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Comparative Anthropology and Rhetorics in Cultures.

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
Introduction Perhaps it is best that we begin on a personal note. Neither of the two authors of this article is a ‘specialist’ in the domain of argumentation theory. Even though we have picked up smatterings of logic, we are not professionals working on either informal or formal logic. One of us is a practicing anthropologist, while the other is oriented towards comparative anthropology. And yet, …
dialogues Balagangadhara published

Rituals and their meaninglessness—S.N.Balagangadhara

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
Consider, say, a ritual like sandhyaavandanam. Here are two extremes, when it comes to saying what it is: (a) one goes very deeply into what Mudras mean, which of the mudras occur in this daily ritual; analyses the praanayaama as it is taught; goes into what the Gaayathri mantra really means; and so on. (b) The other extreme is an ordinary Brahmin who performs all the prescribed actions without …
Balagangadhara ritual

Colonial Consciousness as a process and as an event

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
It is an event because the colonial consciousness that I am talking about comprises of multiplicity of actions executed by indefinitely many Indians over a long period. It is a process because colonial consciousness reproduces itself, colonial consciousness is transmitted from generation to generation and it is learnt. Consequently, we need to understand the mechanisms of this process and the …
Balagangadhara colonial consciousness

The reality of elusive man? –S.N.Balagangadhara

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
Speaking of ’the greatest mystery of our humanness’, Sinari raises the following questions: “Why are we present in the world rather than not being there at all? Why are we present to ourselves as world-experiencers and world-explorers rather than being simply there as perhaps animals are” (p.1) In brief reply to his provocative paper, I would like to reflect on the nature of these queries and with …
Balagangadhara published

Avidya, Ajnana, Maaya, Ignorance: a learning process

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
When we speak about ignorance, we can do so in two ways. One is by talking about ‘how the world is’; the other is by talking about ‘how we think the world is’. Even though we could use both ways to characterize ‘ignorance’, they are not coextensive (or synonyms) because (a) they are about different things – in the first case it is about the world; in the second case it is about what we take to …
Balagangadhara ignorance Indian traditions sat(asat)

Introspection vs. reflection on experience—S.N.Balagangadhara

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
In this post, I want to reflect on what it means to access and think about experience. Perhaps, not so much on what these words mean but what is entailed by (or what happens when we indulge in) this kind of activity. I think the best way to begin this analysis is by asking the following two questions about an activity familiar to most of us: what do we do when we think about ourselves? Do we do it …
Balagangadhara colonial consciousness enlightenment experience psychology

Cultural difference: temporality

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
Experiences are structured differently in different cultures. We believe that it is possible to give a true description of this difference, at some level or the other, asa difference regarding the experience of time itself. Consider the traditions of Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism. One of the central notions in these traditions is that of temporality. That is, they believe that all events, …
Balagangadhara Indian traditions

Understanding and Imagination: A Critical Notice of Halbfass and Inden

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
Introduction During the last decade or so, a new restlessness has begun to disturb the calm facade of the social scientific academia. As yet, it has no name. Better said, it has many names: from ‘reflexive’ to the ‘post-modern’. The ferment is not widespread, but the voices of discontent are coherent and articulate. The critical voices indicate the many kinds of dissatisfaction they have with the …
Balagangadhara caste published review

Review of Staal’s Rules Without Meaning –S.N.Balagangadhara

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
FRITS STAAL. Rules Without Meaning: Ritual, Mantras and the Human Sciences. Toronto Studies in Religion, Vol. 4. New York and Bern: Peter Lang, 1989 xxii+490. In order to set the tone of this review article, let me begin straightway with a confession: I have been a closet admirer of Frits Staal ever since I discovered his writings in 1987. The reasons that undergird my attitude are several: …
Balagangadhara published review ritual

Review of Amartya Sen's Argumentative Indian—S.N. Balagangadhara

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
Today, there are multiple images of India current in the West. There is the mystic India, an image that the German Romantics created and the ‘flower children’ of the sixties made popular. There is the third world India with enormous poverty and suffering, which the developmental workers have projected. There is also the India, the centre of IT outsourcing, which the developments in the last decade …
Balagangadhara published review secular secularization

