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Wednesday, April 01, 2015

Economic & Political Weekly: Table of Contents

Ethics and Theatrics

 
India’s Daughter reflects asymmetries of power and access, and of where and how discourses are generated and directed. Who represents whom, and how they do so, reflects many of these asymmetries and exposes many complicities. As to the question of why India’s Daughter was not made by anyone in India, this is one best answered by those who were most vociferous in their denunciation of the “ban.”

Seeds of Doubt on New GDP Numbers

Private Corporate Sector Overestimated?
 
The estimates of the private corporate sector in 2012-13, using a new data set, seem to account for a substantial part of the upward revision of the economic aggregates in the new series of National Accounts Statistics. This brief note poses a few questions about their veracity.
Special Articles
The form and nature of marriage and family life have changed over the past few decades in Western societies and in East Asia, but they have taken different pathways. Reproduction is becoming delinked from marriage in the West, while in East Asia...
Editorials
The Supreme Court's ruling striking down Section 66A ventures to provide a larger protection to free speech.
Editorials
The Hashimpura verdict after 28 years is salt in an open wound.
Commentary
She did not allow the sexual attack on her to define her and cocoon her in victimhood. Rather, Suzette Jordan was a brave woman whose adamant fight for justice has done so much to restore the dignity of survivors of sexual assault. A personal...
Perspectives
Media professionals have an important responsibility to society since they are in a position to mould public opinion. But the recent exposures of journalists taking favours from corporate groups have only highlighted once again an old phenomenon...
Editorials
Netanyahu's re-election will push Israel further into international isolation; this may even aid the peace process.
Special Articles
This study reports on a survey of 4,881 users of more than 4,100 works created under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act in Maharashtra. It provides evidence that MGNREGA works support agriculture, and benefit a large...
Special Articles
After a command and control paradigm of spectrum management lasting from 2001 to 2008, India has gone in for a phased transition to a liberalised regime. Notable elements of this change include the unbundling of spectrum from the service licence...
Strategic Affairs
Even as Chinese opinion insists that there can be no negotiation with the Tibetan diaspora over the region's political union with China, a fl ashpoint is slowly coming closer. India's festering dispute with China over the border will get...
Commentary
The relationship between veteran leader V S Achuthanandan and the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has reached a new low, but neither he nor the party are willing to part ways amicably. After walking out of the party's state conference in...
Commentary
In these dark times, when "the rebel" who "stood for rebels," Frontier magazine, is desperately needed, its survival is at stake as its offi ce space is sought to be grabbed by real estate sharks.
Commentary
A description and discussion of the legal and illegal flow of migrants from India to West Asia, the problems they face during political crises and when government regulations change.
Commentary
The Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme and pension payments in (undivided) Andhra Pradesh accounted for more than 90% of Aadhaar-authenticated payments in India. This may be the way forward for other public programmes that...
Notes
There is growing consensus that the "crisis of masculinity" needs to be addressed and the focus of interventions on issues of gender and sexuality has to broaden beyond women to include men and other genders.
Discussion
Among the concerns of C P Bhambri’s response (“Revolutionary Armed Struggle in India,” EPW, 14 February 2015) to Sumanta Banerjee’s article titled “Hanoi (1965–68), Gaza (2014): Continuity and Divergence over...
Discussion
Another response to David Hulme and Mathilde Maitrot's "Has Microfi nance Lost Its Moral Compass?" (EPW, 29 November 2014), which takes a closer look at the role and working of microfinance institutions in India
Book Reviews
China-India: Pathways of Economic and Social Development edited by Delia Davin and Barbara Harriss-White, Proceedings of the British Academy, 193, published for The British Academy by Oxford University Press, London, 2014; pp xvii + 218, £...
Book Reviews
Ideas, Institutions, Processes: Essays in Memory of Satish Saberwal edited by N Jayaram; Hyderabad: Orient BlackSwan, 2014; pp x+294, Rs 795.
Reports From the States / Web Exclusives
Villagers explain why they call the “new capital” areas of Andhra Pradesh “class” while older cities like Vijayawada and Guntur are “mass”. The second in a series of photo essays documenting change in the...

