Saturday, 11 July 2026

Disclosure and the Long Memory of Humanity

 

Clown Fish
(From Roshen's Aquarium)

Every civilization inherits two histories.

The first is written in stone, preserved in archives, taught in classrooms, and accepted as the official account of humanity's journey. It is the history of kingdoms and empires, discoveries and revolutions, victories and defeats. It tells us what we know.

The second history is more elusive. It survives in myths, sacred texts, oral traditions, symbols, and whispered questions passed from one generation to another. It speaks of celestial visitors, beings from beneath the seas, gods who descended from the heavens, and civilizations that possessed knowledge now forgotten. It tells us not what we know, but what we remember.

Perhaps the greatest question confronting humanity is not whether these stories are literally true, but why every civilization seems compelled to tell them.

For centuries, modern thought has regarded mythology as the opposite of history. One belongs to faith and imagination and the other to evidence and reason. Yet this distinction may itself deserve examination. Myths are rarely created in isolation. They emerge from the lived experiences of peoples attempting to explain a reality larger than the language available to them. Long before there were scientists, archaeologists, or astrophysicists, there were storytellers. They described extraordinary phenomena using the vocabulary they possessed which includes gods, angels, devas, dragons, sea kings, sky people, and divine messengers.

Whether these narratives describe spiritual truths, symbolic archetypes, misunderstood natural events, or encounters with realities beyond ordinary human experience remains an open question. What is remarkable is not any single story, but the persistence of the pattern. Civilizations separated by oceans, languages, and thousands of years repeatedly returned to the same themes. Humanity has always imagined that it shares existence with other intelligences.

This enduring memory has never truly disappeared. It has merely changed its vocabulary.

What ancient civilizations called gods, modern culture often calls extraterrestrials. What was once described as divine chariots becomes spacecraft. Celestial realms become distant galaxies. Sea kingdoms become hidden civilizations beneath the oceans. The language evolves, but the underlying question remains unchanged.

Popular culture has become the mythology of the technological age.

The twentieth century did not abandon the ancient fascination with the unknown, it modernized it. Television and cinema inherited the role once occupied by epic poetry and sacred literature. Stories such as My Favorite Martian and Mork & Mindy invited audiences to laugh at the possibility of visitors from elsewhere. The X-Files transformed that possibility into a search for hidden truth, placing belief and scepticism in constant dialogue through Mulder and Scully. ‘V’ explored the politics of deception and occupation, while Alien Nation imagined coexistence with another intelligent species as a test of humanity's own moral maturity.

More recent stories have widened the horizon still further. Instead of looking only to the stars, they ask whether intelligence may also dwell within our own planet. Productions such as The War Between the Land and the Sea imagine an ancient aquatic civilization emerging into conflict with humanity. The unknown no longer arrives solely from above, it may also rise from below. Once again, contemporary storytelling echoes motifs that have existed in mythology for thousands of years.

This continuity suggests that science fiction is not merely predicting the future. It may also be remembering the past.

The release of Steven Spielberg's Disclosure Day represents another chapter in this evolving conversation. Throughout his career, Spielberg has consistently explored first contact, not simply as an encounter with extraterrestrials, but as a test of humanity itself. In Disclosure Day, the central question is not whether another intelligence exists. The deeper question is whether humanity is prepared to confront a truth capable of transforming its understanding of history, identity, and its place in the cosmos.

The word disclosure itself deserves reflection.

To disclose is not to invent. It is to reveal.

The concept assumes that knowledge already exists but remains inaccessible. Throughout history, knowledge has always been managed. Every civilization has determined what should be taught publicly, what should remain within priesthoods, what should be entrusted to rulers, and what should remain hidden altogether. Ancient mystery schools guarded sacred teachings. Medieval guilds protected technical knowledge. Modern governments classify intelligence, military technology, and strategic research. Information has always been a form of power.

Viewed from this perspective, the question of disclosure extends far beyond extraterrestrials.

It becomes a question about civilization itself.

Who decides what humanity is ready to know?

History demonstrates that societies rarely reveal transformative knowledge all at once. New ideas often encounter resistance because they challenge existing institutions and established worldviews. The heliocentric model displaced humanity from the centre of the universe. Evolution reshaped our understanding of life. Quantum physics challenged common notions of reality. Each intellectual revolution required humanity to surrender comforting certainties in exchange for deeper, and often more unsettling, truths.

Perhaps every age has experienced its own form of disclosure.

This does not require us to accept every conspiracy theory or every extraordinary claim. History also teaches the importance of evidence, critical inquiry, and intellectual humility. Governments have undoubtedly concealed military projects, intelligence operations, and technological developments. Yet it does not necessarily follow that every hidden programme concerns non human intelligence. Healthy scepticism should apply equally to official narratives and to speculative alternatives.

The philosophical question is larger than either position.

What if the history of humanity is, in part, the history of managing knowledge?

If so, then myths, religions, scientific revolutions, classified archives, archaeological discoveries, and even science fiction become different expressions of the same enduring process. Each generation inherits fragments of reality, interprets them through its own worldview, and passes them to the next generation in a new language.

Perhaps this is why stories of disclosure continue to resonate so deeply.

They are not ultimately stories about aliens.

They are stories about us.

They ask whether human civilization has reached the maturity to confront truths that may fundamentally alter its understanding of existence. They challenge the assumption that humanity already occupies the summit of knowledge. They remind us that every generation has believed itself to be modern, only to discover that reality is always larger than its imagination.

The ancients looked upward and saw gods.

We look upward and imagine civilizations among the stars.

Perhaps both are attempts to answer the same question.

If humanity has always sensed that it is not alone, then the enduring mystery is not why these stories continue to be told. The mystery is why they have never disappeared.

Whether the future brings confirmation, contradiction, or yet another reinterpretation, the significance of disclosure lies not in the existence of another intelligence, but in the possibility that humanity has never stopped searching for one. Every myth, every sacred text, every archaeological puzzle, every scientific breakthrough, and every work of speculative fiction becomes another chapter in a single, unfinished narrative, the story of a species trying to understand its place in a universe that has always seemed far older, far stranger, and perhaps far more inhabited than it has ever dared to believe.

