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{{Short description|Major Hindu Scripture}} {{Short description|Major Hindu scripture}}
{{Redirect-several|Bhagavad Gita|Gita}} {{Redirect-several|Bhagavad Gita|Gita}}
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| name=Bhagavad Gita | name=Bhagavad Gita
| wikisource = The Bhagavad Gita | wikisource = The Bhagavad Gita
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|}} The '''Bhagavad Gita''' ({{IPAc-en|ˌ|b|ʌ|ɡ|ə|v|ə|d|_|ˈ|ɡ|iː|t|ɑː}}; {{lang-sa|भगवद्गीता|lit="God's Song"}}, {{IAST3|bhagavad-gītā}}{{efn|"God" here denotes ].{{sfn|Davis|2014|p=2}}}}), often referred to as the '''Gita''' ({{IAST3|gītā}}), is a 700-verse ], which is part of the ] '']''. It forms the chapters 23–40 of book 6 of the Mahabharata called the ]. The work is dated to the second half of the ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Bhagavadgita {{!}} Definition, Contents, & Significance {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Bhagavadgita |access-date=2022-12-27 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en |archive-date=21 August 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180821140609/https://www.britannica.com/topic/Bhagavadgita |url-status=live }}</ref>

The '''Bhagavad Gita''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|b|ʌ|g|ə|v|ə|d|_|ˈ|g|iː|t|ɑː}};<ref>. '']''.</ref> {{langx|sa|भगवद्गीता, {{IPA|sa|ˌbʱɐɡɐʋɐd ˈɡiːtɑː|ipa}}|lit=God's song|translit=bhagavad-gītā|translit-std=IAST}}),{{efn|"God" here denotes ].{{sfn|Davis|2014|p=2}}}} often referred to as the '''Gita''' ({{IAST3|gītā}}), is a ], dated to the second or first century BCE,{{Refn|{{sfn|Sharma|1986|p=3}}{{sfn|Fowler|2012|page=xxiv}}{{sfn|Buitenen|2013|pp=6, Quote: "ca. 200 BC is a likely date".}}{{sfn|Doniger|2024}}}} which forms part of the ] ]. It is a synthesis of various strands of Indian religious thought, including the Vedic concept of '']'' (duty, rightful action); ]-based '']'' and '']'' (knowledge); and '']'' (devotion).{{sfn|Smith|2009|p=xii}}{{efn|name="synthesis"}} It holds a unique pan-Hindu influence as the most prominent sacred text and is a central text in ] and the ] tradition.

While traditionally attributed to the sage ], the Gita is probably a composite work composed by multiple authors.<ref name="McLeod2014p168"/>{{sfn|Minor|1982|p=xxxiv, Quote: "Therefore, instead of the traditional view of authorship, many scholars have argued that the Gita is not the work of one author but a composite work."}}<ref name=basham1991p85/> Incorporating teachings from the ]s and the ] ], the Gita is set in a narrative framework of dialogue between the ] prince ] and his charioteer guide ], an ] of ], at the onset of the ].{{sfn|Doniger|2024}}


Though the Gita praises the benefits of ]{{sfn|Scheepers|2000|pp=122-127}}{{sfn|Flood|Martin|2013|p=xxvi}} in ] man's ] from the bounds of desire and the ],{{sfn|Doniger|2024}} the text propagates the Brahmanic idea of living according to one's duty or ''dharma'', in contrast to the ascetic ideal of seeking ] by avoiding all ''karma''.{{sfn|Scheepers|2000|pp=122-127}} Facing the perils of war, Arjuna hesitates to perform his duty (''dharma'') as a warrior. Krishna persuades him to commence in battle, arguing that while following one's dharma, one should not consider oneself to be the agent of action, but attribute all of one's actions to God (''bhakti'').{{sfn|Zaehner|1973|p=200}}{{sfn|Flood|1996|p=124-128}}
The Bhagavad Gita is set in a narrative framework of dialogue between the ] prince ] and his charioteer guide ], an ] of ]. At the start of the ] between the ]s and the ]s, Arjuna despairs thinking about the violence and death the war will cause in the battle against his kin and becomes emotionally preoccupied with a dilemma.<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Song Celestial, Or, Bhagavad-gîtâ (from the Mahâbhârata) Being a Discourse Between Arjuna, Prince of India, and the Supreme Being Under the Form of Krishna|publisher=Roberts Bros|year=1885|pages=Book one the first, page 19}}</ref> Wondering if he should renounce the war, Arjuna seeks the counsel of Krishna, whose answers and discourse constitute the Bhagavad Gita. Krishna counsels Arjuna to "fulfil his ] (warrior) duty" for the upholding of ].{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=111–122}} The Krishna–Arjuna dialogue covers a broad range of spiritual topics, touching upon moral and ethical dilemmas, and philosophical issues that go far beyond the war that Arjuna faces.{{sfn|Davis|2014|p=2}}{{sfn|Eliot Deutsch|Rohit Dalvi|2004|pp=60–62}}{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pp=x–xviii}} The setting of the text in a battlefield has been interpreted as an allegory for the struggles of human life.


The Gita posits the existence of an individual self (''jivatman'') and the higher Godself (Krishna, Atman/Brahman) in every being;{{efn|name="twoself"}} the Krishna-Arjuna dialogue has been interpreted as a metaphor for an everlasting dialogue between the two.{{efn|name="dialog"}} Numerous classical and modern thinkers have written commentaries on the Gita with differing views on its essence and essentials, including on the relation between the individual self (]) and God (Krishna){{sfn|Sutton|2017|p=113}} or the supreme self (Atman/]). The Gita famously mentions, in chapter XIII verse 24–25, the four ways to see the self, interpreted as four yogas, namely through meditation (]), insight/intuition (]), work/right action (]) and devotion/love (]), an influential division that was popularized by ] in the 1890s.{{sfn|De Michelis|2005}}{{sfn|Birch|2013}} The setting of the text in a battlefield has been interpreted by several modern Indian writers as an allegory for the struggles and vagaries of human life.
Summarizing the ]ic conceptions of ], the Gita posits the existence of an individual self (]) and the supreme self (]) within each being.{{refn|group=note|name="twoself"}}
The dialogue between the prince and his charioteer has been interpreted as a metaphor for an immortal dialogue between the human self and God.{{refn|group=note|name="dialog"}} Commentators of ] read varying notions in the Bhagavad Gita about the relationship between the ] (individual Self) and ] (supreme Self); ] affirms on the ] of Atman and Brahman,<ref name="Deutsch 2004 page=97">{{harvnb|Eliot Deutsch|Rohit Dalvi|2004|page=97}}</ref> ] asserts qualified non-dualism with Atman and Brahman being related but different in certain aspects, while ] declares the complete duality of Atman and Brahman.{{refn|group=note|name="vedanta"}}{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pp=x–xviii}}<ref>{{cite book|author=Ronald Neufeldt|editor=Robert Neil Minor|title=Modern Indian Interpreters of the Bhagavad Gita |date=30 September 1986 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qVmSnL23_xgC&pg=PA31 |publisher=State University of New York Press |isbn=978-1-4384-1325-9|pages=31–33}}</ref>


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As per ] belief, the Bhagavad Gita was written by the god ], as told to him by the sage ]. It is described as an open discussion between God and Arjuna.<ref name="UUA.org 2024 g525">{{cite web | title=Handout 2: Excerpts from The Bhagavad Gita | website=UUA.org | date=2024-03-07 | url=https://www.uua.org/re/tapestry/youth/bridges/workshop4/handout2 | access-date=2024-04-01}}</ref> The Bhagavad Gita presents a synthesis of various Hindu ideas about dharma, ] ], and the yogic ideal of ].{{sfn|Eliot Deutsch|Rohit Dalvi|2004|pp=61–62}}{{sfn|Scheepers|2000}} The text covers ], ], ], and ]s,{{sfn|Eliot Deutsch|Rohit Dalvi|2004|pp=61–62}} while incorporating ideas from the ]-] philosophy.<ref group=web name="EB-BG" />{{refn|group=note|The Bhagavad Gita also integrates ] and ]<ref group=web name="EB-BG" /> or spiritual],{{sfn|Raju|1992|p=211}} and identifies a God of personal characteristics with the ] of the ].<ref group=web name="EB-BG" />}} The Bhagavad Gita is one of the most revered Hindu scriptures,<ref name="Robinson2014viii"/> and has a unique ] influence.<ref name=buitenen7/><ref name="Neusner2009"/> It is a central text in the ] tradition, and is part of the ]. Numerous commentaries have been written on the Bhagavad Gita with differing views on its essence and essentials.


==Etymology== ==Etymology==
The ''gita'' in the title of the Bhagavad Gita means "song of the god". Religious leaders and scholars interpret the word '']'' in a number of ways. Accordingly, the title has been interpreted as "the word of God" by the theistic schools,<ref>{{cite book|first1=Swami |last1=Prabhavananda|first2=Christopher |last2=Isherwood|title=Bhagavad-Gita: The words of God|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=za3mi8MA2OIC|year=2002|publisher=Signet Classic|isbn=978-0-451-52844-5}}</ref> "the words of the Lord",<ref name=EBG/> "the Divine Song",{{sfn|Cornille|2006}}{{page needed|date=July 2023}}<ref>{{cite book|first=Sachindra Kumar |last=Majumdar|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A Scripture for the Future|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rG7XAAAAMAAJ|year=1991|publisher=Asian Humanities Press|isbn=978-0-89581-885-0}}</ref> and "Celestial Song" by others.<ref>{{cite book|first=Braja Dulal |last=Mookherjee|title=The Essence of Bhagavad Gita|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9YeZMP9WRdcC&pg=PA18|year=2002|publisher=Academic Publishers|isbn=978-81-87504-40-5|page=18|quote=Bhagavad Gita means that Celestial Song.}}</ref> The ''Gita'' in the title of the Bhagavad Gita means "song". Religious leaders and scholars interpret the word '']'' in several ways. Accordingly, the title has been interpreted as "the song of God", "the word of God" by theistic schools,<ref name="Swami-Chris">{{cite book|first1=Swami |last1=Prabhavananda|first2=Christopher |last2=Isherwood|title=Bhagavad-Gita: The words of God|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=za3mi8MA2OIC|year=2002|publisher=Signet Classic|isbn=978-0-451-52844-5}}</ref> "the words of the Lord",<ref name=EBG/> "the Divine Song",{{sfn|Cornille|2006}}{{page needed|date=July 2023}}<ref>{{cite book|first=Sachindra Kumar |last=Majumdar|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A Scripture for the Future|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rG7XAAAAMAAJ|year=1991|publisher=Asian Humanities Press|isbn=978-0-89581-885-0}}</ref> and "Celestial Song" by others.<ref name="Essence-Gita">{{cite book|first=Braja Dulal |last=Mookherjee|title=The Essence of Bhagavad Gita|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9YeZMP9WRdcC&pg=PA18|year=2002|publisher=Academic Publishers|isbn=978-81-87504-40-5|page=18|quote=Bhagavad Gita means that Celestial Song.}}</ref>


In India, its Sanskrit name is often written as Shrimad Bhagavad Gita, श्रीमद् भगवद् गीता (the latter two words often written as a single word भगवद्गीता), where the Shrimad prefix is used to denote a high degree of respect. The Bhagavad Gita is not to be confused with the ], which is one of the eighteen major ] dealing with the life of the Hindu God ] and various avatars of ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Dalal |first=Roshen |title=Hinduism: An Alphabetical Guide |publisher=Penguin Books |year=2010 |pages=409–411 |language=English}}</ref> In India, its Sanskrit name is often written as Shrimad Bhagavad Gita or Shrimad Bhagavadgita (श्रीमद् भगवद् गीता or भगवद्गीता) where the Shrimad prefix is used to denote a high degree of respect. The Bhagavad Gita is not to be confused with the ], which is one of the eighteen major ] dealing with the life of the Hindu God ] and various avatars of ].<ref name="R-Dalal">{{Cite book |last=Dalal |first=Roshen |title=Hinduism: An Alphabetical Guide |publisher=Penguin Books |year=2010 |pages=409–411 |language=English}}</ref>


The work is also known as the ''Iswara Gita'', the ''Ananta Gita'', the ''Hari Gita'', the ''Vyasa Gita'', or the Gita.{{sfn|Sharma|1986|p=ix}} The work is also known as the ''Iswara Gita'', the ''Ananta Gita'', the ''Hari Gita'', the ''Vyasa Gita'', or the Gita.{{sfn|Sharma|1986|p=ix}}


==Date and authorship== ==Dating and authorship==
===Date===
Theories on the date of the composition of the Gita vary considerably. Some scholars accept dates from the 5th century BCE to the 2nd century BCE as the probable range, the latter likely. The Hinduism scholar Jeaneane Fowler, in her commentary on the Gita, considers second century BCE to be the probable date of composition.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|page=xxiv}} ] also states that the Gita was likely composed about 200 BCE.{{sfn|J.A.B. van Buitenen|2013|pp=6, Quote: "ca. 200 BC is a likely date".}} According to the Indologist ], the Gita is generally accepted to be a 2nd-century-BCE text.{{sfn|Sharma|1986|p=3}}


===Dating===
] ]
Kashi Nath Upadhyaya, in contrast, dates it a bit earlier. He states that the Gita was always a part of the ''Mahabharata'', and dating the latter suffices in dating the Gita.{{sfn|Upadhyaya|1998|pages=16–18}} On the basis of the estimated dates of ''Mahabharata'' as evidenced by exact quotes of it in the Buddhist literature by ] (c. 100 CE), Upadhyaya states that the ''Mahabharata'', and therefore the Gita, must have been well known by then for a Buddhist to be quoting it.{{sfn|Upadhyaya|1998|pages=16–18}}{{refn|group=note|According to the Indologist and Sanskrit literature scholar ], the founder of the early Buddhist ] school named Kumaralata (1st century CE) mentions both ''Mahabharata'' and ''Ramayana'', along with early Indian history on writing, art and painting, in his '']'' text. Fragments of this early text have survived into the modern era.<ref>{{cite book|author=Moriz Winternitz|author-link=Moriz Winternitz|title=A History of Indian Literature: Buddhist literature and Jaina literature|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Lgz1eMhu0JsC&pg=PA255 |year=1996|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |isbn=978-81-208-0265-0|pages=258–259}}</ref>}} This suggests a '']'' (latest date) of the Gita to be sometime prior to the 1st century CE.{{sfn|Upadhyaya|1998|pages=16–18}} He cites similar quotes in the dharmasutra texts, the '']'', and other literature to conclude that the Bhagavad Gita was composed in the fifth or fourth century BCE.{{sfn|Upadhyaya|1998|pages=17–19}}{{refn|group=note|The Indologist ] used a similar analysis to conclude that the Gita in its current form likely underwent one redaction that occurred in the 3rd or 2nd century BCE.<ref>{{cite book|author=Étienne Lamotte|title=Notes sur la Bhagavadgita| publisher=Librairie Orientaliste Paul Geuthner|year=1929|pages=126–127}}</ref>}} According to Arthur Basham, the context of the Bhagavad Gita suggests that it was composed in an era when the ] were being questioned and renunciation to monastic life was becoming popular.<ref name=basham1991p95/> Such an era emerged after the rise of ] and ] in the 5th century BCE, and particularly after the semi-legendary life of ] in the 3rd century BCE. Thus, the first version of the Bhagavad Gita may have been composed in or after the 3rd century BCE.<ref name=basham1991p95>{{cite book|author=Arthur Llewellyn Basham|title=The Origins and Development of Classical Hinduism| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2aqgTYlhLikC |year =1991| publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-507349-2|pages=95–96}}</ref>


The text is generally dated to the second or first century BCE,{{sfn|Sharma|1986|p=3}}{{sfn|Fowler|2012|page=xxiv}}{{sfn|Buitenen|2013|pp=6, Quote: "ca. 200 BC is a likely date".}}{{sfn|Doniger|2024}} though some scholars accept dates as early as the 5th century BCE. {{Citation needed|date=October 2024}}
] linguistically categorizes the Bhagavad Gita as Epic-Puranic Sanskrit, a language that succeeds ] and precedes classical Sanskrit.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pp=3–4}} The text has occasional pre-classical elements of the Vedic Sanskrit language, such as ]s and the prohibitive ''mā'' instead of the expected ''na'' (not) of classical Sanskrit.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pp=3–4}} This suggests that the text was composed after the ] era, but before the long compounds of classical Sanskrit became the norm. This would date the text as transmitted by the ] to the later centuries of the 1st-millennium BCE, and the first written version probably to the 2nd or 3rd century CE.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pp=3–4}}<ref>{{cite book|author=Heather Elgood|title=Hinduism and the Religious Arts|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cj2tAwAAQBAJ |year=2000|publisher=A&C Black|isbn=978-0-304-70739-3|pages=13–14}}</ref> According to Jeaneane Fowler, "the dating of the Gita varies considerably" and depends in part on whether one accepts it to be a part of the early versions of the ''Mahabharata'', or a text that was inserted into the epic at a later date.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xxiv–xxiv}} The earliest "surviving" components therefore are believed to be no older than the earliest "external" references we have to the ''Mahabharata'' epic. The ''Mahabharata'' – the world's longest poem – is itself a text that was likely written and compiled over several hundred years, one dated between "400 BCE or little earlier, and 2nd century CE, though some claim a few parts can be put as late as 400 CE", states Fowler. The dating of the Gita is thus dependent on the uncertain dating of the ''Mahabharata''. The actual dates of composition of the Gita remain unresolved.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xxiv–xxiv}} While the year and century is uncertain, states ],<ref>{{cite web|last=College|first=Bard|title=Richard H. Davis|url=https://www.bard.edu/academics/faculty/details/?id=240|access-date=2021-06-09|website=www.bard.edu|language=en|archive-date=1 February 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190201125925/http://www.bard.edu/academics/faculty/details/?id=240|url-status=live}}</ref> the internal evidence in the text dates the origin of the Gita discourse to the Hindu lunar month of '']'' (also called '']'', generally December or January of the Gregorian calendar).{{sfn|Davis|2014|p=3}}


According to Jeaneane Fowler, "the dating of the Gita varies considerably" and depends in part on whether one accepts it to be a part of the early versions of the ''Mahabharata'', or a text that was inserted into the epic at a later date.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xxiv–xxiv}} The earliest "surviving" components therefore are believed to be no older than the earliest "external" references we have to the ''Mahabharata'' epic. The ''Mahabharata'' – the world's longest poem – is itself a text that was likely written and compiled over several hundred years, one dated between "400 BCE or little earlier, and 2nd century CE, though some claim a few parts can be put as late as 400 CE", states Fowler. The dating of the Gita is thus dependent on the uncertain dating of the ''Mahabharata''. The actual dates of composition of the Gita remain unresolved.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xxiv–xxiv}}
===Authorship===
In the Indian tradition, the Bhagavad Gita, as well as the epic '']'' of which it is a part, is attributed to the sage ],<ref name="Folwerxxvi">{{harvnb|Fowler|2012|page=xxvi}}</ref> whose full name was Krishna Dvaipayana, also called Veda-Vyasa.{{sfn|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pages=16}} Another Hindu legend states that Vyasa narrated it when the lord ] broke one of his tusks and wrote down the Mahabharata along with the Bhagavad Gita.<ref name="McLeod2014p168"/><ref name="Slavitt2015vii">{{cite book|author=David Slavitt|title=Mahabharata|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yHfIBgAAQBAJ |year=2015|publisher=Northwestern University Press|isbn=978-0-8101-3060-9|page=vii}}</ref>{{refn|group=note|This legend is depicted with Ganesha (Vinayaka) iconography in Hindu temples where he is shown with a broken right tusk and his right arm holds the broken tusk as if it was a stylus.<ref name="Rao1985">{{cite book|author=T.A. Gopinatha Rao|title=Elements of Hindu Iconography|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=MJD-KresBwIC |year=1985|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |isbn=978-81-208-0878-2|pages=xvii, 58–61}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Lawrence Cohen|editor=Robert L. Brown|title=Ganesh: Studies of an Asian God|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oF-Hqih3pBAC|year=1991|publisher=State University of New York Press|isbn=978-0-7914-0656-4|page=132}}</ref>}}
Scholars consider Vyasa to be a mythical or symbolic author, in part because Vyasa is also the traditional compiler of the ] and the ], texts dated to be from different millennia.<ref name="McLeod2014p168">{{cite book|author=Alexus McLeod|title=Understanding Asian Philosophy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=X1PwAwAAQBAJ |year=2014|publisher=A&C Black|isbn=978-1-78093-631-4|pages=168–169}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=George M. Williams|title=Handbook of Hindu Mythology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=N7LOZfwCDpEC&pg=PA304 |year=2008|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-533261-2|page=304}}, Quote: "Veda Vyasa was said to have edited the four Vedas and authored the Puranas and the Mahabharata. Accomplishing all that would require a human who lived several thousand years, so scholars do place the story of his achievements as those of one man in the area of mythology."</ref>{{sfn|Davis|2014|p=37, Quote: "Textual historians generally prefer terms that undercut any implications of Vyasa's actual authorship. They refer to Vyasa as a mythical or symbolic author of the Mahabharata."}} The word ''Vyasa'' literally means "arranger, compiler", and is a surname in India. According to Kashi Nath Upadhyaya, a Gita scholar, it is possible that a number of different individuals with the same name compiled different texts.{{sfn|Upadhyaya|1998|page=25 with footnote 1}}


According to Arthur Basham, the context of the Bhagavad Gita suggests that it was composed in an era when the ] were being questioned and renunciation to monastic life was becoming popular.<ref name=basham1991p95/> Such an era emerged after the rise of ] and ] in the 5th century BCE, and particularly after the semi-legendary life of ] in the 3rd century BCE. Thus, the first version of the Bhagavad Gita may have been composed in or after the 3rd century BCE.<ref name=basham1991p95>{{cite book|author=Arthur Llewellyn Basham|title=The Origins and Development of Classical Hinduism| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2aqgTYlhLikC |year =1991| publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-507349-2|pages=95–96}}</ref>
], the 19th-century Hindu monk and Vedantist, stated that the Bhagavad Gita may be old but it was mostly unknown in Indian history until the early 8th century when ] (Shankaracharya) made it famous by writing his much-followed commentary on it.<ref name=vivekanandabg/><ref>{{cite book|author=Alexus McLeod|title= Understanding Asian Philosophy|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=X1PwAwAAQBAJ |year=2014|publisher=A&C Black|isbn=978-1-78093-631-4|pages= 169–170}}</ref> Some infer, states Vivekananda, that "Shankaracharya was the author of Gita, and that it was he who foisted it into the body of the ''Mahabharata''."<ref name=vivekanandabg>{{cite book|author=Swami Vivekananda| title=The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda |volume=4 |publisher=Advaita Ashram |edition=12th| year=1958 |pages=–104 | url= https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.99642 }}</ref> This attribution to Adi Shankara is unlikely in part because Shankara himself refers to the earlier commentaries on the Bhagavad Gita, and because other Hindu texts and traditions that compete with the ideas of Shankara refer to much older literature referencing the Bhagavad Gita, though much of this ancient secondary literature has not survived into the modern era.<ref name=vivekanandabg/>


] linguistically categorizes the Bhagavad Gita as Epic-Puranic Sanskrit, a language that succeeds ] and precedes classical Sanskrit.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pp=3–4}} The text has occasional pre-classical elements of the Vedic Sanskrit language, such as ]s and the prohibitive ''mā'' instead of the expected ''na'' (not) of classical Sanskrit.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pp=3–4}} This suggests that the text was composed after the ] era, but before the long compounds of classical Sanskrit became the norm. This would date the text as transmitted by the ] to the later centuries of the 1st-millennium BCE, and the first written version probably to the 2nd or 3rd century CE.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pp=3–4}}<ref>{{cite book|author=Heather Elgood|title=Hinduism and the Religious Arts|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cj2tAwAAQBAJ |year=2000|publisher=A&C Black|isbn=978-0-304-70739-3|pages=13–14}}</ref>
], an Indologist known for his translations and scholarship on ''Mahabharata'', finds that the Gita is so contextually and philosophically well knit within the ''Mahabharata'' that it was not an independent text that "somehow wandered into the epic".<ref name=buitenen2013p5>{{harvnb|J.A.B. van Buitenen|2013|pp=5–6}}</ref> The Gita, states van Buitenen, was conceived and developed by the ''Mahabharata'' authors to "bring to a climax and solution the dharmic dilemma of a war".<ref name=buitenen2013p5/>{{refn|group=note|The debate about the relationship between the Gita and the ''Mahabharata'' is historic, in part the basis for chronologically placing the Gita and its authorship. The Indologist Franklin Edgerton was among the early scholars and a translator of the Gita who believed that the Gita was a later composition that was inserted into the epic, at a much later date, by a creative poet of great intellectual power intimately aware of emotional and spiritual aspects of human existence.<ref name=edgerton1952/> Edgerton's primary argument was that it makes no sense that two massive armies facing each other on a battlefield will wait for two individuals to have a lengthy dialogue. Further, he states that the ''Mahabharata'' has numerous such interpolations and inserting the Gita would not be unusual.<ref name=edgerton1952>{{cite book|author=Franklin Edgerton| title=The Bhagavad Gita, Part 2| publisher= Harvard University Press|year=1952|pages=3–4}}</ref> In contrast, the Indologist James Fitzgerald states, in a manner similar to van Buitenen, that the Bhagavad Gita is the centerpiece and essential to the ideological continuity in the ''Mahabharata'', and the entire epic builds up to the fundamental dharma questions in the Gita. This text, states Fitzgerald, must have been integral to the earliest version of the epic.<ref>{{cite journal|author=James L. Fitzgerald| title=The Great Epic of India as Religious Rhetoric: A Fresh Look at the "Mahābhārata"| journal=Journal of the American Academy of Religion| volume= 51| number= 4| year= 1983| pages= 615–619, context: 611–630}}</ref>}} According to ], a scholar of Philosophy and Asian Studies, it is "impossible to link the Bhagavad Gita to a single author", and it may be the work of many authors.<ref name="McLeod2014p168"/>{{sfn|Minor|1982|p=xxxiv, Quote: "Therefore, instead of the traditional view of authorship, many scholars have argued that the Gita is not the work of one author but a composite work."}} This view is shared by the Indologist ], who states that there were three or more authors or compilers of Bhagavad Gita. This is evidenced by the discontinuous intermixing of philosophical verses with theistic or passionately theistic verses, according to Basham.<ref name=basham1991p85/>{{refn|group=note|According to Basham, passionately theistic verses are found, for example, in chapters 4, 7, 9, 10, 11, 14.1–6 with 14.29, 15, 18.54–78; while more philosophical verses with one or two verses where Krishna identifies himself as the highest god are found, for example, in chapters 2.38–72, 3, 5, 6, 8, 13 and 14.7–25, 16, 17 and 18.1–53. Further, states Basham, the verses that discuss ''Gita's'' "motiveless action" doctrine was probably authored by someone else and these constitute the most important ethical teaching of the text.<ref name=basham1991p85/>}}


Kashi Nath Upadhyaya dates it a bit earlier, but after the rise of Buddhism, by which it was influenced. He states that the Gita was always a part of the ''Mahabharata'', and dating the latter suffices in dating the Gita.{{sfn|Upadhyaya|1998|pages=16–18}} based on the estimated dates of ''Mahabharata'' as evidenced by exact quotes of it in the Buddhist literature by ] (c. 100 CE), Upadhyaya states that the ''Mahabharata'', and therefore the Gita, must have been well known by then for a Buddhist to be quoting it.{{sfn|Upadhyaya|1998|pages=16–18}}{{refn|group=note|According to the Indologist and Sanskrit literature scholar ], the founder of the early Buddhist ] school named Kumaralata (1st century CE) mentions both ''Mahabharata'' and ''Ramayana'', along with early Indian history on writing, art and painting, in his '']'' text. Fragments of this early text have survived into the modern era.<ref>{{cite book|author=Moriz Winternitz|author-link=Moriz Winternitz|title=A History of Indian Literature: Buddhist literature and Jaina literature|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Lgz1eMhu0JsC&pg=PA255 |year=1996|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |isbn=978-81-208-0265-0|pages=258–259}}</ref>}} This suggests a '']'' (latest date) of the Gita be sometime before the 1st century CE.{{sfn|Upadhyaya|1998|pages=16–18}} He cites similar quotes in the dharmasutra texts, the '']'', and other literature to conclude that the Bhagavad Gita was composed in the fifth or fourth-century BCE.{{sfn|Upadhyaya|1998|pages=17–19}}{{refn|group=note|The Indologist ] used a similar analysis to conclude that the Gita in its current form likely underwent one redaction that occurred in the 3rd or 2nd-century BCE.<ref>{{cite book|author=Étienne Lamotte|title=Notes sur la Bhagavadgita| publisher=Librairie Orientaliste Paul Geuthner|year=1929|pages=126–127}}</ref>}}
==Scriptural significance==
The Bhagavad Gita is the best known<ref>{{cite book|author=James G. Lochtefeld|title=The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism, Volume 1|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5kl0DYIjUPgC|year=2001|publisher=The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc|isbn=978-0-8239-3179-8|page=93|access-date=10 October 2018|archive-date=19 January 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230119140900/https://books.google.com/books?id=5kl0DYIjUPgC|url-status=live}}</ref> and most influential of Hindu scriptures.<ref name="Robinson2014viii">{{cite book|author=Catherine A. Robinson |title=Interpretations of the Bhagavad-Gita and Images of the Hindu Tradition: The Song of the Lord |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NKHKAgAAQBAJ |year=2014|publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=978-1-134-27891-6|pages=viii–ix}}</ref> While Hinduism is known for its diversity and the synthesis derived from it, the Bhagavad Gita holds a unique pan-Hindu influence.<ref name=buitenen7>{{harvnb|J.A.B. van Buitenen|2013|pp=6–7}}, Quote: "Its importance as a religious text is demonstrated by its uniquely pan-Hindu influence".</ref><ref name=Maitra2018>{{cite book|author=Keya Maitra|title=Philosophy of the Bhagavad Gita: A Contemporary Introduction|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UmRHDwAAQBAJ |year=2018| publisher= Bloomsbury Publishing |isbn=978-1-350-04017-5| pages=5–6}}</ref> ] – an Indologist and scholar of classical ], states that "if there is any one text that comes near to embodying the totality of what it is to be a ], it would be the Bhagavad Gita."<ref name="Robinson2014viii"/><ref name="Neusner2009">{{cite book|author=Gerald James Larson|editor=Jacob Neusner|title=World Religions in America, Fourth Edition: An Introduction | url= https://books.google.com/books?id=34vGv_HDGG8C |year=2009|publisher=Westminster John Knox Press| isbn=978-1-61164-047-2| page=187}}</ref> The Bhagavad Gita is part of the ], which also includes the ] and the ]. These three form the foundational texts of the ] school of Hindu philosophy.<ref name=nvisaeva35>NV Isaeva (1992), Shankara and Indian Philosophy, State University of New York Press, {{ISBN|978-0-7914-1281-7}}, p. 35 with footnote 30</ref> The Brahma sutras constitute the ''Nyāya prasthāna'' or the "starting point of reasoning canonical base", while the principal Upanishads constitute the ''Sruti prasthāna'' or the "starting point of heard scriptures", and the Bhagavad Gita constitutes the ''Smriti prasthāna'' or the "starting point of remembered canonical base".<ref name=nvisaeva35/> While Upanishads focuses more on knowledge and the identity of the self with Brahman, the Bhagavad Gita shifts the emphasis towards devotion and the worship of a personal deity, specifically Krishna.{{Sfn|Sutton|2017|p=113}} The Bhagavad Gita forms a central text in the ] tradition,<ref>] has said, . Quoted in: {{harvnb|Matchett|2000}}</ref><ref>James Mulhern (1959). ''A History of Education: A Social Interpretation''. p. 93.</ref><ref>] (1925) The Bhagavad Gita: Or, Song of the Blessed One, India's Favorite Bible </ref> and an important scripture in Hinduism.{{sfn|Davis|2014|p=4-8}}{{sfn|Flood|1996|p=124–128}}


