Destiny and Human Initiative in the Mahabharata

Destiny and Human Initiative in the Mahabharata

by Julian F. Woods
Destiny and Human Initiative in the Mahabharata

Destiny and Human Initiative in the Mahabharata

by Julian F. Woods

eBook

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Overview

Destiny and Human Initiative in the Mahabharata explores this epic's ongoing polemic regarding free will in the face of destiny. While the belief that human history is governed exclusively by external forces is evident in the Mahabharata, the epic also contains the commanding message of Kr's'n'a that the lives of individuals and societies may, and should indeed, be changed for the better through human initiative. Woods maintains that the resolution of this conundrum emerges from the epic's view of what it is to be a human being. We may harbor ideas about our self-determination and freedom, but the epic reveals that we are not at all free but trapped in a vicious cycle of birth and death that can be broken only when we realize that our precious ego-self with its sense of agency is a mental fiction. The Mahabharata admits to a modicum of freedom in everyday life which, from a higher perspective, is nothing but destiny in disguise.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780791490587
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 04/19/2001
Series: SUNY series, McGill Studies in the History of Religions, A Series Devoted to International Scholarship
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 247
File size: 431 KB

About the Author

Julian F. Woods is an independent scholar living in Montreal.

Table of Contents

Preface

1. Introduction
The Theme in Historical Perspective
Focus of the Analysis
The Epic Context

2. Hermeneutical Perspectives

3. Cosmic Destiny
The Mythological Background
The Epic Accounts

4. Personal Destiny
Problems and Anomalies
Social Manifestations of Daiva
Prophecies and Pronouncements
Krsna as “Master of Yoga”
Daiva and Karna
Daiva and Duryodhana
Krsna as Daiva

5. Destiny and Human Initiative
Tricks and Strategems
Daiva in Human Expression
Purusakara
Morality (Dharma) and Moral Conflict

6. Action and Contemplation
The Mythological Background
Krsna's Transformation of Vedic Values
Some Alternative Views

7. The Path of the Warrior
Draupadı's Impatie
Kuntı's Exhortation
Yudhisthira's Grief
Bhısma's Instructions

8. Action and Retribution
Purusakara as Moral Autonomy
Vidura's “Wilderness of Life”

9. The Path of Self-Determination
The Spiritual Journey
Moral Implications
The Evolutionary Ladder

10. Conclusion
The “Fate” of Human Action
The Problem of Agency
The Solution to the Antinomy of Providence

Appendix: Some Notes on Scholarship

Notes

Figure: Family Connections in the Mahabharata

Glossary of Proper Names

Glossary of Sanskrit Terms

Bibliography

Index

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