In the end, disclosure may not be the revelation of an alien civilization.

It may be the revelation that the pursuit of hidden knowledge has always been the defining characteristic of our own.

Cheers

ravivarmmankkanniappan@1906110720263.0644° N, 101.5936° E

©All Rights Reserved


Thursday, 2 July 2026

The Wisdom of Admitting What We Do Not Know



Cheriyal Folk Art Mask
(Telengana, India)

In an age that rewards certainty, humility can look like weakness. Public debate favours the confident voice. Social media rewards immediate reactions. Political and cultural conversations often demand that people choose a side before they have fully understood the issue. We are surrounded by information, opinions, statistics, and commentary, yet genuine wisdom can feel increasingly rare.

The reason may be simple, we have confused having an answer with understanding a question.

The pursuit of knowledge does not begin with certainty. It begins with the willingness to recognize what we do not know. This is not an argument for indecision or passivity. It is an argument for intellectual honesty. The person who admits the limits of their understanding is not less capable of learning but they are more capable of it. By contrast, the person convinced that they already possess the full truth may be the least prepared to discover it.

This lesson appears across cultures and centuries. The Bhagavad Gita, Socrates, Thiruvalluvar, and Sun Tzu each approach the problem from a different direction, but their insights converge around one essential principle that is wisdom requires humility, self-awareness, and a willingness to question the assumptions beneath our certainty.

The Bhagavad Gita offers one of the clearest warnings against narrow understanding. In Chapter 18, Verse 22, Krishna describes tamasic knowledge (knowledge based on ignorance/inertia) as a form of knowing that clings to one fragment of reality and mistakes it for the whole. Such knowledge is narrow, irrational, and detached from truth. It does not necessarily arise from a lack of information. In fact, it may arise from the opposite problem which is excessive confidence in limited information.

This is a danger that should feel familiar today. People often take one experience, one ideology, one tradition, one discipline, or one source of information and use it to explain everything. A person may understand economics but ignore ethics. Another may be deeply committed to a spiritual tradition but reject scientific inquiry. Someone else may care passionately about justice while refusing to see the complexity of human motives or the unintended consequences of policy.

Each may possess a part of the truth. The mistake is believing that the part is the whole.

Krishna’s warning is not against knowledge itself. It is against attachment to limited knowledge. The problem begins when our beliefs become intellectual prisons. We stop asking what we may be missing. We stop listening to evidence that challenges us. We begin to treat disagreement as proof that others are ignorant rather than as an opportunity to examine our own thinking.

That is when knowledge becomes dogma.

Socrates offered a similar challenge in ancient Athens. His famous insight, “I know that I know nothing,” is often repeated as a statement of modesty. But it is more than that. It is a method of thinking.

Socrates did not mean that he possessed no knowledge at all. He meant that he was wiser than those who believed they understood matters they had never seriously examined. He questioned politicians, poets, craftsmen, and teachers, asking them to explain what they meant by justice, courage, virtue, and wisdom. Many could speak with confidence, but when pressed, they discovered that their beliefs rested on contradictions or unexamined assumptions.

The lesson remains uncomfortable because it remains true. We often mistake familiarity for understanding. We inherit beliefs from family, culture, religion, politics, or personal experience and assume that because they are familiar, they must be correct. We may know what we believe without knowing why we believe it.

Socrates reminds us that genuine learning begins with better questions. What evidence supports this claim? What assumptions am I making? Could there be another explanation? What would change my mind? These questions are not signs of weakness. They are signs of intellectual maturity.

The Tamil philosopher Thiruvalluvar adds an ethical dimension to this argument. In the Thirukkural, learning is not merely a way to gain status or win arguments. It is a discipline that should refine judgment and character. Knowledge is valuable only when it helps a person live wisely among others.

This distinction matters. A person can be highly educated and still lack wisdom. They may know how to debate but not how to listen. They may know how to persuade but not how to understand. They may have access to vast information but remain trapped by pride.

Thiruvalluvar’s insight is especially relevant in a time when knowledge is often treated as a performance. Online, people are encouraged to display certainty, signal expertise, and defeat opponents. Yet wisdom does not consist in humiliating others or proving one’s superiority. It consists in discernment which is the ability to recognize what matters, to consider consequences, and to remain open to correction.

The truly learned person is not the one who speaks as though they have reached the end of inquiry. It is the one who remains teachable.

Sun Tzu, writing in a very different context, turns humility into a matter of strategy. In The Art of War, he writes that one must know the enemy and know oneself. The phrase is usually understood as military advice, but its meaning reaches far beyond conflict.

The enemy is not always another army, competitor, or opponent. Often, the enemy is our own overconfidence. It is our tendency to assume that we understand a situation before we have studied it. It is our emotional attachment to a desired outcome. It is our failure to recognize bias, fear, pride, or weakness in ourselves.

Sun Tzu understood that success depends on accurate perception. The strongest person does not always prevail. The loudest voice does not always have the clearest judgment. The most confident leader is not always the most capable one. Victory belongs to the person who sees conditions as they are rather than as they wish them to be.

This applies everywhere, in leadership, business, relationships, education, and public life. A leader who cannot accept criticism will make avoidable mistakes. A company that refuses to understand changing conditions will lose relevance. A person who cannot recognize their own patterns may repeat the same failures while blaming everyone else.

Strategy begins where arrogance ends.

Modern critical thinking reinforces this lesson. Much of our reasoning is shaped by assumptions we do not notice because they are so familiar. Every conclusion rests on premises, but we rarely stop to examine those premises. We may assume that success is measured only by wealth, that disagreement is a personal attack, that technological progress automatically produces moral progress, or that people who hold opposing views must be acting in bad faith.

These assumptions can shape our decisions, relationships, and political judgments without ever being consciously examined.

The work of critical thinking is to make those assumptions visible. It does not require us to reject every belief or become cynical about truth. It requires us to hold our beliefs responsibly. We should ask whether our conclusions are supported by evidence, whether our sources are reliable, whether we are ignoring inconvenient facts, and whether our views account for the full complexity of the issue.

This is especially urgent in the digital age.