VEDIC SCIENCE: THE HUE OF SAFFRON IDEOLOGY

Monday 30 March 2015
by Navneet Sharma, Pradeep Nair and Harikrishnan B.
“Ancient Sanskrit literature is full of descriptions of flying machines — Vimanas.... [T]he scientist sages Agastya and Bharadwaja had developed the lore of aircraft construction. Aeronautics or Vaimaanika Shastra is a part of Yantra Sarvasva of Bharadwaja. This is also known as Brihadvimaana Shastra...The knowledge of aeronautics is described in Sanskrit in 100 sections, eight chapters, 500 principles and 3000 slokas. Great sage Bharadwaja explained the construction of aircraft and way to fly it in air, on land, on water and use the same aircraft like a submarine....”
—Capt. Anand Bodas and Ameya Jadhav; Ancient Indian Aviation Technology
“A study of the work ‘Vymanika Shastra’ is presented.... It appears that this work cannot be dated earlier than 1904 and contains details which, on the basis of our present knowledge, force us to conclude the non-feasibility of heavier than craft of earlier times.”
—H.S. Mukunda and Others, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore; A Critical Study of the Work “Vymanika Shastra”
The above extreme appreciation of matters of the fact is not quoted to reflect upon the richness of Indian discourse on what is science. The former is a quote from a paper presented at the 102nd Indian Science Congress held at the University of Mumbai in January 2015. The latter is the scholarly and ‘scientific’ refutation already worked upon by scientists in their respective papers in 1974.
The question is about the vagaries and quirkiness of people in and with science in 2014-15. The government governed by a Hindu ‘cultural’ organisation, headed by a Prime Minister believing that Ganesha had a trunk face, courtesy plastic surgery (Lord, the Mighty is next up for appropriation), an HRD Minister who believes that a Minister of the Union of India can engage with palmistry and occult without breaching the Directive Principles of the Indian Constitution for scientific tempera-ment and is advised by the Bharatiya Shiksha Niti Ayog headed by Dina Nath Batra for corrective steps to Indianise (‘Hinduise’/’saffronise’) the dismal Macaualayvian (producing radical and rational people) education system of India. At a time when the top scientist, who co-ordinated the most successful indigenous Mars probe for the country, performs a special pooja in Tirupati before the launch so as not to leave anything for ‘chance’, the people should ‘realise’ that, if Vedic Science does not help us to fly high, then nothing else can save us from the fall from grace (caused by ‘Mlechcha’ Muslims and the European Christians). Thus, to rescue us, the ‘mightiest’ cultural organisation tells us to go back to the Vedas, or at least to the Vedic Science.
Before engaging with the idea of Vedic Science, one has to clearly understand the idea of science. It is difficult to engage someone who does not comprehend the idea of science and will simultaneously find it difficult to fathom the problem with the idea of Vedicscience. We belong to a subcontinent where we presume that everybody knowa what Vedis?
Veda: Belief as Knowledge
Etymologically Ved comes from the root word vid, means ‘to know’. Trying to understandVed, one should realise that Ved depends on a particular method of knowing, which is called verbal testimony—Shruti—as a source of knowledge. If Ved is a text, or a compilation, or a reportage of the times and approach to the issues of music, hymns,mantras, then they derive their sanctity from the method of knowing called Shruti. Every story, for instance, as in Satya Narayan Katha, uses a narrative which starts like ‘I am going to tell you that story which I listened to once upon a time’ or ‘I am going to tell you that story which I listened from another person who has listened it from yet another one’—so as to establish a lineage. So the listener gets the legitimacy of the source of that knowledge by verbal testimony. This is how Vedic knowledge establishes the lineage through verbal testimony and gets the sanctity. It is believed that Ved is divine revelation. You don’t learn it from experience or reason. It is not a compilation of Brahma’s or Vishnu’s or Shiva’s experience. It is a revelation, like Quran or Bible. For the sages who were meditating, it got intuitively revealed. The person who has written them or has compiled them does not abide by the idea of reason or experience. This form of knowledge is getting explicit by the methods of revelation and verbal testimony.
