Can group members enlighten me on what is the problem with Sheldon Pollock?
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On this forum (bvparishat), the track record of the Malhotra when his claims have been put to question has been poor. There is no response by him to date to by Dr. Vidyasankar Sundaresan in which he said that Malhotra overstates the case quite a lot and significantly misleads many of his readers. The context is claims made by Malhotra in a post on this forum, but similar claims are made in TBFS also.
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Title of the thread is 'What is the problem with Sheldon Pollock ?'It seems to be going in the direction of 'what is the problem with Sri Rajiv Malhotra? '
On Thu, Mar 2, 2017 at 7:45 PM, Kalyan K wrote:And Sri Nityanandji, I will be sure to read your review too, after completing the book. Thanks for the link and for presenting an alternate perspective.
Best Regards
Kalyan
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It's in suspended animation, yet.Most of the maṭha-s have poor, if any, info reg. the Indological developments. Many of our scholars too think that Westerners are doing us a favour by looking into our texts!Can there be a greater puṇya than doing a sincere godāna - to professed beef-eaters?
On Thu, Mar 2, 2017 at 1:42 PM, Kalyan K <pk.k...@gmail.com> wrote:
Sri Kannan
Based on your suggestion, I got the kindle edition of the book and reading it. I am curious about one thing - Is the Adi Shankara chair at Columbia established? Or has the initiative been ditched?
Please throw some light.
Regards
Kalyan
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Come on, Dr Gargeshwari, the book TBFS and the question of problem with Sheldon Pollock are not at all analogous to Western Philosophy and Eastern Philodsophy."It like saying when I ask 'what is the problem with Sri Rajiv Malhotra? I get an answer read Prof. Pollock's and his writings" is another bad analogy. If it was advised to read all books of Sri Rajiv Malhotra or some book of Sri Malhotra not connected to Prof. Pollock, the analogy would have been right.But the book TBFS is directly related to the question of what is the problem with Sheldon Pollock. It in fact is focused on that very question.So your analogies are totally misplaced and wrong.You could have said there are so many other articles and books (if there are) dealing with the question of what is the problem with Sheldon Pollock ; why recommend only the book TBFS ?
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Namaste
On <What is the problem > and < There is a huge amount of education regarding India is needed in the world.> . The need is not disputed. The debate has been on the plans of actions ( plural is deliberate), the Flag and the Ship for this flag-ship venture ( the split focus of words is deliberate).
When the discussion becomes too hot on a topic like ‘ TBFS and Sheldon Pollock’, a little sprinkling of ‘serious –polemical –political’ humor may help to relax.
I am placing a small write up , a ‘Humor analyzed at Harvard (Also)’ which probably carries a suggested answer with a polemical and political flavor, to the question < What is the Problem ? > !
The title of the riddle is called : Why Did the Chicken Cross the Road? The riddle appeared in an 1847 edition of The Knickerbocker, a New York City monthly magazine.
The riddle is not to be treated lightly; it has engaged the scholars and society for over 160 plus years !
The current extract is from the url : - https://www.physics.harvard.edu/academics/undergrad/chickenroad . It has some seriously deliberated answers, in the spirit of various well-known physicists, to the age-
old question. ( I place the Harvard web page text below for the pleasure of readers.
For those who want to laugh their ribs off, and be three legged chickens of analysis ( Traditional ‘ shasha- vishaana’ – simile ? ) please read more at the site - http://www.whydidthechickencrosstheroad.com/ ; https://www.buzzfeed.com/carolynkylstra/why-did-the-chicken-actually-cross-the-road-though?utm_term=.upwrjVZRY#.fiN2YEpJd ; and of course the common wisdom resource - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Why_did_the_chicken_cross_the_road%3F !
The Three legged Chicken: A man was driving along a freeway when he noticed a chicken running alongside his car. He was amazed to see the chicken keeping up with him, as he was doing 50 mph. He accelerated to 60, and the chicken stayed right next to him. He sped up to 75 mph, and the chicken passed him. The man noticed that the chicken had three legs. So he followed the chicken down a road and ended up at a farm. He got out of his car and saw that all the chickens had three legs. He asked the farmer, "What's up with these chickens?" The farmer said "Well, everybody likes chicken legs, so I bred a three-legged bird. I'm going to be a millionaire." The man asked him how they tasted. The farmer said, "Don't know, haven't caught one yet." (Molly - Ohio/USA)
( Additional request: And to provide the ‘ Swadesi - eastern philosophical wisdom ’ on this issue, Would someone care to address and enhance the this ‘ polemical –political’ question from the perspective of ‘ Karma – Daiva Vipaka – Prakrutih tvam niyokshyati, .. etc;..> to advance and balance this polemics ? The issue has already carried its political flavored analysis .
