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Political Ideas in Buddhism and Agganna Sutta

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  • čas přidán 9. 05. 2016
  • This Lecture talks about Political Ideas in Buddhism and Agganna Sutta

Komentáře • 25

  • @jagatheesanchandrasekharan7248

    Buddha’s political philosophy is therapeutic, because Buddha’s entire philosophy is paideia. This finds echo in Plato. Two-thirds of Plato’s Republic is devoted to education. A “just” pedagogy - a paideia which does justice to evolving beings - is a pilgrimage of centering; nourished by dialogue and debate; manifest in creative talent, “giving birth to beauty in time.”
    A just society emerges from schools that are gardens of learning. Buddha says: Society’s main function is to nourish those gardens, whose fruits are future citizens. Buddha’s culture-vision is romantic and pragmatic: The primary function of society is to act as pedagogical playground for evolving beings.
    Buddha, like Aristotle, was less concerned with the form of government than its consequence. Monarchy, aristocracy, democracy, or any combination thereof - its measure is benevolence: the social virtue it serves.
    Buddha gave advice to many kings. He recommended universal health care, anticipating Jesus: “Feed the poor; heal the sick.”
    Buddha was an ecological and animal rights activist. He championed a thriving merchant class for stimulating a progressive marketplace of ideas. He undercut Hindu class, caste, and misogynous prejudice by allowing anyone, including women, into the Sangha.
    Sangha members owned no more than a bowl and robe; perhaps also a blanket and staff. They were obliged to meditate, study, and debate.
    They had to learn the alchemy of medicine, and the art of healing. They balanced rules and reform by democratic consensus. They were invited to leave the community; go forth as ambassadors of the Dharma;
    They had to learn the alchemy of medicine, and the art of healing. They balanced rules and reform by democratic consensus. They were invited to leave the community; go forth as ambassadors of the Dharma; learn by doing; serve the greater good of the greater whole.
    Buddha was “a compassionate and pragmatic teacher who was intent on promoting a social order in which people can live together peacefully … in accord with ethical guidelines. (p. 3)
    In Buddhist philosophy and practice, “each person rises above the demands of narrow self-interest and develops a sincere, large-hearted concern for the welfare of others and the greater good of the whole.” (p. 110)
    “While the Buddha principally aimed at guiding people toward moral and spiritual progress, he was fully aware that their capacity for moral and spiritual development depends upon the material conditions of the society in which they live. He acutely realized that when people are mired in poverty and oppressed by hunger and want, they will find it hard to hold to a path of moral rectitude. … Thus he saw that the provision of economic justice is integral to social harmony and political stability.” (p. 111)

  • @Latika9701
    @Latika9701 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you so much sir for clear explanation on Buddhism with special reference to AggannaSutta ... I would really appreciate your way of teaching sir. Since my base on Indian Political thought is very weak so it is very helpful for me ..

  • @jagatheesanchandrasekharan7248

    Theravada emphasizes the wisdom-ideal of the arhat. Mahayana (which includes Tantra and Zen) emphasizes the compassion-ideal of the bodhisattva. But we must always keep in mind that for Buddhism as a whole, and right from the start, wisdom and compassion - prajna and karuna - are, in essence, two names for the same. This is important because the unity of wisdom and compassion is the heart of Buddha’s political philosophy. Siddhartha Gautama’s pedagogy always operates on three levels: individual, social, and political. These three levels are interconnected, interdependent, mutually interpenetrating; and each is, or ought to be, informed by Dharma as existential essence and cosmological context - what Lao Tzu calls Tao, understood as Nature’s way, process, harmony, balance. A common refrain in Buddha’s teaching is that a Buddha arises “for the welfare of the multitude.”[/ref]
    Nevertheless, the journey to enlightenment must still be made. Mentors and guidelines are helpful, but each individual must do the hard work alone. Mahayana thinking, often best expressed in Zen, is inherently paradoxical. It requires what I call “dialectical thinking.” Mahayana says that we are already enlightened. It also says that our primary task in life is to become enlightened. This is a paradox, not a contradiction. In Platonic terms, the enlightenment adventure is the journey to “recollection” - to the realization that we are, and always have been, embodiments of the Agathon (the Good, the True, the Beautiful).
    Mahayana means “great vehicle.” Maha is “great” (or “large”); yana is “vehicle.” Mahayana Buddhism occasionally calls Theravada “Hinayana” (“small vehicle”). Theravada emphasizes the individual quest for enlightenment; so it only takes a “small vehicle” (a hinayana, or “small raft”) to carry the individual across the river of illusion, from samsara to nirvana. (The raft is the practice of overcoming the obstacles to awakening.) But Mahayana says that individual enlightenment is not nearly enough. The point is to bring everyone to “freedom from suffering;” and to bring everyone across the river of illusion, a large vehicle - a maha-yana - is needed. And to accomplish this, the enlightened sage must engage in the perpetual practice of compassion (karuna). And this is precisely what the Buddha did. Buddha was a bodhisattva.
    We may say, then, that Mahayana Buddhism has two, interrelated aspects. It collapses the distinction between samsara and nirvana, asserting that we are already enlightened (even if, paradoxically, we must pursue that realization experientially). It also asserts that compassion is the path to wisdom, and the necessary fruit of wisdom, supplementing the arhat ideal with that of the bodhisattva. A bodhisattva - by definition a compassionate peace-maker - manifests wisdom by helping to establish institutions of social justice.
    Grounded in bodhichitta - the bodhisattva ideal of socially engaged compassion - Mahayana Buddhism divinizes Buddha; introduces a majestic pantheon of Buddhas and celestial Bodhisattvas; expands the universe into a multiverse; and says that we are already enlightened. Nirvana’s delight is the essence of our being and becoming. Wisdom is compassion with a smile.

