The life of Ramakrishna Paramahamsa ‘enables us to see God face to face’, Gandhiji wrote.
Similarly, when someone in his circle was distraught, the Mahatma sent him to spend time at the Ashram of Ramana Maharshi.
Such was their stature and influence.
The Paramahamsa and the Maharshi have been among the greatest spiritual figures of our country.
They have transformed the lives of and have been a solace to millions. Moreover, in our tradition, words of such mystics are regarded as conclusive.
They have evidentiary status: if they say there is a soul, there is; if they say there is life-after-death or reincarnation, there is.
Their peak, mystic experience is what we yearn to have, even just once.
But what if several of the experiences they had - the feeling that someone higher is present next to them, the feeling that they are floating above their body, looking down at it; the ‘near-death experience’; the ecstasy; the visions - occur in other circumstances also?
Should we think again about their experiences when these occur as points in the brain are stimulated with an electrode during surgery?
What if they can be recreated in a laboratory non-invasively? When they occur to ordinary persons placed in extraordinary circumstances?
Did the experiences occur from some ailment?
As was alleged in the case of Sri Ramakrishna?
From some ‘madness’, which he feared he had?
From the fits that Sri Ramana said he used to have?
What of the experiences of devotees?
Seeing the Master where he wasn’t?
Seeing the Master, feeling his presence, after he had passed away?
Are these hallucinations?
Or do they testify to the Master’s divinity?
How would conclusions about their experiences affect their teaching?
That the world and everything in it is ‘unreal’?
In the light of their pristine example, how should we view and what should we do about the godmen and gurus who control vast financial and real estate empires today, to whom lakhs flock?
Are they the saints they set themselves up to be or just marketers?
With the diligence and painstaking research that mark all his work, Arun Shourie probes these questions in the light of the recent breath-taking advances in neuroscience, as well as psychology and sociology.
The result is a book of remarkable rigour: an examination - and ultimately reconciliation - of science and faith as also of seemingly antagonistic, irreconcilable worldviews.
Ratings
Goodreads Rating - 3.8 out of 5 ( 10 Ratings , 1 Review - As on July 20 2017)
My Rating: 3 out of 5
My Comments:A rather convincing scientific explanation of the mystic experiences of the two saints - Sri Ramakrishna and Sri Ramana Maharshi - without doubting their sincerity and the solace they brought to their countless devotees.
The explanation is supported by very scholarly and dry details of the neurological studies conducted on the mind by various scientists.
Unless read with an open mind, this book may hurt the sentiments of some hard-core devotees of these saints.
I would have rated this book higher if only the narration was more interesting and understandable.
I found it rather boring and abstruse in many sections.
Inspite of this shortcoming, I would recommend this book to everyone who are curious to know why mystical experiences happen in some people.
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