Author, Speaker, Illustrator, Mythologist

Grammar of the Gods

Apr 11, 2010 | Indian Mythology, Myth Theory.

Printed in Speaking Tree supplement, Times of India, 21 March 2010

In Hindu mythology, divinity is expressed in the form of three couples – Brahma and Saraswati, Vishnu and Lakshmi, and finally Shiva and Shakti. What is interesting to note is that the male half of this trinity is associated with verbs – Brahma creates, Vishnu preserves and Shiva destroys. The female half on the other hand is associated with nouns – Saraswati is knowledge, Lakshmi is wealth and Shakti is power. The gods are thus the creators, preservers and destroyers; they are the active subjects. The goddesses by contrast are that which is created, preserved or destroyed; they are the passive objects. While the goddesses are described as embodying wealth, knowledge and power, they themselves are never described as knowledgeable, wealthy or powerful. That is usually an adjective reserved for gods. Makes one wonder – is that good old male chauvinism at work? Or is it something else? A symbolic message encoded using female forms, perhaps.

What is often overlooked while looking at mythological images of gods and goddesses is that mythology is symbolic. Shiva does not represent a man and Shakti does not represent women. Shiva and Shakti are male and female forms that lend themselves to embody ideas. Ideas have no gender. But to communicate them, they are often given various forms – sometimes animals, sometimes plant, sometimes geometrical patterns and sometimes human. If human, they are given gender.

Wealth is embodied using the form of Lakshmi, but that does not mean wealth is feminine or women are wealth. Such confusion between the signifier (the form) and the signified (the thought) has led to all kinds of readings of mythology. We have political commentators wondering why a country that worships wealth, knowledge and power as women has traditionally denied women access to all three.  We have the feminist movement deriving great strength from female deities from Kali to Shakti. Durga then becomes about female power; more a political totem and less a symbolic communication of the forefathers.

In Samkhya, the school of analytical metaphysics, the world is divided into two parts: the spiritual (Purusha) and the material (Prakriti). Purusha is today translated to mean man; that makes Prakriti woman. Prakriti is today translated to mean nature; that makes Purusha culture, or more specifically male culture. But this attribution of gender to elements of Samkhya is more convenient and simplistic rather than correct.

Purusha means that which is not contained in space and time. Prakriti means that which is contained in space and time. Purusha is thus the spirit while Prakriti is matter. Purusha is the soul while Prakriti is that which wraps around the soul – the mind, the body and the world. Now the flesh can be male or female. Thus gender is an attribute of Prakriti. Purusha is beyond gender. That makes man, a soul wrapped in male flesh and woman a soul wrapped in female flesh.

Prakriti is the container of wealth and knowledge and power. It stimulates and provokes, Purusha into action. Purusha is that which can act – it can if it so wills create or sustain or destroy anything: wealth, knowledge or power. Thus Purusha is the divine within us that can create or sustain or destroy. Prakriti is the divine around us manifesting as wealth, knowledge and power. Purusha creates outside itself but within Prakriti just as man creates life outside the male body within a woman’s body. This is why Purusha is best represented by the male form while Prakriti is best represented by the female form. Within is God. Without is Goddess. Without either there is neither.

  • $ujay

    AWESOME!!!

  • http://thevoiceswithin.com Ranjani Ravi

    In my understanding of the Samkhya philosophy, Purusha is the witness, the bystander and not the doer. Only Prakriti acts, Purusha being passive. Also, Purusha is Pure Consciousness itself which is beyond qualities and attributes. In that case, how can the silent spectator create or destroy anything or how can it be stimulated? Please clarify.

  • http://the-redpill.blogspot.com Kiran Varanasi

    Wow.. Devdutt..

    This is the closest you have come to connecting Indian myths with Sāmkhya. Prakriti and Purusha, exactly !!

    Please do read my blog post on how this is related to counting with zeros. I’d be greatly obliged to have your take on this..

    http://the-redpill.blogspot.com/2010/04/samkhya-arithmetic-of-natures-evolution.html

  • http://the-redpill.blogspot.com Kiran Varanasi

    Ranjani,

    Very good question. I will give you a simple answer. Devdutt ji might elaborate later.

    You are absolutely correct that all “action” belongs to Prakriti. Purusha is only the experiencer (experiencing what are termed as “qualia” in modern philosophy). All action is originated by Prakriti depending on the relative composition of the 3 gunas (satwik, rajas, tamas).

    But language is inherently based on actions (verbs), and it creates an actor to explain the action. This actor is what is provided by the trimurti figures. The Purusha “wrongly” associates himself with the actor. This is the cause of all distress. Well.. a Purusha can reside within the body of a woman as well, I am just following the original gender convention of Kapila muni.