  • @darsuraya4231
    @darsuraya4231 Před 5 lety +2

    Great
    Emotions + rationality ....i personally believe is a life of worth living ....

  • @anjalisheartcorner7220
    @anjalisheartcorner7220 Před 6 lety +6

    Sir "mary Wollstonecraft "par bhi vidio bnaiye ... It's is also part of delhi university syllabus(cbcs)

  • @shivamyadav-ve9ew
    @shivamyadav-ve9ew Před 7 lety +1

    I did not comprehend the way of your delineation.

  • @jagatheesanchandrasekharan7248

    The Fourth Noble Truth provides a healing prescription in the form of the Eightfold Path. The Eightfold Path is a Way to awakening, to Nibbana. The eight steps on The Path are: Right thinking, speaking, intention, action, vocation, effort, concentration (mindfulness), and meditation. Note that “right action” is re-emphasized in “right vocation.” All livelihood is to be “a path with heart,” guided by The Healer’s maxim, “Above all, do no harm.” This is Buddha’s Dharma in a seashell. In Buddhist discourse, Dharma is truth, the way to truth, and the teachings that point the way.
    “Are you a god?” asked a Hindu sage.
    “No,” replied the Buddha.
    “Are you a man?”
    “No,” replied the Buddha.
    “What are you?”
    “Awake,” replied the Buddha.
    The Three Jewels of Buddhism are: Buddha, Dharma, Sangha - Teacher, Teaching, and Community.
    The word Buddha means “awake.” Budh is a Sanskrit verb. It means “to know.” Budh is also root of the word bodhi - “wisdom.” A bodhi-sattva is a “wise-being.” Sattva is the attribute - the guna, the “middle way” - that stimulates awakening, “recollection,” what Plato calls anamnesis.
    Dhamma has many meanings, including truth, reality, pattern, doctrine, duty, law, teaching, being, order, virtue, society, and holding. Dharma is roughly equivalent to the Chinese Tao. Buddha’s dharma - his teaching - changed the conventional meaning of “duty.” One’s highest duty, Buddha taught, was the actualization of one’s spiritual potential; the enlightenment adventure; what Socrates would later call “care and perfection of the soul.”
    Buddhism, like Platonism, has often been misinterpreted as an other-worldly philosophy. In fact, however, Plato and Buddha share a passion for virtue: the translation of wisdom into ethics.
    Wisdom and compassion - prajna and karuna - are “the two wings of Buddhism,” paralleling the Greek roots of “philosophy” (Philos-Sophos: Love-Wisdom). Buddha taught that compassion is the path to wisdom, and also the fruit of wisdom. As a Tibetan sage said: “The reward for service is increased opportunity to serve.”
    For Socrates and Buddha, philosophy - awakening - is a raja yoga: a “royal way.” Philosophy is the journey from the love of wisdom to the wisdom of love. This journey transforms the conventional meaning of duty into a calling to live an examined or “awakened” life. For a bodhisattva, the meaning of life is learning and service.
    The journey from ignorance (avidya) to wisdom (vidya, prajna, bodhi) - from folly to freedom, from sleepwalking to awakening - is the journey from samsara to nirvana, then back again to be of service. In this respect, the Buddhist view of enlightenment parallels the journey of the philosopher in Plato’s allegory of the cave in the Republic. In Plato’s allegory, unenlightened thought is represented by prisoners trapped in a cave who can only see shadows cast by the artificial light of a fire. This is a world of illusion (maya in Sanskrit) and is divided from the world of truth (the outside world, where real objects are illuminated by the natural light of the sun), and the philosopher journeys from the former to the latter, before returning to the cave or illusory world to help others find a path out.
    The Buddhist use of the term maya does not, however, mean that the world is illusion. It means that one who thinks what appears is all there is is in a state of illusion. Just as Plato calls into question the firm division between cave and outside world in other dialogues and parts of the Republic, so too does Buddhist thought break down the firm division between illusion and reality, samsara and nirvana. As Nagarjuna said: “One who thinks the world is real is dumb as a cow. One who thinks the world is not real is even dumber.” Or, in the words of a postmodern poet:
    The Buddhist use of the term maya does not, however, mean that the world is illusion. It means that one who thinks what appears is all there is is in a state of illusion. Just as Plato calls into question the firm division between cave and outside world in other dialogues and parts of the Republic, so too does Buddhist thought break down the firm division between illusion and reality, samsara and nirvana. As Nagarjuna said: “One who thinks the world is real is dumb as a cow. One who thinks the world is not real is even dumber.” Or, in the words of a postmodern poet: “All the world’s a stage; but the bullets are real.”