Even if we look at Vedic knowledge as the repository of ancient knowledge in the Indian culture, it only signifies the idea of India which arises from a very different standpoint. We are not talking about the India which includes the peninsular India or North-East India, but an India which has a very different identity—historically and geographically. (Basham, 1959) This typical idea of India is derived from the understanding of Indo-Aryan history, where Aryans came from outside. Even though there are different theories about whether Aryans came from Mesopotamia, Iran or the Middle East, it was the Aryans who discovered the Vedas or wrote them. This historical perspective underscores the difference between the identity of India of the pre-Vedic era from what we now call the federal geopolitical structure of India. It restricts its boundaries to a typically North Indian or North-West Indian spatial identity and to the region where Pali, Prakrit and Sanskrit were spoken as languages. We are not including other cultures and languages in this idea of India. Ved is an Indian text only in this part of India. Other parts of India have similar texts which are not pan-Indian in nature and are restricted to a particular region that shares cultural homogeneity, like the Sangam literature in peninsular India.
Thus Ved, which as a typically North Indian or North-West Indian text, shares knowledge achieved through verbal testimony. It is believed that the compilation of this particular form of knowledge happened at least 200 years before pre-Vedic era. Before commenting upon the temporal aspect of these texts, it should be considered that we generally understand the concept of time from the way it has been conceptualised by the Europeans, Anno Domini and Before Christ. Nevertheless the ‘Indian’ measure of time is characterised by the YugasSatya Yuga,Dwapar Yuga,Treta Yuga and Kali Yuga. We are not trying to check the veracity of this way of measuring time, but it it is important to understand that when we say 2000 years before, it means 2000 years within this Kali Yuga. That was when these compilations took place, spread over a long period of 2000 years. How a sacred text can be written in the Kali Yuga is another interesting commonsensical and commonsensically blasphemous question. Even Shankaracharya, as late as in the eighth century, contributed to the compilation of the Vedas. Thus, there were people who contributed to the Vedas 1000 years ago and 200 years ago also. So it’s not that it was something which was definitely written some 2000 years ago.
It is often flaunted by some people that the mantras in the Vedic texts are formulas to understand the world. These mantras are indeed explanations of the phenomena of the world, but explanations of a very different nature. For instance, the practice of Indian philosophers taking up the example of a pot to explain the idea of space clearly illustrates this approach. Through the example of the pot, they argue that the existence of the pot explains the idea of space existing inside and outside the pot. This is a very speculative way of thinking and elucidating concepts. But this is also a form of explanation; they are trying to explain it with the help of allegory or an example of a pot. But if the same question is asked to a scientist, she will explain it in a very different way. So, instead of talking explicitly about god [as is usually believed], Ved has explanations of natural phenomena as perceived and experienced by the contributors. It is a kind of explanation of the origin of the world. So Ved is a repository of knowledge, and is something which could be an extremely indigenous form of knowledge if we claim it like that.
But the problem is that we can’t even claim Ved as an indigenous body of knowledge, even if we ignore the historical narratives surrounding the existence of Ved and believe that the idea of India is more plural with multiple ‘Indias’ existing within India. For instance, indigenous knowledge could be anything, even the way in which members of tribal shepherds in India hold the knife while fleecing the sheep without cutting one’s own finger or the way potters shape clay into vessels may be taken as indigenous knowledge. This amount of knowledge has not been made part of the Vedic knowledge. But Vedic knowledge is very exclusive in the sense that it excludes many forms of knowledge practised by native Indians and Dalits. There is a specific form of knowledge which constitutes the Vedic knowledge. Thus, this makes it only a partial representation of the Indian knowledge system.
Science: Scientia and Scientism (L.)
A simultaneous look into the idea of science and the notion of Vedic knowledge will help us unravel the misnomer attributed to Vedic knowledge as a scientific system. In 1981, P.N. Haksar, Raja Ramanna and P.M. Bhargava jointly released a statement on scientific temper at the Nehru Centre in Bombay on July 19 which was later on reprinted in several issues of the Mainstream weekly. According to them, “science is a regenerative process of creating and collecting information to understand nature and man, and the relation of man with natural and social environment. Scientific temper is not just a collection of knowledge or facts; it is also not rationalism, although it promotes knowledge and rational thinking. It is an attitude of mind which calls for a particular outlook and pattern of behaviour. It is further an application of scientific methods to acquire knowledge and permeate through the society and influence the way people think and approach their political, social, economic, cultural and educational problems. Thus the spirit of inquiry and the acceptance of the right to question and be questioned are fundamental to scientific temper.”
