Essay on science and technology that evolved in ancient India

Our ancient civilization goes back to more than 5000 years; starting with the Indus Valley Civilisation around 2500 B.C.
The subcontinent has been a place for major historical and philosophical development. The vision of science and technology was integral to the ancient tradition.
The Indus people knew the use of the wheel and the plough, smelted and forged metal and were capable of designing protection measures against fire and flood. They also possessed high technical skill in construction.
They not only used standardized burnt bricks for their buildings, but planned their cities with symmetrically arranged streets and an elaborate drainage system that speaks of their sophisticated awareness of sanitation and hygiene.
Later on, the Vedic Age marked a new era of intellectual inquiry and technological endeavor. Ancient mathematical works such as the Sulva- Sutars utilized geometry for designing and constructing altars. Mathematics was an important field of knowledge and the ancient India made contributions to it.
Our ancestors are credited with the introduction of the concept of zero and the decimal system which spread to other cultures. Indians also invented the Arabic numbers, called Hindsa by the Arab and the knowledge of which reached the west through the Arabs.
Mathematicians like Aryabhata and Bhaskara I, Brahmagupta, Mahbira and Srihari used and developed most of the mathematical formulae that we know today. Aryabhata I gave the approximate value of 3.1416, which is being used to this day.
Bhaskar-II is well known for his work in Algebra and his Siddhantasiromani. Astronomy, essential for religious as well as practical purposes, was another field of inquiry, which achieved remarkable heights in the ancient times. Aryabhata also propounded that the earth rotates about its own axis and calculated the period of earth's rotation with fair accuracy.
Many later scientific works owe their origins to panchasiddhamta of which the Suryasidhata greatly influenced astronomical research. Medicine was yet another field for original research and the ancient India's made notable contribution to it. The Atharvaveda is the original repository of India's medical knowledge.
Ancient Indian also made study on symptoms and causes of diseases and their curative means were also researched by them. They also made use of herbs, flowers and minerals to evolve medical cures. Susruta and Charka Samhitas, the two great classicist of Aryuveda give a clear picture of the medical and surgical practices in use more than 2000 years in India.
Susrutasamhita of Susruta describes the methods of operating cataract, stone disease and several other ailments. Susruta is also regarded as the founder of the Dhanvatri school of medicine. The CharkaSamhita of Charak (2nd century AD) is like an encyclopedia of Indian medicines with details of disease and herbs and plants for their treatment.
Apasthama in the 2nd century B.C. produced a practical geometry of the constructions of altars for sacrifices and Aryabhata formulated the rule of Apasthama for finding the area of a triangle, which led to the origin of trigonometry.
He also calculated the position of the planets according to trigonometry and discovered the real cause of linear and solar eclipses the circumference of the earth based on speculation. Varamihira stated that the moon rotates around the earth and the moon rotes around the sun.
Thus, the ancient civilization in India had developed to such as extent that many philosophic and scientific concepts, which the west was not even remotely aware of had reached a peak here.

Essay on The Oceans: The Biggest Part of the World

Water returning to the oceans from the land carries huge amounts of sediment. The buildup of these sediments, together with erosion shores by pounding waves, has created the continental shelves that border the coasts.
In general, a sharp drop, the continental slope, marks the edge of the continental shelf and the boundary of the deep oceanic basins. The shelf, slope, and in many places the ocean bottom are covered with a fine mud or ooze consisting of slit, minerals precipitated from sea water, and the microscopic shells of dead marine animals.
Much of the ocean floor is a broad abyssal plain. Here and there the floor is studded with underwater mountains, often of volcanic origin. Where these seamounts just above the water they form small, isolated islands, such as those of Hawaii.
Also interrupting the flatness of the abyssal plain are deep trenches and mountainous submarine ridges. The Japanese islands are the exposed tops of one such ridge.
Drifting Continents and Changing Oceans
Recently it has been widely agreed that the continents were once jointed together, and that the present oceans were formed after the continents drifted apart.
This is the theory of plate tectonics, or as it is more popularly known, continental drift. There is a significant body of evidence in support of this theory. Equally important, it explains many previously puzzling features of the earth's surface.
Close inspection of a world map reveals that some continental coastlines have complementary shapes. Like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle, they seem to fit together.
Furthermore, the present ocean floors appear to be relatively young. Examination of cores drilled from bottom sediments suggests that the Atlantic Ocean formed only about 200 million years ago. That was probably when the Americas began to separate from Africa and Europe. The separation was a slow process which still continues.
