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Being Different

Being Different: An Indian Challenge to Western Universalism is a 2011 book by Rajiv Malhotra, an Indian-American author, philanthropist and public speaker, published by HarperCollins. The book reverts the gaze of the western cultures on India, repositioning India from being the observed to the observer, by looking at the West from a Dharmic point of view.

Being Different: An Indian Challenge to Western Universalism
AuthorRajiv Malhotra
CountryIndia
LanguageEnglish
Published2011, HarperCollins Publishers India a joint venture with The India Today Group
Pages474
ISBN978-9350291900
OCLC769101673
Websitebeingdifferentbook.com

About the book

Malhotra intends to give a critique of western culture, by comparing it with Indian culture, as seen from a 'Dharmic point of view.' To accomplish this goal, he postulates a set of characteristics of western culture, and a set of characteristics of Indian culture and religion, characterised as "Dharmic." Malhotra explains that in Being Different,

'Dharma' is used to indicate a family of spiritual traditions originating in India which today are manifested as Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism. I explain that the variety of perspectives and practices of dharma display an underlying integral unity at the metaphysical level.[1]

Malhotra summarizes his rationale for treating Dharmic traditions as a family, contrasting the family of Dharmic traditions with Abrahamic religions. He constructs their differences from this 'Dharmic perspective,' thereby 'reversing the gaze.'[2] Malhotra clarifies that he is not replacing a West-centric view with a Dharma-centric view by proposing the reversal of gaze.[3] Malhotra explains that he seeks a dialogue, where the world civilizations are not merely seen from the viewpoint of the West, but the west is also seen from a non-western, c.q. 'dharmic' point of view.[2]

Malhotra calls for mutual respect as a higher standard for pluralism than tolerance. Mutual respect does not call for acceptance of beliefs held by others, only to have genuine respect for difference, because, beliefs are not facts.[web 1] Malhotra explains why this gaze from the other side benefits the West,[4] explaining that he

... hopes to set the terms for a deeper and more informed engagement between dharmic and Western civilizations."[5]

Overview

Malhotra identifies "six distinct and fundamental points of divergence between the dharmic traditions and the West."[web 2] Malhotra argues that understanding these six points of divergence is crucial to recognizing the fallacy of facile sameness arguments and to understanding senselessness of inculturation efforts.[citation needed] These points of divergence are:[web 2][web 3]

  1. Approaches to difference
  2. History-centrism versus inner sciences
  3. Integral versus synthetic unity
  4. The nature of chaos and uncertainty
  5. Translatability vs. Sanskrit
  6. Western universalism challenged

Divergence 1: Approaches to difference

According to Malhotra, there is a pervasive anxiety in the west over personal and cultural differences. Therefore, the west tries to assimilate and convert "all that does not fit its fundamental paradigms."[web 2] According to Malhotra, this anxiety is grounded in schisms which are inherent in the western worldview. In contrast, "Dharmic traditions [...] are historically more comfortable with differences."[web 2]

Divergence 2: History Centrism versus inner sciences

According to Malhotra, Dharmic traditions rely on adhyatma-vidya,[note 1] while the Abrahamic religions rely on God's interventions in human history.[web 6] For followers of history-centric (Abrahamic) religions, truth-claims based on history are more significant than the scriptural message itself. History-centric dogma such as original sin and resurrection become critical beliefs and no compromise can be made on their acceptance. This explains the centrality of Nicene creed to all major Christian denominations. Followers of history-centric religions believe that the God revealed His message through a special prophet and that the message is secured in scriptures. This special access to God is available only to these intermediaries or prophets and not to any other human beings.[web 7]

Dharma traditions do not hold history central to their faith. Gautama Buddha emphasized that his enlightenment was merely a discovery of a reality that is always there. He was not bringing any new covenants from any God. The history of the Buddha is not necessary for Buddhist principles to work. In fact, Buddha stated that he was neither the first nor the last person to have achieved the state of enlightenment. He also asserted that he was not God nor sent by any God as a prophet, and whatever he discovered was available to every human to discover for himself. This makes Buddhism not History-Centric.

Malhotra explains how history-centrism or lack of it has implications for religious absolutist exclusivity vs. flexible pluralism:

Abrahamic religions claim that we can resolve the human condition only by following the lineage of prophets arising from the Middle East. All other teachings and practices are required to be reconciled with this special and peculiar history. By contrast, the dharmic traditions – Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism -- do not rely on history in the same absolutist and exclusive way. This dharmic flexibility has made fundamental pluralism possible which cannot occur within the constraints of history centrism, at least as understood so far.[web 8]

Divergence 3: Integral versus synthetic unity

Both Western and Dharmic civilizations have cherished unity as an ideal, but with a different emphasis. Here, Malhotra posits a crucial distinction between what he considers a "synthetic unity" that gave rise to a static intellectualistic Worldview in the West positioning itself as the Universal and an "integrative unity" that gave rise to a dynamically oriented Worldview based on Dharma.[6] While the former is characterized by a "top-down" essentialism embracing everything a priori, the latter is a "bottom-up" approach acknowledging the dependent co-origination of alternative views of the human and the divine, the body and the mind, and the self and society.