Never before have so many people had access to so much information. Yet access to information has not automatically produced understanding. Digital platforms can educate us, connect us, and expose us to new perspectives. But they can also encourage intellectual laziness. Algorithms often reward outrage, certainty, and repetition. They show us content that confirms our existing views and make it easier to confuse popularity with truth.

A short clip becomes a complete story. A headline becomes a final judgment. A single statistic becomes proof of a broad social claim. A viral post becomes more persuasive than careful research.

The result is the very condition described in the Bhagavad Gita, fragmentary knowledge mistaken for complete understanding.

The solution is not to abandon technology or retreat from public debate. It is to approach both with greater discipline. Before sharing information, we should ask whether it is accurate and complete. Before condemning another person, we should ask whether we understand their position fairly. Before becoming certain, we should ask what evidence might challenge us.

This kind of humility is not indecision. It is responsibility.

Science advances through this principle. Scientists do not protect their hypotheses simply because they are familiar. They test them, challenge them, revise them, and sometimes abandon them. Progress depends on the recognition that current knowledge may be incomplete.

Philosophy advances in the same way. It does not offer easy certainty but it teaches us to examine the foundations of our beliefs.

Spiritual growth also depends on teachability. A person who believes they have reached final understanding may stop growing. A person who remains open to learning, correction, and deeper reflection continues to develop.

The more we understand reality, the more clearly we see its complexity. Every answer reveals further questions. Every discovery exposes new limits. This is not a reason to despair. It is a reason to remain curious.

The Bhagavad Gita warns against mistaking a part for the whole. Socrates teaches that wisdom begins by recognizing the limits of one’s knowledge. Thiruvalluvar reminds us that learning must be joined with humility and moral judgment. Sun Tzu shows that clear self-knowledge is essential before action. Together, they offer a lesson that modern society urgently needs.

The first victory is over ignorance, but ignorance is not defeated merely by accumulating facts. It is defeated when we recognize its presence within ourselves.

Only then can knowledge become understanding, understanding become wisdom, and wisdom become enlightened action.

Cheers.

ravivarmmankkanniappan@13230307263.0644° N, 101.5936° E

©All Rights Reserved

Thursday, 25 June 2026

From Kurukshetra to Consumerism: Humanity's Forgotten Search for the Self

 

Buddhist Chhams Dance Mask
(Hemis Monastry, Ladakh, India)

Human civilization stands at a peculiar crossroads. Never before has humanity possessed such abundance. We have conquered distance, compressed time, automated labour, and connected billions through invisible networks of information. Our ancestors struggled for survival, we struggle for meaning.

The modern individual lives amidst unprecedented comfort, yet beneath the surface runs a quiet anxiety. We consume more, own more, travel more, and communicate more than any generation before us. Yet depression, loneliness, alienation, and existential uncertainty continue to rise. The shelves are full, but the soul remains hungry.

Perhaps the crisis of our age is not economic, political, or technological.

Perhaps it is a crisis of identity.

The question that haunted philosophers and sages across centuries has returned with renewed urgency,

Who am I?

Centuries ago, René Descartes sought certainty in a world he could no longer trust. He doubted everything. The senses could deceive. Tradition could be wrong. Even reason itself might be manipulated by some cosmic illusion. He stripped reality down to its barest foundation until he arrived at a single undeniable truth, "I think, therefore I am." The act of doubting itself proved the existence of the doubter. This was one of humanity's greatest philosophical breakthroughs. Yet Descartes stopped at the threshold. He established the existence of the thinker but did not fully investigate the nature of the thinker.

Nearly three centuries later, in a small town beneath the sacred Arunachala Hill (India), Ramana Maharshi would pick up the enquiry where Descartes left it. Ramana did not ask whether the world was real. He asked, "To whom does this thought arise?" The answer invariably came, "To me." Then came the next question, "Who am I?" Not as an intellectual puzzle. Not as a theological doctrine. Not as a philosophical argument. But as a direct investigation into the source of consciousness itself.

Every thought, every emotion, every memory, every identity, every role one plays in society can be observed. The body can be observed. The mind can be observed. Even the sense of being a separate individual can be observed. What then is the observer? The sages of Sanatana Dharma called this inquiry, Atma Vichara (self enquiry). Its purpose was not self improvement. It was self discovery. And its conclusion was revolutionary that is, what we fundamentally are is not the body, not the personality, not the achievements, not the failures, not the story we tell ourselves. We are awareness itself. The witness in whose presence all experiences arise and disappear.

This wisdom reaches its grandest expression in the dialogue between Arjuna and Krishna on the battlefield of Kurukshetra (The Mahabharatha). The setting itself is profoundly symbolic.

Arjuna stands between two armies on the eve of catastrophic war. Before him are teachers, friends, cousins, and loved ones. His certainty collapses. His purpose dissolves. His identity fractures. He lays down his bow and enters a state of despair.

In many ways, Arjuna is the first modern man. He possesses knowledge but lacks wisdom. He has power but lacks clarity. He knows how to act but no longer knows why. His crisis is not military. It is existential. Standing in the midst of conflict, Arjuna asks the same question humanity continues to ask today, "What should I do?"

Krishna's answer is astonishing because he does not begin with strategy. He begins with identity. Krishna tells Arjuna that his suffering arises because he has mistaken the temporary for the eternal. He identifies himself with relationships, social roles, successes, failures, and the body itself. Krishna reminds him, "The Self is never born, nor does it die." Weapons cannot cut it. Fire cannot burn it. Water cannot wet it. Wind cannot dry it. The true Self remains untouched by the changing circumstances of life.

The battlefield thus becomes more than a historical event. It becomes a metaphor for human existence. Every human being stands on a personal Kurukshetra. Every day we fight battles between fear and courage, desire and wisdom, ego and truth, attachment and freedom. The war is not merely external. It is internal.

The Kauravas represent the forces of ignorance, greed, pride, attachment, and illusion. The Pandavas represent discrimination, virtue, discipline, devotion, and truth. The battlefield lies within the human heart. This insight becomes especially relevant in our consumerist age. Modern society has elevated acquisition into a way of life. We are taught to construct identities from possessions. To become our careers. To become our political opinions. To become our social media profiles. To become our bank balances. To become our achievements. Consumerism quietly shifts the answer from "Who am I?" toward "What do I own?" or "How am I perceived?"