Drifting of continents from one climatic zone to another may be part of the explanation for why dinosaurs and lush tropical vegetation once existed in what are now temperate areas of the United States and Europe. It certainly explains distribution of closely related species on distant continents-for example, the southern beeches found only in Chile, New Zealand, Tasmania, and Australia.
Are you asking yourself how continents move?
Crustal plates
It is clear that the earth has an unstable crust. Catastrophic earthquakes and volcanic eruptions all too often reveal the tremendous forces at work inside the earth. Luckily for us, most internal stresses, such as those that fold the earth's crust into mountain ranges, act so slowly that they do not affect us during our lifetime. Yet these forces move continents.
Present information indicates that the earth's crust is not an unbroken skin. Instead it consists of at least six-and probably more- fairly rigid blocks or plates.
These plates do not correspond exactly to any of our customary geographic boundaries but often include both continental masses and ocean bottom. Being composed of rather light rock, these crustal plates float on top of the heavier, more plastic material beneath. And like ice cubes floating in water, adjacent plates rub together and slide post or over each other as they are pushed apart by upheavals of molten rock from below.
Tectonics means building
The Atlantic Ocean floor is spreading as the result of activity at mid-oceanic ridges. Here new crustal material seems to be seeping out from fissures and forming additional sea floor. This, in turn, pushes the continents apart. In other oceans similar crusted plates are also growing.
But since the earth is not expanding in circumference, old parts of the crust must be undergoing destruction. This seems to be happening at Pacific Ocean trenches, among other places, such oceanic tranches; some more than six miles deep, develop when one plate is focused under another.
In places, molten crust comes to the surface, forming volcanoes. Volcanoes are particularly common along ocean ridges at places where the plates are growing. Volcanoes also appear near trenches where one crustal plate is slipping over another. In such locations, strings of volcanoes create island arcs. Not surprisingly, earthquake zones are associated with these island arcs as well as being common along other plate margins. Collisions between plates are also responsible for folded mountains.
The union of India (which once was an island) with Asia is believed responsible for the crumpled crust we know as the Himalayas.
Crustal movements are an ongoing characteristic of the earth, extending for back in time. Before the Old and New Worlds were united in one supercontinent, there was a time when they were separated by a body of water called the Protoatlantic Ocean.
Considering the behaviour of the crustal plates, no marine environment is changeless, although some are exceptionally stable compared with most habitats.
Ocean Habitats
Salts are constantly added to the ocean in river water and rainwater runoff. Depending on drainage, currents, and temperature, the saltiness of the oceans varies at different locations. The average salinity is about 3.5 percent, or about 35 parts by weight of salt to each 1000 parts of water.
Most of the salt in seawater is ordinary table salt (sodium chloride), but sulphate, magnesium, calcium, and potassium salts are also abundant. In fact, seawater contains traces of just about every element.
These accumulated salts make seawater much denser than fresh water. This is the reason it is easier to swim or float in the ocean than in a river or a lake. It also means that salt water has a much lower freezing point than fresh water. In addition to salt, seawater also contains dissolved atmospheric gases. But seawater has less oxygen than fresh water, since salt decreases the solubility of oxygen in water.
Ocean layers and life
The sun heats and illuminates the ocean, although few of the sun's rays penetrate very deep into the water. As a result, water temperature, illumination, and salinity (which is temperature dependent) are related to depth. Of course, all these characteristics influence the kind of organisms to be found at a given location, but light is of special importance.
Because photosynthetic plants need light in order to live, they are found only in shallow water and in the surface layer of the open ocean. Almost all photosynthesis occurs in the upper 80 meters (260 feet) designated as the euphotic (good light) zone.
Underneath the euphoric zone is a region of ever-deepening twilight. No sunlight penetates below 600 metres (1967 feet). As a result, most of the ocean is in perpetual darkness and can be inhabited only by animals and decomposer bacteria and fungi.
Life at the top
Microscopic floating algae, known collectively as phytoplankton, are the main producers in the oceans. Diatoms and din flagellates are the most prominent phytoplankton. Their collective biomass far out weights that of the more obvious algae known as "seaweeds." Most seaweeds are attached to rocks near the coast.
Phytoplankton is never evenly distributed. Not only are they limited to the top layers where there is light, but within that layer their density follows distribution of minerals.