One may look at the url’s : - http://www.theunrealtimes.com/2012/10/21/why-did-the-chicken-cross-the-road/ ; http://www.sarcanomics.com/2014/04/145-7-answers-to-why-did-chicken-cross.html )
Regards
BVK Sastry
TEXT FROM THE URL:
Why did the chicken cross the road?
After finding the first four of the following answers on the web, I figured I’d make up some more, and I got on a roll. Have fun with them. A few are a bit esoteric... If you like this page, you’ll probably like the limericks in my new mechanics textbook. But don’t let those fool you about the book -- it's a serious one, as you'll see if you take a look. The limericks are there just to lighten things up.
— David Morin
Albert Einstein: The chicken did not cross the road. The road passed beneath the chicken.
Isaac Newton: Chickens at rest tend to stay at rest. Chickens in motion tend to cross roads.
Wolfgang Pauli: There was already a chicken on this side of the road.
Carl Sagan: There are billions and billions of such chickens, crossing roads just like this one, all across the universe. [Apologies for perpetuating the misquote.]
Jean-Dernard-Leon Foucault: What’s interesting is that if you wait a few hours, it will be crossing the road a few inches back that way.
Robert Van de Graaf: Hey, doesn’t it look funny with all its feathers sticking up like that?
Albert Michelson /Edward Morley: Our experiment was a failure. We could not detect the road.
Ludwig Boltzmann: If you have enough chickens, it is a near certainty that one of them will cross the road.
Johannes van der Waals: Some say it was a sixth sense that led the chicken to cross the road. I say it was a sixth power.
David Hilbert: I was standing on the side of the road and a chicken came along, evidently in some kind of strange state. I informed it that it was nevertheless still in my space, so it went across the road.
Blaise Pascal: The chicken felt pressure on this side of the road. However, when it arrived on the other side it still felt the same pressure.
John David Jackson: You’ll find out after you complete this 37-page calculation.
Henri Poincare: Let’s try changing the initial position of the chicken just a tiny, tiny, tiny bit, and….look, it’s now across the road!
Enrico Fermi: In estimating to the nearest power of 10 the number of chickens that cross the road, note that since fractional chickens are not allowed, the desired power must be at least zero.
Therefore, at least one chicken crosses the road.
Werner Heisenberg: Because I made darn sure it was standing right next to me on this side.
Richard Feynman, 1: It’s all quite clear from this simple little diagram of a circle with lines poking out of it.
Richard Feynman, 2: There was this good-looking rooster on the other side of the road, and he figured he’d skip all the games and just get to the point. So he asked the chicken if she’d like to come over to
his side, and she said sure.
Erwin Schrodinger: The chicken doesn’t cross the road. Rather, it exists simultaneously on both sides…..just don’t peek.
Charles Coulomb: The chicken found a similar chicken on this side of the road to be repellent.
John Bell: Since there are no local hidden chickens, any hidden chickens you find must have come from far away. They therefore surely must have crossed at least one road on their way here.
Henry Cavendish: My dear chicken, I have calculated with the utmost detail and precision the density of your insides. Now, for the sake of my precious sanity, I beg you, stop that incessant clucking and
be gone!
Arthur Compton: There were a bunch of chickens waving at me on this side of the road, but then a car came along and they all scattered to the other side. The funny thing is that the ones that ended farthest away were still waving at me a few minutes later. So apparently, the ones that scattered the most had the longest waves. Hans Geiger: I don’t know, but I say we count how many times it crosses!
Howard Georgi: It can cross all it wants, but I’m going to sit here and wait until it decays.
Edward Teller: I will build a more powerful chicken, and it will cross the road with more energy than any chicken before!
Oskar Klein: Actually, it can get to the other side of the road without crossing it.
