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Hinduism
Nature in the Gita: The
Three Modes
by
Mukul Shri Goel, PhD
In
the Bhagavada Gita, Lord Krishna talks about the three gunas
(modes of instinct) that are pre-installed in all beings. These modes of
Nature include: sattva (goodness or purity), rajas
(passion), and tamas (darkness). All jivas (souls) and
their activities in the universe are bound to Nature through the three
modes and the ratio of these modes in an individual forms one’s
temperament. In Hindu thought, no one in the perceptible universe is
supposed to escape the three gunas as any soul outside the range
of Nature is defined as Brahman (God) Himself or is assumed to have
reached the state of emancipation.
Our
understanding, the process of recalling memories from the past, making a
judgment, adhering to our decision, or performing an act – all karma
derive their functioning from a combination of the three gunas.
Imagine
you have some used textbooks that you wish to donate to a library or a
school. Your initial idea involves no selfish motive; you are giving
your books away as you have already read them and believe that it would
be virtuous to offer them to other students who may now use them. As you
go to your room to pick them up, you observe an advertisement in a
newspaper on your desk, which describes a trade-in offer for old
textbooks. You learn that for each book you exchange, you may get a
discount on a new one. You get attracted to their offer, suddenly change
your initial plan and get ready for the bookstore in place of going to
the library. Lastly, you feel that the weather is not ‘appropriate’ for
going outside, and drop all your plans regarding your textbooks.
You
forget the idea of donation, the idea of gaining a discount and instead,
get yourself an ice cream from the freezer. Eventually the textbooks
remain in your garage for a few years and become obsolete. In this
hypothetical instance, the human mind got engaged in all the three
inherent modes of Nature in a matter of few minutes. The initial thought
about sharing books with fellow students was sattva, the decision
to exchange them at the bookstore, guided by attachment to money, was
rajas, but the final act of slackness was tamas. When the
tamas mode gets activated, even attachment to money is not powerful
enough to make us accomplish a task.
In the context of human actions, sattva mode represents perfect
or ideal behavior, and it involves all good qualities like truth,
honesty, discipline, punctuality, righteousness, perseverance,
politeness, and enthusiasm in work. When we engage in this mode, there
is little concern for our own physical comfort and any favorable return
(profit) for our actions is not to be expected. A sense of duty, love
and sacrifice gets developed, and the sattva doer remains
emotionally balanced in the success and failure (18: 26) of his or her
endeavors to experience lifelong happiness. In comparison, rajas karma
is money-oriented and calculative, with a tinge of egoism. Work in this
mode is performed to fulfill one’s material greed (18: 27). When acting
in this mode, we care about what is easy and agreeable to us, and our
attachment to material desires reduces our concern about universal
dharma. Though righteous actions may be performed in the rajas mode, the
doer always remains attached to the gains. Tamas mode is active
when we do something in a state of total confusion, when our intellect
starts making wrong judgments, when we lack the understanding for doing
something, or when we lack awareness of our act’s consequences. It
ranges from being lazy and sleepy (14: 8) to being arrogant, deceitful
and violent (18: 25, 28).
If we use our intellect in sattva mode, we should be able to
fully differentiate between right and wrong, and should also understand
how we can free ourselves from the cycle of death and rebirth (18: 30).
Because realization of God is the aim of life in Hinduism, intellect
that is incapable of guiding us towards God is not classified as
sattva, no matter how exceptional one’s mental abilities in worldly
matters are. As one would expect, rajas intellect, which focuses on
profits, is unclear or confused over what is righteous. As for tamas
intellect, it is good only at making wrong assumptions. Unlike rajas,
tamas intellect is not puzzled about right or wrong, but firmly
assumes the wrong to be righteous. Arrogance and ignorance become strong
players and one progresses all the way towards darkness believing that
he or she is on the path of Dharma.
In the
context of spiritual knowledge (jnana; 18: 20-22), sattva
sees the Self or One God in the entire creation, rajas perceives the
same soul-material in different individuals as being different, while
tamas knowledge focuses on a self-defined limited aspect of creation
and assumes it to be ‘all there is’ – a kind of ‘frog in a well’
scenario. This classification reflects the level of evolution that is
involved in reaching the sattva mode. Seeing the Divine in all
beings or perceiving the unity in all life forms is an advanced level
feature for the human mind; it is something that can only be expected
from saints. Because knowledge is believed to be the final result of
renunciation, work and sacrifice, presence of knowledge at the sattva
level may indicate that the seeker possesses sattva gunas in all
other areas of life as well.
Our eating habits, which are often taken for granted, have also been
highlighted according to the three modes. The food we intake can be used
as a sign of which inherent mode is present in predominance (17: 7).
Sattva mode implies health-conscious consumption and includes items
like fruits, veggies, cereals, and selected dairy products that are
generally good for us. Rajas mode of eating focuses on taste, not
nutrition value. Like other rajas items on Lord Krishna’s list, rajas
food is attached to sense gratification. It is supposedly tasty in the
beginning but tends to cause disease at the end (17: 9). This category
would include most items on the menu of modern-day restaurants. Tamas
food includes spoiled, tasteless and unclean items. One who ingests such
items is neither attached to taste nor is health conscious, but eats
because of complete ignorance. Many times, the emotion with which we eat
decides the mode, not the item for consumption. If we are allergic to a
fruit, but regularly eat it because it appears tasty, the same eatable
would be counted as rajas. Along the same lines, a compulsive eating
disorder involving the intake of even clean and nutritious food may be
classified as tamas as the disorder is said to comprise
ignorance-born impulses in addition to taste-born cravings (rajas).
One of the main messages in God-incarnate Krishna’s discourse on Nature
is that all gunas, including the sattva ones, bind us.
Sattva binds us to goodness. We may start imagining that we are good
and relatively knowledgeable, or may develop a habit of gaining
enjoyment from helping out everyone we meet. Bound to sattva,
scholars may enjoy collecting more and more information, or read
evermore material in their area of expertise. There is nothing wrong
with collecting lots of worldly knowledge, but such a habit can impede
further evolution towards God. Similarly, rajas binds to fruits (results
of our action). We keep ourselves engaged in karma for continual growth
of our financial status. Tamas binds to laziness, ignorance or
slackness. One may enjoy hurting others or wasting time. The paths
through which we may reach beyond the three modes of Nature form the
major focus of Krishna’s dialogue with Arjuna. Interested readers may
refer to the Bhagavada Gita to learn how Nature can be transcended.
June 23,
2007
Image under
license with Gettyimages.com
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