Divergence 4: The nature of chaos and uncertainty

Dharma philosophical systems are highly systematized in their approach to understanding ultimate reality and in carefully addressing what one can know through various means of knowledge. However, this rigor does not restrict their freedom in being comfortable with social organization. Indians exhibit remarkable openness to self-organization and decentralization. Malhotra explains the basis for this openness:

Hinduism weaves multiple narratives around the central motif of cooperative rivalry between order (personified as devas) and chaos (personified as asuras). A key myth shared by all the dharma traditions – the 'churning of the milky ocean,' or samudra-manthan – shows the eternal struggle between two poles. The milky ocean is the ocean of consciousness and creativity, which is to be churned in order to obtain amrita, or the nectar of eternal life."[web 9]

Dharma actually recognises the need for both Order and Chaos to co-exist in the universe. In the story[7] Prajapati attempts to create the Universe keeping Order and Chaos in dynamic balance. His initial attempts fail because they're too Jami/homogenous or too Prthak/different. Finally he gets the combination just-right by using the principle of Bandhuta/Bandhu i.e. binding together dissimilar things by what is common across all things in the entire creation.

Divergence 5: Translatability vs. Sanskrit

Malhotra identifies various non-translatables in Sanskrit that have been mapped into Abrahamic religious concepts. These mis-translations then are used to draw sameness arguments or to denounce Hinduism. Malhotra explains that

In the fashionable search for sameness in all religions, Holy Spirit in Christianity is often equated with Shakti or kundalini in Hinduism. However, these terms represent different, even incompatible cosmologies. Christianity assumes an inherent dualism between God and creation. This necessitates historical revelations along with prophets, priests and institutions to bring us the truth. But Shakti, being all-pervading, obviates dependence on these; its experience can be discovered by going within through yoga.[web 10]

Malhotra gives example of a list of Sanskrit non-translatables and goes on to provide key differences in their original meaning and the most common translated word in English. For example,[8]

Divergence 6: Western universalism challenged

Malhotra claims that refuting Western Universalism is one of the most important objectives of his book, the conscious effort from American and European individuals to make the rest of the world fit into the template provided by these civilizations. He claims that all people and culture are forced into the various schemes put forward to bring this about and asserts that modern laws, regulation, conventions and common practices are formed, whether consciously or not with Western Universalism in mind.

Malhotra then goes on to provide a case study of Germany for Western digestion and synthesis. He claims that late 18th and early 19th century saw a special interest in ancient India in European academia now called as Romantic movement and Indic origin of European culture started to compete with the earlier held Semitic origin. To satisfy German cultural and religious egotistic interests various German Romantic thinkers like K. W. F. Schlegel and G. W. F. Hegel slowly digested Indic ideas, like monism, and presented a caricature of India as the 'frozen other'. Malhotra says Hegel presented, "The Weltgeist or World Spirit is, in effect the protagonist of this history, and the West is extraordinary because it is destined to lead this journey while all other civilizations must follow or perish." He claims this narrative gave the West its privileges and those who doesn't fit into this scheme are not a part of history, even though the Spirit may use (parts of) them.[9] Malhotra alleges "He (Hegel) laboriously criticizes Sanskrit and Indian civilization, arguing with European Indologists with the aim of assimilating some ideas (such as absolute idealism) into his own philosophy) while postulating India as the inferior other in order to construct his theory of the West. Asia's place in history is as an infant, whereas the West is mature and everyone's eventual destination." This argument led to justification of colonialism as a teleological imperative by which the superior Europeans must appropriate others. For example, Hegel argues it is better for Africans to remain enslaved until they pass through a process of maturation that culminates in their total conversion to Christianity.[10] Hegel regarded colonization as India's inevitable fate and was declared 'static' and incapable of progress by itself, and it was up to the West to colonize and 'operate' on her for her own benefit. Hegel's perception of India as stagnant and lacking history was perpetuated by Karl Marx, who described India as caught in the 'Asiatic Mode of Production'.[11] Hegel writes, 'The Germanic Spirit (germanische Geist) is the Spirit of the New World (neuen Welt), whose end is the realization of the absolute truth... The destiny of the Germanic people is that of serving as the bearer of the Christian principle'.[12] Thus Hegel establishes that while the West is pure, some westerners (Germans) are purer than others. As Halbfass explains, 'European thought has to provide the context and categories for the exploration of all traditions of thought',[13] which Malhotra argues sees the digestion of Indian civilization into Western categories as both natural and desirable. Malhotra also writes that, after Hegel's death his sweeping Eurocentric accounts of history was extrapolated which culminates at the Aryan identity. Malhtora states,

Hegel's theory of history has led to liberal Western supremacy, which hides behind the notion of providing the 'universals'. These European Enlightenment presuppositions became incorporated in the confluence of academic philosophy, philology, social theories and 'scientific' methodologies – all of which were driven by various imperial and colonial values alongside Christian theology.

