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[[Category:1973 - Conversations]]
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[[Category:Lectures, Conversations and Letters - Europe]]
[[Category:Lectures, Conversations and Letters - Europe, England - London]]
[[Category:1973 - New Audio - Released in May 2015]]
[[Category:1973 - New Transcriptions - Released in May 2015]]
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Śrīla Prabhupāda: But death is compelling me to die. There is no science, no philosophy, no hero to conquer over this death. This is our philosophy: how to conquer over the race between life and death. Now you find out that verse,
*This page was previously a conversation with Graham Hill Former World Champion Race Car Driver and has been moved to: [[730726 - Conversation - London]]


<PS:"Verse in purp">janma karma ca me divyam<CR>evaṁ yo vetti tattvataḥ<CR>tyaktvā dehaṁ punar janma<CR>naiti mām eti so 'rjuna<CR> [[BG 4.9]]


This is Sanskrit language.
<div class="code">730826R2.LON - August 26, 1973 - 81:48 Minutes</div>


Śyāmasundara: "One who knows the transcendental nature of My appearance and activities does not upon leaving the body take his birth again in this material world."


Prabhupāda: "Does not take his birth again."
<mp3player>https://s3.amazonaws.com/vanipedia/full/1973/730826R2-LONDON.mp3</mp3player>


Śyāmasundara: "But attains My eternal abode."


Prabhupāda: Yes, this is the winning over death. What is that process?
(eating ''prasādam'')


Śyāmasundara: Ah, "One who knows the transcendental nature of My appearance and activities."
Prabhupāda: A class of men who can understand God, that is missing at the present moment. The first-class men who can understand God, that is missing. That means head is missing. Head is missing. If the head is . . . brain is cracked, then in spite of having the hands and legs and belly, the situation becomes confused.


Prabhupāda: Simply if you know what is Kṛṣṇa, why He comes, what are His activities. These things, if you try to understand, then you conquer over death.
So at the present moment the first-class men who can understand God, who can speak about God, the science of God, that is missing, as well as the arm, real ''kṣatriya'', who can give protection. Here also people are taking part in politics. That is the same aim, "How can I get some money?" That's all. The whole, whole thing is ''śūdra. Śūdra's'' business is, do something and get money. That's all. Finished. That is ''śūdra's'' business.


Graham Hill: And anyone who, I mean, you know the (indictinct) and you are telling your followers.
Guest: What do you think has gone wrong with the supposedly intelligent people who should be concerned with God's business but are not? Why have they lost it?


Prabhupāda: Yes, this is our philosophy. We are spreading this philosophy. That conquer over death and go back to home, back to Godhead. Therefore our name of the paper is Back to Godhead. Winning over the race between life and death and get your eternal life and go back to home, back to Godhead. This is our philosophy.
Prabhupāda: Where is the intelligent people? They do not understand even what is virtue and sin. They do not understand. So where is the intelligent person? They are thinking  everything is all right, but the nature does not say so. Nature says, "This is good for you. This is bad for you," but they do not know it. Where is Paṇḍita Mahāśaya (Pradyumna)? Call him.


Graham Hill: You believe then, in that we come back, rebirth again in another form.
Devotee: He is in London.


Prabhupāda: Yes, transmigration. Just like you also were a boy like him, but where is that body? There is no... That body, that is finished. But you exist, you remember that you were a boy like him. You remember that boy's childhood body. So that body is finished but you are not finished. So therefore you, the soul, is eternal. You are simply changing body. This is called death. Death means changing the body. As soon as the body becomes old enough, no more youthful, then you die. Die means to change the body just like you change your garment. When the garment is no more useful, then you change to another garment. That is truth. vāsāṁsi jīrṇāni yathā vihāya [[BG 2.22]] . (aside:) You come here. Just like jīrṇāni , when old garment, no more youthful, you change it to a new garment. (aside:) Come here, find out vāsāṁsi jīrṇāni yathā vihāya .
Prabhupāda: Oh. Who can read ''Bhagavad-gītā''? Find out the verse ''pravṛttiṁ ca nivṛttiṁ ca janā na vidur āsurāḥ janā'' ([[BG 16.7 (1972)|BG 16.7]]).


Pradyumna:  
Guest: (eating) This is very good.


<PS:"Verse in purp"><FC:0,0,0>vāsāṁsi jīrṇāni yathā vihāya <PT:14><CR> <PT><FC> navāni gṛhṇāti naro 'parāṇi<CR>tathā śarīrāṇi vihāya jīrṇāny<CR> anyāni saṁyāti navāni dehī<CR> [[BG 2.22]]
Prabhupāda: Hmm. ''Pravṛtti. P-r-a-v-r-i-t-t-i''. In the Sixteenth Chapter.


"As a person puts on new garments, giving up old ones, similarly, the soul accepts new material bodies, giving up the old and useless ones."
Devotee:


Graham Hill: And you go back to Godhead, you go back to home.
:''pravṛttiṁ ca nivṛttiṁ ca''
:''janā na vidur āsurāḥ''
:''na śaucaṁ nāpi cācāro''
:''na satyaṁ teṣu vidyate''
:([[BG 16.7 (1972)|BG 16.7]])


Prabhupāda: That is ultimate goal. So long we do not go back to home, back to Godhead, we have to, in our material existence, we have to change from one body to another. That is going on. And there are 8,400,000 forms of bodies. The cats and dogs, they are also living entities, but they have got a different type of body. Every one of us, different type body. Even they are children, their body is different from your body. Even the (indistinct). Although their body is obtained, there are some similarities. But if you analyze very scrutinizingly there will be some difference from your body, from your daughter's body, from your boy's body. So every body, every living entity is getting a certain type of body according to his desire. According to his desire. So that desire means material enjoyment. Just like you have got certain desire to become champion in racing. Another body has got desire to become something else. Another body has got desire for something else. So we have got this freedom by the grace of God or Kṛṣṇa. Because we are children. He has given freedom. "All right, if you want this, take it." In this way our life is going on. This is called birth and death. One chapter you are finishing in one life, next chapter begins another life. Next chapter begins another life. So the problem is birth and death. But nobody wants birth and death. Nobody wants. But it is there on account of our material life. So in material life there are four problems: birth, death, old age, and disease. So long one has to accept a material body, he has to accept these miseries also. Birth is also misery. When the child remains within the womb, in a compact bag... Very precarious condition. We have forgotten, but it is very precarious condition. And for ten months, because he is unconscious at least for seven months he cannot understand. But after seven months when the child becomes conscious, it is very intolerable. He always prays, "Oh, how to get out, how to get out." Then he gets, come out, comes out. Then another life begins. That is also accompanied with so many miserable conditions from the birth. Just like, don't mind, when you drive your car, it is not a very good position. (laughter) Yes. But you are taking that risk for winning over. But the position is not very good. At any moment there can be accident. So similarly, we are trying to achieve some goal of life, every one of us—there are so many varieties of living entities—with the risk of life and death, old age and disease. But if we know what is our actual aim of life... The actual aim of life should be back to home, back to Godhead. Then this human form of life is successful. Just like your son. If he goes out independent. Now he is under father's protection, he is very happy. But if he declares his independence... Just like Śyāmasundara. He is very rich man's son. His father, I met him. His father is a big lawyer, big businessman. But he declared independence. And I know his life history, how much he had to go through so many tribulations. Similarly, we are also sons of God. We have declared independence and we are going through so many chapters of life and death in different... Now we have got... Suppose you have got now a nice Englishman's body but next body you do not know what kind of body you are going to get. That will depend on your karma and desire.
Translation: "Those who are demonic do not know what is to be done and what is not to be done. Neither cleanliness nor proper behavior nor truth is found in them."


Graham Hill: (indistinct) what sort of body we have been in in the past?
Prabhupāda: They do not know what is to be done and what is not to be done. Next?


Prabhupāda: Yes, in the past. You forgot, but in the past you had life. Just like in the past I was young man. That's a fact. Similarly, but that young body is no more existing. Similarly, I had a past life but I have forgotten. That is the... Forgetfulness is our nature. Death means forgetting what was your first, past life. That is by nature you become forgetful because if you remember our past life and compare with this life... Suppose one was very rich man and if he becomes a poor, a cat and dog, then if he remembers, then it is very unbearable for him. Therefore nature helps him to forget. Forget. Otherwise he cannot do it. But the real problem is that we are eternal soul, we are changing our body one after another, birth and death. Apart from worldly happiness and distress, this birth and death, that is not very good process. At death time we have to suffer so much that we give up this body. And then again we enter into the womb of a mother. That is not very good situation. Then when come out there are so many tribulations, disease, then again old age. So people do not understand that he is passing... Especially when we are in other than human life. There are 8,400,000 species of life. Aquatics, then birds, trees, plants, insects, then beasts. In this way we come to human form of life. This is evolution. So in this human form of life there is chance of understanding the problems of life. In other forms of life it is not possible.
Devotee: "Neither cleanliness nor proper behavior . . ."


Graham Hill: (indistinct)
Prabhupāda: No cleanliness, no proper behavior.


Prabhupāda: Yes. That is consciousness. Full consciousness. But if that consciousness is developed into Kṛṣṇa consciousness then his life is success.
Devotee: ". . . nor truth is found in them."


Graham Hill: Can we look at ourselves and say, well, this body that we inherited, the bodies that we're in now, are the results of the behavior of our souls when we were in our previous...
Prabhupāda: This is the general division, fourth-class, fifth-class men—demonic. Then?
 
Devotee: Purport?
 
Prabhupāda: Hmm.
 
Devotee: "In every civilized human society there is some set of scriptural rules and regulations which are followed from the beginning, especially among the Āryans, those who adopt the Vedic civilization and who are known as the most advanced civilized peoples."
 
Prabhupāda: In the civilized men, there is such thing: do and do not. Even in ordinary dealing: "Keep to the right" or "Keep to the left," that means the other side you do not go, ordinary. So why there must be discipline, law and order? There must be these two things: do this; do not do this. Otherwise it is not civilized. Now in the Christian Bible, Lord Jesus Christ says, "Thou shall not kill." But they are killing, giving some plea. Straight thing is, the order is, "Thou shall not kill." But they are killing in spite of. In ordinarily, one does not know whether killing is good or bad. But even there is instruction—"Don't kill"—they do it.
 
Guest: Some of them do not.
 
Prabhupāda: Huh?
 
Guest: There are some who do not, still.
 
Prabhupāda: Some there must be.
 
Guest: But not many.
 
Prabhupāda: But general people, they do not know even what is the wrong by killing. This is fourth-class, fifth-class men. They do not know what is the reaction of killing.
 
Guest: Reaction?
 
Prabhupāda: Yes. There must be reaction, because by nature's law . . . just like you are living, I am living, or you are eating, I am also eating. So both of us have got the right to live, so how can I kill you?
 
Guest: You could . . . sometimes people kill each other not because they want to kill, though; because there are some other reasons.
 
Prabhupāda: Then it is ignorance. You must know why you are killing. You cannot kill.
 
Guest: But essentially, if one person is killing some others, then it's occasionally felt to be justified, to kill the person who's doing the killing. Or to overthrow a tyrant or something.
 
Prabhupāda: If there is justification, then that is another thing.
 
Guest: Well, everybody feels that killing is justified. Very few people kill wantonly. They will always give a reason for it, especially in war.
 
Prabhupāda: They must give good reason. Simply I want to kill, therefore I must kill, that is not very good reason.
 
Guest: No. But people don't usually say like that.
 
Prabhupāda: They give this reason that, "I want to eat, so I must kill." That is tiger's reasoning. Tiger says . . . tiger, by nature he has to kill, so there is no wrong for . . . nothing wrong in his part if he kills, because by nature he is made. But why a man should kill unless the other party is wronged, aggressor, he is coming to kill you? We cannot kill even the tiger. But if the tiger comes in the city and creates disruption, you must kill. But there is no business going to the forest and killing. Why? He is living in his jurisdiction; why shall I encroach upon his jurisdiction? But people go in the forest and kill so many birds and animals unnecessarily.
 
Guest: Yeah, well . . . yeah. This is quite true.
 
Prabhupāda: This is going on. Therefore, as it is stated, that they do not know what is right and what is wrong. This is the modern civilization.
 
Guest: But who does know?
 
Prabhupāda: We know. We know.
 
Guest: Yeah? You're sure?
 
Prabhupāda: That is our special qualification. And we are teaching this philosophy to our students. This is the special contribution of this Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement. We know what is what.
 
Guest: Hmm.
 
Prabhupāda: Yes. Therefore we are inviting persons to know this art, how to distinguish what to do and what not to do. This is our business.
 
Guest: How do you find out?
 
Prabhupāda: Here is the book. Here is the book.
 
Guest: That is the book? ''Bhagavad-gītā''?
 
Prabhupāda: ''Bhagavad-gītā''. Yes. Everything is there.
 
Guest: This seems to be a different version. I have read a very small one many years ago, but this seems to be rather large.
 
Prabhupāda: No. That is you might have seen only the original verses. Here there is explanation.
 
Devotee: The original verses are here. And there is full purport.
 
Guest: I see. Yeah. I once, in fact, was at a course on the ''Gītā''. I went to a course on it. But that was many years ago, when I was very young, so I have forgotten now. I used to be in the Theosophical Movement, which has some relation . . . some related ideas, because its origin is in Indian philosophy. So I know little about the ''Gītā'', but.
 
Prabhupāda: Go on reading.
 
Devotee: "Those who do not follow the scriptural injunctions are supposed to be demons. Therefore it is stated here that the demons do not know the scriptural rules, nor do they have any inclination to follow them. Most of them do not know them, and even if some of them know, they have not the tendency to follow them."
 
Prabhupāda: Yes. These are demons. If you are professing some religion, and the religion says that, "You do not do this," if you act against the scripture, then you are demon. Just like if one does not act according to the law of the state, he is outlaw. But these things are not taken very seriously at the present moment.
 
Guest: That's true.
 
Prabhupāda: They take it, "Oh, they are saying so many things. It doesn't matter. Let us enjoy life." This is demon. And therefore you find all over the world so much confusion, because the number of demons have increased.
 
Guest: What do you think people who are not in the Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement should do? Should they join the movement, or is there a specialization so that there are some people who do what you are doing . . .?
 
Prabhupāda: No. Everyone should join. Everyone should join. Everyone should join. What do you understand by "Kṛṣṇa consciousness"? What is your idea?
 
Guest: I don't know. I've come to find out.
 
Prabhupāda: Kṛṣṇa consciousness means God conscious. Kṛṣṇa means God. So if one is not God conscious, he must be a demon.
 
Guest: Hmm. But there are . . . the trouble is, the phrase is too vague. So there are thousands of groups having the same sort of phrase, you see, talking about God consciousness, "You must have God consciousness."
 
Prabhupāda: Then you have to see . . . just like you go to purchase something in the market. There are thousands of varieties, but the intelligent man can pick up the nice one.
 
Guest: You think there is just one nice one?
 