Yet no matter how sophisticated the identity becomes, it remains fragile because it is built upon things that constantly change. The promotion ends. The beauty fades. The market crashes. The technology becomes obsolete. The applause disappears. The relationship changes. The body ages. The identity built upon these foundations inevitably cracks. And when it does, the hidden emptiness emerges.

Humanity today suffers not from a lack of stimulation but from an excess of distraction. Never before has it been so easy to avoid silence. Every spare moment can be filled with notifications, entertainment, consumption, and noise. But the ancient sages understood something that modern civilization is only beginning to rediscover, that is the answers we seek cannot be found in endless accumulation because the question itself is misunderstood. The hungry thing within us is not seeking another object. It is seeking itself. The reason external success often fails to produce lasting fulfilment is that finite experiences cannot satisfy an infinite longing. The soul does not hunger for possessions. It hungers for truth. It hungers for permanence amidst impermanence. It hungers for the direct recognition of its own nature. This is why Descartes, Ramana Maharshi, and Krishna can be seen as participants in the same timeless conversation.

Descartes says:

"I doubt, therefore I am."

Ramana asks:

"Who is this 'I'?"

Krishna reveals:

"The true 'I' is not the body or mind but the eternal Self."

Together they form a progressive ladder of human understanding. First, discover that you exist. Then investigate what you are. Then realize what you are has never been separate from the ground of existence itself. The tragedy of modern humanity is not that it has lost religion. It is that it has forgotten enquiry. It has become obsessed with mastering the world while neglecting the one who seeks mastery. We have explored the oceans, mapped the genome, split the atom, and reached the stars. Yet the ancient question remains unanswered for most of us, “who is the one experiencing all this”?

Until that question is sincerely investigated, no amount of consumption can cure the underlying restlessness.

As Thiruvalluvar reminds us,

"எப்பொருள் எத்தன்மைத் தாயினும் அப்பொருள்
மெய்ப்பொருள் காண்பது அறிவு" Kural 355

"Whatever the object, whatever its appearance, wisdom is to perceive its true reality."

The wisdom of Kurukshetra, of Ramana, of Advaita, and even of Descartes ultimately points toward the same forgotten direction, not outward, but inward. The future of humanity may depend less on discovering new worlds and more on rediscovering the Self. For the greatest journey is not across continents or galaxies. It is the journey from the restless ego to the silent witness. From possession to presence. From becoming to being.

From the question, "What can I get from life?"

To the question that has echoed through the centuries,

Who am I?

 

ravivarmmankkanniappan@212525062026 3.0644° N, 101.5936° E

©All Rights Reserved


Friday, 12 June 2026

The Doctor Without Philosophy: Reclaiming Wisdom in Contemporary Higher Education

 

The Missing Philosopher
(An art created with dead tree root by Auro Wood Work, Pondichery, India)

The modern university proudly confers the title “Doctor of Philosophy,” yet one is increasingly compelled to ask, with quiet unease rather than indignation, where has the philosophy gone? The question is neither nostalgic nor rhetorical. It arises from a growing tension at the heart of contemporary higher education. The degree retains its historic name, but the intellectual journey it represents has, in many cases, become increasingly detached from the philosophical tradition that once gave it meaning. What was once conceived as a pursuit of wisdom now risks becoming a carefully calibrated procession through methodologies, milestones, performance indicators, publication targets, and professional competencies. The transformation has not been entirely without merit. Specialisation has expanded human knowledge to extraordinary depths, accelerated scientific discovery, and enabled technological innovations that have reshaped society. Yet in its increasing narrowness, it has also thinned the soul of inquiry. The danger confronting contemporary universities is not ignorance but a peculiar form of informed blindness which is the capacity to know more and more about less and less, without pausing to ask why that knowledge matters, whom it serves, or what consequences it produces.

Historically, philosophy served as the intellectual foundation upon which higher learning was built. Before disciplines became fragmented into increasingly specialised domains, philosophy provided the conceptual framework through which questions of knowledge, truth, justice, ethics, and human flourishing were explored. In medieval universities, philosophy functioned as the preparatory discipline through which students learned how to reason before advancing to law, medicine, or theology. Similar traditions existed beyond Europe. Confucian education in China, classical Indian systems of learning, and the intellectual traditions of Tamil civilisation all understood knowledge as inseparable from moral formation. Learning was not merely the acquisition of information but a process of cultivating judgment, character, and wisdom. Education sought not only to answer questions but to teach individuals which questions were worth asking.

The significance of philosophy lies precisely in its willingness to ask inconvenient questions. What is knowledge? What counts as truth? What is justice? What obligations accompany power? What constitutes a good society? Such questions rarely yield simple answers, yet they shape every domain of human activity. Educational philosophy continues to recognise that these foundational inquiries influence curriculum design, ethical reasoning, citizenship, and intellectual development. When philosophy recedes from educational practice, knowledge may continue to expand, but its direction becomes increasingly uncertain. The university retains its capacity to produce expertise while gradually losing its capacity to cultivate wisdom.

This concern becomes especially visible in the rise of hyper specialisation. The modern research university rewards depth, precision, and originality within increasingly narrow fields of inquiry. Doctoral students are encouraged to identify highly specific research gaps, master specialised methodologies, and contribute incremental advances to disciplinary knowledge. Such expectations are understandable and often necessary. Modern medicine, engineering, artificial intelligence, biotechnology, and countless other fields depend upon sophisticated expertise. Yet specialisation carries a hidden cost. As knowledge becomes fragmented, scholars risk losing sight of the larger intellectual and social contexts within which their work operates.

The Spanish philosopher José Ortega Y Gasset warned nearly a century ago of the emergence of what he called the “learned ignoramus”, a person who possesses extraordinary competence within a limited domain while remaining intellectually impoverished outside it. The learned ignoramus is not uneducated. On the contrary, he is often highly credentialed and technically accomplished. His limitation lies in his inability to connect specialised knowledge with broader human concerns. Contemporary academia often rewards precisely this form of expertise. Researchers may become world authorities on a narrowly defined subject while remaining disengaged from questions concerning ethics, politics, history, culture, or the societal implications of their work. The consequence is not merely intellectual fragmentation but moral fragmentation as well.