===Authorship===
], from the '']''. {{circa|1820{{nbsp}}CE}}]]
In the Indian tradition, the Bhagavad Gita, as well as the epic '']'' of which it is a part, is attributed to the sage ],<ref name="Folwerxxvi">{{harvnb|Fowler|2012|page=xxvi}}</ref> whose full name was Krishna Dvaipayana, also called Veda-Vyasa.{{sfn|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pages=16}} Another Hindu legend states that Vyasa narrated it when the lord ] broke one of his tusks and wrote down the Mahabharata along with the Bhagavad Gita.<ref name="McLeod2014p168"/><ref name="Slavitt2015vii">{{cite book|author=David Slavitt|title=Mahabharata|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yHfIBgAAQBAJ |year=2015|publisher=Northwestern University Press|isbn=978-0-8101-3060-9|page=vii}}</ref>{{refn|group=note|This legend is depicted with Ganesha (Vinayaka) iconography in Hindu temples where he is shown with a broken right tusk and his right arm holds the broken tusk as if it was a stylus.<ref name="Rao1985">{{cite book|author=T.A. Gopinatha Rao|title=Elements of Hindu Iconography|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=MJD-KresBwIC |year=1985|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |isbn=978-81-208-0878-2|pages=xvii, 58–61}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Lawrence Cohen|editor=Robert L. Brown|title=Ganesh: Studies of an Asian God|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oF-Hqih3pBAC|year=1991|publisher=State University of New York Press|isbn=978-0-7914-0656-4|page=132}}</ref>}}
In Huston Smith's foreword for Sargeant's ''The Bhagavad Gita,'' he states that the Gita is a "summation of the Vedanta".{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=x}} It is thus one of the key texts for the ],{{sfn|Nicholson|2010|p=7}}{{sfn|Singh|2005|p=37}} a school of thought that provides one of the theoretical foundations for Hinduism,{{sfn|Nakamura|1950|p=3}} and one that has had an enormous influence over time, becoming the central ideology of the Hindu renaissance in the 19th century, according to ] – a scholar of Hinduism.{{sfn|Flood|1996|pp=231–232, 238}}{{refn|group=note|The Vedanta philosophy, as it is generally called at the present day, really comprises all the various sects that now exist in India. Thus there have been various interpretations, ...
The word Vedanta literally means the end of the Vedas — the Vedas being the scriptures of the Hindus. ... In general there are three sorts of commentators in India now; from their interpretations have arisen three systems of philosophy and sects. One is the dualistic, or Dvaita; a second is the qualified non-dualistic, or Vishishtâdvaita; and a third is the non-dualistic, or Advaita.<ref group=web>{{cite web |url=https://www.ramakrishnavivekananda.info/vivekananda/volume_1/lectures_and_discourses/the_vedanta_philosophy.htm#fn3
|title=Complete-Works/Volume 1/Lectures and Discourses/THE VEDANTA PHILOSOPHY|website=ramakrishnavivekananda.info|access-date=2023-07-14}}</ref>
Dvaitism — small circle different from the big circle, only connected by Bhakti; Vishishtadvaitism — small circle within big circle, motion regulated by the big circle; Advaitism — small circle expands and coincides with the big circle. In Advaitism "I" loses itself in God. God is here, God is there, God is "I".<ref group=web>{{cite web |url=https://www.ramakrishnavivekananda.info/vivekananda/volume_6/notes_of_class_talks_and_lectures/notes_taken_down_in_madras.htm|title=Complete-Works/Volume 6/Notes of Class Talks and Lectures/NOTES TAKEN DOWN IN MADRAS, 1892-93 |website=ramakrishnavivekananda.info|access-date=2023-07-14}}</ref>|name="vedanta"}} Some Hindus give it the status of an Upanishad, and some consider it to be a "revealed text".<ref>{{cite book|author=Ronald Neufeldt|editor=Robert Neil Minor|title=Modern Indian Interpreters of the Bhagavad Gita|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=Ku2DGm20WWUC |year=1986 |publisher=State University of New York Press |isbn=978-0-88706-297-1|pages=11–12, 213}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |first=Thomas B.|last=Coburn |title='Scripture' in India: Towards a Typology of the Word in Hindu Life |journal=Journal of the American Academy of Religion |volume=52 |issue=3 |year=1984 |pages=435–59 |jstor=1464202 |doi=10.1093/jaarel/52.3.435 }}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Tapasyananda|1990|page=1}}</ref> There are alternate versions of the Bhagavad Gita (such as the one found in Kashmir), but the basic message behind these texts are not distorted.{{sfn|Upadhyaya|1998|pages=10–12 with footnote 1 on p. 11}}{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=39–40}}{{sfn|Minor|1982|pp= li–lii, Quote: "the Kashmir recension is a later reading of the Gita." (note the different views of F Otto Schrader from those of SK Belvalkar as well as JAB van Buitenen.)}}


Scholars consider Vyasa to be a mythical or symbolic author, in part because Vyasa is also the traditional compiler of the ] and the ], texts dated to be from different millennia.<ref name="McLeod2014p168">{{cite book|author=Alexus McLeod|title=Understanding Asian Philosophy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=X1PwAwAAQBAJ |year=2014|publisher=A&C Black|isbn=978-1-78093-631-4|pages=168–169}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=George M. Williams|title=Handbook of Hindu Mythology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=N7LOZfwCDpEC&pg=PA304 |year=2008|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-533261-2|page=304}}, Quote: "Veda Vyasa was said to have edited the four Vedas and authored the Puranas and the Mahabharata. Accomplishing all that would require a human who lived several thousand years, so scholars do place the story of his achievements as those of one man in the area of mythology."</ref>{{sfn|Davis|2014|p=37, Quote: "Textual historians generally prefer terms that undercut any implications of Vyasa's actual authorship. They refer to Vyasa as a mythical or symbolic author of the Mahabharata."}}
The Bhagavad Gita draws heavily from the philosophical ideas presented in the Upanishads, incorporating and expanding upon them throughout the text. For example, in the Bhagavad Gita's second chapter, Krishna explains to Arjuna about the eternal nature of the soul, a concept echoed from the ]. It talks about the concept of ], mentioned in the ], and ideal times for departing from life, echoing teachings from the ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Sutton |first=Nicholas |url=https://books.google.com/books/about/Bhagavad_Gita.html?id=eNzUnQAACAAJ |title=Bhagavad-Gita |date=2016-12-16 |publisher=Blurb, Incorporated |isbn=978-1-366-61059-1 |pages=12 |language=en}}</ref>


According to Alexus McLeod, a scholar of Philosophy and Asian Studies, it is "impossible to link the Bhagavad Gita to a single author", and it may be the work of many authors.<ref name="McLeod2014p168"/>{{sfn|Minor|1982|p=xxxiv, Quote: "Therefore, instead of the traditional view of authorship, many scholars have argued that the Gita is not the work of one author but a composite work."}} This view is shared by the Indologist ], who states that there were three or more authors or compilers of Bhagavad Gita. This is evidenced by the discontinuous intermixing of philosophical verses with theistic or passionately theistic verses, according to Basham.<ref name=basham1991p85/>{{refn|group=note|According to Basham, passionately theistic verses are found, for example, in chapters 4, 7, 9, 10, 11, 14.1–6 with 14.29, 15, 18.54–78; while more philosophical verses with one or two verses where Krishna identifies himself as the highest god are found, for example, in chapters 2.38–72, 3, 5, 6, 8, 13 and 14.7–25, 16, 17 and 18.1–53. Further, states Basham, the verses that discuss Gita's "motiveless action" doctrine were probably authored by someone else and these constitute the most important ethical teaching of the text.<ref name=basham1991p85/>}}
===Hindu synthesis===
{{See also|Smarta tradition}}
The Bhagavad Gita is the sealing achievement of the ], incorporating its various religious traditions.{{sfn|Scheepers|2000}}{{sfn|Raju|1992|p=211}}{{sfn|Eliot Deutsch|Rohit Dalvi|2004|pp=61–62}} The synthesis is at both philosophical and socio-religious levels, states the Gita scholar Keya Maitra.{{sfn|Maitra|2018| pages=5, 26–30, 143}} The text refrains from insisting on one right ''marga'' (path) to spirituality. It openly synthesizes and inclusively accepts multiple ways of life, harmonizing spiritual pursuits through action (''karma''), knowledge (''jñāna''), and devotion (''bhakti'').{{sfn|Robinson|2006|pp=69–70, 95–100}} According to the Gita translator Radhakrishnan, quoted in a review by Robinson, Krishna's discourse is a "comprehensive synthesis" that inclusively unifies the competing strands of Hindu thought such as "Vedic ritual, Upanishadic wisdom, devotional theism and philosophical insight".{{sfn|Robinson|2006|p=95}} Aurobindo described the text as a synthesis of various ]s. The Indologist Robert Minor, and others,<ref group=web name="EB-BG">{{cite encyclopedia|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Bhagavadgita |title=Hinduism| encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica}}</ref> in contrast, state that the Gita is "more clearly defined as a synthesis of Vedanta, Yoga and Samkhya" philosophies of Hinduism.{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=74–75, 81}}


], an Indologist known for his translations and scholarship on ''Mahabharata'', finds that the Gita is so contextually and philosophically well-knit within the ''Mahabharata'' that it was not an independent text that "somehow wandered into the epic".<ref name=buitenen2013p5>{{harvnb|Buitenen|2013|pp=5–6}}</ref> The Gita, states van Buitenen, was conceived and developed by the ''Mahabharata'' authors to "bring to a climax and solution the dharmic dilemma of a war".<ref name=buitenen2013p5/>{{refn|group=note|The debate about the relationship between the Gita and the ''Mahabharata'' is historic, in part the basis for chronologically placing the Gita and its authorship. The Indologist Franklin Edgerton was among the early scholars and a translator of the Gita who believed that the Gita was a later composition that was inserted into the epic, at a much later date, by a creative poet of great intellectual power intimately aware of emotional and spiritual aspects of human existence.<ref name=edgerton1952/> Edgerton's primary argument was that it makes no sense that two massive armies facing each other on a battlefield will wait for two individuals to have a lengthy dialogue. Further, he states that the ''Mahabharata'' has numerous such interpolations and inserting the Gita would not be unusual.<ref name=edgerton1952>{{cite book|author=Franklin Edgerton| title=The Bhagavad Gita, Part 2| publisher= Harvard University Press|year=1952|pages=3–4}}</ref> In contrast, the Indologist James Fitzgerald states, like van Buitenen, that the Bhagavad Gita is the centrepiece and essential to the ideological continuity in the ''Mahabharata'', and the entire epic builds up to the fundamental dharma questions in the Gita. This text, states Fitzgerald, must have been integral to the earliest version of the epic.<ref>{{cite journal|author=James L. Fitzgerald| title=The Great Epic of India as Religious Rhetoric: A Fresh Look at the "Mahābhārata"| journal=Journal of the American Academy of Religion| volume= 51| number= 4| year= 1983| pages= 615–619, context: 611–630}}</ref>}}
]
The synthesis in Bhagavad Gita addresses the question of what constitutes the virtuous path that is necessary for spiritual liberation or release from the cycles of rebirth (''moksha'').<ref name="Flood2004p85">{{cite book|author=Gavin Flood|title=The Ascetic Self: Subjectivity, Memory and Tradition|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=fapXqp-JSL0C |year=2004 |publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-60401-7|pages=85–89 with notes}}</ref><ref name="Gill2017p129">{{cite book|author=Robin Gill|title=Moral Passion and Christian Ethics|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=xNwcDgAAQBAJ |year=2017| publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-1-107-17682-9|pages=129–130}}</ref> It discusses whether one should renounce a householder lifestyle for a life as an ascetic, or lead a householder life dedicated to one's duty and profession, or pursue a householder life devoted to a personalized God in the revealed form of Krishna. Thus Gita discusses and synthesizes the three dominant trends in Hinduism: enlightenment-based renunciation, dharma-based householder life, and devotion-based theism. According to Deutsch and Dalvi, the Bhagavad Gita attempts "to forge a harmony" between these three paths.{{sfn|Eliot Deutsch|Rohit Dalvi|2004|pp=61–62}}{{refn|group=note|They state that the authors of the Bhagavad Gita must have seen the appeal of the soteriologies found in "the heterodox traditions of Buddhism and Jainism" as well as those found in " the orthodox Hindu traditions of Samkhya and Yoga". The Gita attempts to present a harmonious, universalist answer, state Deutsch and Dalvi.{{sfn|Eliot Deutsch|Rohit Dalvi|2004|pp=61–62}}}}


===Pancaratra Agama===
The Bhagavad Gita{{'}}s synthetic answer recommends that one must resist the "either-or" view, and consider a "both-and" view.<ref name="Zaehner1973p187">{{cite book|author=Robert Charles Zaehner|title=The Bhagavad-gītā|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=nY6PRhqdlJsC |year=1973|publisher= Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-501666-6| pages=187, 200}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last=Nikam | first=N.A.| title=A Note on the Individual and His Status in Indian Thought | journal=Philosophy East and West | publisher= University of Hawai'i Press| volume=2 | issue=3 | year=1952 | doi=10.2307/1397274 | pages=254–258| jstor=1397274}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Franklin Edgerton| title=The Bhagavad Gita, Part 2| publisher= Harvard University Press|year=1952|pages=91–92}}</ref> It states that the dharmic householder can achieve the same goals as the renouncing monk through "inner renunciation" or "motiveless action".<ref name="Flood2004p85"/>{{refn|group=note|This is called the doctrine of '']'' in Hinduism.<ref>{{cite book|author=Jonardon Ganeri|title=The Concealed Art of the Soul: Theories of Self and Practices of Truth in Indian Ethics and Epistemology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5dITDAAAQBAJ |year= 2007|publisher= Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-920241-6|pages=68–70}}</ref><ref name= Framarin/>}} One must do the right thing because one has determined that it is right, states Gita, without craving for its fruits, without worrying about the results, loss or gain.<ref name= Framarin>{{cite journal|title =The Desire You Are Required to Get Rid of: A Functionalist Analysis of Desire in the Bhagavadgītā| author= Christopher G. Framarin| journal= Philosophy East and West| volume= 56| pages= 604–617| number= 4| year= 2006| publisher = University of Hawai'i Press| jstor= 4488055| doi= 10.1353/pew.2006.0051| s2cid= 170907654}}</ref><ref name="Basham1991p86">{{cite book|author=Arthur Llewellyn Basham|title=The Origins and Development of Classical Hinduism| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2aqgTYlhLikC |year =1991| publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-507349-2|pages=86–87}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last=White | first=David | title=Human Perfection in the Bhagavadgita | journal=Philosophy East and West | publisher=University of Hawai'i Press | volume=21 | issue=1 | year=1971 | doi=10.2307/1397763 | pages=43–53| jstor=1397763 }}</ref> Desires, selfishness, and the craving for fruits can distort one from spiritual living.<ref name="Basham1991p86"/> The Gita synthesis goes further, according to its interpreters such as Swami Vivekananda, and the text states that there is Living God in every human being and the devoted service to this Living God in everyone – without craving for personal rewards – is a means to spiritual development and liberation.<ref name="Nadkarni2016p82">{{harvnb|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pp=82, 95–96}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Franklin Edgerton| title=The Bhagavad Gita, Part 2| publisher= Harvard University Press|year=1952|pages=47–48, 73–74, 83–84}}</ref>{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=38–39, 123–128, 143}} According to Galvin Flood, the teachings in the Gita differ from other Indian religions that encouraged extreme austerity and self-torture of various forms (''karsayanta''). The Gita disapproves of these, stating that not only is it against tradition but against Krishna himself, because "Krishna dwells within all beings, in torturing the body the ascetic would be torturing him", states Flood. Even a monk should strive for "inner renunciation" rather than external pretensions.<ref>{{cite book|author=Gavin Flood|title=The Ascetic Self: Subjectivity, Memory and Tradition|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fapXqp-JSL0C |year=2004|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-60401-7|pages=83–84 with notes}}</ref>
], on a coin of ] {{circa|180{{nbsp}}BCE}}.<ref name="US">{{cite book |last1=Singh |first1=Upinder |title=A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the Stone Age to the 12th Century |date=2008 |publisher=Pearson Education India |isbn=978-81-317-1120-0 |pages=436–438 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=H3lUIIYxWkEC&pg=PA437 |language=en}}</ref><ref>], {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220405172142/https://www.academia.edu/25807197 |date=5 April 2022 }}, 2016.</ref> This is "the earliest unambiguous image" of the deity.<ref name="BRILL">{{cite book |last1=Srinivasan |first1=Doris |title=Many Heads, Arms, and Eyes: Origin, Meaning, and Form of Multiplicity in Indian Art |date=1997 |publisher=BRILL |isbn=978-90-04-10758-8 |page=215 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vZheP9dIX9wC&pg=PA215 |language=en}}</ref>}}]]


According to Dennis Hudson, there is an overlap between Vedic and Tantric rituals within the teachings found in the Bhagavad Gita.{{sfn|Hudson|2002|pp=9, 160–163}} He places the ''Pancaratra Agama'' in the last three or four centuries of 1st-millennium BCE, and proposes that both the tantric and vedic, the Agama and the Gita share the same ] roots.{{sfn|Hudson|2002|p=133}} Some of the ideas in the Bhagavad Gita connect it to the ''Shatapatha Brahmana'' of '']''. The ''Shatapatha Brahmana'', for example, mentions the absolute Purusha who dwells in every human being.
The Gita synthesizes several paths to spiritual realization based on the premise that people are born with different temperaments and tendencies (''guna'').{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=xii}} Smith notes that the text acknowledges that some individuals are more reflective and intellectual, some are affective and engaged by their emotions, some are action-driven, yet others favor experimentation and exploring what works.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=xii}} It then presents different spiritual paths for each personality type respectively: the path of knowledge (''jnana yoga''), the path of devotion (''bhakti yoga''), the path of action (''karma yoga''), and the path of meditation (''raja yoga'').{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=xii}}{{sfn|Robinson|2006|pages=92–93, 133–134}} The ''guna'' premise is a synthesis of the ideas from the Samkhya school of Hinduism. According to Upadhyaya, the Gita states that none of these paths to spiritual realization is "intrinsically superior or inferior", rather they "converge in one and lead to the same goal".{{sfn|Upadhyaya|1998|pp=474–475}}


According to Hudson, a story in this Vedic text highlights the meaning of the name Vāsudeva as the 'shining one (deva) who dwells (Vasu) in all things and in whom all things dwell', and the meaning of Vishnu to be the 'pervading actor'. In the Bhagavad Gita, similarly, '] identified himself both with ], Vishnu and their meanings'.{{sfn|Hudson|2002|pp=156–157}}{{refn|group=note|Other parallelism includes verse 10.21 of Gita replicating the structure of verse 1.2.5 of the Shatapatha Brahmana.{{sfn|Hudson|2002|p=157}}}} The ideas at the centre of Vedic rituals in ''Shatapatha Brahmana'' and the teachings of the Bhagavad Gita revolve around this absolute Person, the primordial genderless absolute, which is the same as the goal of Pancaratra Agama and Tantra.{{sfn|Hudson|2002|pp=162–163}}
According to Hiltebeitel, ''Bhakti'' forms an essential ingredient of this synthesis, and the text incorporates ''Bhakti'' into ''Vedanta''.{{sfn|Hiltebeitel|2002}} According to Scheepers, The Bhagavad Gita is a Brahmanical text which uses ] and Yogic terminology to spread the Brahmanic idea of living according to one's duty or ''dharma'', in contrast to the ascetic ideal of liberation by avoiding all karma.{{sfn|Scheepers|2000|pp=122-127}} According to Galvin Flood and Charles Martin, the Gita rejects the Shramanic path of non-action, emphasizing instead "the renunciation of the fruits of action".<ref>{{cite book|author1=Galvin Flood|author2=Charles Martin|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=PDYEAwAAQBAJ&pg=PR26 |year=2013 |publisher=W.W. Norton & Company| isbn=978-0-393-34513-1| page=xxvi}}</ref> The Bhagavad Gita, according to Raju, is a great synthesis of impersonal spiritual monism with personal God, of "the ''yoga'' of action with the ''yoga'' of transcendence of action, and these again with the ''yogas'' of devotion and knowledge".{{sfn|Raju|1992|p=211}}


==Manuscripts and layout== ==Manuscripts and layout==
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===Structure=== ===Structure===
The Bhagavad Gita is a poem written in the ] language.<ref name=flood2013xviii>{{cite book|author1=Galvin Flood|author2=Charles Martin|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=PDYEAwAAQBAJ |year=2013 |publisher=W.W. Norton & Company| isbn=978-0-393-34513-1| page=xxviii}}</ref> Its 700 ]<ref name=minor1982lli/> are structured into several ancient Indian poetic ], with the principal being the ''shloka'' (''Anushtubh chanda''). It has 18 chapters in total.{{sfn|Coburn|1991|page=27}} Each ''shloka'' consists of a couplet, thus the entire text consists of 1,400 lines. Each ''shloka'' has two quarter verses with exactly eight syllables. Each of these quarters is further arranged into two metrical feet of four syllables each.<ref name=flood2013xviii/>{{refn|group=note|An alternate way to describe the poetic structure of Gita, according to Sargeant, is that it consists of "four lines of eight syllables each", similar to one found in Longfellow's '']''.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=8}}}} The metered verse does not rhyme.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=8}} While the ''shloka'' is the principal meter in the Gita, it does deploy other elements of ] (which refers to one of the six Vedangas, or limbs of Vedic statues).{{sfn|Egenes|2003|page=4}} At dramatic moments, it uses the ''tristubh'' meter found in the Vedas, where each line of the couplet has two quarter verses with exactly eleven syllables.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=8}} The Bhagavad Gita is a poem written in the ] language.<ref name=flood2013xviii>{{cite book|author1=Galvin Flood|author2=Charles Martin|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=PDYEAwAAQBAJ |year=2013 |publisher=W.W. Norton & Company| isbn=978-0-393-34513-1| page=xxviii}}</ref> Its 700 ]<ref name=minor1982lli/> are structured into several ancient Indian poetic ], with the principal being the ''shloka'' (''Anushtubh chanda''). It has 18 chapters in total.{{sfn|Coburn|1991|page=27}} Each ''shloka'' consists of a couplet, thus the entire text consists of 1,400 lines. Each ''shloka'' has two-quarter verses with exactly eight syllables. Each of these quarters is further arranged into two metrical feet of four syllables each.<ref name=flood2013xviii/>{{refn|group=note|An alternate way to describe the poetic structure of Gita, according to Sargeant, is that it consists of "four lines of eight syllables each", similar to one found in Longfellow's '']''.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=8}}}} The metered verse does not rhyme.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=8}} While the ''shloka'' is the principal meter in the Gita, it does deploy other elements of ] (which refers to one of the six Vedangas, or limbs of Vedic statues).{{sfn|Egenes|2003|page=4}} At dramatic moments, it uses the ''tristubh'' meter found in the Vedas, where each line of the couplet has two-quarter verses with exactly eleven syllables.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=8}}


===Characters=== ===Characters===
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===Narrative=== ===Narrative===
The Gita is a dialogue between Krishna and Arjuna right before the start of the climactic ] in the Hindu epic ''Mahabharata''.<ref>{{cite book|author=Alexus McLeod|title= Understanding Asian Philosophy|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=X1PwAwAAQBAJ |year=2014|publisher=A&C Black|isbn=978-1-78093-631-4|page= 136}}</ref>{{refn|group=note|In the epic ''Mahabharata'', after ]—counsellor of the ] king ]—returns from the battlefield to announce the death of ], he begins recounting the details of the ''Mahabharata'' war. Bhagavad Gita is a part of this recollection.<ref>{{harvnb|Fowler|2012|page=xxii}}</ref>}} Two massive armies have gathered to destroy each other. The Pandava prince Arjuna asks his charioteer ] to drive to the center of the battlefield so that he can get a good look at both the armies and all those "so eager for war".{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=1–2}} He sees that some among his enemies are his own relatives, beloved friends, and revered teachers. He does not want to fight to kill them and is thus filled with doubt and despair on the battlefield.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Kriyananda |first1=Goswami |title=The Bhagavad Gita |date=1994 |publisher=The Temple of Kriya Yoga |location=Chicago, IL |isbn=978-0-9613099-3-0 |page=4 |edition=3rd}}</ref> He drops his bow, wonders if he should renounce and just leave the battlefield.{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=1–2}} He turns to his charioteer and guide Krishna, for advice on the rationale for war, his choices and the right thing to do. The Bhagavad Gita is the compilation of Arjuna's questions and moral dilemma and Krishna's answers and insights that elaborate on a variety of philosophical concepts.{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=1–2}}{{sfn|Eliot Deutsch|Rohit Dalvi|2004|pp=59–61}} The Gita is a dialogue between Krishna and Arjuna right before the start of the climactic ] in the Hindu epic ''Mahabharata''.<ref>{{cite book|author=Alexus McLeod|title= Understanding Asian Philosophy|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=X1PwAwAAQBAJ |year=2014|publisher=A&C Black|isbn=978-1-78093-631-4|page= 136}}</ref>{{refn|group=note|In the epic ''Mahabharata'', after ]—counsellor of the ] king ]—returns from the battlefield to announce the death of ], he begins recounting the details of the ''Mahabharata'' war. Bhagavad Gita is a part of this recollection.<ref>{{harvnb|Fowler|2012|page=xxii}}</ref>}} Two massive armies have gathered to destroy each other. The Pandava prince Arjuna asks his charioteer ] to drive to the centre of the battlefield so that he can get a good look at both the armies and all those "so eager for war".{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=1–2}} He sees that some among his enemies are his relatives, beloved friends, and revered teachers. He does not want to fight to kill them and is thus filled with doubt and despair on the battlefield.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Kriyananda |first1=Goswami |title=The Bhagavad Gita |date=1994 |publisher=The Temple of Kriya Yoga |location=Chicago, IL |isbn=978-0-9613099-3-0 |page=4 |edition=3rd}}</ref> He drops his bow, wonders if he should renounce and just leave the battlefield.{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=1–2}} He turns to his charioteer and guide, Krishna, for advice on the rationale for war, his choices and the right thing to do. The Bhagavad Gita is the compilation of Arjuna's questions and moral dilemma and Krishna's answers and insights that elaborate on a variety of philosophical concepts.{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=1–2}}{{sfn|Deutsch|Dalvi|2004|pp=59–61}}<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Song Celestial, Or, Bhagavad-gîtâ (from the Mahâbhârata) Being a Discourse Between Arjuna, Prince of India, and the Supreme Being Under the Form of Krishna|publisher=Roberts Bros|year=1885|pages=Book one the first, page 19}}</ref>


] ]
The compiled dialogue goes far beyond the "rationale for war"; it touches on many human ethical dilemmas, philosophical issues and life's choices.{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=1–2}} According to Flood and Martin, although the Gita is set in the context of a wartime epic, the narrative is structured to apply to all situations; it wrestles with questions about "who we are, how we should live our lives, and how should we act in the world".<ref>{{cite book|author1=Galvin Flood|author2=Charles Martin|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=PDYEAwAAQBAJ&pg=PR26 |year=2013 |publisher=W.W. Norton & Company| isbn=978-0-393-34513-1| pages=xv–xvi}}</ref> According to Sargeant, it delves into questions about the "purpose of life, crisis of self-identity, human Self, human temperaments, and ways for spiritual quest".{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pp=x–xviii}} The compiled dialogue goes far beyond the "rationale for war"; it touches on many human ethical dilemmas, philosophical issues and life's choices.{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=1–2}}{{sfn|Deutsch|Dalvi|2004|pp=60–62}} According to Flood and Martin, although the Gita is set in the context of a wartime epic, the narrative is structured to apply to all situations; it wrestles with questions about "who we are, how we should live our lives, and how should we act in the world".<ref>{{cite book|author1=Galvin Flood|author2=Charles Martin|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=PDYEAwAAQBAJ&pg=PR26 |year=2013 |publisher=W.W. Norton & Company| isbn=978-0-393-34513-1| pages=xv–xvi}}</ref> According to Huston Smith, it delves into questions about the "purpose of life, crisis of self-identity, human Self, human temperaments, and ways for the spiritual quest".{{sfn|Smith|2009|pp=x–xviii}}


