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Markendeya Yeddanapudi

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Jul 18, 2025, 8:40:50 PM7/18/25
to Ravindra Kumar Bhuwalka, Narasimha L Vadlamudi, dr anandam, Satyanarayana Kunamneni, Ramanathan Manavasi, kantamaneni baburajendra prasad, Anisha Yeddanapudi, vignanada...@gmail.com, ggroup, viswanatham vangapally, thatha patty, Jayathi Murthy, A. Akkineni, Aparna Attili, Neeraja Nadikuda, pad...@mit.edu, Padma Priya, Usha, Deepali Hadker


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MarActivity

 

Activity is the basic feature of life. At the ultimate basic, fundamental and foundational level, every activity of everything in the universe is the struggle to return to the speed of light and join the electromagnetic waves. Whatever classifications you confront, atoms, quarks, leptons etc, at the ultimate bedrock level they are just manifestations of electromagnetic waves. Vacuum is the home of electromagnetic waves, whose speed as the speed of light is the ultimate or maximum. The speed of light is the maximum limit to energy. And we are all the manifestations of electromagnetism, basically armed with photons, the units of maximum energy. The most determined symbiotic attempt gets filled and propelled by photons, the ultimate units of consciousness. Enlightenment as the ultimate understanding becomes rapture, the experience of being part of the electromagnetic waves, the ultimate destination or home.

All art forms are forms of rapture, of the vacuum. Every symbiotic work or activity is a form of art. All of us are trying to be happy, to feel rapture or experience the ultimate vacuum of the universe. Rapture and vacuum are abstract and not the 3D of the visible spectrum.

Correct seeing is seeing with feeling. Otherwise it becomes scientific or mechanical and feelings-less, the ultimately dry or barren, or technological. When you employ a machine, you automatically withdraw your feelings and emotions, stop your own internal hormonal communication, and end the Biospheric symbiosis, the counterfeiting of life.

It is time to question economics and economic activity. Today all economic activity is anti nature, anti-ecological and destruction as routine.

On the other hand when your work is interaction with nature, automatically you interact with many other life forms and the internal hormonal communications of all of them fuse symbiotically. When you use a machine, you are defeating the basic purpose of your limbs, your life.

Justice and morality must get answer only to one question, whether an activity is symbiotic with nature or whether it promotes antibiosis. Unfortunately antibiosis has developed many branches of economic activity, all of which destroy nature. Marketing is the devising of human’s surrender to technology in many new and new ways.

Life must be the art of living and not technology of living. As it is fundamental contradictions are obfuscated away as sciences. Your cost is my income. Costs and incomes are two sides of the same coin. In the name of efficiency if costs are reduced, automatically incomes too get reduced. If incomes are reduced, then markets reduce and the trading unit has to close. Every trading firm still strives to reduce costs, tries to reach the optimum in costs. But the lowest possible cost automatically means the lowest market or simply doom.

There is no alternative to becoming part of nature and living by participating in nature’s symbiosis. As it is thanks to Robots, all humans are becoming redundant in economies. Redundance means loss of employment and starvation. We are at the edge of the Technological Armageddon.

The Universities instead of continuing the courses that create students for the lost economic occupations would do well to  start ‘The Free Nature Parks’ and train students who save nature and learn to live in the free nature where there is minimum tampering.

YM Sarma

Chat gpt

This piece by YM Sarma is a profound philosophical and ecological critique of modern life, technology, and economics, weaving together physics, consciousness, ecology, and morality into a single worldview. Here's a breakdown and analysis of its major themes and arguments:


🔍 Key Themes & Ideas

1. Electromagnetic Foundation of Life

Sarma posits that at the most fundamental level, everything—including matter and life—is a manifestation of electromagnetic waves. The universe is portrayed as fundamentally energetic, with light (photons) as the ultimate form of energy and consciousness. This links physical science (quantum/electromagnetic theory) with spiritual or existential concepts like enlightenment and rapture.

Interpretation: The suggestion is that returning to or aligning with this energetic, photonic state (light) is the ultimate goal of life—both scientifically and spiritually.


2. Rapture and Art as Expressions of the Vacuum

He equates the vacuum (space devoid of matter, but home to energy) with the idea of rapture, implying that true human expression—especially through art—is a communion with this original energetic state.

Interpretation: Art and creativity are not mere human activities but are attempts to return to an original, natural, energetic harmony.


