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Atom theory

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Micro-cosmology - Atom in
Jain philosophy & Modern Science.
Book by Shri Jethalal Zaveri and Muni Shri Mahendra Kumarji.
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Where did the universe come from and where is it going? Did it have a beginning?
How and why did it begin? What happened before that? Will it come to an end, or
not? Did anybody create the universe? Is it static and unchanging or dynamic and
mutable?
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These and many other questions regarding space, time, animate and inanimate
orders of existence have been before mankind ever since man became capable of
thinking. Theories about the origin of universe and its contents have been put
forward by theologizes, met physicists, philosophers as well as modern
scientists. In the orient, philosophers mostly dealt with such questions.
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The enigma of the physical
universe has also been pondered alike by religion (theology),
philosophy, and science. The fundamental problems, no doubt, remained
the same from one age to another, but the point of view from which they
were attacked varied with the viewer as well as the age. It would,
therefore, be not surprising if the answers to the problems are found to
be radically divergent. Answers given by theology, for instance, are
based mostly on dogmatic belief that we have knowledge, where, in fact,
we have ignorance. Science, on the other hand, cannot answer many
questions of great interest raised by the inquisitive human mind.
"Philosophy is intermediate between theology and science" says Sir
Bertrand Russell, "and it is the business of philosophy to study such
problems in order that we do not become insensitive to many things of
great value."
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At the same time, unlike in the West, science has never been able to
completely subjugate the religious sensitivities. In India, at least,
mystery, ambiguity, and transcendence remain as important as
rationality, logic and sensible perception. Here, man's personality is
not entirely denatured by the scientific objectivity nor has mystery and
sacredness been taken away by its rationality. In short, science, in
spite of its spectacular achievements, did never become a new religion
here as it in effect did in the West.
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From Preface - to Jain Philosophy of Non-absolutism
- by Prof. Dr. Satkari
Mookerjee.
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Jain philosophy does not swear by mysticism, though it culminates in it.
But the mysticism is not the result of dogmatic faith. Philosophical
speculation is a necessary discipline of the mind for attenuating
doubts. But the ultimate truth cannot be realized by philosophical
discipline alone. The terminus of philosophy is the beginning of
spiritual career. The plenum, of knowledge can be attained by the
development of a superior power of vision, which is not satisfied with
the negative findings of reason and seeks infinite perfection. "The
Jains are emphatic that omniscience is the condition as well as the
result of perfection and however much we may advance in our
philosophical enquiry and scientific pursuit, which are not antagonistic
in their aim in spite of their difference in method and lines of
approach, it cannot by itself unlock the mystery of ultimate reality and
bring about the final consummation."
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Eastern mystics in general and Jains in particular emphasize the
systematic unity of Reality which does not mean that all things are
identical, but they are aware that all differences and contrasts are
relative (and not absolute) within an all-embracing unity. It is
difficult to accept the paradoxical unity of opposites in our normal
state of consciousness and even some philosophies either bypass or
conceal the problem. Jain philosophers, on the other hand, by their
remarkable insight, reveal the relativity and polar relationship of all
opposites, which not only include unity and multiplicity, motion and
rest, but also the fundamental attributes of existence and non-
existence. The Jain doctrine of non-absolutism (anekantavada) solves the
problem by affirming the possibility of diverse attributes in a unitary
entity. A thing exists in some context and does not exist in some other
context. In atomic physics, we can never predict the absolute existence
or absolute non- existence of a subatomic particle. We can never say
that it does not exist, but the particle has tendencies or probabilities
to exist in various places and this manifests a strange kind of physical
reality between existence and non-existence. In this book, we shall
briefly discuss the Jain philosophy of non-absolutism and how it can be
applied to properly understand the paradoxical behaviour of subatomic
particles. Readers will recognize many parallels between the notions of
atomic physics and Jain views.
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Author: Jethalal S.
Zaveri (B.Sc.,DII.Sc., F.I.S.I.), and Prof. Muni Mahendra Kumar (B.Sc.
Hons.), Honorary professor, Jain Vishva Bharati University.
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Book Available at:
Source: Publishers:
Jain Vishva Bharati University,
Ladnun - 341 306 (Rajasthan, India).
Published: 28.08.2009
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Time (Weekly Magazine):
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"Modern science has made tremendous progress during the last hundred
years. Few people have been more publicly admired than scientists,
engineers, and technologists. Together they discovered the secrets of
the microcosm and perfected the ways of controlling and tapping colossal
stores of nuclear energy, they probed the vast spaces of the universe
and pried into the mysteries of the macrocosm, discovered the mechanisms
of heredity and compounded the miracle of modern medicine. With utmost
daring and immense resourcefulness, they capped their achievements by
landing man on the moon to gather first-hand knowledge of the earths
nearest celestial body.
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Albert Einstein: Foreword to
The Universe and Dr. Einstein. - And so, perhaps this is the
most appropriate time to make an attempt to compare the findings of
philosophical enquiry with the results of scientific pursuit. "In the
history of human thinking" says Werner Heisenberg, "new, interesting and
the most fruitful developments frequently take place when two different
lines of thought - lines having their roots in quite different parts of
human culture, in different times, or different religious traditions -
meet and mutually interact." Synchronizing the presentations of
scientific facts with those of philosophical findings is, however, a
very difficult task. The writer may "either succeed in being
intelligible by offering only superficial aspects of the problem and
thus arousing in the reader the deceptive illusion of comprehension or
give an account in such a fashion that the reader is unable to follow
the exposition and becomes discouraged from reading any further."
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Recently, however, some
eminent physicists like Geoffrey Chew and David Bohm find it necessary
to regard consciousness as an essential aspect of universe, which will
have to be included in a future theory of physical phenomena.
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"Ironically this very age of
unprecedented scientific progress has also become the dawn of a new age
of doubts, regarding the future benefits to the human race of bold new
scientific ventures, because technological advances seem to accompany
environmental ravages. On the philosophical level, there is a new mood
of scepticism about the absolute objectivity and utter rationality of
the scientific methods. Says Harvard Biologist- Historian E. I.
Mendelssohn, 'Science, as we know it, has outlived its usefulness.'
There is a new fascination with the mystical and even irrational. In the
recent years, there is a loud and insistent chorus for anti-science.
Declares Richard H. Bube, a professor of materials science and
electrical engineering at Stanford, 'One of the most pernicious
falsehoods ever to be almost universally accepted is that the scientific
method is the only reliable way to truth.' Insisting that there is also
spiritual knowledge and power besides reason, Theodore Roszak pleads for
a return of submerged religious sensitivities. 'Here is a range of
experience that we are screening out of our experience in the name of
what we call knowledge', says Roszak. The late psychologist Abraham
Maslow said that we have learned to think of knowledge as verbal,
rational, logical, and sensible but transcendental experience is equally
important.
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