    Buddha drew a provisional distinction between samara and nirvana. Original, “elder” Buddhism - Theravada - emphasized the journey from samsara to Nibbana. But as Buddhism evolved, Mahayana Buddhism collapsed that distinction, emphasizing nirvana in samsara.
    Nagarjuna’s Madhyamaka - “middle way” - provokes a distinction between “provisional” and “ultimate” truth, approximating the difference between samsara and nirvana; or, if you will: being in Plato’s cave and being out of it. By this account, the journey from suffering to non-suffering is almost, but not quite, the journey from samsara to nirvana. To become “awake” is to journey from ignorance to wisdom, finding nirvanic freedom in samsaric opportunity.
    Awakening is, existentially, nirvana in samsara. This is because, metaphysically, samsara is in nirvana. We cross to the other shore only to find ourselves on the shore where we stood. This is a Buddhist version of the holographic Hermetic Dictum: “Microcosm mirrors macrocosm.”
    T. S. Eliot echoes Buddhist insight when he observes: “We shall not cease from exploration, and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time.”
    A bodhisattva serves humanity by journeying from ignorance to wisdom, from samsara to nirvana, and then skillfully showing ultimate truth permeating provisional truth. As in Plato’s Symposium, up and down the stairway to heaven, giving birth to beauty in time.
    The adventure to Equanimity - sattva, samadhi, upeksha - is Odyssean. The awakening quest is a constant test of impeccability; a razor’s edge of challenge and response. Though the stormy voyage to satori leads at last to peace (samadhi) - even bliss (ananda) - one remains surrounded by The Samsaric Absurd. To be a bodhisattva hero is to endure feeling all too often Sisyphean. Yet, as Camus says, “one must imagine Sisyphus happy.” Shakyamuni, too, smiles. Indeed, the first step on The Eightfold Path is “right thinking,” which, in Nietzsche, becomes, “There is nothing more necessary than cheerfulness.”
    Asked on his death-bed to summarize his teaching, Buddha said: “Do your best, be detached, and be a lamp unto yourself.”
    Buddha was known to say: “Don’t believe in me. In fact, don’t even believe me. Find out for yourself.”
    The Evolution of Buddhism
    Gautama’s life reflects the three archetypal stages in what Joseph Campbell calls “The Hero’s Journey” - Departure, Initiation, Return. Siddhartha departs the palace; achieves enlightenment; returns to community to begin his career as a teacher. He teaches the Four Noble Truths.
    Siddhartha’s inaugurating political act was almost covert. He taught his first sermon - The Four Noble Truths - to his first five disciples. This small group was the beginning of the sangha - the Buddhist Community.
    The sangha would grow; slowly for a while, then exponentially. In 250 BCE, Emperor Ashoka turned his vast kingdom into a Dharma Nation, based on Buddha’s teachings.
    Siddhartha’s second political act was revolutionary and counter-cultural. He created monasticism. Individuals could drop out of their assigned roles - their dharma, “duty” - in a militaristic and class and caste structured Hindu society, shave their hair, put on a robe, and devote themselves to the enlightenment adventure.
    In India, monastics - bhikshus and bhikshunis, monks and nuns - would walk once a day to a nearby village or metropolis in humble pilgrimage for alms. Hindu tradition honored the opportunity to be of service to those on the spiritual path. “Householders” gained “merit” in providing monks with food. A bhikshu or bhikshuni might, in return, offer a short dharma talk.
    When Buddhism spread to China, there was a Confucian ethic of self-reliance quite the opposite of Indian generosity. No “begging” allowed. Buddhist monks were forced to innovate.
    Zen - called Ch’an in Chinese - expanded monastic life to include gardening, thus beginning a work-ethic of enduring practicality and aesthetics.
    Monastic life included meditation, chanting, chores, study, debate, and the art of medicine. Buddhism spread throughout India and Asia largely because its practitioners were healers. People referred to wandering Buddhists as “medicine monks.” People were impressed and grateful. They inquired about therapeutic skill.
    Buddha’s second turning of the Dharma Wheel - the seed for what might be called the Mahayana revolution - collapses the distinction between samsara and Nibbana. That distinction was initially offered as a provisional, heuristic device. It stimulates the journey to awakening. But Siddhartha knew that this provisional distinction could easily be reified into a sharp and dogmatic dualism, as if nirvanic freedom is somewhere else, and something other than what we are at the core of our being. Mahayana Buddhism adds the clarification that precludes that mistake.[ref]It would be a mistake to make too sharp a distinction between Theravada and Mahayana Buddhism. There is, of course, a difference in emphasis.

