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When Buddha grew to manhood he found the halls, the streets, the very woods of
northern India ringing with philosophic disputation, mostly of an atheistic and
materialistic trend. The later Upanishads and the oldest Buddhist books are full of
references to these heretics. A large class of traveling Sophists-the Paribbajaka, or
Wanderers-spent the better part of every year in passing from locality to locality, seeking
pupils, or anty-agonists, in philosophy. Some of them taught logic as the art of proving
anything and earned for themselves the titles of ‘Hair-splitters’ and ‘Eel wrigglers’;
others demonstrated the non-existence of God and the inexpediency of virtue. Large
audiences gathered to hear such lectures and debates; great halls were built to
accommodate them and sometimes princes offered rewards for those who should emerge
victorious from these intellectual jousts. It was an age of amazingly free thought and of a
thousand experiments in philosophy.
Out of the aphorisms of Brihaspati came a whole school of Hindu materialist,
named, after one of them, Carvakas. They laughed at the notion that the Vedas were
divinely revealed truth; truth, they argued, can never be known, except through the
senses. Even reason is not to be trusted, for every inference depends for its validity not
only upon accurate observation and correct reasoning, but also upon the assumption that
the future will behave like the past; and of this, as Hume was to say, there can be no
certainty. What is not perceived by the senses, said the Carvakas, does not exist; therefore
the soul is a delusion and Atman is humbug. We do not observe, in experience or history,
any interposition of supernatural forces in the world. All phenomena are natural; only
simpletons trace them to demons or gods. Matter is the one reality; the body is a
combination of atoms; the mind is merely matter thinking; the body, not the soul, feels,
sees, hears, and thinks. “Who has seen the soul existing in a state separate from the
body?” There is no immortality, no rebirth. Religion is an aberration, a disease, or a
chicanery; the hypothesis of a god is useless for explaining or understanding the world.
Men think religion necessary only because, being accustomed to it, they feel a sense of
loss, and an uncomfortable void, when the growth of knowledge destroys this faith.
Morality, too, is natural; it is a social convention and convenience, not a divine
command. Nature is indifferent to good and bad, virtue and vice, and lets the sunshine
indiscriminately upon knaves and saints; if nature has any ethical quality at all it is that of
transcendent immorality. There is no need to control instinct and passion, for these is the
instructions of nature to men. Virtue is a mistake; the purpose of life is living, and the
only wisdom is happiness.
This revolutionary philosophy of the Carvakas put an end to the age of the Vedas
and the Upanishads. It weakened the hold of the Brahmans on the mind of India, and left
in Hindu society a vacuum which almost compelled the growth of a new religion. But the
materialists had done their work so thoroughly that both of the new religions which arose
to replace the old Vedic faith were, anomalous though it may sound atheistic religions,
devotions without a god. Both belonged to the Nastika or Nihilistic movement; and both
were originated not by the Brahman priests but by members of the Kshatriyas warrior
caste in a reaction against sacerdotal ceremonialism and theology. With the coming of
Jainism and Buddhism a new epoch began in the history of India.
CARVAKA – WAY OF LIFE
In their ethics, the Carvakas upheld a kind of hedonism: the only goal people ought
to pursue is maximizing sensual pleasure in life while avoiding pain—the kind that
proceeds from over-indulgence and instant gratification. As is common with
confrontational schools of thought, they were accused of "immoral practices" and
depicted as "hedonists advocating a policy of total opportunism; they are often described
as addressing princes, whom they urged to act exclusively in their own self-interest, thus
providing the intellectual climate in which a text such as Kautilya's Arthashastra a text
that elevated the material wellbeing of both the nation and its people and favored an
autocratic state to realize it. In accordance with the dictates of policy and enjoyment, the
mass of men consider wealth and satisfaction of desire the only ends of man. They deny
the existence of any object belonging to a future world, and follow only the doctrine of
Carvakas. Hence another name for that school is Lokayata—a name well accordant with
the thing signified [that only the material world, loka, exists].
The Carvakas have emphasized that pleasure and pain are the central themes of life
and it is not possible to separate life from all these. They have also claimed that virtue is
nothing more than a delusion and enjoyment is the only reality. The Carvakas School of
Thought believed that life is the end of life. Unlike the Upanishads the Carvakas or the
materialist philosophy asserts the doctrines of uncontrolled-energy, self-assertion and
reckless disregard for authority. Carvakas believe not in the notion of stringent
philosophy, but in liberal beliefs. Hence, they refute most of the already-established rules
in the context of Indian philosophy. The prime importance is laid on the likes and dislikes
of humans. As a result, Carvakas believe in the perceived knowledge of the present life,
and not in rebirth and past life. According to them good deed is not much necessary to
perform in one’s lifetime, as is instructed by the crafty priests. The basic thought of the
Carvakas is to obtain worldly pleasure by making merry, as there is no hell where one
can be hurled. What is meant by heaven is the pleasure we have in eating, drinking,
singing and in the company and embrace of women. And hell is the pain we experience
in this world itself. There is no point in trying to obtain salvation and a life of eternal
quietude; there is an end to life at death and all will be quietude then. The differences
between castes and their distinctive duties are falsely laid down by interested persons.
There are no objective ethical laws, so one can do what one likes, provided he is careful
that his actions do not bring pain as a consequence. The Carvakas do not seem to have
advocated pleasures of the moment, because pleasures of the moment and over-
indulgence may result in pain and pain has to be avoided. It is also said that, because
pleasure is associated with fine arts like music, they encouraged them and contributed
much for their development. And because they were unwilling to kill animals, some of
the Charvakas are also believed to be vegetarians.
