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When Dr. J. K. Bajaj and Dr. M.
D. Srinivas came to me and asked for a set of my speeches, I
had no inkling that they would come back and present me a
compilation of twenty-four speeches, very assiduously collated
by them. These speeches were delivered by me as the Minister
for Human Resource Development, Science and Technology and
Ocean Development at various national and international forums
during 1998-2002. Speeches when presented in the form of a
book must include the chapter and verse of the quotations
which occur in the text, but that was a difficult task; while
writing these speeches, I had never thought that Bajaj and
Srinivas would someday undertake this exercise. It was with
some hard work that they could lay their hands on almost all
of the references quoted in the speeches. If there is any
material where the source has not been mentioned, the fault is
mine, for most of my notes were on loose papers and some of
them got lost. Be as it may, now the book is being published
in its present form, under the title, Science, Sustainability
and Indian Resurgence.
I have been interested in the
history of science since my student days. The interaction
between science, technology and society and the consequent
transformation of not only the social systems but also of the
political and economic structures, has been a fascinating
subject for me. Over the centuries, some of the finest brains
have engaged themselves in the relationship between science on
the one hand, and philosophy, spirituality, religion and
culture on the other. Technology has been used as a very
powerful tool to transform the economy by several countries
and has ushered in a new techno-economic world order in which
technologically advanced countries are in a commanding
position. Some of the speeches have dealt with the global
situation emerging out of this new world order, its
infirmities and the possible Indian approach for reducing the
widening asymmetries among the nations and between the rich
and poor within a nation. Some of the speeches discuss how
science and technology are related to this trajectory of
current economic, as well as social, cultural and ethical
aspects of human life. The interrelationship between the
scientific developments and the current world order needs an
in-depth investigation.
The scientific revolution in the
West was in a sense initiated by Nicolas Copernicus in the
sixteenth century. He was followed by Johannes Kepler, who
formulated his laws of planetary motion supporting Copernicus.
It was Galileo Galilei who first combined experimental
observations with mathematical formulations expressing the
laws of nature. Galileo, therefore, can be regarded as the
founder of Western science. This mathematical representation
of natural laws continues to be as important today in the
twenty-first century as it was in the seventeenth. Francis
Bacon, the British scientist and philosopher of the sixteenth
and early seventeenth century, introduced the inductive
procedure along with an emphasis on experimentation. Bacon
believed in using scientific knowledge to dominate and control
nature. Nature in his view had to be `hounded in her
wanderings', `bound into service', and made a `slave'. And the
aim of scientists was to `torture nature's secrets from her'.1
Ren‚ Descartes (1596-1650), the
renowned French mathematician and philosopher is credited with
the founding of the analytical method of reasoning that
involves first breaking up ideas and problems into small
components and then rearranging them in a logical sequence.
One can say that the basic tenet of Descartes' philosophy is
doubt. Doubting everything, he ultimately reaches a point
where he cannot doubt as a thinker, that point is his own
self. His famous statement, Cogito, ergo sum, meaning `I
think, therefore I exist', has revolutionised Western
thinking. It is this approach in which mind becomes more
important than matter, and ultimately produces the
mind-matter dichotomy that posits mind and matter to be
separate and essentially different.
Descartes undoubtedly introduced
the picture of universe as a perfect machine, for him the
universe was nothing more than a machine; but, it was Isaac
Newton who through his theories gave powerful support to this
view. Newtonian physics was considered a great success during
the seventeenth century and provided a worldview that remained
the basic tenet of scientific thought till the early part of
the twentieth century. This mechanistic worldview, or the
so-called reductionist approach, was in fact responsible for
amazing scientific and technological wonders.
During the past two centuries, we
have witnessed unprecedented advancements in science and
technology. Man's rendezvous in space was hailed as a first
step towards conquering other planets. Developments in nuclear
power, cybernetics, lasers, information and communications
technology, biotechnology, medicine and surgery, genetic
engineering, materials science, nanotechnology, etc., have all
resulted in staggering heights of affluence and unprecedented
levels of consumption. But despite this great success story,
human society finds itself engulfed in a multidimensional
crisis, a crisis that encompasses all aspects of human life Ý
social, political, techno-economic, cultural and spiritual.
All nations whether developed or
developing are going through serious stresses and strains.
