Hinduism Doctrine And Way Of Life
Major Sections
Books By Rajaji

FOREWORD

The writer must make it clear at the very outset that he does not profess to prove anything but seeks to present the body of faith called Vedanta to those who are not familiar with it.  It is his belief that while agnosticism or scepticism may do no harm and on the contrary may do much good to the minds of an enlightened few that find satisfaction in it, in the mass, scepticism inevitably and steadily leads to positive  denial.

A divorce between action and moral responsibility follows.   This is not good either for the present or for the future generations.  It is the writer's conviction that Vedanta is a faith as suitable for modern times as it was for ancient India, and more especially so, as the world is now fully and irreplaceably permeated by the discipline and knowledge that have come to stay through science and are bound to grow as time advances.

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