Scientific temper is compatible with obser-vation and insight, reasoning, intuition, systematic work and creative impulse. It is an attitude of mind which helps to develop the ability in man to unravel the mysteries of the surroundings. Thus, it is a part of human culture, philosophy and existence. It considers knowledge as an open-ended and ever-evolving system. Scientific temper in a society helps people think rationally and objectively thereby creating an egalitarian, democratic and secular environment for growth and prosperity. (Prasad, 1982)
However, the idea of science as it functions today is more like a didactic language game. The problem of science is that it is a new language game which emerged out of a specific socio-historic context. What we understand as the idea of science today emerged in the 19th century in a particular socio-political context. (Rao, 1997) Looking back to the history of how the present identity of the concept of science evolved helps us to understand the structural idea of science which makes it different from knowledge. (Lakatos and Musgrave, 2004) The exponents of this socio-political movement were mainly inspired by the French Revolution that propagated this idea that science is very much different from philosophy as they vied with each other to have a separate identity. Terms like scientia or scientism reflect this idea that science as a systematic system of knowledge relies on rational, logical, experimental, and empirical methods based on observations, facts, findings and analysis. Even Social Sciences, Language and Mathematics fit into this definition, as all these disciplines share common characteristics. Even Vedic knowledge is syste-matic; it has its own logicality.
There is logicality even in a story, say in Alice in Wonderland, as it follows a basic premise which is to be followed further by a major premise. It is not that Vedicknowledge is bereft of deductions, inductions, assumptions and analysis. Nor has it been claimed that Vedic knowledge is no knowledge. It, in fact, is knowledge. It is a form of knowledge. The moment we call it science, or a systematic knowledge, we are defining systematic knowledge in a very different way. Being systematic has a different implication in science. We observe a problem, and then look multitudes of the same problem, and then see as how that multiplicity affects the observation of the problem. It also includes collecting similar and dis-similar experiences of that problem alongside analysing them. As part of the systematic process of science, we conduct an experiment controlling all its extraneous variables thereby reaching analysis. This is the Positivist idea of science. (Chalmers, 1999)
Being systematic does not mean only that you get the same result. Science works within a paradigm. And to be scientific, understanding the paradigm is essential. We have hundreds of names for Pea plant in different languages and dialects. But someone from Botany will call it Pisum sativum—the scientific name of the Pea plant. For a person who is trained in the paradigm of Science, Pisum Sativum will mean the same across the world. It is like the functioning of an idioglossia—denoting private languages spoken and shared by only a few people. Should it anyway mean that science is the largest and longest body of private language? Isn’t that science too is suffering from idioglossia? Such a question, however, may require a separate debate. But the point here is that science abides by a paradigm which pre-determines what the system, according to it, is.
The Ideology: Vedic Science
There are two different blocks in this discussion —Veda and Science. Before going into the problem and anomaly of putting these two—Veda and Science—together as VedicScience, it is important to discuss the term ideology. Any concept understood by any person is an idea. As we share it, it takes the form of knowledge. Thereafter, such forms of knowing get together to institutionalise knowledge. But the difference is that if you understand an idea with or without believing that there could not be any other idea, it becomes an ideology. Why any religion should have a problem with the existence of any other religion? Because the paradigm of every religion states that its god is the most powerful one, which makes it impossible to accept the existence of another form of god. Needless to mention, the question of relative supremacy has already arisen. Even in Hindu mythology, where there are 33 billion gods, every god has his own department. Similarly, if you believe that the world is created through Big Bang, you cannot believe that it was created by Bramha. These are two different paradigms. Like oil and water, these paradigms do not converge or intermingle.