This is why the philosophical canon continues to matter. The enduring value of philosophical texts lies not in their age but in their capacity to challenge assumptions that remain relevant today. Plato’s Republic, for example, is frequently reduced to a historical artifact, yet its central question, what is justice?, remains unresolved. Plato compels readers to examine whether justice is merely a social convenience or an intrinsic good that ought to guide both individual conduct and political institutions. In an age marked by political polarisation, growing inequality, and declining trust in public institutions, such questions are hardly antiquated. The dialogue forces us to consider whether societies can remain stable when power becomes detached from virtue and whether expertise alone is sufficient for leadership.

Similarly, Immanuel Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason remains profoundly relevant in an era increasingly defined by data, algorithms, and artificial intelligence. Kant’s central insight was that human knowledge is not simply a passive reflection of reality but is shaped by the structures through which we perceive and understand the world. This lesson acquires renewed significance when technological systems are routinely portrayed as objective and neutral. Contemporary algorithmic systems often reproduce hidden biases embedded within data sets, social institutions, and historical inequalities. Facial recognition technologies have demonstrated differential error rates across demographic groups, where, predictive policing systems have reinforced existing patterns of surveillance, and automated recruitment tools have reflected gender and racial biases present within historical hiring data. Kant’s insistence that reason must critically examine its own assumptions serves as an intellectual safeguard against technological hubris.

Friedrich Nietzsche’s Beyond Good and Evil performs a different but equally important function. Nietzsche challenges inherited moral assumptions, asking not whether values are true but how they emerged and whose interests they serve. Such inquiry remains essential in contemporary institutions that routinely invoke concepts such as excellence, innovation, productivity, and competitiveness. Nietzsche encourages us to ask whether these ideals are genuinely universal goods or products of particular historical and economic conditions. His philosophy does not seek the destruction of values but their interrogation. A scholar who has seriously engaged with Nietzsche becomes less likely to accept institutional narratives uncritically and more inclined to examine the power structures that shape knowledge production.

Jean-Paul Sartre’s existentialism introduces another indispensable dimension, which is responsibility. Sartre argued that human beings are condemned to freedom, meaning that they cannot ultimately escape responsibility for their choices by appealing to systems, institutions, or authority. This insight remains highly relevant in contemporary organisations where responsibility is often diffused across bureaucratic structures. Ethical failures frequently occur not because individuals lack intelligence but because they convince themselves that responsibility belongs elsewhere. Sartre reminds us that moral agency persists even within complex systems.

Eastern intellectual traditions offer complementary insights. The Analects of Confucius emphasise self cultivation, ethical conduct, and the moral responsibilities associated with education. Knowledge is valuable because it improves character and strengthens society. Likewise, the Thirukkural presents learning as inseparable from virtue. Thiruvalluvar consistently links knowledge with integrity, compassion, and social responsibility. Learning that fails to transform conduct is, in this tradition, fundamentally incomplete. Such perspectives stand in stark contrast to contemporary tendencies to evaluate education primarily through economic returns, employability statistics, and productivity metrics.

The consequences of neglecting philosophical reflection are not merely theoretical. They become visible in some of the most significant institutional failures of recent decades. The collapse of Enron, for example, was not primarily the result of inadequate technical knowledge. The organisation employed highly educated individuals with sophisticated financial expertise. The failure was ethical. Corporate culture rewarded short term gains while discouraging critical questioning and moral accountability. Technical competence existed in abundance but philosophical reflection did not. The same pattern can be observed in the Theranos scandal, where the narrative of technological innovation eclipsed commitments to truth and evidence. Ambition became detached from epistemic responsibility. Investors, executives, and even portions of the media became captivated by the promise of disruption while neglecting fundamental questions concerning verification and integrity.

The Boeing 737 MAX crisis offers another revealing example. Investigations following the tragedies pointed to a complex interaction of engineering decisions, regulatory oversight, organisational pressures, and commercial imperatives. The issue was not merely technical failure but ethical prioritisation. Questions concerning safety, transparency, accountability, and profit became deeply entangled. Such dilemmas cannot be resolved solely through engineering calculations. They require moral reasoning capable of evaluating competing obligations and human consequences.

Perhaps nowhere is the need for philosophical reflection more apparent than in the development of artificial intelligence. Contemporary AI systems increasingly influence decisions concerning employment, healthcare, finance, education, security, and governance. Researchers and developers confront questions that are fundamentally philosophical in nature. What constitutes fairness in algorithmic decision-making? Who bears responsibility when autonomous systems cause harm? How should societies balance innovation against privacy, efficiency against dignity, and automation against human autonomy? These are not technical problems awaiting technical solutions. They are moral and political questions requiring precisely the kind of philosophical engagement that universities increasingly marginalise.

Yet any serious discussion of philosophy’s decline must also acknowledge an important counterargument. There is a temptation to romanticise the past and imagine earlier universities as communities devoted solely to wisdom and truth. Historical reality is more complicated. Universities have often reflected social hierarchies, political interests, and institutional exclusions. Philosophy itself has not always been a force for liberation. Intellectual traditions can become dogmatic, elitist, or detached from practical realities. Furthermore, modern specialisation emerged for compelling reasons. The extraordinary complexity of contemporary science and technology makes broad generalism insufficient. No amount of philosophical reflection can substitute for expertise in molecular biology, aerospace engineering, or quantum physics. The challenge, therefore, is not to reject specialisation but to prevent it from becoming isolated from broader intellectual and ethical concerns.

The problem confronting contemporary higher education is not that universities produce specialists. The problem is that they too often produce specialists without synthesis. Doctoral candidates become experts in methodology but receive little encouragement to interrogate the philosophical assumptions underlying their methods. Researchers learn how to conduct investigations but are seldom asked to reflect deeply on the social implications of their findings. Academic success becomes increasingly defined by publication counts, citation indices, grant income, and institutional rankings, while questions concerning wisdom, responsibility, and the public good are relegated to the margins.

