Mukunda Raghavan

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Mukunda Raghavan

Mukunda Raghavan

@raghman36

Do some podcast hosting on @brownpundits and @themerumedia, recovering attorney, Fin-tech exec, into philosophy, sanskrit, science, history and generally truth?

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Mukunda Raghavan
Mukunda Raghavan@raghman36·
Why do Christians and their cheerleaders like @meghaverma_art who tend to show an utter lack of knowledge or education on anything really to do with let's say Hinduism feel so comfortable making idiotic and ignorant statements like the below? Let's do a quick thread on this:
Will Spencer@willspencer

I absolutely agree that India and Japan are great to juxtapose against each other. But having spent a lot of time in both countries, I think this analysis is only partially correct. As a poor country, India has a ethic called “jugaad,” which essentially translates to “make it work however you can.” This leads to very creative solutions to problems, at all levels. Also known as “hacks.” However, if your ONLY ethic is “make it work,” then once it works you’re done. You’ve fulfilled the ethic. “Good enough” is good enough. And everything in India is merely “good enough”… more or less. Japan, on the other hand, has an ethic of honor. Your performance in any given task reflects on your whole lineage. Consequently, almost everything in Japan is excellent. Streets are clean, buildings gleam, and you have to fight to have a bad meal. The basic idea is that you do an outstanding job for the virtue of doing an outstanding job. It’s the call of craftsmanship, independent of audience. However, my read is that this exerts an enormous psychic burden on the Japanese people. When you MUST do everything to an A++ level or you dishonor your ancestors, you end up either doing far less, or being very secretive about your failings. This sense of pressure and hiding is palpable throughout the country, especially once you get out of the cities. I believe it’s contributing to Japan’s crashing birth rate as well. They’re being crushed under their own sense of honor. The takeaway I want everyone to get is, once again, how superior America is in ways that most don’t realize. The majority of people here understand that you do a good job for the sake of doing a good job. There is a wrong way to do things, a right way to do things, and a more right way to do things. You might not realize it, but most people in America instinctively do things the “more right” way. I’m writing this at In N Out right now, with low-wage workers making great food in a clean and safe environment, because they derive at least some joy from doing a good job. This would be impossible in a “make it work” country. India will never have an In N Out. By the same token, that call to a good job is only lightly enforced. We accept a minimum standard of performance, and don’t incriminate the person’s whole family if they fail. We could probably afford to put more pressure on families to disciple their children better. But when someone screws up at their job, even due to incompetence, we don’t curse their grandfathers. Because America has the true Christian ethic called “grace.” Christianity acknowledges we are broken creatures incapable of reaching our full glory on our own. So, via Christ’s excellent sacrifice, God forgives us our sins. Therefore, we forgive. India has no excellence to look up to and embody in that way. Reincarnation is a shallow promise compared to heaven. Similarly, Japan has no God granting demerited favor, aka grace. So they have no grace to give in return. Both these are broken models in different ways. America worked in its superior way because of Christ at its core. That superior way is being threatened because the core is being removed. The heart is being cut out. What will the result be? Who knows. I’d prefer we didn’t find out.

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Anwesh Satpathy
Anwesh Satpathy@anwesh_satpathy·
Brother, Gyan Pandey and Shahid Amin were my teachers. Sumit Sarkar was my supervisor. I have grown up knowing Partha Chatterjee since I was a baby. I have a review copy at home of Elementary Aspects sent to my father. Teach someone else.
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Mukunda Raghavan
Mukunda Raghavan@raghman36·
I might disagree with many things @GhoshSamyak says, but this @Aunindyo2023 arguing the position that it's not what you know but who you know nonsense is pretty pathetic. I'm glad you're 56 and know some people in the past, whoop di doo. Says nothing about if you know anything about the subject at hand. I know a bunch of doctors doesn't mean I am qualified or able to speak meaningfully about medicine.
Samyak Ghosh 🌈@GhoshSamyak

Yes, I am a nobody. A nobody with no big daddy in academia. Fought my way to where I am. We have stopped talking about connections & nepotism. But, try being a nobody in academia for a day you’ll see what the fight looks like. I hope more nobodies make academia a better place!

