Hello.
In a book named Hindu Ethics : Purity, abortion and euthanasia, I came across this passage.
As one sided as this text sounds, I can see that it is easy to come to this conclusion. The Upanishads and commentaries, which are the first places one goes to to know about Hinduism constantly talk about how desires bind one to samsara, how one must give up stuff etc.
The mimansa school, which does not pay heed to moksa, instead goes on about Vedic rituals, preferring to talk in detail about how rituals are to be done, but nothing secular is talked about.
We see some basic ethics in the Yoga sutras, (Yama and niyama), but these again are steps on the road to liberation.
In the Dharma shashtras and Dharma sutras, we see ritual penances, casteism, misogyny, and how Brahmins are superior, but again nothing secular.
Another book, named Dharma Sutras, says that unless specified, all injunctions in the Dharma sutras are for Brahmins only, and nearly all are this way. Thus again we see a lack of secular and practical ideas.
In contrast, on the Abrahamic Judaism side, the Rabbis are most likely to give out practical advice for the common man. Books such as Pirkei Avot and Mesillas Yesharim are no nonsense guides to living, which nonetheless depend on the Torah.
So, I have to ask, how far do you think this characterisation of Hinduism is justified? Do you know of sources of ethics or daily living for the common man?
Thanks
In a book named Hindu Ethics : Purity, abortion and euthanasia, I came across this passage.
There are two widespread pictures of Hindu society in the West. One is of the yogi performing great feats of physical and mental gymnastics, wandering through the world with his begging bowl or sitting motionless in the forest, deep in meditation. The other picture is of the Brahmin priest-scholar at the top of a vast hierarchy of hereditary communities that do not intermarry or even eat together outside the caste. The first picture is supported by the Indian philosophies elaborating various paths that renounce the world and lead to eternal salvation. The second picture has its scriptural support in a different set of sacred texts, the "law books" (Dharmasastras*).
As one sided as this text sounds, I can see that it is easy to come to this conclusion. The Upanishads and commentaries, which are the first places one goes to to know about Hinduism constantly talk about how desires bind one to samsara, how one must give up stuff etc.
The mimansa school, which does not pay heed to moksa, instead goes on about Vedic rituals, preferring to talk in detail about how rituals are to be done, but nothing secular is talked about.
We see some basic ethics in the Yoga sutras, (Yama and niyama), but these again are steps on the road to liberation.
In the Dharma shashtras and Dharma sutras, we see ritual penances, casteism, misogyny, and how Brahmins are superior, but again nothing secular.
Another book, named Dharma Sutras, says that unless specified, all injunctions in the Dharma sutras are for Brahmins only, and nearly all are this way. Thus again we see a lack of secular and practical ideas.
In contrast, on the Abrahamic Judaism side, the Rabbis are most likely to give out practical advice for the common man. Books such as Pirkei Avot and Mesillas Yesharim are no nonsense guides to living, which nonetheless depend on the Torah.
So, I have to ask, how far do you think this characterisation of Hinduism is justified? Do you know of sources of ethics or daily living for the common man?
Thanks