The Gita posits the existence of two selfs in an individual,{{refn|group=note|The Gita teaches that there are two selves within man--an individual self which may be identified with mind/ego/personality that is really the false or apparent self, and the supreme Self within the sheath of the individual self which is called Atman and is thus Brahman, the Supreme Self. The individual self is mutable and in a state of subjection. The supreme Self is changeless and persists throughout all the experiences of life and survives the crisis of death; it is free. This Self is not the soul in the popular Western sense, but is the Divine Lord. It is the core of inner calm where all tensions and fears cease. It is within every person.{{sfn|Casebeer|p=94|1952}}|name="twoself"}} and its presentation of Krishna-Arjuna dialogue has been interpreted as a metaphor for an eternal dialogue between the two.{{refn|group=note|the Self is the spectator who views the action of the empirical self. He is untouched by the experiences of the individual in which he dwells. He is in a real sense the core of inner calm, the Very Person within the mutable psychophysical self or personality. Man’s tragedy is his unawareness of this core of Reality--Self. There is some type of contact between this inner Self and the outer sheath of the thinking, feeling empirical self. When the absolute Self is in such contact it is called, as mentioned previously, jiva. Theos Bernard writes: "When a part of the Universal Breath becomes ensconced in the protoplasmic environment which it animates, it is called jiva." The body is the scene of this contact between the individual and the supreme Self. In fact some commentators interpret the scene between Arjuna and Krishna on the battlefield of Kurukshetra as a "timeless dialogue carried on in the recesses of every striving soul, the chariot being symbolic of the body of man (See Katha Upanishad 1.3.3.) The Gita thus would not disparage the physical body but would honor it as "a vehicle for the manifestation of the Eternal."{{sfn|Casebeer|p=12-13|1952}}|name="dialog"}} The Gita posits the existence of two selves in an individual,{{efn|The Gita teaches that there are two selves within man--an individual self which may be identified with mind/ego/personality that is the false or apparent self, and the supreme Self within the sheath of the individual self which is called Atman and is thus Brahman, the Supreme Self. The individual self is mutable and in a state of subjection. The supreme Self is changeless and persists throughout all the experiences of life and survives the crisis of death; it is free. This Self is not the soul in the popular Western sense but is the Divine Lord. It is the core of inner calm where all tensions and fears cease. It is within every person.{{sfn|Casebeer|p=94|1952}}|name="twoself"}} and its presentation of the Krishna-Arjuna dialogue has been interpreted as a metaphor for an eternal dialogue between the two.{{efn|the Self is the spectator who views the action of the empirical self. He is untouched by the experiences of the individual in which he dwells. He is in a real sense the core of inner calm, the Very Person within the mutable psychophysical self or personality. Man’s tragedy is his unawareness of this core of Reality--Self. There is some type of contact between this inner Self and the outer sheath of the thinking, feeling empirical self. When the absolute Self is in such contact it is called, as mentioned previously, jiva. Theos Bernard writes: "When a part of the Universal Breath becomes ensconced in the protoplasmic environment which it animates, it is called jiva." The body is the scene of this contact between the individual and the supreme Self. Some commentators interpret the scene between Arjuna and Krishna on the battlefield of Kurukshetra as a "timeless dialogue carried on in the recesses of every striving soul, the chariot being symbolic of the body of man (See Katha Upanishad 1.3.3.) The Gita thus would not disparage the physical body but would honour it as "a vehicle for the manifestation of the Eternal."{{sfn|Casebeer|p=12-13|1952}}|name="dialog"}}

==Textual significance==
===Synthesis prioritizing dharma and bhakti===
]
{{See also|Smarta tradition}}

The Bhagavad Gita is a synthesis of Vedic and non-Vedic traditions,{{sfn|Thompson|2008|p=xxvi, xxix}}{{efn|name="synthesis"}}{{efn|name="Deutsch_Davi_2004"}} reconciling renunciation with action by arguing that they are inseparable; while following one's dharma, one should not consider oneself to be the agent of action, but attribute all one's actions to God.{{sfn|Zaehner|1973|p=200}}{{sfn|Flood|1996|p=125}} It is a Brahmanical text that uses ] and Yogic terminology to propagate the Brahmanic idea of living according to one's duty or ''dharma'', in contrast to the ascetic ideal of liberation by avoiding all karma.{{sfn|Scheepers|2000|pp=122-127}} According to Hiltebeitel, the Bhagavad Gita is the sealing achievement of the consolidation of Hinduism, merging Bhakti traditions with ], ], and other knowledge based traditions.{{sfn|Hiltebeitel|2002}}

The Gita discusses and synthesizes sramana- and yoga-based renunciation, dharma-based householder life, and devotion-based theism, attempting "to forge a harmony" between these three paths.{{sfn|Deutsch|Dalvi|2004|pp=61–62}}{{efn|name="Deutsch_Davi_2004"|According to {{harvtxt|Deutsch|Dalvi|2004|pp=61–62}}, the authors of the Bhagavad Gita must have seen the appeal of the soteriologies found in "the heterodox traditions of Buddhism and Jainism" as well as those found in "the orthodox Hindu traditions of Samkhya and Yoga." The Gita attempts to present a harmonious, universalist answer.}} It does this in a framework addressing the question of what constitutes the virtuous path that is necessary for spiritual liberation or release from the cycles of rebirth (''moksha''),<ref name="Flood2004p85">{{cite book|author=Gavin Flood|title=The Ascetic Self: Subjectivity, Memory and Tradition|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=fapXqp-JSL0C |year=2004 |publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-60401-7|pages=85–89 with notes}}</ref><ref name="Gill2017p129">{{cite book|author=Robin Gill|title=Moral Passion and Christian Ethics|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=xNwcDgAAQBAJ |year=2017| publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-1-107-17682-9|pages=129–130}}</ref> incorporating various religious traditions,{{sfn|Raju|1992|p=211}}{{sfn|Scheepers|2000}}{{sfn|Deutsch|Dalvi|2004|pp=61–62}} including philosophical ideas from the Upanishads<ref>{{Cite book |last=Sutton |first=Nicholas |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eNzUnQAACAAJ |title=Bhagavad-Gita |date=2016-12-16 |publisher=Blurb, Incorporated |isbn=978-1-366-61059-1 |pages=12 |language=en}}</ref>{{sfn|Doniger|2024}} ] ],{{sfn|Doniger|2024}} and '']'', incorporating ''bhakti'' into ].{{sfn|Hiltebeitel|2002}} As such, it neutralizes the tension between the Brahmanical worldorder with its caste-based social institutions that hold society together, and the search for salvation by ascetics who have left society.{{sfn|Thompson|2008|p=xxxix}}

====Rejection of sramanic non-action====
{{Quote box
| width = 30em
| bgcolor = #FFE0BB
| align = right
| salign = right
| quote =Knowledge is indeed better than practice;<br>Meditation is superior to knowledge;<br>Renunciation of the fruit of action is
better than meditation;<br>Peace immediately follows renunciation.
| source = Bhagavad Gita, chapter XII, verse 12{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=519}}}}

According to Gavin Flood and Charles Martin, the Gita rejects the shramanic path of non-action, emphasizing instead "the renunciation of the fruits of action".{{sfn|Flood|Martin|2013|p=xxvi}} According to Gavin Flood, the teachings in the Gita differ from other Indian religions that encouraged extreme austerity and self-torture of various forms (''karsayanta''). The Gita disapproves of these, stating that not only is it against tradition but against Krishna himself, because "Krishna dwells within all beings, in torturing the body the ascetic would be torturing him", states Flood. Even a monk should strive for "inner renunciation" rather than external pretensions.<ref>{{cite book|author=Gavin Flood|title=The Ascetic Self: Subjectivity, Memory and Tradition|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fapXqp-JSL0C |year=2004|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-60401-7|pages=83–84 with notes}}</ref> It further states that the dharmic householder can achieve the same goals as the renouncing monk through "inner renunciation" or "motiveless action".<ref name="Flood2004p85"/>{{refn|group=note|This is called the doctrine of '']'' in Hinduism.<ref>{{cite book|author=Jonardon Ganeri|title=The Concealed Art of the Soul: Theories of Self and Practices of Truth in Indian Ethics and Epistemology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5dITDAAAQBAJ |year= 2007|publisher= Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-920241-6|pages=68–70}}</ref><ref name= Framarin/>}} One must do the right thing because one has determined that it is right, states Gita, without craving for its fruits, without worrying about the results, loss or gain.<ref name= Framarin>{{cite journal|title =The Desire You Are Required to Get Rid of: A Functionalist Analysis of Desire in the Bhagavadgītā| author= Christopher G. Framarin| journal= Philosophy East and West| volume= 56| pages= 604–617| number= 4| year= 2006| publisher = University of Hawai'i Press| jstor= 4488055| doi= 10.1353/pew.2006.0051| s2cid= 170907654}}</ref><ref name="Basham1991p86">{{cite book|author=Arthur Llewellyn Basham|title=The Origins and Development of Classical Hinduism| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2aqgTYlhLikC |year =1991| publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-507349-2|pages=86–87}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last=White | first=David | title=Human Perfection in the Bhagavadgita | journal=Philosophy East and West | publisher=University of Hawai'i Press | volume=21 | issue=1 | year=1971 | doi=10.2307/1397763 | pages=43–53| jstor=1397763 }}</ref> Desires, selfishness, and the craving for fruits can distort one from spiritual living.<ref name="Basham1991p86"/>{{efn|According to religious interpreters such as Swami Vivekananda the text states that there is a Living God in every human being and the devoted service to this Living God in everyone – without craving for personal rewards – is a means to spiritual development and liberation.<ref name="Nadkarni2016p82">{{harvnb|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pp=82, 95–96}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Franklin Edgerton| title=The Bhagavad Gita, Part 2| publisher= Harvard University Press|year=1952|pages=47–48, 73–74, 83–84}}</ref>{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=38–39, 123–128, 143}}}}

===Vedanta===
The Bhagavad Gita is part of the ],{{sfn|Nicholson|2010|p=7}}{{sfn|Singh|2005|p=37}} which also includes the ] and the ], the foundational texts of the ] school of Hindu philosophy.{{sfn|Isaeva|1992|p=35 with footnote 30}}{{efn|The Brahma sutras constitute the ''Nyāya prasthāna'' or the "starting point of reasoning canonical base", while the principal Upanishads constitute the ''Sruti prasthāna'' or the "starting point of heard scriptures", and the Bhagavad Gita constitutes the ''Smriti prasthāna'' or the "starting point of remembered canonical base" {{harv|Isaeva|1992|p=35 with footnote 30}}.}}

====Vaishnavism====
The Gita is a revered text in the ] tradition,<ref>] has said, . Quoted in: {{harvnb|Matchett|2000}}</ref><ref>James Mulhern (1959). ''A History of Education: A Social Interpretation''. p. 93.</ref><ref>] (1925) The Bhagavad Gita: Or, Song of the Blessed One, India's Favorite Bible </ref>{{sfn|Davis|2014|p=4-8}}{{sfn|Flood|1996|p=124}} mostly through the Vaishnava Vedanta commentaries written on it,{{sfn|Flood|1996|p=124}} though the text itself is also celebrated in the Puranas, for example, the ''Gita Mahatmya'' of the ].{{efn|See .}} While Upanishads focus more on knowledge and the identity of the self with Brahman, the Bhagavad Gita shifts the emphasis towards devotion and the worship of a personal deity, specifically Krishna.{{Sfn|Sutton|2017|p=113}} There are alternate versions of the Bhagavad Gita (such as the one found in Kashmir), but the basic message behind these texts is not distorted.{{sfn|Upadhyaya|1998|pages=10–12 with footnote 1 on p. 11}}{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=39–40}}{{sfn|Minor|1982|pp= li–lii, Quote: "the Kashmir recension is a later reading of the Gita." (note the different views of F Otto Schrader from those of SK Belvalkar as well as JAB van Buitenen.)}}

===Modern prominence===
] of the ] was the first detonation of a ], which led Oppenheimer to recall verses from the Bhagavad Gita, notably being: "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds".]]
] people in Kolkata, 24th December {{circa|2023{{nbsp}}CE}}.]]

While Hinduism is known for its diversity and the synthesis derived from it, the Bhagavad Gita holds a unique pan-Hindu influence.{{sfn|Buitenen|2013|pp=6–7}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=5–6}}{{efn|{{harvtxt|Buitenen|2013|pp=6–7}}: "Its importance as a religious text is demonstrated by its uniquely pan-Hindu influence".}} ] – an Indologist and scholar of classical ], states that "if there is any one text that comes near to embodying the totality of what it is to be a ], it would be the Bhagavad Gita."{{sfn|Larson|2009|p=187}}{{sfn|Robinson|2014|pp=viii–ix}}

Yet, according to Robinson, "it is increasingly recognized by scholars that the extraordinary prominence of the Bhagavad Gita is a feature of modernity despite disagreement over the date at which it became dominant."{{sfn|Robinson|2006|p=5}} According to Eric Sharpe, this change started in the 1880s, and became prominent after 1900.{{sfn|Robinson|2006|p=5}} According to Arvind Sharma, the Bhagavad Gita was always an important scripture but became prominent in the 1920s.{{sfn|Robinson|2006|p=5}}

With its translation and study by Western scholars beginning in the early 18th century, the Bhagavad Gita gained a growing appreciation and popularity in the ].<ref group=web name="EB-BG">{{cite encyclopedia|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Bhagavadgita |title=Hinduism| encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|date=19 June 2024 }}</ref> Novel interpretations of the Gita, along with apologetics on it, have been a part of the modern era revisionism and renewal movements within Hinduism.{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=34–35, 131–133, 147–149}} According to Ronald Neufeldt, it was the ] that dedicated much attention and energy to the allegorical interpretation of the Gita, along with religious texts from around the world, after 1885 and given H. P. Blavatsky, Subba Rao and Anne Besant writings.{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=11–14}} Their attempt was to present their "universalist religion." These late 19th-century theosophical writings called the Gita a "path of true spirituality" and "teaching nothing more than the basis of every system of philosophy and scientific endeavour", triumphing over other "Samkhya paths" of Hinduism that "have degenerated into superstition and demoralized India by leading people away from practical action".{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=11–14}}

====Hindu reform movements====
{{Main|Hindu reform movements}}

Neo-Hindus and ] have celebrated the Bhagavad Gita as containing the essence of Hinduism and taking the Gita's emphasis on duty and action as a clue for their activism for Indian nationalism and independence.{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=154, 161–163}}{{sfn|Robinson|2006|pp=69–70}} ] (1838–1894) challenged orientalist literature on Hinduism and offered his interpretations of the Gita, states Ajit Ray.{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=34–43}}{{sfn|Hacker|1958|p=261}} ] (1856–1920) interpreted the ''karma yoga'' teachings in Gita as a "doctrine of liberation" taught by Hinduism,{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=44–57}} while ] (1888–1975) stated that the Bhagavad Gita teaches a universalist religion and the "essence of Hinduism" along with the "essence of all religions", rather than a private religion.{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=154, 161–163}}

]'s (1863–1902) works contained numerous references to the Gita, such as his lectures on the four yogas – Bhakti, Jnana, Karma, and Raja.{{sfn|Minor|1986|page=131}} Through the message of the Gita, Vivekananda sought to energise the people of India to reclaim their dormant but strong identity.{{sfn|Minor|1986|page=144}} ] (1872–1950) saw the Bhagavad Gita as a "scripture of the future religion" and suggested that Hinduism had acquired a much wider relevance through the Gita.{{sfn|Robinson|2006|page=69}}

====Neo-Vedanta and yoga====
{{Quote box
| width = 30em
| bgcolor = #FFE0BB
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| quote = He who in this way knows the Spirit<br>And material nature, along with the qualities ,<br>In whatever stage of transmigration he may exist,<br>Is not born again.<br><br> Some perceive the Self in the Self<br>By the Self through meditation;<br>Others by the discipline of Sankhya<br>And still others by the yoga of action.<br><br> Yet others, not knowing this,<br>Worship, having heard it from others,<br>And they also cross beyond death,<br>Devoted to what they have heard.
| source = Bhagavad Gita, chapter XIII, verse 23-25{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=551-553}}}}
{{Main|Neo-Vedanta|Three Yogas}}

While the Upanishads refer to ] as yoking or restraining the mind,{{sfn|Flood|1996|p=85}} the topic of BG chapter 6, the Bhagavad Gita introduces "the famous three kinds of yoga, 'knowledge' (''jnana''), 'action' (''karma''), and 'love' (''bhakti'').{{sfn|Flood|1996|p=96}} BG XIII verse 23-25 famously mentions four kinds of yoga, or ways of seeing the self, adding meditation to the three yogas.{{sfn|Smith|2009|p=xii}} Yet, the practice of ] (meditation), is a part of all three classical paths in Hinduism.{{sfn|Matilal|2005|p=4928}}{{sfn|Jones|Ryan|2007|p=73}} Knowledge or insight, discerning the true self (''purusha'') from matter and material desires (''prakriti''), is the true aim of ], in which meditation and insight cannot be separated. Furthermore, the Gita "rejects the Buddhist and Jain path of non-action, emphasizing instead renunciation of the fruits of action"{{sfn|Flood|Martin|2013|p=xxvi}} and devotion to Krishna.{{sfn|Flood|Martin|2013|p=xxi}}

The systematic presentation of Hindu monotheism as divided into these four paths or "Yogas" is modern, advocated by ] from the 1890s in his books on ''Jnana Yoga'',''Karma Yoga'', ''Bhakti Yoga'' and ''Raja Yoga'', emphasizing Raja Yoga as the crowning achievement of yoga.{{sfn|De Michelis|2005}}{{sfn|Birch|2013}} Vivekananda, who was strongly inspired by the Gita, viewed all spiritual paths as equal.{{sfn|Davis|2014|p=108-109}} Yet, Vivekananda also noted that "The reconciliation of the different paths of Dharma, and work without desire or attachment — these are the two special characteristics of the Gita."{{sfn|Vivekananda|1998}} Similarly, Cornille states that the Gita asserts that the path of ] (devotion) is the foremost and the easiest of them all.{{sfn|Cornille|2006|p=2}}

According to ], a notable ], referring to BG XIII verse 23–25, the Gita mentions four ways to see the self, based on the Samkhya-premise that people are born with different temperaments and tendencies ('']'').{{sfn|Smith|2009|p=xii}} Some individuals are more reflective and intellectual, some are effective and engaged by their emotions, some are action-driven, yet others favour experimentation and exploring what works.{{sfn|Smith|2009|p=xii}} According to Smith, BG XIII verse 24-25 lists four different spiritual paths for each personality type respectively: the path of knowledge (''jnana yoga''), the path of devotion (''bhakti yoga''), the path of action (''karma yoga''), and the path of meditation (''raja yoga'').{{sfn|Smith|2009|p=xii}}

Medieval commentators argued which path had priority.{{sfn|Davis|2014|p=61-62}} According to Robinson, modern commentators have interpreted the text as refraining from insisting on one right ''marga'' (path) to spirituality.{{sfn|Robinson|2006|pp=69–70, 95–100}} According to Upadhyaya, the Gita states that none of these paths to spiritual realization is "intrinsically superior or inferior", rather they "converge in one and lead to the same goal".{{sfn|Upadhyaya|1998|pp=474–475}}


==Chapters and content== ==Chapters and content==
Bhagavad Gita comprises 18 chapters (section 23 to 40)<ref>{{harvnb|Bose|1986|page=71}}</ref><ref group=web>{{cite web |title=Gita Introduction |url=http://www.bhagavad-gita.org/Gita/intro.html |publisher=Bhagavad-Gita Trust 1998–2009 U.S. |access-date=2 October 2011 |archive-date=2 October 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002213749/http://www.bhagavad-gita.org/Gita/intro.html |url-status=live }}</ref> in the ] of the epic ''Mahabharata''. Because of differences in ]s, the verses of the Gita may be numbered in the full text of the ''Mahabharata'' as chapters 6.25–42 or as chapters 6.23–40.<ref group=web name="Bhandarkar"/> The number of verses in each chapter vary in some manuscripts of the Gita discovered on the Indian subcontinent. However, variant readings are relatively few in contrast to the numerous versions of the ''Mahabharata'' it is found embedded in.<ref name=minor1982lli>{{harvnb|Minor|1982|pp= l–li, Quote: "The current text of the Bhagavad Gita is well-preserved with relatively few variant readings and none quite serious. This is especially remarkable in the light of the numerous variants for the remainder of the Mahabharata, some of which are quite serious. Secondary insertions are found in individual manuscripts of the Gita, but these are clearly secondary. The number of stanzas in the Gita is 700, a number confirmed by Shankara, and possibly deliberately chosen in order to prevent interpolations."}}</ref> The Bhagavad Gita contains 18 chapters and 700 verses found in the ] of the epic ''Mahabharata.''<ref>{{harvnb|Bose|1986|page=71}}</ref><ref group=web>{{cite web |title=Gita Introduction |url=http://www.bhagavad-gita.org/Gita/intro.html |publisher=Bhagavad-Gita Trust 1998–2009 U.S. |access-date=2 October 2011 |archive-date=2 October 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002213749/http://www.bhagavad-gita.org/Gita/intro.html |url-status=live }}</ref> Because of differences in ]s, the verses of the Gita may be numbered in the full text of the ''Mahabharata'' as chapters 6.25–42 or as chapters 6.23–40.<ref group=web name="Bhandarkar"/> The number of verses in each chapter vary in some manuscripts of the Gita discovered on the Indian subcontinent. However, variant readings are relatively few in contrast to the numerous versions of the ''Mahabharata'' it is found embedded in.<ref name=minor1982lli>{{harvnb|Minor|1982|pp= l–li, Quote: "The current text of the Bhagavad Gita is well-preserved with relatively few variant readings and none quite serious. This is especially remarkable in the light of the numerous variants for the remainder of the Mahabharata, some of which are quite serious. Secondary insertions are found in individual manuscripts of the Gita, but these are secondary. The number of stanzas in the Gita is 700, a number confirmed by Shankara, and possibly deliberately chosen to prevent interpolations."}}</ref>


] with Disciples'', by ] ({{circa|1904{{nbsp}}CE}}). Shankara published 700 verses of the Gita ({{circa|800{{nbsp}}CE}}), now the standard version.]] ] with Disciples'', by ] ({{circa|1904{{nbsp}}CE}}). Shankara published 700 verses of the Gita ({{circa|800{{nbsp}}CE}}), now the standard version.]]
The original Bhagavad Gita has no chapter titles. Some Sanskrit editions that separate the Gita from the epic as an independent text, as well as translators, however, add chapter titles.{{sfn|Maitra|2018|p=39}}<ref group=web name="Bhandarkar">see {{cite web |url=http://bombay.indology.info/mahabharata/statement.html |title=The Mahabharata (Electronic text) |publisher=Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute, Pune |year=1999 |access-date=17 April 2007 |archive-date=16 July 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716075208/http://bombay.indology.info/mahabharata/statement.html |url-status=live }}</ref> For example, ] describes each of the eighteen chapters as a separate yoga because each chapter, like yoga, "trains the body and the mind". He labels the first chapter "Arjuna Vishada Yogam" or the "Yoga of Arjuna's Dejection".<ref>{{harvnb|Chidbhavananda|1997|page=33}}</ref> Sir ] titled this chapter in his 1885 translation as "The Distress of Arjuna".<ref name=EBG>{{Citation|last=translated by Sir ]|title=Bhagavadgita|year=1885|publisher=] (1993 Reprint)|location=New York|isbn=0-486-27782-8|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KOd6N2_t6XoC|edition=Unabridged}}</ref>{{refn|group=note|Some editions include the '']'' consisting of 9 verses. The ''Gita Dhyanam'' is not a part of the original Bhagavad Gita, but some modern era versions insert it as a prefix to the ''Gītā''. The verses of the ''Gita Dhyanam'' (also called ''Gītā Dhyāna'' or ''Dhyāna Ślokas'') offer salutations to a variety of sacred scriptures, figures, and entities, characterise the relationship of the ''Gītā'' to the ], and affirm the power of divine assistance.<ref name=chinmaya98>{{harvnb|Chinmayananda|1998|page=3}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Ranganathananda|2000|pages=15–25}}</ref>}} The original Bhagavad Gita has no chapter titles. Some Sanskrit editions that separate the Gita from the epic as an independent text, as well as translators, however, add chapter titles.{{sfn|Maitra|2018|p=39}}<ref group=web name="Bhandarkar">see {{cite web |url=http://bombay.indology.info/mahabharata/statement.html |title=The Mahabharata (Electronic text) |publisher=Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute, Pune |year=1999 |access-date=17 April 2007 |archive-date=16 July 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716075208/http://bombay.indology.info/mahabharata/statement.html |url-status=live }}</ref> For example, ] describes each of the eighteen chapters as a separate yoga because each chapter, like yoga, "trains the body and the mind". He labels the first chapter "Arjuna Vishada Yogam" or the "Yoga of Arjuna's Dejection".<ref>{{harvnb|Chidbhavananda|1997|page=33}}</ref> Sir ] titled this chapter in his 1885 translation as "The Distress of Arjuna".<ref name=EBG>{{Citation|last=translated by Sir ]|title=Bhagavadgita|year=1885|publisher=] (1993 Reprint)|location=New York|isbn=0-486-27782-8|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KOd6N2_t6XoC|edition=Unabridged}}</ref>{{refn|group=note|Some editions include the '']'' consisting of 9 verses. The ''Gita Dhyanam'' is not a part of the original Bhagavad Gita, but some modern era versions insert it as a prefix to the ''Gītā''. The verses of the ''Gita Dhyanam'' (also called ''Gītā Dhyāna'' or ''Dhyāna Ślokas'') offer salutations to a variety of sacred scriptures, figures, and entities, characterise the relationship of the Gītā to the ], and affirm the power of divine assistance.<ref name=chinmaya98>{{harvnb|Chinmayananda|1998|page=3}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Ranganathananda|2000|pages=15–25}}</ref>}}


The chapters are:
===Chapter listing===
{{multiple image
| direction = vertical
| width = 220
| footer = Face pages of chapters 1, 2 and 3 of historic Bhagavad Gita manuscripts. Top: ] produced before {{circa|1900{{nbsp}}CE}}; Bottom: ] {{circa|1750|1850{{nbsp}}CE}}.
| image1 = 1st and 2nd chapter face page, Bhagavad Gita, Bengali script, 19th century.jpg
| image2 = 3rd Chapter Verses 1-2, Bhagavad Gita, Gurmukhi script, Punjab.jpg
}}
There are total 18 chapters and 700 verses in Gita. These are:
{| class="wikitable sortable" {| class="wikitable sortable"
|'''Chapter''' ! Chapter
|'''Name of Chapter''' ! Name of Chapter
|'''Total Verses''' ! Total Verses
|- |-
|1 |1
|] |'']''
|47 |46
|- |-
|2 |2
|] |'']''
|72 |72
|- |-
|3 |3
|] |'']''
|43 |43
|- |-
|4 |4
|] |'']''
|42 |42
|- |-
|5 |5
|] |'']''
|29 |29
|- |-
|6 |6
|] (Dhyana Yoga) |'']''
|47 |47
|- |-
|7 |7
|] |'']''
|30 |30
|- |-
|8 |8
|] |'']''
|28 |28
|- |-
|9 |9
|Raja-Vidya-Raja-Guhya Yoga |'']''
|34 |34
|- |-
|10 |10
|Vibhuti Yoga |'']''
|42 |42
|- |-
|11 |11
|'']''
|Vishwarupa-Darsana Yoga
|55 |55
|- |-
|12 |12
|] |'']''
|20 |20
|- |-
|13 |13
|Ksetra-Ksetrajna-Vibhaga Yoga |'']''
|34 |35
|- |-
|14 |14
|Gunatraya-Vibhaga Yoga |'']''
|27 |27
|- |-
|15 |15
|Purushottama Yoga |'']''
|20 |20
|- |-
|16 |16
|Daivasura-Sampad-Vibhaga Yoga |'']''
|24 |24
|- |-
|17 |17
|Shraddha-Traya-Vibhaga Yoga |'']''
|28 |28
|- |-
|18 |18
|Moksha-Sanyasa Yoga |'']''
|78 |78
|- |-
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|} |}