Apart from the rising graph of sex and drug related crimes,
decline in moral and ethical values, sharpening of
civilisational conflicts, widespread religious bigotry,
increasing violence, proliferation of terrorism on a global
scale and other serious psychological disturbances, humankind
is also experiencing fragmentation of societies and
atomisation of families to such an extent that individuals
have begun to feel completely uprooted. The situation is
further confounded by rapid degradation of the environment,
serious climatic changes and widening of economic disparities.
And, all these have largely contributed to produce a web of
world problematique.
The irony of the matter is that,
despite all the technological development and sophisticated
tools of analysis available to him, the modern expert is
unable to provide any tangible solutions to the complex
problems of the modern world. This then is the predicament
that confronts human society today. The roots of this
predicament lie in the Newtonian-Cartesian worldview in which
life and problems are studied and understood by reducing them
into smaller and smaller components and then reassembling them
to obtain a clear picture of the problem and a tangible
solution. Further, Bacon's philosophy, according to which
science is all about torturing nature to reveal her secrets
and to enslave her, has given legitimacy to human efforts at
manipulating nature and using its resources indiscriminately.
In the ultimate analysis, seeds
of an exploitative world order were sown when scientists and
philosophers accepted the reductionist approach of Bacon,
Descartes and Newton, without understanding its grave
philosophical implications. Pointing towards the influence of
the Cartesian divide, Noble Laureate Werner Heisenberg once
said,2 ßThis partition has penetrated deeply into the human
mind during the three centuries following Descartes and it
will take a long time for it to be replaced by a really
different attitude toward the problem of reality.û The
consequences of this approach have to be carefully analysed.
Some of the speeches have dealt with the nature and complexity
of this predicament that the human society is facing today.
The speeches grouped together in
the section entitled `Science Technology and Sustainable
Consumption' underscore how the levels of consumption
available to about twenty percent of the population of the
world have created serious distortions and imminent threats to
global sustainability. Gisbert Glaser, senior advisor to the
International Council for Science, has defined sustainable
development as a moving target that represents a continuous
effort to balance and integrate the three pillars of social
well-being, economic prosperity and environmental protection
for the benefit of the present and future generations.
What has been the result of
pursuing economic policies supposedly directed towards
sustainable development: a world out of balance, tormented by
increasing violence and galloping inequalities. The report of
the Conference on Redefining the American Dream held at
Virginia in 1995 has poignantly brought out the fact that the
highly unequal levels of consumption have contributed to the
worsening of an already violent situation, putting many poor
people in high security prisons, many rich people in caged
compounds and everybody in insecurity. Global trends in
disparity of consumption show that the gap between the rich
and poor has widened from 30:1 in 1974 to 74:1 today; and, the
trend continues in the same direction.
What are the implications of this
imbalance? I have been cautioning during my addresses to
various international forums that the concept of unlimited
growth on a limited planet is untenable. I have always argued
in these conferences that the consequences of this imbalance
are frightening. If there is one single cause that can produce
global turmoil and grave threat to world peace, it is this
imbalance produced by unsustainable consumption patterns of
the developed world.
In an education conference held
in 2003 in India, attended by several representatives of the
UNESCO and international financial institutions, I pointed out
this increasing imbalance, and the attitude of the developed
world, which instead of reducing the imbalance was continuing
to worsen it. The representative of the World Bank handed me
the speech by James D. Wolfensohn, President, World Bank Group
delivered to the Boards of Governors in Dubai in September
2003. The speech is a confession that the present world order
is against the poor and the deprived. Arguing for rebalancing
the world, Wolfensohn says:3
…We must address the fundamental
forces shaping our world. In many respects, they are forces
that have caused the imbalance.
In our world of six billion
people, one billion own 80 percent of the global GDP, while
another billion struggle to survive on less than a dollar a
day. This is a world out of balance.
ßOver the next 25 years, 50
million people will be added to the population of the rich
countries. About one and half billion people will be added to
the population of the poor countries. Many will experience
poverty and unemployment, and disillusion with what they will
see as an inequitable global system. A growing number will
leave their home countries to find work. Migration will become
a critical issue. … …
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Mr. Chairman, it is time to take
a cold, hard look at the future. Our planet is not balanced.
Too few control too much, and too many have too little to hope
for. Too much turmoil, too many wars, too much suffering.