  • @jagatheesanchandrasekharan7248

    Mahayana includes Tibetan Buddhism and Zen. In Mahayana Buddhism, Nagarjuna is revered as “a second Buddha.” Nagarjuna was a scholar yogi and early abbot of Nalanda Monastic University. Nalanda was several hundred times larger than Plato’s Academy. Nagarjuna founded Madhyamaka - “Middle Way” Buddhism. Madhyamaka is the lotus at the heart of the Mahayana Renaissance in Indian Buddhism, blooming in the first thousand years CE.
    After 500 years of Theravada Buddhist influence, India, at the turn to the Common Era, blossomed into what was, perhaps, the most peaceful, prosperous, and creative culture the world has ever known, becoming The Jewel of Asia with the rise of Mahayana Buddhism and the socially interacting bodhisattva ideal.
    New texts emerge, mostly in Sanskrit. Texts like the Heart Sutra, Diamond Sutra, Lotus Sutra, Vimalakirti Sutra, Lankavatara Sutra, and Avatamsaka (“Flower Garland”) Sutra. About 500 CE, Mahayana introduced the long esoteric, thunderbolt Tantric path to enlightenment.New texts emerge, mostly in Sanskrit. Texts like the Heart Sutra, Diamond Sutra, Lotus Sutra, Vimalakirti Sutra, Lankavatara Sutra, and Avatamsaka (“Flower Garland”) Sutra. About 500 CE, Mahayana introduced the long esoteric, thunderbolt Tantric path to enlightenment, called Vajrayana - the “diamond vehicle.” This is the historical unfolding of Buddha’s seed for the third turning of the Dharma Wheel.
    Buddha’s third turning of the Dharma Wheel shows that to be a Buddha is to be a shaman. In Vajrayana tradition, the ideal of fully awake human being is “transpersonal” - more than merely “human,” and better than being a god.
    Tantra is the diamond path to metamorphosis; the yogic alchemy of angelic transformation to mahasiddha. A mahasiddha is a Vajrayana Magus. Hermes Trismegistus. Shaman, healer, sage.
    Actualizing Blake’s dictum that “the paranormal is normal,” a Tantric adept, fusing Zen meditation and yogic discipline with shamanic imagination, becomes a “magical being,” with exponential energy for a life of service.
    Vajrayana flourished for the next 500 years until the Muslim invasions beginning in the year 1000. For Buddhist monastic universities - the greatest gardens of learning the world has ever seen - those invasions launched 200 years of nightmare.
    By the year 1200, Buddhism had virtually vanished in the land of its birth, the smoke from Nalanda’s smoldering libraries darkening the skies for months.
    As historical footnote, we might observe a certain irony. The Muslims were so impressed by what they had destroyed, they were inspired to recreate Buddhist Gardens of Learning in Islamic mold, giving birth to Hagia Sophia and Andalusian Spain, thus sparking the European Renaissance with its own double culmination in Newtonian science and the French Revolution.
    By the time of Buddhism’s disappearance in India, Siddhartha’s Dharma had already spread throughout Southeast Asia. Also into Kashmir, Afghanistan, Bhutan. Across Central Asia west; and across the Silk Route east, into Mongolia and China.
    Around 500 CE, the legendary Bodhidharma sailed from Sri Lanka and brought meditative Buddhism (dhyana) to China. By the year 600, dhyana Buddhism in China was merging with Taoism to give birth to Ch’an Buddhism, which, crossing to Japan around the year 1200, became known as Zen.
    Beginning in the 7th century, Buddhism crossed the Himalayas into Tibet, where the Tantric tradition in particular, built on a solid practice of Theravada and Mahayana, survived and grew. Tibetan Buddhism now nourishes the postmodern soul with treasures therapeutic and global.
    Said the voice in the bell: “Aim for Beauty, and all will be well.”
    czcams.com/video/Zswtoz3qoIg/video.html
    Buddha gives advice to Kings or Rulers of his time Buddhism Explained
    Buddha’s Political Philosophy
    The demand to abandon illusions about our condition
    is a demand to abandon the conditions which require illusion.Karl Marx
    Buddha’s political philosophy begins with pedagogy. Society should exist for the sake of schools; not the other way around.
    At the core of Buddha’s political philosophy is the notion that “human life is precious, endowed with freedom and opportunity.” The preciousness of life is Kantian “dignity,” manifest in what Martin Buber calls “I-Thou” relations. For Buddha: All is sacred; the only ‘profane’ is not to know that.