====Chapter 1: Arjuna Vishada Yoga (47 verses)==== === Chapter 1: Arjuna Vishada Yoga (46 verses) ===
{{Main|Arjuna Vishada-yoga}} {{Main|Arjuna Vishada-yoga}}
Translators have variously titled the first chapter as '']'', ''Prathama Adhyaya'', ''The Distress of Arjuna'', ''The War Within'', or ''Arjuna's Sorrow''.<ref name="EBG" />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} The Bhagavad Gita is opened by setting the stage of the Kurukshetra battlefield. Two massive armies representing different loyalties and ideologies face a catastrophic war. With Arjuna is Krishna, not as a participant in the war, but only as his charioteer and counsel. Arjuna requests Krishna to move the ] between the two armies so he can see those "eager for this war". He sees family and friends on the enemy side. Arjuna is distressed and in sorrow.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=71–82}} The issue is, states ], "is it morally proper to kill?"{{sfn|Sharma|1986|pp=xiv–xv}} This and other moral dilemmas in the first chapter are set in a context where the Hindu epic and Krishna have already extolled '']'' (non-violence) to be the highest and divine virtue of a human being.{{sfn|Sharma|1986|pp=xiv–xv}} The war feels evil to Arjuna and he questions the morality of war. He wonders if it is noble to renounce and leave before the violence starts, or should he fight, and why.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=71–82}} Translators have variously titled the first chapter as '']'', ''Prathama Adhyaya'', ''The Distress of Arjuna'', ''The War Within'', or ''Arjuna's Sorrow''.<ref name="EBG" />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} The Bhagavad Gita is opened by setting the stage of the Kurukshetra battlefield. Two massive armies representing different loyalties and ideologies face a catastrophic war. With Arjuna is Krishna, not as a participant in the war, but only as his charioteer and counsel. Arjuna requests Krishna to move the ] between the two armies so he can see those "eager for this war". He sees family and friends on the enemy side. Arjuna is distressed and in sorrow.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=71–82}} The issue is stated ], "Is it morally proper to kill?"{{sfn|Sharma|1986|pp=xiv–xv}} This and other moral dilemmas in the first chapter are set in a context where the Hindu epic and Krishna have already extolled '']'' (non-violence) to be the highest and divine virtue of a human being.{{sfn|Sharma|1986|pp=xiv–xv}} The war feels evil to Arjuna and he questions the morality of war. He wonders if it is noble to renounce and leave before the violence starts, or should he fight, and why.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=71–82}}


====Chapter 2: Sankhya Yoga (72 verses)==== === Chapter 2: Sankhya Yoga (72 verses) ===
{{Main|Samkhya Yoga (Bhagavad Gita)}} {{Main|Samkhya Yoga (Bhagavad Gita)}}
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Nor should one attach oneself to inaction. Nor should one attach oneself to inaction.
</poem> </poem>
- ''Bhagavad Gita'' 2 : 47 - Bhagavad Gita 2 : 47
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Translators title the chapter as ''Sankhya Yoga'', ''The Book of Doctrines'', ''Self-Realization'', or ''The Yoga of Knowledge (and Philosophy)''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} The second chapter begins the philosophical discussions and teachings found in the Gita. The warrior Arjuna whose past had focused on learning the skills of his profession now faces a war he has doubts about. Filled with introspection and questions about the meaning and purpose of life, he asks Krishna about the nature of life, Self, death, afterlife and whether there is a deeper meaning and reality.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=83–98}} Krishna teaches Arjuna about the eternal nature of the soul (atman) and the temporary nature of the body, advising him to perform his warrior duty with detachment and without grief. The chapter summarizes the Hindu idea of rebirth, samsara, eternal Self in each person (Self), universal Self present in everyone, various types of yoga, divinity within, the nature of knowledge of the Self and other concepts.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=83–98}} The ideas and concepts in the second chapter reflect the framework of the Samkhya and ] schools of ]. This chapter is an overview for the remaining sixteen chapters of the Bhagavad Gita.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=83–98}}{{sfn|Sharma|1986|pp=xv–xvi}}{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=xx}} ] memorized the last 19 verses of the second chapter, considering them as his companion in his non-violent movement for social justice during colonial rule.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=xxviii}} Translators title the chapter as ''Sankhya Yoga'', ''The Book of Doctrines'', ''Self-Realization'', or ''The Yoga of Knowledge (and Philosophy)''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} The second chapter begins the philosophical discussions and teachings found in the Gita. The warrior Arjuna whose past had focused on learning the skills of his profession now faces a war he has doubts about. Filled with introspection and questions about the meaning and purpose of life, he asks Krishna about the nature of life, Self, death, afterlife and whether there is a deeper meaning and reality.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=83–98}} Krishna teaches Arjuna about the eternal nature of the soul (atman) and the temporary nature of the body, advising him to perform his warrior duty with detachment and without grief. The chapter summarizes the Hindu idea of rebirth, samsara, eternal Self in each person (Self), universal Self-present in everyone, various types of yoga, divinity within, the nature of knowledge of the Self and other concepts.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=83–98}} The ideas and concepts in the second chapter reflect the framework of the Samkhya and ] schools of ]. This chapter is an overview of the remaining sixteen chapters of the Bhagavad Gita.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=83–98}}{{sfn|Sharma|1986|pp=xv–xvi}}{{sfn|Smith|2009|p=xx}} ] memorized the last 19 verses of the second chapter, considering them as his companion in his non-violent movement for social justice during colonial rule.{{sfn|Smith|2009|p=xxviii}}


====Chapter 3: Karma Yoga (43 verses)==== === Chapter 3: Karma Yoga (43 verses) ===
{{Main|Karma Yoga (Bhagvad Gita)}} {{Main|Karma Yoga (Bhagavad Gita)}}


Translators title the chapter as ''Karma yoga'', ''Virtue in Work'', ''Selfless Service'', or ''The Yoga of Action''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} After listening to Krishna's spiritual teachings in Chapter 2, Arjuna gets more confounded and returns to the predicament he faces. He wonders if fighting the war is "not so important after all" given Krishna's overview on the pursuit of spiritual wisdom. Krishna replies that there is no way to avoid action (karma), since abstention from work is also an action.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=99–110}} Krishna states that Arjuna has an obligation to understand and perform his duty (dharma), because everything is connected by the law of cause and effect. Every man or woman is bound by activity. Those who act selfishly create the Karmic cause and are thereby bound to the effect which may be good or bad.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=99–110}} Those who act selflessly for the right cause and strive to do their dharmic duty are doing God's work.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=99–110}} Those who act without craving for fruits are free from the Karmic effects because the results never motivate them. Whatever the result, it does not affect them. Their happiness comes from within, and the external world does not bother them.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=99–110}}{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=50–63, 66–70}} According to Flood and Martin, chapter 3 and onwards develops "a theological response to Arjuna's dilemma".<ref>{{cite book|author1=Galvin Flood|author2=Charles Martin|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=PDYEAwAAQBAJ |year=2013 |publisher=W.W. Norton & Company| isbn=978-0-393-34513-1| page=xix}}</ref> Translators title the chapter as ''Karma yoga'', ''Virtue in Work'', ''Selfless Service'', or ''The Yoga of Action''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} After listening to Krishna's spiritual teachings in Chapter 2, Arjuna gets more confounded and returns to the predicament he faces. He wonders if fighting the war is "not so important after all" given Krishna's overview on the pursuit of spiritual wisdom. Krishna replies that there is no way to avoid action (karma) since abstention from work is also an action.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=99–110}} Krishna states that Arjuna must understand and perform his duty (dharma) because everything is connected by the law of cause and effect. Every man or woman is bound by activity. Those who act selfishly create the Karmic cause and are thereby bound to the effect which may be good or bad.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=99–110}} Those who act selflessly for the right cause and strive to do their dharmic duty are doing God's work.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=99–110}} Those who act without craving fruits are free from the Karmic effects because the results never motivate them. Whatever the result, it does not affect them. Their happiness comes from within, and the external world does not bother them.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=99–110}}{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=50–63, 66–70}} According to Flood and Martin, chapter 3 and onwards develops "a theological response to Arjuna's dilemma".<ref>{{cite book|author1=Galvin Flood|author2=Charles Martin|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=PDYEAwAAQBAJ |year=2013 |publisher=W.W. Norton & Company| isbn=978-0-393-34513-1| page=xix}}</ref>


====Chapter 4: Gyana Karma Sanyasa Yoga (42 verses)==== === Chapter 4: Jnana Karma Sanyasa Yoga (42 verses) ===
{{Main|Gyana Karma Sanyasa Yoga}} {{Main|Jnana Karma Sanyasa Yoga}}


Translators title the fourth chapter as ''Jñāna–Karma-Sanyasa yoga'', ''The Religion of Knowledge'', ''Wisdom in Action'', or ''The Yoga of Renunciation of Action through Knowledge''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} Krishna reveals that he has taught this yoga to the Vedic sages. Arjuna questions how Krishna could do this, when those sages lived so long ago, and Krishna was born more recently. Krishna reminds him that everyone is in the cycle of rebirths, and while Arjuna does not remember his previous births, he does. Whenever dharma declines and the purpose of life is forgotten by Man, says Krishna, he returns to re-establish dharma.{{refn|group=note|This is the ] concept found in the Vaishnavism tradition of Hinduism.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=111–122}}}} Every time he returns, he teaches about the inner Self in all beings. The later verses of the chapter return to the discussion of motiveless action and the need to determine the right action, performing it as one's dharma (duty) while renouncing the results, rewards, fruits. The simultaneous outer action with inner renunciation, states Krishna, is the secret to the life of freedom. Action leads to knowledge, while selfless action leads to spiritual awareness, state the last verses of this chapter.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=111–122}} The 4th chapter is the first time where Krishna begins to reveal his divine nature to Arjuna.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Galvin Flood|author2=Charles Martin|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=PDYEAwAAQBAJ |year=2013 |publisher=W.W. Norton & Company| isbn=978-0-393-34513-1| page=xxi}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Arthur Llewellyn Basham|title=The Origins and Development of Classical Hinduism| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2aqgTYlhLikC |year =1991| publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-507349-2|page=93}}</ref> Translators title the fourth chapter as ''Jñāna–Karma-Sanyasa yoga'', ''The Religion of Knowledge'', ''Wisdom in Action'', or ''The Yoga of Renunciation of Action through Knowledge''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} Krishna reveals that he has taught this yoga to the Vedic sages. Arjuna questions how Krishna could do this, when those sages lived so long ago, and Krishna was born more recently. Krishna reminds him that everyone is in the cycle of rebirths, and while Arjuna does not remember his previous births, he does. Whenever dharma declines and the purpose of life is forgotten by Man, says Krishna, he returns to re-establish dharma.{{refn|group=note|This is the ] concept found in the Vaishnavism tradition of Hinduism.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=111–122}}}} Every time he returns, he teaches about the inner Self in all beings. The later verses of the chapter return to the discussion of motiveless action and the need to determine the right action, performing it as one's dharma (duty) while renouncing the results, rewards, and fruits. The simultaneous outer action with inner renunciation, states Krishna, is the secret to the life of freedom. Action leads to knowledge, while selfless action leads to spiritual awareness, state the last verses of this chapter.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=111–122}} The 4th chapter is the first time where Krishna begins to reveal his divine nature to Arjuna.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Galvin Flood|author2=Charles Martin|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=PDYEAwAAQBAJ |year=2013 |publisher=W.W. Norton & Company| isbn=978-0-393-34513-1| page=xxi}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Arthur Llewellyn Basham|title=The Origins and Development of Classical Hinduism| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2aqgTYlhLikC |year =1991| publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-507349-2|page=93}}</ref>


====Chapter 5: Karma Sanyasa Yoga (29 verses)==== === Chapter 5: Karma Sanyasa Yoga (29 verses) ===
{{Main|Karma-Sanyasa Yoga}} {{Main|Karma-Sanyasa Yoga}}


Line 237: Line 284:
It is not those who lack energy It is not those who lack energy
nor those who refrain from action, nor those who refrain from action,
but those who work without expecting reward but those who work without expecting a reward
who attain the goal of meditation, who attain the goal of meditation,
Theirs is true renunciation(]). Theirs is true renunciation(]).
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}} }}


====Chapter 6: Dhyana Yoga (Aatma Samyam Yoga) (47 verses)==== === Chapter 6: Atma Samyama Yoga (47 verses) ===
{{Main|Atma-Samyama Yoga}} {{See also|Samyama}}
Translators title the sixth chapter as ''Dhyana yoga'', ''Religion by Self-Restraint'', ''The Practice of Meditation'', or ''The Yoga of Meditation''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} The chapter opens as a continuation of Krishna's teachings about selfless work and the personality of someone who has renounced the fruits that are found in chapter 5. Krishna says that such self-realized people are impartial to friends and enemies, are beyond good and evil, equally disposed to those who support them or oppose them because they have reached the summit of consciousness. Verses 6.10 and after proceed to summarize the principles of Yoga and meditation in a format similar to but simpler than Patanjali's ''Yogasutra''. It discusses who is a true yogi, and what it takes to reach the state where one harbours no malice towards anyone.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=133–146}}{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=106–120}} Verse 6.47 emphasizes the significance of the soul's faith and loving service to Krishna as the highest form of yoga.{{Sfn|Schweig|2007|p=327-328}}


=== Chapter 7: Jnana Vijnana Yoga (30 verses) ===
Translators title the sixth chapter as ''Dhyana yoga'', ''Religion by Self-Restraint'', ''The Practice of Meditation'', or ''The Yoga of Meditation''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} The chapter opens as a continuation of Krishna's teachings about selfless work and the personality of someone who has renounced the fruits that are found in chapter 5. Krishna says that such self-realized people are impartial to friends and enemies, are beyond good and evil, equally disposed to those who support them or oppose them because they have reached the summit of consciousness. The verses 6.10 and after proceed to summarize the principles of Yoga and meditation in the format similar to but simpler than Patanjali's ''Yogasutra''. It discusses who is a true yogi, and what it takes to reach the state where one harbors no malice towards anyone.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=133–146}}{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=106–120}} Verse 6.47 emphasizes the significance of soul's faith and loving service to Krishna as the highest form of yoga.{{Sfn|Schweig|2007|p=327-328}}

====Chapter 7: Gyana Vigyana Yoga (30 verses)====
{{Main|Jnana-Vijnana Yoga}} {{Main|Jnana-Vijnana Yoga}}


Translators title this chapter as ''Jnana–Vijnana yoga'', ''Religion by Discernment'', ''Wisdom from Realization'', or ''The Yoga of Knowledge and Judgment''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} The seventh chapter opens with Krishna continuing his discourse. He discusses ''jnana'' (knowledge) and ''vijnana'' (realization, understanding) using the ]-] (matter-Self) framework of the ] school of Hindu philosophy, and the ]-] framework of the ] school. The chapter states that evil is the consequence of ignorance and attachment to the impermanent, the elusive Maya. Maya is described as difficult to overcome, but those who rely on Krishna can easily cross beyond Maya and attain ''moksha''. It states that Self-knowledge and union with Purusha (Krishna) are the highest goal of any spiritual pursuit.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=147–156}} Translators title this chapter as ''Jnana–Vijnana yoga'', ''Religion by Discernment'', ''Wisdom from Realization'', or ''The Yoga of Knowledge and Judgment''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} The seventh chapter opens with Krishna continuing his discourse. He discusses ''jnana'' (knowledge) and ''vijnana'' (realization, understanding) using the ]-] (matter-Self) framework of the ] school of Hindu philosophy, and the ]-] framework of the ] school. The chapter states that evil is the consequence of ignorance and attachment to the impermanent, the elusive Maya. Maya is described as difficult to overcome, but those who rely on Krishna can easily cross beyond Maya and attain ''moksha''. It states that Self-knowledge and union with Purusha (Krishna) are the highest goals of any spiritual pursuit.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=147–156}}


====Chapter 8: Akshara Brahma Yoga (28 verses)==== === Chapter 8: Akshara Brahma Yoga (28 verses) ===
{{Main|Akshara Brahma Yoga}} {{Main|Akshara Brahma Yoga}}


Translators title the chapter as '']–Brahma yoga'', ''Religion by Devotion to the One Supreme God'', ''The Eternal Godhead'', or ''The Yoga of the Imperishable Brahman''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} The chapter opens with Arjuna asking questions such as what is Brahman and what is the nature of '']''. Krishna states that his own highest nature is the imperishable Brahman, and that he lives in every creature as the ''adhyatman''. Every being has an impermanent body and an eternal Self, and that "Krishna as Lord" lives within every creature. The chapter discusses cosmology, the nature of death and rebirth.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=157–168}} This chapter contains ] of the Bhagavad Gita. Importance of the last thought before death, differences between material and spiritual worlds, and light and dark paths that a Self takes after death are described.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=157–168}} Krishna advises Arjuna about focusing the mind on the Supreme Deity within the heart through yoga, including ] and chanting sacred mantra "]" to ensure concentration on Krishna at the time of death.{{Sfn|Sutton|2017|p=137}} Translators title the chapter as '']–Brahma yoga'', ''Religion by Devotion to the One Supreme God'', ''The Eternal Godhead'', or ''The Yoga of the Imperishable Brahman''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} The chapter opens with Arjuna asking questions such as what is Brahman and what is the nature of '']''. Krishna states that his own highest nature is the imperishable Brahman and that he lives in every creature as the ''adhyatman''. Every being has an impermanent body and an eternal Self, and that "Krishna as Lord" lives within every creature. The chapter discusses cosmology, the nature of death and rebirth.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=157–168}} This chapter contains ] of the Bhagavad Gita. The importance of the last thought before death, the differences between material and spiritual worlds, and the light and dark paths that a Self takes after death are described.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=157–168}} Krishna advises Arjuna about focusing the mind on the Supreme Deity within the heart through yoga, including ] and chanting sacred mantra "]" to ensure concentration on Krishna at the time of death.{{Sfn|Sutton|2017|p=137}}


====Chapter 9: Raja Vidya Raja Guhya Yoga (34 verses)==== === Chapter 9: Raja Vidya Raja Guhya Yoga (34 verses) ===
Translators title the ninth chapter as ''Raja–]–Raja–Guhya yoga'', ''Religion by the Kingly Knowledge and the Kingly Mystery'', ''The Royal Path'', or ''The Yoga of Sovereign Science and Sovereign Secret''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} Chapter 9 opens with Krishna continuing his discourse as Arjuna listens. Krishna states that he is everywhere and in everything in an unmanifested form, yet he is not in any way limited by them. Eons end, everything dissolves and then he recreates another eon subjecting them to the laws of ''Prakriti'' (nature).{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=169–178}} He equates himself to being the father and the mother of the universe, to being the ], to the three Vedas, to the seed, the goal of life, the refuge and abode of all. The chapter recommends devotional worship of Krishna.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=169–178}} According to theologian Christopher Southgate, verses of this chapter of the Gita are ],{{sfn|Southgate|2005|page=246}} while German physicist and philosopher ] deems the work ].<ref name="Weinstein-India">Max Bernhard Weinsten, ''Welt- und Lebensanschauungen, Hervorgegangen aus Religion, Philosophie und Naturerkenntnis'' ("World and Life Views, Emerging From Religion, Philosophy and Perception of Nature") (1910), p. 213: "Wir werden später sehen, daß die Indier auch den Pandeismus gelehrt haben. Der letzte Zustand besteht in dieser Lehre im Eingehen in die betreffende Gottheit, Brahma oder Wischnu. So sagt in der Bhagavad-Gîtâ Krishna-Wischnu, nach vielen Lehren über ein vollkommenes Dasein."</ref> It may, in fact, be neither of them, and its contents may have no definition with previously developed Western terms. Translators title the ninth chapter as ''Raja–]–Raja–Guhya yoga'', ''Religion by the Kingly Knowledge and the Kingly Mystery'', ''The Royal Path'', or ''The Yoga of Sovereign Science and Sovereign Secret''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} Chapter 9 opens with Krishna continuing his discourse as Arjuna listens. Krishna states that he is everywhere and in everything in an unmanifested form, yet he is not in any way limited by them. Eons end, everything dissolves and then he recreates another eon subjecting them to the laws of ''Prakriti'' (nature).{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=169–178}} He equates himself to being the father and the mother of the universe, to being the ], to the three Vedas, to the seed, the goal of life, the refuge and abode of all. The chapter recommends devotional worship of Krishna.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=169–178}} According to theologian Christopher Southgate, verses of this chapter of the Gita are ],{{sfn|Southgate|2005|page=246}} while German physicist and philosopher ] deems the work ].<ref name="Weinstein-India">Max Bernhard Weinsten, ''Welt- und Lebensanschauungen, Hervorgegangen aus Religion, Philosophie und Naturerkenntnis'' ("World and Life Views, Emerging From Religion, Philosophy and Perception of Nature") (1910), p. 213: "Wir werden später sehen, daß die Indier auch den Pandeismus gelehrt haben. Der letzte Zustand besteht in dieser Lehre im Eingehen in die betreffende Gottheit, Brahma oder Wischnu. So sagt in der Bhagavad-Gîtâ Krishna-Wischnu, nach vielen Lehren über ein vollkommenes Dasein."</ref> It may, in fact, be neither of them, and its contents may have no definition with previously developed Western terms.


] depicting ''Mahabharata'' scenes involving Arjuna-Krishna chariot. Pattadakal is a UNESCO ]. {{circa|700{{nbsp}}CE}}]] ] depicting ''Mahabharata'' scenes involving Arjuna-Krishna chariot. Pattadakal is a UNESCO ]. {{circa|700{{nbsp}}CE}}]]
====Chapter 10: Vibhuti Yoga (42 verses)====


=== Chapter 10: Vibhuti Yoga (42 verses) ===
Translators title the chapter as ''Vibhuti–Vistara–yoga'', ''Religion by the Heavenly Perfections'', ''Divine Splendor'', or ''The Yoga of Divine Manifestations''.<ref name="EBG" />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} When Arjuna asks of the opulences (Vibhuti) of Krishna, he explains how all the entities are his forms. He reveals his divine being in greater detail as the ultimate cause of all material and spiritual existence, as one who transcends all opposites and who is beyond any duality. Nevertheless, at Arjuna's behest, Krishna states that the following are his major opulences: He is the ''atman'' in all beings, Arjuna's innermost Self, the compassionate Vishnu, ], Indra, Shiva-Rudra, Ananta, Yama, as well as the Om, Vedic sages, time, Gayatri mantra, and the science of Self-knowledge. Krishna says, "Among the Pandavas, I am Arjuna," implying he is manifest in all the beings, including Arjuna. He also says that he is ] when he says, "Among the wielders of weapons, I am Rama". Arjuna accepts Krishna as the ''purushottama'' (Supreme Being).{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=179–190}}
Translators title the chapter as ''Vibhuti–Vistara–yoga'', ''Religion by the Heavenly Perfections'', ''Divine Splendor'', or ''The Yoga of Divine Manifestations''.<ref name="EBG" />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} When Arjuna asks of the opulence (Vibhuti) of Krishna, he explains how all the entities are his forms. He reveals his divine being in greater detail as the ultimate cause of all material and spiritual existence, as one who transcends all opposites and who is beyond any duality. Nevertheless, at Arjuna's behest, Krishna states that the following are his major opulence: He is the ''atman'' in all beings, Arjuna's innermost Self, the compassionate Vishnu, ], Indra, Shiva-Rudra, Ananta, Yama, as well as the Om, Vedic sages, time, ], and the science of Self-knowledge. Krishna says, "Among the Pandavas, I am Arjuna," implying he is manifest in all the beings, including Arjuna. He also says that he is ] when he says, "Among the wielders of weapons, I am Rama". Arjuna accepts Krishna as the ''purushottama'' (Supreme Being).{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=179–190}}


====Chapter 11: Vishvarupa Darshana Yoga (55 verses)==== === Chapter 11: Vishvarupa Darshana Yoga (55 verses) ===
{{See also|Vishvarupa}} {{See also|Vishvarupa}}
Translators title the chapter as ''Vishvarupa–Darshana yoga'', ''The Manifesting of the One and Manifold'', ''The Cosmic Vision'', or ''The Yoga of the Vision of the Cosmic Form''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} On Arjuna's request, Krishna displays his "universal form" (''Viśvarūpa'').{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=191–202}} Arjuna asks Krishna to see the Eternal with his own eyes. The Krishna then "gives" him a "heavenly" eye so that he can recognize the All-Form Vishvarupa of the Supreme God Vishnu or Krishna. Arjuna sees the divine form, with his face turned all around, as if the light of a thousand suns suddenly burst forth in the sky. And he sees neither end, middle nor beginning. And he sees the gods and the host of beings contained within him. He also sees the Lord of the gods and the universe as the Lord of ], who devours his creatures in his "maw". And he sees people rushing to their doom in haste. And the Exalted One says that even the fighters are all doomed to death. And he, Arjuna, is his instrument to kill those who are already "killed" by him. Arjuna folds his hands trembling and worships the Most High. Translators title the chapter as ''Vishvarupa–Darshana yoga'', ''The Manifesting of the One and Manifold'', ''The Cosmic Vision'', or ''The Yoga of the Vision of the Cosmic Form''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} On Arjuna's request, Krishna displays his "universal form" (''Viśvarūpa'').{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=191–202}} Arjuna asks Krishna to see the Eternal with his own eyes. The Krishna then "gives" him a "heavenly" eye so that he can recognize the All-Form Vishvarupa of the Supreme God Vishnu or Krishna. Arjuna sees the divine form, with his face turned all around as if the light of a thousand suns suddenly burst forth in the sky. And he sees neither end, middle nor beginning. And he sees the gods and the host of beings contained within him. He also sees the Lord of the gods and the universe as the Lord of ], who devours his creatures in his "maw". And he sees people rushing to their doom in haste. And the Exalted One says that even the fighters are all doomed to death. And he, Arjuna, is his instrument to kill those who are already "killed" by him. Arjuna folds his hands trembling and worships the Most High.
This is an idea found in the '']'' and many later Hindu texts, where it is a symbolism for '']'' (Self) and '']'' (Absolute Reality) eternally pervading all beings and all existence.<ref>{{cite book|author=T. S. Maxwell|title=Viśvarūpa|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=6AbWAAAAMAAJ|year=1988|publisher=Oxford University Press|pages=131–136|isbn=978-0-19-562117-4}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author1=Kapila Vatsyayan|author2=Bettina Bäumer|author3=Ramesh Chandra Sharma|title=Kalātattvakośa |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dhRKCh70ouMC |year=1988 |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |isbn=978-81-208-1917-7|pages=79–81, 87–88}}</ref> Chapter 11, states Eknath Eswaran, describes Arjuna entering first into ''savikalpa ]'' (a particular form), and then ''nirvikalpa samadhi'' (a universal form) as he gets an understanding of Krishna. A part of the verse from this chapter was recited by ] in a 1965 television documentary about the atomic bomb.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=191–202}} This is an idea found in the '']'' and many later Hindu texts, where it is a symbolism for '']'' (Self) and '']'' (Absolute Reality) eternally pervading all beings and all existence.<ref>{{cite book|author=T. S. Maxwell|title=Viśvarūpa|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=6AbWAAAAMAAJ|year=1988|publisher=Oxford University Press|pages=131–136|isbn=978-0-19-562117-4}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author1=Kapila Vatsyayan|author2=Bettina Bäumer|author3=Ramesh Chandra Sharma|title=Kalātattvakośa |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dhRKCh70ouMC |year=1988 |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |isbn=978-81-208-1917-7|pages=79–81, 87–88}}</ref> Chapter 11, states Eknath Eswaran, describes Arjuna entering first into ''savikalpa ]'' (a particular form), and then ''nirvikalpa samadhi'' (a universal form) as he gets an understanding of Krishna. A part of the verse from this chapter was recited by ] in a 1965 television documentary about the atomic bomb.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=191–202}}


====Chapter 12: Bhakti Yoga (20 verses)==== === Chapter 12: Bhakti Yoga (20 verses) ===
{{See also|Bhakti yoga}} {{See also|Bhakti yoga}}
Translators title this chapter as ''Bhakti yoga'', ''The Religion of Faith'', ''The Way of Love'', or ''The Yoga of Devotion''.<ref name="EBG" />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} In this chapter, Krishna glorifies the path of love and devotion to God. Krishna describes the process of devotional service (Bhakti yoga). Translator ] contrasts this "way of love" with the "path of knowledge" stressed by the Upanishads, saying that "when God is loved in personal aspect, the way is vastly easier". He can be projected as "a merciful father, a divine mother, a wise friend, a passionate beloved, or even a mischievous child".{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=203–210}} The text states that combining "action with inner renunciation" with the love of Krishna as a personal God leads to peace. In the last eight verses of this chapter, Krishna states that he loves those who have compassion for all living beings, are content with whatever comes their way, and live a detached life that is impartial and selfless, unaffected by fleeting pleasure or pain, neither craving for praise nor depressed by criticism.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=203–210}}<ref>{{cite journal | last=Moffitt | first=John | title=The Bhagavad Gita as Way-Shower to the Transcendental | journal=Theological Studies | publisher=Sage Publications | volume=38 | issue=2 | year=1977 | doi=10.1177/004056397703800204 | pages=323, context: 316–331| s2cid=170697131 }}</ref> Translators title this chapter as ''Bhakti yoga'', ''The Religion of Faith'', ''The Way of Love'', or ''The Yoga of Devotion''.<ref name="EBG" />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} In this chapter, Krishna glorifies the path of love and devotion to God. Krishna describes the process of devotional service (Bhakti yoga). Translator ] contrasts this "way of love" with the "path of knowledge" stressed by the Upanishads, saying that "when God is loved in personal aspect, the way is vastly easier". He can be projected as "a merciful father, a divine mother, a wise friend, a passionate beloved, or even a mischievous child".{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=203–210}} The text states that combining "action with inner renunciation" with the love of Krishna as a personal God leads to peace. In the last eight verses of this chapter, Krishna states that he loves those who have compassion for all living beings, are content with whatever comes their way, and live a detached life that is impartial and selfless, unaffected by fleeting pleasure or pain, neither craving for praise nor depressed by criticism.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=203–210}}<ref>{{cite journal | last=Moffitt | first=John | title=The Bhagavad Gita as Way-Shower to the Transcendental | journal=Theological Studies | publisher=Sage Publications | volume=38 | issue=2 | year=1977 | doi=10.1177/004056397703800204 | pages=323, context: 316–331| s2cid=170697131 }}</ref>