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The demographics of the future
speak to a growing imbalance of people, resources and the
environment. If we act together now, we can change the world
for the better. If we do not, we shall leave greater and more
intractable problems for our children.
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We must rebalance our world to
give everyone a chance for life that is secure … …We all share
one planet. It is time to restore balance to the way we use
it. Let us move forward to fight poverty, to establish equity,
and to assure peace for the next generation.û
Serious concerns regarding the
growing disparity among and within the nations have been
raised also by Joseph Stiglitz in his seminal work,
Globalisation and its Discontents, published in 2001. He
argues that globalisation was not working in the interest of
the poor nations and of the poor within the nations. However,
he suggests that the situation had arisen because
globalisation was not being managed properly. In my opinion
the ever-growing disparity is not due to any mismanagement of
globalisation but due to the wrong fundamentals on which
globalisation is operating. It is, in the ultimate analysis, a
consequence of continued unsustainable consumption by the rich
of the world who form just one-sixth of the population of the
world.
Consumption patterns in the
industrialized world have assumed staggeringly high levels,
which cannot be sustained. If these very levels were to be
attained by the remaining five-sixth of the world's
population, the resulting demand for energy, water and other
resources, both renewable and non-renewable, would result in a
total collapse of the ecosystem. It is evident that the
existing techno-economic model cannot sustain the type of
global economic development which has been propagated till
now.
Several scientific reports on
environmental pollution and indiscriminate use of natural
resources have appeared during the last two decades. The
Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) also
published an assessment report in 2001. The reports provide a
deeper understanding of the likely global scenario if we
continue with our present rate of growth. It is estimated that
by 2050, CO2 content in the atmosphere would reach the
threshold of 500 ppm. The consequent global-warming and its
concomitant hazards have been described recently by V.
Ramanathan and Peter Cox. According to them, we have perhaps
already reached a situation that leads to the point of no
return in global-warming.
We have to act urgently to save
our planet from irreversible damage. We have to change our
mindset and start thinking and acting towards developing a new
model based on sustainable consumption to replace the current
economic model that is based on a mechanistic and fragmentary
worldview and is propelled by market forces alone. Failure to
do so will seriously impinge upon the rights of the future
generations to sustain their lives on earth.
Much of the web of problems is
created because we consider science and technology in
isolation, disregarding the fact that all problems, social,
economic, cultural, political and ethical, are connected
together and cannot be considered in fragments. Life and its
affairs cannot be discussed in parts; there has to be a
holistic approach. If, however, one continues to pursue the
fragmentary approach, then confusion is bound to be created.
As David Bohm argues,4 ß…men who
are guided by such a fragmentary-self worldview cannot do
other, in the long run, than to try in their actions to
break themselves and the world into pieces, corresponding to
their general mode of thinking. … Likewise, when men try to
separate some aspect of nature in their practical, technical
work, a similar state of … disunity will develop. The same
sort of thing will happen to the individual when he tries to
separate himself from society. The unity in the individual and
between man and nature, as well as between man and man, can
rise only in a form of action that does not attempt to
fragment the whole of reality.û
It is evident that the roots of
this widespread range of crises Ý social, political, economic,
environmental, psychological and even moral and spiritual Ý in
the individual, groups of people and humankind as a whole, lie
in the fragmentary or mechanistic worldview. The solution lies
in adopting a holistic approach.
It was only towards the last
quarter of the twentieth century that scientists started
thinking seriously about the dangers looming large due to the
rapid degradation of environment and indiscriminate
exploitation of natural resources. It was then realised that
there was no coherent vision of the planet Earth. However,
some scientists, including James Lovelock who proposed the
Gaia hypothesis in 1972, have vigorously argued about the
Earth being a self-regulatory system. The idea was accepted by
scientists from four international research programmes
gathered in a meeting held in Amsterdam in 2001. A declaration
was made, stating, ßThe Earth system behaves as a single,
self-regulating system, comprised of physical, chemical,
biological and human components. The interactions and
feedbacks between the component parts are complex and exhibit
complex and multi-scale temporal and spatial variability.û
Lovelock has emphasised the
urgency of recognising Earth as a living thing. He has argued
that, ßMetaphor is important, because to deal with,
understand, and ameliorate the fix we are now in over global
change, requires us to know the true nature of the Earth and
imagine it as the largest living thing in the solar system,
not something inanimate like the disreputable contraption,
`Spaceship Earth'. Until change of heart and mind happens, we
will not instinctively sense that we live on a live planet,
that behaves as if it were alive, at least to the extent of
regulating its climate and chemistry, we will lack the will to
change our way of life and to understand that we have made it
our greatest enemy.û Albert Schweitzer once said, ßMan has
lost the capacity to foresee and forestall. He will end by
destroying the earth.û An alternative paradigm is urgently
needed.