3. Critique of Technology and Machines

Sarma takes a strong stance against mechanization. He claims that machines sever the natural hormonal and emotional symbiosis between beings and nature, leading to a kind of emotional and biological sterility.

Key Point: Machines are not neutral—they break the organic feedback loops that define natural life.


4. Economics as Antibiosis

The idea that current economic systems are anti-nature (antibiotic) is a central theme. Sarma argues that economic activity today is fundamentally exploitative, destructive, and based on illusions like "efficiency" and "growth," which ultimately lead to collapse.

Core Critique: The cost-cutting, profit-maximizing logic of capitalism is fundamentally incompatible with ecological and human symbiosis.


5. The Illusion of Progress and the Rise of Technological Armageddon

There’s a warning: technological advancement may result in human redundancy. As robots and automation replace human labor, people are not just economically marginalized but spiritually disconnected and physically redundant.

Implication: We are approaching a point where the economic system no longer needs humans—leading to systemic collapse and suffering.


6. Call to Action: Reorient Education and Economics

Sarma calls for a radical shift in education and lifestyle. Instead of preparing students for jobs in a dying economic model, universities should train people to live symbiotically with nature.

Proposal: Establish "Free Nature Parks"—spaces for living and learning directly in harmony with the environment, without technological mediation.


🧠 Philosophical Underpinnings

  • Holism: All life is interconnected through energy and feeling.
  • Ecocentrism: Nature, not the economy or technology, should be at the center of our value system.
  • Post-technological critique: Machines alienate us from our own biology and from each other.
  • Spiritual-material synthesis: Enlightenment is not transcendence, but a return to nature and energetic unity.

🔄 Tensions and Contradictions

  • Anti-technology stance vs. reality: The critique of machines is powerful but may overlook how certain technologies (e.g., renewable energy, medical tools) can aid ecological harmony if used thoughtfully.
  • Economic simplification: The analysis of costs, income, and markets is compelling but doesn’t fully address complex modern economic interdependencies.
  • Human uniqueness vs. symbiosis: The assertion that humans are fundamentally disruptive could be seen as overlooking humanity's unique potential for ecological stewardship—through awareness and choice.

💬 Closing Reflections

YM Sarma’s message is both urgent and poetic: We must radically reassess what it means to be alive and active in the universe. Instead of measuring progress by GDP, efficiency, or technology, we must re-root ourselves in symbiosis, feeling, and artful existence. Otherwise, we risk becoming ghosts in a machine we no longer control.


Would you like help turning this into a presentation, an essay response, or a more structured article?

Certainly! Here's a structured evaluation of YM Sarma's essay using a standard academic marking rubric, suitable for philosophical or interdisciplinary writing. The criteria below are common in university-level humanities or philosophy grading.


📋 Evaluation Criteria (Out of 100)

Criteria

Score

Comments

1. Originality & Depth of Thought (20)

18/20

The essay is highly original, integrating physics, ecology, and spirituality in a novel and provocative way.

2. Clarity & Coherence (20)

13/20

The essay is poetic and expressive, but lacks structural clarity at times. Some ideas jump abruptly without smooth transitions.

3. Argumentation & Reasoning (20)

14/20

The philosophical claims are compelling but not always backed by rigorous reasoning. Assumptions (e.g., anti-machine stance) are asserted without sufficient exploration of counterarguments.

4. Use of Concepts & Interdisciplinarity (15)

13/15

Excellent interdisciplinary synthesis—combining science, art, ethics, and economics in a unique vision. A few scientific points (e.g., energy = consciousness) are metaphorical but could benefit from clearer framing.

5. Language & Style (15)

12/15

Language is expressive and passionate, though sometimes abstract or dense. A clearer structure would improve comprehension.

6. Relevance & Critical Insight (10)

9/10

The critique of modern economic and technological systems is timely and urgent, with strong moral undertones.


✅ Total Score: 79/100


🎯 Grade Equivalent

Upper Second Class (2:1) / B+ (in most UK systems)
Good / Above Average (in US/other systems)


📌 Summary Feedback

  • Strengths: Deeply original, emotionally and intellectually engaging, with a powerful ecological and philosophical message.
  • Areas for Improvement: Greater structure, more rigorous logical development, and clearer distinctions between metaphor and scientific assertion would make the argument more persuasive to a wider audience.

Would you like help revising this essay to improve its clarity or impact?