Prabhupāda: Yes. God is one, therefore God consciousness must be one. Do you think God . . . there are many Gods?
 
Guest: God has many forms. God has many forms.
 
Prabhupāda: That is another thing. Just like you are Mr. Such-and-such. You may dress in a different way, but in whichever way you dress, you are Mr. Such-and-such. Similarly, God may have many forms. We also admit that. But God is one. God cannot be many. That is stated in the Vedic literature: ''advaitam acyutam anādim ananta-rūpam'' (Bs. 5.33). ''Ananta-rūpam''. God can expand. We are also expansion of God. We living entities, we are also expansion of God. The tree is also expansion of God. The germ is also expansion of God. So everything is expansion of God. That is pure understanding of God. But who is understanding in that way?
 
They are seeing differently, "Oh, here is a man, here is a dog, here is a cat, here is a tree." Who is seeing that everyone is expansion of God? And if I think that everyone is expansion of God, then if I want to kill you, I must take sanction from God. It is a great science. People are neglecting it. They are not interested. Whenever we speak of God, they think, "They are talking something utopian." God is there; kingdom of God is there; one can go there; how one can be qualified—these things they are not interested at all. Therefore they are fourth-class, fifth-class men. So how you can be peaceful with fourth-class, fifth-class men?
 
Guest: Can people change themselves from being fourth class to third class and so on?


Prabhupāda: Yes.
Prabhupāda: Yes.


Graham Hill: And then can we sort of, by looking at ourselves, can we get the sort of person we were when we were here before?
Guest: Can people change themselves?
 
Prabhupāda: Oh, yes. That is the Kṛṣṇa conscious movement. We can train from the tenth-class men to the first-class men. This is Kṛṣṇa conscious. What to speak of fourth class, fifth class—any lowest class, ''ye 'pi syuḥ pāpa-yonayaḥ'' ([[BG 9.32 (1972)|BG 9.32]])
 
(aside:) Find out this verse: ''māṁ hi pārtha vyapāśritya'' . . .
 
Somebody must be quick. ''Māṁ hi pārtha vyapāśritya ye 'pi syuḥ pāpa-yonayaḥ. Māṁ, m-a-m. Māṁ hi pārtha vyapāśritya.''
 
Śrutakīrti: ''Māṁ hi pārtha'' . . .?
 
Prabhupāda: ''Vyapāśritya''.
 
Śrutakīrti: . . . ''vyapāśritya''.
 
:''. . . ye 'pi syuḥ pāpa-yonayaḥ''
:''striyo vaiśyās tathāśūdrās''
:''te 'pi yānti parāṁ gatim''
:([[BG 9.32 (1972)|BG 9.32]])
 
"O son of Pṛthā, those who take shelter in Me, though they be of lower birth—women, ''vaiśyas'' (merchants) as well as ''śūdras'' (workers)—can approach the supreme destination."


Prabhupāda: Yes.
Prabhupāda: Yes.


Graham Hill: Can we?
Guest: It said women as well?
 
Prabhupāda: Yes, women, because they are less intelligent.
 
Guest: Women?
 
Prabhupāda: Yes. You do not know that?
 
Guest: No. I didn't know that. No. Hmm. But I'm quite surprised to hear it.
 
Prabhupāda: But it doesn't matter. If one takes to Kṛṣṇa consciousness, he can be elevated. That is the . . .
 
(aside) Read the purport.
 
Śrutakīrti: "It is clearly declared here by the Supreme Lord that in devotional service there is no distinction between the lower or higher classes of people. In the material conception of life there are such divisions, but for a person engaged in transcendental devotional service to the Lord there are not."
 
"Everyone is eligible for the supreme destination. In the ''Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam'' ([[SB 2.4.18|SB 2.4.18]]) it is stated that even the lowest, who are called ''caṇḍālas'' (dog-eaters), can be elevated by association with a pure devotee. Therefore devotional service and guidance of a pure devotee are so strong that there is no discrimination between the lower and higher classes of men; anyone can take to it. The most simple man taking center of the pure devotee can be purified by proper guidance."
 
"According to the different modes of material nature, men are classified in the mode of goodness (''brāhmaṇas''), the mode of passion (''kṣatriyas'', or administrators), the mixed modes of passion and ignorance (''vaiśyas'', or merchants), and the mode of ignorance (''śūdras'', or workers). Those lower than them are called ''caṇḍālas'', and they are born in sinful families. Generally, those who are born in sinful families are not accepted by the higher classes. But the process of devotional service and the pure devotee of the Supreme God are so strong that all the lower classes can attain the highest perfection of life. This is possible only when one takes shelter of Kṛṣṇa. One has to take shelter completely of Kṛṣṇa; then one can become much greater than great ''jñānīs'' and ''yogīs''."
 
Prabhupāda: Materially there is such division, but when they take to the spiritual platform, there is no such distinction. They'll work on spiritual platform.
 
Guest: Should they . . . can they do that in ordinary life, or do they have to join the institution like this?
 
Prabhupāda: Yes, any ordinary life, any ordinary life.
 
Guest: What was the function of the ''āśrama'', then?
 
Prabhupāda: ''Āśrama'' means to teach. ''Sva-karmaṇā tam abhyarcya saṁsiddhiṁ labhate narā'' ([[BG 18.46 (1972)|BG 18.46]]). There is verse—''sva-karmaṇā. S-v-a.''
 
Śrutakīrti: ''Sva. S-v-a.''
 
:''. . . yena sarvam idaṁ tatam''
:''sva-karmaṇā tam abhyarcya''
:''siddhiṁ vindati mānavaḥ''
:([[BG 18.46 (1972)|BG 18.46]])
 
"By worship of the Lord, one who is the source of all beings and who is all-pervading, man can, in the performance of his own duty, attain perfection."
 
Prabhupāda: Simply he has to know how to do.
 
Guest: And it is very simple. Yes? Yes. That's the story I've heard. Yes.
 
Prabhupāda: Therefore we can claim anyone from any position if he agrees to abide by our regulative principle. Then he can be. There is no difficulty. That is being happen, actually. All my students, ask them what was their previous life and what is the life now. They will explain. A healthy person recovered from disease, he can very well understand that, "What I was in my diseased condition and what I am now." He doesn't require to take certificate from others. He can personally understand, "Yes. I was like this. Now I am like this." You can talk with any one of our student, boys and girls, they will convince you. Yes. They have been trained.
 
Guest: Hmm. I'm surprised that . . .
 
Prabhupāda: For example, in America government is using . . . spending millions and millions of dollars how to check LSD, but the same LSD man, as soon as he comes to our camp, he gives up completely. This is practical.
 
Guest: Yes. I've heard that.
 
Prabhupāda: They'll hate to touch LSD, it is so perfect. So every thoughtful man, every philanthropist must study this philosophy very seriously and try to spread the all benefit activities for the human society.
 
Guest: Is it . . . but when you say it's very simple . . .
 
Prabhupāda: Very simple. Simpler than the simple.
 
Guest: It would change your life. But does it require very great visible change? I mean, do you have to change your life in the sense that you actually do different things? You say in the ordinary performance of your duty you can still attain the consciousness . . .
 
Prabhupāda: (aside) Just try to explain.
 
Dhanañjaya: Yes, well, you can go on being a student. You can go on being a householder. You can go on being a professional man. You can do all these prescribed duties, and still you can go on becoming Kṛṣṇa conscious.
 
Guest: But there are degrees of it. So it's simple, but yet . . .
 
Dhanañjaya: It's a practical application in daily life, day-to-day life.
 
Guest: But then does that take a long time or a lot of training?
 
Dhanañjaya: No. It doesn't take so much training.
 
Guest: Then what is the purpose of degrees of initiation? That's if it's just a one thing . . .
 
Dhanañjaya: That's something different. If you want to take seriously, then you can become initiated.
 
Guest: And what is the function of that?
 
Dhanañjaya: The function is that you accept the spiritual master as a bona fide representative as God, and then you take the rules and regulations very seriously, and you abide by these rules and regulations. There are rules and regulations in every ''āśrama'', in every temple. Just like for instance if you decided you would like to stay here, so you . . . it would be expected that you follow four basic rules: no meat-eating; no intoxication; no illicit sex life; and no idle sports, no gambling, no betting.
 
You see? And taking part in the day-to-day routine, like rising early, bathing, attending the services and helping to maintain the ''āśrama'' by working or by engaging in some particular duty that you would like to do—by writing. You can do this. If you have this vocation to write, then we supply you an office, we supply you with a typewriter, paper, and you can write so many nice articles about Kṛṣṇa. And therefore that . . . dovetailing whatever you have experienced in the material world and whatever you have understood from the ''śāstra'', from the scripture. You're benefiting yourself and you're benefiting your fellow men also.
 
Guest: So that . . . that's the ''āśrama'' life. But even in the ordinary world, in a way which is what I'm interested in . . . I'm interested in the influence of Kṛṣṇa consciousness in the ordinary world, and how would it change people's relationships and how would it change . . .
 
Dhanañjaya: Well all we simply ask is to chant Hare Kṛṣṇa, to spend a few minutes, sometime in the day—in the morning or in the evening—just to sit down and chant Hare Kṛṣṇa and gradually take on these rules and regulations.
 
Prabhupāda: We actually say that chant Hare Kṛṣṇa always.
 
Guest: Why . . . how does that have such a strange effect?
 
Haṁsadūta: Why does it have such a strong effect, chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa?
 
Dhanañjaya: "Strange."
 
Prabhupāda: Oh, that you can see.
 
Guest: Yes, I try to see. It is something very simple that one could do.
 
Prabhupāda: Yes. Very simple.
 
Guest: It is something very simple. And so then the world could be changed very nicely, and without any very complicated changes.
 
Haṁsadūta: For example, the best example and most practical example is, for instance, George Harrison, whom you must know. He has given this house for our propagating Kṛṣṇa consciousness. He himself is singing about Kṛṣṇa. So he is a singer. Before he was singing something; now he is singing something. So it's simply a change to Kṛṣṇa. The singing is there, the music is there, the record is there, the audience is there—simply the consciousness or the object of the song is Kṛṣṇa. Just like you are a scientist, so you use your knowledge to systematically present Kṛṣṇa.
 
Guest: But there is a difference between presenting an idea which is about Kṛṣṇa and ideas, and . . .
 
Prabhupāda: This is not an idea, it is a fact.
 
Guest: Yes. Well, some idea which is more complicated than just the word. I am surprised that just the chanting of the words will be so significant.
 
Haṁsadūta: Because the philosophy or the understanding is that this sound ''Kṛṣṇa'', the sound of the name of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Kṛṣṇa, there is no difference. This is the meaning of absolute. Absolute means there is no difference between the name, the thing, its quality. In this world your name . . .
 
Prabhupāda: In this physical world, from the sound everything has come. From the sound, the air has come. From air, the fire has come. From fire, water has come. From water, earth has come.
 
Guest: But the . . . but the puzzle is that by . . . how the world could be made better, and people could be made to change by this simple procedure.
 
Prabhupāda: First of all we have to understand what is the aim of this world. Why such big cosmic creation is there? What is the purpose?
 
Guest: That is a very important question to ask.
 
Prabhupāda: Yes. They do not know that.
 
Guest: But you know it?
 
Prabhupāda: Yes.
 
Guest: That's remarkable.
 
Prabhupāda: Yes. We know it. What is the purpose of this big creation, we know it. We know everything perfectly. That is our special qualification.
 
Guest: How do you think that there are so many other people that think they also know? How did they go wrong?
 
Prabhupāda: They are thinking part of, partially. They do not know the right way. Just like a train is going on. So in the middle of the station you get on a train. Now it moves. If you think this movement is began from here, that is wrong. The movement has begun where from the train has started. That is right knowledge. But a child will think, "Now we have got the train, it is moving now." That is not perfect knowledge. The moving is fact, but the knowledge is not  fact. So the modern so-called scientists, they capture something in the middle. They do not know where is the beginning, and they are simply theorizing. No perfect knowledge.
 
Guest: I can believe that very readily. It's not very difficult . . .
 
Prabhupāda: Yes. So they have no perfect knowledge, and still they are taking the place of a teacher. So others must be misled. If you have no perfect knowledge on a subject matter, and if you become a teacher of that subject matter, will you not mislead others? That is going on.
 
Guest: Hmm. Certainly.
 
Prabhupāda: They are taking big, big Nobel Prize by theorizing that life has begun from matter. Totally wrong, but they are getting Nobel Prize. Fool's paradise. You see?
 
:''śva-viḍ-varāhoṣṭra-kharaiḥ''
:''saṁstutaḥ puruṣaḥ paśuḥ''
:([[SB 2.3.19|SB 2.3.19]])
 
Animals—big animal. Suppose a lion roars. A small animal thinks, "Oh, he is big thing." He does not know that he is animal—nothing but animal. Is it not? (laughs) So this class of Nobel Prize winner just like a big animal praised by other small animals. That's all. Both of them are animals. Otherwise, how they can cheat people putting some wrong theory? But this is going on. He is getting Nobel Prize. Wherever he goes, he gets good audience. By stopping all nonsense we can understand that, "Here is a . . . (indistinct) . . . fool. He is talking something intelligent." It was challenged. One some professor in California University—not he is from here, he came from outside—Nobel Prize winner. He . . .
 
Perhaps you may know. "Evolution of chemicals." He is theorizing this. So his lecture began that life has begun from these four chemicals. So in that university there is my disciple, who is also doctor in chemistry. So he challenged him, "Suppose if I give you these four chemicals, can you manufacture life?" He replied: "That I cannot say." What is this? (laughter) "Then why you are theorizing like this, nonsense?" This is going on. Just like Darwin's theory—he said that man has come from monkey, but not a single monkey up 'til now has produced any man, neither scientifically they can inject a monkey to produce another man. Still the theory is going on.
 
Guest: It could have taken a long time. It might have taken a long time to happen.
 
Prabhupāda: Why it should take? If it is actually fact, then it is no difficult thing to understand. But it is false theory.
 
Guest: You think that kind of evolution . . .
 
Prabhupāda: That is not evolution. Evolution is different. That we have got full knowledge. Evolution means just like I am now living in a house. It will belonged to some lord. What is this lord?
 
Devotee: Piggot.
 
Prabhupāda: Piggot. Lord Piggot. Now I am become lord. Piggot is gone. (laughter) Now it is Bhaktivedanta Manor. So not that I was in a small cottage, the cottage has evolved to become a big, palatial building. Not that. I have come from that cottage to this big house. That this nonsense Darwin does not know. Not elevation of the cottage to this big house. It is my personal elevation, that I was living in a cottage; now I have got the chance to live in a palatial house. I am concerned. But Darwin is thinking the cottage has evolved to become a big house. That is his nonsense.
 
Guest: You make it more silly than it really is. It's not quite as silly as that.
 
Prabhupāda: What is that?
 
Haṁsadūta: He says you are making it more silly than it actually is.
 