But the peculiar contribution, which this philosophy seems to have made to the
philosophy of life, was the philosophical justification it tried to furnish to any kind of
action for the sake of pleasure. Of course, pleasure is not possible in the absence of
wealth (artha). By spending money one can obtain pleasure (kama). The value of dhartna
(duty) and the value of salvation (moksha) were firmly rejected by the Carvakas School.
The Carvakas denied the validity of dhartna (self-dharma, righteous duty) in any form.
Action when completed, the Carvakas would say, ends there. Apurva or the latent
potential form which action takes, or merit and demerit cannot be perceived by anyone
atall. They are therefore not real. It is foolish to think that past actions become a kind of
unseen force (adrsta) and determines one`s future births. In fact, according to the Carvaka
way of life, there is no rebirth. Humans have only one birth and that is the present one. If
there is rebirth, one ought to remember it; no one remembers his/her previous births
The Carvakas believed there was nothing wrong with sensual indulgence, and that it
was the only enjoyment to be pursued.
That the pleasure arising to man
from contact with sensible objects,
is to be relinquished because accompanied by pain—
such is the reasoning of fools.
The kernels of the paddy, rich with finest white grains,
what man, seeking his own true interest,
would fling them away
because of a covering of husk and dust?
The only end of man is enjoyment produced by sensual pleasures. Nor may you say that
such cannot be called the end of man as they are always mixed with some kind of pain,
because it is our wisdom to enjoy the pure pleasure as far as we can, and to avoid the pain
which inevitably accompanies it. Thus the man, who desires fish takes the fish with their
scales and bones, and having eaten the parts he wants, desists. Or the man, who desires
rice, takes the rice, straw and all, and having taken that which he wants, desists. It is not
therefore for us, through a fear of pain, to reject the pleasure which our nature
instinctively recognizes as congenial. Men do not refrain from sowing rice because there
happen to be wild animals to devour it; nor do they refuse to set the cooking-pots on the
fire, because there happen to be beggars to pester us for a share of the contents. if any one
were so timid as to forsake a visible pleasure, he would indeed be foolish like a beast,
Carvaka ethics urged each individual to seek his or her pleasure here and now. "As
long as you live, live life to the fullest," said Carvaka. "After death, the body is turned to
ashes. There is no re-birth." These words, so full of love for humanity and life, are
strikingly reminiscent of the life-enhancing philosophy of EpicurusWhat is meant by
heaven is the pleasure one has in eating, drinking, making merry and singing. And hell is
the pain one experiences in this world itself. There is no point in trying to obtain
salvation and a life of eternal quietude; there is an end to life at death and all will be
quietened then
The three authors of the Vedas were buffoons, knaves, and demons.
All the well-known formulae of the pandits, jarphari, turphari, etc.
and all the obscene rites for the queen commanded in Aswamedha,
these were invented by buffoons, and so all the various kinds of presents to the priests,
while the eating of flesh was similarly commanded by night-prowling demons.
The Agnihotra, the three Vedas, the ascetic's three staves, and smearing oneself with
ashes, these are but means of livelihood for those who have no manliness nor sences Like
the other two heterodox schools, Jainism and Buddhism, they criticized the caste system
and stood opposed to the ritual sacrifice of animals. When the Brahmins defended the
latter by claiming that the sacrificed beast goes straight to Swarga Loka (an interim
heaven before rebirth), the Carvakas asked why the Brahmans did not kill their aged
parents to hasten their arrival in Swarga Loka. "If he who departs from the body goes to
another world," they asked, "how is it that he comes not back again, restless for love of
his kindred?
Carvakas thought also appears in the Ramayana. In the epic, Rama is not the god
that he later became, but an epic-hero, who, as Sen. Notes, has "many good qualities and
some weaknesses, including a tendency to harbor suspicions about his wife Sita's
faithfulness." In the epic, a pundit named Jabali "not only does not treat Rama as God, he
calls his actions 'foolish' ('especially for', as Jabali puts it, 'an intelligent and wise man')".
Echoing Carvakas doctrine, Jabali even asserts that "there is no after-world, nor any
religious practice for attaining that ... the injunctions about the worship of gods, sacrifice,
gifts and penance have ...
The Carvakas denounced the caste system, calling it artificial, unreal and hence
unacceptable. "What is this senseless humbug about the castes and the high and low
among them when the organs like the mouth, etc in the human body are the same?"
The Carvaka way of life speaks that the differences between castes and their
distinctive duties are laid down misleadingly by interested people. There are no objective
ethical laws, so one can do what one wishes to, provided he is careful that his actions do
not bring pain as an outcome..
Hence, it can be concluded saying that the materialist philosophy had a lot to do
with regard to the repudiation of old system of religion and custom of magic. The
Carvakas Philosophy is in fact a man’s return to his own spirit and rejection of all those
which are external and foreign. It also says that nothing needs to be accepted by an
individual which do not find its place in the way of reason.
Refrancees and Bibliography
Jayarāśi Bhaṭṭa was an 8th or 9th century Indian philosopher (dated to ca. 770-830 by
Franco 1994), author of the Tattvopaplavasimha (tattva-upa.plava-simha "The Lion that
Devours All Categories"/"The Upsetting of All Principles"). The manuscript of this work
was discovered in 1926 and published in 1940 (eds. Sanghavi and Parikh). ..
Madhavacharya, the 14th-century Vedantic philosopher from South India starts his
famous work The Sarva-darsana-sangraha with a chapter on the Carvaka system with
the intention of refutation
Monier-Williams (1899); the name literally means "speaking nicely", from cāru
"agreeable" and vāk "speech"