  • @jagatheesanchandrasekharan7248

    Bikkhu Bodhi
    The highest social virtue is awakening (prajna) - in mindfully compassionate body, speech and mind (karuna).
    Compassion is the essence of Buddha’s political philosophy. In Kantian terms: Wisdom without compassion is like concepts without percepts. Kant articulates the Buddhist challenge: The task - individual and collective - is to move “from an age of enlightenment to a more enlightened age.”
    As a social virtue - at the heart of Buddha’s political philosophy and manifest in the sangha - cooperation takes primacy over competition. Instead of, “How can I use you to maximize personal gain?” - one bows and thinks, “How can I best be of service?”
    While Buddhist practitioners “take refuge” in The Three Jewels - Buddha, Dharma, Sangha - “refuge” is understood not so much as a place of comfort as a vigorous adventure in self-discovery and selfless service.
    Buddhism asserts (with echoes in Rousseau, Blake, Wordsworth, and Emerson) that joy and compassion constitute our “natural attitude;” that unity has primacy over separation; that interbeing - universal brother-sisterhood - is the quantum field sustaining the dance of diversity.
    Buddha’s famous declaration of no-self - anatman - is not a denial of individuality or soul. It is a way of showing “soul” as window to the universe. The universe of interbeing. Our mutually interpenetrating influence in a unified field spiced with karmic effort and a common pedagogical project.
    “Interbeing” (pratitya-samutpadha - “dependent co-origination”) is Buddha’s quantum insight into universal brother-sisterhood. Universal brother-sisterhood promotes heart-centered rationality. Heart-centered rationality points to the tension in detached action.
    The Taoist name for detached action is wu-wei. Wu-wei, literally “not-doing,” signifies equanimity, going with the flow, non-interfering.
    Yet Lao Tzu, like Jesus and Buddha, was first and foremost a pacifist; and the doing of not-doing (wei-wu-wei) in no way implies indifference to injustice and suffering. Indeed, the Tao Te Ching - like The Gospels and the Dhammapada (“Sayings of the Buddha”) - articulates a path to peace.
    Buddhism has been called “the rational religion” because it balances meditative depth and equanimity with Socratic gusto of scrutiny and debate. It has been called “religion without God” because it is, at heart, more existential than theological. Heart-centered rationality is pragmatic. Buddha’s point is: We are karmic creatures, co-creating the world in which we live; and it is folly to create anything less than beauty.
    We might say, in sum: 1) Buddha does not say life is suffering. He says the unenlightened life is suffering. 2) Buddhism is not an other-worldly escape from life, but a joyful embrace of life as profound and precious opportunity for learning, exploring, evolving, sharing, caring, and creating. 3) Buddha proposes the education of desire, not its elimination. 4) Buddhism as a whole proposes that the meaning of life is learning and service. 5) The Buddhist concept of emptiness (shunyata, which, in Western terms, undermines Cartesian dualism and explodes the Aristotelian notion of “substance”) is best understood as interbeing.link.springer.com/.../10.1007%2F978-3-319-31816-5...
    Governance and Buddhism
    Based on the spirit of Sobbe satta shuketa vabantu meaning all entities be happy, Buddhist governance offers a total system perspective of governance to steer human action, both individual and collective, including everything within its functional purview.
