by pandava bandhava das
There is a clear connection between the concept of the three gunas which are constantly fighting for supremacy and the dialectics of Hegel and Aristotle where every reality is seen to contain the seed of its own denial. We could say that the doctrine of the gunas is the core doctrine in this case and that the thesis-antithesis-synthesis theory of Hegel is simply a manifestation of this eternal doctrine.
There is a clear connection between the concept of the three gunas which are constantly fighting for supremacy and the dialectics of Hegel and Aristotle where every reality is seen to contain the seed of its own denial. We could say that the doctrine of the gunas is the core doctrine in this case and that the thesis-antithesis-synthesis theory of Hegel is simply a manifestation of this eternal doctrine.
The interchanging gunas are the
reason why sometimes it seems that the nondevotees can have good qualities.
Actually those qualities are manifestations of the gunas which control them for
the present moment. Soon however the gunas change and then the nondevotees do
not look so nice anymore. That means that they do not posses those good qualities;
good qualities can be possessed by devotees only because the devotees are above
the gunas and because they attain these good qualities by the mercy of Krishna
who is the reservoir of all good qualities. This is made clear in Srimad
Bhagavatam:
"All the demigods and their exalted qualities, such
as religion, knowledge and renunciation, become manifest in the body of one who
has developed unalloyed devotion for the Supreme Personality of Godhead,
Väsudeva. On the other hand, a person devoid of devotional service and engaged
in material activities has no good qualities. Even if he is adept at the
practice of mystic yoga or the honest endeavor of maintaining his family and
relatives, he must be driven by his own mental speculations and must engage in
the service of the Lord's external energy. How can there be any good qualities
in such a man?"
It is so amusing to hear how
nonbelievers speak of being objective. In reality every one of them is
subjected to the particular combination of gunas he happens to be under at his current
birth and at the present moment of his life. Objectivity means that there
should be a proper standard way of thinking; in the case of the atheists
however, the only standard are their fluctuating thought patterns
dictated by the gunas. The state of the gunas
predetermines their value system and the value system sets their convictions. This
is made clear by Srila Prabhupada in his purport to Bhagavad gita 17.3:
"The word çraddhä, or "faith," is very significant in this verse.
Çraddhä, or faith, originally comes out of the mode of goodness. One's faith
may be in a demigod or some created God or some mental concoction. One's strong
faith is supposed to be productive of works of material goodness. But in
material conditional life, no works are completely purified. They are mixed.
They are not in pure goodness. Pure goodness is transcendental; in purified
goodness one can understand the real nature of the Supreme Personality of
Godhead. As long as one's faith is not completely in purified goodness, the
faith is subject to contamination by any of the modes of material nature. The
contaminated modes of material nature expand to the heart. Therefore according
to the position of the heart in contact with a particular mode of material
nature, one's faith is established. It should be understood that if one's heart
is in the mode of goodness his faith is also in the mode of goodness. If his
heart is in the mode of passion, his faith is also in the mode of passion. And
if his heart is in the mode of darkness, illusion, his faith is also thus
contaminated. Thus we find different types of faith in this world, and there
are different types of religions due to different types of faith. The real
principle of religious faith is situated in the mode of pure goodness, but
because the heart is tainted we find different types of religious principles.
Thus according to different types of faith, there are different kinds of
worship."
When Srila Prabhupada speaks about “faith”
in this purport he means not just adherence to particular belief system or
religion. Faith here means any type of conviction about anything, including
things usually viewed as purely secular phenomena such as politics, science, philosophy,
food, or clothes. Any attraction we have for any object of this world is a
result of the combinations of the gunas.
This same attraction defines the
nature of our mind. Having material mind means that we like certain things in
this material world and the way by which we are attracted and bound to them is
through our mind. That what we know as our material mind in essence is simply
the condition of material attraction. It is our state of being attracted to
matter, gross or subtle. One who is attracted to matter has a material mind.
And one who is attracted only to Krishna has a spiritual mind.
That gives the mind the fateful role
of our chain to this world of despair. The interesting thing is that we are not
usually aware of this sinister function of the mind and tend to follow his
dictations. Thus we find ourselves in the situation of being its prisoners
without even realizing it and this makes the escape almost impossible. For it
is one thing to escape a well guarded prison, and another thing to even plan an
escape when you are not even aware that you live in a prison. Srila Prabhupada
explains this situation in another famous purport from Gita:
"In the material world, the center of all activities is
sex, and thus this material world is called maithunya-ägära, or the shackles of
sex life. In the ordinary prison house, criminals are kept within bars;
similarly, the criminals who are disobedient to the laws of the Lord are
shackled by sex life. Advancement of material civilization on the basis of
sense gratification means increasing the duration of the material existence of
a living entity. Therefore, this lust is the symbol of ignorance by which the
living entity is kept within the material world. While one enjoys sense
gratification, it may be that there is some feeling of happiness, but actually
that so-called feeling of happiness is the ultimate enemy of the sense enjoyer"