This tendency is further intensified by the marketisation of higher education. Universities increasingly operate within competitive environments that emphasise efficiency, productivity, and measurable outcomes. Students are frequently described as consumers, education as an investment, and knowledge as a commodity. While such language reflects certain economic realities, it also risks narrowing the purpose of education itself. The university becomes valued primarily for its capacity to generate economic growth and workforce development rather than for its role in cultivating thoughtful, responsible citizens. Under such conditions, philosophy appears expendable because its contributions resist easy quantification. Wisdom does not fit neatly into performance metrics.

Nevertheless, the situation is far from hopeless. Reintegrating philosophy into higher education does not require abandoning scientific rigour, disciplinary expertise, or professional relevance. Rather, it requires reconnecting them to broader questions of meaning and responsibility. Philosophy need not be confined to standalone courses or isolated departments. It can be woven throughout the educational experience. Doctoral candidates can be encouraged to articulate not only how they conduct research but why their research matters. Interdisciplinary seminars can create opportunities for scientists, engineers, social scientists, and humanists to engage common ethical and societal questions. Engagement with classical and contemporary philosophical texts can become part of intellectual formation across disciplines rather than a privilege reserved for philosophy students alone.

A chemist does not cease to be a chemist by reflecting on environmental ethics. An engineer does not weaken technical competence by considering the social consequences of design decisions. A marketer does not diminish strategic capability by questioning consumerism and its effects on human well-being. On the contrary, such reflection deepens professional practice by situating specialised expertise within a broader human context.

The image of the doctoral scholar need not be that of a cog within a knowledge production apparatus driven solely by metrics and market demands. It can once again resemble the seeker, as intellectually rigorous, critically reflective, ethically aware, and attentive to the wider tapestry of human existence. The title “Doctor of Philosophy” should signify more than mastery of a specialised field. It should represent participation in an ongoing conversation about truth, meaning, responsibility, and wisdom. The philosophical tradition, whether emerging from Athens, Königsberg, Jena, Paris, Lu, Nalanda, or Tamilakam, does not demand reverence. It demands engagement. Its enduring value lies not in providing definitive answers but in teaching scholars how to live with difficult questions.

Perhaps, then, the absence of philosophy in contemporary higher education is not irreversible decline but merely an interruption in a much longer conversation. Universities continue to possess the intellectual resources necessary for renewal. What is required is the willingness to recover a neglected dimension of their mission. If higher education can reconnect specialised knowledge with philosophical reflection, then the title “Doctor of Philosophy” may once again carry its original weight and not merely as a badge of completion, nor as a credential certifying expertise, but as a lifelong commitment to wisdom. Such a commitment remains as necessary today as it was in the earliest academies, for the greatest challenge facing modern societies is not the production of knowledge but the cultivation of the judgment required to use that knowledge wisely.

ravivarmmankkanniappan@1530120620263.0567° N, 101.5851° E

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Sunday, 31 May 2026

The Intellectual Steward: Reclaiming Education for Human Liberation in an Age of Consumerism and Control

 

Dhamma Doll
(story for another day)

The role of the educator has undergone a profound transformation over the course of history. Once regarded primarily as a custodian of wisdom and a guide in humanity's search for truth, the educator today increasingly operates within an educational ecosystem shaped by economic imperatives, institutional metrics, technological disruption, and market demands. Education itself has evolved into a multibillion-dollar global enterprise, deeply intertwined with the logic of competition, productivity, employability, and consumer satisfaction. Within this context, contemporary higher education institutions have identified a range of competencies required of lecturers to remain relevant and effective. A scholar has suggested that institutions require five broad types of lecturers ie., the industry-connected lecturer, the student-centric lecturer, the assessment-literate lecturer, the Open and Distance Learning (ODL)-ready lecturer, and the reflective lecturer who is committed to continuous self-improvement. These are undoubtedly valuable and necessary characteristics, particularly in an era where universities are expected to respond rapidly to technological change, labour market expectations, and evolving student needs.

Yet while these competencies are important, they largely describe the functional dimensions of teaching rather than its philosophical essence. They address how educators should operate within the system but leave unanswered the more fundamental question of why education exists in the first place. In the relentless pursuit of relevance, efficiency, and economic utility, there is a growing concern that education has drifted away from its foundational purpose which are the cultivation of intellectual growth, critical consciousness, moral wisdom, and human liberation. The educator, in this deeper sense, ought not merely to be a facilitator of learning outcomes or a producer of employable graduates, but an intellectual steward whose responsibility is to nurture thoughtful, reflective, and ethically grounded individuals capable of contributing meaningfully to society.

This concern becomes particularly significant when viewed against the backdrop of modern political and economic realities. The contemporary world is increasingly dominated by a consumerist ethos that defines success through acquisition, productivity, and measurable performance. Educational institutions, often consciously or unconsciously, mirror these values. Students are frequently positioned as consumers, knowledge as a commodity, and universities as service providers competing within an educational marketplace. Under such conditions, learning risks becoming transactional rather than transformational. Degrees become products, employability becomes the principal outcome, and intellectual inquiry is valued primarily insofar as it generates economic returns.

It is within this context that the provocative observation by Osho acquires renewed relevance. Osho argued that a truly thinking society is inherently difficult to control because individuals who think critically are less susceptible to manipulation, dogma, and unquestioned authority. According to this perspective, knowledge has often been feared more than ignorance because genuine understanding empowers individuals to challenge established structures of power. Whether one agrees entirely with Osho's formulation or not, his observation invites serious reflection on the relationship between education, power, and social control. Throughout history, political systems and economic structures have often exhibited an ambivalent relationship with critical thought. While societies publicly celebrate education, there is frequently greater enthusiasm for forms of education that produce compliance, technical competence, and economic productivity than for forms that encourage radical questioning of prevailing assumptions.

The result is a subtle but powerful tension. Educational systems are encouraged to produce innovation, but not necessarily dissent, creativity, but not necessarily critique, employability, but not necessarily emancipation.