Satyendra Bose: An identical chicken already crossed the road, so this one was much more likely to do the same.
Wallace Clement Sabine: If you listen very carefully, you can hear the pitter patter of chicken feet, which implies that a chicken must be crossing the road.
Sir David Brewster: Let me give you my angle on this….
Galileo Galilei: The chicken crossed the road because it put one foot in front of the other and took a sufficient number of steps to traverse a distance greater than or equal to the road’s width. Note that the reason is not because the earth is the center of the universe. Oh, great… another jail term.
David Gross, H. David Politzer, Frank Wilczek: The road is not wide. And at short distances a chicken is free to do whatever it wants.
Robert Millikan: It didn't. It made it part way and then just sort of hovered there, apparently feeling an equal pull in both directions.
Peter Higgs: We must first find the chicken.
Nicolaus Copernicus: The chicken was moving at a slightly different orbital speed around the sun.
Fusion researchers: Because it knew that in 30 years it would get to the other side. [No insult intended here. Well, at least not to the physicists working hard with the meager funds they've been given.]
George Francis FitzGerald: It had its doubts, but after starting across the road, the chicken observed that the distance to the other side didn’t seem quite as large, so it figured it would continue on.
Leo Szilard: First one chicken crossed. This then caused a few more to cross, each of which in turn caused a few more…
George Atwood: The chicken wanted to introduce a setup that would enable it to pose a question and thereby torture future students over and over and over...
Johannes Kepler: I don't know. But I'm glad it did, because as it waddled across, it was kind enough to sweep the area of the road with its wings. And it did so at an astonishingly consistent rate.
Robert Pound and Glen Rebka: It was out for a morning jog and wanted to get its heart rate up by crossing over the crown of the road.
Robert Hooke: At first, the chicken was drawn across the road. But after passing the middle, it felt an increasing desire to return to the original side. It did end up making it to the other side (just
barely), but then decided to return. I believe it is still going back and forth on this.
Lisa Randall: The only thing about the chicken we ever discuss is why it crossed the road. There are many more dimensions to it than that!
Norman Ramsey: I don’t know why, but I do know that it took 4.71988362706153 seconds to get there.
Pierre de Fermat: Forget about why. I’ll show you how it can get there in the least amount of time.
Neils Bohr: In attempting to answer the question by observing the chicken, I collapsed its wavefunction to the other side.
Gustav Kirchhoff: It actually crossed the road twice, due to a strange desire to form a closed loop.
Louis de Broglie: Interesting, it always seems to flap its wings an integral number of times before it comes back.
Michael Faraday: No, again? How many times do I have to tell it to stick to the safety of its cage?!
Max Planck: It appears to be a white chicken. Sorry, I deal only with black bodies.
Sir William Hamilton: With regard to the issue of crossing the road, the chicken made it to the other side by taking as little action as possible.
Hugh Everett: I don’t know, but there’s another one over there that isn’t crossing the road.
Edward Witten: 50 years ago, you probably would have said there was no hope of answering this question either.
Archimedes: I was running through the streets yelling and screaming, and it was only afterward that I realized I was carrying a chicken.
Amadeo Avogadro: What, just one? I deal only with very large chicken numbers.
Ptolemy: Someone will probably think of a simpler explanation in a few thousand years, but the present understanding is that the chicken crosses the road because it is constrained to move on this here sphere, which in turn has its center on this one over here. The end result is that, except in the rare case of retrograde chicken motion, the chicken does indeed cross the road.
Marie Curie: Good question. And one that is much less hazardous to one’s health.
Willebrod Snell: I’m not sure, but I did notice that when it stepped onto the road, it changed its direction.
Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss: Draw a pillbox around the road, and consider the flux of chickens through the box. If a chicken leaves this side of the road, then assuming that there are no chicken sinks or sources, it
must end up on the other side.
Johann Balmer: Why are there only two lines in the middle of the road?
James Clerk Maxwell: Ok, Miss Chicken, let’s figure this out together. Hold out your right foot…. yes, that’s it…. good…. now curl your talons…. right…. now look at your…. hold on – you don’t have any
thumbs!
Osborne Reynolds: No idea. But I can see from the ruffled feathers that this was turbulent chicken flow.