Prabhupāda: No.
 
Guest: Yes. You are making Darwin sound a fool. I mean, he might well be wrong, but . . . he had a better grasp of . . .
 
Prabhupāda: Then produce from a body of a monkey, you produce human being. Then you are correct. I don't say that I can turn this cottage into a big palace. I don't say. I am not so fool.
 
Guest: You could, but it would take you a long time.
 
Prabhupāda: No. No. No. It is not possible. Cottage is different, this house is different.
 
Guest: No. You can change . . . you can take a cottage and gradually add bits. You can put more bricks here. You can start to put windows in. That will take you a long, long time, gradually it could change.
 
Prabhupāda: Why shall I do that? If the palace is already there, why shall I waste my time?
 
Guest: Why should you? But it's possible to do it.
 
Prabhupāda: No, why . . . it is not possible. Cottage is there. You break the cottage and make a palace. That is another thing.
 
Guest: But we can . . . for example, we can change dogs.
 
Prabhupāda: We can utilize the ingredients. Not that the cottage has developed into a cottage . . . into a . . . it is not that. Matter does not develop in that way.
 
Guest: But we can do it ourselves. Your cows here, you see . . .
 
Prabhupāda: That is our challenge. You cannot do it.
 
Guest: Those cows. You have a brown cow, you have a black and white cow and you have a brown and white cow. Now all those cows came from a single kind of cow, which is the wild cow. And you can make those cows change, you see, to different kinds of cows—some which produce a lot of milk, and some which produce a lot of beef, and some which have big horns, and . . . different colors. We can change animals in that way. You can see evolution happening on a small scale like that. So I think it's obviously possible that animals can change. I think you can see that.
 
Prabhupāda: I do not think it is possible that you can change a black cow to a white cow. I don't think.
 
Haṁsadūta: He is talking about breeding. He is talking about breeding.
 
Prabhupāda: That is another process. That is another process. Not that the same black cow has become a white cow. That is not possible.
 
Guest: That's not what Darwin claims—that a monkey becomes a man. He claims that it is a similar process to getting a pure-bred special cow from a wild cow, but it happens over many generations, as a change. And he would have supposed that that is the way people came, or humans came.
 
Prabhupāda: No, the point is whether the body of the monkey has changed into the body of human being.
 
Guest: I don't think that ever occurred. I am sure that doesn't occur. (laughs) I don't think it could.
 
Prabhupāda: But Darwin's theory is like that. He is pointing out that this body has changed into this body.
 
Dhanañjaya: He says it has evolved from a monkey's form, with a tail, to a human being's form. But this is not according to this knowledge of ''Vedas''.
 
Guest: Well, you seem to be attributing the wrong theory to Darwin, that . . .
 
Prabhupāda: No, we have got our own theory.
 
Guest: . . . because he supposed that . . . a monkey will change into a man, but in the same way as you can breed dogs, and things like that. You can obviously change their form. That happens occasionally even in nature, from some special ways that . . .
 
Haṁsadūta: Yes. But a human being and a monkey . . . just like a cow and a horse. You will never get a horse from a cow, no matter how you breed them.
 
Guest: Well horse and cow, it's possible over many . . . a long time you can keep doing that.
 
Haṁsadūta: No.
 
Guest: The horse and cow had a common ancestor.
 
Haṁsadūta: No. You must do it.
 
Prabhupāda: One thing is, even accepting his theory . . .
 
Guest: Well, I'm not defending it; I'm just saying.
 
Prabhupāda: . . . even mixed breeding you can change to another species, accepting this, but that you have to mix. But in nature's way there are so many species of life. How it has happened?
 
Guest: According to Darwin's theory, by that very process, by animals just constantly evolving over millions of years and changing.
 
Prabhupāda: But you say, your analogy, that you said that if we mix—you mix. But who is mixing?
 
Guest: Ah, well that is—nature does that. Natural selection.
 
Prabhupāda: If you analyze, make analogy, you must bring all the similar points. Otherwise it is defective. Here you bring a species of dog, another dog and mix them—you are the worker.
 
Guest: Oh, yes. That's true. That's true.
 
Prabhupāda: Yes. So who is the worker?
 
Guest: Well, according to Darwin's theory, it's nature. It's nature. It's very simple, you see, because . . .
 
Prabhupāda: Nature . . . you say nature. Nature is there. Just like this table, it has got these iron rod, it does not change into iron flute automatically. You cannot say that. If I am a man, I take this iron rod and make it a iron flute; I can do it.  But it does not make iron flute automatically. That analogy will not do.
 
Guest: Well, in living things they do move around and nature has a great deal . . .
 
Prabhupāda: Living a dead thing . . . this is a dead thing—iron rod, iron pipe, but I am a living being. I can change this iron pipe into iron flute. The iron pipe does not automatically becomes iron (flute). Darwin says they automatically it is become.
 
Guest: Well, with living things it is different.
 
Prabhupāda: (to devotee) Just make him understand.
 
Haṁsadūta: The point is that . . .
 
Guest: I can see what he is saying.
 
Haṁsadūta: . . . whatever it is—animal or any species of life—it appears to change, but actually someone is changing it. It is not changing . . .
 
Guest: Yes. It's possible. I agree.
 
Haṁsadūta: You understand?
 
Guest: Yes. It's certainly possible that there is a force outside which is making things change.
 
Prabhupāda: That he does not know.
 
Haṁsadūta: That is the defect in Darwin's theory. Darwin is putting forward that the matter is changing independently of any worker, of any other force.
 
Prabhupāda: Therefore I say that is foolishness.
 
Guest: Yes. I agree. You could still have evolution, but it could be directed by an outside force.
 
Haṁsadūta: Yes. There is evolution, but there is it is spiritual, not material. In other words, the monkey body's not changing to the human form, but actually the soul . . . eh, what . . .
 
Prabhupāda: He is transmigrating . . .
 
Haṁsadūta: Transmigrates.
 
Prabhupāda: . . . from this body to another body.
 
Guest: Oh, I see. But how did the bodies start to come about in the first place? I mean, they were just created, huh, in the first place? How did human bodies arise?
 
Prabhupāda: You have no experience?
 
Guest: Oh, yes. (laughs) But . . .
 
Prabhupāda: How your body is created?
 
Guest: Yeah. But in the very beginning? Well, that was some . . .
 
Prabhupāda: At the very beginning, yes. Very beginning we accept God. God is therefore called the original father. Is there any wrong?
 
Guest: No. That's splendid. That's a good story. Yes. Very good story.
 
Prabhupāda: Just like I have got my father. So it is a fact, my father has got a father. He has got father, he has got father, and come up to the original father. Who has no father, but He is original father, that is God. But you have to accept it that there is somebody, living entity, who is the original father. That you have to accept.
 
Guest: But that doesn't seem to make any difference to the way one behaves in the world. See, in your practice of Kṛṣṇa consciousness, as you have—the practice and the . . . (indistinct) . . . there seem to be two parts. There is one part which is about how to behave. And there is another part which is how the world is or how the universe is, or how things came to be.
 
Prabhupāda: Yes.
 
Guest: And it seems to me that these two are not necessarily to be connected. I see for you it is very important that they are, but it seems to make no difference to me . . .
 
Prabhupāda: Our point is . . .
 
Guest: . . . whether evolution exists or not, or whether . . . how human beings started. That seems to make no difference at all. What seems to matter is how to live and how to behave and how to behave towards each other. Things like that. I can understand that it is a good thing to be a vegetarian, for example, you see, not to gamble . . .
 
Prabhupāda: The question is, how to behave, if I do not know what is the ultimate goal of life, then where is the question of behavior?
 
Guest: I can see that the ultimate goal of life is very important, but what about the history? That doesn't seem to be important, or the theory of how evolution occurs, for example.
 
Prabhupāda: History, history can give you the statement of a few years, but creation is not like that. It is eternal. It is eternal. So you cannot give eternal evidences by your historical method. That is not possible.
 
Revatīnandana: What he's saying is that one way or another, history . . . regardless of what the history was, it's an irrelevant subject. History does not seem a relevant subject—whether we evolved or whether we were created does not seem important to him, but how we behave seems important to him.
 
Prabhupāda: The thing is that he is also created. How he can say he can remain aloof from creation? He is created by father and mother. How you can neglect this process of creation? As soon as you accept that you are also created being, then the intelligent person, "What is the origin of creation?" That is next. If you are not interested in the origin of creation, then you are not in perfect knowledge.
 
Guest: Why do you need perfect knowledge?
 
Prabhupāda: Yes. Perfect knowledge to become perfect.
 
Guest: No, I am puzzled about how that would influence. You see, you have a set of metaphysical theories, and some of them seem to be relevant to behavior. In other words, they will change your behavior. They would change the way you treat other people. And that's very important. But there are other theories which you have which don't seem to make any difference to life. They are just theories.
 
Prabhupāda: What do you mean by behavior?
 
Guest: Well, if you have a theory, for example, about how all things are part of God, so if you kill something then you are killing part of God—and that is obviously a bad thing. Now I can understand how that theory has a relevance to behavior. It explains why you mustn't kill things. But there are all sorts of other parts of the theory, the theories that you have, which seem to have no bearing; it doesn't really matter. I mean the nature of God, for example, it doesn't seem to make much difference.
 
Prabhupāda: First of all, thing is that what is the purpose of proposing some theory of knowledge? What is the purpose? Just like somebody is putting a theory of knowledge—take Darwin: he had no necessity to put forward this theory of evolution. Why? Why he takes so much trouble, and why people are taking interest in his theory? What is the idea behind it? There is no need of. Suppose if one does not know the Darwin's theory. He is not suffering. There are so many hundreds and thousands of men, they do not care to know, but they are also living. Cats and dogs, they are also living. The first thing is the . . . where is the necessity of become a man of knowledge?
 
Guest: I don't think it's necessary, but it seems . . . some people like it.
 
Prabhupāda: Then it is something sporting?
 
Guest: Sporting?
 
Prabhupāda: Yes. I can give some knowledge as my sporting, as my whims. Is that the aim of knowledge?
 
Guest: For some people it is. Some people just like it.
 
Prabhupāda: Some people . . . if you bring some people, then some people rascal, some people very nice, then it is very difficult. We have to generalize. Do you think that knowledge is equal for some people and not for all?
 
Guest: Sorry, I don't understand.
 
Prabhupāda: Do you think that a man should be man of knowledge only for himself and not for others?
 
Guest: I think there are different kinds of knowledge. Some knowledge everybody should have, and some knowledge is . . . not everybody can know everything.
 
Prabhupāda: My point is, what is the purpose of acquiring knowledge?
 
Guest: It varies. It varies. Sometimes it's to know how to live . . .
 
Prabhupāda: It may vary. Just like we are eating. You are eating something, I am eating something, but eating is necessary. You cannot say that eating is not necessary. So you may be interested in a particular type of knowledge—I may be interested. But whether knowledge is essential for us or not?
 
Guest: Some knowledge is essential.
 
Prabhupāda: Anyway, some knowledge is also knowledge. That you cannot deny. So knowledge is essential. You have to accept. Then what is the ultimate goal of essential knowledge? That comes. Suppose I am the whole thing. Somebody is studying my hand. This is also knowledge. Somebody is studying my leg. So there are different parts of my body, but what is the ultimate goal of such knowledge: that he must know whose hand, whose leg, whose head. And that is essential knowledge. Knowledge is essential. Somebody is simply partially studying a part of that essential knowledge, but the aim should be how to come to that complete knowledge, which is called absolute knowledge.
 
Guest: I can see that. Yes, I can see that's true. Yes.
 
Prabhupāda: Yes.
 
Guest: Yes. How to come to that knowledge.
 
Prabhupāda: (indistinct) . . . yes.
 
Guest: But there seem to me to be many routes to that knowledge, and you seem to deny that. That puzzles me.
 
Prabhupāda: Many groups may be, but we have to know which is right. That is my business. When I want to purchase something, many sellers will come. Everyone will say: "Here is sir. Very nice." So it depends on me how to select the nice. That depends on me, on my intelligence.
 
Guest: It's not just a matter of intelligence, it seems, because . . .
 
Prabhupāda: No, it is matter of intelligence. Just like when you go to purchase something from the store, the storekeeper will give you varieties of gold, and you have to select, "Yes, it is right."
 
Guest: Yeah, but there are . . . you see, in the case of going to a stall, they have a lot of things. There is not necessarily one single thing which is the best one, because you might go there . . . some people, just like you are choosing pears, you see—some people may like soft pears, and some people may like hard pears, some people might like brown pears and others like yellow pears. There is no best pear. There are particular ones. There are obviously bad pears and good pears, but of many different kinds, and you pick the one that you like. It depends on, to some extent, what you are looking for. And then there will be many pears that are equally good.
 
Prabhupāda: If there is something that if you get that knowledge or you get that thing you can get all other things automatically, is it not intelligence to pick up that knowledge?
 
Guest: If it existed, yes. If it existed.
 
Prabhupāda: It exists. That is intelligence. Just like there is a tree in your house. So the tree has got so many branches, twigs, leaves, flowers, fruits. So if you . . . if somebody says: "No, I like to pour water on the fruit," if somebody says: "No, I like to pour onto the leaves," and somebody says twigs . . . this is different. But if somebody knows to water everything at a time, who is intelligent?
 
Guest: Well, it depends . . . I don't know what the best thing to do is.
 
Prabhupāda: First of all you answer this.
 
Guest: It's not that the analogy is not . . .
 
Prabhupāda: Why not analogy? You have understand by analogy. You gave me analogy too. Without analogy, how we can make progress?
 
Guest: (laughs) Well, you see I would be in the position of somebody not knowing about trees, and I would see a lot of people, and they would all have a particular theory about how it is best to water a tree.
 
Prabhupāda: This is the way going on. The whole cosmic manifestation, that is described in the ''Bhagavad-gītā'', ''viśva-rūpa''. Just like I am a form. So I have got many parts—the fingers are there, the hairs are there, the nails are there. So many things. If you make analytical study the anatomy or physiology, you will get so many parts. Innumerable. So this body, somebody studies as psychologist. He is simply studying the brain. Somebody is physiologist. Somebody is a biologist. The same . . . center is the body. Center is the body.
 
They have made so many departmental knowledge, but if there is any such process to know what is this body, then is it not possible to know everything? ''Yasmin vijñāte'' . . . that is the Vedic instruction: ''yasmin vijñāte sarvam evam vijñātaṁ bhavati'' (''Muṇḍaka Upaniṣad'' 1.1.3). If you understand the Absolute Truth, then other, relative truths become automatically known. So those who are interested with the relative truth, they are intelligent? Or one who is interested in the Absolute Truth, he is intelligent?
 
Guest: Hmm. It just seems to be a particular problem to find one's way among lots of different groups that express themselves in exactly the way that you do. Because there are very many, and that's . . .
 
Prabhupāda: They are busy with the relative truth.
 
Guest: Yes, but they all say the Absolute Truth.
 