Consequently, there exists the danger that education may become an instrument through which individuals are prepared to function efficiently within existing systems without ever being encouraged to question whether those systems themselves are just, humane, or sustainable. The outcome is a society that appears to advance continuously yet remains trapped within what may be described as an expanding circle of development, one that grows in complexity and scale but seldom transcends its underlying assumptions. Technological progress accelerates, economies expand, and institutions become increasingly sophisticated, yet the fundamental questions concerning human flourishing, justice, wisdom, and freedom often remain unresolved.

The educational philosophies embodied by Socrates, Thiruvalluvar, Franz Fanon, and Steve Jobs offer compelling alternatives to this increasingly instrumental conception of education. Although separated by centuries, cultures, and intellectual traditions, all four figures understood education as a transformative force capable of shaping not only what individuals know but also who they become.

For Socrates, education was fundamentally an exercise in awakening the mind. Knowledge was not something deposited into passive learners, but something discovered through rigorous questioning and dialogue. The Socratic method sought to expose assumptions, reveal contradictions, and cultivate intellectual humility. Education, therefore, was not about providing answers but about developing the capacity to inquire. The ultimate objective was the formation of autonomous individuals capable of examining their beliefs and making reasoned judgments. From a Socratic perspective, an educational system overly preoccupied with standardisation, assessment, and credentialism risks undermining the very qualities it ought to cultivate. The purpose of education is not merely to train individuals for existing roles but to develop citizens capable of questioning whether those roles and the structures that sustain them serve the common good.

Thiruvalluvar offers a complementary but equally profound vision. In the Thirukkural, learning is inseparable from virtue. Knowledge acquires meaning only when it contributes to ethical conduct, self-mastery, and social harmony. The educated individual is not simply one who possesses information but one who possesses wisdom. This distinction is particularly significant in an age characterised by unprecedented access to information yet persistent crises of ethics, integrity, and social responsibility. Technological expertise and professional competence, while important, are insufficient if they are not guided by moral discernment. Thiruvalluvar reminds us that education should cultivate character alongside intellect and that the educator's responsibility extends beyond cognitive development to the nurturing of ethical consciousness.

Franz Fanon deepens this discussion by exposing the political dimensions of education. Writing in the context of colonial domination, Fanon argued that education often functions as a mechanism through which systems of power reproduce themselves. Colonial education was not designed to liberate but to condition individuals to accept and internalise structures of subordination. For Fanon, genuine education must therefore be emancipatory. It must enable learners to recognise the forces that shape their consciousness, challenge inherited narratives, and reclaim their agency. Although Fanon's critique emerged from colonial contexts, its relevance extends to contemporary societies shaped by powerful political, economic, and cultural institutions. Educational systems that prioritise conformity over critique may inadvertently perpetuate inequalities and limit the capacity of individuals to imagine alternative futures. Fanon thus compels educators to view teaching as an act of liberation rather than mere professional preparation.

Even Steve Jobs, whose legacy is often associated with technological innovation and entrepreneurial success, articulated an educational philosophy that transcended narrow economic considerations. Jobs consistently emphasised the importance of integrating technology with the humanities, arguing that creativity emerges at the intersection of diverse fields of knowledge. He recognised that innovation is not simply a product of technical expertise but of imagination, curiosity, aesthetic sensitivity, and the capacity to connect seemingly unrelated ideas. His vision challenges contemporary educational systems that increasingly encourage specialisation at the expense of intellectual breadth. For Jobs, education should inspire individuals to think differently, to challenge conventions, and to pursue possibilities that have not yet been imagined.

Taken together, these four perspectives suggest that the educator's role extends far beyond the competencies demanded by contemporary institutional frameworks. Industry engagement, assessment literacy, student-centred pedagogies, digital readiness, and reflective practice are all valuable. However, they are ultimately means rather than ends. They describe the mechanics of education but not its soul. What remains absent from many contemporary discussions is the figure of the educator as an intellectual steward, one who cultivates critical inquiry in the spirit of Socrates, ethical wisdom in the spirit of Thiruvalluvar, emancipatory consciousness in the spirit of Fanon, and creative imagination in the spirit of Jobs.

Such an educator understands that the ultimate purpose of education is not merely to prepare individuals for the economy but to prepare them for humanity itself. This does not imply a rejection of economic realities or labour market demands. Universities must undoubtedly equip students with the skills necessary to navigate an increasingly complex world. However, when employability becomes the sole measure of educational success, education risks losing its transformative potential. A society may produce highly skilled professionals while simultaneously suffering from a deficit of wisdom, ethical judgment, and critical thought.

The challenge before contemporary education is therefore not simply to produce graduates who can adapt to the world as it is, but to cultivate individuals capable of imagining what the world ought to become. In an age increasingly shaped by political polarisation, technological acceleration, and consumerist excess, the need for educators as intellectual stewards has never been greater. The future of humanity may depend not merely on how effectively we educate individuals to participate in existing systems, but on how courageously we educate them to question, reform, and transcend those systems. For it is only through such intellectual and moral awakening that education can fulfil its highest purpose, the cultivation of free minds capable of advancing not merely economic progress, but human progress itself.

ravivarmmankkanniappan@1236010620263.0567° N, 101.5851° E

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Monday, 25 May 2026

The Ghost of Marx in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

 

AI Generated

The outrage surrounding Standard Chartered CEO Bill Winters describing workers as “lower-value human capital” was never really about one badly phrased sentence. It struck a nerve because it exposed, with unusual honesty, the underlying logic of modern capitalism where labour is valuable only insofar as it produces returns. When returns can be improved through automation, labour becomes expendable. Winters later apologised for his wording, but the apology did little to change the economic reality behind the statement.

What happened at Standard Chartered is not an anomaly. It is the continuation of a centuries-old economic philosophy dating back to Adam Smith and the Industrial Revolution, where labour was fundamentally treated as an input of production, no different from land or machinery. The terminology has evolved over time. “Labour” became “Human Resources,” and later “Human Capital,” a more sophisticated corporate expression designed to sound empowering while preserving the same economic relationship beneath it. The language modernised, but the structure did not. Workers are still measured through productivity metrics, cost efficiency, and shareholder value.