====Chapter 13: Kshetra Kshetragya Vibhaga Yoga (34 verses)==== === Chapter 13: Kshetra Kshetrajna Vibhaga Yoga (35 verses) ===
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| footer = Bhagavad Gita and related commentary literature exists in numerous Indian languages. | footer = Bhagavad Gita and related commentary literature exists in numerous Indian languages.
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| caption1 = Sanskrit, Malayalam script (Kerala) {{circa|1500|1600{{nbsp}}CE}} | caption1 = Sanskrit, Malayalam script (Kerala) {{circa|1500|1600{{nbsp}}CE}}
| image2 = 18th century Bhagavad Gita and bhasya, Sanskrit, Kannada script, Karnataka.jpg | image2 = 18th century Bhagavad Gita and bhasya, Sanskrit, Kannada script, Karnataka.jpg
| caption2 = Sanskrit, Kannada script (Karnataka) {{circa|1700|1800{{nbsp}}CE}} | caption2 = Sanskrit, Kannada script (Karnataka) {{circa|1700|1800{{nbsp}}CE}}
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Translators title this chapter as ''Ksetra–Ksetrajna Vibhaga yoga'', ''Religion by Separation of Matter and Spirit'', ''The Field and the Knower'', or ''The Yoga of Difference between the Field and Field-Knower''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} The chapter opens with Krishna continuing his discourse. He describes the difference between the transient perishable physical body (''kshetra'') and the immutable eternal Self (''kshetrajna''). The presentation explains the difference between ''ahamkara'' (ego) and ''atman'' (Self), from there between individual consciousness and universal consciousness. The knowledge of one's true self is linked to the realization of the Self.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=211–220}}{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=216–221}} The 13th chapter of the Gita offers the clearest enunciation of the ] philosophy, states Basham, by explaining the difference between field (material world) and the knower (Self), ''prakriti'' and ''purusha''.<ref>{{cite book|author=Arthur Llewellyn Basham|title=The Origins and Development of Classical Hinduism| url= https://books.google.com/books?id=2aqgTYlhLikC |year =1991| publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-507349-2|pages=88–89}}</ref> According to Miller, this is the chapter which "redefines the battlefield as the human body, the material realm in which one struggles to know oneself" where human dilemmas are presented as a "symbolic field of interior warfare".{{sfn|Miller|1986|page=12}} Translators title this chapter as ''Ksetra–Ksetrajna Vibhaga yoga'', ''Religion by Separation of Matter and Spirit'', ''The Field and the Knower'', or ''The Yoga of Difference between the Field and Field-Knower''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} The chapter opens with Krishna continuing his discourse. He describes the difference between the transient perishable physical body (''kshetra'') and the immutable eternal Self (''kshetrajna''). The presentation explains the difference between ''ahamkara'' (ego) and ''atman'' (Self), from there between individual consciousness and universal consciousness. The knowledge of one's true self is linked to the realization of the Self.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=211–220}}{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=216–221}} The 13th chapter of the Gita offers the clearest enunciation of the ] philosophy, states Basham, by explaining the difference between field (material world) and the knower (Self), ''prakriti'' and ''purusha''.<ref>{{cite book|author=Arthur Llewellyn Basham|title=The Origins and Development of Classical Hinduism| url= https://books.google.com/books?id=2aqgTYlhLikC |year =1991| publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-507349-2|pages=88–89}}</ref> According to Miller, this is the chapter which "redefines the battlefield as the human body, the material realm in which one struggles to know oneself" where human dilemmas are presented as a "symbolic field of interior warfare".{{sfn|Miller|1986|page=12}}


====Chapter 14: Gunatraya Vibhaga Yoga (27 verses)==== === Chapter 14: Gunatraya Vibhaga Yoga (27 verses) ===
Translators title the fourteenth chapter as ''Gunatraya–Vibhaga yoga'', ''Religion by Separation from the Qualities'', ''The Forces of Evolution'', or ''The Yoga of the Division of Three Gunas''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} Krishna continues his discourse from the previous chapter. Krishna explains the difference between ''purusha'' and ''prakriti'', by mapping human experiences to three '']s'' (tendencies, qualities).{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=221–228}} These are listed as ''sattva'', ''rajas'' and ''tamas''. All thoughts, words and actions are filled with ] (truthfulness, purity, clarity), ] (movement, energy, passion) or ] (darkness, inertia, stability). Whoever understands everything that exists as the interaction of these three states of being can gain knowledge. When asked by Arjuna how he recognizes the one who has conquered the three gunas, Krishna replies: He who remains calm and composed when a guna 'arises', who always maintains equanimity, who is steadfast in joy and sorrow, who remains the same when he is reviled or admired, who renounces every action (from the ego), detaches himself from the power of the gunas. Likewise, the one who seeks me with unwavering love succeeds in doing so. He too transcends the three gunas and can become one with Brahman. All phenomena and individual personalities are thus a combination of all three ''gunas'' in varying and ever-changing proportions. The ''gunas'' affect the ego, but not the Self, according to the text.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=221–228}} This chapter also relies on Samkhya theories.{{sfn|Miller|1986|pages=12–13, 59}}{{sfn|J.A.B. van Buitenen|2013|pp==35–36}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=17–18}} Translators title the fourteenth chapter as ''Gunatraya–Vibhaga yoga'', ''Religion by Separation from the Qualities'', ''The Forces of Evolution'', or ''The Yoga of the Division of Three Gunas''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} Krishna continues his discourse from the previous chapter. Krishna explains the difference between ''purusha'' and ''prakriti'', by mapping human experiences to three '']s'' (tendencies, qualities).{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=221–228}} These are listed as ''sattva'', ''rajas'' and ''tamas''. All thoughts, words and actions are filled with ] (truthfulness, purity, clarity), ] (movement, energy, passion) or ] (darkness, inertia, stability). These gunas influence future rebirths, with sattva leading to higher states, rajas to continued material existence, and tamas to lower forms of life.{{Sfn|Sutton|2017|p=218}} Whoever understands everything that exists as the interaction of these three states of being can gain knowledge, transcend all three gunas and achieve liberation.{{Sfn|Sutton|2017|p=215}} When asked by Arjuna how he recognizes the one who has conquered the three gunas, Krishna replies that it is one who remains calm and composed when a guna 'arises', who always maintains equanimity, who is steadfast in joy and sorrow, who remains the same when he is reviled or admired, who renounces every action (from the ego), detaches himself from the power of the gunas. Liberation can also be reached by unwavering devotion to Krishna, which enables one to transcend the three gunas and become one with Brahman. All phenomena and individual personalities are thus a combination of all three ''gunas'' in varying and ever-changing proportions. The ''gunas'' affect the ego, but not the Self, according to the text.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=221–228}} This chapter also relies on Samkhya theories.{{sfn|Miller|1986|pages=12–13, 59}}{{sfn|Buitenen|2013|pp==35–36}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=17–18}}


====Chapter 15: Purushottama Yoga (20 verses)==== === Chapter 15: Purushottama Yoga (20 verses) ===
{{See also|Purushottama}} {{See also|Purushottama}}
Translators title the chapter as ''Purushottama yoga'', ''Religion by Attaining the Supreme Krishna'', ''The Supreme Self'', or ''The Yoga of the Supreme Purusha''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} The fifteenth chapter expounds on Krishna's theology, in the Vaishnava Bhakti tradition of Hinduism. Krishna discusses the nature of God, according to Easwaran, wherein Krishna not only transcends the impermanent body (matter) but also transcends the ''atman'' (Self) in every being.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=229–234}} It follows an image of an upside tree with roots in the sky, without beginning and without end. It is necessary to cut down its shoots (sense objects), branches and the solid root with the axe of equanimity and "non-attachment" and thereby reach the immovable spirit (Brahman). Later it is said that the supreme ] (]) is greater than this immutable mind (akshara) and also greater than the mind that became things (kshara). He is the one who carries this entire threefold world and who, as Lord, governs and encompasses it. Whoever truly recognizes this has reached the ultimate goal. According to Franklin Edgerton, the verses in this chapter, in association with select verses in other chapters, make the metaphysics of the Gita to be ]. However, its overall thesis, according to Edgerton, is more complex because other verses teach the Upanishadic doctrines and "through its God the Gita seems after all to arrive at an ultimate monism; the essential part, the fundamental element, in every thing, is after all One — is God."<ref name="Franklin Edgerton 1952 44–45 with footnotes, context: pp. 30–54 Part 2">{{cite book|author=Franklin Edgerton| title=The Bhagavad Gita, Part 2| publisher= Harvard University Press|year=1952|pages=44–45 with footnotes, context: pp. 30–54 (Part 2)}}</ref> Translators title the chapter as ''Purushottama yoga'', ''Religion by Attaining the Supreme Krishna'', ''The Supreme Self'', or ''The Yoga of the Supreme Purusha''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} The fifteenth chapter expounds on Krishna's theology, in the Vaishnava Bhakti tradition of Hinduism. Krishna discusses the nature of God wherein Krishna not only transcends the impermanent body (matter) but also transcends the ''atman'' (]) in every being.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=229–234}} The chapter uses the metaphor of the Ashvattha (banyan) tree to illustrate the material world's entanglements, emphasizes detachment as the means to liberation, highlights the importance of true knowledge, and explains that those who realize this knowledge transcend the need for Vedic rituals. It follows an image of an upside tree with roots in the sky, without a beginning and end. It is necessary to cut down its shoots (sense objects), branches and solid root with the axe of equanimity and detachment and thereby reach the original person (''adyam purusham'').{{Sfn|Sutton|2017|pp=220-221}} Later, Krishna says that he is known as ] in both common speech and the Veda, sustaining and governing the entire threefold world and that he is greater than the kshara (perishable), which includes all living beings, and the ] (imperishable), which is beyond kshara. Whoever truly recognizes this has reached the ultimate goal.{{Sfn|Sutton|2017|pp=225}} According to Franklin Edgerton, the verses in this chapter, in association with select verses in other chapters, make the metaphysics of the Gita to be ]. However, its overall thesis, according to Edgerton, is more complex because other verses teach the Upanishadic doctrines and "through its God, the Gita seems after all to arrive at an ultimate monism; the essential part, the fundamental element, in everything, is after all One — is God."<ref name="Franklin Edgerton 1952 44–45 with footnotes, context: pp. 30–54 Part 2">{{cite book|author=Franklin Edgerton| title=The Bhagavad Gita, Part 2| publisher= Harvard University Press|year=1952|pages=44–45 with footnotes, context: pp. 30–54 (Part 2)}}</ref>


====Chapter 16: Daivasura Sampad Vibhaga Yoga (24 verses)==== === Chapter 16: Daivasura Sampad Vibhaga Yoga (24 verses) ===
Translators title the chapter as ''Daivasura–Sampad–Vibhaga yoga'', ''The Separateness of the Divine and Undivine'', ''Two Paths'', or ''The Yoga of the Division between the Divine and the Demonic''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} According to Easwaran, this is an unusual chapter where two types of human nature are expounded, one leading to happiness and the other to suffering. Krishna identifies these human traits to be divine and demonic respectively. He states that truthfulness, self-restraint, sincerity, love for others, desire to serve others, being detached, avoiding anger, avoiding harm to all living creatures, fairness, compassion and patience are marks of the divine nature. The opposite of these are demonic, such as cruelty, conceit, hypocrisy and being inhumane, states Krishna.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=235–242}}<ref>{{cite book|author=Franklin Edgerton| title=The Bhagavad Gita, Part 2| publisher= Harvard University Press|year=1952|pages=82–83 (Part 2), 149–153 (Part 1)}}</ref>{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=253–257}} Some of the verses in Chapter 16 may be polemics directed against competing Indian religions, according to Basham.<ref name=basham1991p95/> The competing tradition may be the materialists (]), states Fowler.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=253–257}} Translators title the chapter as ''Daivasura–Sampad–Vibhaga yoga'', ''The Separateness of the Divine and Undivine'', ''Two Paths'', or ''The Yoga of the Division between the Divine and the Demonic''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} According to Easwaran, this is an unusual chapter where Krishna describes two types of human nature: divine (''daivi sampad''), leading to happiness, and demonic (''asuri sampad''), leading to suffering. He states that truthfulness, self-restraint, sincerity, love for others, desire to serve others, being detached, avoiding anger, avoiding harm to all living creatures, fairness, compassion and patience are marks of the divine nature. The opposite of these are demonic, such as cruelty, conceit, hypocrisy and being inhumane, states Krishna.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=235–242}}<ref>{{cite book|author=Franklin Edgerton| title=The Bhagavad Gita, Part 2| publisher= Harvard University Press|year=1952|pages=82–83 (Part 2), 149–153 (Part 1)}}</ref>{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=253–257}} Some of the verses in Chapter 16 may be polemics directed against competing Indian religions, according to Basham.<ref name=basham1991p95/> The competing tradition may be the materialists (]), states Fowler.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=253–257}}


====Chapter 17: Shraddhatraya Vibhaga Yoga (28 verses)==== === Chapter 17: Shraddhatraya Vibhaga Yoga (28 verses) ===
Translators title the chapter as ''Shraddhatraya-Vibhaga yoga'', ''Religion by the Threefold Kinds of Faith'', ''The Power of Faith'', or ''The Yoga of the Threefold Faith''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} Krishna qualifies various aspects of human life, including faith, thoughts, deeds, and eating habits, in relation to the three ''gunas'' (modes): ''sattva'' (goodness), ''rajas'' (passion), and ''tamas'' (ignorance). Krishna explains how these modes influence different aspects of human behavior and spirituality, how one can align with the mode of goodness to advance on their spiritual journey. The final verse of the Chapter stresses that genuine faith ('']'') is essential for spiritual growth. Actions without faith are meaningless, both in the material and spiritual realms, highlighting the significance of faith in one's spiritual journey.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=243–250}} Translators title the chapter as ''Shraddhatraya-Vibhaga yoga'', ''Religion by the Threefold Kinds of Faith'', ''The Power of Faith'', or ''The Yoga of the Threefold Faith''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} Krishna qualifies various aspects of human life, including faith, thoughts, deeds, and eating habits, in relation to the three ''gunas'' (modes): ''sattva'' (goodness), ''rajas'' (passion), and ''tamas'' (ignorance). Krishna explains how these modes influence different aspects of human behaviour and spirituality, and how one can align with the mode of goodness to advance on their spiritual journey. The final verse of the Chapter stresses that genuine faith ('']'') is essential for spiritual growth. Actions without faith are meaningless, both in the material and spiritual realms, highlighting the significance of faith in one's spiritual journey.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=243–250}}


====Chapter 18: Moksha Sanyasa Yoga (78 verses)==== === Chapter 18: Moksha Sanyasa Yoga (78 verses) ===
Translators title the chapter as ''Moksha–Sanyasa yoga'', ''Religion by Deliverance and Renunciation'', ''Freedom and Renunciation'', or ''The Yoga of Liberation and Renunciation''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} In the final and longest chapter, the Gita offers a final summary of its teachings in the previous chapters.<ref>{{cite book|author=Franklin Edgerton| title=The Bhagavad Gita, Part 2| publisher= Harvard University Press|year=1952|pages=70–71 (Part 2, Chapter IX)}}</ref> It gives a comprehensive overview of Bhagavad Gita's teachings, highlighting self-realization, duty, and surrender to Krishna to attain liberation and inner peace.{{Sfn|Davis|2014|p=32}} It begins with the discussion of spiritual pursuits through ''sannyasa'' (renunciation, monastic life) and spiritual pursuits while living in the world as a householder. It teaches "''karma-phala-tyaga''" (renunciation of the fruits of actions), emphasizing the renunciation of attachment to the outcomes of actions and performing duties with selflessness and devotion.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=251–265}} Translators title the chapter as ''Moksha–Sanyasa yoga'', ''Religion by Deliverance and Renunciation'', ''Freedom and Renunciation'', or ''The Yoga of Liberation and Renunciation''.<ref name=EBG />{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=vii–viii}} In the final and longest chapter, the Gita offers a final summary of its teachings in the previous chapters.<ref>{{cite book|author=Franklin Edgerton| title=The Bhagavad Gita, Part 2| publisher= Harvard University Press|year=1952|pages=70–71 (Part 2, Chapter IX)}}</ref> It gives a comprehensive overview of Bhagavad Gita's teachings, highlighting self-realization, duty, and surrender to Krishna to attain liberation and inner peace.{{Sfn|Davis|2014|p=32}} It begins with the discussion of spiritual pursuits through ''sannyasa'' (renunciation, monastic life) and spiritual pursuits while living in the world as a householder. It teaches "''karma-phala-tyaga''" (renunciation of the fruits of actions), emphasizing the renunciation of attachment to the outcomes of actions and performing duties with selflessness and devotion.{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|pp=251–265}}


== Themes covered== == Themes ==
===Theology===
==== The nature of God ====
The Gita adopts the Upanishadic concept of Absolute Reality (]), a shift from the earlier ritual-driven Vedic religion to one abstracting and internalizing spiritual experiences.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=xxxiii–xxiv}}{{sfn|Zaehner|1969|pp=30–32, 36–41}} According to Jeaneane Fowler, the Gita builds on the Upanishadic Brahman theme, conceptualized to be that which is everywhere, unaffected, constant Absolute, indescribable and ''nirguna'' (abstract, without features). This Absolute in the Gita is neither a He nor a She, but a "neuter principle", an "It or That".{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=xxxiii–xxiv}}{{sfn|Zaehner|1969|pp=30–32, 36–41}}


===Dharma===
{{multiple image|perrow = 2|total_width=260
{{Main|Dharma}}
| image1 = Vishnuvishvarupa.jpg
Dharma is a prominent paradigm of the ''Mahabharata'', and it is referenced in the Gita as well. The term ''dharma'' has several meanings.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|p=2}} Fundamentally, it refers to that which is right or just.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|p=2}} Contextually, it also means the essence of "duty, law, class, social norms, ritual and cosmos itself" in the text, in the sense "the way things should be in all these different dimensions".{{sfn|Fowler|2012|p=2}} According to Zaehner, the term ''dharma'' means "duty" in the Gita{{'}}s context; in verse 2.7, it refers to the "right ", and in 14.27 to the "eternal law of righteousness".{{sfn|Zaehner|1969|pp=123, 382}}
| image2 = Bazaar art print of Bhavadgita, c. mid-1900's.jpg
| image3 = Vishvarupa Vishnu LACMA M.83.248.1.jpg
| image4 = Le temple de Changu Narayan (Bhaktapur) (8567805757).jpg
| footer = Chapter 11 of the Gita refers to Krishna as '']'' (above). This is an idea found in the ''Rigveda''.<ref>{{cite book|author=T.S. Maxwell|title=Viśvarūpa|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6AbWAAAAMAAJ|year=1988|publisher=Oxford University Press|pages=131–135|isbn=978-0-19-562117-4}}</ref> The ''Vishvarupa'' omniform has been interpreted as symbolism for Absolute Reality, God or Self that is in all creatures, everywhere, eternally.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Kapila Vatsyayan|author2=Bettina Bäumer|author3=Ramesh Chandra Sharma|title=Kalātattvakośa |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dhRKCh70ouMC |year=1988 |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |isbn=978-81-208-1917-7|pages=79–81, 88}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=R.D. Ranade|title=Mysticism in Maharashtra: Indian Mysticism|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=73vbTVsPga0C |year=1982|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass|isbn=978-81-208-0576-7|pages=67–68}}</ref>}}
Like some of the Upanishads, the Gita does not limit itself to the ''nirguna'' Brahman. It teaches both the abstract and the personalized Brahman (God), the latter in the form of Krishna.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=xxxiii–xxiv}}{{sfn|Zaehner|1969|pp=30–32, 36–41}} It accomplishes this synthesis by projecting the ''nirguna'' Brahman as higher than ''saguna'' or personalized Brahman, where the ''nirguna'' Brahman "exists when everything else does not".{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=xxxiii–xxv}}<ref name="Bryant2007p312">{{cite book|author=Edwin F. Bryant| title=Krishna: A Sourcebook |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2n4VDAAAQBAJ |year=2007| publisher=Oxford University Press | isbn= 978-0-19-972431-4|pages =312–315}}</ref> The text blurs any distinction between a personalized God and impersonal absolute reality by amalgamating the two and using the concepts interchangeably in later chapters.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=xxxiii–xxv}} This theme has led scholars to call the Gita panentheistic,{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=xxxiii–xxiv}} theistic as well as monistic.{{sfn|Edgerton|1952|pp=44–45 with footnote 1}}{{sfn|Raju|1992|p=211}}{{sfn|Eliot Deutsch| Rohit Dalvi| 2004| pp= 61–62}}


Few verses in the Bhagavad Gita deal with dharma, according to the Indologist Paul Hacker, but the theme of dharma is broadly important.{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=260}} In Chapter 1, responding to ]'s despondency, ] asks him to follow his ''sva-dharma'',{{sfn|Hacker|1958|pp=1–15}} "the dharma that belongs to a particular man (Arjuna) as a member of a particular '']'', (i.e., the ''kshatriya'' – the warrior varna)".{{sfn|Hacker|1958|p=261}} According to Paul Hacker, the term ''dharma'' has additional meanings in the context of Arjuna. It is more broadly, the "duty" and a "metaphysically congealed act" for Arjuna.{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=261}} According to the Indologist Jacqueline Hirst, the ''dharma'' theme is "of significance only at the beginning and end of the Gita" and this may have been a way to perhaps link the Gita to the context of the ''Mahabharata''.<ref name="Hirst1997p48">{{cite book|author=Jacqueline Hirst|editor=Julius Lipner|title=The Fruits of Our Desiring: An Enquiry Into the Ethics of the Bhagavadgītā for Our Times |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=tk9YBPOl36UC&pg=PA48|year=1997|publisher=Bayeux|isbn=978-1-896209-30-2|page=48}}</ref>
==== The nature of Self ====
The Gita, states Fowler, "thoroughly accepts" '']'' as a foundational concept.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|p=xxxvi}} In the Upanishads, this is the Brahmanical idea that all beings have a "permanent real self", the true essence, the Self it refers to as ''Atman'' (Self).<ref>{{cite book|author=Juan Mascaró|title=The Bhagavad Gita|url=https://archive.org/details/bhagavadgita00masc|url-access=registration|year=1962|publisher=Penguin|isbn=978-0-14-044121-5|pages=xiv–xviii}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Paul Deussen|title=Sixty Upaniṣads of the Veda|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8mSpQo9q-tIC|year=1980|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass|isbn=978-81-208-1468-4|pages=409–410}}</ref><ref>'''''' , Oxford Dictionaries, Oxford University Press (2012), '''Quote''': "1. real self of the individual; 2. a person's Self";<br />'''''' John Bowker (2000), The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions, Oxford University Press, {{ISBN|978-0-19-280094-7}}, See entry for Atman;<br />'''''' WJ Johnson (2009), ], Oxford University Press, {{ISBN|978-0-19-861025-0}}, See entry for Atman (self). {{ODNBsub}}</ref>{{refn|group=note|This contrasts with a few competing schools of Indian religions which denied the concept of Self.<ref>John C. Plott et al. (2000), Global History of Philosophy: The Axial Age, Volume 1, Motilal Banarsidass, {{ISBN|978-81-208-0158-5}}, p. 63, Quote: "The Buddhist schools reject any Ātman concept. As we have already observed, this is the basic and ineradicable distinction between Hinduism and Buddhism".</ref><ref>'''''' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210122042635/https://www.britannica.com/topic/anatta |date=22 January 2021 }}, Encyclopædia Britannica (2013), '''Quote:''' "Anatta in Buddhism, the doctrine that there is in humans no permanent, underlying Self. The concept of anatta, or anatman, is a departure from the Hindu belief in atman ("the self").";<br />'''''' Steven Collins (1994), Religion and Practical Reason (Editors: Frank Reynolds, David Tracy), State Univ of New York Press, {{ISBN|978-0-7914-2217-5}}, p. 64; '''Quote:''' "Central to Buddhist soteriology is the doctrine of not-self (Pali: anattā, Sanskrit: anātman, the opposed doctrine of ātman is central to Brahmanical thought). Put very briefly, this is the doctrine that human beings have no soul, no self, no unchanging essence.";<br />'''''' Edward Roer (Translator), {{Google books|3uwDAAAAMAAJ|Shankara's Introduction|page=2}} to ''Brihad Aranyaka Upanishad'', pp. 2–4;<br />'''''' KN Jayatilleke (2010), Early Buddhist Theory of Knowledge, {{ISBN|978-81-208-0619-1}}, pp. 246–249, from note 385 onwards;<br />'''''' Bruno Nagel (2000), Roy Perrett (editor), Philosophy of Religion: Indian Philosophy, Routledge, {{ISBN|978-0-8153-3611-2}}, p. 33, '''Quote:''' "The dispute with Buddhists, who do not accept an imperishable Self, gives the Atman schools a chance to articulate the intellectual aspects of their way to meditative liberation".</ref>}} In the Upanishads that preceded the Gita, such as the '']'', the salvational goal is to know and realize this Self, a knowledge that is devoid of the delusions of the instinctive "I, mine" egoism typically connected with the body and material life processes that are impermanent and transient. The Gita accepts ''atman'' as the pure, unchanging, ultimate real essence.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=xxxv, xxxvii–xix}}


According to Malinar, "Arjuna's crisis and some of the arguments put forward to call him to action are connected to the debates on war and peace in the '']''."{{sfn|Malinar|2007|p=36}} The ''Udyoga Parva'' presents many views about the nature of a warrior, his duty and what calls for heroic action. While ] presents it as a matter of status, social norms, and fate, ] states that the heroic warrior never submits, knows no fear and has the duty to protect people.{{sfn|Malinar|2007|pp=36–41}} The '']'' sets the stage for two ideologies in conflict and two massive armies gathered for what each considers as a righteous and necessary war. In this context, the Gita advises Arjuna to do his holy duty (''sva-dharma'') as a warrior: fight and kill.{{sfn|Miller|2004|p=3}}{{sfn|Michaels|2004|p=59}}{{sfn|Malinar|2007|pp=36–39}}
==== The nature of the world ====
The Gita considers the world to be transient, all bodies and matter as impermanent. Everything that constitutes '']'' (nature, matter) is process driven and has a finite existence. It is born, grows, matures, decays, and dies. It considers this transient reality as ]. Like the Upanishads, the Gita focuses on what it considers real in this world of change, impermanence, and finitude.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp= xxxix–xl}}{{sfn|Zaehner|1969|pp=13–15, 254}} To build its theological framework about the world, the text relies on the theories found in the Samkhya and Vedanta schools of Hinduism.{{sfn|Zaehner|1969|pp=13–15, 254}}


According to the Indologist Barbara Miller, the text frames heroism not in terms of physical abilities, but instead in terms of effort and inner commitment to fulfil a warrior's ''dharma'' on the battlefield.{{sfn| Miller|1986|pp=1–8}} War is depicted as a horror, the impending slaughter a cause for self-doubt, yet at stake is the spiritual struggle against evil.{{sfn| Miller|1986|pp=1–8}} The Gita's message emphasizes that personal moral ambivalence must be addressed, the warrior needs to rise above "personal and social values" and understand what is at stake and "why he must fight". The text explores the "paradoxical interconnectedness of disciplined action and freedom".{{sfn| Miller|1986|pp=1–8}}
==== Brahman-atman ====
The Upanishads developed the equation "Atman = Brahman", states Fowler, and this belief is central to the Gita.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp= xxxix–xl}} This equation is, however, interpreted in a number of ways by different sub-schools of Vedanta. In the Gita, the Self of each human being is considered to be identical to every other human being and all beings, but it "does not support an identity with the Brahman", according to Fowler.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp= xxxix–xl}} According to Raju, the Gita supports this identity and spiritual monism, but as a form of synthesis with a personal God.{{sfn|Raju|1992|p=211}} According to Edgerton, the authors of the Gita rely on their concept of a personalized God (Krishna) to ultimately arrive at an ultimate monism, where the devotee realizes that Krishna is the essential part, the real fundamental element within everyone and everything. Krishna is simultaneously one and all.<ref name="Franklin Edgerton 1952 44–45 with footnotes, context: pp. 30–54 Part 2"/> According to ], the Gita is teaching that "when one sees the entire universe as pervaded by the single Universal Spirit , one contemplates, marvels, and falls in love with its amazing glory. Having experienced that Truth oneself, all doubts are dispelled. This is how the flower of devotion evolves into the fruit of knowledge."{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=xvii}}


The first reference to ''dharma'' in the Bhagavad Gita occurs in its first verse, where ] refers to the Kurukshetra, the location of the battlefield, as the ''Field of Dharma'', "The Field of Righteousness or Truth".{{sfn|Fowler|2012|p=2}} According to Fowler, dharma in this verse may refer to the '']'', "what Hindus understand as their religion, for it is a term that encompasses wide aspects of religious and traditional thought and is more readily used for religion".{{sfn|Fowler|2012|p=2}} Therefore, the "field of dharma" implies the field of righteousness, where the truth will eventually triumph, states Fowler.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|p=2}} According to Jacqueline Hirst, the "field of dharma" phrase in the Gita epitomizes that the struggle concerns dharma itself. This dharma has "resonances at many different levels".<ref>{{cite book|author=Jacqueline Hirst|editor=Julius Lipner|title=The Fruits of Our Desiring: An Enquiry Into the Ethics of the Bhagavadgītā for Our Times |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=tk9YBPOl36UC&pg=PA48|year=1997|publisher=Bayeux|isbn=978-1-896209-30-2|pages=50–58}}</ref>
==== Means to God ====
The Gita teaches several spiritual paths – jnana, bhakti and karma – to the divine. However, states Fowler, it "does not raise any of these to a status that excludes the others".{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp= xl}} The theme that unites these paths in the Gita is "inner renunciation" where one is unattached to personal rewards during one's spiritual journey.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp= xl}}


=== Asceticism, renunciation and ritualism ===
==== Karma yoga ====
The Gita rejects ascetic life, renunciation as well as Brahminical Vedic ritualism where outward actions or non-actions are considered a means of personal reward in life, the afterlife or as a means of liberation. Instead, it recommends the pursuit of an active life where the individual adopts "inner renunciation", and acts to fulfil what he determines to be his ''dharma'', without craving for or being concerned about personal rewards, viewing this as an "inner sacrifice to the personal God for a higher good".<ref name="Johnson2004xi">{{cite book|author=W.J. Johnson|title=The Bhagavad Gita|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cPSoXHhh-Q0C|year=2004|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-283581-9|pages=xi–xv}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author1=Galvin Flood|author2=Charles Martin|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=PDYEAwAAQBAJ |year=2013 |publisher=W.W. Norton & Company| isbn=978-0-393-34513-1| pages=xxv–xxvii}}</ref>