The Atharvaveda has a long
chapter on the Earth; here the Vedic Rishi announces
categorically that the Earth is his mother and he is her son.
In one of the hymns [XII.1.12], he sings, ßWhat is thy middle,
O! Earth, and what thy navel, what refreshment arose out of
thy body, in them do they set us; be purifying towards us;
Earth is mother, I am Earth's son; Parjanya is Father, let him
save us.û
The parameters of using the
natural resources are defined in another hymn [XII.1.35],
which says, ßWhat of thee, O! Earth, I dig out, let that
quickly grow over; let me not hit thy vitals, nor thy heart,
O! Cleansing One.û In yet another hymn [XII.1.45], the Rishi,
recognising that people with diverse languages, laws and
customs inhabit this planet, requests `the Mother Earth to
yield a thousand streams of affluence, like a steady,
unresisting cow.'
The Hindu approach towards Mother
Earth is one of deep reverence and gratitude for sustaining
life; we may draw sustenance from Mother Earth, we cannot
exploit it. Just as a child can obtain feed from the mother,
but cannot be allowed to torture and bleed her, Mother Earth
cannot be subjected to torture and exploitation. Vedic Rishis
consider the world as a family and not as a market. This
family includes the entire universe, living and non-living,
animate and inanimate, organic and inorganic, along with the
entire biosphere. And this family is sustained by Mother
Earth.
Modern scientists have yet to
recognise this ancient Indian wisdom. However, they do
recognise the need for protecting and preserving the
environment and preventing indiscriminate and rapid
exploitation of natural resources. Sustainable consumption,
and not the mad race for growth in the name of sustainable
development, is the new paradigm that is relevant in this
context.
In the early phases of
development of civilisation, the human mind pursued a
`holistic' approach for comprehending the reality. Ancient
Indian philosophy and religion emphasise `wholeness' and not
any reductionist approach for understanding the universe. The
Indian worldview denies fragmentation and division. Western
science is based on the assumption that the reality is
constituted of separate and separable parts. In order to
comprehend reality, scientists continued to explore, till
recently, as to how these separate parts are related to each
other. After the advent of quantum mechanics, however, the
situation has radically changed and the separate parts do not
appear to be separate anymore. ßPartsû, says David Bohm, ßare
seen to be in immediate connection, in which their dynamical
relationship depends, in an irreducible way, on the state of
the whole system.û Further, he asserts, ßThus one is led to a
new notion of unbroken wholeness which denies the classical
idea of the analysability of the world into separately and
independently existing parts. …û Heisenberg's uncertainty
principle shows that it is a participatory universe; in other
words, whatever properties of the world `out there' are
observed are enmeshed in our own perceptions, both
psychologically and ontologically.
It may be also recognised that
Bohr's principle of complementarity deals with the issues of
consciousness also. Penrose argues that consciousness is a
part of our universe, and the physical theories must make a
proper accommodation of consciousness in order to provide a
complete and genuine picture of the universe. According to
this view, unless consciousness is included in the physical
theories, it is not possible to form a coherent worldview.
Once the modern physical theories incorporate consciousness in
their description of the universe, an entirely different
worldview will emerge, that would profoundly alter the
Cartesian paradigm.
Several millennia before the
twentieth century debate regarding consciousness appeared in
Western science, Indian genius had recognised that
consciousness was integral to any coherent description of the
universe. The Upanishadic Rishis had realised that âtman is
Brahman. The Rishi states, ßBrahman alone exists without a
second; âtman itself is Brahman; All is Brahman, I am Brahman
and so are thou. The All-pervading Brahman is subtler than the
subtle and larger than the largest.û
Thus, according to the
Upanishadic view, the cosmic consciousness is pervading
everywhere and connects every `being' with everything. Perhaps
nowhere else has this fundamental unity in the apparent
diversity of the universe been so positively affirmed as in
the Upanishadic thought. This holistic worldview recognises
consciousness as a fundamental ingredient of the universe and
also the interconnectedness of the physical, intellectual,
psychological and spiritual aspects of creation.
