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Category:Blind Men

Theme Analysis

The condition of the "blind man" is used by Śrīla Prabhupāda to describe the soul bereft of transcendental vision. While the materialist may possess physical sight, he is "blind" to the spiritual reality of reincarnation, the laws of nature, and the Supreme Personality of Godhead. This analysis explores the three primary analogies used in this category: the blind man falling into a dark well of ignorance, the group of blind men providing a distorted description of an elephant based on touch, and the visionary cooperation between the "blind" Western countries and "lame" India. Ultimately, Śrīla Prabhupāda teaches that blindness can only be cured by the "eye ointment" of knowledge delivered through the disciplic succession.

  • The Ditch of Ignorance: Without a guide who has "eyes to see" the truth, the blind leader and the blind follower are both doomed to fall into the ditch of material suffering and karmic reactions.
  • Incomplete Perception (The Elephant Story): Śrīla Prabhupāda uses the story of the blind men and the elephant to show that material research, logic, and touch are always mistaken or incomplete when applied to the Absolute Truth.
  • The Dark Well of Anxieties: A person who loses their spiritual intelligence becomes like a blind man perpetually trapped in a dark well, where anxiety and the bodily concept of life prevent any escape.
  • Cooperative Vision: In a stroke of practical genius, Prabhupāda proposes that the Western world (the blind man with money and legs) and India (the lame man with spiritual vision) should combine to lead human society back to Godhead.
  • Restoring Sight: The article concludes that through the mercy of the Pañca-tattva and the Spiritual Master, even the most "blind" soul can be granted the vision to see the stars of spiritual reality.

Pages in category "Blind Men"

The following 66 pages are in this category, out of 66 total.

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