Prabhupāda: There is a process of knowing the Absolute Truth.
 
Guest: They will say that too.
 
Prabhupāda: So if you can understand the Absolute Truth, the relative truths become automatically known. This is Vedic injunction. ''Yasmin vijñāte sarvam evaṁ vijñātaṁ bhavati'' (''Muṇḍaka Upaniṣad'' 1.1.3). By knowing the Absolute Truth . . . just like, take another example, analogy. In the mathematics 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 0. So if you simply learn this, then you learn the whole mathematics, because whatever you write in mathematics is 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, in this way and that way, say plus, minus, division, but they are nothing but 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 . . . you simply make different angle of vision of studying, but the figures are the same—1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.
 
Dhanañjaya: Everything else is simply a combination of . . .
 
Prabhupāda: That's right.
 
Guest: Yes. It's interesting. I can use that; I can explain that.
 
Prabhupāda: Similarly, we understand the Absolute Truth in this way in the ''Bhagavad-gītā''.
 
(aside) Just find out:
 
:''bhūmir āpo 'nalo vāyuḥ''
:''khaṁ mano buddhir eva ca''
:([[BG 7.4 (1972)|BG 7.4]])
 
Seventh Chapter. ''Bhūmi. B-h-u-m-i.''
 
Devotee: ''Bhūmir āpo''?
 
:''bhūmir āpo 'nalo vāyuḥ''
:''khaṁ mano buddhir eva ca''
:''ahaṅkāra itīyaṁ me''
:''bhinnā prakṛtir aṣṭadhā''
:([[BG 7.4 (1972)|BG 7.4]])
 
Prabhupāda: ''Bhinnā prakṛtir me aṣṭadhā''. Yes.
 
Devotee: "Earth, water, fire, air, ether, mind, intelligence and false ego—all together these eight comprise My separated material energies."
 
Prabhupāda: Yes. This is the whole composition of the whole material world, these eight elements: earth, water, fire, air, sky—this is gross; and mind, intelligence, ego—subtle. So the whole material . . . whole cosmic manifestation is combination of these eight things. Just like the same analogy: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.
 
Guest: Do you think that's the only way to describe them? Do you think there could not be another, I mean, indefinite number of equivalent ways to describe . . .
 
Prabhupāda: No, no. Whatever you can take. Suppose you are, what is called, soil expert. The soil expert means you are studying the earth, that's all. You may be interested in light and heat. So light and heat is fire. You are studying fire. You are studying electricity—you are studying fire. You are studying gas—it is combination of water and fire. So you cannot go out of these elements. You cannot go out of these elements. Whatever you may be expert in particular line, but you are bound up within these eight elements. That's all. If you are psychologist, that means intelligence or mind. That is stated. ''Mano buddhir ahaṅkāraḥ''. So you cannot go outside.
 
So here Kṛṣṇa, or God, says: "These eight elements are My energy—separated energy." Separated energy means just like it is being recorded in the tape-recorder, but when it will be replayed, it will speak exactly like me—the same sound, same everything. But I am not that. That is my separated energy. This is the example of separated energy. Similarly, all these eight elements, they have come from the original source, God, and they are acting differently. So if I know God, I can know that these are different energies of God. That's all. Therefore my knowledge in God, if it is perfect, then I can understand perfectly all these material energies.
 
Guest: That's an example of what I was saying earlier—that it doesn't seem to be necessary to have that particular theory or way of describing the world to behave properly.
 
Prabhupāda: There is no necessity. Your real necessity is the Absolute, wherefrom these things have come. That is your real necessity.
 
Guest: . . . and to understand the purpose of life. I think that's . . .
 
Prabhupāda: That is purpose of life, because that is the purpose of human life especially—not all. Cats and dogs, they cannot understand. A human being can understand. Therefore a human being's aim of life is to understand God.
 
Guest: Hmm. That's a very good angle, that.
 
Prabhupāda: Yes. And if he understands God, he understands everything. Just like we, we speak with so many scientists, psychologists, metaphysists and chemists. But we talk with them because we know the central point. Therefore we can detect what is the wrong in Darwin's theory.
 
Guest: Can you use it for anything? Can you use it to detect what's wrong in any theory?
 
Prabhupāda: Any theory. Any theory. Because we know the central point.
 
Guest: So you should be able to use it to predict things. You should be able to use it . . .
 
Prabhupāda: What is the use of prediction? Prediction . . . we can also predict. Predict . . . just like I can predict, "You'll die." Is that prediction? (laughter) If I say: "You'll die," is that prediction? Everyone knows. Or if I say: "In the month of January there will be snowfall," is that prediction?
 
Guest: Well, you might have a warm January.
 
Prabhupāda: Yes, it is simply experience. And we can experience on the world. That is our point of view. We take the perfect knowledge from the perfect, everything is then perfect. We take knowledge that the soul is not destroyed after the destruction of the body. Well, that's a fact.
 
Guest: What happens to the soul after the death of the body?
 
Prabhupāda: You have to accept another body out of the so many varieties of body.
 
Guest: Immediately?
 
Prabhupāda: Yes, immediately. Immediately like this. The example is given, just like you are walking. So when you fix up your leg in right place, then you take up this leg. Not before that.
 
Guest: What happens when . . .
 
Prabhupāda: (indistinct) . . . so . . . when . . . sometimes a man remains in coma. That means what kind of life he'll have to accept, that is being judged by higher, superior authority. And as soon it is settled up, he leaves this body and takes another. That is transmigration of the soul. ''karmaṇā daiva-netreṇa'' ([[SB 3.31.1|SB 3.31.1]]). Just like there is a judgment is going on in the high court that what will be the next stage. So as the judgment is given, he must go to the prison and suffer so many days or so many months. Immediately he leaves this, goes there. That's all.
 
But these rascals, they do not believe that there is a judge and there is judgment, there is life after death, there is . . . therefore I say they are rascals. I don't say whimsically. Because they are misleading, therefore they are rascals. So many human being they are misleading by false knowledge. How much disservice they are doing they do not know, by giving false knowledge, misleading people. ''Andhā yathāndhair upanīyamānās'' ([[SB 3.31.1|SB 3.31.1]]). A blind man is giving lead to thousands of blind men, what is the result? All of them will fall in a ditch. This is going on.
 
Therefore our policy is to accept perfect knowledge from the Supreme Perfect. That is perfect knowledge. Then we get knowledge, perfect knowledge, and then you become perfect. But a man is imperfect or perfect on account of knowledge. See one has got perfect knowledge, he is perfect. One who has got imperfect knowledge, he is imperfect. Because my existence as living entity, I am cognizant. I want knowledge. So if my knowledge is perfect, then I am perfect. And if my knowledge is imperfect, then I am imperfect. Just like they do not know that the soul is there and the soul is transmigrating from one body to another. They do not know.
 
Guest: How many people are there with perfect knowledge?
 
Prabhupāda: Anyone can become, provided he takes the perfect knowledge.
 
Guest: How long does that take?
 
Prabhupāda: It takes immediately. If you are really serious, it takes immediately. Therefore Kṛṣṇa says:
 
:''sarva-dharmān parityajya''
:''mām ekaṁ śaraṇaṁ vraja''
:''ahaṁ tvāṁ sarva-pāpebhyo''
:''mokṣayiṣyāmi mā śucaḥ''
:([[BG 18.66 (1972)|BG 18.66]])
 
Kṛṣṇa said, God said that, "You simply surrender unto Me, I will give you protection from all imperfection." So how long it takes? A second. You simply surrender to Kṛṣṇa, and immediately your life, your perfect life, begins. Now if you keep yourself surrendered, then you . . . on and on your life becomes perfect, perfect, perfect, more, more, more, more, more. Absolutely perfect.
 
:''teṣāṁ satata-yuktānāṁ''
:''bhajatāṁ prīti-pūrvakam''
:''buddhi-yogaṁ dadāmi taṁ''
:''yena mām upayānti te''
:([[BG 10.10 (1972)|BG 10.10]])
 
First of all you have to accept this principle; then you become . . . immediately your perfection life begins.
 
:''śreyaḥ-kairava-candrikā-vitaraṇaṁ vidyā-vadhū-jīvanam''
:''ānandāmbudhi-vardhanaṁ prati-padaṁ pūrṇāmṛtāsvādanaṁ''
:''paraṁ vijayate śrī-kṛṣṇa-saṅkīrtanam''
:([[CC Antya 20.12|CC Antya 20.12]])
 
(aside) He can explain this verse, ''ceto-darpaṇa-mārjanaṁ.''
 
Revatīnandana: This is the first verse of the verses composed by Lord Caitanya, who began this movement; it is present from five hundred years ago. The ''Vedas'' say that He is a incarnation of Kṛṣṇa Himself. And the verse . . .
 
Guest: The ''Vedas'' five hundred years ago?


Prabhupāda: Yes. There is... There is... Even astrology, Bṛghu-saṁhitā . Astrological calculation. You can know your past life, present life, and future life. There is system. Bṛghu-saṁhitā .
Revatīnandana: It's unpredicted . . . as it is described in here . . . said that He would be actually Kṛṣṇa Himself. So He didn't write, except a few selected verses. This is the first verse, and the translation is, "All glories to the ''śrī-kṛṣṇa-saṅkīrtanam,'' chanting of the names of the Lord, because this chanting will cleanse the heart of all the dust that's accumulated there for years together. It is all the material conditioning that's been acquired from births and deaths. It is cleansed by the transcendental sound, and in this way the fire of conditional life, of repeated birth and death, is extinguished."


Graham Hill: So by our behavior (indistinct) will determine what sort of body we will get when we return?
And the troubles with this material life, starting out with the cycle of birth and death, is likened to being in a blazing fire condition of existence. It says: "It is the life of all transcendental knowledge, this chanting." It brings it to life, the whole process. "It increases the ocean of transcendental bliss by bringing more and more souls into it, and it helps us also to have a taste of the full nectar for which we are always anxious." Everyone is always anxious to enjoy fully, but he does not experience full enjoyment, because he's not linked with the source, which is Kṛṣṇa. The chanting forms an immediate link. And, erm, "It helps us to have a taste of the full nectar, for which we are always anxious." This is the verse. So this . . .


Prabhupāda: Yes. Just like if you are educating your son for future life. So according to his education, according to his qualification, his future life will be fixed up. If he is properly educated he can become a very big man. And if he is not, he may not become. So this life is preparation for the next life. So this human form of life, if we are advanced in our consciousness then we should try to get our next life going back to home, back to Godhead. This...
Prabhupāda: ''Vidyā-vadhū-jīvanam''—it is reservoir of knowledge, ''vidyā-vadhū-jīvanam''; ''ānandāmbudhi-vardhanaṁ''—increasing spiritual bliss. Then all perfectness. All these things can be achieved only by ''paraṁ vijayate śrī-kṛṣṇa-saṅkīrtanam''. The process is very simple.


<LS:1><TS:0.5,NM,NO,1,NM,NO,1.5,NM,NO,2,NM,NO,2.5,NM,NO,3,NM,NO,3.5,NM,NO,4,NM,NO,4.5,NM,NO,5,NM,NO,5.5,NM,NO,6,NM,NO,6.5,NM,NO>
Guest: What would one do in order to . . . first of all you can just chant the name. That seems to be the thing. But then there were some . . . a bit . . . rules of behavior that one has to follow.


<PS:"Verse in purp">yānti deva-vratā devān<CR> pitṟn yānti pitṛ-vratāḥ<CR>bhūtāni yānti bhūtejyā<CR>yānti mad-yājino 'pi mām<CR> [[BG 9.25]]
Prabhupāda: No, chanting of this ''mahā-mantra'', Hare Kṛṣṇa, there is no rule. You can chant without following any rule. There is no such thing. You simply chant—Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare/ Hare Rāma, Hare Rāma, Rāma Rāma, Hare Hare. That's all. God has given you the tongue, so you can chant Hare Kṛṣṇa without any difficulty, without any loss. Why don't you try it, if there is any gain?


Find out this verse.
Guest: Yes, I'll try it. Why not? Are there any particular times of the day when . . .


Śyāmasundara: There is no more body? No more body?
Prabhupāda: No. No. Anytime. Simply you try to chant always. (laughter)


Prabhupāda: Yes. No, this body you have got. Just like this hat and coat, vasamsi, this is covering of your body. So you have got already your spiritual body.
Guest: Now what is the full chant?


Śyāmasundara: Spiritual body.
Prabhupāda: Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare/ Hare Rāma, Hare Rāma, Rāma Rāma, Hare Hare.


Prabhupāda: Yes. That is now covered by this material element. So emancipation or salvation means you no more get your material body. But your body is already there. Just like in this body, I have got my body. And because I have got a hand my dress has got a hand. Because I have got a leg, my pant has got a leg. So this superficial, external body is simply covering of your original body. The original body is spiritual. So go back to home back to Godhead means you remain in your original spiritual body. You get freedom from this covering of material body. Now that spiritual body you can transfer to so many ways. Read it.
(aside) You can give in writing.


Pradyumna:  
Guest: (indistinct comments by devotees) I think I can learn it.


<PS:"Verse in purp">yānti deva-vratā devān<CR> pitṟn yānti pitṛ-vratāḥ<CR>bhūtāni yānti bhūtejyā<CR> yānti mad-yājino 'pi mām. <CR> [[BG 9.25]]
Prabhupāda: These sixteen words: Hare, Kṛṣṇa, Hare, Kṛṣṇa, that's four, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare/ Hare Rāma, Hare Rāma, Rāma Rāma, Hare Hare. Actually three words. They are adjusted in sixteen words.


"Those who worship the demigods will take birth amongst the demigods."
Guest: What does ''Hare'' mean?


Prabhupāda: Higher planetary system of demigods, yes.
Prabhupāda: ''Hare, Hare'' means, "O the energy of God." There are two things: God and His energy. Just like fire—fire itself and its energy. Is it not? Two things are there. Is it not? Fire itself and its energy, heat and light, whatever you call. So similarly, God we cannot see at the present moment because we are materially dull, blind. We cannot see God. Therefore common man cannot understand what is God. But he can see and feel His energy.


Pradyumna: "Those who worship ghosts and spirits will take birth amongst such beings. Those who worship ancestors go to the ancestors. And those who worship Me will live with Me."
Just like the sun planet. It is not possible to go there, but you can feel the energy of the sun planet, the sunshine. Any common man can understand. But it is a fact that sunshine is not important—the sun is important, wherefrom the energy is coming. Is it not? Similarly, whatever we are seeing, that is already explained, ''bhūmir āpo 'nalo vāyuḥ'' ([[BG 7.4 (1972)|BG 7.4]]), this material world, this is simply the energy of God. So ''Hare'' means "O the energy of God."


Prabhupāda: Yes. So we can transfer to any form of body. Simply you have to prepare. But if we remain in our original body then you go back to home, back to Godhead.
Guest: And Rāma?


