
The
ethics of the Hindus is subtle, sublime and profound. All religions have taught
ethical precepts such as: “Do not kill, do not injure others, love your
neighbour as your self,” but they have not given the reason. The basis of Hindu
ethics is this: “There is one all-pervading Atman. It is the innermost soul of
all beings. This is the common, pure consciousness. If you injure your
neighbour, you really injure yourself. If you injure any other creature, you
really injure yourself, because the whole world is nothing but your own Self.”
This is Hindu ethics. This is the basic metaphysical truth that underlies all
Hindu ethical codes.
The
Atman or Self is one. One life vibrates in all beings. Life is common in
animals, birds and human beings. Existence is common. This is the emphatic
declaration of the Upanishads or Srutis. This primary truth of religion is the
foundation of ethics or morality or science of right conduct. Morality has
Vedanta as its basis.
The
first thing you learn from religion is the unity of all selves. The Upanishads
says: “The neighbour is, in truth, the very Self and what separates you from
him is mere illusion.” One Atman or Self abides in all beings. Universal love
is the expression of the unity. Universal brotherhood has its basis in the
unity of Self. All human relations exist because of this unity. Yajnavalkya
said to his wife Maitreyi: “Behold, my dear, not indeed for the love of the
husband is the husband dear, for the love of the Self is the husband dear.” And
so with wife, sons, property, friends, worlds and even the Devas themselves.
All are dear, because the one Self is in all. If you injure another man, you
injure yourself. If you help another person, you help yourself. There is one
life, one common consciousness in all beings. This is the foundation of right conduct.
This is the foundation of ethics.
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