Reception

Several reviews of Being Different have been published in academic periodicals, that include reviews by Campbell,[14] Wiebe,[15] Rai,[16] and Rukmani.[17] A special issue of the International Journal of Hindu Studies was dedicated to discussing Being Different,[18] and included articles by Nicholas F. Gier,[19] Shrinivas Tilak,[6] Gerald James Larson,[20] Rita M. Gross, [21] Robert A. Yelle,[22] and Cleo McNelly Kearns,[23] as well as a nearly 40-page response by Malhotra.[24][note 2]

In February 2012, Patheos Book Club hosted a discussion of Being Different on their website. [web 3]

International Journal of Hindu Studies

Cleo McNelly Kearns

According to Kearns, Malhotra puts forward a valuable challenge to Christian theology.[25] She also notes that Malhotra himself adds to the "binary thinking" which he rejects.[25]

Rita M. Gross

According to Gross, Malhotra has located "one of the most urgent tasks for human survival", namely the ability to accommodate diversity without judging one culture over another as superior or inferior.[26]

Shrinivas Tilak

Tilak is appreciative of the "counterreading"[27] that Malhotra offers. According to Tilak, Malhotra "gives voice to Indic subjects who have been silenced or transformed by nineteenth century and contemporary Indological filters.[27] Tilak uses the term Dharmacatuskam, "House of Dharma with Its Four Wings (Dharmas)",[28] to denote the sense of integration that underlies the Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism traditions.[28] Tilak points out that Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism offer various approaches to dharma, which are "not unitary but composite".[29]

Gerald James Larson

Gerald James Larson is critical of Malhotra's presentation of "differences". According to Larson, Malhotra ignores the differences, to arrive at an "integral unity" "that is little more than a Neo-Vedanta or Neo-Hindu reading of the Bhagavad Gita documented with numerous citations from Aurobindo." Larson calls this the "Brahmin imaginary",[note 3] the standard Brahmanical view of Indic religion and philosophy in its Neo-Hindu understanding.[31] According to Larson, the "Brahmin imaginary" is an imagined "integral unity" that is adhered to only by a cultural elite, with very little reality "on the ground", as it were, throughout the centuries of cultural development in the South Asian region.[31] Larson also criticises the use of the term "Dharma traditions" or "dharmic systems", which ignores the differences between the various Indian religions.[31] Larson ends his review with the recommendation to move toward a future in which "being different" really reflects the "differences' in Indic religion and thought, "in a manner that challenges but also learns from the ongoing interactions with "the West.""[32]

Robert A. Yelle

Robert A. Yelle is highly critical of Malhotra's approach. According to Yelle, "there is little, if any, original scholarship in the book. It is the work of a polemicist," who uses western scholarship when criticizing the West, but ignores this scholarship when he presents his own nativist vision of "dharmic traditions." According to Yelle, Malhotra's vision is a mirror image of Orientalism, namely Occidentalism.[33] Robert A. Yelle also criticises Malhotra for his use of the term "dharmic traditions".[22] According to Yelle, Malhotra ignores the differences that exist among and within the various traditions of India. According to Yelle, Malhotra presents a thoroughly homogenized ideal of Hinduism, based on a limited choice of aspects from Vedanta philosophy and Yoga.[34] Yelle ends his review with the remark that there has been a gradual improvement in Western scholars' knowledge of Indian traditions. To come to a real dialogue, Indians must also be willing to look in the mirror, and be open to self-criticism.[35]

Nicholas F. Gier

Gier criticizes Malhotra for ignoring profound differences between Dharmic traditions in seeing an integral unity. Gier notices that Malhotra himself admits that there are ‘profound differences in theory and practice' in the Dharma traditions. According to Gier, this undermines Malhotra's principal claim that these philosophical schools are "integral".[19]

Other peer-reviewed reviews

Brian Campbell

In the Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford, Brian Campbell wrote that the book succeeds in fulfilling only one of its four goals. According to Campbell, it gives a simplistic view of modern colonialism. It also fails to reverse the gaze, and to apply dharmic categories to Western socio-cultural reality. According to Campbell, Malhotra does succeed in tracing the difference between Western and Oriental thought.[36]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Sciences of spirituality,"[web 4] "True, Genuine and Authentic Spiritual Knowledge."[web 5]
  2. ^ The publisher of Being Different also quotes comments about the book from John M. Hobson, Francis X. Clooney, D. R. Sardesai, Don Wiebe, Makarand R. Paranjape, Kapila Vatsyayan, Satya Narayan Das, Rita Sherma, Sampadananda Mishra, and others.[web 11] In addition to appearing on the book website,[web 11] quotes appear in the opening pages, in a section entitled "Praise for the Book" that precedes the title page, from Gerald James Larson, Don Wiebe, Makarand R. Paranjape, Cleo Kearns, Kapila Vatsyayan, Satya Narayan Das, Shrinivas Tilak, Rita Sherma, and Sampadananda Mishra.
  3. ^ Doniger: "It is often convenient to speak of a Brahmin-oriented quasi-orthodoxy (or ortho-praxy [...]), which we might call the Brahmin imaginary or the idealized system of class and life stage (varna-ashrama-dharma). but whatever we call this constructed center, it is, like the empty center in the Zen diagram of Hinduisms, simply an imaginary point around which we orient all the actual Hindus who accept or oppose it; it is what Indian logicians call the straw man (purva paksha), against whom argues. The actual beliefs and practices of Hindus – renunciation, devotion, sacrifice, and so many more – are peripheries that the imaginary Brahmin center cannot hold.[30]