The holistic worldview,
therefore, offers a new approach to `nature'. It recognises an
unbroken relationship between humankind and the ecosystem. The
relationship is organic and symbiotic. In consequence, the
holistic paradigm completely prohibits the exploitation of
nature. The principle of organic relationship among
socio-economic systems and ecosystem does not permit us to
seek solutions to problems in parts. In other words, the
dynamic balance between humankind and ecosystems cannot be
disturbed beyond a certain limit.
Socio-economic systems built on
this concept are, therefore, necessarily anchored in a set of
values. Any human activity not based on a value system
ultimately produces unbearable stresses and strains, leading
to a violent collapse of the system. Moral and ethical codes
of conduct are necessary concomitants of a holistic approach
and provide an inbuilt ability to harmonise the conflicts as
and when they arise. Consequently, socio-economic systems
based on `holism' are both `non-exploitative' and
`non-violent'.
Who can then harmonise? The
answer to this very important question lies in having an
inviolable code of conduct. According to the Hindu seers and
philosophers, it is the `innate law' or `Dharma' that decides
the propriety of individual and social behaviour in a
particular situation. It is Dharma which strikes the balance
between `whole' and its `parts'.
The inescapable conclusion of the
holistic worldview is that the whole is not merely the
algebraic sum of its parts, but is something more than that.
The all-pervading cosmic consciousness provides a fundamental
bond between the `whole' and its `parts'. It also recognises
that all aspects of human life, material, intellectual,
emotional and spiritual, are inseparable, mutually interactive
and interdependent. Any interference with anyone is bound to
affect all others. Therefore, problems should be understood in
totality and cannot be solved in parts.
This also means that the concepts
of growth and development that have prevailed till now have to
be redefined. Science and technology should serve the entire
humankind and not a particular group alone; technology should
neither degrade the environment, nor dehumanise the society.
Technology, according to the holistic approach, should have a
human face and should serve both human society and nature.
Technologies, apart from developing a society materially, also
affect its social and cultural life. The techno-economic
system based on the Cartesian paradigm has produced a value
system that has led to the development of a highly insensitive
and individualistic society propelled by the market forces.
Concern for the suffering humanity and a sense of compassion
for it requires a different value system at individual,
social, national and global levels.
India, with her deep-rooted
spirituality and holistic vision, had pronounced at the very
dawn of civilisation that `the world is like a family',
vasudhaiva kuñumbakam. India has always considered the issue
of values to be of paramount importance and their immutability
and primacy has always been an important theme of scientific
and philosophical enquiry. India can, therefore, play a
definitive role in evolving a value system which would instil
a sense of deep compassion and concern, not only for fellow
members of this world-family, but also for the eco-system.
Some of the speeches collected here have dealt with the
relationship of Science, Religion and Spirituality and their
convergence.
India is at a crucial juncture of
her history. If India has to survive as a nation, then she has
to carve out a niche in the front row of the comity of
nations. For this to happen, India has to self-evaluate and
redefine her path for the future. There are moments when a
country faces a dilemma about its direction. India today has
to rediscover her world-vision and redefine her path for the
future. As the renowned Gandhian thinker, Dharampal, has
said, ßFor every civilisation, there comes a time when the
people of that civilisation have to remind themselves of their
fundamental civilisational consciousness and their
understanding of the Universe and the Time.û5 For India, that
time has come now.
India's understanding of the
Universe and Time has been clearly defined by her seers and
philosophers. It is only on this basis of her glorious past
that she can raise her head high. India has to integrate
science and technology with her cosmic vision in a manner that
harmonises not only the present day conflicts within India,
but also serves as a beacon light to the rest of humanity.
I take this opportunity to
express my heartfelt gratitude to
Dr. J. K. Bajaj and Dr. M. D.
Srinivas for bringing out this compilation. It is their
patience and painstaking effort in collecting my scattered
speeches, and searching for the references, that has made this
publication possible. I am also indebted to the Centre for
Policy Studies for publishing this compilation.
New Delhi
Ràmanavamã, Kali 5110
April 14, 2008 M. M. Joshi
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