    In reality, all the actors and all the action .. all of them are the facets of Prakriti – the Divine mother. The Purusha is beyond all actions, all descriptions, and all comprehensibility to thought. Both the Prakriti and Purusha taken together constitute Brahman (the absolute), but not independently.

  • http://the-redpill.blogspot.com Kiran Varanasi

    It stimulates and provokes, Purusha into action. Purusha is that which can act – it can if it so wills create or sustain or destroy anything: wealth, knowledge or power.

    There is the Purusha, and then there is the Purusha as reflected in Prakriti. Any kind of “actor” at whichever level (material, life, mind, understanding, ego) is an association that Purusha makes about himself to an aspect of Prakriti. In reality, it is purely Prakriti that moves, all by herself, due to her relative composition of qualities.

    The Purusha only experiences the sensation that is obtained by the movement of Prakriti. He has no control whatsoever on the movement of Prakriti. Neither does Prakriti have any control on the attentiveness of Purusha. Both of them come together only owing to grace for each other. This is love in its purest form. That is why these two concepts are expressed in Samkhya using male and female images. And any assension towards bliss is considered as an act of love between the two.

  • cmpatnaik

    A awesome explanation!!!
    I don’t think that any body has better explanation than this. I was having this false notion that Puruah is male form and Prakriti is famele form. Its actually Purusha the spirit whare its neither male or female and Prakriti the matter its male and famale form both. Hence Purusha the spirit can not act of its own for that it needs the help of the matter.
    Regards
    cmpatnaik

  • Krishna

    Mr.Dev,

    I wish to draw your attention to what is said in the Gita.
    Purusha is the “Self”, the non-changing one, the constant one, the spirit.
    Prakriti on the other hand is ever-changing/ever-evolving matter.
    Hence, only Purusha can possess or wield knowledge, wealth and power, and not prakriti.

    Krishna

  • Sudip

    The medium, which I see through is much clearer now. Thanks Devdutt!!!

  • http://kamleshjangid.com Kamlesh Jangid

    It is really very great to read such thing. Very explanatory. Thanks.

  • Suresh Nottath

    Dear Devji,

    If we take Purusha, as something which symbolises Male & Prakirti that of a female. Then what about eunuchs? What do they symbolise? Just curious to know??

    Best regards / Suresh

  • Kannan K

    @Suresh
    Then eunuchs must be Brahman combination of Purusha & Prakriti ;)

    On a serious note,the whole point of the article was to make the point NOT to draw direct correlation with gender to allegorical male-female labels of various gunas&vasanas.
    Its like the old saying of asking if Sita is Rama’s sister..after reciting whole of Ramayana.
    Good Grief.

  • Sayan

    Hi Devdutt,

    What I gather from here, ‘Purusha’ and ‘Prakriti’ have a kind of cause and effect relationship.

    Purusha is the one which is making things happen and Prakriti is the one which experiences the things which are happening.

    So, Purusha is the ‘Instigator’ while Prakriti is the ‘Experiencer’.

    And this concept has been metaphorically represented as the Male and Female entities of nature (as you’ve described in the article).

    All these are quite clear.

    My question to you is …You’ve mentioned that we visualize our deities as pairs (Brahma – Saraswati), (Vishnu – Laxmi), (Shiva – Shakti). How is this combination made? Why is Brahma (creator) associated with Saraswati (knowledge) and not Laxmi (wealth) and so on? What is the basis of this combination?…

  • Nitesh

    @ Sayan

    The pairings are as logical as it gets. Saraswati, Lakshmi and Shakti are the means without which purusha loses its significance. The creator can’t create without Knowledge, the Preserver can’t run the world without dhana(wealth) and the destroyer can’t destroy without power.

    • Devdutt

      Try creating without power…..preserving without knowledge…and creating without wealth….these pairings are more convenient than correct for a mediocre understanding of the trinity

  • kosru

    the concept of brahma, vishnu and shiva is correct. They are doing their duty perfectly. And if we wanted, we can see them physically also.

  • http://lovejoshi.blogspot.com/ Love Joshi

    Sir,
    I notice you briefly mentioned the geometrical shapes in this particular discourse.

    Was wondering, what was the ‘uttapatti’(origin) of a lot of the geometric patterns that we now see? for example the different ‘yantras’, ‘chakras’, etc. is this also an offshoot of the vedas and hinduism ?

    Thanks,
    LJ

    • Devdutt

      I don’t know origin…but thoughts in India are often expressed geometrically…this then becomes a yantra

  • Rashmi Nair

    Can I work under you Sir?

  • Mihir

    Isnt their a popular saying somewhere that Shiva without Shakti is Shava … I think that sums up almost everything …

  • http://NA varsha k. shah

    Dear Mr. Dev,

    If God is a concept, then are incarnations of Vishnu is also an idea…. what IS the truth…?

    Please kindly revert…. Awaiting eagerly….

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