From Myths to Truth – Part 4
What is Dharma [Sanātana Dharma, the eternal cosmic law]?
Everyone is talking about Dharma, not just now, but since there have been people, but no one has really understood it or wanted to understand it. Let’s take the examples from past rebirths to make this clearer.
Why is it that a human or any other known species cannot normally remember reincarnations? On the one hand, the memories also become a kind of burden, and the previous bonds also become a disaster. Do you know how many mothers and fathers you have had? The absolute ASymmetry is the only thing that is truly identical, everything else can be variable, at least according to my current understanding of the divine order, but even my knowledge is not yet complete. Can it be complete? Yes?! No, can you define in one line what natural numbers are when they are infinite?
Did Karnan, also known as Radheya (Mahabharata), have other options to act because he says everyone abandoned him, only his friend and prince Duryodhana stood by his side from the beginning and treated him as an equal, everyone else saw him as inferior?
Let’s leave aside all the other constellations, why Duryodhana won him as a friend or why his mother gave him over to nature, i.e. let him float along the river as a newly born/manifested child in a kind of basket floating in the water.
Speaking of manifested, do you know the meaning of this term in different contexts? In Western culture there is also a story, at least related to purity, that is the story of Jesus and the Virgin Mary. How can a woman be a virgin when she gives birth to a child?
Now back to the original question, leave all other variables as they are and we only look at the constant, i.e. Karnan, did Radheya have a choice? His reasoning is that because of the worldly circumstances and especially because only Duryodhana stood by him when the whole world laughed at him and treated him inferiorly, there was no other dharma, that is, loyal behaviour, for him.
Do you know the barber Paradox, also known in mathematics as Russell’s Antinomy? How was it solved and who created this paradox?
Now I ask a counter question: Is it not the duty of a true friend to show his friend his mistake and not to support him in his faulty behaviour? A good, true friend will never want the worst for his friend, right?
If this is the case, then it was not the right decision to drop Duryodhana?
If this is absolutely true in all facets of possibilities, why do many religions think that God must be merciful? Can God also be angry? Let’s put the question differently, can a father be angry with his child? What does it mean to educate or, to put it heartlessly, how many forms of control or conditioning are there? Do you know why people used to pull reins through the noses of riding animals?
If you draw the right conclusions with the right understanding, then you will also understand that death is also a blessing, so if God lets someone die, then it is also so that he or she does not make more mistakes, right? So, the belief in religions is wrong when they claim that God can only be good-natured, right?
I am talking about God and not about those who play God. Imagine if you gave a person a cell phone around 200 years ago, what would that person think? Magic?
You have to differentiate between what is what, right?
Imagine a culture, an era where the rulers say, with the help of science, you people, you have no eyes, you only imagine that you can see, is that possible?
What is gaslighting, a term from modern psychology?
Apropos the thing with Karnan, this can be applied to all the characters from the Mahabharata. What do you think we have today, like Radheya, Bhishma or Guru Drona?
Isn’t all of this a cycle? Science also says this, energy can neither be created nor destroyed, so why do you think that death is something absolute?
What do I mean by roller shutter-function?
What is morality?
Morality is the effect of Sanātana Dharma, in other words, it is the consequence of Sanātana Dharma. Since Sanātana Dharma is the eternal law, and therefore timeless, morality is also timeless.