Collated by Tusar Nath Mohapatra
https://vipvak.blogspot.com/2026/06/economics-was-fuel.html
Evaluating gentrification, Sanskritisation, Ambedkar’s politics, and Srinivas’s field sociology through Sri Aurobindo’s The Human Cycle provides an extraordinary perspective. Writing more than a century ago, Sri Aurobindo mapped the psychological evolution of societies through five progressive stages: Symbolic, Typal, Conventional, Individualist/Rational, and Subjective. [1, 2]
When mapping this 100-year-old framework onto modern social struggles, it becomes clear how Indian society remains trapped between these psychological epochs.
1. Sanskritisation as the "Conventional" Trap
Aurobindo describes the Conventional Age as a period where the living psychological truth of a society hardens into external formulas, systems, and rigid social hierarchies. [1, 2, 3, 4]
- The Aurobindonian View: Originally, the Varna system was "Symbolic" and "Typal"—based on inner temperament (Guna) and action (Karma). By the time it became fixed caste (Jati), it entered the Conventional stage. [4, 5, 6, 7, 8]
- Evaluating Srinivas: Sanskritisation is a classic symptom of a society deeply stuck in the Conventional trap. Lower castes copy the outward habits (vegetarianism, sacred threads) of upper castes to climb a rigid, pre-existing structure. From Aurobindo’s lens, Sanskritisation is not true progress; it is merely an imitation of a fossilized convention. It does not liberate the individual; it just shifts their position within a cage. [6, 9, 10, 11]
2. Gentrification as the "Rational/Individualist" Failure
The Individualist or Rational Age emerges as a revolt against suffocating conventions. It champions the individual, reason, science, and freedom. However, Aurobindo warned that the Western Rational Age would make a grand mistake: it would look for the truth of life in outsides and try to achieve human perfection through external "machinery"—including economic systems. [12, 13, 14]
- Evaluating Gentrification: Urban gentrification is the pinnacle of this externalized, rational machinery. It replaces the conventional ties of neighborhood, community, and heritage with cold, economic calculations of real estate value and market logic.
- The Failure: Aurobindo noted that the Individualist age ultimately fails because it mistakes economic freedom and material comfort for true freedom. Gentrification creates a modern, sleek facade, but beneath it lies displacement, alienation, and social atomization. [12]
3. Ambedkar vs. The Left: The Battle within the Rational Age
The historical clash between Dr. B.R. Ambedkar and the Communists can be viewed as two competing forces fighting within the Individualist/Rational Age to dismantle the Conventional Age. [12]
- The Communist Error: Early Marxists believed that altering the economic "machinery" (class struggle) would solve everything. Aurobindo explicitly wrote that trying to fix society purely through economic re-engineering is a failure of the externalizing intellect. [12]
- Ambedkar's Deeper Insight: Ambedkar understood that you cannot build a rational, democratic state on top of a rotten, conventional psychology (caste). He realized that the internal psychology of the people (the "division of laborers") had to be systematically broken first. By leading his followers to convert to Buddhism, Ambedkar attempted a leap out of the Rational Age and into a Subjective/Spiritual framework, recognizing that social liberation requires a psychological and spiritual transformation, not just an economic change. [12]
4. Where Does Srinivas Stand?
M.N. Srinivas was the ultimate cartographer of the transition zone between the Conventional and the Rational. His concepts of Sanskritisation (clinging to convention) and Westernisation (adopting individualistic, secular habits) perfectly capture a society caught in a multi-layered psychological transition. Srinivas showed that even when the machinery of the Rational Age arrives (railways, voting, economic markets), the Conventional mind weaponizes it to keep caste alive. [9, 12]
The 100-Year Verdict: Where Are We Now?
A century after The Human Cycle, India finds itself in a chaotic, overlapping state of development:
- The Outer Shell is Rational/Economic: Cities are gentrifying, capital rules supreme, and class mobility is real.
- The Core remains Conventional: Caste endogamy, ritual anxieties, and Sanskritisation-like status seeking remain fiercely active just beneath the surface. [2]
According to Sri Aurobindo, the only way out of this impasse is to move into the Subjective and ultimately Spiritual Age. Society will only transcend the hierarchies of both caste (Sanskritisation) and capital (Gentrification) when it stops measuring human worth by external structures—whether those structures are ritual purity or real estate value—and begins to ground human unity in the deeper soul. [1, 12, 15, 16, 17]
To continue this synthesis, would you like to explore:
- How Sri Aurobindo distinguished between True and False Subjectivism in modern societies?
- The specific chapters in The Human Cycle where he dissects the degeneration of the Varna system?
- How modern spiritual or alternative communities (like Auroville) attempt to bypass both class and caste? [6, 18, 19]
- GoogleAI
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