There are paradigmatic differences within Sciences also. When Physics believes that matter is the elementary reality, Biology says that cell is the basic reality; they do not contradict each other or win over each other. On the contrary, they are just different paradigms. Different paradigms propagate different ideas, but it is the human intervention that makes them ideology. So ideologues could exist in Physics as well as in Biology. Such ideologues do more harm to science than good. When compared to each other Religion, Vedic knowledge and Science abide by mutually different paradigms. Thus, Vedic knowledge, as a form of knowledge, exists with its own legitimacy within its own paradigm.
But why do people add the suffix ‘science’ to Vedic knowledge? Why does Vedicknowledge need legitimacy from science? Somebody who is hell-bent on calling Vedicscience is in fact seeking legitimacy for Vedic knowledge. They are doing it with a purpose explicitly and implicitly motivated by their ideology. What then is the ideology behind seeking legitimacy from science? If somebody believes in god, that is a question of faith. You can’t alter faith by scientifically explaining that there is no god or by presenting ‘scientific’ evidence for the existence/non-existence of god. For believing in god we need not see god. When a teacher says that Paris is the capital of France, students believe it, even without demanding to see it, since the teacher, as far as many students are concerned, has the power of verbal testimony. Even if you go to Paris, you may still seek where is Paris in Paris, because Paris exists as a concept too. Similarly god exists as a concept, which does not demand a scientific explanation and verification.
The problem in fact is theoretical. Could the appendage of science, make anything science? For instance, when we attach the term ‘science’ with ‘social’ (as in Social Science), does it become science? Or when we say Political Science, is it actually a science? Not necessary always. Even by adding the term ‘science’, Vedic knowledge will not become science, as it does not abide by the Positivist paradigm. All other disciplines other than those following the paradigm of Positivist science belong to a natural domain. They can be, on account of the methodology, called natural sciences, based on a specific sense of a discipline. In a manner of speaking, we don’t want to lose the glory of the Vedicknowledge by calling it science. Therefore, why seek legitimacy from a discipline which emerged only 200 years ago to validate a form of knowledge which existed much prior to it? This is a tricky ploy to exploit the deeply ingrained idea of Positivist knowledge as the most legitimate one. Our concept of knowledge has been constructed/shaped in such a way that the moment we call anything science, it gains legitimacy. Thus, science seems like a penultimate ploy lending legitimacy to anything and sell it—right from Yoga packages to toilet cleaners. So if you need validity for any blind claim, you present it as science. That is what the ideologically and perhaps commercially motivated idea of Vedicscience signifies.
This ideology, which seeks to establish legitimacy for Vedic knowledge by calling it science, tells you that if you believe that Ved is the scientific knowledge, you must also believe that Indians (Hindus) had a superior idea of knowledge and further Indians would regain the supreme capacity to rule the world which could be proclaimed by the great Hindu movement in times to come. When they seek legitimacy to Vedic knowledge, they are being motivated by a specific ideology—Hindutva. What is implied is an urge that if you believe Vedic knowledge as superior, you must vote for a particular political party which would struggle to make sure that Ved be called science. It keeps you reminding how ignorant we are about the greatness of our ancient wisdom and also that it was the mlechcha Muslims and foreigners who came to India and ruined it. So let’s go back to the Vedic era and reclaim glory to the Hindu world. Let us believe that there will be some superior Hindu leader who will rule across the world and will get you the legitimate right of being Hindu—the most intelligent, supreme, superior race in the world. Similar ideology proclaims about the idea of soul as scientific and presents scientific evidence for its existence, and establishes that if you believe in the existence ofAtma, you should believe that it will take you to Paramatma, but there are some specific tasks which should be done, or the Atma will not reach Paramatma and one of these tasks is to vote for the BJP. This is the agenda of the ideology that motivates them to seek legitimacy for Vedic knowledge as science.