Organisms that die in deep water usually drift to the bottom. Similarly, faces settle out, and the valuable nutrients they contain are lost from surface waters. Currents and diffusion only slowly return precious nitrogen and phosphorus from the bottom to the euphotic zone.
Shallow water over the continental shglves is usually fairly well mixed and contains more nutrients than surface water over the open ocean. Here the deep water is quite undisturbed, and minerals are concentrated far below the euphotic zone.
During the winter, because sunlight striking temperate waters is less intense than at other seasons, photosynthesis is limited to the top few metres of water. With the coming of spring the phytoplankton multiply rapidly in response to increasing illumination.
Exploding plankton populations are termed plankton blooms, because the masses, of algae often colour the water bright red, brown, or green. Although clearly visible, marine plankton blooms are never as dramatic as those of freshwater lakes. This difference in productivity may result from mineral deficiencies in illuminated marine waters.
Microscopic animals, often referred to as zooplankton, feed on phytoplankton. Copepods and krill, tiny relatives of crabs and shrimp, are among the most abundant zooplankton. Others are numbered among the unicellular protozoa and include foraminifera and radiolarians.
Typically, zooplanktons bear numerous projections that increase their surface area and help suspend them in the water. Most zooplankton both swims and floats.
For the most part, relatively small fish, such as anchovies, herrings, and sardines, prey on zooplankton. There are exceptions, however. In the cold but fertile water around Antarctica the penguins, fish, squid, and even baleen whales feed directly on krill. The amount of zooplankton consumed by a large animal can be astounding. A single blue whale can eat three tons of krill a day.
The briny deep
Beneath the productive upper layer of the ocean lies as much as six miles of water. Throughout most of this space, life is sparse. Food from the top decomposes quite slowly.
Fish in deep, dark waters are mostly mouth Good meals are rare here and few items are rejected as being too big. This is the province of the famous angler fish, which is equipped with luminescent lures that attract prey into its gaping mouth.
The low population level in deep water makes finding a mate at the right time a chancy proposition. In some species the males attach to the females during adolescence and maintain this parasitic relationship throughout life. As you might expect, the males of such species are tiny compared with their mates.
Rocks and Sand: Marsh and Muck
In contract to the relatively uniform conditions of the open sea, a variety of habitats occur where water meets land. Each of these environments is unique; each is intriguing in its own way. Perhaps rocky shores are the most interesting. Here we find a diverse community attuned to the rhythmically changing environment.
Living between the tides
In the band that spans high and low tide, the first priorities are to stay put, to keep wet, and to avoid being crushed. Waves pound the shores so vigorously that delicate organisms can be destroyed or carried away. Alternately submerged and exposed, intertidal species (those that live between lowest low tide and highest high tide) must also withstand cold, heat, and a wide range of salinity.
Summer sun can cook tissues, and evaporation of seawater deposits a crust of salt on every surface. Only a few months later, winter tides pull the protective layer of water away and leave organisms exposed to freezing cold or to torrents of fresh water. As adaptations to this extreme environment, intertidal organisms either cling tenaciously or dart about to find shelter. Their bodies are protected by shells, tough body walls, leathery surfaces; or muscus.
Since tidal exposure varies every day, there are distinct life zones along the shore. The following applies to the central California coast, but similar areas occur on rocky shores from Mexico to Alaska and along the coast of Maine and the Maritime Provinces, as well as on other continents.
A dark band of cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) marks the highest zone where there is much marine life. Here numerous periwinkles scavenge. A distinct band of white barnacles grows below the black zone. Barnacles lie on their backs, stuck to the rocks. When the tide goes out, barnacles close their limy shells to conserve water.
When they are submerged, they open their shell plates and feed, using delicate, jointed appendages to kick food into their mouths.
Limpets are abundantly distributed among the barnacles. These marine snails use a tremendous suction foot to pull their shells tightly against the rock. This traps water under the shells and prevents dehydration during low tide.
A crowded strip of mussels stands just below the mean-sea-level mark that coincides with the bottom of the barnacle region. The clams like mussels spin proteinaeous fibers that attach their blue-black shells to the rocks. Tidal pools harbour rock crabs, hermit crabs, and large green sea anemones.
Farther out, on the underside of large rocks and steep ledges hide sponges, sea cucumbers, sea squirts, chitons and abalone, Shrimp and spiny lobsters lurk in the lowest tide pools. No one has made a complete census of animals in the intertidal zone, but biologists familiar with the California coast estimate that there may be 300 species there.