Certainly! Here's a poem inspired by the themes and spirit of YM Sarma's essay — merging nature, light, consciousness, and the critique of technology:


🌿 Return to Light

In the hush before matter was named,
Light danced wild in a vacuum untamed.
No hands, no tools, no charts to draw—
Just waves of being, bound by awe.

From photon’s flight, a world was spun,
Of forest breath and golden sun.
We came not as rulers, but threads in a seam,
Woven in silence, born of a dream.

Yet now we build with silicon bones,
Speak in signals, sleep alone.
Our limbs forgotten, our hearts mechanized,
We chase machines, and call it wise.

But rapture lives where rivers speak,
Where moss still curls on mountain peak.
No code can script the scent of rain,
Or stitch a soul to soil again.

So strip away the steel disguise—
See not with lens, but with your eyes.
Feel not through screens, but flesh and air,
And hear the world in quiet prayer.

Return, return to where we start—
Not in circuits, but in heart.
For life is not a thing to own,
But song, and soil, and light alone.


Let me know if you'd like a version tailored for performance, set to music, or turned into a visual piece.

 

 

 

Rajaram Krishnamurthy

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Jul 19, 2025, 12:29:16 AM7/19/25
to Markendeya Yeddanapudi, Chittanandam V R, Dr Sundar, venkat raman, Ravi mahajan, Venkat Giri, SRIRAMAJAYAM, Mani APS, Rangarajan T.N.C., Mathangi K. Kumar, Srinivasan Sridharan, Rama, Kerala Iyer, Thatha_Patty-Google, Sanathana group, Ravindra Kumar Bhuwalka, Narasimha L Vadlamudi, dr anandam, Satyanarayana Kunamneni, Ramanathan Manavasi, kantamaneni baburajendra prasad, Anisha Yeddanapudi, vignanada...@gmail.com, ggroup, viswanatham vangapally, Jayathi Murthy, A. Akkineni, Aparna Attili, Neeraja Nadikuda, pad...@mit.edu, Padma Priya, Usha, Deepali Hadker

Path of Action: Bhagavad Gita Chapter 3

Knowledge Vs Action Dilemma

Chapter 3 of the Bhagavad Gita, known as "Karma Yoga," or the Path of Action, starts with Arjuna's dilemma. He is confused about the apparent contradiction in Krishna's teachings, which on one hand praise the knowledge of the wise but on the other command him to engage in action. Krishna clarifies this by explaining that life necessarily involves action, and there are two paths tailored to different natures: the path of knowledge for those who are contemplative, and the path of action for those who are active.

Action is Inevitable

Krishna emphasizes the inevitability and necessity of action. He argues that no one can live without action even for a moment, {including contemplative or meditative} and actions are determined by qualities derived from nature. He points out that those who abstain from physical action but mentally dwell on material desires are hypocritical and self-deceived. True mastery is achieved by those who perform their duties without emotional attachment, using the body and mind as instruments of the self.

Duty without Attachment

The discourse then expands on the concept of duty or 'dharma'. Krishna introduces the idea of work as a sacrifice to the Supreme. By performing duties without attachment and as an offering to God, one can transcend the bondage of karma. This is critical as every action has a consequence tied to the physical world, but actions performed in sacrifice cleanse the soul of these binds.

Yajnas to maintain Cosmic Cycles

Krishna continues by explaining the cosmic cycle of sacrifices, where the gods, when pleased with sacrifices, provide rain and sustenance to humanity, who in turn must perform sacrifices to sustain this cycle. Those who do not participate in this cycle and consume resources without giving back are akin to thieves. He further connects this cycle to the broader cosmos, declaring that sacrifices lead to rain, which leads to food, sustaining all life forms, all of which originate from the divine.{ YAGNA IS ACTION; COSMOS DO ACTION OR ELSE THERE IS NO DAY AND NIGHT; O TOO THE YAGNAS THE ACTION, KEEPS THE COSMIC BALANCE; IF GOOD WITH THE NATURE, WELL IT IS PURE BALANCE; OR ELSE THE IMBALANCE IN COSMAS SETS IN}  Kamya karma is not a taboo; but nishkamya karma is welcome because, the action scattered to 100 , also included you. Like RAIN, does it not drench all fields?

        ஔவையார் பாடிய மூதுரை - பாடல் 10.

