Tag: Philosophical Thought

  • When Accidents Reveal Hidden Truth: Knowledge, Chance, Karma, and Divine Grace

    When Accidents Reveal Hidden Truth: Knowledge, Chance, Karma, and Divine Grace

    This long-form philosophical essay examines whether accidents are truly random or simply events whose causes remain hidden from human understanding. Beginning with relatable examples from daily life and cricket, it moves into legal definitions, classical philosophy, science, and dharmic thought. The essay explains how Aristotle, Hume, Kautsky, Engels, Bradley, Merton, and Mill help distinguish accident,…

  • Jagadakhila and the Cosmic Triangle: Unveiling Shakti’s Universal Play in Tantra

    Jagadakhila and the Cosmic Triangle: Unveiling Shakti’s Universal Play in Tantra

    Jagadakhila presents the universe as the sacred field of Shakti’s lilaan ever-unfolding play of consciousness and energy. The Cosmic Triangle, embodying iccha, jnana, and kriya shakti, serves as a contemplative key for understanding how intention, insight, and action cohere in daily life. This Tantric vision is both metaphysical and practical, offering guidance for ethical living…

  • Plato in Dialogue with Dharmic Wisdom: Insights from a Three-Day Symposium at SKUAST-Kashmir

    Plato in Dialogue with Dharmic Wisdom: Insights from a Three-Day Symposium at SKUAST-Kashmir

    A three-day international symposium at SKUAST-Kashmir brought Plato into conversation with Dharmic traditions, emphasizing unity in spiritual diversity. Scholars and students explored ethics, political philosophy, and the Socratic method alongside the Upanishads, Buddhist dialectics, Jain Anekantavada, and Sikh ethical reflection. The program modeled rigorous comparative studies and civil discourse, strengthening critical thinking and textual analysis.…

  • Bhuktivada and Rasa: Bhatta Nayaka’s Revolutionary Insight into Indian Aesthetics

    Bhuktivada and Rasa: Bhatta Nayaka’s Revolutionary Insight into Indian Aesthetics

    Bhuktivada, articulated by Bhatta Nayaka, explains rasa as an alaukika enjoyment (bhukti) rather than a product to be caused or a conclusion to be inferred. It reframes earlier debates by introducing bhāvakatva (art’s power to universalize emotion), bhojakatva (the audience’s receptivity), and sādhāraṇīkaraṇa (shared, de-individualized feeling). Placed between Anandavardhana and Abhinavagupta, this theory anchors the…

  • Do We Want Bharatavarsha to Become a Christian Outpost of the West?

    Do We Want Bharatavarsha to Become a Christian Outpost of the West?

    This blog post offers a critical exploration of India’s cultural heritage, emphasizing its non-Abrahamic roots rooted in the Vedas and Dharmashastras. It delves into the absence of pessimism within Indian philosophical thought, contrasting it with the fundamental principles of Christianity and Islam. The narrative scrutinizes historical interventions by colonial powers, particularly British rule’s impact, the…