Graham Hill: How do we attain our spiritual body?
Prabhupāda: And ''Rāma'' means God Himself. Because there are two things: God and His energy. No—three things. Actually there is one thing: only God. Without God there is no energy. Therefore He is Absolute. But for our experience we can understand God is there. We cannot see God, therefore we have to go through the energy. If you want to go to the sun planet you must go through the sunshine. Therefore we offer our prayers to the energy also. That is Hare—not only God, but His energy. Hare Kṛṣṇa means the Supreme, the all-attractive. We are also energy of God. So Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, so simply pray, "O the energy of God, O God, kindly accept me." That's all. Simple thing.


Prabhupāda: You have got already spiritual body.
Guest: Yes, simple.


Graham Hill: I mean, how did I get my spiritual body?
Prabhupāda: Just like a child cries, "Mother, take me, take me on your lap." The mother will take. You have to cry a little, that's all. (break) Mother wants to see, "How much the child is anxious for me." As soon as mother sees, "Oh, he is very much anxious. All right. Come on," she will give up all other business and take the son on the lap. Similarly, we have to become little eager. Just like Caitanya Mahāprabhu says, ''yugāyitaṁ nimeṣeṇa'' ([[CC Antya 20.39|CC Antya 20.39]]), eagerness: "Oh, one moment is just like twelve years." Twelve years; ''yuga'' means twelve years. ''Yugāyitaṁ nimeṣeṇa cakṣuṣā prāvṛṣāyitam'', that "Torrents of rain of my tears." ''Śūnyāyitaṁ jagat sarvaṁ'', "I find everything vacant," ''govinda-viraheṇa me'', "without Kṛṣṇa, without . . ." This is eagerness. When we become eager like that, God will reveal: "Yes, come on. Here I am." What is there? Simply He waits to see how much eager you are.


Prabhupāda: Because you are part and parcel of God. God is all spirit. Just like materially, because you have got white body your son has got white body. Similarly, God is all spirit. Therefore you are son of God, part and parcel of God, then you are all spirit. But you have got this material covering because you wanted to come here and enjoy or lord it over the material nature. Everyone is trying to that. Everyone is trying to become a very prominent man in this material world. That is he can lord it over the material nature. So because you desire to lord it over the material nature you have to accept a material body.
But our eagerness is attracted by this material energy, illusion. We are engaged in studying physics, chemistry and so many things, other things, politics, sociology and that ''logy'', this ''logy'', that ''logy'', that's all. We are thinking we shall be happy being attracted by the different varieties of energy. Therefore we pray to the energy, "Don't put me into illusion." These are illusion. What you will do? Suppose if you become a great physist, even Professor Einstein, does it mean that you are free from death? Has the all the scientists discovered something, "Yes, I am the greatest scientist, Noble Prize winner. There will be no more death"? Where is that scientist, "There will be no more disease"? We may manufacture million types of best medicine, but can you stop disease? "No, sir." So this is intelligence.


Graham Hill: Are all spiritual bodies the same? I mean, is your spiritual body exactly the same as...
So what is the use of cultivating this knowledge? The real problem is there: birth, death, old age and disease. How to get out of this? They do not know. They are simply theorizing—this theory, that theory, that theory, that theory. What is the value of all these theories? You are compelled by nature . . . (indistinct) . . . as soon as nature comes, "Please get out from this platform," you have no theory. Finished, all your knowledge. They are not thinking of that. They are not thinking of that, that "What is the value of my theories?" Real problems are there. And that is stated in the ''Bhagavad-gītā'': ''janma-mṛtyu-jarā-vyādhi-duḥkha-doṣānudarśanam'' ([[BG 13.8-12 (1972)|BG 13.9]]). This is real knowledge, that we are theorizing in so many ways, but we must always put forward before us, "Here is birth, here is death, here is old age and disease."


Prabhupāda: Yes, yes. Spiritually you are all the same. Just like as human beings you are all the same but you may have a black dress, I may have a saffron dress, he may have white dress. This is outward covering. This is not myself. Similarly, dehino 'smin yathā dehe kaumāraṁ yauvanaṁ jarā [[BG 2.13]] . Within this body the spirit soul is there and he is changing different types of bodies. So when he accepts a process, this going back to home, back to Godhead, to Kṛṣṇa, then he hasn't got to accept any more material body. He remains in his own spiritual body. And spiritual body by original constitution it is eternal. Eternal. Nityaṁ śāśvato 'yam, na hanyate hanyamāne [[BG 2.13]] . na jāyate mriyate vā kadācin . This is a description of it.
Guest: Do your theories help you to deal with those problems?


Śyāmasundara: In the spiritual bodies aren't there also individualities?
Prabhupāda: Yes. Then I shall be serious how to solve these problems. And that is also stated in the ''Bhagavad-gītā'', that if you simply try to understand the Absolute Truth, Kṛṣṇa, then immediately you get out of the clutches of death. Get out of clutches of death means you get out of clutches of birth also. Because where there is birth, there is death. If there is no death, then there is no birth, and if there is no birth, there is no disease, there is no old age. So ''Bhagavad-gītā'' says that:


Prabhupāda: Yes. Yes.
:''janma karma ca divyam me''
:''jānāti tattvataḥ''
:''tyaktvā dehaṁ punar janma''
:''naiti . . .''
:([[BG 4.9 (1972)|BG 4.9]])


Śyāmasundara: My spiritual body won't be the same as...
Anyone who simply understands Kṛṣṇa and His activities, then he immediately becomes free from rebirth—''tyaktvā dehaṁ.'' This body you have got. You have to give it up. But after giving up this body I am not transmigrating to another material body. I'm going directly to the spiritual world. Then there is no more birth, death, old age and disease, because as spirit soul we have no birth, death, old age and disease. It is the body, the material body. So there is no such knowledge throughout the whole world, universities. They are not busy for acquiring this knowledge.


Prabhupāda: Yes, just like father and son. Son is also individual. Father is also individual. Although the son is born of the body of the father, of the mother. But he is individual. He is individual. He can disobey father or he can obey the father. So long he obeys he is happy. When he disobeys he is unhappy. (to child) Is that all right? Eh? You want to be happy or unhappy? Obey your father, that's all. (laughter) Very simple philosophy. Yes.
(aside) Where is Śyāmsundara?


Graham Hill: (indistinct) at home he is very active.
Guest: You must excuse me. I have to go. I have to go home.


Prabhupāda: Yes, ...that's nice. Yes. So he sometimes becomes disobedient? Sometimes? Eh? Why? (laughs) That means you have got independence. Is it not? Yes. That means he has got independence. Yes. This is a fact. Similarly we are sons of God, we have got little independence. We may remain with God, we may give up His company and come here to find our own fortune. And to find our own fortune we are becoming implicated and taking birth in different species of life. That is our ignorance. You are obedient to your mother?
Prabhupāda: You have to go? Why?


Girl: Sometimes.
Guest: My lady friend, she will expect me back about ten o'clock.


Prabhupāda: Sometimes, not always.
Prabhupāda: So your lady friend will give you protection from birth, death, old age and disease?


Girl: Yes.
Guest: Well, maybe, maybe not. (laughs)


Prabhupāda: She is the youngest? Ah, therefore she must be disobedient. (laughter) Daughter is eldest? This daughter? Oh. You are obedient?
Prabhupāda: We can give you protection. Why don't you remain here?


Girl: Sometimes.
Guest: Hmm. Well, I shall try it. By chanting I shall . . . (indistinct) . . . it's very interesting. Thank you very much for giving me so much of your time.


Prabhupāda: Sometimes? Not always? (laughs) All right. Thank you.
Prabhupāda: Yes. Thank you.


Graham Hill: She's a bit wild when she is at home.
Guest: Bye-bye.


Prabhupāda: Hare Kṛṣṇa. So give them prasadam. Oh, (indistinct) that's nice. So I am very glad to see you with your all family. Ah. Please come here. We have got very... (end)
Prabhupāda: Please come again.


Guest: Yes we must. I think you've got something very nice going there.


Prabhupāda: Thank you. Hare Kṛṣṇa.


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Revision as of 04:07, 23 May 2020

His Divine Grace
A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada



730826R2.LON - August 26, 1973 - 81:48 Minutes



(eating prasādam)

Prabhupāda: A class of men who can understand God, that is missing at the present moment. The first-class men who can understand God, that is missing. That means head is missing. Head is missing. If the head is . . . brain is cracked, then in spite of having the hands and legs and belly, the situation becomes confused.

So at the present moment the first-class men who can understand God, who can speak about God, the science of God, that is missing, as well as the arm, real kṣatriya, who can give protection. Here also people are taking part in politics. That is the same aim, "How can I get some money?" That's all. The whole, whole thing is śūdra. Śūdra's business is, do something and get money. That's all. Finished. That is śūdra's business.

Guest: What do you think has gone wrong with the supposedly intelligent people who should be concerned with God's business but are not? Why have they lost it?

Prabhupāda: Where is the intelligent people? They do not understand even what is virtue and sin. They do not understand. So where is the intelligent person? They are thinking everything is all right, but the nature does not say so. Nature says, "This is good for you. This is bad for you," but they do not know it. Where is Paṇḍita Mahāśaya (Pradyumna)? Call him.

Devotee: He is in London.

Prabhupāda: Oh. Who can read Bhagavad-gītā? Find out the verse pravṛttiṁ ca nivṛttiṁ ca janā na vidur āsurāḥ janā (BG 16.7).

Guest: (eating) This is very good.

Prabhupāda: Hmm. Pravṛtti. P-r-a-v-r-i-t-t-i. In the Sixteenth Chapter.

Devotee:

pravṛttiṁ ca nivṛttiṁ ca
janā na vidur āsurāḥ
na śaucaṁ nāpi cācāro
na satyaṁ teṣu vidyate
(BG 16.7)

Translation: "Those who are demonic do not know what is to be done and what is not to be done. Neither cleanliness nor proper behavior nor truth is found in them."

Prabhupāda: They do not know what is to be done and what is not to be done. Next?

Devotee: "Neither cleanliness nor proper behavior . . ."

Prabhupāda: No cleanliness, no proper behavior.

Devotee: ". . . nor truth is found in them."

Prabhupāda: This is the general division, fourth-class, fifth-class men—demonic. Then?

Devotee: Purport?

Prabhupāda: Hmm.

Devotee: "In every civilized human society there is some set of scriptural rules and regulations which are followed from the beginning, especially among the Āryans, those who adopt the Vedic civilization and who are known as the most advanced civilized peoples."

Prabhupāda: In the civilized men, there is such thing: do and do not. Even in ordinary dealing: "Keep to the right" or "Keep to the left," that means the other side you do not go, ordinary. So why there must be discipline, law and order? There must be these two things: do this; do not do this. Otherwise it is not civilized. Now in the Christian Bible, Lord Jesus Christ says, "Thou shall not kill." But they are killing, giving some plea. Straight thing is, the order is, "Thou shall not kill." But they are killing in spite of. In ordinarily, one does not know whether killing is good or bad. But even there is instruction—"Don't kill"—they do it.

Guest: Some of them do not.

Prabhupāda: Huh?

Guest: There are some who do not, still.

Prabhupāda: Some there must be.

Guest: But not many.

Prabhupāda: But general people, they do not know even what is the wrong by killing. This is fourth-class, fifth-class men. They do not know what is the reaction of killing.

Guest: Reaction?

Prabhupāda: Yes. There must be reaction, because by nature's law . . . just like you are living, I am living, or you are eating, I am also eating. So both of us have got the right to live, so how can I kill you?

Guest: You could . . . sometimes people kill each other not because they want to kill, though; because there are some other reasons.

Prabhupāda: Then it is ignorance. You must know why you are killing. You cannot kill.

Guest: But essentially, if one person is killing some others, then it's occasionally felt to be justified, to kill the person who's doing the killing. Or to overthrow a tyrant or something.

Prabhupāda: If there is justification, then that is another thing.

Guest: Well, everybody feels that killing is justified. Very few people kill wantonly. They will always give a reason for it, especially in war.

Prabhupāda: They must give good reason. Simply I want to kill, therefore I must kill, that is not very good reason.

Guest: No. But people don't usually say like that.

Prabhupāda: They give this reason that, "I want to eat, so I must kill." That is tiger's reasoning. Tiger says . . . tiger, by nature he has to kill, so there is no wrong for . . . nothing wrong in his part if he kills, because by nature he is made. But why a man should kill unless the other party is wronged, aggressor, he is coming to kill you? We cannot kill even the tiger. But if the tiger comes in the city and creates disruption, you must kill. But there is no business going to the forest and killing. Why? He is living in his jurisdiction; why shall I encroach upon his jurisdiction? But people go in the forest and kill so many birds and animals unnecessarily.

Guest: Yeah, well . . . yeah. This is quite true.

Prabhupāda: This is going on. Therefore, as it is stated, that they do not know what is right and what is wrong. This is the modern civilization.

Guest: But who does know?

Prabhupāda: We know. We know.

Guest: Yeah? You're sure?

Prabhupāda: That is our special qualification. And we are teaching this philosophy to our students. This is the special contribution of this Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement. We know what is what.

Guest: Hmm.

Prabhupāda: Yes. Therefore we are inviting persons to know this art, how to distinguish what to do and what not to do. This is our business.

Guest: How do you find out?

Prabhupāda: Here is the book. Here is the book.

Guest: That is the book? Bhagavad-gītā?

Prabhupāda: Bhagavad-gītā. Yes. Everything is there.

Guest: This seems to be a different version. I have read a very small one many years ago, but this seems to be rather large.

Prabhupāda: No. That is you might have seen only the original verses. Here there is explanation.

Devotee: The original verses are here. And there is full purport.

Guest: I see. Yeah. I once, in fact, was at a course on the Gītā. I went to a course on it. But that was many years ago, when I was very young, so I have forgotten now. I used to be in the Theosophical Movement, which has some relation . . . some related ideas, because its origin is in Indian philosophy. So I know little about the Gītā, but.

Prabhupāda: Go on reading.

Devotee: "Those who do not follow the scriptural injunctions are supposed to be demons. Therefore it is stated here that the demons do not know the scriptural rules, nor do they have any inclination to follow them. Most of them do not know them, and even if some of them know, they have not the tendency to follow them."

Prabhupāda: Yes. These are demons. If you are professing some religion, and the religion says that, "You do not do this," if you act against the scripture, then you are demon. Just like if one does not act according to the law of the state, he is outlaw. But these things are not taken very seriously at the present moment.

Guest: That's true.

Prabhupāda: They take it, "Oh, they are saying so many things. It doesn't matter. Let us enjoy life." This is demon. And therefore you find all over the world so much confusion, because the number of demons have increased.

Guest: What do you think people who are not in the Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement should do? Should they join the movement, or is there a specialization so that there are some people who do what you are doing . . .?

Prabhupāda: No. Everyone should join. Everyone should join. Everyone should join. What do you understand by "Kṛṣṇa consciousness"? What is your idea?

