Monday 25 November 2019

ENDS AND MEANS



                                ENDS AND MEANS
In simple terms ends are aims, purposes, objectives, goals, targets, intentions, aspirations or whatever we want to achieve.  Means are the methods, resources, rules, procedures, regulations, systems, practices, processes, ways, approaches, manners, measures, modes, styles, courses of actions, or modus operandi which we may use to realize the ends set by us.
In many fields of life, people do not believe in the morality of the methods used by them.  According to them nothing succeeds like us.  They do not mind if they achieve the ends intended by them by hook or by crook.  Here, fair may be foul and foul may be fair.  In short, they can use unfair means to accomplish fair ends.  They decide to abide by the saying ‘All is fair in love and war’.  Such people are called smart, determined, pragmatists, self-willed or worldly wise. They justify the use of wrong methods for right ends by asserting that in a competitive world one cannot avoid the use of practically nor morally useful methods to compete with their rivals as also outdo them.  
 Such people are not afraid of God or any kind of punishment mentioned in the scriptures of their religions. Their conscience does not bite them when they consciously use wicked ways for virtuous ends. They have hardly any fear of the horrible consequences which result from committing a sin or a crime or any immoral deed or act. However, this state of their minds may not last for a long time. A moment may come sooner or later when changing circumstances and the fruits of their actions may compel them to feel that they have to reap today what they sowed yesterday. This situation may be severe enough to ruin not only their own life but also of their accomplices and kith and kith  
In this context, let us have a deep look at the views of Gandhiji, Lord Buddha and Leo Tolstoy. 
According to Gandhiji, impure means result in an impure end.  One cannot reach Truth by untruthfulness. The means may be likened to a seed, the end to a tree, and there is just the same inviolable connection between the means and the end, as there is between the seed and the tree. In Gandhiji’s opinion, it is pernicious to hold that so long as the end was good, any means, however violent or unjust, were justifying.
Relating the issue of ends and means to spirituality, Gandhiji said:: “There are two methods of attaining desired end. Truthful and Truthless. In our scriptures, they have been described respectively as divine and devilish. The final triumph of Truth is always assumed for the divine method.  Its votary does not abandon it, even though at times the path seems impenetrable and beset with difficulties and dangers, and a departure, however slight, from that straight path may appear full of promise.  His faith even then shines respectively like the mid-day sun and he does not despond.  With Truth for sword, he needs neither steel nor gunpowder.  He conquers the enemy by the force of the soul, which is Love.”
Speaking about the relations between politics and religion, Gandhiji says, “I cannot conceive politics as divorced from religion.  Indeed, religion should pervade every one of our actions.  Here religion does not mean sectarianism.  It means a belief in ordered moral government of the universe.
Let us now listen to what Lord Buddha says: “Surely if living creatures saw the results of their evil deeds, they would turn away from them in disgust.  But selfhood blinds them, and they cling to their obnoxious desires.  They crave for pleasure for themselves and they cause pain to others, when death destroys their individuality, they find no peace; their thirst for existence abides and their selfhood reappears in new births.  Thus they continue to move in the coil and can find no escape from the hell of their own making.
“And how empty are their pleasures, how vain are heir endeavours Hollow like the plantain-tree and without contents like the bubble.  The world is full of evil and sorrow, because it is full of lust.  Men go astray because they think that delusion is better than truth. Rather than truth they follow errors, which is pleasant to look at in the beginning but in the end causes anxiety, tribulation, and misery.”
   Russian writer and moral philosopher, Leo Tolstoy (1928- 1910) whom Gandhiji admired time and again, attributes the choice of evil methods to temptations. The world of men, says he, is unhappy only on account of temptations.  Temptations are everywhere in the world, they always were and will always will be; and man perishes from temptations.  Therefore men should give up everything, sacrifice everything, if only they not fall into temptation.  A fox, if it falls into a trap, will wrench off its paw and go away, and the paw will heal and it will remain alive.  Men should do likewise.  They should give up everything, if only not to sink into temptation. 
      To conclude, may I suggest we should not fall a prey to temptations to lead a happy and peaceful life both here as well as hereafter.  


26th November 2019                                     ------G. R. KANWAL                 

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