The Literature of Limits IV: Hinduism, Forms, and the Infinite

by Muhammad Aurangzeb Ahmad

Image by Photo by Chaithanya Krishnan Creative Commons License

This is the last part of our discussion on the culture of limits (Part I, Part II, and Part III). In Hindu thought limits that define finitude and infinity were never opposed in a simple or antagonistic way. Instead, they were understood as mutually implicated. One could even say that they were woven together through cycles of manifestation and withdrawal, form and formlessness, appearance and return. The infinite was not something to be reached beyond the world, it was something already present within it. It was always unfolding rhythmically through time, consciousness, and matter. Philosophical expressions of Hinduism resisted the idea that ultimate reality could be exhausted by conceptual knowledge. The Upanishads repeatedly returned to the intuition that what is most real is also what is least graspable. Brahman, the ground of all being, was not an object among other objects, nor even the highest object of thought. It was that in which all objects, thoughts, and selves already participated. To know Brahman was not to acquire information, but to undergo a transformation of orientation. It was meant to be an inward turning in which the knower, the known, and the act of knowing were gradually revealed as inseparable.

The Upanishads, rather than offering systematic doctrines, offered sustained interrogations into the nature of self, reality, and knowledge, repeatedly returning to what resists articulation. Their method was deliberately indirect: aphorism, dialogue, paradox, and negation were used not to obscure meaning, but to prevent it from hardening into concept. Brahman was described as “not this, not that” (neti neti), not because it was inaccessible, but because any positive description would prematurely limit what was fundamentally unbounded. Knowledge, in the Upanishadic sense, did not accumulate toward mastery. It is supposed to turn inward, loosening the distinction between knower and known until insight emerged as recognition rather than discovery. In this respect, the Upanishadic discipline of unknowing closely paralleled later Sufi practices of ḥayra and self-refinement, where the failure of conceptual grasp was likewise treated not as an impasse, but as a necessary condition for deeper apprehension of reality.

This inseparability reshaped how limits were understood. Read more »

Monday, February 10, 2014

In Defence of Valentine’s Day

by Tara* Kaushal

In-Defence-of-Valentines-Day-Sahil-Mane-PhotographyDespite the criticisms in the Indian context, I explain why I'm a huge fan of the day of love. Conceptual image by Sahil Mane Photography.

Call me a romantic fool, but I love Valentine's Day. In college in New Delhi, I'd laugh and say, “Why not? It's just another excuse to celebrate and get presents!” Now, 10 years, awareness and much consumer fatigue since, it isn't about the gift economy at all. For days before, love is literally in the air (and on the airwaves, TV and everywhere). Consciously ignoring advertising suggestions of what we should be giving-receiving, where we should be going, what we should be doing, Sahil and I celebrate without spending. Last year, we just cooked for each other over music and laughter; this year, we're planning a party. I also wish my mother, family and friends.

When I speak of my love for Valentine's, it tends to spark debate with a whole range of people. I've had the religious and cultural traditionalists play the ‘Against Hinduism/Islam' (India's two major religions) and/or ‘Against Indian Culture' Card, say it is a cultural contamination from the West. Friends who are nonconformists and anti consumerism are, well, anti its consumerism, the nauseating marketing blitz and the pigeonholing.

And the many arguments of those coming from a postcolonial perspective are best summed up on Wiki: “The holiday is regarded as a front for ‘Western imperialism', ‘neocolonialism' and ‘the exploitation of working classes through commercialism by multinational corporations' (Satya Sharma in ‘The Cultural Costs of a Globalized Economy for India', Dialectical Anthropology). Studies have shown that Valentine's Day promotes and exacerbates income inequality in India, and aids in the creation of a pseudo-Westernized middle class. As a result, the working classes and rural poor become more disconnected socially, politically and geographically from the hegemonic capitalist power structure. They also criticize mainstream media attacks on Indians opposed to Valentine's Day as a form of demonization that is designed and derived to further the Valentine's Day agenda.”

And, surprisingly, I agree with most of these criticisms.

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