References

  1. ^ Malhotra 2011, p. 3.
  2. ^ a b Malhotra 2012, p. 371.
  3. ^ Malhotra 2012, p. 375.
  4. ^ Malhotra 2012, p. 373.
  5. ^ Malhotra 2011, p. 2.
  6. ^ a b Tilak 2012.
  7. ^ "Order, chaos and creation – The Times of India". The Times Of India.
  8. ^ Malhotra 2011, p. 251-306.
  9. ^ Hegel, G. W. F. (1977). Phenomenology of Spirit.
  10. ^ Schlegel, K. W. F. (1859). The Philosophy of History. p. 120.
  11. ^ Marx, Karl (1853). "The British Rule in India". New-York Herald Tribune. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
  12. ^ Hegel, G. W. F. (1982). Lectures on the Philosophy of World History. p. 341.
  13. ^ Halbfass, Wilhelm (1988). India and Europe : An Essay in Understanding. State University of New York Press. p. 96. ISBN 978-0887067952.
  14. ^ Campbell 2012.
  15. ^ Wiebe 2012.
  16. ^ Rai & Prakash 2013.
  17. ^ Rukmani 2011.
  18. ^ Springer 2012.
  19. ^ a b Gier 2012.
  20. ^ Larson 2012.
  21. ^ Gross 2012.
  22. ^ a b Yelle 2012.
  23. ^ Kearns 2012.
  24. ^ Malhotra 2012.
  25. ^ a b Kearns 2012, p. 349-368.
  26. ^ Gross 2012, p. 323-334.
  27. ^ a b Tilak 2012, p. 306.
  28. ^ a b Tilak 2012, p. 291.
  29. ^ Tilak 2012, p. 295.
  30. ^ Doniger 2010, p. 29-30.
  31. ^ a b c Larson 2012, p. 313.
  32. ^ Larson 2012, p. 320.
  33. ^ Yelle 2012, p. 337-338.
  34. ^ Yelle 2012, p. 338-339.
  35. ^ Yelle 2012, p. 346.
  36. ^ Campbell 2012, p. 225.

Sources

Printed sources

  • Campbell, Brian (2012), (PDF), Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford, 4 (2): 222–225, ISSN 2040-1876, archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016, retrieved 8 April 2013
  • Doniger, Wendy (2010), The Hindus: An Alternative History, Oxford University Press, ISBN 9780199593347
  • Gier, Nicholas F. (2012), "Overreaching to be different: A critique of Rajiv Malhotra's Being Different", International Journal of Hindu Studies, 16 (3): 259–285, doi:10.1007/s11407-012-9127-x, ISSN 1022-4556, S2CID 144711827
  • Gross, Rita M. (2012), "Being Different: An Indian Challenge to Western Universalism", International Journal of Hindu Studies, 16 (3): 323–334, doi:10.1007/s11407-012-9128-9, ISSN 1022-4556, S2CID 144307510
  • Kearns, Cleo McNelly (2012), "Christianity, History and the Dharma in Rajiv Malhotra's Being Different", International Journal of Hindu Studies, 16 (3): 349–368, doi:10.1007/s11407-012-9131-1, ISSN 1022-4556, S2CID 143348788
  • Larson, Gerald James (December 2012), "The Issue of Not Being Different Enough: Some Reflections on Rajiv Malhotra's Being Different" (PDF), International Journal of Hindu Studies, 16 (3): 311–322, doi:10.1007/s11407-012-9129-8, S2CID 144728948
  • Malhotra, Rajiv (2011), Being Different: An Indian Challenge to Western Universalism, HarperCollins Publishers India
  • Malhotra, Rajiv (December 2012), "Author's Response: The Question of Dharmic Coherence", International Journal of Hindu Studies, 16 (3): 369–408, doi:10.1007/s11407-012-9132-0
  • Rai, Rishabh; Prakash, Anand (21 May 2013), "Being Different: An Indian Challenge to Western Universalism. Rajiv Malhotra", Psychological Studies, 58 (2): 201–205, doi:10.1007/s12646-013-0189-7, S2CID 141650314
  • Rukmani, T. S. (29 November 2011), "Book Review: "Being Different: An Indian Challenge to Western Universalism"", Journal of Hindu-Christian Studies, 24: 13, doi:10.7825/2164-6279.1490
  • Tilak, Shrinivas (2012), "Differing Worldviews (Western and Dharmic) in Rajiv Malhotra's Being Different", International Journal of Hindu Studies, 16 (3): 287–310, doi:10.1007/s11407-012-9130-2, ISSN 1022-4556, S2CID 143869600
  • Wiebe, Donald (2012), "Review of Being Different: An Indian challenge to Western Universalism, by Rajiv Malhotra", Toronto Journal of Theology, 28 (1): 182, doi:10.1353/tjt.2012.0011, ISSN 1918-6371, S2CID 144338156, ISSN 0826-9831
  • Yelle, Robert A. (December 2012), "Comparative Religion as Cultural Combat: Occidentalism and Relativism in Rajiv Malhotra's Being Different", International Journal of Hindu Studies, 16 (3): 335–348, doi:10.1007/s11407-012-9133-z, S2CID 144950049

Web-sources

  1. ^ Rajiv Malhotra. "'Tolerance Isn't Good Enough'". Huffington Post.
  2. ^ a b c d beingdifferentbook.com, Synopsis
  3. ^ a b "Patheos Book Club – Being Different".
  4. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, Adhyatmavidya
  5. ^ adhyatmavidya.com
  6. ^ Rajiv Malhotra. "Problematizing God's Interventions In History".
  7. ^ Rajiv Malhotra. "Problematizing God's Interventions In History".
  8. ^ Rajiv Malhotra. "Dharma and the new Pope". Huffington Post.
  9. ^ Rajiv Malhotra. "Order, chaos and creation". The Times Of India.
  10. ^ Rajiv Malhotra. "'Holy Spirit' is not the same as 'Shakti' or 'Kundalini'".
  11. ^ a b Being Different website (accessed 8 April 2013)
  • Springer (2012). "International Journal of Hindu Studies, volume 16, issue 3".

