|
|
|
|
|
by rajekas
2279 days ago
|
|
Kerala in particular and South India more generally has also preserved other Indian knowledge traditions well - Ayurveda comes to mind. But despite my innate Indian nationalism I think the time has come to stop writing articles (or even having thoughts) like the one linked above. Yes, many cultures, including several represented in the Indian subcontinent, had deep and important ideas. It's even likely that in some disciplines - the mind sciences being the most obvious - there are many ideas and practices that are waiting to transform and revolutionize 'western' science, whatever that might mean. But the knee jerk chauvinistic instinct that says all science (& democracy & sliced bread) arose in Greece and the Indian/Chinese/Middle-Eastern response to counter that with continued fractions in the Lilavati (as well as spaceships and chimeras) has run its course in my view. Plain common sense and generosity suggests that insights have mingled across people's for millennia. One of my favorite sources for that belief: Thomas McEvilley's superlative "Shape of Ancient Thought." [1] If anything, the events of the past weeks show that we are still stuck in a parochial mindset when the big problems of the present and the foreseeable future are all human in the expansive sense of that term. And why human - I would rather rather we started thinking with any number of other species that have something to teach us. [1] https://www.amazon.com/Shape-Ancient-Thought-Comparative-Phi... |
|