The showy life of rocky shore appears missing from sandy beaches, but even though beaches appear barren, animals are present. It's just that most of them are hidden from view. Burrowing, digging, and tunnelling creatures, among them clams, mole crabs, tube worms, and olive shells, bury themselves in the sand.
Low tides expose some species periodically; others are permanently protected within their burrows. Typical residents below the low-tide line include whelks, swimming crabs, sand dollars, and hermit crabs.
Wetlands and estuaries
Bays and river mouths, where fresh and salt water meet, are unusually fertile environments. The most valuable of such estuaries are broad, shallow basins created by silt deposits.
Here mud flats and tidal marshes line channels of open water. Most of the silt and organic matter dumped from the river becomes trapped in its estuary. Slow currents, a large surface for evaporation, and presence of rooted vegetation all helps make estuaries places where nutrients tarry.
Salt marsh grasses, eel grasses, and other rooted plants take advantage of rich water and soft bottoms. Algal scums cover mud flats, larger plants, and every solid surface, and dense phytoplankton blooms colour the water. There is so much food that only a tiny part of the photosynthetic product finds its way directly into the mouth of herbivores. Instead, most plants die and, in the absence of swift currents, simply sink to the bottom and rot.
The abundant organic matter supports a teaming broth of bacteria and fungi that use all available oxygen from the muddy bottom. As a result, other anaerobic microorganisms thrive there and release hydrogen sulphide. This noxious gas blackens marshland mucks and imparts a characteristic stench.
Their tremendous photosynthetic productivity and extensive decomposer food chain permit estuaries to literally teem with life. Microscopic decomposers are eaten by filter-feeding zooplankton, as well as by larger filter feeders, such as worms, clams, and oysters. Estuaries serve as nurseries for numerous coastal fish.
Menhaden, striped mullet, summer flounder, king whiting, croakers, striped, bass, smelt, and strugeon are all commercially important species that rely on estuaries sometime during their lives. The shrimp fisheries also depend on this resource, because young shrimp require the estuary habitat. Oysters, blue crabs, and several commerically valuable elam species are permanent estuarian residents. Furthermore, salt water marshes are the natural home of most waterfowl.
As valuable as they are in their native state, estuaries are often prized more for their land. To take advantage of a protected harbor, most seaports are built on estuaries.
As early ports grew, the surrounding marshes and mud flats were usually drained, and regions of shallow water were dredged or filled to provide areas for docks, industries, airports, and even residences. In Washington, D.C., only the Tidal Basin remains to remind us that the Jefferson Memorial, Lincoln Memorial, and Washington Monument were built on land "reclaimed" from a marsh.
Once leached free of their load of salt, drained tidal marshes become fertile farmland. Over the centuries, carefully engineered diking and pumping schemes created much of the Netherlands.
But present generations seem little aware of how much humans are responsible for familiar shorelines and of how important estuaries are in the schemes of aquatic life. Even now, many of our least-modified estuaries are threatened with "development" into resorts.

Essay on the impact of Globalisation in India

Globalization in India had a favorable impact on the overall growth rate of the economy. The pickup in GDP growth has helped improve India's global position from the 8th position in 1991 to 4th place in 2001.
During 1991-92, the Indian economy grew by 0.9% only. However the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth accelerated to 5.3 % in 1992-93, and 6.2% 1993-94. A growth rate of above 8% was an achievement by the Indian economy during the year 2003-04.
(i) Structure of the Economy
Due to globalisation, not only the GDP has increased but also the direction of growth in the sectors has also been changed. Earlier the maximum part of the GDP in the economy was generated from the primary sector but now the service industry is devoting the maximum part of the GDP.
The services sector remains the growth driver of the economy with a contribution of more than 57 per cent of GDP. India is ranked 18th among the world's leading exporters of services with a share of 1.3 per cent in world exports.
The services sector is expected to benefit from the ongoing liberalisation of the foreign investment regime into the sector. Software and the ITES-BPO sectors have recorded an exponential growth in recent years. FDI increased from around US$ 100 million in 1990/91 to USD 5536 million in 2004-5.
(ii) India's imports in 2004-05 stood at US$ 107 billion recording an increase of 35.62 per cent compared with US$ 79 billion in the previous fiscal. Export also increased by 24 per cent as compared to previous year.