External links

Being Different

  • Being Different (book website)
  • Review of Being Different in by Subhasis Chattopadhyay.

Rajiv Malhotra

  • rajivmalhotra.com
  • Huffington Post - Blog by Rajiv Malhotra

being, different, canadian, documentary, film, film, indian, challenge, western, universalism, 2011, book, rajiv, malhotra, indian, american, author, philanthropist, public, speaker, published, harpercollins, book, reverts, gaze, western, cultures, india, repo. For the Canadian documentary film see Being Different film Being Different An Indian Challenge to Western Universalism is a 2011 book by Rajiv Malhotra an Indian American author philanthropist and public speaker published by HarperCollins The book reverts the gaze of the western cultures on India repositioning India from being the observed to the observer by looking at the West from a Dharmic point of view Being Different An Indian Challenge to Western UniversalismAuthorRajiv MalhotraCountryIndiaLanguageEnglishPublished2011 HarperCollins Publishers India a joint venture with The India Today GroupPages474ISBN978 9350291900OCLC769101673Websitebeingdifferentbook wbr com Contents 1 About the book 2 Overview 2 1 Divergence 1 Approaches to difference 2 2 Divergence 2 History Centrism versus inner sciences 2 3 Divergence 3 Integral versus synthetic unity 2 4 Divergence 4 The nature of chaos and uncertainty 2 5 Divergence 5 Translatability vs Sanskrit 2 6 Divergence 6 Western universalism challenged 3 Reception 3 1 International Journal of Hindu Studies 3 1 1 Rita M Gross 3 1 2 Shrinivas Tilak 3 1 3 Gerald James Larson 3 1 4 Robert A Yelle 3 1 5 Nicholas F Gier 3 2 Other peer reviewed reviews 3 2 1 Brian Campbell 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Sources 7 1 Printed sources 7 2 Web sources 8 External linksAbout the book EditMalhotra intends to give a critique of western culture by comparing it with Indian culture as seen from a Dharmic point of view To accomplish this goal he postulates a set of characteristics of western culture and a set of characteristics of Indian culture and religion characterised as Dharmic Malhotra explains that in Being Different Dharma is used to indicate a family of spiritual traditions originating in India which today are manifested as Hinduism Buddhism Jainism and Sikhism I explain that the variety of perspectives and practices of dharma display an underlying integral unity at the metaphysical level 1 Malhotra summarizes his rationale for treating Dharmic traditions as a family contrasting the family of Dharmic traditions with Abrahamic religions He constructs their differences from this Dharmic perspective thereby reversing the gaze 2 Malhotra clarifies that he is not replacing a West centric view with a Dharma centric view by proposing the reversal of gaze 3 Malhotra explains that he seeks a dialogue where the world civilizations are not merely seen from the viewpoint of the West but the west is also seen from a non western c q dharmic point of view 2 Malhotra calls for mutual respect as a higher standard for pluralism than tolerance Mutual respect does not call for acceptance of beliefs held by others only to have genuine respect for difference because beliefs are not facts web 1 Malhotra explains why this gaze from the other side benefits the West 4 explaining that he hopes to set the terms for a deeper and more informed engagement between dharmic and Western civilizations 5 Overview EditMalhotra identifies six distinct and fundamental points of divergence between the dharmic traditions and the West web 2 Malhotra argues that understanding these six points of divergence is crucial to recognizing the fallacy of facile sameness arguments and to understanding senselessness of inculturation efforts citation needed These points of divergence are web 2 web 3 Approaches to difference History centrism versus inner sciences Integral versus synthetic unity The nature of chaos and uncertainty Translatability vs Sanskrit Western universalism challengedDivergence 1 Approaches to difference Edit According to Malhotra there is a pervasive anxiety in the west over personal and cultural differences Therefore the west tries to assimilate and convert all that does not fit its fundamental paradigms web 2 According to Malhotra this anxiety is grounded in schisms which are inherent in the western worldview In contrast Dharmic traditions are historically more comfortable with differences web 2 Divergence 2 History Centrism versus inner sciences Edit According to Malhotra Dharmic traditions rely on adhyatma vidya note 1 while the Abrahamic religions rely on God s interventions in human history web 6 For followers of history centric Abrahamic religions truth claims based on history are more significant than the scriptural message itself History centric dogma such as original sin and resurrection become critical beliefs and no compromise can be made on their acceptance This explains the centrality of Nicene creed to all major Christian denominations Followers of history centric religions believe that the God revealed His message through a special prophet and that the message is secured in scriptures This special access to God is available only to these intermediaries or prophets and not to any other human beings web 7 Dharma traditions do not hold history central to their faith Gautama Buddha emphasized that his enlightenment was merely a discovery of a reality that is always there He was not bringing any new covenants from any God The history of the Buddha is not necessary for Buddhist principles to work In fact Buddha stated that he was neither the first nor the last person to have achieved the state of enlightenment He also asserted that he was not God nor sent by any God as a prophet and whatever he discovered was available to every human to discover for himself This makes Buddhism not History Centric Malhotra explains how history centrism or lack of it has implications for religious absolutist exclusivity vs flexible pluralism Abrahamic religions claim that we can resolve the human condition only by