I would like to follow up on Ami’s post, and in particular,
his comment on Prasad’s assertion that “Advaita and Mīmāṃsā are agreed that
action and cognition are not intrinsically able to change the content of the
other.” (105) I also disagree, and I think some of the subsequent ideas
presented in the text are also in opposition to this supposed lack of
interdependence between cognition and action.
As Kumarila states, “it is accepted that lack of right
cognition brings about wrong actions” (105). If this is the case, that right
cognition brings about wrong action,
than surely we can say that action follows from knowledge. But how can action
follow from knowledge if the two are not able to intrinsically affect one
another?
The idea that right cognition can enable right action but
does no necessarily prevent wrong action is readily apparent. Knowing that
Mcdonalds is unhealthy may allow you to resist eating a Big Mac, but this realization
does not mean you cannot or will not succumb to temptation. This is further
illuminated with Prasad’s comment that “One may know that gambling is ruinous
and still gamble.” (105)
I simply do not see how one can make the jump from
“knowledge (cognition) does not necessitate good decisions (action)” to
“knowledge has no bearing on action”.
This thinking leads to one of two conclusions: either knowledge has no
purpose because our actions are all that matter (we’ve all heard how actions
speak louder than words…), or knowledge has some intrinsic value beyond any
potential affect on action. Prasad certainly acknowledges the latter of these
possibilities as he writes, “there undeniably are sacred texts which clearly
assert that knowledge has its own
results”. (109) Yet even in these assertions knowledge is
subordinate to action.
At the risk of devaluing action, I’d like to make an
argument in favor of knowledge having intrinsic value independent of action.
Take this class, for example. I’m certainly acquiring knowledge, but it would
be a stretch to say that anything I learn about Eastern religions will have a
bearing on my future actions. I simply derive satisfaction from the knowledge. “Knowledge
acquired” is an argument in my utility function (for those not familiar with
the concept, a utility function is a hypothetical model that seeks to quantify
and aggregate everything that has a bearing on an individuals well being) that
is independent of action. In other words, learning something or acquiring some
piece of information does not have to lead to action for it to have value.
While the Advaitic position is that knowledge “can lead to the attainment of
the highest good” (115), I argue that knowledge can itself be a part of the
highest good.
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