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Jainism: The Cosmic Vision
who can claim final and absolute victory in the race for armaments? Like Arjun, the nations believing in violent means shall have to declare, "Nor do we know which for us is better, whether we conquer them or they conquer us." Ahimsa teaches us that recourse to armed force is an infallible sign of the brute in man, that war neither profits the victor nor the vanquished.
The second great vow is Truth. To speak the truth, one requires moral courage. Only those, who have conquered greed, fear, anger, jealousy, ego, vulgarity, frivolity etc., can speak the truth when required.
Jainism always advocates the generous view, the view that there can be a grain of truth in what the other persons say, Anekantadrishti, for truth is relative. As you have full faith in what is truth from your point of view, so too, one should make room for the view-point of others. Thus, Anekantavada (Theory of many-sidedness) enables one to tolerate and co-ordinate a wide range of points-of-view in a spirit of co-operation, even if, at times, these may be contradictory. This is the true method involving ceaseless endeavour to search out truth. To regard everything from a relative point of view and to see an element of truth in everything, this is Anekantavada. Not ‘mine is the truth', but 'truth is mine' should be one's motto.
Anekantavada is the heart of Jainism. It constitutes its most significant contribution to religious thought, and especially in the field of ethics. It teaches that the kingdom of truth can be reached through plurality of ways. It also teaches not to impose one's own thoughts or views on others, and to try to reconcile the thoughts or view-points of others with one's own. This principle, therefore, if, earnestly, is put into practice, shows us
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