Karl Schwarzschild: The sad thing is, I know I could have answered this question too. [This one isn’t meant to be funny.]
Christian Doppler: It always sounds a bit down when it’s heading over there, but rather upbeat when it’s coming back.
Edwin Hubble: Strange, it seems to move faster the farther away it gets.
Ernest Rutherford: The differential cross section for forward chicken scattering is quite large, so the chicken will most likely cross the road if it was initially heading in that direction.
Lene Hau: Well, I wish it hadn't. It cut right in front of me while I was out for a bike ride, chatting it up with a photon.
Stephen Hawking: Chicken fluctuations will inevitably create a scenario where a chicken ends up on the other side of the yellow line, in which case there is a nonzero probability that it will escape to the
other side.
Lord Kelvin: I don’t know. But I think the road actually starts back there a bit.
Daniel Bernoulli: Because it enjoyed flying to the other side. Ok, wait, can someone tell me once and for all if I’m relevant to all this flying stuff or not?!
Robert Oppenheimer: Although it was deemed appropriate at the time, people will forever question whether it was correct for the chicken to cross the road.
The thread started as a response to the other thread on SI-2 conference. The member wanted to know why SI-2 focused on Prof. Pollock.Prof. Kannan aptly responded by suggesting to read the book TBFS. It is apt because the context of SI series and the book have the same roots and motivations.Members could say1. That is not the only source problematizing Prof. Pollock's writings. You might want to read these other sources too etc.or2. There is no problem with Prof. Pollock at all etc.,or3. Please read the following counters to the arguments of TBFS, establishing that there is no problem with Prof. Pollock etc.
On Friday, 3 March 2017 11:36:24 UTC+8, Nagaraj Paturi wrote:The thread started as a response to the other thread on SI-2 conference. The member wanted to know why SI-2 focused on Prof. Pollock.Prof. Kannan aptly responded by suggesting to read the book TBFS. It is apt because the context of SI series and the book have the same roots and motivations.Members could say1. That is not the only source problematizing Prof. Pollock's writings. You might want to read these other sources too etc.or2. There is no problem with Prof. Pollock at all etc.,or3. Please read the following counters to the arguments of TBFS, establishing that there is no problem with Prof. Pollock etc.
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Firstly, I thank Sri Nityanand Misra for drawing attention to the earlier discussion about this topic on this forum, so I don't have to do it myself now.Secondly, I can see how this issue has become very politically charged, so I'll be brief. I am not an official spokesman for Sringeri, but if anyone thinks for a moment that the Sringeri Peetham, of all the traditional institutions, was going to sell its soul to an American university or to an individual Western Sanskritist, then all I'll say is that they just don't know how the advaita sampradAya maTha-s operate.
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Can you be clearer Sri Kalyanji ?Do you mean,that is the reason why, I think / I am sure, Sringeri Math wanted to establish the chair at Columbia ?or,that is the reason I suggest /recommend Sringeri Math should establish the chair at Columbia?
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Thanks for the clarification.So you mean, that is the reason why Sringeri Math should be /should have been careful not to allow the chair to go into the hands of those who , as Sri RM suspects, could use it for the purpose contrary to the intended one.
On Thursday, 2 March 2017 14:11:08 UTC+5:30, Kalyan K wrote:Sri Kannan
Based on your suggestion, I got the kindle edition of the book and reading it. I am curious about one thing - Is the Adi Shankara chair at Columbia established? Or has the initiative been ditched?
Please throw some light.
