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Reviving Sacred Questioning: Vedic, Buddhist, Jain, and Sikh Paths to Intellectual Freedom

Sacred questioning sits at the heart of the dharmic heritage. This long-form analysis traces how Vedic dialogues, Nyāya–Mīmāṃsā logic, Buddhist pramāṇa theory, Jain anekāntavāda, and Sikh vichar cultivated disciplined inquiry as a path to truth and social harmony. It explains the technical tools of reasoning—pramāṇas, syllogisms, hermeneutic canons, and fallacy-detection—and shows how classical śāstrārtha fostered…
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Why Questioning Is Sacred in Hinduism: A Deep Dive into Dharmic Philosophy and Pluralism

This article examines why questioning is sacred in Hinduism and the wider dharmic traditions, showing how inquiry anchors both philosophy and spiritual practice. It explains how the Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gita, and the classical darshanas institutionalize rigorous debate, evidence, and contemplative verification. Readers learn practical tools from pramana theory to navigate misinformation, and from disciplines…
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Timeless Dharmic Debate: From Vada to Anekantavada—A Fearless Path to Truth and Unity

Constructive, unbiased debate sits at the heart of Hindu philosophy as a disciplined path to knowledge and self-realization. Grounded in pramana theory and refined by Nyaya’s robust logic, classical shastrartha privileges clarity over conquest. The Upanishads, the Bhagavad-Gita’s samvada, and traditions across Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism model dialogue that is rigorous, ethical, and inclusive. Practices…
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The Myth that Mohandas Gandhi Alone Delivered Freedom to India

A hundred and fifty-four years after his birth, the legacy of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi remains contested in India. Much of this uncertainty stems from extensive propaganda that has obscured vital truths about Gandhi as an activist, leader, politician, demagogue, and unlikely saint. One of the most enduring myths is encapsulated in the single word: Mahatma.…