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Śrutaṃ me gopāya
Śrutaṃ me gopāya@shrutammegopaya·
The modern educated Hindu's obsession with अर्थवाद (literal material truths) is a little puzzling You don't become less of a Hindu if you don't believe the गीता was revealed exactly as it currently exists in the middle of the battle field. The इतिहासs are NOT प्रमाण in the literal sense as it relates to these mundane details (e.g. how many soldiers killed etc). They are प्रमाण in a higher sense ONLY as it relates to vedantic truths. This is asserted even by traditionalists. Notably the 17th cen श्री वैष्णव theologian - श्रीनिवास in his opus यतीन्द्रमतदीपिका
Halley@halleyji

Then why think Gita is a response strategy to tension with other Nastika darshanas etc? What's the harm in believing Krishna said everything to Arjuna when the battle actually happened centuries prior to Buddhism and Jainism etc? Sure textual documentation may have happened later. But why make it sound like Gita is creative fiction by saying it is a later day response strategy?

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Mukunda Raghavan
Mukunda Raghavan@raghman36·
This is another reason people shouldn't follow fools
India in Pixels by Ashris 🔱@indiainpixels

No group has done more internal damage to Hinduism than these fanatic Vaishnavites. And almost nobody names it. Here's their operation: 1. Derive all legitimacy from the Vedas. Quote them, garland them, claim continuity and in-group membership. 2. Absorb tribal cults from abhira pastoralists, Narayana traditions, regional folk deities and rebrand them as "avatars" of one Supreme God who barely appears in the Rigveda. 3. Having looted the prestige of the Vedas, turn around and call the Vedas themselves "tribalistic." Discourage study by saying it is all "too vast, too complex, nobody can understand without a guru" and push the Upanishads as the "distillation." Which is a blatant lie. That's where the Vedic spirit is quietly extinguished and replaced with the self-denying machinery of karma and moksha. 4. Manufacture story after story to defame Indra. Reduce him from civilizational hero to a rotating post. Kill the symbol of aspiration itself. They hate Indra because they hate excellence. And like Mamata Benrjee threatening anyone who questions her and saying without us one community will finish you, this guy also is threatening that "without us you sissies would have been crushed," the enforcement is always the same: shut up, or we make you the villain. This is why Indians are trained into dishonesty. We use gaslighting and selective memory to manufacture peace, and call the result "tolerance." A civilization that runs on a thousand-year-old lie, where the source text says one thing, the marketing says the opposite, and everyone agrees not to notice produces people who cannot tell the truth from lie. And such people who cannot tell the truth never achieve excellence and that is why we rot in this mediocrity.

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Mukunda Raghavan
Mukunda Raghavan@raghman36·
@halleyji The Gita layering argument or position is circular, as is most strata arguments around the Mahabharata, Adluri and Bagchee address these. I think there is ample evidence to indicate that the Gita is pre-Buddhist and directly taken from the Upanishads.
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Mukunda Raghavan
Mukunda Raghavan@raghman36·
We are going Live in 10 min! Join Us
Mukunda Raghavan@raghman36

Join @raghman36 , @ynotvinit, and @windshaman13, tomorrow at 9 am pst, 9:30 pm IST, as we discuss Shabda Pramana? What is it? How does it function? Is it the equivalent of Biblical or Quranic Authority? What happens when Shabda conflicts with other sources of knowledge? Plus some diving into exegesis ideas and how the traditions have approached the Shastras. @themerumedia youtube.com/live/kJaiA8Vy0…

