Life Comes
from Life - The First Morning Walk
Recorded Talks
of A.C.
Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada with Dr. Thoudam Damodara Singh,
Karandhara dasa Adhikary, Brahmananda Swami and other students.
Recorded on April 18, 1973, in Cheviot Hills Park, Los Angeles.
Send
this story to a friend
Printer
Friendly Page
Life On
Other Planets
Srila
Prabhupada: Even on the sun and moon there are living entities.
What is the opinion of the scientists?
Dr. Singh:
They say there is no life there.
Srila
Prabhupada: That is nonsense. There is life there.
Dr. Singh:
They say that there is no life on the moon because they did not find
any there.
Srila
Prabhupada: Why do they believe that? The moon planet is covered
with dust, but within that dust the living entities can live. Every
atmosphere is suitable for life—any atmosphere. Therefore the Vedas[1]
describe the living entities as sarva-gatah, which means
"existing in all circumstances." The living entity is not material.
Although encaged in a material body, he is not material. But when we
speak of different atmospheres, we refer to different material
conditions.
Karandhara:
They say that the moon's atmosphere is unsuitable for life, but all
they can legitimately say is that it is unsuitable for life as they
know it.
Srila
Prabhupada: The Vedas say that the living entity has
no connection with material things. He cannot be burned, cut, dried up
or moistened. This is discussed in Bhagavad-gita.[2]
Dr. Singh:
Scientists extend their knowledge about life on this planet, thinking
that it must apply to life on other planets also.
Srila
Prabhupada: Yes. They are thinking foremost of their own selves.
They are thinking limitedly, in terms of their own circumstances. This
is what we call "Dr. Frog's philosophy. [Laughter.]
Once there
was a frog in a well, and when a friend informed him of the existence
of the Atlantic Ocean, he asked the friend, "Oh, what is this Atlantic
Ocean?""It is a vast body of water," his friend replied."How vast? Is
it twice the size of this well?""Oh, no-much, much larger," his friend
replied.
"How much
larger? Ten times the size?" In this way, the frog went on calculating.
But what is the possibility of ever understanding the vastness of the
great ocean in this way? Our faculties, our experience, and our powers
of speculation are always limited. The speculations of the scientists
only give rise to such frog philosophy.
Karandhara:
The basis of what they call "scientific integrity" is that they talk
only about what they can directly experience.
Srila
Prabhupada: You may talk about your experience, and I may talk
about my experience. But why should I accept your experience? You may
be a fool, so why should I also become a fool? You may be a frog, but
suppose I am a whale. Why should I take your well as all in all? You
have your method of acquiring scientific knowledge, and I have mine.
Dr. Singh:
Because the scientists haven't detected any water on the surface of the
moon, they've concluded that no life could survive there.
Srila
Prabhupada They haven't seen the whole surface of the moon. Suppose
someone were to come here from another planet, drop into the Arabian
Desert and then return home. Could he come to a complete conclusion
about the nature of the whole earth? His knowledge would not be
complete.
Karandhara:
They have a device that senses water. They say they've had it orbit the
moon, and they've concluded that the moon has no water and therefore no
life.
Srila
Prabhupada: Even if, as on the sun, there is apparently no water,
still
there are living entities there. How does a cactus grow in the desert,
apparently without water?
Karandhara:
It gets water from the atmosphere.
Srila
Prabhupada: Yes, because the atmosphere contains all the elements
needed to sustain life: earth, water, fire, air and ether. In anything
material, all these elements are present. For example, in my body there
is water, although you cannot see it. Similarly, you don't see fire in
my body, yet my body is warm. Where does this warmth come from? You
don't see any fire. Do you see any fire burning in my body? Then where
does the warmth come from? What is the answer?
The
Universe in the Atom
Srila
Prabhupada: All matter is a combination of five gross elements
(earth, water, fire, air and ether) and three subtle elements (mind,
intelligence and false ego).
Karandhara:
According to the Vedic science, material energy begins with the false
ego and then develops into the intelligence, then the mind and then the
gross elements—ether, air, fire and so on. So the same basic
ingredients are present in all matter. Is this right?
Srila
Prabhupada: Yes. The creation of the material universe is like the
growth of a great banyan tree[3] from a tiny seed. No
one can see the
tree within the seed, but all the necessary ingredients for the tree
are there, including the required intelligence. Actually, everyone's
body is simply a sample universe. Your body and my body are different
universes, small universes. Therefore, all eight material elements are
present within our bodies, just as they are within the whole universe.
Similarly, an insect's body is another universe.
Karandhara:
How about the atom?
Srila
Prabhupada: The same formula applies: all these constituents are
within the atom. Anor aniyan mahato mahiyan (Katha
Upanishad 1.2.20). This means that whether something is
extremely large or infinitesimal, it is still made of the same basic
elements. This is true everywhere in the material world. Just as a
woman's small watch has all the requisite machinery for its smooth
functioning, so an ant has all the necessary brain substance to manage
its affairs nicely. How is this possible? To answer this properly, you
must minutely examine the brain tissues in the ant. But this you cannot
do. Moreover, there are innumerable insects smaller than the
ant. So there must be a mechanical arrangement for all this detailed
activity, but scientists cannot discover it.