Guest: I don't know. I've come to find out.

Prabhupāda: Kṛṣṇa consciousness means God conscious. Kṛṣṇa means God. So if one is not God conscious, he must be a demon.

Guest: Hmm. But there are . . . the trouble is, the phrase is too vague. So there are thousands of groups having the same sort of phrase, you see, talking about God consciousness, "You must have God consciousness."

Prabhupāda: Then you have to see . . . just like you go to purchase something in the market. There are thousands of varieties, but the intelligent man can pick up the nice one.

Guest: You think there is just one nice one?

Prabhupāda: Yes. God is one, therefore God consciousness must be one. Do you think God . . . there are many Gods?

Guest: God has many forms. God has many forms.

Prabhupāda: That is another thing. Just like you are Mr. Such-and-such. You may dress in a different way, but in whichever way you dress, you are Mr. Such-and-such. Similarly, God may have many forms. We also admit that. But God is one. God cannot be many. That is stated in the Vedic literature: advaitam acyutam anādim ananta-rūpam (Bs. 5.33). Ananta-rūpam. God can expand. We are also expansion of God. We living entities, we are also expansion of God. The tree is also expansion of God. The germ is also expansion of God. So everything is expansion of God. That is pure understanding of God. But who is understanding in that way?

They are seeing differently, "Oh, here is a man, here is a dog, here is a cat, here is a tree." Who is seeing that everyone is expansion of God? And if I think that everyone is expansion of God, then if I want to kill you, I must take sanction from God. It is a great science. People are neglecting it. They are not interested. Whenever we speak of God, they think, "They are talking something utopian." God is there; kingdom of God is there; one can go there; how one can be qualified—these things they are not interested at all. Therefore they are fourth-class, fifth-class men. So how you can be peaceful with fourth-class, fifth-class men?

Guest: Can people change themselves from being fourth class to third class and so on?

Prabhupāda: Yes.

Guest: Can people change themselves?

Prabhupāda: Oh, yes. That is the Kṛṣṇa conscious movement. We can train from the tenth-class men to the first-class men. This is Kṛṣṇa conscious. What to speak of fourth class, fifth class—any lowest class, ye 'pi syuḥ pāpa-yonayaḥ (BG 9.32)

(aside:) Find out this verse: māṁ hi pārtha vyapāśritya . . .

Somebody must be quick. Māṁ hi pārtha vyapāśritya ye 'pi syuḥ pāpa-yonayaḥ. Māṁ, m-a-m. Māṁ hi pārtha vyapāśritya.

Śrutakīrti: Māṁ hi pārtha . . .?

Prabhupāda: Vyapāśritya.

Śrutakīrti: . . . vyapāśritya.

. . . ye 'pi syuḥ pāpa-yonayaḥ
striyo vaiśyās tathāśūdrās
te 'pi yānti parāṁ gatim
(BG 9.32)

"O son of Pṛthā, those who take shelter in Me, though they be of lower birth—women, vaiśyas (merchants) as well as śūdras (workers)—can approach the supreme destination."

Prabhupāda: Yes.

Guest: It said women as well?

Prabhupāda: Yes, women, because they are less intelligent.

Guest: Women?

Prabhupāda: Yes. You do not know that?

Guest: No. I didn't know that. No. Hmm. But I'm quite surprised to hear it.

Prabhupāda: But it doesn't matter. If one takes to Kṛṣṇa consciousness, he can be elevated. That is the . . .

(aside) Read the purport.

Śrutakīrti: "It is clearly declared here by the Supreme Lord that in devotional service there is no distinction between the lower or higher classes of people. In the material conception of life there are such divisions, but for a person engaged in transcendental devotional service to the Lord there are not."

"Everyone is eligible for the supreme destination. In the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam (SB 2.4.18) it is stated that even the lowest, who are called caṇḍālas (dog-eaters), can be elevated by association with a pure devotee. Therefore devotional service and guidance of a pure devotee are so strong that there is no discrimination between the lower and higher classes of men; anyone can take to it. The most simple man taking center of the pure devotee can be purified by proper guidance."

"According to the different modes of material nature, men are classified in the mode of goodness (brāhmaṇas), the mode of passion (kṣatriyas, or administrators), the mixed modes of passion and ignorance (vaiśyas, or merchants), and the mode of ignorance (śūdras, or workers). Those lower than them are called caṇḍālas, and they are born in sinful families. Generally, those who are born in sinful families are not accepted by the higher classes. But the process of devotional service and the pure devotee of the Supreme God are so strong that all the lower classes can attain the highest perfection of life. This is possible only when one takes shelter of Kṛṣṇa. One has to take shelter completely of Kṛṣṇa; then one can become much greater than great jñānīs and yogīs."

Prabhupāda: Materially there is such division, but when they take to the spiritual platform, there is no such distinction. They'll work on spiritual platform.

Guest: Should they . . . can they do that in ordinary life, or do they have to join the institution like this?

Prabhupāda: Yes, any ordinary life, any ordinary life.

Guest: What was the function of the āśrama, then?

Prabhupāda: Āśrama means to teach. Sva-karmaṇā tam abhyarcya saṁsiddhiṁ labhate narā (BG 18.46). There is verse—sva-karmaṇā. S-v-a.

Śrutakīrti: Sva. S-v-a.

. . . yena sarvam idaṁ tatam
sva-karmaṇā tam abhyarcya
siddhiṁ vindati mānavaḥ
(BG 18.46)

"By worship of the Lord, one who is the source of all beings and who is all-pervading, man can, in the performance of his own duty, attain perfection."

Prabhupāda: Simply he has to know how to do.

Guest: And it is very simple. Yes? Yes. That's the story I've heard. Yes.

Prabhupāda: Therefore we can claim anyone from any position if he agrees to abide by our regulative principle. Then he can be. There is no difficulty. That is being happen, actually. All my students, ask them what was their previous life and what is the life now. They will explain. A healthy person recovered from disease, he can very well understand that, "What I was in my diseased condition and what I am now." He doesn't require to take certificate from others. He can personally understand, "Yes. I was like this. Now I am like this." You can talk with any one of our student, boys and girls, they will convince you. Yes. They have been trained.

Guest: Hmm. I'm surprised that . . .

Prabhupāda: For example, in America government is using . . . spending millions and millions of dollars how to check LSD, but the same LSD man, as soon as he comes to our camp, he gives up completely. This is practical.

Guest: Yes. I've heard that.

Prabhupāda: They'll hate to touch LSD, it is so perfect. So every thoughtful man, every philanthropist must study this philosophy very seriously and try to spread the all benefit activities for the human society.

Guest: Is it . . . but when you say it's very simple . . .

Prabhupāda: Very simple. Simpler than the simple.

Guest: It would change your life. But does it require very great visible change? I mean, do you have to change your life in the sense that you actually do different things? You say in the ordinary performance of your duty you can still attain the consciousness . . .

Prabhupāda: (aside) Just try to explain.

Dhanañjaya: Yes, well, you can go on being a student. You can go on being a householder. You can go on being a professional man. You can do all these prescribed duties, and still you can go on becoming Kṛṣṇa conscious.

Guest: But there are degrees of it. So it's simple, but yet . . .

Dhanañjaya: It's a practical application in daily life, day-to-day life.

Guest: But then does that take a long time or a lot of training?

Dhanañjaya: No. It doesn't take so much training.

Guest: Then what is the purpose of degrees of initiation? That's if it's just a one thing . . .

Dhanañjaya: That's something different. If you want to take seriously, then you can become initiated.

Guest: And what is the function of that?

Dhanañjaya: The function is that you accept the spiritual master as a bona fide representative as God, and then you take the rules and regulations very seriously, and you abide by these rules and regulations. There are rules and regulations in every āśrama, in every temple. Just like for instance if you decided you would like to stay here, so you . . . it would be expected that you follow four basic rules: no meat-eating; no intoxication; no illicit sex life; and no idle sports, no gambling, no betting.

You see? And taking part in the day-to-day routine, like rising early, bathing, attending the services and helping to maintain the āśrama by working or by engaging in some particular duty that you would like to do—by writing. You can do this. If you have this vocation to write, then we supply you an office, we supply you with a typewriter, paper, and you can write so many nice articles about Kṛṣṇa. And therefore that . . . dovetailing whatever you have experienced in the material world and whatever you have understood from the śāstra, from the scripture. You're benefiting yourself and you're benefiting your fellow men also.

Guest: So that . . . that's the āśrama life. But even in the ordinary world, in a way which is what I'm interested in . . . I'm interested in the influence of Kṛṣṇa consciousness in the ordinary world, and how would it change people's relationships and how would it change . . .

Dhanañjaya: Well all we simply ask is to chant Hare Kṛṣṇa, to spend a few minutes, sometime in the day—in the morning or in the evening—just to sit down and chant Hare Kṛṣṇa and gradually take on these rules and regulations.

Prabhupāda: We actually say that chant Hare Kṛṣṇa always.

Guest: Why . . . how does that have such a strange effect?

Haṁsadūta: Why does it have such a strong effect, chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa?

Dhanañjaya: "Strange."

Prabhupāda: Oh, that you can see.

Guest: Yes, I try to see. It is something very simple that one could do.

Prabhupāda: Yes. Very simple.

Guest: It is something very simple. And so then the world could be changed very nicely, and without any very complicated changes.

Haṁsadūta: For example, the best example and most practical example is, for instance, George Harrison, whom you must know. He has given this house for our propagating Kṛṣṇa consciousness. He himself is singing about Kṛṣṇa. So he is a singer. Before he was singing something; now he is singing something. So it's simply a change to Kṛṣṇa. The singing is there, the music is there, the record is there, the audience is there—simply the consciousness or the object of the song is Kṛṣṇa. Just like you are a scientist, so you use your knowledge to systematically present Kṛṣṇa.

Guest: But there is a difference between presenting an idea which is about Kṛṣṇa and ideas, and . . .

Prabhupāda: This is not an idea, it is a fact.

Guest: Yes. Well, some idea which is more complicated than just the word. I am surprised that just the chanting of the words will be so significant.

Haṁsadūta: Because the philosophy or the understanding is that this sound Kṛṣṇa, the sound of the name of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Kṛṣṇa, there is no difference. This is the meaning of absolute. Absolute means there is no difference between the name, the thing, its quality. In this world your name . . .

Prabhupāda: In this physical world, from the sound everything has come. From the sound, the air has come. From air, the fire has come. From fire, water has come. From water, earth has come.

Guest: But the . . . but the puzzle is that by . . . how the world could be made better, and people could be made to change by this simple procedure.

Prabhupāda: First of all we have to understand what is the aim of this world. Why such big cosmic creation is there? What is the purpose?

Guest: That is a very important question to ask.

Prabhupāda: Yes. They do not know that.

Guest: But you know it?

Prabhupāda: Yes.

Guest: That's remarkable.

Prabhupāda: Yes. We know it. What is the purpose of this big creation, we know it. We know everything perfectly. That is our special qualification.

Guest: How do you think that there are so many other people that think they also know? How did they go wrong?

Prabhupāda: They are thinking part of, partially. They do not know the right way. Just like a train is going on. So in the middle of the station you get on a train. Now it moves. If you think this movement is began from here, that is wrong. The movement has begun where from the train has started. That is right knowledge. But a child will think, "Now we have got the train, it is moving now." That is not perfect knowledge. The moving is fact, but the knowledge is not fact. So the modern so-called scientists, they capture something in the middle. They do not know where is the beginning, and they are simply theorizing. No perfect knowledge.

Guest: I can believe that very readily. It's not very difficult . . .

Prabhupāda: Yes. So they have no perfect knowledge, and still they are taking the place of a teacher. So others must be misled. If you have no perfect knowledge on a subject matter, and if you become a teacher of that subject matter, will you not mislead others? That is going on.

Guest: Hmm. Certainly.

Prabhupāda: They are taking big, big Nobel Prize by theorizing that life has begun from matter. Totally wrong, but they are getting Nobel Prize. Fool's paradise. You see?

śva-viḍ-varāhoṣṭra-kharaiḥ
saṁstutaḥ puruṣaḥ paśuḥ
(SB 2.3.19)

Animals—big animal. Suppose a lion roars. A small animal thinks, "Oh, he is big thing." He does not know that he is animal—nothing but animal. Is it not? (laughs) So this class of Nobel Prize winner just like a big animal praised by other small animals. That's all. Both of them are animals. Otherwise, how they can cheat people putting some wrong theory? But this is going on. He is getting Nobel Prize. Wherever he goes, he gets good audience. By stopping all nonsense we can understand that, "Here is a . . . (indistinct) . . . fool. He is talking something intelligent." It was challenged. One some professor in California University—not he is from here, he came from outside—Nobel Prize winner. He . . .

Perhaps you may know. "Evolution of chemicals." He is theorizing this. So his lecture began that life has begun from these four chemicals. So in that university there is my disciple, who is also doctor in chemistry. So he challenged him, "Suppose if I give you these four chemicals, can you manufacture life?" He replied: "That I cannot say." What is this? (laughter) "Then why you are theorizing like this, nonsense?" This is going on. Just like Darwin's theory—he said that man has come from monkey, but not a single monkey up 'til now has produced any man, neither scientifically they can inject a monkey to produce another man. Still the theory is going on.

Guest: It could have taken a long time. It might have taken a long time to happen.

Prabhupāda: Why it should take? If it is actually fact, then it is no difficult thing to understand. But it is false theory.

Guest: You think that kind of evolution . . .

Prabhupāda: That is not evolution. Evolution is different. That we have got full knowledge. Evolution means just like I am now living in a house. It will belonged to some lord. What is this lord?

Devotee: Piggot.

Prabhupāda: Piggot. Lord Piggot. Now I am become lord. Piggot is gone. (laughter) Now it is Bhaktivedanta Manor. So not that I was in a small cottage, the cottage has evolved to become a big, palatial building. Not that. I have come from that cottage to this big house. That this nonsense Darwin does not know. Not elevation of the cottage to this big house. It is my personal elevation, that I was living in a cottage; now I have got the chance to live in a palatial house. I am concerned. But Darwin is thinking the cottage has evolved to become a big house. That is his nonsense.

Guest: You make it more silly than it really is. It's not quite as silly as that.

Prabhupāda: What is that?

Haṁsadūta: He says you are making it more silly than it actually is.

Prabhupāda: No.

Guest: Yes. You are making Darwin sound a fool. I mean, he might well be wrong, but . . . he had a better grasp of . . .

Prabhupāda: Then produce from a body of a monkey, you produce human being. Then you are correct. I don't say that I can turn this cottage into a big palace. I don't say. I am not so fool.

Guest: You could, but it would take you a long time.

Prabhupāda: No. No. No. It is not possible. Cottage is different, this house is different.

Guest: No. You can change . . . you can take a cottage and gradually add bits. You can put more bricks here. You can start to put windows in. That will take you a long, long time, gradually it could change.

Prabhupāda: Why shall I do that? If the palace is already there, why shall I waste my time?

