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If you are new to this site, start with these posts. Majority of these posts are not written for this website, rather they were lifted from the conversations on the defunct sulekha.com, the defunct yahoo group, and other places. (Check this forum for current connversations.) These posts serve three purposes: (a) to help newbies to understand Balagangadhara’s research program called “Comparative Science of Cultures”; (b) to aid those who have read articles published in various journals and books; (c) to understand the studies of Indian culture and traditions in a different light—a framework different from that of current social sciences which take secularized Christian theological ideas as facts (or granted).
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- Translations or travesty of our traditions
- To follow our forefathers: the nature of traditions
- Why understand the Western culture?
- Is tradition same as following a set of moral obligations?
- Comparing India and the West
- Why social sciences are not producing knowledge?
- Negative portrayals of non-Western cultures: secularization of Christianity
- Reductive explanations in social sciences
- Why Westology a la Indology is doomed to fail?
- The dynamic of religion: secularization and proselytization
- India and her traditions: a reply to Jeffrey Kripal
- On colonial experience and the Indian Renaissance
- Secularism, Colonialism and Indian intellectuals
- Colonialism: Hindering alternative explanations
- Colonial Consciousness: are Indians corrupt?
- Fuss about Indic categories I
- Fuss about Indic categories II
- Why use Indic categories to describe the world?
- Indians’ barren criticisms of Western translations
- Hinduism, whether a religion or a way of life, does not exist.
- Hinduism and Hipkapi: an imaginary entity
- Is puja same as worship?
- Are rituals meaningless?
- The paradox of multiple meanings of puja, thonda(m), etc
- Are stories symbols?
- Polytheism is contradiction in terms.
- Is rain dance superstitious?
- Neutrality of the Indian secular state
- Why do Indian secularists do not think but talk?
- Is the distinction between laukika and adhyatmika, same as that between secular and religious?
- How do we understand the concept of communal violence in India?
- How to speak for Indian traditions
- Have Indian reformers understood the protest reformation?
- Bankruptcy of postcolonial scholars and their defense of secularism
- The vacuity of secularism: on the Indian debate and its Western origins
- Mantras of Anti-Brahmanism: Colonial experience of Indian intellectuals
- Are Brahmins priests?
- What is experience (anubhava) I
- What is experience II
- What is experience III
- What is experience IV
- Is enlightenment learnable?
- Is Bhagavadgita a revelation?
- Indian heathens’ misunderstanding of Christian questions like “meaning(purpose) of life”
- Silly symbolic explanations of Linga
- Does Shiv Linga mean a phallus?
- Denying experience: do Hindus worship? do they perform puja to phallus?
- Theory-ladenness: facts are facts of a theory
- Theory-ladenness: Swami Vivekananda and caste discrimiantion
- Colonial Experience: Normative ethics 101
- The logic of normative ethics: Immorality of Indians
- Normative assumptions: corruption
- Normative assumptions: discriminations and caste discriminations
- castes vs caste-system
- What makes Christianity a religion?
- Do Indian traditions claim that the universe is an expression of God’s Will (intention)?
- Atheism: a secularized theism
- Kids of NRI and their Balvihar education
- Vacuity of NRIs and their symbolic interpretations
- Colonial Consciousness and Victorian Morality
- Indian Americans and their identity politics
- Adhoc explanations: why do puja to cows?
- Superstition and rationality
- Is tolerant Christianity a contradiction in terms?
- Are Indian Christians not bound by Christian theologies?
- Religious intolerance vs civic intolerance
- Religious tolerance vs Ecumenism
- Historicity of Rama, Krishna and Anjaneya
- What do Indians need: A history or the past
- Anti-proselytization legislations: a weakness of Indian culture
- What makes one an intellectual?
- The absence of super natural entities in Indian traditions
- The Wendy Incident: a view from Europe