According to ], the Indologist with publications on Krishna-related Hindu traditions, the Gita rejects "actionless behaviour" found in some Indic monastic traditions. It also "relegates the sacrificial system of the early Vedic literature to a path that goes nowhere because it is based on desires", states Bryant.<ref>{{cite book|author=Edwin Francis Bryant |title=Krishna: A Sourcebook |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0z02cZe8PU8C |year=2007|publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-803400-1|pages=78 }}</ref>

=== Moksha - liberation ===
{{Main|Moksha}}

The Bhagavad Gita accommodates dualistic and theistic aspects of ''moksha''. The Gita, while including impersonal ''Nirguna Brahman'' as the goal,{{efn|Liberation or '']'' in ] philosophy is not something that can be acquired. '']'' (Self) and Self-knowledge, along with the loss of egotistic ignorance, the goal of ''moksha'', is always present as the essence of the self, and must be realized by each person by one's own effort. While the ] largely uphold such a monistic viewpoint of liberation.}} mainly revolves around the relationship between the Self and a personal God or '']''. A synthesis of knowledge, devotion, and desireless action is offered by Krishna as a spectrum of choices to Arjuna; the same combination is suggested to the reader as a way to moksha.<ref>{{harvnb|Fowler|2012|pages=xlv–xlviii}}</ref> Christopher Chapple---a scholar focusing on Indian religions---in ] translation of the Gita, states that "In the model presented by the Bhagavad Gita, every aspect of life is a way of salvation."{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pages=xxii–xxiii}}

=== Spiritual discipline===
{{Main|Sadhana}}

The Gita treats three forms of spiritual discipline - jnana, bhakti and karma – to attain the divine. However, states Fowler, it "does not raise any of these to a status that excludes the others".{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp= xl}} The theme that unites these paths in the Gita is "inner renunciation" where one is unattached to personal rewards during one's spiritual journey.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp= xl}}

==== Karma yoga - selfless action ====
{{Main|Karma yoga}} {{Main|Karma yoga}}
The Gita teaches the path of Karma yoga in Chapter 3 and others. It upholds the necessity of action.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xliii–iv}} However, this action should "not simply follow spiritual injunctions", without any attachment to personal rewards or because of craving for fruits. The Gita teaches, according to Fowler, that the action should be undertaken after proper knowledge has been applied to gain a full perspective on "what the action should be".{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xliii–xliv}}<ref>{{cite book|author=Stephen Phillips|title=Yoga, Karma, and Rebirth: A Brief History and Philosophy|url =https://books.google.com/books?id=uLqrAgAAQBAJ |year =2009| publisher= Columbia University Press|isbn= 978-0-231-14485-8|pages=99–100}}</ref>


The Gita teaches the path of selfless action in Chapter 3 and others. It upholds the necessity of action.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xliii–iv}} However, this action should "not simply follow spiritual injunctions", without any attachment to personal rewards or because of craving for fruits. The Gita teaches, according to Fowler, that the action should be undertaken after proper knowledge has been applied to gain a full perspective on "what the action should be".{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xliii–xliv}}<ref>{{cite book|author=Stephen Phillips|title=Yoga, Karma, and Rebirth: A Brief History and Philosophy|url =https://books.google.com/books?id=uLqrAgAAQBAJ |year =2009| publisher= Columbia University Press|isbn= 978-0-231-14485-8|pages=99–100}}</ref>
The concept of such detached action is also called '']'', a term not used in the Gita but equivalent to other terms such as ''karma-phala-tyaga''.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xliii–xliv}} This is where one determines what the right action ought to be and then acts while being detached to personal outcomes, to fruits, to success or failure. A karma yogi finds such work inherently fulfilling and satisfying.<ref name="Bhawuk2011p147">{{cite book|author=Dharm Bhawuk|title=Spirituality and Indian Psychology: Lessons from the Bhagavad-Gita |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VO7jV2OZDF4C |year=2011|publisher=Springer Science |isbn=978-1-4419-8110-3|pages=147–148 with footnotes}}</ref> To a ''karma yogi'', right work done well is a form of prayer,<ref>Robert A. McDermott (1975), {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181014091406/https://www.jstor.org/stable/1397942 |date=14 October 2018 }}, Philosophy East and West, University of Hawai'i Press, Vol. 25, No. 2 (Apr 1975), pp. 228–230</ref> and ''karma yoga'' is the path of selfless action.<ref name="Coward2012p142">{{cite book|author=Harold G. Coward|title=Perfectibility of Human Nature in Eastern and Western Thought, The|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UVsXcS3xPFsC&pg=PA142 |year=2012|publisher=State University of New York Press|isbn=978-0-7914-7885-1|pages=142–145}}</ref>

The concept of such detached action is also called '']'', a term not used in the Gita but equivalent to other terms such as ''karma-phala-tyaga''.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xliii–xliv}} This is where one determines what the right action ought to be and then acts while being detached to personal outcomes, to fruits, to success or failure. A karma yogi finds such work inherently fulfilling and satisfying.<ref name="Bhawuk2011p147">{{cite book|author=Dharm Bhawuk|title=Spirituality and Indian Psychology: Lessons from the Bhagavad-Gita |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VO7jV2OZDF4C |year=2011|publisher=Springer Science |isbn=978-1-4419-8110-3|pages=147–148 with footnotes}}</ref> To a ''karma yogi'', right work done well is a form of prayer,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=McDermott |first1=Robert A. |title=Indian Spirituality in the West: A Bibliographical Mapping |journal=Philosophy East and West |date=1975 |volume=25 |issue=2 |pages=213–239 |doi=10.2307/1397942 |jstor=1397942 }}</ref> and ''karma yoga'' is the path of selfless action.<ref name="Coward2012p142">{{cite book|author=Harold G. Coward|title=Perfectibility of Human Nature in Eastern and Western Thought, The|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UVsXcS3xPFsC&pg=PA142 |year=2012|publisher=State University of New York Press|isbn=978-0-7914-7885-1|pages=142–145}}</ref>


According to Mahatma Gandhi, the object of the Gita is to show the way to attain self-realization, and this "can be achieved by selfless action, by desireless action; by renouncing fruits of action; by dedicating all activities to God, i.e., by surrendering oneself to Him, body and Self." Gandhi called the Gita "The Gospel of Selfless Action".<ref name="gandhi">{{harvnb|Gandhi|2009|pages=xv–xxiv}}</ref> According to Jonardon Ganeri, the premise of "disinterested action" is one of the important ethical concepts in the Gita.<ref>{{cite book|author=Jonardon Ganeri|title=The Concealed Art of the Soul: Theories of Self and Practices of Truth in Indian Ethics and Epistemology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5dITDAAAQBAJ |year=2007| publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-920241-6|pages=67–69}}</ref> According to Mahatma Gandhi, the object of the Gita is to show the way to attain self-realization, and this "can be achieved by selfless action, by desireless action; by renouncing fruits of action; by dedicating all activities to God, i.e., by surrendering oneself to Him, body and Self." Gandhi called the Gita "The Gospel of Selfless Action".<ref name="gandhi">{{harvnb|Gandhi|2009|pages=xv–xxiv}}</ref> According to Jonardon Ganeri, the premise of "disinterested action" is one of the important ethical concepts in the Gita.<ref>{{cite book|author=Jonardon Ganeri|title=The Concealed Art of the Soul: Theories of Self and Practices of Truth in Indian Ethics and Epistemology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5dITDAAAQBAJ |year=2007| publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-920241-6|pages=67–69}}</ref>


==== Bhakti yoga ==== ==== Bhakti yoga - devotion====
{{Main|Bhakti yoga}} {{Main|Bhakti yoga}}
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In the Bhagavad Gita, bhakti is characterized as the "loving devotion, a longing, surrender, trust and adoration" of the divine Krishna as the ''ishta-devata''.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xlii–xliii}} While bhakti is mentioned in many chapters, the idea gathers momentum after verse 6.30, and chapter 12 is where is fully developed. According to Fowler, the bhakti in the Gita does not imply renunciation of "action", but the bhakti effort is assisted with "right knowledge" and dedication to one's ''dharma''.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xlii–xliii}} Theologian ] writes, "The text offers a survey of the different possible disciplines for attaining liberation through knowledge (''Jnana''), action (karma), and loving devotion to God (bhakti), focusing on the latter as both the easiest and the highest path to salvation."<ref>{{harvnb|Cornille|2006|page=2}}</ref>


While the Upanishads focus more on knowledge and the identity of the self with Brahman, the Bhagavad Gita shifts the emphasis towards devotion and the worship of a personal deity, specifically Krishna.{{sfn|Sutton|2017|p=113}} In the Bhagavad Gita, bhakti is characterized as the "loving devotion, a longing, surrender, trust and adoration" of the divine Krishna as the ''ishta-devata''.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xlii–xliii}} While bhakti is mentioned in many chapters, the idea gathers momentum after verse 6.30, and chapter 12 is where is fully developed. According to Fowler, the bhakti in the Gita does not imply renunciation of "action", but the bhakti effort is assisted with "right knowledge" and dedication to one's ''dharma''.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xlii–xliii}} Theologian ] writes, "The text offers a survey of the different possible disciplines for attaining liberation through knowledge (''Jnana''), action (karma), and loving devotion to God (bhakti), focusing on the latter as both the easiest and the highest path to salvation."<ref>{{harvnb|Cornille|2006|page=2}}</ref>
According to M. R. Sampatkumaran, a Bhagavad Gita scholar, the Gita's message is that mere knowledge of the scriptures cannot lead to final release, but "devotion, meditation, and worship are essential."<ref>{{harvnb|Sampatkumaran|1985|page=xxiii}}</ref> The Gita likely spawned a "powerful devotionalism" movement, states Fowler, because the text and this path was simpler, and available to everyone.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xxii–xxiv, xlii–xliii}}


According to M. R. Sampatkumaran, a Bhagavad Gita scholar, Gita's message is that mere knowledge of the scriptures cannot lead to final release, but "devotion, meditation, and worship are essential."<ref>{{harvnb|Sampatkumaran|1985|page=xxiii}}</ref> The Gita likely spawned a "powerful devotional" movement, states Fowler, because the text and this path were simpler and available to everyone.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xxii–xxiv, xlii–xliii}}
==== Jnana yoga ====

==== Jnana yoga -discernment of the true self====
{{Main|Jnana yoga}} {{Main|Jnana yoga}}
Jnana yoga is the path of knowledge, wisdom, and direct realization of the Brahman.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xl–xlii, 89–93}}<ref>{{cite book|author=P.T. Raju|title=Structural Depths of Indian Thought |url=https://archive.org/details/structuraldepths0000raju |url-access=registration|year=1985|publisher=State University of New York Press|isbn=978-0-88706-139-4|pages=–8}}</ref> In the Bhagavad Gita, it is also referred to as ''buddhi yoga'' and its goal is self-realization.{{sfn|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|p=266}} The text states that this is the path that intellectuals tend to prefer.<ref>{{cite book|author=Eknath Easwaran|title=Essence of the Bhagavad Gita: A Contemporary Guide to Yoga, Meditation, and Indian Philosophy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xcvJAAAAQBAJ |year=2011 |publisher=Nilgiri Press|isbn=978-1-58638-068-7|pages=118, 281}}</ref> The chapter 4 of the Bhagavad Gita is dedicated to the general exposition of ''jnana yoga''.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=72–90}}{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pp=201–242}} The Gita praises the path, calling the jnana yogi to be exceedingly dear to Krishna, but adds that the path is steep and difficult.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xli–xlii}}


Jnana yoga is the path of knowledge, wisdom, and direct realization of the Brahman.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xl–xlii, 89–93}}<ref>{{cite book|author=P.T. Raju|title=Structural Depths of Indian Thought |url=https://archive.org/details/structuraldepths0000raju |url-access=registration|year=1985|publisher=State University of New York Press|isbn=978-0-88706-139-4|pages=–8}}</ref> In the Bhagavad Gita, it is also referred to as ''buddhi yoga'' and its goal is the discernment of the true self.{{sfn|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|p=266}} The text states that this is the path that intellectuals tend to prefer.<ref>{{cite book|author=Eknath Easwaran|title=Essence of the Bhagavad Gita: A Contemporary Guide to Yoga, Meditation, and Indian Philosophy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xcvJAAAAQBAJ |year=2011 |publisher=Nilgiri Press|isbn=978-1-58638-068-7|pages=118, 281}}</ref> The chapter 4 of the Bhagavad Gita is dedicated to the general exposition of ''jnana yoga''.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=72–90}}{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pp=201–242}} The Gita praises the path, calling the jnana yogi to be exceedingly dear to Krishna, but adds that the path is steep and difficult.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pages=xli–xlii}}
==== Synthesis of yogas, Raja yoga ====
Sivananda's commentary regards the eighteen chapters of the Bhagavad Gita as having a progressive order, by which Krishna leads "Arjuna up the ladder of Yoga from one rung to another."<ref>{{harvnb|Sivananda|1995|page=xvii}}</ref> The influential commentator ] divided the Gita{{'}}s eighteen chapters into three sections with six chapters each. ] characterises Madhusudana Sarasvati's system as a successive approach in which Karma yoga leads to Bhakti yoga, which in turn leads to Jnana yoga:<ref>{{harvnb|Gambhirananda|1997|pages=xx, 16}}</ref>
* Chapters 1–6 = Karma yoga, the means to the final goal
* Chapters 7–12 = Bhakti yoga or devotion
* Chapters 13–18 = Jnana yoga or knowledge, the goal itself


==== Raja yoga - meditation====
Some scholars treat the "yoga of meditation" to be a distinct fourth path taught in the Gita, referring to it as ].{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=xii}}{{sfn|Robinson|2006|pages=92–93, 133–134}}{{sfn|Minor|1986|pages=131, 194–196}} Others consider it a progressive stage or a combination of Karma yoga and Bhakti yoga.{{sfn|Minor|1986|page=123 }} Some, such as Adi Shankara, have considered its discussion in the 13th chapter of the Gita and elsewhere to be an integral part of Jnana yoga.<ref>{{cite book|author=Trevor Leggett|title=Realization of the Supreme Self: The Bhagavad Gītā Yoga's |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZkhwsvL4InsC |year=1995|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-0-7103-0433-9|pages=48, 204–205, 222–231}}</ref><ref name="Phillips2009p179">{{cite book|author=Stephen H. Phillips|title=Yoga, Karma, and Rebirth: A Brief History and Philosophy |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cRg2AAAAQBAJ |year=2009|publisher=Columbia University Press |isbn=978-0-231-51947-2|pages=178–179}}</ref>
Some scholars treat the "yoga of meditation," yoga proper, to be a distinct fourth path taught in the Gita, referring to it as ].{{sfn|Smith|2009|p=xii}}{{sfn|Robinson|2006|pages=92–93, 133–134}}{{sfn|Minor|1986|pages=131, 194–196}} Others consider it a progressive stage or a combination of Karma yoga and Bhakti yoga.{{sfn|Minor|1986|page=123 }}{{efn|Sivananda's commentary regards the eighteen chapters of the Bhagavad Gita as having a progressive order, by which Krishna leads "Arjuna up the ladder of Yoga from one rung to another" {{harv|Sivananda|1995|page=xvii}}. The influential commentator ] divided the Gita{{'}}s eighteen chapters into three sections with six chapters each. ] characterises Madhusudana Sarasvati's system as a successive approach in which Karma yoga leads to Bhakti yoga, which in turn leads to Jnana yoga {{harv|Gambhirananda|1997|pages=xx, 16}}:<br>* Chapters 1–6: Karma yoga, the means to the final goal<br>* Chapters 7–12: Bhakti yoga or devotion<br>* Chapters 13–18: Jnana yoga or knowledge, the goal itself}} Some, such as Adi Shankara, have considered its discussion in the 13th chapter of the Gita and elsewhere to be an integral part of Jnana yoga.<ref>{{cite book|author=Trevor Leggett|title=Realization of the Supreme Self: The Bhagavad Gītā Yoga's |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZkhwsvL4InsC |year=1995|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-0-7103-0433-9|pages=48, 204–205, 222–231}}</ref><ref name="Phillips2009p179">{{cite book|author=Stephen H. Phillips|title=Yoga, Karma, and Rebirth: A Brief History and Philosophy |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cRg2AAAAQBAJ |year=2009|publisher=Columbia University Press |isbn=978-0-231-51947-2|pages=178–179}}</ref>


===Metaphysics===
==== Asceticism, renunciation and ritualism ====
To build its metaphysical framework, the text relies on the theories found in the Samkhya and Vedanta schools of Hinduism.{{sfn|Zaehner|1969|pp=13–15, 254}}
The Gita rejects ascetic life, renunciation as well as Brahminical Vedic ritualism where outward actions or non-actions are considered a means of personal reward in life, after-life or as a means of liberation. Instead it recommends the pursuit of an active life where the individual adopts "inner renunciation", acts to fulfill what he determines to be his ''dharma'', without craving for or being concerned about personal rewards, viewing this as an "inner sacrifice to the personal God for a higher good".<ref name="Johnson2004xi">{{cite book|author=W.J. Johnson|title=The Bhagavad Gita|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cPSoXHhh-Q0C|year=2004|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-283581-9|pages=xi–xv}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author1=Galvin Flood|author2=Charles Martin|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=PDYEAwAAQBAJ |year=2013 |publisher=W.W. Norton & Company| isbn=978-0-393-34513-1| pages=xxv–xxvii}}</ref>


==== Prakriti and maya ====
According to ], the Indologist with publications on Krishna-related Hindu traditions, the Gita rejects "actionless behavior" found in some Indic monastic traditions. It also "relegates the sacrificial system of the early Vedic literature to a path that goes nowhere because it is based on desires", states Bryant.<ref>{{cite book|author=Edwin Francis Bryant |title=Krishna: A Sourcebook |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0z02cZe8PU8C |year=2007|publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-803400-1|pages=78 }}</ref>
The Gita considers the world to be transient, all bodies and matter as impermanent. Everything that constitutes '']'' (nature, matter) is process-driven and has a finite existence. It is born, grows, matures, decays, and dies. It considers this transient reality as ]. Like the Upanishads, the Gita focuses on what it considers ] in this world of change, impermanence, and finitude.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp= xxxix–xl}}{{sfn|Zaehner|1969|pp=13–15, 254}}


===Dharma=== ==== Atman ====
The Gita, states Fowler, "thoroughly accepts" '']'' as a foundational concept.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|p=xxxvi}} In the Upanishads, this is the Brahmanical idea that all beings have a "permanent real self", the true essence, the Self it refers to as ''Atman'' (Self).<ref>{{cite book|author=Juan Mascaró|title=The Bhagavad Gita|url=https://archive.org/details/bhagavadgita00masc|url-access=registration|year=1962|publisher=Penguin|isbn=978-0-14-044121-5|pages=xiv–xviii}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Paul Deussen|title=Sixty Upaniṣads of the Veda|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8mSpQo9q-tIC|year=1980|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass|isbn=978-81-208-1468-4|pages=409–410}}</ref><ref>'''''' , Oxford Dictionaries, Oxford University Press (2012), '''Quote''': "1. real self of the individual; 2. a person's Self";<br />'''''' John Bowker (2000), The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions, Oxford University Press, {{ISBN|978-0-19-280094-7}}, See entry for Atman;<br />'''''' WJ Johnson (2009), ], Oxford University Press, {{ISBN|978-0-19-861025-0}}, See entry for Atman (self). {{ODNBsub}}</ref>{{refn|group=note|This contrasts with a few competing schools of Indian religions which denied the concept of Self.<ref>John C. Plott et al. (2000), Global History of Philosophy: The Axial Age, Volume 1, Motilal Banarsidass, {{ISBN|978-81-208-0158-5}}, p. 63, Quote: "The Buddhist schools reject any Ātman concept. As we have already observed, this is the basic and ineradicable distinction between Hinduism and Buddhism".</ref><ref>'''''' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210122042635/https://www.britannica.com/topic/anatta |date=22 January 2021 }}, Encyclopædia Britannica (2013), '''Quote:''' "Anatta in Buddhism, the doctrine that there is in humans no permanent, underlying Self. The concept of anatta, or anatman, is a departure from the Hindu belief in atman ("the self").";<br />'''''' Steven Collins (1994), Religion and Practical Reason (Editors: Frank Reynolds, David Tracy), State Univ of New York Press, {{ISBN|978-0-7914-2217-5}}, p. 64; '''Quote:''' "Central to Buddhist soteriology is the doctrine of not-self (Pali: anattā, Sanskrit: anātman, the opposed doctrine of ātman is central to Brahmanical thought). Put very briefly, this is the doctrine that human beings have no soul, no self, no unchanging essence.";<br />'''''' Edward Roer (Translator), {{Google books|3uwDAAAAMAAJ|Shankara's Introduction|page=2}} to ''Brihad Aranyaka Upanishad'', pp. 2–4;<br />'''''' KN Jayatilleke (2010), Early Buddhist Theory of Knowledge, {{ISBN|978-81-208-0619-1}}, pp. 246–249, from note 385 onwards;<br />'''''' Bruno Nagel (2000), Roy Perrett (editor), Philosophy of Religion: Indian Philosophy, Routledge, {{ISBN|978-0-8153-3611-2}}, p. 33, '''Quote:''' "The dispute with Buddhists, who do not accept an imperishable Self, gives the Atman schools a chance to articulate the intellectual aspects of their way to meditative liberation".</ref>}} In the Upanishads that preceded the Gita, such as the '']'', the salvational goal is to know and realize this Self, a knowledge that is devoid of the delusions of the instinctive "I, mine" egoism typically connected with the body and material life processes that are impermanent and transient. The Gita accepts ''atman'' as the pure, unchanging, ultimate real essence.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=xxxv, xxxvii–xix}}
{{Main|Dharma}}
Dharma is a prominent paradigm of the ''Mahabharata'', and it is referenced in the Gita as well. The term ''dharma'' has a number of meanings.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|p=2}} Fundamentally, it refers to that which is right or just.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|p=2}} Contextually, it also means the essence of "duty, law, class, social norms, ritual and cosmos itself" in the text, in the sense "the way things should be in all these different dimensions".{{sfn|Fowler|2012|p=2}} According to Zaehner, the term ''dharma'' means "duty" in the Gita{{'}}s context; in verse 2.7, it refers to the "right ", and in 14.27 to the "eternal law of righteousness".{{sfn|Zaehner|1969|pp=123, 382}}


==== Krishna and Brahman====
Few verses in the Bhagavad Gita deal with dharma, according to the Indologist Paul Hacker, but the theme of dharma is broadly important.{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=260}} In Chapter 1, responding to ]'s despondency, ] asks him to follow his ''sva-dharma'',{{sfn|Hacker|1958|pp=1–15}} "the dharma that belongs to a particular man (Arjuna) as a member of a particular '']'', (i.e., the ''kshatriya'' – the warrior varna)".{{sfn|Hacker|1958|p=261}} According to Paul Hacker, the term ''dharma'' has additional meanings in the context of Arjuna. It is more broadly, the "duty" and a "metaphysically congealed act" for Arjuna.{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=261}} According to the Indologist Jacqueline Hirst, the ''dharma'' theme is "of significance only at the beginning and end of the Gita" and this may have been a way to perhaps link the Gita to the context of the ''Mahabharata''.<ref name="Hirst1997p48">{{cite book|author=Jacqueline Hirst|editor=Julius Lipner|title=The Fruits of Our Desiring: An Enquiry Into the Ethics of the Bhagavadgītā for Our Times |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=tk9YBPOl36UC&pg=PA48|year=1997|publisher=Bayeux|isbn=978-1-896209-30-2|page=48}}</ref>
{{multiple image|perrow = 2|total_width=260
| image1 = Vishnuvishvarupa.jpg
| image2 = Bazaar art print of Bhavadgita, c. mid-1900's.jpg
| image3 = Vishvarupa Vishnu LACMA M.83.248.1.jpg
| image4 = Le temple de Changu Narayan (Bhaktapur) (8567805757).jpg
| footer = Chapter 11 of the Gita refers to Krishna as '']'' (above). This is an idea found in the ''Rigveda''.<ref>{{cite book|author=T.S. Maxwell|title=Viśvarūpa|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6AbWAAAAMAAJ|year=1988|publisher=Oxford University Press|pages=131–135|isbn=978-0-19-562117-4}}</ref> The ''Vishvarupa'' omniform has been interpreted as symbolism for Absolute Reality, God or Self that is in all creatures, everywhere, eternally.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Kapila Vatsyayan|author2=Bettina Bäumer|author3=Ramesh Chandra Sharma|title=Kalātattvakośa |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dhRKCh70ouMC |year=1988 |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |isbn=978-81-208-1917-7|pages=79–81, 88}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=R.D. Ranade|title=Mysticism in Maharashtra: Indian Mysticism|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=73vbTVsPga0C |year=1982|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass|isbn=978-81-208-0576-7|pages=67–68}}</ref>}}


The Gita teaches both the personalized God, in the form of Krishna, and the abstract nirguna Brahman.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=xxxiii–xxiv}}{{sfn|Zaehner|1969|pp=30–32, 36–41}} The text blurs any distinction between a personalized God and impersonal absolute reality by amalgamating the two and using the concepts interchangeably in later chapters,{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=xxxiii–xxv}} though it projects the ''nirguna'' Brahman as higher than ''saguna'' or personalized Brahman, where the ''nirguna'' Brahman "exists when everything else does not".{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=xxxiii–xxv}}<ref name="Bryant2007p312">{{cite book|author=Edwin F. Bryant| title=Krishna: A Sourcebook |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2n4VDAAAQBAJ |year=2007| publisher=Oxford University Press | isbn= 978-0-19-972431-4|pages =312–315}}</ref> This theme has led scholars to call the Gita panentheistic,{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=xxxiii–xxiv}} theistic as well as monistic.{{sfn|Edgerton|1952|pp=44–45 with footnote 1}}{{sfn|Raju|1992|p=211}}{{sfn|Deutsch|Dalvi|2004|pp=61–62}}
According to Malinar, "Arjuna's crisis and some of the arguments put forward to call him to action are connected to the debates on war and peace in the '']''."{{sfn|Malinar|2007|p=36}} The ''Udyoga Parva'' presents many views about the nature of a warrior, his duty and what calls for heroic action. While ] presents it as a matter of status, social norms, and fate, ] states that the heroic warrior never submits, knows no fear and has the duty to protect people.{{sfn|Malinar|2007|pp=36–41}} The '']'' sets the stage of two ideologies in conflict and two massive armies gathered for what each considers as a righteous and necessary war. In this context, the Gita advises Arjuna to do his holy duty (''sva-dharma'') as a warrior: fight and kill.{{sfn|Miller|2004|p=3}}{{sfn|Michaels|2004|p=59}}{{sfn|Malinar|2007|pp=36–39}}


The Gita adopts the Upanishadic concept of Absolute Reality (]), a shift from the earlier ritual-driven Vedic religion to one abstracting and internalizing spiritual experiences.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=xxxiii–xxiv}}{{sfn|Zaehner|1969|pp=30–32, 36–41}} According to Jeaneane Fowler, the Gita builds on the Upanishadic Brahman theme, conceptualized to be that which is everywhere, unaffected, constant Absolute, indescribable and ''nirguna'' (abstract, without features). This Absolute in the Gita is neither a He nor a She, but a "neuter principle", an "It or That".{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=xxxiii–xxiv}}{{sfn|Zaehner|1969|pp=30–32, 36–41}}
According to the Indologist Barbara Miller, the text frames heroism not in terms of physical abilities, but instead in terms of effort and inner commitment to fulfill a warrior's ''dharma'' in the battlefield.{{sfn| Miller|1986|pp=1–8}} War is depicted as a horror, the impending slaughter a cause for self-doubt, yet at stake is the spiritual struggle against evil.{{sfn| Miller|1986|pp=1–8}} The Gita's message emphasizes that personal moral ambivalence must be addressed, the warrior needs to rise above "personal and social values" and understand what is at stake and "why he must fight". The text explores the "paradoxical interconnectedness of disciplined action and freedom".{{sfn| Miller|1986|pp=1–8}}


==== ''The Field of Dharma'' ==== ==== Relation between Atman and Krishna ====
The Upanishads developed the equation "Atman <nowiki>=</nowiki> Brahman", states Fowler and this belief is central to the Gita.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp= xxxix–xl}} This equation is, however, interpreted in several ways by different sub-schools of Vedanta. In the Gita, the Self of each human being is considered to be identical to every other human being and all beings, but it "does not support an identity with the Brahman", according to Fowler.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp= xxxix–xl}} According to Raju, the Gita supports this identity and spiritual monism, but as a form of synthesis with a personal God.{{sfn|Raju|1992|p=211}} According to Edgerton, the authors of the Gita rely on their concept of a personalized God (Krishna) to ultimately arrive at an ultimate monism, where the devotee realizes that Krishna is the essential part, the real fundamental element within everyone and everything. Krishna is simultaneously one and all.<ref name="Franklin Edgerton 1952 44–45 with footnotes, context: pp. 30–54 Part 2"/> According to ], the Gita is teaching that "when one sees the entire universe as pervaded by the single Universal Spirit , one contemplates, marvels, and falls in love with its amazing glory. Having experienced that Truth oneself, all doubts are dispelled. This is how the flower of devotion evolves into the fruit of knowledge."{{sfn|Smith|2009|p=xvii}}
The first reference to ''dharma'' in the Bhagavad Gita occurs in its first verse, where ] refers to the Kurukshetra, the location of the battlefield, as the ''Field of Dharma'', "The Field of Righteousness or Truth".{{sfn|Fowler|2012|p=2}} According to Fowler, dharma in this verse may refer to the '']'', "what Hindus understand as their religion, for it is a term that encompasses wide aspects of religious and traditional thought and is more readily used for religion".{{sfn|Fowler|2012|p=2}} Therefore, "field of dharma" implies the field of righteousness, where truth will eventually triumph, states Fowler.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|p=2}} According to Jacqueline Hirst, the "field of dharma" phrase in the Gita epitomizes that the struggle concerns dharma itself. This dharma has "resonances at many different levels".<ref>{{cite book|author=Jacqueline Hirst|editor=Julius Lipner|title=The Fruits of Our Desiring: An Enquiry Into the Ethics of the Bhagavadgītā for Our Times |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=tk9YBPOl36UC&pg=PA48|year=1997|publisher=Bayeux|isbn=978-1-896209-30-2|pages=50–58}}</ref>