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Mukunda Raghavan
Mukunda Raghavan@raghman36·
@The_Equationist I hear you man, its a mix of India and Hinduism was the best in the past without actually trying to read widely both indian and western works and also pure identity pride, which without knowledge is just lame
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𑘀𑘦𑘡 𑘎𑘨𑘢𑘹
𑘀𑘦𑘡 𑘎𑘨𑘢𑘹@The_Equationist·
Taking a break from Indic discourse As an Indian-American, I've always been rooted and connected to my heritage and ethnic background. Particularly, that has included an interest in Indian history (especially but not only military history) and modern developments in Indic art and literature. In recent years, that has brought me into touch with mainland Indians and the Indian cultural discourse on social media. The experience has been enriching and given me fresh insights into my own identity; including an unexpected appreciation for my American identity, and realizing there are many traits that I have which make me quintessentially American. There are, unfortunately, aspects of discourse about Indian culture that I've found deeply offputting. There is a general tendency towards hyper-defensiveness and aggression towards criticism, coupled with a certain insular superiority complex that has been documented since the times of Al Biruni. Perhaps most frustrating has been the witnessing the paucity of actual productive cultural / literary output, and how much effort goes instead into arguing and debating. Consider how many people agitate for their regional languages (or for making everyone learn Hindi), and how few actually write any literature worth reading in their favored language. So many Indians complain about British colonial historians while failing to put in even 1% of the effort into studying Indian historiography that the colonial British researchers did. This frustration has spilled over into affecting my own historical research. Things that were mere annoyances to me in the past enormously taxing. E.g., consider the difficulty of deciphering the meaning of terse Sanskrit verse / prose. How can I, an American (albeit one of Indian heritage) maintain motivation in this endeavor while regularly interacting with actual Indians who constantly declare that Sanskrit is a perfect and "most scientific" language but don't put in any work to translate any of the copious untranslated Sanskrit manuscripts? I'm simply burnt out on all this. I'm going to try to step back from Indic discourse and take a break from Indian historical research until I'm able to regain motivation, if such a time comes. The good news is that there is a lot of research I've already done and insights that I haven't published regarding two heavily under-researched fields: warfare in Early Historic India, and historically documented martial arts in Late Medieval and Early Modern India. Putting a pause on my historical research means that I'm less vulnerable to my unfortunate tendency towards perfectionism. I know I haven't read all the relevant sources and some of what I'll write might be incomplete or speculative, but I can put it out there knowing that it's better to publish what I have than to not publish it at all, waiting for further research that I might never do. Keep an eye out as I'll be putting out much more frequent posts about history.
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Mukunda Raghavan
Mukunda Raghavan@raghman36·
Join @raghman36 , @ynotvinit, and @windshaman13, tomorrow at 9 am pst, 9:30 pm IST, as we discuss Shabda Pramana? What is it? How does it function? Is it the equivalent of Biblical or Quranic Authority? What happens when Shabda conflicts with other sources of knowledge? Plus some diving into exegesis ideas and how the traditions have approached the Shastras. @themerumedia youtube.com/live/kJaiA8Vy0…
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Mukunda Raghavan
Mukunda Raghavan@raghman36·
@kangminlee Terrible analogy, Homelander's "strength" comes from his powers, take that away he is a sniveling weak man. Trump's "strength" comes from his money and the power of people around him, if those away maybe he'd act the same as Homelander or maybe not, but your position isn't apt.
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Kangmin Lee | 이강민
How Kripke thinks Trump would act in the face of death vs how Trump acted in the face of death
Kangmin Lee | 이강민 tweet mediaKangmin Lee | 이강민 tweet media
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Mukunda Raghavan
Mukunda Raghavan@raghman36·
It is odd to me that some people are supporting Homelander as a strong man when in fact the whole point of Homelander in the series is that he is, at his heart, a weak man who possesses power, and that power projects strength. It is power undeserved, ungained, and unearned. Strength comes from true conviction, self-esteem, and a sense of self. Hughie in the series represents that, the antithesis of Homelander, a man, despite having no power, gained power, then willingly gave it up, constantly undervalued and underestimated, beat down and hurt, yet he perseveres, adapts, and contextualizes his morality. He changes, but not in the way that truly alters his nature. @therealKripke
Emir Han@RealEmirHan

In The Boys finale, Homelander had to look powerless according to Eric Kripke “Yeah, it was really important to us for Homelander to at least experience a little bit of time powerless.” “People have asked me, ‘Well, why don’t you send him out in the world powerless, wouldn’t that be the ultimate punishment?’ “I’m like, it would, until he gets his hands on some more Compound V, and then you’re back to where you started.” “So, he cannot walk out of that room alive, but we can spend time with him powerless to really reveal what everyone’s been saying all season, which is, ‘Take away those powers and you are nothing.’ “And he’s so cowardly and blubbering and pathetic, as are most strong men when you remove their power and they’re and they’re faced with their imminent death, they rarely handle it bravely.”

