritual strength” material gains are nothing
unless subordinated to spiritual and human advancements well being is for all, wisdom and
justice shall reign everywhere. Arts and poetry shall ennoble all men minds.
Indian sociology
A current sociological view as expressed by Radhakamal Mukerjee of Lucknow University is
“that social interests and experience must express our conceptions of the natures and function of
divinity.”
Universal law as effecting human beings “is something which is molded by the interaction of
classes and interests with in the state.” Furthermore it is in the “groups and association which
conflict or cooperate with one another” that human values are molded.
D.P Mukherji of India has recently(1932) made an analysis of concepts in sociology . he
emphasized such concepts as personality equality,social force and social control. He find
progress in three principles:
1. Principle of harmony
2. Principle of coordination
3. Principle of unity
According to him growth of personality depends upon four factors:
1. Variety
2. Change
3. Directivity
4. Purpose
Geographic factors, technic factors,psycho-physical factors and social factors are the
conditioning phenomena in social life.
Social control according to Mukerji involves three things:
1. The need for order
2. Controlling authority that has its own scheme of order
3. Some type of accommodation by a large part of people controlled.
He discovered the two control existed in world:
1. Control by classes
2. Control by caste
Contribution to group psychology has been made by RadhaKamal Mukerji and N.N.Sen_Gupta
in their introduction to social psychology subtitled as “the mind in society” In this book it is said
that “if groups are not in operation then new groups will rise.”
Distinctive aspects of East Indian social
thought
The Framework for Indian History: Geography and a Formative Period. Important reasons for
India’s distinctive path lie in geography and early historical experience. India’s geography
shaped a number of vital features of its society. The vast Indian subcontinent is partially
separated from the rest of Asia (and particularly from East Asia) by northern mountain ranges.
Mountain passes linked India to civilizations in the Middle East. Though it was not as isolated as
China, the subcontinent was nevertheless set apart within Asia. The most important agricultural
regions are along the two great rivers, the Ganges and the Indus. During its formative period,
called the Vedic and Epic ages, the Aryans (Indo-Europeans), originally from central Asia,
impressed their own stamp on Indian culture. During these ages, the caste system, Sanskrit, and
various belief systems were introduced.
Patterns in Classical India. By 600 B.C.E., India had passed through its formative stage. Indian
development during its classical era did not take on the structure of rising and falling dynasties,
as in China. Patterns in Indian history were irregular and often consisted of invasions through the
subcontinent’s northwestern mountain passes. As a result, classical India alternated between
widespread empires and a network of smaller kingdoms. Even during the rule of the smaller
kingdoms, both economic and cultural life advanced. The Maurya and Gupta dynasties were the
most successful in India, run entirely by Indians and not by outside rulers. The greatest of the
Mauryan emperors was Ashoka (269-232 B.C.E.). The Guptas did not produce as dynamic a
leader as Ashoka, but they did provide classical India with its greatest period of stability.
THE END