Karma: A Guide to Cause and Effect
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About this ebook
In this compelling and in-depth introduction to the ancient Hindu concept of karma, spiritual teacher and award-winning author Jeffrey Armstrong explores reincarnation, the deeper mysteries of the soul, the laws of nature, and the ways in which cause and effect influence our lives.
Moving beyond Western perceptions of science and luck, Armstrong explores the mystical balance of the universe. These long-secret laws of karma, excavated from the ancient wisdom of India, offer a means to deepen one’s spiritual vision and reveal the profoundly interconnected nature of all that exists.
The Mandala Wisdom Series is an introductory collection on Eastern wisdom and spirituality, providing readers with the tools to enhance their health and well-being.
Jeffrey Armstrong
Jeffrey Armstrong, founder of the Vedic Academy of Sciences & Arts, is an award-winning author of numerous books on Vedic knowledge, including Spiritual Teachings of the Avatar. Armstrong is an ayurvedic astrologer, philosopher, practitioner, and teacher of the Vedas for over forty years, with degrees in psychology, history and comparative religions, and literature. He also had a successful career as an executive in Silicon Valley and as corporate speaker for Fortune 500 companies before turning to teaching the philosophy and lifestyle of yoga full time. He lives in Vancouver, BC.
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Karma - Jeffrey Armstrong
INTRODUCTION
When you speak badly of others, you eat their karma.
Of all the subjects that are crucial to us human beings, karma–or ultimate cause and effect–is one of the most important. Karma is about all of the things we do and the results that proceed from that doing. Karma is a Sanskrit word that comes to us from the Vedas, the library of spiritual books from India. Sanskrit is a very precise language, used throughout ancient history as a scientific language to record the results of human experience in both material and spiritual matters. Modern linguists recognize that Aramaic, Greek, Latin romance languages, and English are largely rooted in Sanskrit origins. Karma is an ancient concept, with at least a ten-thousand-year cultural history in India. Before there was modern science with its notion that every action has an equal and opposite reaction,
ancient thinkers throughout the East studied karma as the science of the reactions to everything we do.
The word karma stems from the Sanskrit root kri, which means to do.
The English word create is derived from this root. The idea is that everything that surrounds us is interconnected in causal chains that are not always obvious. And as we engage in actions, we desire the ability to predict their outcomes. It is for this reason that modern science has based its progress upon repeatable experiments. Repeatable means that there is a predictable outcome to certain specific actions. In a limited sense, this is also karma, the science of understanding how the outcome is related to our behavior–to what we do.
The scientific thinkers of ancient India also studied material nature in exactly that way, in terms of cause and effect. But they realized that in order to ultimately understand what we do and our actions’ long-term implications, we also have to understand three other things. One of those is the individual doer, the second is material nature, and the third is the Supreme Controller or Divine Intelligence. In other words, cause and effect are not just about the mechanical operations of matter; they are also about who we are in essence and what our ultimate destination could be, as well as our relationship with the Supreme Being and the various laws of nature. Karma raises the questions of who we are in the final state of our being, where we come from, why we are here, who or what is in control of the universe, and what possibilities are there beyond our present experiences. Karma not only asks how we can interact with and control the world around us, but also brings forward the moral questions of what right and wrong actions are and what the future consequences of our present actions will be. How long do we, and the cause and effect resulting from our actions, continue into the future?
It is for this reason that we often hear the words karma and reincarnation in the same sentence. The missing question regarding cause and effect that modern science and many religions have failed to consider is this: What if we, the doers, are neither the body nor the mind? What if we are indestructible conscious entities that move from body to body, life after life, creating and receiving the results of our various doings? It is very likely that one of the reasons science has avoided these questions is because of their problematic history with the medieval Catholic Church. Since independent scientific thinking was persecuted and often punishable by death at the hands of religion, it is natural that the scientists of that era were apprehensive of the danger and subsequently divorced themselves from spiritual questions of life that could challenge the ruling religious elite. But in India, no such persecution of scientific thinking ever occurred. There, the widely accepted rule was tolerance of various philosophies and worldviews. Thus it was only natural for the Indian approach to karma to include materialistic, existential, scientific, philosophical, and spiritual components.
The main question that lies at the root of India’s spiritual schools of thought is this: Who or what is the Ultimate Source of the laws of nature? These laws imply both purpose and intelligence, including a lawmaker and finally a long-term view of the soul and its relation to cause and effect as an evolutionary process over many lifetimes. From the Indian perspective, any science is incomplete unless it addresses ultimate questions as well as temporal ones. This, at least, is the view promoted by the Vedic library of knowledge that first gave rise to the study of karma as a science. Unlike many religions or traditions that limit their source of information to one or a very few books, the culture of India has a large library of books on hundreds of material and spiritual subjects. Those texts are called the Vedas and are all written in the ancient and scientific Sanskrit language. That body of knowledge has been carefully preserved and handed down over the last ten thousand years. The information on karma in this book has been extracted and summarized from those Vedic sources. Of course, discussions on some of the principles of karmic science are present in most philosophies and traditions. You will no doubt see similarities and differences with the Vedic view as you study the subject more deeply.
Once we include the bigger questions of nature, our own eternal nature, and the intention of the Supreme Being into the question of cause and effect, karma becomes a pivotal part of a much larger conversation. If, as the Vedas suggest, we really are eternal beings, then the things that we do by using our free will have the potential to unfold over very