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Between Axiality and Modernity _ Dr Ravi Sinha _ New Socialist Initiative

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  • Опубликовано: 7 июл 2024
  • Between Axiality and Modernity
    Bhakti Era as the Plebeian Plateau in the Civilizational Landscape of India
    • Ravi Sinha
    We have by now devoted several sessions to mapping the millennial trajectory of the Bhakti Movement across the history and the cultural geography of the subcontinent. Starting with the Tamil lands in the 7th century we followed Bhakti performing the pradakshina of the cultural landmass of the subcontinent, crossing the Vindhyas in its northward journey sometime in the 13-14th century. Our endeavour has been to understand the role of Bhakti in shaping the cultural and the civilizational mind of India. This, in turn, has been motivated by task of making sense of the role this mind plays in contemporary politics and in the rise of fascistic Hindutva in recent decades.
    As we stated in the proposal to a previous session, we seek to understand the impact of Bhakti at two different time-scales. On the shorter time-scale of contemporary politics one looks at the phenomenon of communalism. The mainstream of the anti-colonial national movement considered Bhakti Movement as the harbinger of religious tolerance and syncretism that would help evolve the Indian brand of secularism. The subsequent history, however, paints a mixed picture. A social fabric and a cultural mind weaved by the Bhakti ideologies do not offer the kind of resistance to communalism and sectarianism as was expected of them. In our previous sessions we mainly stayed with evaluating the impact of Bhakti at the political-historical time-scale characterized by the problem of communalism and the rise of Hindutva.
    On a longer - millennial - time-scale, however, one can evaluate the Bhakti phenomenon in the civilizational context. One can ask something like the Needham Question - why did the Indian civilization, despite its glory and accomplishments in the ancient and the medieval periods, fail to realize its cultural and scientific potentials? Why was it defeated often and why was it eventually colonized? Why did the West forge ahead, why has India lagged behind? Did the cultural mind and social ethos prepared by the Bhakti Movement play a role in the civilizational decline of India? These are very large questions not amenable to easy answers. But one must prepare to wrestle with them as they are of crucial importance for imagining and fashioning a desirable future for India. In this session, we finally arrive at the task of outlining a framework for asking and answering these questions.
    For this purpose, we propose to take help of two large concepts - one of Axiality and the other of Modernity. The idea of axial revolutions was proposed for the civilizational breakthroughs that happened in the middle centuries of the first millennium BC in several different and unconnected societies - Judea (land of the Old Testament in the era of prophets), Greece (of pre-Socratic philosophers as well as of Socrates, Plato and Aristotle), China (of Confucius, Mencius and others) and India (of Upanishads, six systems of philosophies, and of Buddha) being the prime examples. We will briefly go through the idea of Axiality and see how we can understand it in the sequence of human cultural and cognitive evolution progressively from the mimetic (pre-linguistic, primarily based on gestures, rituals and body-language) to the mythic (linguistic but largely oral and narrative-based) to the theoretic (rational, abstract, normative and self-reflective). We will try to locate the Indian antiquity in the sequence of cultural evolution.
    ......
    July 01, 2024

Комментарии • 3

  • @venkatkolagari491
    @venkatkolagari491 Месяц назад

    Excellent presentation. It provides a new framework to understand Indian mind for the political task. It provides new and in-depth insights on cultural and social mind. Congratulations to speaker for this wonderful presentation.

  • @venkatkolagari491
    @venkatkolagari491 Месяц назад

    Dear Friends,
    0:20
    I would like to share with you this talk ("Between Axiality and Modernity") on a possible framework for looking at the millennial trajectory of Indian civilization.
    It is a bit long, but I still hope that you will be able to spare some time for it and also get back to me with your comments and critique.
    Hope to hear back from you.