Philosophy Department - EPOCH Colloquium
April 4, 2:00pm - 4:30pmMānoa Campus, Sakamaki C-308
Dharma and Grief: Imagination in Classical Indian Moral Metaphysics of Suffering presented by Professor Purushottama Billimoria of Melbourne University.
The seminar begins with exploring recent thinking on the 'hard emotions', such as grief and mourning, in the context of classical Indian ethics or Dharma. Taking a comparative perspective, we will discuss how tragic pathos features in classical literature, and in Rabindranath Tagore's sketches (and via a film-song). The work of empathy or compassion in a therapeutic setting will also be drawn upon. These instances will help to illustrate the spaces of imagination at personal and inter-personal levels that are continuous with the dharmic quest in dire moments of suffering.
The second part will focus on metaphysical thinking. We will draw on the use of mantra-s in ancient sacrifice toward evoking divinity in the form of devatÄ-s or deities, but without committing to their real or ontological existence. In other words, gods have momentary existence. It will be suggested that the MÄ«mÄṃsÄ thinkers here are evolving a theory of Absent Divinity – akin to Heidegger's 'Absent God', or Jasper's 'Missing God'. Here imagination forestalls the counter-argument that the residual potency from the smoky sacrifice would not work should we not assume the real-time existence of deities.
Finally, a comparison will be made between Yudhiá¹£á¹hira as the paragon of morality in the MahÄbhÄrata and Mahatma Gandhi. The former bore witness to the carnage of the war as it drew to an unending end, and faced rebuke from DraupadÄ« for wandering the earth without finding an absolute foundation for Dharma. Gandhi's theory of morality called for scant theorizing and much sensitivity toward social variations and alterations, and reliance on sheer inner moral strength, checked by conscience. Thus he appealed to situational imagination; as he remarked, truth in moral matters has no absolutes; rather, the individual by virtue of her character and imaginative engagement arrives at a decision and resolves to act accordingly. One chooses the best course to the best cause. When applied to war and its anti-thesis nonviolence, this imaginative moral insight has had a positively transformative effect on world politics in our secular and postcolonial age.
Event Sponsor
Philosophy, Mānoa Campus
More Information
Patricia Pimental, 956-8649, philo@hawaii.edu, PBilimoria (PDF)
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