It stood at US$ 79 billion in 2004-05 compared with US$ 63 billion in the previous year. Oil imports zoomed by 19 per cent with the import bill being US$ 29.08 billion against USD 20.59 billion in the corresponding period last year. Non-oil imports during 2004-05 are estimated at USD 77.036 billion, which is 33.62 per cent hig'ier than previous year's imports of US$ 57.651 billion in 2003-04.

Essay on Democratic Socialism in India

"Our basic aim is to create an ideal 'welfare state' on a socialistic pattern, a classless society in which none is exploited, where there is no class conflict, regional rivalry or groupism. Our object is to promote individual initiative and social and moral ori­entation of people. In short, we are to evolve an entirely new pattern of our social, cultural, ethical and economic outlook of our entire nation." —Pt. Nehru in his Presidential address to the A.I.C.C. Lahore in 1929.
Socialism is essentially a humanitarian ideal. It seeks to bridge the ever widening a gap between the rich and the poor by bringing about a better-ordering of the means of production and distribution. It is always sceptical of the welfare content of private ownership and, therefore, advocates collective ownership for the maximization of collective welfare. In India we speak of 'Democratic Socialism' believing in Evolutionary Socialism and the inevitability of a happy marriage between the 'collective spirit' and the individual spirit'. Like democracy, Socialism has also lost the sharp edge of its meanings; it is almost like a flute on which everybody can play his own tune.
The Indian approach to Socialism, as conceived by Gandhi and particularly by Nehru is India's distinct contribution to the world socialist movement. India does not believe in extremism, Capitalism and Communism. Between these two extreme forms of society, there must be a common ground acceptable to both the opposing groups.
India's first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, was an M.A. in Agricultural Economics. He devoutly studied Karl Marx and Lenin, but he favored the socialism which co-existed with demo­cracy and capitalism, as in the U.S.A., the U.K. and the Scandina­vian countries. So, Nehru opted for 'Democratic Socialism'. Now what is 'Democratic Socialism’? For an answer to this question we should remember that the constitution of India has defined the social and economic goals of national policy. Now democracy champions the cause of free enterprise and individual liberty whereas socialism insists on state ownership of the means of production and distribution. In a bid to establish an equalitarian society with justice to all. Pandit Nehru evolved a compromise formula known as 'democratic socialism'.
Democratic socialism aims at following a middle course bet­ween one extreme of individualism-cum-capitalism and the other extreme of communism-cum-totalitarianism. However, it is no easy matter to pursue the middle path in a parliamentary democracy like India where there are numerous political parties and regional and parochial groups sufficient to disintegrate the unified national interests. Still we arc trying to reconcile the implications of both democracy and socialism, to evolve programmes which postulate state action in defined spheres of state activity for elimination of social and economic inequalities.
To ensure success for democratic socialism in India, there are certain requirements which must be followed provision of equal facilities to all sections of the people; prevention of concentration of economic power in a few hands through state regulation and legislation; elimination of monopolies and monopolistic trends in business, industrial or other organizations, progressive extension of the public sector in key industries and power generation and public control over significant areas of economic power; maximum utilization of technology for increasing production and lessening the burdens of manual labour. In the social sphere, the aim is the elimination of social inequalities through legislation and extensive state-implemented welfare activities.
India firmly believes that if Socialism stands for 'common welfare', every country of the world must become socialistic. India's path to the attainment of the goal of socialism is the thorny and precarious path of democracy, without invoking in our minds the horrors of a regimented totalitarian community.
The history of democratic socialism in India is, in a way, the history of the evolution of the principles of the Congress Party; to be more precise, it is the evolution of the socialistic thinking of one man, Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru, India's 'Man of Destiny'. In the beginning, Nehru was deeply moved by Marxism. His passion for socialism originated from his intense desire to wipe out the tears of poverty and to establish a just and equitable socio-economic structure on Soviet pattern. But maturity with advancement of age made him increasingly incredulous of any creed or dogma. He felt that socia­lism had adapted itself to the changing condition in India.