New IITs, IIMs will look different

Many more Indian Institutes of Technology and Indian Institutes of Management may come up in the country before long. A Human Resources Development ministry committee, headed by education secretary and consisting of KV Kamath, chairperson, ICICI among others, has accepted the recommendations submitted by noted architect Hafeez Contractor.
The concept was basically prepared for the central educational institutions after undertaking a case study of national and international educational institutions. The case study also included a detailed analysis of the location, land parcel, students enrolled, faculty available, courses offered and the facilities provided at the select institutions.
According to Hafeez Contractor’s recommendations, the NITs with 6,000 students should be built on 150 acre campus. Besides, the IITs with 10,000 students should have a 260 acre campus while the Central Universities with 10,000 students should be built on 250 acre campus. In case of Indian Institutes of Management, Contractor said that those with 1,000 students should have a campus of 5 to 10 acres.
The concept was broad enough in its sweep to take care of the regulatory bodies and calculations based on floor plans, administrative, academic blocks, faculty and staff accommodation and hostels in IIMs, IITs and NITs. His recommendation also included a model architectural map indicating the horizontal and vertical spread of the building blocks with scope of future expansion.

Vedanta - Fool, Never be Foolproof


April Fool's Day is as good as any to start becoming serious about taking the world and oneself less seriously . One way in which you can judge a person's ability to negotiate with the world is how lightly he takes himself. Someone who values the clothes he wears will sooner or later be terrified of stepping out, especially if there are puddles on the road, never mind fellow humans.We are told about the importance of the Self, the value of the Brahmn that resides within us all, as well as how to influence friends and win people -or is it the other way round? All this is about the upkeep of a robust self-esteem.So, it may strike odd to argue that to value oneself, one should take oneself less seriously .
We are essentially bur lesque, rollicking beings. To treat ourselves in any other way would be like demeaning a great work of art by keeping it `safe and locked away' in a cupboard with flowers marking the spot. We are funny -in the sense of comic, if not always with a sense of humour -ludicrous, life-affirming, majestic in our tragiccomedy creatures.
Losing this notion is fooling ourselves. As one fool once told another, “You'd make me laugh if it wasn't prohibited.“
To which the other asks, “We have lost our rights?“ To which comes the diagnosis of the malaise, “We got rid of them.“
It is by being foolish, by being touched by a certain madness -and laughter is just one form -by rejecting the pedestal both for ourselves and others, that we rather make ourselves special. Never be foolproof.
UGC has failed, scrap it, says HRD panel
New Delhi:


One of the first committees set up by HRD minister Smriti Z Irani to review the working of University Grants Commission (UGC) has said the regulator has not only “failed to fulfill its mandate but also has not been able to deal with emerging diverse complexities“ and should be replaced by a National Higher Education Authority .Headed by former UGC chairperson Hari Gautam, the committee has said any “restructuring“ of UGC will be a “futile“ exercise, as will amend ing the UGC Act. Therefore, it has recommended the setting up of a new authority through an act of Parliament and prepared a draft bill. Till such time a body is set up, the panel says, the HRD ministry can bring about changes in UGC through an executive order.
Ministry sources said the recommendations were “farreaching“ and “will be looked into seriously“. Among the committee's other suggestions are a national research aptitude test for PhD admission and teaching of yoga and transcendental meditation. The HRD committee also rec ommends doing away with the 10-year criterion for professors to become vice-chancellors.
The two-volume report submitted by the committee to the ministry says UGC is “plagued in the main by reductionism in its functioning“.“It (UGC) has side-stepped its function of being a sentinel of excellence in education and embraced the relatively easier function of funding education.“
The report says the UGC staff is unhappy as only “few find favour and are delegated with powers to perform in important areas while many of them are left out with hardly much to contribute... It is said that they are pushed around through an element of fear and threat. The overall impression is that there is a manmade crisis which seems to be cause of unhealthy ambience and poor performance of UGC.“
Coming down heavily on the functioning of the top levels, the committee says the UGC chairperson “should be advised to strictly keep a vigilant track of the various performance areas“ and “assess the contribution at all levels“.
The chairperson, it adds, should spend more time in his “seat“ than go around the “country and the world on occasions that have not much relevance for the system he governs“. The committee has recommended that the chairperson's performance “be assessed once after three years and then at the end of his tenure of five years by a committee constituted by HRD“.
For the full report, log on to http:www.timesofindia.com

Love und

Animals and humans frequently bond with unconditional love. Read on to find out more.