following the lineage of prophets arising from the Middle East All other teachings and practices are required to be reconciled with this special and peculiar history By contrast the dharmic traditions Hinduism Buddhism Jainism and Sikhism do not rely on history in the same absolutist and exclusive way This dharmic flexibility has made fundamental pluralism possible which cannot occur within the constraints of history centrism at least as understood so far web 8 Divergence 3 Integral versus synthetic unity Edit Both Western and Dharmic civilizations have cherished unity as an ideal but with a different emphasis Here Malhotra posits a crucial distinction between what he considers a synthetic unity that gave rise to a static intellectualistic Worldview in the West positioning itself as the Universal and an integrative unity that gave rise to a dynamically oriented Worldview based on Dharma 6 While the former is characterized by a top down essentialism embracing everything a priori the latter is a bottom up approach acknowledging the dependent co origination of alternative views of the human and the divine the body and the mind and the self and society Divergence 4 The nature of chaos and uncertainty EditDharma philosophical systems are highly systematized in their approach to understanding ultimate reality and in carefully addressing what one can know through various means of knowledge However this rigor does not restrict their freedom in being comfortable with social organization Indians exhibit remarkable openness to self organization and decentralization Malhotra explains the basis for this openness Hinduism weaves multiple narratives around the central motif of cooperative rivalry between order personified as devas and chaos personified as asuras A key myth shared by all the dharma traditions the churning of the milky ocean or samudra manthan shows the eternal struggle between two poles The milky ocean is the ocean of consciousness and creativity which is to be churned in order to obtain amrita or the nectar of eternal life web 9 Dharma actually recognises the need for both Order and Chaos to co exist in the universe In the story 7 Prajapati attempts to create the Universe keeping Order and Chaos in dynamic balance His initial attempts fail because they re too Jami homogenous or too Prthak different Finally he gets the combination just right by using the principle of Bandhuta Bandhu i e binding together dissimilar things by what is common across all things in the entire creation Divergence 5 Translatability vs Sanskrit Edit Malhotra identifies various non translatables in Sanskrit that have been mapped into Abrahamic religious concepts These mis translations then are used to draw sameness arguments or to denounce Hinduism Malhotra explains that In the fashionable search for sameness in all religions Holy Spirit in Christianity is often equated with Shakti or kundalini in Hinduism However these terms represent different even incompatible cosmologies Christianity assumes an inherent dualism between God and creation This necessitates historical revelations along with prophets priests and institutions to bring us the truth But Shakti being all pervading obviates dependence on these its experience can be discovered by going within through yoga web 10 Malhotra gives example of a list of Sanskrit non translatables and goes on to provide key differences in their original meaning and the most common translated word in English For example 8 Sr No Sanskrit non translatable Most common English translation1 Brahman and Ishwara God2 Shiva Destroyer3 Atman Soul or Spirit4 Veda Bible or Gospel5 Dharma Religion or Law6 Jati and Varna Caste7 Aum Amen Allah etc 8 Dukkha Suffering9 Avatar Jesus10 Shakti or Kundalini Holy Spirit11 Rishi Guru or Yogi Prophet or Christian Saint12 Devatas Pagan Gods13 Murtis Idols14 Yajna Christian Sacrifice15 Karma Western Notion of Suffering16 Karma Redemption17 Karma Yoga Christian Works18 Jivanmukti or Moksha SalvationDivergence 6 Western universalism challenged Edit Malhotra claims that refuting Western Universalism is one of the most important objectives of his book the conscious effort from American and European individuals to make the rest of the world fit into the template provided by these civilizations He claims that all people and culture are forced into the various schemes put forward to bring this about and asserts that modern laws regulation conventions and common practices are formed whether consciously or not with Western Universalism in mind Malhotra then goes on to provide a case study of Germany for Western digestion and synthesis He claims that late 18th and early 19th century saw a special interest in ancient India in European academia now called as Romantic movement and Indic origin of European culture started to compete with the earlier held Semitic origin To satisfy German cultural and religious egotistic interests various German Romantic thinkers like K W F Schlegel and G W F Hegel slowly digested Indic ideas like monism and presented a caricature of India as the frozen other Malhotra says Hegel presented The Weltgeist or World Spirit is in effect the protagonist of this history and the West is extraordinary because it is destined to lead this journey while all other civilizations must follow or perish He claims this narrative gave the West its privileges and those who doesn t fit into this scheme are not a part of history even though the Spirit may use parts of them 9 Malhotra alleges He Hegel laboriously criticizes Sanskrit and Indian civilization arguing with European Indologists with the aim of assimilating some ideas such as absolute idealism into his own philosophy while postulating India as the inferior other in order to construct his theory of the West Asia s place in history is as an infant whereas the West is mature and everyone s eventual destination This argument led to justification of colonialism as a teleological imperative by which the superior Europeans must appropriate others For example Hegel argues it is better for Africans to remain