It was in 1931 at Karachi session of the A.I.C.C. that under the Presidentship of Nehruji, the Congress Party took a positive step in the direction of introducing Socialism in India by resolving the nationalization of the key industries and other measures to lessen the gulf between the rich and the poor. However, it was Subhash Chandra Bose, who gave a concrete shape to Socialism in terms of economic development in his Presidential address at the Haripur Session. He instituted the National Planning Committee with Nehru as the head of the Committee. The struggle for freedom, the independence and the holocaust of partition gave a new urgency to the social and economic problems of the country. However, neither our constitution nor the Five-year-Plans make any explicit reference to the idea of Socialism. It was only towards the end of 1954 in the Avadi Congress that Socialism asserted itself in the official resolution of each Congress Session, for 'Socialistic Pattern of Society',
Ever since, India launched the Five-year plans, till his death in May 1964, Mr. Nehru was not tired of repeating that Socialism is the ultimate goal of India. Late Mr. Lai Bahadur Shastri also strove for it. No body can deny that the objectives of the democra­tic socialism are very noble and worth-pursuing, for they spring from a positive respect for law and recognition of human dignity. Democratic socialism presupposes that economic development and social amelioration should take place simultaneously within the frame work of national constitution.
And yet anybody who closely analyses the pronouncements in Socialism in India, including those of Nehru, would surely be confounded by a sense of unreality and vagueness, of ambivalence and evasiveness which surround them. In other words Nehru's democratic socialism is not based on a strong foundation. The idea of socialism hi India, the Socialism of the Nehru era, has emerged as a rather weak and hollow reed that may not withstand the prevailing strong winds, and into which any one can blow any kind of music. A great discomforting feature is that the in equality of wealth and economic power has tended to increase. Conditions of economic monopoly still exist; there is continued prevalence of the socio-economic evils of bureaucratic corruption and administrative incompetence the prevailing tone of social behavior is unmistakably that of private profit and acquisitiveness.
The co-operative movement, with its democratic basis, can play a vital role in the realization of democratic socialism, which provides for an orderly transition from a capitalistic to a socialistic economy. In our Plans, the Co-operative Movement is accorded a prominent place in rural economy where the traditional agricultural economy of zamindars and money-lenders and conventional me­thods of agriculture has transformed into the new technology oriented methods and facilities of agricultural credit, marketing, processing of commodities and distributions and sale of food grains.
In fine, the implementation of democratic socialism should conform to Indian values and traditions of life. Our approach should be cautious, very cautious. The Bhubaneswar Congress resolution sums up the Congress ideal of Democratic Socialism which should be the effort of every Indian national to fructify, ''………. a society wherein poverty, disease, and ignorance shall be eliminated wherein property and privilege in any form occupy If strictly limited place, wherein all citizens have equal Opportunities and wherein ethical and spiritual values contribute to the enrich­ment of the individual and community life".

Essay on India Needs More Work, Less Talk

"Those who can do something, do it, those who cannot, simply talk about it."
Much in the spirit of Goethe's dictum 'life is action, not contemplation'. Late Jawaharlal Nehru coined the slogan 'Aaram Haram Hal' because he knew the typical Indian's penchant for inactivity, or worse, substituting 'talk' in place of 'work'. Whether his slogan had the desired effect or not can be seen from the fact that after twenty seven years of independence, India still is not fully self-sufficient in food grains despite its being a predominantly agricultural country.
That a country like India needs more work and less talk is beyond doubt. But the people and their leaders cannot be expected to turn into eager beavers overnight. It is a slow process which needs a lot of time and coaxing. But before any vital breakthrough in this field is achieved, one has to understand the basic causes of the Indian's apathy to work. One has also to understand why the leaders and the politicians did perpetually talk. Only then can a rational approach be adopted replacing the age-old habit of empty talk.
The most important aspect of this problem is the common man's gospel of stagnation. It derives its essential character from excessive religiosity. It can be summed up in a few words: that man's greatest destiny is to achieve 'Moksha' which means freedom from the circle of life arid death. This further presupposes a progress from action to inaction. The common man who neither reads scriptures nor has the power of critical analysis developed within him, easily surrenders this initiative and adopts a life of inaction. There are countless people in this country who just lie low, waiting for something to happen and also waiting for someone to give their food and succor. They believe that since they are also God's creatures, the Almighty Himself would provide them the various means of subsistence. Such people indulge in even greater self-deception.
When renunciation is the greatest ideal to be pursued for spiritual development, when life itself is looked upon as a product of our past sins; when all happiness is considered finding a place in the other world, heaven; when money is the cause of sins and evils, no one is expected to exert himself Little wonder, our contribution to material prosperity is so small.