Guest: Why should you? But it's possible to do it.

Prabhupāda: No, why . . . it is not possible. Cottage is there. You break the cottage and make a palace. That is another thing.

Guest: But we can . . . for example, we can change dogs.

Prabhupāda: We can utilize the ingredients. Not that the cottage has developed into a cottage . . . into a . . . it is not that. Matter does not develop in that way.

Guest: But we can do it ourselves. Your cows here, you see . . .

Prabhupāda: That is our challenge. You cannot do it.

Guest: Those cows. You have a brown cow, you have a black and white cow and you have a brown and white cow. Now all those cows came from a single kind of cow, which is the wild cow. And you can make those cows change, you see, to different kinds of cows—some which produce a lot of milk, and some which produce a lot of beef, and some which have big horns, and . . . different colors. We can change animals in that way. You can see evolution happening on a small scale like that. So I think it's obviously possible that animals can change. I think you can see that.

Prabhupāda: I do not think it is possible that you can change a black cow to a white cow. I don't think.

Haṁsadūta: He is talking about breeding. He is talking about breeding.

Prabhupāda: That is another process. That is another process. Not that the same black cow has become a white cow. That is not possible.

Guest: That's not what Darwin claims—that a monkey becomes a man. He claims that it is a similar process to getting a pure-bred special cow from a wild cow, but it happens over many generations, as a change. And he would have supposed that that is the way people came, or humans came.

Prabhupāda: No, the point is whether the body of the monkey has changed into the body of human being.

Guest: I don't think that ever occurred. I am sure that doesn't occur. (laughs) I don't think it could.

Prabhupāda: But Darwin's theory is like that. He is pointing out that this body has changed into this body.

Dhanañjaya: He says it has evolved from a monkey's form, with a tail, to a human being's form. But this is not according to this knowledge of Vedas.

Guest: Well, you seem to be attributing the wrong theory to Darwin, that . . .

Prabhupāda: No, we have got our own theory.

Guest: . . . because he supposed that . . . a monkey will change into a man, but in the same way as you can breed dogs, and things like that. You can obviously change their form. That happens occasionally even in nature, from some special ways that . . .

Haṁsadūta: Yes. But a human being and a monkey . . . just like a cow and a horse. You will never get a horse from a cow, no matter how you breed them.

Guest: Well horse and cow, it's possible over many . . . a long time you can keep doing that.

Haṁsadūta: No.

Guest: The horse and cow had a common ancestor.

Haṁsadūta: No. You must do it.

Prabhupāda: One thing is, even accepting his theory . . .

Guest: Well, I'm not defending it; I'm just saying.

Prabhupāda: . . . even mixed breeding you can change to another species, accepting this, but that you have to mix. But in nature's way there are so many species of life. How it has happened?

Guest: According to Darwin's theory, by that very process, by animals just constantly evolving over millions of years and changing.

Prabhupāda: But you say, your analogy, that you said that if we mix—you mix. But who is mixing?

Guest: Ah, well that is—nature does that. Natural selection.

Prabhupāda: If you analyze, make analogy, you must bring all the similar points. Otherwise it is defective. Here you bring a species of dog, another dog and mix them—you are the worker.

Guest: Oh, yes. That's true. That's true.

Prabhupāda: Yes. So who is the worker?

Guest: Well, according to Darwin's theory, it's nature. It's nature. It's very simple, you see, because . . .

Prabhupāda: Nature . . . you say nature. Nature is there. Just like this table, it has got these iron rod, it does not change into iron flute automatically. You cannot say that. If I am a man, I take this iron rod and make it a iron flute; I can do it. But it does not make iron flute automatically. That analogy will not do.

Guest: Well, in living things they do move around and nature has a great deal . . .

Prabhupāda: Living a dead thing . . . this is a dead thing—iron rod, iron pipe, but I am a living being. I can change this iron pipe into iron flute. The iron pipe does not automatically becomes iron (flute). Darwin says they automatically it is become.

Guest: Well, with living things it is different.

Prabhupāda: (to devotee) Just make him understand.

Haṁsadūta: The point is that . . .

Guest: I can see what he is saying.

Haṁsadūta: . . . whatever it is—animal or any species of life—it appears to change, but actually someone is changing it. It is not changing . . .

Guest: Yes. It's possible. I agree.

Haṁsadūta: You understand?

Guest: Yes. It's certainly possible that there is a force outside which is making things change.

Prabhupāda: That he does not know.

Haṁsadūta: That is the defect in Darwin's theory. Darwin is putting forward that the matter is changing independently of any worker, of any other force.

Prabhupāda: Therefore I say that is foolishness.

Guest: Yes. I agree. You could still have evolution, but it could be directed by an outside force.

Haṁsadūta: Yes. There is evolution, but there is it is spiritual, not material. In other words, the monkey body's not changing to the human form, but actually the soul . . . eh, what . . .

Prabhupāda: He is transmigrating . . .

Haṁsadūta: Transmigrates.

Prabhupāda: . . . from this body to another body.

Guest: Oh, I see. But how did the bodies start to come about in the first place? I mean, they were just created, huh, in the first place? How did human bodies arise?

Prabhupāda: You have no experience?

Guest: Oh, yes. (laughs) But . . .

Prabhupāda: How your body is created?

Guest: Yeah. But in the very beginning? Well, that was some . . .

Prabhupāda: At the very beginning, yes. Very beginning we accept God. God is therefore called the original father. Is there any wrong?

Guest: No. That's splendid. That's a good story. Yes. Very good story.

Prabhupāda: Just like I have got my father. So it is a fact, my father has got a father. He has got father, he has got father, and come up to the original father. Who has no father, but He is original father, that is God. But you have to accept it that there is somebody, living entity, who is the original father. That you have to accept.

Guest: But that doesn't seem to make any difference to the way one behaves in the world. See, in your practice of Kṛṣṇa consciousness, as you have—the practice and the . . . (indistinct) . . . there seem to be two parts. There is one part which is about how to behave. And there is another part which is how the world is or how the universe is, or how things came to be.

Prabhupāda: Yes.

Guest: And it seems to me that these two are not necessarily to be connected. I see for you it is very important that they are, but it seems to make no difference to me . . .

Prabhupāda: Our point is . . .

Guest: . . . whether evolution exists or not, or whether . . . how human beings started. That seems to make no difference at all. What seems to matter is how to live and how to behave and how to behave towards each other. Things like that. I can understand that it is a good thing to be a vegetarian, for example, you see, not to gamble . . .

Prabhupāda: The question is, how to behave, if I do not know what is the ultimate goal of life, then where is the question of behavior?

Guest: I can see that the ultimate goal of life is very important, but what about the history? That doesn't seem to be important, or the theory of how evolution occurs, for example.

Prabhupāda: History, history can give you the statement of a few years, but creation is not like that. It is eternal. It is eternal. So you cannot give eternal evidences by your historical method. That is not possible.

Revatīnandana: What he's saying is that one way or another, history . . . regardless of what the history was, it's an irrelevant subject. History does not seem a relevant subject—whether we evolved or whether we were created does not seem important to him, but how we behave seems important to him.

Prabhupāda: The thing is that he is also created. How he can say he can remain aloof from creation? He is created by father and mother. How you can neglect this process of creation? As soon as you accept that you are also created being, then the intelligent person, "What is the origin of creation?" That is next. If you are not interested in the origin of creation, then you are not in perfect knowledge.

Guest: Why do you need perfect knowledge?

Prabhupāda: Yes. Perfect knowledge to become perfect.

Guest: No, I am puzzled about how that would influence. You see, you have a set of metaphysical theories, and some of them seem to be relevant to behavior. In other words, they will change your behavior. They would change the way you treat other people. And that's very important. But there are other theories which you have which don't seem to make any difference to life. They are just theories.

Prabhupāda: What do you mean by behavior?

Guest: Well, if you have a theory, for example, about how all things are part of God, so if you kill something then you are killing part of God—and that is obviously a bad thing. Now I can understand how that theory has a relevance to behavior. It explains why you mustn't kill things. But there are all sorts of other parts of the theory, the theories that you have, which seem to have no bearing; it doesn't really matter. I mean the nature of God, for example, it doesn't seem to make much difference.

Prabhupāda: First of all, thing is that what is the purpose of proposing some theory of knowledge? What is the purpose? Just like somebody is putting a theory of knowledge—take Darwin: he had no necessity to put forward this theory of evolution. Why? Why he takes so much trouble, and why people are taking interest in his theory? What is the idea behind it? There is no need of. Suppose if one does not know the Darwin's theory. He is not suffering. There are so many hundreds and thousands of men, they do not care to know, but they are also living. Cats and dogs, they are also living. The first thing is the . . . where is the necessity of become a man of knowledge?

Guest: I don't think it's necessary, but it seems . . . some people like it.

Prabhupāda: Then it is something sporting?

Guest: Sporting?

Prabhupāda: Yes. I can give some knowledge as my sporting, as my whims. Is that the aim of knowledge?

Guest: For some people it is. Some people just like it.

Prabhupāda: Some people . . . if you bring some people, then some people rascal, some people very nice, then it is very difficult. We have to generalize. Do you think that knowledge is equal for some people and not for all?

Guest: Sorry, I don't understand.

Prabhupāda: Do you think that a man should be man of knowledge only for himself and not for others?

Guest: I think there are different kinds of knowledge. Some knowledge everybody should have, and some knowledge is . . . not everybody can know everything.

Prabhupāda: My point is, what is the purpose of acquiring knowledge?

Guest: It varies. It varies. Sometimes it's to know how to live . . .

Prabhupāda: It may vary. Just like we are eating. You are eating something, I am eating something, but eating is necessary. You cannot say that eating is not necessary. So you may be interested in a particular type of knowledge—I may be interested. But whether knowledge is essential for us or not?

Guest: Some knowledge is essential.

Prabhupāda: Anyway, some knowledge is also knowledge. That you cannot deny. So knowledge is essential. You have to accept. Then what is the ultimate goal of essential knowledge? That comes. Suppose I am the whole thing. Somebody is studying my hand. This is also knowledge. Somebody is studying my leg. So there are different parts of my body, but what is the ultimate goal of such knowledge: that he must know whose hand, whose leg, whose head. And that is essential knowledge. Knowledge is essential. Somebody is simply partially studying a part of that essential knowledge, but the aim should be how to come to that complete knowledge, which is called absolute knowledge.

Guest: I can see that. Yes, I can see that's true. Yes.

Prabhupāda: Yes.

Guest: Yes. How to come to that knowledge.

Prabhupāda: (indistinct) . . . yes.

Guest: But there seem to me to be many routes to that knowledge, and you seem to deny that. That puzzles me.

Prabhupāda: Many groups may be, but we have to know which is right. That is my business. When I want to purchase something, many sellers will come. Everyone will say: "Here is sir. Very nice." So it depends on me how to select the nice. That depends on me, on my intelligence.

Guest: It's not just a matter of intelligence, it seems, because . . .

Prabhupāda: No, it is matter of intelligence. Just like when you go to purchase something from the store, the storekeeper will give you varieties of gold, and you have to select, "Yes, it is right."

Guest: Yeah, but there are . . . you see, in the case of going to a stall, they have a lot of things. There is not necessarily one single thing which is the best one, because you might go there . . . some people, just like you are choosing pears, you see—some people may like soft pears, and some people may like hard pears, some people might like brown pears and others like yellow pears. There is no best pear. There are particular ones. There are obviously bad pears and good pears, but of many different kinds, and you pick the one that you like. It depends on, to some extent, what you are looking for. And then there will be many pears that are equally good.

Prabhupāda: If there is something that if you get that knowledge or you get that thing you can get all other things automatically, is it not intelligence to pick up that knowledge?

Guest: If it existed, yes. If it existed.

Prabhupāda: It exists. That is intelligence. Just like there is a tree in your house. So the tree has got so many branches, twigs, leaves, flowers, fruits. So if you . . . if somebody says: "No, I like to pour water on the fruit," if somebody says: "No, I like to pour onto the leaves," and somebody says twigs . . . this is different. But if somebody knows to water everything at a time, who is intelligent?

Guest: Well, it depends . . . I don't know what the best thing to do is.

Prabhupāda: First of all you answer this.

Guest: It's not that the analogy is not . . .

Prabhupāda: Why not analogy? You have understand by analogy. You gave me analogy too. Without analogy, how we can make progress?

Guest: (laughs) Well, you see I would be in the position of somebody not knowing about trees, and I would see a lot of people, and they would all have a particular theory about how it is best to water a tree.

Prabhupāda: This is the way going on. The whole cosmic manifestation, that is described in the Bhagavad-gītā, viśva-rūpa. Just like I am a form. So I have got many parts—the fingers are there, the hairs are there, the nails are there. So many things. If you make analytical study the anatomy or physiology, you will get so many parts. Innumerable. So this body, somebody studies as psychologist. He is simply studying the brain. Somebody is physiologist. Somebody is a biologist. The same . . . center is the body. Center is the body.

They have made so many departmental knowledge, but if there is any such process to know what is this body, then is it not possible to know everything? Yasmin vijñāte . . . that is the Vedic instruction: yasmin vijñāte sarvam evam vijñātaṁ bhavati (Muṇḍaka Upaniṣad 1.1.3). If you understand the Absolute Truth, then other, relative truths become automatically known. So those who are interested with the relative truth, they are intelligent? Or one who is interested in the Absolute Truth, he is intelligent?

Guest: Hmm. It just seems to be a particular problem to find one's way among lots of different groups that express themselves in exactly the way that you do. Because there are very many, and that's . . .

Prabhupāda: They are busy with the relative truth.

Guest: Yes, but they all say the Absolute Truth.

Prabhupāda: There is a process of knowing the Absolute Truth.

Guest: They will say that too.

Prabhupāda: So if you can understand the Absolute Truth, the relative truths become automatically known. This is Vedic injunction. Yasmin vijñāte sarvam evaṁ vijñātaṁ bhavati (Muṇḍaka Upaniṣad 1.1.3). By knowing the Absolute Truth . . . just like, take another example, analogy. In the mathematics 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 0. So if you simply learn this, then you learn the whole mathematics, because whatever you write in mathematics is 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, in this way and that way, say plus, minus, division, but they are nothing but 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 . . . you simply make different angle of vision of studying, but the figures are the same—1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.

Dhanañjaya: Everything else is simply a combination of . . .

Prabhupāda: That's right.

Guest: Yes. It's interesting. I can use that; I can explain that.

Prabhupāda: Similarly, we understand the Absolute Truth in this way in the Bhagavad-gītā.

(aside) Just find out:

bhūmir āpo 'nalo vāyuḥ
khaṁ mano buddhir eva ca
(BG 7.4)

Seventh Chapter. Bhūmi. B-h-u-m-i.

Devotee: Bhūmir āpo?

bhūmir āpo 'nalo vāyuḥ
khaṁ mano buddhir eva ca
ahaṅkāra itīyaṁ me
bhinnā prakṛtir aṣṭadhā
(BG 7.4)

Prabhupāda: Bhinnā prakṛtir me aṣṭadhā. Yes.