    With Nibbana (Eternal Bliss/Ultimate Freedom) as the Final Overall Goal, Buddhist governance includes four noble truth, eightfold path, three shelters (Tissarana), Patimokkha (accountability), and Barshabsa (moral and intellectual development process) from systems perspective.
    Buddhist governance refers to the vision of wholeness as well as the interrelationship and functional connectivity among all entities, living and nonliving. Basing on Sila, Samadhi and Prajñā it integrates everything from complicated individual human mind to all inanimate bodies and forces into a system to attain the of Nibbana.It refers to the final goal of Buddhism where there...
    Ratnāvalī aka Precious Garland
    The 3rd Century B.C.E. advice to the Indian King Udayibhadra come alive for today’s interconnected, global village.
    Short introductions to the ethics of Buddhism, the history of mindfulness skills training and the sources of bias found in the understanding and presentation of Mahayana Buddhist teachings.
    Includes definition of the five mental aggregates or body mind processes during a guided meditation and leads an exploration of non-dualism and it’s relationship to the Buddha’s teachings on ethics, emptiness, compassion and his discovery of the blissful nature of reality.
    Concludes with a discussion of the transcendent virtues, especially upāya (Skillful Means or Liberative Art), the seventh, as presented in the Mahayana sūtras and in the writings of Nāgārjuna.
    ‘A Force For Good’ is a Tibet House US course to further the Dalai Lama’s contemporary world initiatives, from His Holiness’ American Institute of Buddhist Studies and Mind & Life Institute science dialogues (Universe in a Single Atom) and His creation of Abhidharma 2.0 through the “Science for Monks” programs, his “secular ethics” (Ethics for the New Millennium and Beyond Religion), His nonviolent approach to conflict resolution, including His Nobel Peace Laureate activities to seek dialogue and a win-win reconciliation with China in the face of the ongoing ethnicidal policies in Tibet (Freedom in Exile and Man of Peace: The Illustrated Life Story of Tibet’s Dalai Lama) & along with his emphasis on positive activism (A New Reality: Charter of Universal Responsibility).
    Political Ideas in Buddhism and Agganna Sutta
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    This Lecture talks about Political Ideas in Buddhism and Agganna Sutta

  • @nehasahu149
    @nehasahu149 Před 3 lety

    Thankyou for this series ❤️🙏

  • @musalaiahjadi1723
    @musalaiahjadi1723 Před 7 lety +1

    It is very good lecture

  • @vsmechtron4237
    @vsmechtron4237 Před 4 lety

    Very nice sir,Thank you

  • @Rajniti921
    @Rajniti921 Před 5 lety

    Outstanding lecture sir

  • @gautampriya875
    @gautampriya875 Před 4 lety

    thankyou for valuable information

  • @anuraggupta2905
    @anuraggupta2905 Před 3 lety

    thank you sir

  • @activistshakti1207
    @activistshakti1207 Před 3 lety

    Nice lecture

  • @NITINSHARMA-xv2ui
    @NITINSHARMA-xv2ui Před 7 lety

    not streaming properly.

  • @sandhyamishra6259
    @sandhyamishra6259 Před 4 lety +1

    Pls provides this lecture in Hindi language,🙏

  • @dondavis911
    @dondavis911 Před 8 lety +1

    I found conclusion a little weak.

  • @akashrajmaurya1994
    @akashrajmaurya1994 Před 4 lety

    Plz Upload more video m n thakur sir

  • @akashrajmaurya1994
    @akashrajmaurya1994 Před 4 lety

    Plz upload hindi version

  • @YogeshYadav-nr2po
    @YogeshYadav-nr2po Před 5 lety

    Please all lecture also give in hindi

  • @adityatripathi5945
    @adityatripathi5945 Před 4 lety +1

    lecture is not to the point