A pink heart-shaped balloon floats in the blue sky. An advertisement promises us a kiss if our clothes are brighter. A parent and child exchange a quick hug before alighting a school bus. Two best friends in a heated argument break out into spontaneous laughter. A blood-red hibiscus grows its way through a pile of concrete rubble.
The images of love and its various manifestations greet us on a daily basis. Without exaggeration, there is not a single day when we are not touched by its power. Just like its nature, love can be vast or minuscule depending on how one defines it. Living with a dog is a daily reminder of the power of this force that makes the world goes around.
Dogs show us, in countless ways, the simplicity behind the complex phenomenon known as love.
Jurra’s story
Jurra is an eight-month-old golden Labrador dog and one might suspect that she has never contemplated love and its definitions. (It is, of course, a human obsession!)
Jurra is love — meaning that her whole way of looking at the world is from a very different point of view. There are no expectations of what love is, how it should be and how one must behave when expressing it. Her love is rooted in what is happening at present — she carries no past history and no sense of future expectations.
Everything that comes into her field of vision is met with certain clarity, and she responds to what comes her way with a natural ease. A butterfly sunning itself is tickled by her nose, and her tail wagging in great momentum means she has seen her favourite people. Biologists call this instinct. We call it love undefined!
Expectations
One of the characteristics of human love in various relationships is that it is based on expectations.
If we observe the countless ways in which our love manifests, there is always an undercurrent of wanting something. While in some relationships, this is glaringly obvious; in others it is more subtle. When a relationship collapses or is in conflict, it is normally that either person is unwilling to let go of a need that they seek in the other. In fact, when students often come and tell me that they “hate” someone, we have a discussion and they inevitably realise that what they hate is something that they are totally in love with.
Very few beings can love unconditionally, but Jurra’s expression of love is just that. She is totally immune to what you are wearing, how you are looking, body shape and size or whether you have had a bad hair day! The joy with which she greets you can make the surliest among us break into an inner smile. Jurra, in that moment of expressing her love, is not thinking of herself. It is very difficult to understand the nature of unconditional love unless one has really experienced it. A student of mine had a severe reading difficulty, and this often clouded her sense of confidence. One summer holiday, she visited her grandparents who had a dog. Through the course of the month, a friendship developed and both would spend a lot of time together.
One afternoon, the family was surprised to hear her reading aloud to the dog. Her reading still had errors but there was a new-found confidence in the reading. When asked about it, she said candidly, “Oh, Juno does not judge me, she just listens.” There are countless stories of how animals and humans have bonded over this kind of unconditional love. How and why it transpires will remain a mystery in the nature of things.
Dimensions
One of the common misconceptions about the nature of love is that it excludes any discomfort. We expect love to be always pleasant and wrap us in a bubble of coziness.But love has other dimensions to it. Sometimes, love can be tough and seem unfair as it challenges us to face pain and step out of our comfort zone.
A friend who was caught up in a hectic life, found herself in a situation where she had to be home bound to nurse her ailing dog. The dog had developed a cancerous growth and needed a lot of nursing and healing. For someone who had never faced such an unpleasant task that demanded her time and courage, she said it was a lesson in understanding the depths of her own reservoir of love. Something inside her had transformed, and just caring for one who had no voice changed the way she viewed people and life. Each day, Jurra shows us a part of ourselves that we did not know existed. She, of course, is blissfully unaware, and at the time of writing this, has just brought a coconut from the garden as a gift offering.

Maybe we need to talk less about love and live it a little more. Something my best friend teaches me every moment, an ever expanding curriculum on the nature of love!efined

270 on death row in India, 64 sentenced last year: Amnesty

But no executions took place in 2014; globally, executions fell by a fifth, and two-thirds of the world has abolished the death penalty

Indian courts handed down at least 64 death sentences last year, but no executions took place, largely as a result of court rulings, new data from Amnesty International shows. Globally, executions fell by a fifth, and two-thirds of the world has abolished the death penalty.
China continues to execute the most people globally — thousands every year, the human rights group said in a new report published early on Wednesday — but does not publish any data. Iran, Iraq and Saudi Arabia accounted for nearly three-quarters of the rest of the world’s executions in 2014.
The United States of America executed 35 people, its fewest in 20 years.
In India, which saw the execution of Ajmal Kasab in late 2012 and Afzal Guru in early 2013 after a gap of eight years, several executions scheduled for 2014 were put on hold.
In January, a landmark Supreme Court ruling laid down guidelines for death sentences, including classifying delay in the disposal of mercy petitions as grounds for commutation, as also mental disability. Information reported by the Death Penalty Research Project of the National Law University in Delhi indicated that 270 people were on death row in various Indian prisons, and eight mercy petitions were rejected in 2014.
Pakistan lifted a six-year moratorium on executions after the Peshawar school massacre. Seven people were executed in 2014. As of Tuesday, 66 people have been hanged since the lifting of the moratorium, and Amnesty estimated that 8,000 more persons were on death row.
“Governments using the death penalty to tackle crime are deluding themselves. There is no evidence that shows the threat of execution is more of a deterrent than any other punishment,” said Salil Shetty, Amnesty International’s Secretary General, said in a statement.