This is precisely what Karl Marx warned about in Das Kapital. Marx never claimed capitalism would collapse simply because it was morally wrong. His argument was structural. Capitalism, left unchecked, contains internal contradictions that eventually destabilise society itself. One of those contradictions is that the system relentlessly seeks efficiency by reducing labour costs, yet labourers themselves are also consumers. Remove purchasing power from enough people, and eventually the market begins to cannibalise its own demand.

That contradiction feels increasingly visible today. The same corporations pursuing automation and AI-driven efficiency also depend on a population capable of consuming the goods and services being produced. Standard Chartered plans to eliminate thousands of back-office jobs as part of its AI transformation strategy. Similar trends are unfolding across technology, logistics, media, and retail industries. The corporate narrative insists that displaced workers will “reskill” and move into higher-value roles. But there is little serious discussion about whether economies can realistically absorb millions of displaced workers quickly enough, especially when AI itself is increasingly capable of replacing not only repetitive labour, but cognitive and administrative work once considered uniquely human.

The deeper issue is not merely unemployment. It is alienation. György Lukács described this through the concept of reification, the process where human beings begin seeing one another as objects, functions, or commodities rather than people. That idea feels disturbingly contemporary. Workers today are evaluated through dashboards, KPIs, performance algorithms, and optimisation software. Even social interaction has been absorbed into economic logic. Networking replaces friendship. Personal branding replaces identity. Human value becomes transactional.

Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer extended this critique further by arguing that capitalism commodified culture itself through mass media and entertainment. Their “culture industry” thesis now feels prophetic in the age of algorithmic feeds and platform capitalism. Digital life increasingly fragments collective consciousness rather than strengthening it. Workers once organised physically in factories, unions, and communities. Today, labour is atomised. Gig workers rarely meet colleagues. Remote employees compete silently across continents. Social media encourages outrage but weakens sustained solidarity.

This fragmentation benefits capital immensely. The modern gig economy exemplifies this shift. Companies maintain the economic benefits of labour while offloading the social responsibilities historically associated with employment, such as pensions, healthcare, stability, and long-term security. Flexibility is celebrated publicly, while precarity expands quietly underneath it. The worker becomes permanently temporary.

The irony is that technology itself is not the problem. Technological advancement has historically improved human life when paired with social safeguards and ethical direction. The problem emerges when technological development is subordinated entirely to market logic. AI is evolving not according to collective human need, but according to competitive pressure, profit incentives, and shareholder expectations. Humans are increasingly expected to adapt themselves around technology rather than technology adapting around humanity.

That inversion matters. A civilisation obsessed with speed, convenience, and optimisation eventually begins treating human beings the same way it treats software systems, as variables to streamline. Consumer culture intensifies this dynamic. Modern societies reward immediacy, efficiency, and individual self-preservation. Questions of communal justice, labour dignity, or social preservation become secondary because survival itself feels increasingly individualised. People are exhausted, economically insecure, and psychologically fragmented. Under such conditions, collective resistance becomes difficult.

This is why thinkers like Frantz Fanon remain relevant. Fanon argued that capitalism and domination rarely operate alone, they intertwine with structures of race, empire, and hierarchy. Global capitalism does not distribute sacrifice equally. Wealthier societies often preserve comfort through invisible labour systems elsewhere, outsourced manufacturing, migrant labour, digital exploitation, and economic dependency. AI and automation may intensify these inequalities rather than reduce them.

Meanwhile, contemporary Marxist scholars such as David Harvey and Michael Roberts continue to argue that capitalism survives by constantly searching for new spaces of expansion, such as property markets, debt economies, technological revolutions, and data extraction, while simultaneously undermining its own foundations. Roberts, in particular, argues that automation may actually worsen capitalism’s long-term instability because replacing labour with technology reduces the very source of surplus value and profit generation over time.

Whether one fully accepts Marxist economics or not, the social anxiety surrounding AI reveals that many people instinctively sense something is deeply unbalanced. The fear is not simply about losing jobs. It is about losing meaning, dignity, and economic relevance in a system that increasingly defines human worth through productivity alone.

And this is the contradiction modern capitalism cannot easily escape. If enough people lose stable employment, purchasing power collapses. Without purchasing power, demand weakens. Without demand, businesses themselves become unsustainable. Endless efficiency eventually reaches a point where the system begins consuming the social foundations that allow it to function in the first place.

The warning signs are already visible, for instance, rising inequality, declining social trust, loneliness, political polarisation, burnout, and economic insecurity, despite unprecedented technological progress. Civilisation is advancing rapidly, yet many people feel less secure, less connected, and more disposable than before.

Technology should elevate humanity, not diminish it. Progress should not merely mean faster systems or larger profits; it should mean greater human flourishing. Otherwise, society risks arriving at a future where machines become more efficient, corporations become more profitable, yet human beings themselves become increasingly alienated from work, from one another, and ultimately from their own sense of worth.

A profoundly fitting Thirukkural that captures my thought,

அருளொடும் அன்பொடும் வாராப் பொருளாக்கம்
புல்லார் புரள விடல்.”குறள் 755

“Discard and renounce the wealth that is acquired without compassion and love.” kural 755

This couplet is remarkably relevant to my contentions on modern capitalism, AI-driven disposability, and the reduction of human beings into “human capital.” Thiruvalluvar is not condemning wealth itself but rather, he condemns wealth accumulation divorced from அருள் (compassion) and அன்பு (human love). The Kural anticipates the moral contradiction of a system that pursues efficiency while eroding dignity, solidarity, and compassion.

So, in the end when a system begins treating people as expendable long enough, eventually people stop believing the system exists for them at all.

If civilisation continues to measure progress only through efficiency, automation, and profit, it may eventually discover that it has engineered prosperity while impoverishing the human spirit. Thiruvalluvar warned eons ago that wealth without compassion and love is not true wealth at all. In an age where humans are increasingly reduced to data, productivity, and “human capital,” perhaps the real question is no longer whether technology is advancing, but whether humanity itself still is.

Cheers.

 

ravivarmmankkanniappan@1957250520263°2'37.8'' N 101°34.837' E

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