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Mukunda Raghavan
Mukunda Raghavan@raghman36·
This is the stupidest take. If your parents are from one place and you are born in a second place, live and are raised there then you are from that second place you aren't foreign. The Vedas are born and were and are nurtured in India, their entire reference points are in the subcontinent, it is native to the region.
𝖇 𝖗 𝖚 𝖙 𝖚@Brutu24

All Hindus are converts 🫤 Historical evidence is the biggest Proof that between 1500 BC and 500 BC, Aryan brought the Vedic religion from Central Asia to North India. HINDUISM is as foreign as Christianity and Islam. They added local flavour to it just like Paneer Tacos

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Mukunda Raghavan retweetledi
CoHNA (Coalition of Hindus of North America)
Between 1838–1917 several hundred thousand Indians -mostly Hindus- were sent as “indentured labor” to far flung British colonies like Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago, Suriname, Fiji, Mauritius, South Africa.... Most could not return home. Generations battled poverty, institutional discrimination + hostile pressures to convert out of Hinduism! Yet they overcame and thrived, with many migrating to Canada and USA in recent decades. During May-June these communities honor their “Arrival Days”, while reflecting on how they guarded their Hindu faith in these conditions. What can Hindus learn from their experiences as double migrants? Join our latest CoHNA Dialogues featuring a diverse mix of Hindu leaders from Canada and USA to learn more. Sunday May 31, 10 am PST/1 pm EST Register: us02web.zoom.us/webinar/regist… @ShawnBinda #caribbeanhindu #Cohna
CoHNA (Coalition of Hindus of North America) tweet media
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Mukunda Raghavan
Mukunda Raghavan@raghman36·
@priestlyclass I stopped overhead barbell press and even barbell bench, the dumbell presses are better on my joints and shoulder
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Priestlyclass Strongman
Priestlyclass Strongman@priestlyclass·
Barbell Overhead Press has always been my weakest exercise, used to struggle even with 70 kg, worked on it a lot & now hitting a decent 120 kg. May Indra bless our workouts.
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Mukunda Raghavan
Mukunda Raghavan@raghman36·
I'm not sure this is fair, historians should be as neutral as possible when it comes to ascertaining facts and developing theories or explanations. This doesn't mean that a historian cannot have opinions on what is "moral" or "good" or "wrong". Hell Truschke does this constantly. One can have different frameworks and still do good history, for example I think Dialectical Materialist frameworks for history is not a good one but it can offer some value.
Samyak Ghosh 🌈@GhoshSamyak

No decent historian of the early modern world should have anything to gain from the heroes vs villains, wrt Mughal history. To be stuck in this framework is to not think like a historian. The Mughals matter bcz of the world they built and its relevance today, not their excesses!

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Mukunda Raghavan retweetledi
Meru Media
Meru Media@themerumedia·
How do you know that you know: Indian Pramana and Western Epistemology x.com/i/broadcasts/1…
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klownShowz
klownShowz@KlownShowz6204·
@raghman36 @PrasunNagar @Saatvata @being_harshsinh correct. any idiot can name drop papers and names; notice you both didn't address the questions at all but embellished the paper claims. no definition of 'sister' languages, tall claims that no one spoke sanskrit... that's how people know you are poseurs.
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John Oldman
John Oldman@PrasunNagar·
#GuptaInscriptions Mathura pillar inscription of 380 AD is the first inscription of Chandragupta Vikramaditya. The main points of the inscription are as under: 1) The inscription is in Gupta Brahmi, language is Sanskrit; 2) The inscription is in prose; 3) Mentions the king as tat-pratigrihita' & describing him as 'Satputra ' of his father, Samudragupta; 4) It is the first Gupta inscription to have a date on it.. Gupta year 61 = 380 AD; 5) The words 'prathme (first) or 'panchme ( fifth) on the inscription means that the inscription was inscribed in either the first or fifth year of the king; 6) Describes the flourishing Shaiva sect of 'Maheshvaras' at Mathura; 7) Name of a teacher, 'Uditacharya' is mentioned, who was the head of the above sect; 8) Bhagvat Kushika is named as the founder of this sect; 9) Names of past teachers of this sect is mentioned such as Kapila- Vimala, 'Upamita - Vimala' & ' Parasara'. 10) The above Shaiva sect at Mathura, proves that the city was once famous for Shiva worship as well, apart from Vishnu worship. 11) The inscription is also called 'Lakulisha inscription' after one of the avatars of Shiva, 'Lakulisha' who was one of the avatars of Shiva as per Linga Purana.
John Oldman tweet mediaJohn Oldman tweet media
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