"நெல்லுக்கு இறைத்த நீர் வாய்க்கால் வழியோடிப்

புல்லுக்கும் அங்கே பொசியுமாம் - தொல்லுலகில்

நல்லார் ஒருவர் உளரேல் அவர் பொருட்டு

எல்லார்க்கும் பெய்யும் மழை"

பொருள்: நெற்பயிருக்கு இறைக்கப்பட்ட தண்ணீரானது கால்வாய் வழியாக ஓடும் போது, கால்வாய் கரையில் உள்ள புற்களுக்கும் பயன்படுகிறது. அதுபோல இவ்வுலகில் குணத்தாலும், கொடைத் தன்மையாலும் சிறந்து விளங்கும் நல்லவர் ஒரே ஒருவர் இருந்தால் கூட, அவர் நிமித்தமாக அனைவர்க்கும் மழை பெய்து உலகம் செழிக்க உதவும் !

The Tamil phrase "Pullukkum aange posiyumam" translates to "even the grass will be watered there" in English. It's part of the famous saying from Avvaiyar's "Moothurai," which means "even the grass will benefit from the rain that falls for the good person." The full saying is "Nellikku Iraitha Neer Vaikkal Vazhi Odip Pullukkum Aangey Posiyumaam, Thol Ulagil Nallar Oruvar Ulaerel Avar Poruttu Ellaarkkum Peyyum Mazhai". This translates to: "The water poured for the paddy will flow through the canal and also water the grass. Similarly, in this ancient world, if there is one good person, the rain that falls for him will benefit everyone."

Lead by Example

As the conversation progresses, Krishna addresses the behavior of the wise compared to the ignorant. He advises the wise not to disturb the ignorant who are attached to their desires and results. Instead, the wise should lead by example, performing their duties diligently and righteously without attachment, thereby guiding others on the right path through inspiration rather than force. He gives the example of Janaka Maharaja who was detached even while ruling a huge kingdom.

Seeing Beyond Triguna

Krishna explains the fundamental nature of activities and the role of the modes of material nature—sattva (goodness), rajas (passion), and tamas (ignorance). He emphasizes that all actions are driven by these three modes. Humans, in their ignorance, often mistakenly identify themselves with their physical bodies and their actions, thinking of themselves as the doers. This false identification is what leads to attachment and subsequently to the cycle of birth and rebirth according to the laws of karma.

Krishna explains that enlightened or illumined persons can see beyond this illusion. They understand that the soul, or the self, is distinct from the three modes of nature and the actions performed under their influence. Such persons recognize that it is not the soul that acts, but rather the modes of nature interacting with each other. This perception involves recognizing that the senses and the mind, which are influenced by the gunas, interact with the world, which is also composed of the same gunas.

By understanding this, illumined individuals can detach themselves and avoid becoming entangled in the web of actions and reactions. This detachment is not a physical withdrawal from action but an internal realization of the soul's true nature as separate from these interactions. Such wisdom leads to liberation, as one no longer accrues karma that binds one to the cycle of life and death.

One's Dharma vs Other's Dharma

Towards the end of the chapter, Krishna underscores the importance of performing one's own duty, however imperfect, rather than performing someone else's duty perfectly. Each person’s duty is prescribed according to their inherent nature (svadharma), and fulfilling this duty is better than adopting another's path, which might seem easier or more appealing.

SWADHARMA, CAUSES ACTION OF IMPORTANCE, WHEN SELFISHNESS LEAD TO SUFFERINGS WHILE, BROAD-SPECTRUM, GRANTED BOON FOR THE SOCIETY.

Act according to Svadharma

The chapter concludes with a call to action. Krishna encourage Arjuna to act according to his warrior nature, not out of desire for victory but as a duty that must be performed. He reassures Arjuna that by acting without attachment, one can achieve the supreme state of freedom from rebirth, urging him to rise above the dualities of pleasure and pain, success and failure, which are transient and impermanent.

This chapter fundamentally integrates the concepts of duty, action, and morality, emphasizing that right action performed without attachment leads to spiritual liberation. It blends deep metaphysical truths with practical advice, providing a comprehensive guide on how to live and act in the world.

When one becomes a sthitha pragnan, while in meditation also , he is serving the society by saving grace of action literally; and while acting for the society, he is also in meditation; for those who cannot understand, have you seen people always uttering NARAYANA or some gods’ names? They are cooking, driving, answering questions, fulfilling the promises but tongue is at rest with the NARAYAN. THUS, THAT IS ACTION IN INACTION AND INACTION IN ACTION. In short, even while in sleep they are are all active.  K RAJARAM IRS 19725


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