==Commentaries==
=== The Gita and War ===


==== Allegory of war ==== === Classical Bhashya (commentaries) ===
Bhagavad Gita integrates various schools of thought, notably Vedanta, Samkhya and Yoga, and other theistic ideas, but its composite nature also leads to varying interpretations of the text and scholars have written '']'' (commentaries) on it.<ref name=sadhale>SGS Sadhale ( 1935), , Volume 1 & 2, pages 1–7</ref>{{sfn|Neufeldt|1986|pp=31–33}}
Unlike any other religious scripture, the Bhagavad Gita broadcasts its message in the centre of a battlefield.<ref>{{harvnb|Krishnananda|1980|pages=12–13}}</ref> Several modern Indian writers have interpreted the battlefield setting as an allegory for "the war within".{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|p=15}} ] writes that the Gita{{'}}s subject is "the war within, the struggle for self-mastery that every human being must wage if he or she is to emerge from life victorious".<ref>{{harvnb|Easwaran|2007|page=15}}</ref>


Many "classical and modern Hindu" intellectuals have written commentaries on the Gita.{{sfn|Cornille|2006|p=3}} According to ], the Gita is "one of the hardest books to interpret, which accounts for the numerous commentaries on it—each differing from the rest in one essential point or the other".<ref>{{harvnb|Singh|2006|pages=54–55}}</ref>
], takes Arjuna as an allegory of Ātman, Krishna as an allegory of ], Arjuna's chariot as the body, and Dhritarashtra as the ignorant mind.{{refn|group=note|{{harvnb|Nikhilananda|Hocking|2006|page=2}} "Arjuna represents the individual Self, and Sri Krishna the Supreme Self dwelling in every heart. Arjuna's chariot is the body. The blind king Dhritarashtra is the mind under the spell of ignorance, and his hundred sons are man's numerous evil tendencies. The battle, a perennial one, is between the power of good and the power of evil. The warrior who listens to the advice of the Lord speaking from within will triumph in this battle and attain the Highest Good."}} Nikhilananda's allegorical interpretation is shared by Huston Smith.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=x}} ] interprets the first discourse in the Gita as well as the "Kurukshetra war" allegorically.<ref>{{Citation|last=Vivekananda|first=Swami|title=The Complete works of Swami Vivekananda |volume=9 |chapter=] }}</ref> Vivekananda states that "when we sum up its esoteric significance, it means the war which is constantly going on within man between the tendencies of good and evil".{{Sfn|Vivekananda|1998}}


The Gita has attracted much scholarly interest in Indian history and some 227 commentaries have survived in the Sanskrit language alone.{{sfn|Davis|2014|pages=55–56}} It has also attracted commentaries in regional vernacular languages for centuries, such as the one by Sant Dnyaneshwar in Marathi (13th century).<ref name=Dnyandevfull/>
], in his commentary on the Gita,<ref>see {{harvnb|Gandhi|2009}}</ref> interprets the battle as an allegory in which the battlefield is the soul and Arjuna embodies man's higher impulses struggling against evil.<ref>{{harvnb|Fischer|2010|pages=15–16}}</ref>


The Bhagavad Gita is referenced in the '']'' and numerous scholars wrote commentaries on it, including ], ], ], ], and ].{{sfn|Deutsch|Dalvi|2004|p=60}}{{sfn|Flood|1996|page=124}} Many of these commentators state that the Gita is "meant to be a ''moksa-shastra'' (''moksasatra''), and not a ''dharmasastra'', an ''arthasastra'' or a ''kamasastra''".<ref>{{cite book|author=Abhinavagupta (Rājānaka.)|translator=]|title= Gītārthasaṅgraha|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=U9oUAAAAIAAJ |year=1983|publisher=Brill Academic|isbn=90-04-06736-1| pages=30–31 with footnotes}}</ref>
In ]'s view, Krishna was a historical figure, but his significance in the Gita is as a "symbol of the divine dealings with humanity",<ref>{{harvnb|Aurobindo|2000|pages=15–16}}</ref> while Arjuna typifies a "struggling human soul".<ref name =THD/> However, Aurobindo rejected the interpretation that the Gita, and the ''Mahabharata'' by extension, is only "an allegory of the inner life" and therefore that it has nothing to do with our outward human life and actions.<ref name =THD>{{harvnb|Aurobindo|2000|pages=20–21}}</ref>{{refn|group=note|Aurobindo writes, "...&nbsp;That is a view which the general character and the actual language of the epic does not justify and, if pressed, would turn the straightforward philosophical language of the Gita into a constant, laborious and somewhat puerile mystification&nbsp;... the Gita is written in plain terms and professes to solve the great ethical and spiritual difficulties which the life of man raises, and it will not do to go behind this plain language and thought and wrest them to the service of our fancy. But there is this much of truth in the view that the setting of the doctrine, though not symbolical, is certainly typical.<ref name="THD"/>}}


===Śaṅkara (c. 800 CE)===
==== Promotion of just war and duty ====
The oldest and most influential surviving commentary was published by ] (Śaṅkarācārya).<ref name="Zaehner, p. 3">{{harvnb|Zaehner|1969|page=3}}</ref><ref name="Flood 1996 page=124">{{harvnb|Flood|1996|page=124}}</ref> Shankara interprets the Gita in a monist, nondualistic tradition (]).<ref>{{cite book| title= The Bhagavad Gita with the Commentary of Sri Sankaracharya| author=Alladi Mahadeva Sastry|publisher= Samata| url=https://archive.org/details/Bhagavad-Gita.with.the.Commentary.of.Sri.Shankaracharya/page/n0| year=1980}}</ref> Advaita Vedanta affirms on the ] of Atman and Brahman.{{sfn|Deutsch|Dalvi|2004|p=97}} Shankara prefaces his comments by stating that the Gita is popular among the laity, that the text has been studied and commented upon by earlier scholars (these texts have not survived), but that "I have found that to the laity it appears to teach diverse and quite contradictory doctrines". He calls the Gita "an epitome of the essentials of the whole ]".<ref>{{cite book| title= The Bhagavad Gita with the Commentary of Sri Sankaracharya| author=Alladi Mahadeva Sastry|publisher= Samata| url=https://archive.org/details/Bhagavad-Gita.with.the.Commentary.of.Sri.Shankaracharya/page/n0| year=1980| pages=ii, 1–6}}</ref> To Shankara, the teaching of the Gita is to shift an individual's focus from the outer, impermanent, fleeting objects of desire and senses to the inner, permanent, eternal atman-Brahman-Vasudeva that is identical, in everything and every being.<ref>{{cite book|author=N.V. Isaeva|title=Shankara and Indian Philosophy |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J43SDe9ilOsC |year=1993|publisher=State University of New York Press |isbn=978-0-7914-1282-4|pages=211–214}}</ref>
Other scholars such as Steven Rosen, Laurie L. Patton and Stephen Mitchell have seen in the Gita a religious defense of the warrior class' (] ]) duty (''svadharma''), which is to wage war with courage. They do not see only an allegorical teaching but also a real defense of ].<ref>Rosen, Steven; Krishna's Song: A New Look at the Bhagavad Gita, p. 22.</ref><ref>Patton, Laurie L.; The Failure of Allegory in ''Fighting Words''</ref>


===Abhinavagupta (c. 1000 CE)===
] like ] and ] saw the Gita as a text which defended war when necessary and used it to promote armed rebellion against colonial rule. Lajpat Rai wrote an article on the "Message of the Bhagavad Gita". He saw the main message as the bravery and courage of Arjuna to fight as a warrior.<ref name="ReferenceA">{{harvnb|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pp=Chapter 4}}</ref> ] saw the Gita as defending killing when necessary for the betterment of society, such as, for example, the killing of ].<ref name="ReferenceA"/>
] was a theologian and philosopher of the Kashmir Shaivism (]) tradition.<ref name="Flood 1996 page=124"/> His commentary, the ''Gitartha-Samgraha'', has survived into the modern era. The Gita text he commented on is a slightly different recension than the one of Adi Shankara. He interprets its teachings in the Shaiva Advaita (monism) tradition quite similar to Adi Shankara, but with the difference that he considers both Self and matter to be metaphysically real and eternal. Their respective interpretations of ''jnana yoga'' are also somewhat different, and Abhinavagupta uses Atman, Brahman, Shiva, and Krishna interchangeably. Abhinavagupta's commentary is notable for its citations of more ancient scholars, in a style similar to Adi Shankara. However, the texts he quotes have not survived into the modern era.<ref>{{cite book|author=Abhinavagupta (Rājānaka.)|translator=]|title= Gītārthasaṅgraha|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=U9oUAAAAIAAJ |year=1983|publisher=Brill Academic|isbn=90-04-06736-1| pages=30–35, 41–47 with footnotes}}</ref>


===Rāmānuja (c. 1100 CE)===
==== Pacifism and the ''Gita'' ====
] was a Hindu theologian, philosopher, and an exponent of the Sri Vaishnavism (]) tradition in the 11th and early 12th centuries. Like his Vedanta peers, Ramanuja wrote a '']'' (commentary) on the Gita - ].<ref>{{harvnb|Sampatkumaran|1985|page=xx}}</ref> Ramanuja's commentary disagreed with Adi Shankara's interpretation of the Gita as a text on nondualism (Self and Brahman are identical), and instead interpreted it as a form of dualistic and qualified monism (]).<ref>{{cite book|author=William M. Indich|title=Consciousness in Advaita Vedanta|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=7ykZjWOiBMoC|year=1995|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass|isbn=978-81-208-1251-2|pages=1–2, 97–102}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=C.J. Bartley |title=The Theology of Rāmānuja: Realism and Religion|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=9SpTAQAAQBAJ| year=2013| publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-85306-7|pages=2–3, 87–91}}</ref>
Because by the end of the ''Gita'', Krishna convinces Arjuna that it is his right and duty to fight, the ''Gita'' has been argued by some as pro-war, others argue it is neither pro- nor anti-war.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://shc.stanford.edu/stanford-humanities-center/events/fields-religious-interpretation-bhagavad-gita-and-war |title=Fields of Religious Interpretation: The Bhagavad Gita and War |date=5 January 2016 |access-date=8 March 2023 |archive-date=8 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230308002101/https://shc.stanford.edu/stanford-humanities-center/events/fields-religious-interpretation-bhagavad-gita-and-war |url-status=live }}</ref>


===Madhva (c. 1250 CE)===
Noted author ] suffered the death of his father in WWI and saw no serious effort by the allies to avoid plunging head-long into the next war. In his novels, '']'', he describes life in Germany as the Nazis rose to power. In the late 1930s, Isherwood, with advice from and influence of ] and ]<ref>{{cite book |last= Sawyer |first= Dana |date= 2002|title= Aldous Huxley: A Biography |publisher= Crossroads Publishing Company |page= 99|isbn= 0-8245-1987-6}}</ref> he became a practicing pacifist and ], working with the Quakers, doing alternative service to help settle Jewish refugees fleeing the war.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1986-01-06-me-13515-story.html |title=Obituary in the LA Times |website=] |date=6 January 1986 |access-date=8 March 2023 |archive-date=7 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230307212742/https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1986-01-06-me-13515-story.html |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1986/01/06/obituaries/christopher-isherwood-is-dead-at-81.html |title=Obituary in the NY Times |website=] |date=6 January 1986 |access-date=8 March 2023 |archive-date=7 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230307195733/https://www.nytimes.com/1986/01/06/obituaries/christopher-isherwood-is-dead-at-81.html |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last= Isherwood |first= Christo6pher |date= 1996|title= Diaries: Volume 1, 1939-1960, Edited and Introduced by Katherine Bucknell |publisher= HarperFlamingo|page= Introduction XII|isbn= 978-0061180002}}</ref> In 1944, Isherwood worked with ] of the ] to translate the ] into English.<ref>{{cite book |last= Isherwood |first= Christo6pher |date= 199|title= Diaries: Volume 1, 1939-1960, Edited and Introduced by Katherine Bucknell |publisher= HarperFlamingo|page= 117|isbn= 978-0061180002}}</ref> In the Appendix, there is an essay written by Isherwood titled, ]. He argues that in certain circumstances, it would be quite alright to refuse to fight. In Arjuna's particular circumstances, since it is a righteous war, and he's a warrior by birth and trade, he must fight.<ref>]</ref>
], a commentator of the Dvaita (modern taxonomy) Tatvavada (actually quoted by Madhva) Vedanta school,<ref name="Flood 1996 page=124"/> wrote a commentary on the Bhagavad Gita, which exemplifies the thinking of the Tatvavada school (]).<ref name="Zaehner, p. 3"/> According to Christopher Chapelle, in Madhva's school there is "an eternal and complete distinction between the Supreme, the many Selfs, and matter and its divisions".{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pages=xxiii–xxiv}} His commentary on the Gita is called {{IAST|Gita Bhāshya}}. Madhva's commentary has attracted secondary works by pontiffs of the ] monasteries such as ], ], and ].<ref>{{harvnb|Rao|2002|page=86}}</ref>
<Blockquote>
...every action, under certain circumstances and for certain people, may be a stepping-stone to spiritual growth—if it is done in the spirit of non-attachment. There is no question, here, of doing evil that good may come. The Gita does not countenance such opportunism. Arjuna is to do the best he knows, in order to pass beyond that best to better.<ref>Bhagavad Gita – The Song of God, 2023 Edition, The Gita and War, page 149</ref>
</Blockquote>


==== Ethics, war and violence ==== ===Keśava Kāśmīri (c. 1410 CE)===
], a commentator of Dvaitādvaita Vedanta school, wrote a commentary on the Bhagavad Gita named {{IAST|Tattva-prakāśikā}}. The text states that ''Dasasloki''—possibly authored by Nimbarka—teaches the essence of the Gita; the ''Gita tattva prakashika'' interprets the Gita also in a hybrid monist-dualist manner.<ref name="Nadkarni2016p37"/><ref name="archive.org">SGS Sadhale ( 1936), , Volume 2 of 3</ref>
In the Gita, Krishna persuades Arjuna to wage war where the enemy includes some of his own relatives and friends. In light of the '']'' (non-violence) teachings in Hindu scriptures, the Gita has been criticized as violating the ''Ahimsa'' value, or alternatively, as supporting political violence.{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=65–73}} The justification of political violence when peaceful protests and all else fails, states Varma, has been a "fairly common feature of modern Indian political thought" along with the "mighty antithesis of Gandhian thought on non-violence". During the independence movement in India, Hindus considered the active "burning and drowning of British goods". While technically illegal under colonial legislation, these acts were viewed as a moral and ] for the sake of liberty and righteous values of the type that the Gita discusses.<ref name="Varma1990p232">{{cite book |author=Vishwanath Prasad Varma |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bLrp0c0hizAC |title=The Political Philosophy of Sri Aurobindo |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |year=1990 |isbn=978-81-208-0686-3 |pages=232–235}}</ref> According to Paul Schaffel the influential Hindu nationalist ] "often turned to Hindu scripture such as the Bhagavad Gita, arguing that the text justified violence against those who would harm Mother India."<ref>Schaffel, Paul. ''Empire and Assassination: Indian Students, 'India House', and Information Gathering in Great Britain, 1898–1911.'' Wesleyan University, 2012, p. 38.</ref>


===Gauḍīya Vaiṣṇava commentaries===
], in his book length critique of the text titled ''The Truth About the Gita,'' criticizes the ethical teachings of the Gita. He argues that the ethics of the Gita are so ambiguous, that one can use it to justify any ethical position.<ref>V. R. Narla (2010), ''The Truth About the Gita,'' pp. 126-135. Prometheus Books.</ref> Narla argues that the Gita is mainly a theological argument in favor of the warrior ethos.<ref>V. R. Narla (2010), ''The Truth About the Gita,'' p. 135. Prometheus Books.</ref> Narla argues that the fact that the Gita tries constantly to make Arjuna kill his kin in order to gain a petty kingdom shows it is not a pacifist work. Narla compares the Krishna of the Gita with a modern-day ], who uses theology to excuse violence.<ref>V. R. Narla (2010), ''The Truth About the Gita,'' pp. 142-148. Prometheus Books.</ref> Narla also cites ] who argued that the apparent moral of the Gita is "kill your brother if duty calls, without passion; as long as you have faith in Me, all sins are forgiven...".<ref>V. R. Narla (2010), ''The Truth About the Gita,'' p. 148. Prometheus Books.</ref>
*] (b. 1486 CE). Commentaries on various parts of the Gita are in the ] Bhakti Vedanta tradition (''])''.;{{refn|group=note|According to Edwin Bryant and Maria Ekstrand, this school incorporates and integrates aspects of "qualified monism, dualism, monistic dualism, and pure nondualism".<ref name=ekstrand175>{{cite book|author1=Edwin Bryant|author2=Maria Ekstrand|title=The Hare Krishna Movement: The Postcharismatic Fate of a Religious Transplant |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mBMxPdgrBhoC&pg=PA175 |year=2004|publisher=Columbia University Press|isbn=978-0-231-50843-8|pages=175–176}}</ref>}}


===Others===
In his ''Myth and Reality'', the Indian historian ] argued that the Gita was written as a religious text that could provide support for the actions of the upper castes, including the warrior caste. These sort of exhortations to battle would not have been uncommon in ancient India as it was the job of Indian bards. Kosambi writes that in the Gita, "the high god repeatedly emphasizes the great virtue of non-killing (''ahimsa''), yet the entire discourse is an incentive to war."<ref name=":2">] (1962) '']'' p. 21. (Popular Prakashail, Bombay).</ref> He also cites the Gita, which states: "if slain, you gain heaven; if victorious, the earth; so up, son of Kunti, and concentrate on fighting."<ref name=":2" /> Kosambi argues that the injunctions and excuses for killing found in the Gita are unethical.<ref name=":2" />
Other classical commentators include:
* ] ({{circa|900 CE}}) disagreed with Adi Shankara, wrote his commentary on both Bhagavad Gita and ''Brahma Sutras'' in the {{IAST|Bhedābheda}} tradition.<ref name="Nadkarni2016p37">{{harvnb|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pp=37–38}}</ref> According to Bhaskara, the Gita is essentially Advaita, but not quite exactly, suggesting that "the ''Atman'' (Self) of all beings are like waves in the ocean that is Brahman". Bhaskara also disagreed with Shankara's formulation of the ''Maya'' doctrine, stating that prakriti, atman and Brahman are all metaphysically real.<ref name="Nadkarni2016p37"/>
* ], Ramanuja's teacher, summarised the teachings of the Gita in his ''Gitartha sangraham''.
* ] (620 CE) Bhagavadgītā-Vākyārtha, A lost commentary on Bhagavad gītā.{{sfn|Agrawal|2013|p=93}}
* ] (1290 CE)<ref name=Dnyandevfull>{{Citation|last1 = Dnyandev | last2 = Pradhan| first2= Vitthal Ganesh| title = Dnyaneshwari : Bhāvārthadipikā | publisher =State University of New York Press | editor-last = Lambert | editor-first = Hester Marjorie |year = 1987 |pages = x–xi |url =https://books.google.com/books?id=Xxg0RI7dSWIC |isbn = 978-0-88706-487-6}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Doderet |first1=W. |title=The Passive Voice of the Jnanesvari |journal=Bulletin of the School of Oriental Studies, University of London |date=1926 |volume=4 |issue=1 |pages=59–64 |doi=10.1017/S0041977X00102575 |jstor=607401 }}</ref> commentary '']'' ({{aka}} ''Jnaneshwari'' or ''Bhavarthadipika'')<ref>{{harvnb|Gyaānadeva|Pradhan|1987}}</ref> is the oldest surviving literary work in the ],<ref name="Sircar1996"/> one of the foundations of the Varkari tradition (the ], ], ]) in Maharashtra .<ref name="Sircar1996">{{cite book|author=D.C. Sircar|title=Indian Epigraphy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hXMB3649biQC|year=1996|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass|isbn=978-81-208-1166-9|pages=53–54|access-date=16 October 2018|archive-date=15 April 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230415073744/https://books.google.com/books?id=hXMB3649biQC|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Ranade1997">{{cite book|author=R.D. Ranade|title=Tukaram| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZOWIAwAAQBAJ |year=1997| publisher=State University of New York Press|isbn=978-1-4384-1687-8|pages=9–11}}</ref><ref name="Melton2011">{{cite book|author=J. Gordon Melton|title=Religious Celebrations: An Encyclopedia of Holidays, Festivals, Solemn Observances, and Spiritual Commemorations|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lD_2J7W_2hQC |year=2011|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=978-1-59884-206-7|pages=373–374}}</ref> The commentary interprets the Gita in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.<ref>{{Citation|last1 = Dnyandev | last2 = Pradhan| first2= Vitthal Ganesh| title = Dnyaneshwari : Bhāvārthadipikā | publisher =State University of New York Press | editor-last = Lambert | editor-first = Hester Marjorie |year = 1987 |page =xviii with footnote 1 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Xxg0RI7dSWIC |isbn= 978-0-88706-487-6}}</ref> Dnyaneshwar belonged to the ] yogi tradition. His commentary on the Gita is notable for stating that it is the devotional commitment and love with inner renunciation that matters, not the name ''Krishna'' or ''Shiva'', either can be used interchangeably.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Karine Schomer|author2=W.H. McLeod|title=The Sants: Studies in a Devotional Tradition of India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OkKhOivXrhgC&pg=PA222|year=1987|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |isbn=978-81-208-0277-3|pages=219–223}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Christian Novetzke |editor=Guy L. Beck|title=Alternative Krishnas: Regional and Vernacular Variations on a Hindu Deity|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0SJ73GHSCF8C |year=2005|publisher=State University of New York Press |isbn=978-0-7914-6415-1|pages=113–118}}</ref>
* Vallabha II, a descendant of ] (1479 CE), wrote the commentary ''Tattvadeepika'' in the Suddha-Advaita tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* ] commentary ''Gudhartha Deepika'' is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* Hanumat's commentary ''Paishacha-bhasya'' is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* Anandagiri's commentary ''Bhashya-vyakhyanam'' is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* Nilkantha's commentary ''Bhava-pradeeps'' is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* Shreedhara's (1400 CE) commentary ''Avi gita'' is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* Dhupakara Shastri's commentary ''Subodhini'' is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* ] (1548–1596), commentary ''Prameyadīpikā Bhavabodha'' is in the ] tradition.{{Sfn|Sharma|2000|p=266}}
* ] (1595–1671) commentary ''Artha samgraha'' is in the ] tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* Vanamali Mishra's (1650–1720) commentary ''Gitagudharthacandrika'' is quite similar to Madhvacharya's commentary and is in the Dvaita Vedanta tradition.{{Sfn|Sharma|2000|p=391}}


The Indian jurist and politician ] also saw the Gita's defense of violence based on the eternity of the soul (atman) as unethical. Ambedkar wrote that "to say that killing is no killing because what is killed is the body and not the soul is an unheard of defense of murder...If Krishna were to appear as a lawyer acting for a client who is being tried for murder and pleaded the defense set out by him in the Bhagavad Gita there is not the slightest doubt that he would be sent to the lunatic asylum."<ref>Engels, Jeremy David (2021). ''The Ethics of Oneness: Emerson, Whitman, and the Bhagavad Gita'', p. 14. University of Chicago Press.</ref>


=== Modern-era commentaries ===
In his introduction to his translation of the Gita, ] argues that while Arjuna appears as a pacifist, concerned with ], Krishna "is the ]" who convinces him to kill.<ref name=":3">P. Lal (2019). '','' Introduction''.'' Orient Paperbacks</ref> According to Lal, Krishna makes use of a "startling" argument to convince Arjuna to kill, which Lal outlines as "the atman is eternal; only the body dies; so go ahead and kill - you will kill only the body, the atman will remain unaffected ."<ref name=":3" /> Lal states that "there could hardly be a better example of forked-tongue speciousness."<ref name=":3" /> Lal further argues that: "the truth of the matter surely is that no rational refutation is possible of the essential humanist position that killing is wrong...many of the answers given by Krishna appear to be evasive and occasionally sophistic. When logic fails, Krishna apparently resorts to divine magic."<ref name=":3" /> According to Lal, in the Gita, Krishna "stuns Arjuna with a glorious 'revelation' of psychedelic intensity." This "confidence trick" is problematic for Lal, who sees Arjuna's plight as a "painful and honest problem that Krishna should have faced on its own terms, painfully and honestly, and did not."<ref name=":3" />
* Among notable modern commentators of the Bhagavad Gita are ], ], ] (who called its philosophy Anasakti Yoga), ], ], ], ], ] and ]. Chinmayananda took a syncretistic approach to interpret the text of the Gita.<ref>For Aurobindo, Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, and Chinmayananda as notable commentators see: {{harvnb|Sargeant|2009|page=xix}}</ref><ref>For Aurobindo as notable commentators, see: {{harvnb|Gambhirananda|1997|page=xix}}</ref>
* Tilak wrote his commentary ''Shrimadh Bhagavad Gita Rahasya'' while in jail during the period 1910–1911 serving a six-year sentence imposed by the ] in India for ].<ref>Stevenson, Robert W., "Tilak and the Bhagavadgita's Doctrine of Karmayoga", in: {{harvnb|Minor|1986|page=44}}</ref> While noting that the Gita teaches possible paths to liberation, his commentary places most emphasis on Karma yoga.<ref>Stevenson, Robert W., "Tilak and the Bhagavadgita's Doctrine of Karmayoga", in: {{harvnb|Minor|1986|page=49}}</ref>
* No book was more central to Gandhi's life and thought than the Bhagavad Gita, which he referred to as his "spiritual dictionary".<ref name="Minor,p.88">Jordens, J.T.F., "Gandhi and the Bhagavadgita", in: {{harvnb|Minor|1986|page=88}}</ref> During his stay in Yeravada jail in 1929,<ref name="Minor,p.88"/> Gandhi wrote a commentary on the Bhagavad Gita in ]. The Gujarati manuscript was translated into English by Mahadev Desai, who provided an additional introduction and commentary. It was published with a foreword by Gandhi in 1946.<ref>{{harvnb|Gandhi|2009}}, First Edition 1946. Other editions: 1948, 1951, 1956.</ref><ref>A shorter edition, omitting the bulk of Desai's additional commentary, has been published as: ''Anasaktiyoga: The Gospel of Selfless Action''. Jim Rankin, editor. The author is listed as M.K. Gandhi; Mahadev Desai, translator. (Dry Bones Press, San Francisco, 1998) {{ISBN|1-883938-47-3}}.</ref>
* The version by ], entitled ''],'' is "by far the most widely distributed of all English Gīta translations" due to the efforts of ].<ref name="Davis 2014 page=168">{{harvnb|Davis|2014|pages=167–168, 175}}</ref> Its publisher, the {{IAST|Bhaktivēdānta Book Trust}}, estimates sales at twenty-three million copies, a figure which includes the original English edition and secondary translations into fifty-six other languages.<ref name="Davis 2014 page=168"/> The Prabhupada commentary interprets the Gita in the ] tradition of Chaitanya,<ref name="Davis 2014 page=168"/> quite similar to ] Dvaita Vēdanta ideology.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pages=xxiv–xxvi}} It presents Krishna as the Supreme, a means of saving mankind from the anxiety of material existence through loving devotion. Unlike in Bengal and nearby regions of India where the '']'' is the primary text for this tradition, the devotees of Prabhupada's ISKCON tradition have found better reception for their ideas by those curious in the West through the Gita, according to Richard Davis.<ref name="Davis 2014 page=168"/>
* In 1966, Mahārishi Mahesh Yogi published a partial translation.<ref name="Davis 2014 page=168"/>
* An abridged version with 42 verses and commentary was published by ].<ref>{{cite book|author=Arthur Osborne|title=The Collected Works of Ramana Maharshi|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_rdMEhgClvEC|year=1997|publisher=Weiser|isbn=978-0-87728-907-4|pages=101–104}}</ref>
* ''Bhagavad Gita – The song of God'', is a commentary by ].<ref name=SongOfGod>{{cite web|url=http://www.holy-bhagavad-gita.org/|title=Bhagavad Gita The Song of God, Commentary by Swami Mukundananda|access-date=25 November 2017|archive-date=1 December 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171201035940/http://www.holy-bhagavad-gita.org/|url-status=live}}</ref>
* ] two-volume commentary on the Bhagavad Gita, called '']'', was released in 1995 and is available in 4 languages and as an English e-book.<ref>{{harvnb|Yogananda|1995}}</ref> The book is significant in that unlike other commentaries of the Bhagavad Gita, which focus on ], ], and ] in relation to the Gita, Yogananda's work stresses the training of one's mind, or ].<ref name="Taylor & Francis"/> It is published by ]/].
* ] commentary interprets the Gita for his collection of problems of daily modern life.<ref>{{harvnb|Easwaran|1993}}</ref>
* Other modern writers such as ] and Sādhu Vāsvāni have published their own commentaries.<ref>{{cite book|author=A. Pārthasārathy|title=Bhagavad Gita|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=ZVC5AwAAQBAJ |year=2013|publisher=A. Parthasarathy | isbn= 978-93-81094-13-6}}</ref>
* Academic commentaries include those by Jeaneane Fowler,{{sfn|Fowler|2012}} Ithamar Theodor,{{sfn|Theodor|2010}} and Robert Zaehner.{{sfn|Zaehner|1969}}
* A collection of Christian commentaries on the Gita has been edited by Catherine Cornille, comparing and contrasting a wide range of views on the text by theologians and religious scholars.<ref>{{cite book|author=Catherine Cornille|title=Song Divine: Christian Commentaries on the Bhagavad Gītā |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=F8DxPDYHgbEC|year=2006|publisher=Peeters Publishers|isbn=978-90-429-1769-9}}</ref>
* The book ''The Teachings of Bhagavad Gita: Timeless Wisdom for the Modern Age'' by Richa Tilokani offers a woman's perspective on the teachings of the Bhagavad Gita in a simplified and reader-friendly spiritual format.<ref>{{cite web |title=Richa Tilokani's The Teachings of Bhagavad Gita: Timeless Wisdom for the Modern Age |url=https://www.ritzmagazine.in/richa-tilokanis-the-teachings-of-bhagavad-gita/ |website=Ritz Magazine |date=28 June 2021 |access-date=28 July 2021 |archive-date=23 July 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210723102003/https://www.ritzmagazine.in/richa-tilokanis-the-teachings-of-bhagavad-gita/ |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Who Would Want a Woman's Perspective on the Bhagavad Gita? A Writer's Story |url=https://www.shethepeople.tv/personal-stories/womans-perspective-on-the-bhagavad-gita/ |website=She The People |date=8 June 2021 |access-date=28 July 2021 |archive-date=28 July 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210728090511/https://www.shethepeople.tv/personal-stories/womans-perspective-on-the-bhagavad-gita/ |url-status=live }}</ref>
*] published a four-volume Bhagavad Gītā, Home Study Course in 1998 based on transcripts from his teaching and commentary of the Bhagavad Gītā in the classroom. This was later published in 2011 in a new edition and nine-volume format.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Dayananda Saraswati|first=Swami|title=Bhagavad Gītā Home Study Course.|publisher=Arsha Vidya Research and Publication Trust, Chennai.|year=2011|isbn=978-93-80049-39-7|language=English}}</ref>
*Galyna Kogut and Rahul Singh published ''An Atheist Gets the Gita'', a 21st-century interpretation of the 5,000-year-old text.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://rupapublications.co.in/authors/rahul-singh/|title=About Rahul Singh|publisher=Rupa|access-date=23 Dec 2021|archive-date=23 December 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211223082732/https://rupapublications.co.in/authors/rahul-singh/|url-status=live}}</ref>
*A compact edition by ] arranges the Sanskrit words so that their corresponding meanings form complete sentences. This method, known as 'anvaya' in Sanskrit, follows the traditional way of presenting the meaning. Additionally, the book includes extensive footnotes that clarify difficult concepts.