Refutation

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
My book is not about India but about the western culture. It is a study of the western culture using one thread, namely, religion. To the extent I talk about India, I do so using some of the ‘facts’ that Indologists (and others) have so far used. My use of their facts (to show the opposite of what they believe they have shown) illustrates the consensus in the philosophies of sciences (of the last …
Balagangadhara basics criticism

Commonalities and Similarities—S.N.Balagangadhara

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
Whether or not we observe ‘commonalities’ has to do with the descriptive framework we use. Things might share common properties in one description; at the same time, share nothing common in another description. Both could be true descriptions of the same set of objects. ‘Perception of similarity’ is (at the moment our knowledge is in) is extremely difficult to analyze and understand. On the one …
Balagangadhara basics

Cognitive Superiority

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
It is partly a term of the art (in the philosophy of sciences) and partly retains the commonsense usage. When one compares theories (in order to choose the best one among the rivals), one compares them with respect to the important properties that theories should have. What these properties are depends upon the philosophy of science one subscribes to. For instance, one might think that a theory …
Balagangadhara basics

Use and Mention

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
All works of Balagangadhara make use of use-mention distinction . Please get familiarized with this distinction. In logic the words ‘use’ and ‘mention’ are sometimes used in a technical sense to mark an important distinction, which is explaind by example: ‘London’ is a word six letters long. London is a city. In 1 the word ‘London’ is said to be mentioned; in 2 the word ‘London’ is said to be used …
basics

‘Hinduism’ and hipkapi: an Imaginary entity –S.N. Balagangadhara

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
What did the theory of gravitation do? Apart from describing the fall of bodies on earth, it also tied the motion of planets and the ebb and tide in the sea to each other. This theory allowed us to predict the motion of the planets and helped us discover a new planet in the solar system. In other words, it provided a theory that unified phenomena. Until that stage, we did not know that these …
Balagangadhara basics Hinduism
hipkapi

Ontological and epistemological commitments of ‘Hinduism’—S.N.Balagangadhara

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
The English word ‘Hinduism’ not only carries multiple meanings it also appears to refer to many different things. If the context of the discussion were to help us disambiguate the reference of this word, it might not pose many problems for a serious discussion. Unfortunately, the context itself gets muddled. Each understands the question ‘Does Hinduism Exist? ’ in a different fashion. As though …
Balagangadhara Hinduism
hipkapi

Antiquity and ‘religious wisdom’

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
Let me focus on the citation “Ours is the true religion because, above all, it…stands up… to tell and to declare to the nations who are mere children of yesterday in comparison with us Hindus - who own the hoary antiquity of the wisdom, discovered by our ancestors here in India.” Two things are striking in this citation: the “truth” of a religion is directly linked to its “antiquity” and to its …
Balagangadhara

Is ‘sat’ ‘being’? S.N.Balagangadhara

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
To take German language, let us look at how Heidegger talks about ‘being’: there is the ‘big Being’ (‘Sein’) and there is the ‘small being’ (‘Dasein’ meaning ’there-being’ or ‘so-being’). And then there is ‘Sein’ and ‘Seindes’. All these are translated by the word ‘being’. To jump back a couple of hundred years, and pick up another philosopher with the same alphabet and the same language, we have …
Balagangadhara belief translation sat(asat)

Atheism: a secularized theism—Jakob de Roover

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
1: Atheism is a phenomenon that came into being in the western culture at around the time of the so-called Enlightenment. The West claims that it liberated itself from the dogmas of the Christian religion in this Enlightenment, and those who call themselves atheists mean by this that they belong to the enlightened people who “have escaped from the dogmatic illusions of religion.” Now, as it has …
atheism Christianity Jakob secularization

What makes Christianity a religion? The structure of Christianity as a religion

Mar 5, 2011 hipkapi
The logical steps that inevitably make the claim that God revealed His Will in Jesus Christ into an unconditional and exclusive truth claim are fairly simple: (a) Christianity says that the universe was created by God, and that this universe is the perfect embodiment of His will or plan; (b) Furthermore, it claims that this God has revealed His Will to humankind, and that this revelation is the …
Christianity Jakob
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