Insights into the weekly Torah portion
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Cc Madhya 25.1-104 https://vedabase.io/en/library/cc/madhya/25/advanced-view/ ------------------------------------------------------------ Prabhupāda was especially keen on defeating atheistic science. And as you know, I'm keen on that. People aren't very philosophical or very scientific. Even scientists aren't. We've been talking to a few lately.In any case, the people in general just have a base, basic understanding of erroneous scientific theories, and I feel that what would be most helpful for them is to have a way to question those theories and think for themselves. Like you made that presentation about the Big Bang, and the way you presented it was to take people through the history of the theory itself and see how flimsy the evidence is and how it's all held together with rubber bands and Scotch tape and a few pieces of thread found here and there. And when people come to question materialistic scientists and the theories that are accepted a priori these days—for instance, if you read any self-help book, guaranteed, it could be in the first chapter, but at least the second chapter by the third page, somebody is going to say, "As everybody knows, we evolved into this." Some of that concept is going to come in, that we started in a primitive state, or as matter, and now somehow we've evolved into humans, and this is a phenomenon. Whatever they are describing is a result of this evolution, and whatever primal instincts we still have came from a time when we were less evolved. To be able to have a team of young people who are endowed with sattva-guṇa and above-average intelligences and access to sound arguments in order to untie people's attachments to science—not to disparage science outright, but just to take individual points and help people question them so they can open their minds to another epistemology that can guide them in their lives, rather than just accepting what modern science says. I think that Drutakarmā's approach is fantastic, because in Forbidden Archeology, he basically just shows people what's going on behind the curtain in academia: that people cheat all over the place, and they're self-motivated. They try to hold the levers of power through academia and control what information gets out there. You don't have to make anything up. You just have to show that human nature has entered into the academy, and that's what everybody believes in, because that's what gets into the textbooks for lower education, what to speak of higher education. So that's where I think we have to take a systematic approach and bring presentations that are understandable to the common person on the street, where they can take those and then say, "Aha, maybe there is another way." And a lot of scientists are thinking that way nowadays. They're talking about how consciousness can't be measured in the same way that we've thought we could measure the material nature, and to some degree, we can, through controlled experiments, but you can't control consciousness in the same way. So that's one place I think that we could contribute to the conversation that's going on. (0:30:36) (excerpt from the discussion) ------------------------------------------------------------ To connect with His Grace Vaiśeṣika Dāsa, please visit https://www.fanthespark.com/next-steps/ask-vaisesika-dasa/ ------------------------------------------------------------ Add to your wisdom literature collection: https://iskconsv.com/book-store/ https://www.bbtacademic.com/books/ https://thefourquestionsbook.com/ ------------------------------------------------------------
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