Devotee: "Earth, water, fire, air, ether, mind, intelligence and false ego—all together these eight comprise My separated material energies."

Prabhupāda: Yes. This is the whole composition of the whole material world, these eight elements: earth, water, fire, air, sky—this is gross; and mind, intelligence, ego—subtle. So the whole material . . . whole cosmic manifestation is combination of these eight things. Just like the same analogy: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.

Guest: Do you think that's the only way to describe them? Do you think there could not be another, I mean, indefinite number of equivalent ways to describe . . .

Prabhupāda: No, no. Whatever you can take. Suppose you are, what is called, soil expert. The soil expert means you are studying the earth, that's all. You may be interested in light and heat. So light and heat is fire. You are studying fire. You are studying electricity—you are studying fire. You are studying gas—it is combination of water and fire. So you cannot go out of these elements. You cannot go out of these elements. Whatever you may be expert in particular line, but you are bound up within these eight elements. That's all. If you are psychologist, that means intelligence or mind. That is stated. Mano buddhir ahaṅkāraḥ. So you cannot go outside.

So here Kṛṣṇa, or God, says: "These eight elements are My energy—separated energy." Separated energy means just like it is being recorded in the tape-recorder, but when it will be replayed, it will speak exactly like me—the same sound, same everything. But I am not that. That is my separated energy. This is the example of separated energy. Similarly, all these eight elements, they have come from the original source, God, and they are acting differently. So if I know God, I can know that these are different energies of God. That's all. Therefore my knowledge in God, if it is perfect, then I can understand perfectly all these material energies.

Guest: That's an example of what I was saying earlier—that it doesn't seem to be necessary to have that particular theory or way of describing the world to behave properly.

Prabhupāda: There is no necessity. Your real necessity is the Absolute, wherefrom these things have come. That is your real necessity.

Guest: . . . and to understand the purpose of life. I think that's . . .

Prabhupāda: That is purpose of life, because that is the purpose of human life especially—not all. Cats and dogs, they cannot understand. A human being can understand. Therefore a human being's aim of life is to understand God.

Guest: Hmm. That's a very good angle, that.

Prabhupāda: Yes. And if he understands God, he understands everything. Just like we, we speak with so many scientists, psychologists, metaphysists and chemists. But we talk with them because we know the central point. Therefore we can detect what is the wrong in Darwin's theory.

Guest: Can you use it for anything? Can you use it to detect what's wrong in any theory?

Prabhupāda: Any theory. Any theory. Because we know the central point.

Guest: So you should be able to use it to predict things. You should be able to use it . . .

Prabhupāda: What is the use of prediction? Prediction . . . we can also predict. Predict . . . just like I can predict, "You'll die." Is that prediction? (laughter) If I say: "You'll die," is that prediction? Everyone knows. Or if I say: "In the month of January there will be snowfall," is that prediction?

Guest: Well, you might have a warm January.

Prabhupāda: Yes, it is simply experience. And we can experience on the world. That is our point of view. We take the perfect knowledge from the perfect, everything is then perfect. We take knowledge that the soul is not destroyed after the destruction of the body. Well, that's a fact.

Guest: What happens to the soul after the death of the body?

Prabhupāda: You have to accept another body out of the so many varieties of body.

Guest: Immediately?

Prabhupāda: Yes, immediately. Immediately like this. The example is given, just like you are walking. So when you fix up your leg in right place, then you take up this leg. Not before that.

Guest: What happens when . . .

Prabhupāda: (indistinct) . . . so . . . when . . . sometimes a man remains in coma. That means what kind of life he'll have to accept, that is being judged by higher, superior authority. And as soon it is settled up, he leaves this body and takes another. That is transmigration of the soul. karmaṇā daiva-netreṇa (SB 3.31.1). Just like there is a judgment is going on in the high court that what will be the next stage. So as the judgment is given, he must go to the prison and suffer so many days or so many months. Immediately he leaves this, goes there. That's all.

But these rascals, they do not believe that there is a judge and there is judgment, there is life after death, there is . . . therefore I say they are rascals. I don't say whimsically. Because they are misleading, therefore they are rascals. So many human being they are misleading by false knowledge. How much disservice they are doing they do not know, by giving false knowledge, misleading people. Andhā yathāndhair upanīyamānās (SB 3.31.1). A blind man is giving lead to thousands of blind men, what is the result? All of them will fall in a ditch. This is going on.

Therefore our policy is to accept perfect knowledge from the Supreme Perfect. That is perfect knowledge. Then we get knowledge, perfect knowledge, and then you become perfect. But a man is imperfect or perfect on account of knowledge. See one has got perfect knowledge, he is perfect. One who has got imperfect knowledge, he is imperfect. Because my existence as living entity, I am cognizant. I want knowledge. So if my knowledge is perfect, then I am perfect. And if my knowledge is imperfect, then I am imperfect. Just like they do not know that the soul is there and the soul is transmigrating from one body to another. They do not know.

Guest: How many people are there with perfect knowledge?

Prabhupāda: Anyone can become, provided he takes the perfect knowledge.

Guest: How long does that take?

Prabhupāda: It takes immediately. If you are really serious, it takes immediately. Therefore Kṛṣṇa says:

sarva-dharmān parityajya
mām ekaṁ śaraṇaṁ vraja
ahaṁ tvāṁ sarva-pāpebhyo
mokṣayiṣyāmi mā śucaḥ
(BG 18.66)

Kṛṣṇa said, God said that, "You simply surrender unto Me, I will give you protection from all imperfection." So how long it takes? A second. You simply surrender to Kṛṣṇa, and immediately your life, your perfect life, begins. Now if you keep yourself surrendered, then you . . . on and on your life becomes perfect, perfect, perfect, more, more, more, more, more. Absolutely perfect.

teṣāṁ satata-yuktānāṁ
bhajatāṁ prīti-pūrvakam
buddhi-yogaṁ dadāmi taṁ
yena mām upayānti te
(BG 10.10)

First of all you have to accept this principle; then you become . . . immediately your perfection life begins.

śreyaḥ-kairava-candrikā-vitaraṇaṁ vidyā-vadhū-jīvanam
ānandāmbudhi-vardhanaṁ prati-padaṁ pūrṇāmṛtāsvādanaṁ
paraṁ vijayate śrī-kṛṣṇa-saṅkīrtanam
(CC Antya 20.12)

(aside) He can explain this verse, ceto-darpaṇa-mārjanaṁ.

Revatīnandana: This is the first verse of the verses composed by Lord Caitanya, who began this movement; it is present from five hundred years ago. The Vedas say that He is a incarnation of Kṛṣṇa Himself. And the verse . . .

Guest: The Vedas five hundred years ago?

Revatīnandana: It's unpredicted . . . as it is described in here . . . said that He would be actually Kṛṣṇa Himself. So He didn't write, except a few selected verses. This is the first verse, and the translation is, "All glories to the śrī-kṛṣṇa-saṅkīrtanam, chanting of the names of the Lord, because this chanting will cleanse the heart of all the dust that's accumulated there for years together. It is all the material conditioning that's been acquired from births and deaths. It is cleansed by the transcendental sound, and in this way the fire of conditional life, of repeated birth and death, is extinguished."

And the troubles with this material life, starting out with the cycle of birth and death, is likened to being in a blazing fire condition of existence. It says: "It is the life of all transcendental knowledge, this chanting." It brings it to life, the whole process. "It increases the ocean of transcendental bliss by bringing more and more souls into it, and it helps us also to have a taste of the full nectar for which we are always anxious." Everyone is always anxious to enjoy fully, but he does not experience full enjoyment, because he's not linked with the source, which is Kṛṣṇa. The chanting forms an immediate link. And, erm, "It helps us to have a taste of the full nectar, for which we are always anxious." This is the verse. So this . . .

Prabhupāda: Vidyā-vadhū-jīvanam—it is reservoir of knowledge, vidyā-vadhū-jīvanam; ānandāmbudhi-vardhanaṁ—increasing spiritual bliss. Then all perfectness. All these things can be achieved only by paraṁ vijayate śrī-kṛṣṇa-saṅkīrtanam. The process is very simple.

Guest: What would one do in order to . . . first of all you can just chant the name. That seems to be the thing. But then there were some . . . a bit . . . rules of behavior that one has to follow.

Prabhupāda: No, chanting of this mahā-mantra, Hare Kṛṣṇa, there is no rule. You can chant without following any rule. There is no such thing. You simply chant—Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare/ Hare Rāma, Hare Rāma, Rāma Rāma, Hare Hare. That's all. God has given you the tongue, so you can chant Hare Kṛṣṇa without any difficulty, without any loss. Why don't you try it, if there is any gain?

Guest: Yes, I'll try it. Why not? Are there any particular times of the day when . . .

Prabhupāda: No. No. Anytime. Simply you try to chant always. (laughter)

Guest: Now what is the full chant?

Prabhupāda: Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare/ Hare Rāma, Hare Rāma, Rāma Rāma, Hare Hare.

(aside) You can give in writing.

Guest: (indistinct comments by devotees) I think I can learn it.

Prabhupāda: These sixteen words: Hare, Kṛṣṇa, Hare, Kṛṣṇa, that's four, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare/ Hare Rāma, Hare Rāma, Rāma Rāma, Hare Hare. Actually three words. They are adjusted in sixteen words.

Guest: What does Hare mean?

Prabhupāda: Hare, Hare means, "O the energy of God." There are two things: God and His energy. Just like fire—fire itself and its energy. Is it not? Two things are there. Is it not? Fire itself and its energy, heat and light, whatever you call. So similarly, God we cannot see at the present moment because we are materially dull, blind. We cannot see God. Therefore common man cannot understand what is God. But he can see and feel His energy.

Just like the sun planet. It is not possible to go there, but you can feel the energy of the sun planet, the sunshine. Any common man can understand. But it is a fact that sunshine is not important—the sun is important, wherefrom the energy is coming. Is it not? Similarly, whatever we are seeing, that is already explained, bhūmir āpo 'nalo vāyuḥ (BG 7.4), this material world, this is simply the energy of God. So Hare means "O the energy of God."

Guest: And Rāma?

Prabhupāda: And Rāma means God Himself. Because there are two things: God and His energy. No—three things. Actually there is one thing: only God. Without God there is no energy. Therefore He is Absolute. But for our experience we can understand God is there. We cannot see God, therefore we have to go through the energy. If you want to go to the sun planet you must go through the sunshine. Therefore we offer our prayers to the energy also. That is Hare—not only God, but His energy. Hare Kṛṣṇa means the Supreme, the all-attractive. We are also energy of God. So Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, so simply pray, "O the energy of God, O God, kindly accept me." That's all. Simple thing.

Guest: Yes, simple.

Prabhupāda: Just like a child cries, "Mother, take me, take me on your lap." The mother will take. You have to cry a little, that's all. (break) Mother wants to see, "How much the child is anxious for me." As soon as mother sees, "Oh, he is very much anxious. All right. Come on," she will give up all other business and take the son on the lap. Similarly, we have to become little eager. Just like Caitanya Mahāprabhu says, yugāyitaṁ nimeṣeṇa (CC Antya 20.39), eagerness: "Oh, one moment is just like twelve years." Twelve years; yuga means twelve years. Yugāyitaṁ nimeṣeṇa cakṣuṣā prāvṛṣāyitam, that "Torrents of rain of my tears." Śūnyāyitaṁ jagat sarvaṁ, "I find everything vacant," govinda-viraheṇa me, "without Kṛṣṇa, without . . ." This is eagerness. When we become eager like that, God will reveal: "Yes, come on. Here I am." What is there? Simply He waits to see how much eager you are.

But our eagerness is attracted by this material energy, illusion. We are engaged in studying physics, chemistry and so many things, other things, politics, sociology and that logy, this logy, that logy, that's all. We are thinking we shall be happy being attracted by the different varieties of energy. Therefore we pray to the energy, "Don't put me into illusion." These are illusion. What you will do? Suppose if you become a great physist, even Professor Einstein, does it mean that you are free from death? Has the all the scientists discovered something, "Yes, I am the greatest scientist, Noble Prize winner. There will be no more death"? Where is that scientist, "There will be no more disease"? We may manufacture million types of best medicine, but can you stop disease? "No, sir." So this is intelligence.

So what is the use of cultivating this knowledge? The real problem is there: birth, death, old age and disease. How to get out of this? They do not know. They are simply theorizing—this theory, that theory, that theory, that theory. What is the value of all these theories? You are compelled by nature . . . (indistinct) . . . as soon as nature comes, "Please get out from this platform," you have no theory. Finished, all your knowledge. They are not thinking of that. They are not thinking of that, that "What is the value of my theories?" Real problems are there. And that is stated in the Bhagavad-gītā: janma-mṛtyu-jarā-vyādhi-duḥkha-doṣānudarśanam (BG 13.9). This is real knowledge, that we are theorizing in so many ways, but we must always put forward before us, "Here is birth, here is death, here is old age and disease."

Guest: Do your theories help you to deal with those problems?

Prabhupāda: Yes. Then I shall be serious how to solve these problems. And that is also stated in the Bhagavad-gītā, that if you simply try to understand the Absolute Truth, Kṛṣṇa, then immediately you get out of the clutches of death. Get out of clutches of death means you get out of clutches of birth also. Because where there is birth, there is death. If there is no death, then there is no birth, and if there is no birth, there is no disease, there is no old age. So Bhagavad-gītā says that:

janma karma ca divyam me
jānāti tattvataḥ
tyaktvā dehaṁ punar janma
naiti . . .
(BG 4.9)

Anyone who simply understands Kṛṣṇa and His activities, then he immediately becomes free from rebirth—tyaktvā dehaṁ. This body you have got. You have to give it up. But after giving up this body I am not transmigrating to another material body. I'm going directly to the spiritual world. Then there is no more birth, death, old age and disease, because as spirit soul we have no birth, death, old age and disease. It is the body, the material body. So there is no such knowledge throughout the whole world, universities. They are not busy for acquiring this knowledge.

(aside) Where is Śyāmsundara?

Guest: You must excuse me. I have to go. I have to go home.

Prabhupāda: You have to go? Why?

Guest: My lady friend, she will expect me back about ten o'clock.

Prabhupāda: So your lady friend will give you protection from birth, death, old age and disease?

Guest: Well, maybe, maybe not. (laughs)

Prabhupāda: We can give you protection. Why don't you remain here?

Guest: Hmm. Well, I shall try it. By chanting I shall . . . (indistinct) . . . it's very interesting. Thank you very much for giving me so much of your time.

Prabhupāda: Yes. Thank you.

Guest: Bye-bye.

Prabhupāda: Please come again.

Guest: Yes we must. I think you've got something very nice going there.

Prabhupāda: Thank you. Hare Kṛṣṇa.

(guest leaves) (break) (end)