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Spiritual Meditations ( 15 Jun 2024, NewAgeIslam.Com)

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Wisdom Is Disinterested Involvement and Positive Indifference

By Sumit Paul, New Age Islam

15 June 2024

“The Devil is not the Prince of Matter; the Devil is the arrogance of the spirit, faith without smile, truth that is never seized by doubt. The Devil is grim because he knows where he is going, and, in moving, he always returns whence he came.”

Umberto Eco, “The Name of the Rose”

This is a sequel to Professor Adis Duderija's write up on wisdom as a universal phenomenon.

Umberto Eco's statement is certainly not an anti-religious sentiment, far from it. It embraces spirit, faith, and truth; it simply asks of us that we also embrace the twin virtues of good humour and scepticism, both of which keep us honest. This is wisdom which knows that good humour and scepticism are central values to free inquiry for anyone, whether you identify with the faithful or the faithless or refuse the need to choose between them.

Too often our discourse today asks us to fully condemn religion, or to simplify definitions of what religion is, which can lead to shoddy, anachronistic, ahistorical understandings of the genealogies of important concepts in our culture.

Eco once cheekily claimed that his most famous novel was written because he “wanted to poison a monk,” and though he was an atheist, Eco still understood how theological the origin of so much of the humanities was, and the profound debt that literary study owed to the scriptural hermeneutics that was its precedent. " To me, theology is not sacred. Scriptures are mere books. Divinity has no basis and spirituality is just refined religiosity. Yet, all these things have a civilizational significance and their cumulative contributions to the enrichment of the human race cannot be repudiated," Eco once opined during a lecture at Bologna University, Italy, where he taught Semiotics, science of signs and symbols.

This is wisdom which is called Pragya in Sanskrit. It's interesting to know that the etymological root of the Sanskrit word Pragya is not Gyaan (knowledge) but the denial of Gyaan! This needs further enumeration. Gyaan being limited, it restricts. So, what restricts must be denied and defied by going beyond it.

In Sanskrit lexicons, Pragya is defined as the denial of Gyaan and going beyond Gyaan. True wisdom is acceptance sans involvement (Anavriti in Sanskrit). It's a state of dispassionate / disinterested involvement and positive indifference which can be understood by the words of Aristotle who said centuries ago, "It's the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." Wisdom is never confrontational. An evolved mind knows that all theological debates, discourses and discussions lead humans nowhere. They'll remain ever inconclusive. Yet, pooh-poohing them disdainfully is also an act of ignorance and condescension.

Nagarjuna, known as The Second Buddha, said in his Middle Path (Madhyam Marg), "Vritham Eko Ekatram Parivrajyate Dwityem" (Though it's of no use to me, it could be of use to someone). Wisdom lies in the welfare of all. Though it (wisdom) is eclectic syncretism, its spirit is all-encompassing. But the problem with wisdom is that it cannot be developed or acquired. It dawns on you. That's why it's called Satori (a Japanese Buddhist term for awakening which strikes like a blitzkrieg).

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A regular columnist for New Age Islam, Sumit Paul is a researcher in comparative religions, with special reference to Islam. He has contributed articles to the world's premier publications in several languages including Persian.

 

URL:     https://www.newageislam.com/spiritual-meditations/wisdom-disinterested-involvement-positive-indifference/d/132512


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