enslaved until they pass through a process of maturation that culminates in their total conversion to Christianity 10 Hegel regarded colonization as India s inevitable fate and was declared static and incapable of progress by itself and it was up to the West to colonize and operate on her for her own benefit Hegel s perception of India as stagnant and lacking history was perpetuated by Karl Marx who described India as caught in the Asiatic Mode of Production 11 Hegel writes The Germanic Spirit germanische Geist is the Spirit of the New World neuen Welt whose end is the realization of the absolute truth The destiny of the Germanic people is that of serving as the bearer of the Christian principle 12 Thus Hegel establishes that while the West is pure some westerners Germans are purer than others As Halbfass explains European thought has to provide the context and categories for the exploration of all traditions of thought 13 which Malhotra argues sees the digestion of Indian civilization into Western categories as both natural and desirable Malhotra also writes that after Hegel s death his sweeping Eurocentric accounts of history was extrapolated which culminates at the Aryan identity Malhtora states Hegel s theory of history has led to liberal Western supremacy which hides behind the notion of providing the universals These European Enlightenment presuppositions became incorporated in the confluence of academic philosophy philology social theories and scientific methodologies all of which were driven by various imperial and colonial values alongside Christian theology Reception EditSeveral reviews of Being Different have been published in academic periodicals that include reviews by Campbell 14 Wiebe 15 Rai 16 and Rukmani 17 A special issue of the International Journal of Hindu Studies was dedicated to discussing Being Different 18 and included articles by Nicholas F Gier 19 Shrinivas Tilak 6 Gerald James Larson 20 Rita M Gross 21 Robert A Yelle 22 and Cleo McNelly Kearns 23 as well as a nearly 40 page response by Malhotra 24 note 2 In February 2012 Patheos Book Club hosted a discussion of Being Different on their website web 3 International Journal of Hindu Studies Edit Cleo McNelly KearnsAccording to Kearns Malhotra puts forward a valuable challenge to Christian theology 25 She also notes that Malhotra himself adds to the binary thinking which he rejects 25 Rita M Gross Edit According to Gross Malhotra has located one of the most urgent tasks for human survival namely the ability to accommodate diversity without judging one culture over another as superior or inferior 26 Shrinivas Tilak Edit Tilak is appreciative of the counterreading 27 that Malhotra offers According to Tilak Malhotra gives voice to Indic subjects who have been silenced or transformed by nineteenth century and contemporary Indological filters 27 Tilak uses the term Dharmacatuskam House of Dharma with Its Four Wings Dharmas 28 to denote the sense of integration that underlies the Hinduism Buddhism Jainism and Sikhism traditions 28 Tilak points out that Hinduism Buddhism Jainism and Sikhism offer various approaches to dharma which are not unitary but composite 29 Gerald James Larson Edit Gerald James Larson is critical of Malhotra s presentation of differences According to Larson Malhotra ignores the differences to arrive at an integral unity that is little more than a Neo Vedanta or Neo Hindu reading of the Bhagavad Gita documented with numerous citations from Aurobindo Larson calls this the Brahmin imaginary note 3 the standard Brahmanical view of Indic religion and philosophy in its Neo Hindu understanding 31 According to Larson the Brahmin imaginary is an imagined integral unity that is adhered to only by a cultural elite with very little reality on the ground as it were throughout the centuries of cultural development in the South Asian region 31 Larson also criticises the use of the term Dharma traditions or dharmic systems which ignores the differences between the various Indian religions 31 Larson ends his review with the recommendation to move toward a future in which being different really reflects the differences in Indic religion and thought in a manner that challenges but also learns from the ongoing interactions with the West 32 Robert A Yelle Edit Robert A Yelle is highly critical of Malhotra s approach According to Yelle there is little if any original scholarship in the book It is the work of a polemicist who uses western scholarship when criticizing the West but ignores this scholarship when he presents his own nativist vision of dharmic traditions According to Yelle Malhotra s vision is a mirror image of Orientalism namely Occidentalism 33 Robert A Yelle also criticises Malhotra for his use of the term dharmic traditions 22 According to Yelle Malhotra ignores the differences that exist among and within the various traditions of India According to Yelle Malhotra presents a thoroughly homogenized ideal of Hinduism based on a limited choice of aspects from Vedanta philosophy and Yoga 34 Yelle ends his review with the remark that there has been a gradual improvement in Western scholars knowledge of Indian traditions To come to a real dialogue Indians must also be willing to look in the mirror and be open to self criticism 35 Nicholas F Gier Edit Gier criticizes Malhotra for ignoring profound differences between Dharmic traditions in seeing an integral unity Gier notices that Malhotra himself admits that there are profound differences in theory and practice in the Dharma traditions According to Gier this undermines Malhotra s principal claim that these philosophical schools are integral 19 Other peer reviewed reviews Edit Brian Campbell Edit In the Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford Brian Campbell wrote that the book succeeds in fulfilling only one of its four goals According to Campbell it gives a simplistic view of modern colonialism It also fails to reverse the gaze and to apply dharmic categories to Western socio cultural reality According to Campbell Malhotra does succeed in tracing the