This disastrous drift towards salvation has to stop before the country harnesses itself to more productive work. Happiness, people have to be told, stems from action, not inaction. That the greatest of thinkers (not spiritualists) have recommended work as unfailing antidote to unhappiness. 'Work is worship' is an old but meaning­ful maxim.
The famous philosopher, Bertrand Russel says, "The habit of viewing life as a whole is an essential part both of wisdom and of morality, and is one of the things which ought to be encouraged in education. Consistent purpose is an indispensable condition of a happy life. And consistent purpose embodies itself mainly in work".
A positive attitude to work, linking it with happiness and as a powerful means to produce wealth is absolutely essential to put India on the onward march, and to free her from the crippling impact of poisonous, pseudo-spiritual theories. The nation needs less and less of religiosity and more of constructive effort in all walks of life. It needs more and liberal doses of modern thought which act as power­ful incentives of productive effort.
India needs more work. Therefore, it is essential seriously to review the holiday-structure of the country. At present, our holidays are far too numerous and frequent. We have a large variety of holi­days. Any excuse is good enough for a holiday. Even a tennis or a cricket match is a ground enough to bring the official work in a State to a halt. Death of a politician is another excuse. Judging from our penchant for holidays, we are a nation on a perpetual holiday. The dead in our country are honored at the cost of the living. The death of an important personage is invariably condoled by closing down of all offices, industrial establishments and schools, colleges, universities. The entire nation comes to a grinding halt. We lose the man and hundreds of crores of rupees in the bargain.
Most Indians have no idea how to spend holidays. The impor­tance of freshening the mind and to get rid of the week’s stress and strain, is virtually unknown to the multitudes of people. They fail to use holidays to change the pace of life. Holidays in the names of great heroes or leaders are an utter waste, as none has them in mind when the day is spent in irritating or unproductive rituals and chores. The entire holiday structure needs to be re-examined to avoid to useless talk, and to divert the national energy to useful pro­ductive work.
There is much talk of Indians imitating the West But one thing which we should imitate to our great advantage is the habit of hard work of the American and the German, even of the Japanese. They are rich because of their hard work. India is a rich country inhabited by the poor. It simply means we have rich resour­ces which remain unexploited because of our proverbial sloth and indolence.
India has to step out of its ruts of stagnation, apathy and the deep-seated habit of substituting talk in place of work. That is the crying need of the hour.

Essay on India and the New World Order

In the New World Order, USA is no more the sole power like in the past Cold War period, but several other powers are also emerging with vital stakes in world affairs. India’s response to this World War is striking in terms of its changing profile of relationship not only with neighbors but also with major powers and in international and regional international institutions.
India’s increasing global influence has been driven by rapid economic growth. The most significant shift in its foreign policy over the past two decades has been rapprochement with the United States. Several factors explain the greater warmth towards Washington:
1. The collapse of the Soviet Union and the relative weakness of Russia since then;
2. Growing economic ties between the US and India particularly in the IT industries.
3. The rise of China.
The thickening of the closeness led to the nuclear demand between the Governments of Manmohan Singh and George W Bush. This deal was followed by a number of civil nuclear cooperation between India and other countries.
In case of India’s relation with China, a new power game is underway on which both must seek to be as friendly as possible. This pushes both sides to take diplomatic measures to solve their issues of concern besides their border dispute. China’s encirclement strategy’, in terms of its growing relations with India’s immediate neighbours like Sri Lanka, Nepal, Mayanmar, Bangladesh and Pakistan, is a new concern for India.
The counter these concerns, India are to make efforts to build close relations with Japan, Australia and Singapore. They explain India’s charm offensive in South-East Asia, intended to prevent Chinese domination of the region. They also account for India’s ambition in Africa as was reflected in the recently concluded India-Africa Summit in Addis Ababa.
India’s relationship with Russia is much less important than during the Cold War years. India-Russia continues to share military relations in terms of arms sell. Trade relations are hindered by the lack of an overland trade route as Pakistan does not allow transit. Politically, a relation between the two remains quite good. Russia is considered as a potential element in their strategy for preventing Chinese dominance of Asia.
India’s relations with European Union (EU) mainly focus on trade and investment relationship. EU is also considered as a strategic partner on several issues, such as reform of the UNSC and the India-US nuclear deal.
India’s relations with countries and institutions clearly reflect as a determined pledge to carve a niche for itself in the New World Order.