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Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Kireet Joshi/English/Landmarks of Hinduism/Yogic Science and Vedic Yoga.htm
YOGIC SCIENCE AND VEDIC YOGA
There is a larger perspective in the context of which the theme of Yoga stands out as a subject of great contemporary relevance. That larger perspective is that of
the acute crisis through which humankind is passing
today. This crisis has arisen, it seems, from the fact
that, while on the one hand, it does not seem unlikely
that we may succeed in creating a system of life,
practically covering the whole globe, which can provide
to human beings means and materials to satisfy
hedonistic, selfish and egoistic wants on such a scale
that, for quite a long indefinite period, humankind might
remain chained to circles of lower life marked
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Kireet Joshi/English/Landmarks of Hinduism/Significant Features of Hinduism.htm
SIGNIFICANT FEATURES OF HINDUISM
(as they have emerged through a historical process)
The significance of the history of the religion that gave no name to itself but which, in its later stages came to be
called Hinduism, lies in the fact that it came to develop
itself into a congregation of religions providing, at the
same time, to each human being with his or her own
method of inner experience. It began with the Vedas and
developed various facets of spiritual experience,
philosophical thought and systems responding
to emotional and vital needs as also demands of the
physical nature. It maintained a continuous
thread uninterruptedly right up to the pr
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Kireet Joshi/English/Landmarks of Hinduism/Ancient Indian wisdom and contemporary challenges.htm
ANCIENT INDIAN WISDOM
AND
CONTEMPORARY CHALLENGES
What are the critical problems of today? And what could be relevance of ancient Indian wisdom in resolving
our predicaments when the modern knowledge appears
to have been so advanced? Since the last two centuries,
humanity has taken a serious turn, and in its worst
manifestation, two devastating wars have stormed the
entire earth, and in its best manifestation, global
aspiration to unite the peoples of the world has taken a
concrete form. On its worst side, the survival of
humanity on the earth has come under severest attack; on its best side, it has come to be realised that a new
conscious
PREFACE
This is a collection of papers which were written
at different times for different occasions. They present
reflections on the theme of Hinduism and how the Vedic
knowledge which is greatly revered by Hinduism
contains valuable bases for new discoveries, and which
are relevant to the needs of our own times. Inevitably,
some important ideas will be found repeated, but it is
hoped that they will serve as reiterations.
Hinduism is a non-dogmatic religion which
acknowledges yogic science to be superior to religion. It
has a capacity to renew itself and to invite adherents of
other religions and even those who do not belong to any
religion in a quest whereby religions can be
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Kireet Joshi/English/Landmarks of Hinduism/Vedic Ideals of Education.htm
VEDIC IDEALS OF EDUCATION AND
THEIR CONTEMPORARY RELEVANCE
I. Our Contemporary Search
The contemporary moment of human history is riddled
with a number of dilemmas, and we find it extremely
difficult to resolve them. We erect the ideal of truth, and
our quest ends in probabilities filled with mixtures of
truth and error; we erect the ideal of liberty; and our
experiments oblige us to strangulate it in the interests of
equality; we erect the ideal of equality and we find
ourselves obliged to abandon it in the interests of
liberty; we erect the Ideals of peace and unity but we
seem to be incapable of fraternity; we erect huge edifices
of the victorious an
Pre-Contents
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Kireet Joshi/English/Landmarks of Hinduism/Gods in the Vedas and Puranas.htm
GODS IN THE VEDAS AND PURANAS
History of Indian religion and spirituality has an inner
continuity, even though forms and atmosphere have
changed from time to time in the course of millennia.
The Vedic beginning was so vast and so lofty, so
comprehensive in its seed-form that the later
developments could be considered to be growing forms
necessitated by changing circumstances in terms
of varying emphases on intellectuality, emotionality and
sensuality as also by the boldness of
experimental spirit that wanted to bring larger and
larger sections of people, larger and larger gradations of
people into the realm of experience of the secrets which
were orig
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Kireet Joshi/English/Landmarks of Hinduism/Elements of Poetics And Poetry in the Veda.htm
ELEMENTS OF POETICS AND POETRY IN THE VEDA
The very first thing that we may remark is that the Vedic Samhitas contain poetry of hundreds of poets, and even
though they differ among themselves in style and power,
they still share in common what may be called
"algebraic notations", fund of images, figures, symbols,
the adventurous climbing of the heights of visions and
capability of infusing hue and colour, power and force,
movement of rhythm and strength of substance in their
poetry to such a great extent as to arrive at what may
properly be called mantric power.
That Vedic poetry is mystic and symbolic can be
noticed at once by taking a numb
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Kireet Joshi/English/Landmarks of Hinduism/Bhagavadgita and Contemporary Crisis.htm
BHAGAVADGITA AND CONTEMPORARY CRISIS
Bhagavadgita has this uniqueness that, unlike other
great religious books of the world, it does not stand
apart as a work by itself. It is given as an episode in an
epic history of India and of a great war fought in it. This
episode focuses on a critical moment in the soul of one
of the leading personages of this epic history,
Mahabharata. It is also a moment of the crowning action
of his life, where he faces a work which is terrible,
violent and sanguinary. And he is confronted with a
critical choice when he must either recoil from it
altogether or carry it through to its inexorable execution.
The criticality of th
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Kireet Joshi/English/Landmarks of Hinduism/The Veda in the Light of Sri Aurobindo.htm
THE VEDA IN THE LIGHT OF SRI AUROBINDO
The Veda or at least the Samhita of the Rigveda appears
to be the earliest literary composition of humanity.
There might have been earlier or contemporaneous compositions but they seem to have been lost in the tides
and ebbs of time and we do not know what thoughts
and aspirations they might have expressed. Considering,
however, that there was, in the earlier stages, a remarkable tradition of mysteries, Orphic and Eleusinian in
Greece, of occult lore and magic in Egypt and Chaldea,
of Magi in Persia, and of the Rishis in India, there might
have been in them something common but what could
have been their conten