0 J2008 - Fate and Free Will in The Bhagavadgītā
0 J2008 - Fate and Free Will in The Bhagavadgītā
0 J2008 - Fate and Free Will in The Bhagavadgītā
http://journals.cambridge.org/RES
Arvind Sharma
ARVIND SHARMA
Lecturer in Religious Studies, University of Queensland
The issue of free will versus fate can be analysed in three ways in relation to
the Bhagavadgita: (1) by focusing on those verses of the Glta which address
themselves to this question; (2) by focusing on the figure of Arjuna himself
who, as will be shown, crystallizes around his person the issue of free will and
fate; and (3) by focusing on the Kauravas who are similarly involved in the
issue.
11
There are two verses of the Bhagavadgita which seem to address themselves
to this issue. They appear successively. Unfortunately the interpretation of
one of these verses is problematical1 or at least has been made to appear so.2
This is the 14th verse of the xvmth chapter of the Bhagavadgita. It may be
translated thus:
The (material) basis, the agent too,
And the instruments of various sorts,
And the various motions of several kinds,
And Fate, as the fifth of them.3
The next verse, more free from commentarial divergencies than the
previous one, may also be cited here:
With body, speech, or mind, whatever
Action a man undertakes,
Whether it be lawful or the reverse,
These are its five factors.4
If the interpretation accorded to these verses by Franklin Edgerton, with
which the present writer is in agreement, is accepted, the outcome of events
is visualized not in terms ofjust two factors — free will or fate — but in terms of
five factors: (1) material (natural?) basis (adhisthdna); (2) doer (kartd);
(3) instruments of various sorts (karana)); (4) various motions or, if you
please, efforts of several kinds {prthak cestd); (5) fate (daivam). Thus basis,
1
W. Douglas P. Hill, The Bhagavadgita (Oxford University Press, 1969), pp. 204-5.
2
Franklin Edgerton, The Bhagavadgita (New York: Harper & Row, 1964), p. 102.
3 4
Ibid. p. 84. Ibid.
doer, instruments, efforts and fate - these five decide the outcome of an
undertaking. Fate is an element - but is not the only one. The outcome seems
to be the result of both free will as represented by the doer and his efforts, and
fate acting in a given environment involving given instruments.
in
IV
v
In chapter xvi Arjuna and the Kauravas are discussed together in terms of the
Gita's well-known classification of two types of beings in the world, the daiva
and the dsura? Now Krsna says of the dsura that:
These wicked ones, I constantly hurl
Into demoniac wombs alone.4
Now several interesting points emerge from a consideration of the material
in this chapter. The first is that Arjuna is clearly identified as belonging to the
daiva or divine type (xvi. 5):
Be not grieved: to the divine lot
Thou art born, son of Pandu.6
1 2 8
Franklin Edgerton, op, cit. pp. 57-8. Ibid. p. 58. Bhagavadgita xvi. 6.
4 5
Frankling Edgerton, op. cit. p. 78. Ibid. p. 76.
VI
Thus one conclusion suggested by the analysis in general and specially by the
immediately preceding one is that the Gita. opts for predeterminism. How-
ever, both the text and the context seem to render such a blanket statement
vulnerable. Another possible conclusion is that the Gita. never quite makes up
its mind. A more detailed discussion, however, suggests clearer contours, if
not yet a definite conclusion.
It is not entirely clear whether Arjuna's participation in the war would be
an exercise of free will on his part, or is fated. It may be noted, however, that
even if he is destined to fight this is the result of his nature or character, not
of his past karma or prdrabdha. Since traditionally in Hindu thinking destiny is
associated with past karma1 this is a significant point.2 Although the Bhaga-
vadgita seems to recognize generally both free will and fate as affecting an
outcome specifically, in the case of the Mahabharata war, it may be seen as
regarding the death of the Kauravas as destined. On the question of the
fact or degree of Arjuna's predestination, it is hard to be completely certain,
though on balance some free will on Arjuna's part appears to be involved. The
overall position of the Gita on the issue of the role of free will and fate in
shaping the future is perhaps best summed up as follows.
There is ' no fate, circumstance or even which in the last analysis we do not
or have not created for ourselves (i.e. ourselves in relationship with others) '. 3
But this is neither 'an optimistic or a pessimistic view, and certainly not a
pessimistic one. We are today what we have made ourselves all through the
past, and we shall be tomorrow what we have been made by the past
together with our present attitudes'. 4 But in this process one faces a plasticine
future and one should note that 'the relation between future and present
may be as significant as between past and present. ' It doth not yet appear
what we shall be', and the present may be what it is, so that a future may be
what it shall be (and what on the deeper levels it already is) '.5 This aspect of
1
The use of the word karma in Bhagavadglta xvm. 60 could be misleading in this context. Note
that the word karmand has to be construed with the adjective svabhavajena and not with some hypo-
thetical or parenthetical purvajanmand.
2
T. M. P. Mahadevan, Outlines of Hinduism (Bombay: Chetana Ltd, i960), pp. 60-1.
3
Raynor C.Johnson, TTie Imprisoned Splendour (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1953), p . 173.
4 6
Ibid. Ibid. p. 174.