Regards
Kalyan
While you are at it, I also suggest you to go through older threads on this forum, especially the following well-argued post by Dr. Vidyasankar Sundaresan:At the cost of upsetting a few memebers on the list, let me say that a major weakness of TBFS is that it makes many claims about the proposed Adi Shankara Chair without evidence. At some places, Malhotra even sounds like an alarmist (perhaps of a false alarm). For more on this, you may read section 4.3 of my [still unpublished] review of the book here. https://www.academia.edu/25071774/The_Battle_for_Sanskrit_Review. Just as one example, Malhotra claims that hundreds of calls were made and thousands of emails were sent to the Shringeri peetha (pp. 9–10), but really does Malhotra have any evidence of this? Did Malhotra go through phone records and email servers of Shringeri peetha or did he himself make all the hundreds of calls and write all the thousands of emails? If not, did he just over-exaggerate or pull out these claims from thin air?On this forum (bvparishat), the track record of the Malhotra when his claims have been put to question has been poor. There is no response by him to date to by Dr. Vidyasankar Sundaresan in which he said that Malhotra overstates the case quite a lot and significantly misleads many of his readers. The context is claims made by Malhotra in a post on this forum, but similar claims are made in TBFS also.In fact, I suggest you read the entire thread (https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/bvparishat/4fWAEj38Pzc%5B1-25%5D) for another example of attributing a claim to Pollock. Malhotra claims on page 389 of TBFS that Pollock said that Anushtubh chanda was invented by Buddhists and copied by Valmiki. It has been one year since Prof. Paturi and I have repeatedly asked on this forum where specifically Pollock made this claim. Malhotra has been silent and has not furnished any evidence yet.I am afraid to say these examples raise serious questions about credibility of TBFS and Malhotra. This is not to be taken personally, and I do not expect Malhotra or other members of this list to take offence with questions I am raising. Any non-fiction book that makes bold and tall claims should be questioned, and it is the moral responsibility of the author to either defend the claims when they are questioned with specific evidence, or admit that no evidence exists. But staying silent on questions and not responding, as Malhotra chooses to, is certainly not a sign of academic honesty.
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Interesting to see that Dr Gargeshwari agreed with aadaraNi/ya Anil Veppatangudiji that " overlooking Sheldon Pollock's and other Western Indologists' misdoings" is a "danger".
On Fri, Mar 3, 2017 at 7:00 PM, Ajit Gargeshwari <ajit.gar...@gmail.com> wrote:You are right in a sense Dr. Veppatangudi. The concentration has been in promoting a book and a view of an individual what he says in blogs and elsewhere, rather than real issues that are raised or portrayed in the book itself. We are also having a set of people outside the list who want to promote an individual rather than issues he raises. There is also a side track to this discussion dragging mutts into needless controversies by people who have no clue what Sringeri Mutt is doing or how funding for US universities happen. Some simply write what pleases them.Regards
Ajit Gargeshwari
न जायते म्रियते वा कदाचिन्नायं भूत्वा भविता वा न भूयः।
अजो नित्यः शाश्वतोऽयं पुराणो न हन्यते हन्यमाने शरीरे।।2.20।।On Fri, Mar 3, 2017 at 4:25 PM, AnilkumarVeppatangudi <veppat...@gmail.com> wrote:Am I sensing here a danger of overlooking Sheldon Pollock's and other Western Indologists' misdoings because Rajiv Malhotra has overstated his case?--
--Nagaraj PaturiHyderabad, Telangana, INDIA.Former Senior Professor of Cultural StudiesFLAME School of Communication and FLAME School of Liberal Education,(Pune, Maharashtra, INDIA )
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On Friday, 3 March 2017 11:36:24 UTC+8, Nagaraj Paturi wrote:The thread started as a response to the other thread on SI-2 conference. The member wanted to know why SI-2 focused on Prof. Pollock.Prof. Kannan aptly responded by suggesting to read the book TBFS. It is apt because the context of SI series and the book have the same roots and motivations.Members could say1. That is not the only source problematizing Prof. Pollock's writings. You might want to read these other sources too etc.or2. There is no problem with Prof. Pollock at all etc.,or3. Please read the following counters to the arguments of TBFS, establishing that there is no problem with Prof. Pollock etc.On lines of (1), I may add that that the the member may want to read Pollock’s paper The Death of Sanskrit and the response by Hanneder titled ‘On “The Death of Sanskrit”’ to it.Hanneder’s response: https://www.uni-marburg.de/fb10/iksl/indologie/fachgebiet/mitarbeiter/hanneder/downloads/downloads-artikel/jh-a08-deathsanskrit.pdfGoogle Scholar citations are far more for Pollock’s paper than for Hanneder’s response. When I compared last year, Pollock’s paper was cited by 79 papers, while the respone by Hanneder was cited by only eight papers.In fact, reading original works on both sides will give the best picture.
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Scholars are welcome to visit swadeshiindology.com web-sitewhere all videos and many papers from SI-1 have been available for weeks.(This is faster than most conferences being held).