Relativity
and Knowledge
Srila
Prabhupada: All living entities possess the required intelligence
to execute four principles: eating, sleeping, sexual intercourse and
defense. These four principles exist even in the atom. The only
difference in the human being is that he has the extra intelligence
with which to understand God. This is the difference. Ahara-nidra-bhaya-
maithunam cha samanam etat pashubhir naranam. Eating, sleeping,
sex life and defense are to be found everywhere. You have seen trees
growing. Wherever there is a knot, the bark does not go this way; it
goes that way. [Srila Prabhupada gestures to show that a tree's bark
grows not over a knot, but around it.] The tree has intelligence: "If I
go this way, I will be blocked, so I will go that way." But where are
its eyes? How can it see? It has intelligence. That intelligence may
not be as good as yours, but it is intelligence. Similarly, a child
also has intelligence, though not as developed as his father's. In due
course of time, when the child gets a body like that of his father, the
child's intelligence will be fully developed and exhibited.
Dr.
Singh: Then intelligence is relative.
Srila
Prabhupada: Yes. Everything is relative. You have your body, your
duration of life, and your intelligence, and the ant has his. Both we
and the ant live for one hundred years, but the length of our
hundred—year life—span is relative to our bodies. Even Brahma, the
longest—living entity in this universe, lives for one hundred years. To
us the ant's life-span may seem only a few days. In the same way, on
other planets with atmospheres different from the earth's, there are
life-forms suited to those conditions. But the scientists try to view
everything according to the relative conditions of planet earth. This
is nonsense. Why are they doing that? If the whole cosmic manifestation
follows the law of relativity, how can the scientist say that the
conditions of this planet must apply to life on other planets? The
Vedas instruct us that knowledge must always be considered in
terms of desha-kala-patra. Desha means
"circumstances," kala means "time," and patra means
"the object." We must understand everything by taking these three
elements into consideration. For example, a fish is living very
comfortably in the water, and we are shivering on the shore of the sea.
This is because my desha-kala-patra and the fish's desha-kala-patra
are different. But if we conclude that the sea gulls will also shiver
in the water, that is nonsense; their desha-kala
-patra is again different. There are 8,400,000 different species of
life in the material cosmic manifestation, and each species must adjust
to circumstances differently. Even on this planet, you cannot go live
comfortably in Alaska, although it is America. Similarly, the living
entities enjoying life in Alaska do not come here.
Karandhara:
Relativity, then, is based upon our individual situation.
Srila
Prabhupada: Yes. Therefore it is said that what is food for one is
poison for another.
Brahmananda
Swami: Because scientists cannot survive on the moon, they think no
one else can.
The
8.6-Billion-Year Day
Dr.
Singh: The problem with the world is that practically everyone is
thinking only in terms of his own circumstances
—and that is nonsense.
Student:
Someone who has never gone out of his village thinks that his village
is the whole world.
Srila
Prabhupada: Yes. The frog is always thinking in terms relative to
his
well. He has no power to think otherwise. The ocean is great, but he is
thinking of the ocean's greatness in terms relative to his own
greatness. Similarly, God is great, but we are thinking of God in terms
of relative greatness, greatness relative to our own. There are certain
insects that are born at night, and they grow, bear offspring and
die—all before daybreak. They never see the morning. So if they
conclude that there is no morning, that is nonsense. In the same way,
as soon as we hear from the shastras [revealed scriptures] that
Brahma's duration of life is equivalent to millions of our years, we do
not believe it. We say, "How can it be?" But Bhagavad-gita
(8.17) says, sahasra-yuga-paryantam ahar yad brahmano viduh:
"Four billion three hundred million earth years equal Brahma's twelve
hours." Even a leading Indian politician who was known as a great
scholar of the Gita could not accept this information. He
said it is mental speculation. Such a rascal! Yet he is passing as an
important scholar. This is the problem. Rascals and fools are passing
as scholars, scientists and philosophers, and therefore the whole world
is being misguided. END
1. Vedic knowledge was originally handed down as one Veda.
About five thousand years ago the sage Vyasadeva divided it into four Vedas
(Rig, Yajur, Sama and Atharva) so that less
intelligent people might understand it. Vyasadeva was an empowered
incarnation of God. He also undertook the task of expanding the Vedas
into eighteen Puranas and the Mahabharata,
and he summed up all the Vedic literature in the Vedanta
-sutra. But he was still dissatisfied with this colossal
literary achievement. Therefore, under the direction of his spiritual
master, Narada Muni, he wrote the Srimad-Bhagavatam,
which is "the ripened fruit of Vedic knowledge."
2. Bhagavad-gita is widely renowned
throughout the world as the
essence of Vedic knowledge. It contains the sacred instructions given
by Lord Krishna, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, to Arjuna, His
intimate devotee, on the Battlefield of Kurukshetra. In these
instructions Lord Krishna gives a scientific exposition of the perfect
path to self-realization in the present dark age of hypocrisy and
quarrel. Originally written in Sanskrit, Bhagavad-gita
has been published in almost every language in the world (there are
more than six hundred English translations alone), but
Bhagavad-gita As It Is by His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta
Swami Prabhupada, is the first English translation and commentary by a
pure devotee of the Lord in a bona fide disciplic succession of
spiritual masters stemming from Lord Krishna Himself. Therefore, Bhagavad-gita
As It Is presents Lord Krishna's message without the slightest
distortion or personal interpretation. Thus it is the first edition to
have actually awakened the dormant Krishna consciousness of its
readers.
3. The banyan is the sacred Indian fig tree (Ficus
religiosa). Its branches drop shoots to the ground, and these take
root and support their parent branches. Extending itself in this way,
one tree will often cover a very large area.