difference between Western and Oriental thought 36 See also EditRajiv Malhotra Invading the Sacred Breaking India Indra s Net Hinduism Invades America Hindu American FoundationNotes Edit Sciences of spirituality web 4 True Genuine and Authentic Spiritual Knowledge web 5 The publisher of Being Different also quotes comments about the book from John M Hobson Francis X Clooney D R Sardesai Don Wiebe Makarand R Paranjape Kapila Vatsyayan Satya Narayan Das Rita Sherma Sampadananda Mishra and others web 11 In addition to appearing on the book website web 11 quotes appear in the opening pages in a section entitled Praise for the Book that precedes the title page from Gerald James Larson Don Wiebe Makarand R Paranjape Cleo Kearns Kapila Vatsyayan Satya Narayan Das Shrinivas Tilak Rita Sherma and Sampadananda Mishra Doniger It is often convenient to speak of a Brahmin oriented quasi orthodoxy or ortho praxy which we might call the Brahmin imaginary or the idealized system of class and life stage varna ashrama dharma but whatever we call this constructed center it is like the empty center in the Zen diagram of Hinduisms simply an imaginary point around which we orient all the actual Hindus who accept or oppose it it is what Indian logicians call the straw man purva paksha against whom argues The actual beliefs and practices of Hindus renunciation devotion sacrifice and so many more are peripheries that the imaginary Brahmin center cannot hold 30 References Edit Malhotra 2011 p 3 a b Malhotra 2012 p 371 Malhotra 2012 p 375 Malhotra 2012 p 373 Malhotra 2011 p 2 a b Tilak 2012 Order chaos and creation The Times of India The Times Of India Malhotra 2011 p 251 306 Hegel G W F 1977 Phenomenology of Spirit Schlegel K W F 1859 The Philosophy of History p 120 Marx Karl 1853 The British Rule in India New York Herald Tribune Retrieved 2 November 2015 Hegel G W F 1982 Lectures on the Philosophy of World History p 341 Halbfass Wilhelm 1988 India and Europe An Essay in Understanding State University of New York Press p 96 ISBN 978 0887067952 Campbell 2012 Wiebe 2012 Rai amp Prakash 2013 Rukmani 2011 Springer 2012 a b Gier 2012 Larson 2012 Gross 2012 a b Yelle 2012 Kearns 2012 Malhotra 2012 a b Kearns 2012 p 349 368 Gross 2012 p 323 334 a b Tilak 2012 p 306 a b Tilak 2012 p 291 Tilak 2012 p 295 Doniger 2010 p 29 30 a b c Larson 2012 p 313 Larson 2012 p 320 Yelle 2012 p 337 338 Yelle 2012 p 338 339 Yelle 2012 p 346 Campbell 2012 p 225 Sources EditPrinted sources Edit Campbell Brian 2012 Review of Being Different An Indian challenge to Western Universalism by Rajiv Malhotra PDF Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford 4 2 222 225 ISSN 2040 1876 archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 retrieved 8 April 2013 Doniger Wendy 2010 The Hindus An Alternative History Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199593347 Gier Nicholas F 2012 Overreaching to be different A critique of Rajiv Malhotra s Being Different International Journal of Hindu Studies 16 3 259 285 doi 10 1007 s11407 012 9127 x ISSN 1022 4556 S2CID 144711827 Gross Rita M 2012 Being Different An Indian Challenge to Western Universalism International Journal of Hindu Studies 16 3 323 334 doi 10 1007 s11407 012 9128 9 ISSN 1022 4556 S2CID 144307510 Kearns Cleo McNelly 2012 Christianity History and the Dharma in Rajiv Malhotra s Being Different International Journal of Hindu Studies 16 3 349 368 doi 10 1007 s11407 012 9131 1 ISSN 1022 4556 S2CID 143348788 Larson Gerald James December 2012 The Issue of Not Being Different Enough Some Reflections on Rajiv Malhotra s Being Different PDF International Journal of Hindu Studies 16 3 311 322 doi 10 1007 s11407 012 9129 8 S2CID 144728948 Malhotra Rajiv 2011 Being Different An Indian Challenge to Western Universalism HarperCollins Publishers India Malhotra Rajiv December 2012 Author s Response The Question of Dharmic Coherence International Journal of Hindu Studies 16 3 369 408 doi 10 1007 s11407 012 9132 0 Rai Rishabh Prakash Anand 21 May 2013 Being Different An Indian Challenge to Western Universalism Rajiv Malhotra Psychological Studies 58 2 201 205 doi 10 1007 s12646 013 0189 7 S2CID 141650314 Rukmani T S 29 November 2011 Book Review Being Different An Indian Challenge to Western Universalism Journal of Hindu Christian Studies 24 13 doi 10 7825 2164 6279 1490 Tilak Shrinivas 2012 Differing Worldviews Western and Dharmic in Rajiv Malhotra s Being Different International Journal of Hindu Studies 16 3 287 310 doi 10 1007 s11407 012 9130 2 ISSN 1022 4556 S2CID 143869600 Wiebe Donald 2012 Review of Being Different An Indian challenge to Western Universalism by Rajiv Malhotra Toronto Journal of Theology 28 1 182 doi 10 1353 tjt 2012 0011 ISSN 1918 6371 S2CID 144338156 ISSN 0826 9831 Yelle Robert A December 2012 Comparative Religion as Cultural Combat Occidentalism and Relativism in Rajiv Malhotra s Being Different International Journal of Hindu Studies 16 3 335 348 doi 10 1007 s11407 012 9133 z S2CID 144950049 Web sources Edit Rajiv Malhotra Tolerance Isn t Good Enough Huffington Post a b c d beingdifferentbook com Synopsis a b Patheos Book Club Being Different Encyclopaedia Britannica Adhyatmavidya adhyatmavidya com Rajiv Malhotra Problematizing God s Interventions In History Rajiv Malhotra Problematizing God s Interventions In History Rajiv Malhotra Dharma and the new Pope Huffington Post Rajiv Malhotra Order chaos and creation The Times Of India Rajiv Malhotra Holy Spirit is not the same as Shakti or Kundalini a b Being Different website accessed 8 April 2013 Springer 2012 International Journal of Hindu Studies volume 16 issue 3 External links EditBeing Different Being Different book website Review of Being Different in Prabuddha Bharata by Subhasis Chattopadhyay Rajiv Malhotra rajivmalhotra com The Infinity Foundation Huffington Post Blog by Rajiv MalhotraPortals India Religion Hinduism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Being Different amp oldid 1127758137, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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