== Translations and modern commentaries==
Mahatma Gandhi credited his commitment for ''ahimsa'' to the Gita. For Gandhi, the Gita is teaching that people should fight for justice and righteous values, that they should never meekly suffer injustice to avoid a war. According to the Indologist Ananya Vajpeyi, the Gita does not elaborate on the means or stages of war, nor on ''ahimsa'', except for stating that "''ahimsa'' is virtuous and characterizes an awakened, steadfast, ethical man."<ref name="Vajpeyi2012p66">{{cite book |author=Ananya Vajpeyi |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=knCDsvJYy1EC&pg=PA66 |title=Righteous Republic: The Political Foundations of Modern India |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=2012 |isbn=978-0-674-06728-8 |pages=66–67}}</ref> For Gandhi, states Vajpeyi, ''ahimsa'' is the "relationship between self and other" as he and his fellow Indians battled against colonial rule. Gandhian ahimsa is in fact "the essence of the entire Gita", according to Vajpeyi.<ref name="Vajpeyi2012p66" /> The teachings of the Gita on ''ahimsa'' are ambiguous, states Arvind Sharma, and this is best exemplified by the fact that Nathuram Godse stated the Gita as his inspiration to do his dharma after he ].{{sfn|Sharma|1986|pp=xiv–xv}} ], the Trappist monk and author of books on Zen Buddhism, concurs with Gandhi and states that the Gita is not teaching violence nor propounding a "make war" ideology. Instead, it is teaching peace and discussing one's duty to examine what is right and then act with pure intentions, when one faces difficult and repugnant choices.{{sfn|Miller|1986|pp=149–150}}

=== Moksha: Liberation ===
{{Main|Moksha}}
Liberation or '']'' in ] philosophy is not something that can be acquired. '']'' (Self) and Self-knowledge, along with the loss of egotistic ignorance, the goal of ''moksha'', is something that is always present as the essence of the self, and must be realized by each person by one's own effort. While the ] largely uphold such a monistic viewpoint of liberation, the Bhagavad Gita also accommodates the dualistic and theistic aspects of ''moksha''. The Gita, while including impersonal ''Nirguna Brahman'' as the goal, mainly revolves around the relationship between the Self and a personal God or '']''. A synthesis of knowledge, devotion, and desireless action is offered by Krishna as a spectrum of choices to Arjuna; the same combination is suggested to the reader as a way to moksha.<ref>{{harvnb|Fowler|2012|pages=xlv–xlviii}}</ref> Christopher Chapple---a scholar focusing on Indian religions---in ] translation of the Gita, states that "In the model presented by the Bhagavad Gita, every aspect of life is in fact a way of salvation."{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pages=xxii–xxiii}}

===Pancaratra Agama===
According to Dennis Hudson, there is an overlap between Vedic and Tantric rituals within the teachings found in the Bhagavad Gita.{{sfn|Hudson|2002|pp=9, 160–163}} He places the ''Pancaratra Agama'' in the last three or four centuries of 1st-millennium BCE, and proposes that both the tantric and vedic, the Agama and the Gita share the same ] roots.{{sfn|Hudson|2002|p=133}} Some of the ideas in the Bhagavad Gita connect it to the ''Shatapatha Brahmana'' of '']''. The ''Shatapatha Brahmana'', for example, mentions the absolute Purusha who dwells in every human being.

], on a coin of ] {{circa|180{{nbsp}}BCE}}.<ref name="US">{{cite book |last1=Singh |first1=Upinder |title=A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the Stone Age to the 12th Century |date=2008 |publisher=Pearson Education India |isbn=978-81-317-1120-0 |pages=436–438 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=H3lUIIYxWkEC&pg=PA437 |language=en}}</ref><ref>], {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220405172142/https://www.academia.edu/25807197 |date=5 April 2022 }}, 2016.</ref> This is "the earliest unambiguous image" of the deity.<ref name="BRILL">{{cite book |last1=Srinivasan |first1=Doris |title=Many Heads, Arms, and Eyes: Origin, Meaning, and Form of Multiplicity in Indian Art |date=1997 |publisher=BRILL |isbn=978-90-04-10758-8 |page=215 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vZheP9dIX9wC&pg=PA215 |language=en}}</ref>}}]]
According to Hudson, a story in this Vedic text highlights the meaning of the name Vāsudeva as the 'shining one (deva) who dwells (vasu) in all things and in whom all things dwell', and the meaning of Vishnu to be the 'pervading actor'. In Bhagavad Gita, similarly, '] identified himself both with ], Vishnu and their meanings'.{{sfn|Hudson|2002|pp=156–157}}{{refn|group=note|Other parallelism include verse 10.21 of Gita replicating the structure of verse 1.2.5 of the Shatapatha Brahmana.{{sfn|Hudson|2002|p=157}}}} The ideas at the center of Vedic rituals in ''Shatapatha Brahmana'' and the teachings of the Bhagavad Gita revolve around this absolute Person, the primordial genderless absolute, which is the same as the goal of Pancaratra Agama and Tantra.{{sfn|Hudson|2002|pp=162–163}}

== Translations ==
The first English translation of the Bhagavad Gita was published by ] in 1785.<ref name= "Gita-Wilkins">{{cite book|editor1-last=Wilkins|editor1-first=Charles|title=The Bhagavat-Geeta, Or, Dialogues of Krishna and Arjoon in Eighteen Lectures with notes|date=1785|location=LONDON|url=https://oll.libertyfund.org/titles/wilkins-the-bhagvat-geeta-or-dialogues-of-kreeshna-and-arjoon|access-date=27 November 2019|archive-date=27 November 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191127200150/https://oll.libertyfund.org/titles/wilkins-the-bhagvat-geeta-or-dialogues-of-kreeshna-and-arjoon|url-status=live}}</ref> The Wilkins translation had an introduction to the Gita by ]. Soon the work was translated into other European languages such as French (1787), German, and Russian. In 1849, the Weleyan Mission Press, Bangalore published ''The Bhagavat-Geeta, Or, Dialogues of Krishna and Arjoon in Eighteen Lectures'', with Sanskrit, ] and English in parallel columns, edited by Rev. John Garrett, with the effort being supported by ].<ref name= "Gita-Garrett">{{cite book|editor1-last=Garrett|editor1-first=John|editor2-last=Wilhelm|editor2-first=Humboldt|title=The Bhagavat-Geeta, Or, Dialogues of Krishna and Arjoon in Eighteen Lectures|date=1849|publisher=Wesleyan Mission Press|location =Bangalore|url= https://archive.org/details/bhagavatgeetaor00humbgoog|access-date=18 January 2017}}</ref>
{{multiple image
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| image2 = 1787 Bhagavad Gita re-translation French.jpg

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| image3 = Bhagvat - Geeta, Wesleyan Mission Press, Bangalore, 1849.jpg
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| footer = Cover pages of early Gita translations. Left: Charles Wilkins ({{circa|1785{{nbsp}}CE}}); Center: Parraud re-translation of Wilkins ({{circa|1787{{nbsp}}CE}}); Right: Wesleyan Mission Press ({{circa|1849{{nbsp}}CE}}).
}}
In 1981, Larson stated that "a complete listing of Gita translations and a related secondary bibliography would be nearly endless".<ref name=larson81>{{Citation |doi=10.2307/1398797 |author=Gerald James Larson |year=1981 |title=The Song Celestial: Two centuries of the Bhagavad Gita in English |journal=Philosophy East and West |publisher= University of Hawai'i Press |volume=31 |issue=4 |pages=513–40 |jstor=1398797}}</ref>{{rp|514}} According to Larson, there is "a massive translational tradition in English, pioneered by the British, solidly grounded philologically by the French and Germans, provided with its indigenous roots by a rich heritage of modern Indian comment and reflection, extended into various disciplinary areas by Americans, and having generated in our time a broadly based cross-cultural awareness of the importance of the Bhagavad Gita both as an expression of a specifically Indian spirituality and as one of the great religious "classics" of all time."<ref name=larson81/>{{rp|518}}

According to Sargeant, the Gita is "said to have been translated at least 200 times, in both poetic and prose forms".{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|page=1}} Richard Davis cites a count by Callewaert & Hemraj in 1982 of 1,891 translations of the Bhagavad Gita in 75 languages, including 273 in English.{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=154–155}} These translations vary,<ref>{{cite book|author=George Thompson|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=K_knYDLJMfsC |year=2008|publisher=Farrar, Straus and Giroux|isbn=978-1-4668-3531-3|pages=xi–xii}}</ref> and are in part an interpretative reconstruction of the original Sanskrit text that differ in their "friendliness to the reader",{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=159–161}} and in the amount of "violence to the original Gita text".{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|page=xxv}}{{refn|group=note|Sanskrit scholar ] produced a translation in 1986 intended to emphasise the poem's influence and current context within ], especially the works of ], ] and ].<ref>{{harvnb|Miller|1986|pages=14–17}}</ref> The translation was praised by scholars as well as literary critics.<ref>{{harvnb|Bloom|1995|page=531}}</ref><ref>{{Citation|last=Doniger|first=Wendy|title=Obituary: Barbara Stoler Miller|journal=Journal of Asian Studies|date=August 1993|volume=52|issue=3|pages=813–15|jstor=2058944|doi=10.1017/S002191180003789X|doi-access=free}}</ref> Similarly, the Hinduism scholar Jeaneane Fowler's translation and student text has been praised for its comprehensive introduction, quality of translation, and commentary.<ref>Arvind Sharma (2014), ''Review: Three New Books on the "Bhagavad Gītā", International Journal of Hindu Studies, Vol. 18, No. 2, p. 269</ref>}}


===Persian translations===
The translations and interpretations of the Gita have been so diverse that these have been used to support apparently contradictory political and philosophical values. For example, Galvin Flood and Charles Martin note that interpretations of the Gita have been used to support "pacifism to aggressive nationalism" in politics, from "monism to theism" in philosophy.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Galvin Flood|author2=Charles Martin|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=PDYEAwAAQBAJ |year=2013 |publisher=W.W. Norton & Company| isbn=978-0-393-34513-1| page=xii}}</ref> According to William Johnson, the synthesis of ideas in the Gita is such that it can bear almost any shade of interpretation.<ref>{{cite book|author=W.J. Johnson|title=The Bhagavad Gita|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cPSoXHhh-Q0C|year=2004|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-283581-9|pages=vii–ix}}</ref> A translation "can never fully reproduce an original and no translation is transparent", states Richard Davis, but in the case of the Gita the linguistic and cultural distance for many translators is large and steep which adds to the challenge and affects the translation.{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=80–81}} For some native translators, their personal beliefs, motivations, and subjectivity affect their understanding, their choice of words and interpretation.{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=157–158}}<ref>{{cite book|author=W.J. Johnson|title=The Bhagavad Gita|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cPSoXHhh-Q0C|year=2004|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-283581-9|pages=ix–xi}}</ref>{{sfn|Sharma|1986|pp=xvi–xxvii}} Some translations by Indians, with or without Western co-translators, have "orientalist", "apologetic", "Neo-Vedantic" or "guru phenomenon" biases.<ref name=larson81/>{{rp|525–530}}
In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, in the ], multiple Persian translations of the Gita were completed.<ref>{{Cite thesis|title=Persian interpretations of the Bhagavadgita in the Mughal period : with special reference to the Sufi version of #Abd al-Raham Chishti.|url=https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.241699/|publisher=School of Oriental and African Studies (University of London)|date=1988|degree=Ph.D.|first=R.|last=Vassie|access-date=19 July 2021|archive-date=19 July 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210719012031/https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.241699/|url-status=live}}</ref>


===English translations===
{| class="wikitable autocollapse"
{| class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="float:right;"
! colspan="3" style="text-align: center;" |A sample of translations of the Bhagavad Gita<ref name="larson81" />
|+ style="text-align: center;" |English translations<ref name="larson81" />
|- |-
! style="background: #ffad66;" |Title ! style="background: #ffad66;" |Title
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| |
|- |-
|''Bhagavad Gita: The Song of God'' |''Bhagavad Gītā: Sāra-samanvitā. Translation and Summary''
|]
| ]
|2015
|
|- |-
|''Bhagavad Gita: Rhythm of Krishna (Gita in Rhymes)'' |''Bhagavad Gita: Rhythm of Krishna (Gita in Rhymes)''
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|} |}


The first English translation of the Bhagavad Gita was published by ] in 1785.<ref name= "Gita-Wilkins">{{cite book|editor1-last=Wilkins|editor1-first=Charles|title=The Bhagavat-Geeta, Or, Dialogues of Krishna and Arjoon in Eighteen Lectures with notes|date=1785|location=LONDON|url=https://oll.libertyfund.org/titles/wilkins-the-bhagvat-geeta-or-dialogues-of-kreeshna-and-arjoon|access-date=27 November 2019|archive-date=27 November 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191127200150/https://oll.libertyfund.org/titles/wilkins-the-bhagvat-geeta-or-dialogues-of-kreeshna-and-arjoon|url-status=live}}</ref> The Wilkins translation had an introduction to the Gita by ]. Soon the work was translated into other European languages such as French (1787), German, and Russian. In 1849, the Weleyan Mission Press, Bangalore published ''The Bhagavat-Geeta, Or, Dialogues of Krishna and Arjoon in Eighteen Lectures'', with Sanskrit, ] and English in parallel columns, edited by Rev. John Garrett, with the effort being supported by ].<ref name= "Gita-Garrett">{{cite book|editor1-last=Garrett|editor1-first=John|editor2-last=Wilhelm|editor2-first=Humboldt|title=The Bhagavat-Geeta, Or, Dialogues of Krishna and Arjoon in Eighteen Lectures|date=1849|publisher=Wesleyan Mission Press|location =Bangalore|url= https://archive.org/details/bhagavatgeetaor00humbgoog|access-date=18 January 2017}}</ref>
According to the ] scholar Robert Minor, the Gita is "probably the most translated of any Asian text", but many modern versions heavily reflect the views of the organization or person who does the translating and distribution. In Minor's view, the Harvard scholar Franklin Edgerton's English translation and Richard Garbe's German translation are closer to the text than many others.{{sfn|Minor|1982|pp=xx–xxi}} According to Larson, the Edgerton translation is remarkably faithful, but it is "harsh, stilted, and syntactically awkward" with an "orientalist" bias and lacks "appreciation of the text's contemporary religious significance".<ref name=larson81/>{{rp|524}}
{{multiple image
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| width2 = 94
=== The Gita in other languages ===
| alt2 =
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| image3 = Bhagvat - Geeta, Wesleyan Mission Press, Bangalore, 1849.jpg
| width3 = 133
| alt3 =
| caption3 =
| footer = Cover pages of early Gita translations. Left: Charles Wilkins ({{circa|1785{{nbsp}}CE}}); Center: Parraud re-translation of Wilkins ({{circa|1787{{nbsp}}CE}}); Right: Wesleyan Mission Press ({{circa|1849{{nbsp}}CE}}).
}}
In 1981, Larson stated that "a complete listing of Gita translations and a related secondary bibliography would be nearly endless".<ref name=larson81>{{Citation |doi=10.2307/1398797 |author=Gerald James Larson |year=1981 |title=The Song Celestial: Two centuries of the Bhagavad Gita in English |journal=Philosophy East and West |publisher= University of Hawai'i Press |volume=31 |issue=4 |pages=513–40 |jstor=1398797}}</ref>{{rp|514}} According to Larson, there is "a massive translational tradition in English, pioneered by the British, solidly grounded philologically by the French and Germans, provided with its indigenous roots by a rich heritage of modern Indian comment and reflection, extended into various disciplinary areas by Americans, and having generated in our time a broadly based cross-cultural awareness of the importance of the Bhagavad Gita both as an expression of a specifically Indian spirituality and as one of the great religious "classics" of all time."<ref name=larson81/>{{rp|518}}


According to Sargeant, the Gita is "said to have been translated at least 200 times, in both poetic and prose forms".{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|page=1}} Richard Davis cites a count by Callewaert & Hemraj in 1982 of 1,891 translations of the Bhagavad Gita in 75 languages, including 273 in English.{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=154–155}} These translations vary,<ref>{{cite book|author=George Thompson|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=K_knYDLJMfsC |year=2008|publisher=Farrar, Straus and Giroux|isbn=978-1-4668-3531-3|pages=xi–xii}}</ref> and are in part an interpretative reconstruction of the original Sanskrit text that differ in their "friendliness to the reader",{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=159–161}} and in the amount of "violence to the original Gita text".{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|page=xxv}}{{refn|group=note|Sanskrit scholar ] produced a translation in 1986 intended to emphasise the poem's influence and current context within ], especially the works of ], ] and ].<ref>{{harvnb|Miller|1986|pages=14–17}}</ref> The translation was praised by scholars as well as literary critics.<ref>{{harvnb|Bloom|1995|page=531}}</ref><ref>{{Citation|last=Doniger|first=Wendy|title=Obituary: Barbara Stoler Miller|journal=Journal of Asian Studies|date=August 1993|volume=52|issue=3|pages=813–15|jstor=2058944|doi=10.1017/S002191180003789X|doi-access=free}}</ref> Similarly, the Hinduism scholar Jeaneane Fowler's translation and student text has been praised for its comprehensive introduction, quality of translation, and commentary.<ref>Arvind Sharma (2014), ''Review: Three New Books on the "Bhagavad Gītā", International Journal of Hindu Studies, Vol. 18, No. 2, p. 269</ref>}}
The Gita has also been translated into European languages other than English. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, in the ], multiple Persian translations of the Gita were completed.<ref>{{Cite thesis|title=Persian interpretations of the Bhagavadgita in the Mughal period : with special reference to the Sufi version of #Abd al-Raham Chishti.|url=https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.241699/|publisher=School of Oriental and African Studies (University of London)|date=1988|degree=Ph.D.|first=R.|last=Vassie|access-date=19 July 2021|archive-date=19 July 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210719012031/https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.241699/|url-status=live}}</ref> In 1808, passages from the Gita were part of the first direct translation of Sanskrit into German, appearing in a book through which ] became known as the founder of Indian philology in Germany.<ref>What had previously been known of Indian literature in Germany had been translated from the English. {{harvnb|Winternitz|1972|page=15|volume=1}}</ref> The most significant French translation of the Gita, according to J. A. B. van Buitenen, was published by ] in 1922.{{sfn|J.A.B. van Buitenen|2013|p=xii; Emile Senart's Translation: Wikisource}} More recently, a new French translation was produced by the Indologist Alain Porte in 2004.<ref>{{cite book|language=fr|author=Alain Porte|title=Bhagavad Gîtâ|place=Paris|publisher=Arléa Poche (n°6)|date=2004|pages=167|isbn=2363082060}} The book was reprinted in 2019.</ref> ] released the first ] version of the scripture, with the original Sanskrit text and a Hindi commentary, on 30 November 2007.<ref group=web>{{cite news |date=3 December 2007 |url=http://zeenews.india.com/news/lifestyle/bhagwad-gita-in-braille-language_411003.html |title=Bhagavad Gita in Braille Language |work=Zee News |access-date=24 April 2011 |archive-date=16 August 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110816172429/http://zeenews.india.com/news/lifestyle/bhagwad-gita-in-braille-language_411003.html |url-status=live }}</ref>


The translations and interpretations of the Gita have been so diverse that these have been used to support contradictory political and philosophical values. For example, Galvin Flood and Charles Martin note that interpretations of the Gita have been used to support "pacifism to aggressive nationalism" in politics, from "monism to theism" in philosophy.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Galvin Flood|author2=Charles Martin|title=The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=PDYEAwAAQBAJ |year=2013 |publisher=W.W. Norton & Company| isbn=978-0-393-34513-1| page=xii}}</ref> According to William Johnson, the synthesis of ideas in the Gita is such that it can bear almost any shade of interpretation.<ref>{{cite book|author=W.J. Johnson|title=The Bhagavad Gita|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cPSoXHhh-Q0C|year=2004|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-283581-9|pages=vii–ix}}</ref> A translation "can never fully reproduce an original and no translation is transparent", states Richard Davis, but in the case of the Gita the linguistic and cultural distance for many translators is large and steep which adds to the challenge and affects the translation.{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=80–81}} For some native translators, their personal beliefs, motivations, and subjectivity affect their understanding, their choice of words and interpretation.{{sfn|Davis|2014|pp=157–158}}<ref>{{cite book|author=W.J. Johnson|title=The Bhagavad Gita|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cPSoXHhh-Q0C|year=2004|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-283581-9|pages=ix–xi}}</ref>{{sfn|Sharma|1986|pp=xvi–xxvii}} Some translations by Indians, with or without Western co-translators, have "orientalist", "apologetic", "Neo-Vedantic" or "guru phenomenon" biases.<ref name=larson81/>{{rp|525–530}}
The ] has published the Gita in multiple Indian languages.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.business-standard.com/article/current-affairs/after-selling-580-mn-books-gita-press-facing-existential-crisis-115090700780_1.html|title=After selling 580 mn books, Gita Press faces labour crisis|date=8 September 2015|newspaper=Business Standard|first=Virendra Singh|last=Rawat|access-date=12 October 2019|archive-date=19 October 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171019210916/http://www.business-standard.com/article/current-affairs/after-selling-580-mn-books-gita-press-facing-existential-crisis-115090700780_1.html|url-status=live}}</ref> ] translated the Gita into Tamil in the sandam metre poetic form.<ref>{{Citation|title=Bhagavadgita|year=1997|publisher=Bharati Publications|location=Chennai, India}}</ref> The ] associated with ISKCON has re-translated and published A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada's 1972 English translation of the Gita in 56 non-Indian languages.<ref>{{cite web |title=Bhagavad Gita As It Is |author=A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada |display-authors=etal |year=2015 |publisher=Bhaktivedanta Book Trust (1972 edition) |url=http://files.krishna.com/2016/01-Jan/BBT_Books_Printed_SEP15.pdf |access-date=6 October 2017 |archive-date=6 October 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171006212036/http://files.krishna.com/2016/01-Jan/BBT_Books_Printed_SEP15.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Davis 2014 page=168"/>{{refn|group=note|Teachings of ] (ISKCON), a ] religious organisation which spread rapidly in North America in the 1970s and 1980s, are based on a translation of the Gita called '']'' by ].<ref>{{harvnb|Jones|Ryan|2007|page=199}}</ref> These teachings are also illustrated in the ]s of ] in Los Angeles, California.<ref>{{cite journal|title=F.A.T.E. – the First American Theistic {{sic|Exib|ition|nolink=y}} – Back To Godhead|journal=]|date=1 July 1977|volume=12|issue=7|pages=16–23|url=http://www.backtogodhead.in/f-a-t-e-the-first-american-theistic-exibition/|access-date=8 February 2018|archive-date=11 March 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180311140924/http://www.backtogodhead.in/f-a-t-e-the-first-american-theistic-exibition/|url-status=live}}</ref>}} ] has written the Geeta in ] as Geetai (or "Mother Geeta") in a similar shloka form. ] retold the complete text in ] prose as ''Bhagavad Gita: Dialog Arjuna dan Krishna di Kurukshetra'' (2021).


According to the ] scholar Robert Minor, the Gita is "probably the most translated of any Asian text", but many modern versions heavily reflect the views of the organization or person who does the translating and distribution. In Minor's view, the Harvard scholar Franklin Edgerton's English translation and Richard Garbe's German translation are closer to the text than many others.{{sfn|Minor|1982|pp=xx–xxi}} According to Larson, the Edgerton translation is remarkably faithful, but it is "harsh, stilted, and syntactically awkward" with an "orientalist" bias and lacks "appreciation of the text's contemporary religious significance".<ref name=larson81/>{{rp|524}}
]'s commentary on the Bhagavad Gita called '']'' has been translated into Spanish, German, Thai and Hindi so far. The book is significant in that unlike other commentaries of the Bhagavad Gita, which focus on ], ], and ] in relation to the Gita, Yogananda's work stresses the training of one's mind, or ].<ref name="Taylor & Francis">{{cite book |last1=Nadkarni |first1=M.V.|title=The Bhagavad-Gita for the Modern Reader: History, Interpretations and Philosophy |date=2016 |publisher=] |pages=135–137 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DCklDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA135|isbn=978-1-315-43899-3}}</ref>


=== The Gita in other European languages ===
== Bhashya (commentaries) ==
In 1808, passages from the Gita were part of the first direct translation of Sanskrit into German, appearing in a book through which ] became known as the founder of Indian philology in Germany.<ref>What had previously been known of Indian literature in Germany had been translated from the English. {{harvnb|Winternitz|1972|page=15|volume=1}}</ref> The most significant French translation of the Gita, according to J. A. B. van Buitenen, was published by ] in 1922.{{sfn|Buitenen|2013|p=xii; Emile Senart's Translation: Wikisource}} More recently, a new French translation was produced by the Indologist Alain Porte in 2004.<ref>{{cite book|language=fr|author=Alain Porte|title=Bhagavad Gîtâ|place=Paris|publisher=Arléa Poche (n°6)|date=2004|pages=167|isbn=2363082060}} The book was reprinted in 2019.</ref> ] released the first ] version of the scripture, with the original Sanskrit text and a Hindi commentary, on 30 November 2007.<ref group=web>{{cite news |date=3 December 2007 |url=http://zeenews.india.com/news/lifestyle/bhagwad-gita-in-braille-language_411003.html |title=Bhagavad Gita in Braille Language |work=Zee News |access-date=24 April 2011 |archive-date=16 August 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110816172429/http://zeenews.india.com/news/lifestyle/bhagwad-gita-in-braille-language_411003.html |url-status=live }}</ref>
Bhagavad Gita integrates various schools of thought, notably Vedanta, Samkhya and Yoga, and other theistic ideas. It remains a popular text for commentators belonging to various philosophical schools. However, its composite nature also leads to varying interpretations of the text and historic scholars have written '']'' (commentaries) on it.<ref name=sadhale>SGS Sadhale ( 1935), , Volume 1 & 2, pages 1–7</ref> According to ], the Gita is "one of the hardest books to interpret, which accounts for the numerous commentaries on it—each differing from the rest in one essential point or the other".<ref>{{harvnb|Singh|2006|pages=54–55}}</ref>


]'s commentary on the Bhagavad Gita called '']'' has been translated into Spanish, German, Thai and Hindi so far. The book is significant in that, unlike other commentaries of the Bhagavad Gita, which focus on ], ], and ] in relation to the Gita, Yogananda's work stresses the training of one's mind, or ].<ref name="Taylor & Francis">{{cite book |last1=Nadkarni |first1=M.V.|title=The Bhagavad-Gita for the Modern Reader: History, Interpretations and Philosophy |date=2016 |publisher=] |pages=135–137 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DCklDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA135|isbn=978-1-315-43899-3}}</ref>
According to Richard Davis, the Gita has attracted much scholarly interest in Indian history and some 227 commentaries have survived in the Sanskrit language alone.{{sfn|Davis|2014|pages=55–56}} It has also attracted commentaries in regional vernacular languages for centuries, such as the one by Sant Dnyaneshwar in Marathi (13th century).<ref name=Dnyandevfull/>


===Indian languages===
=== Classical commentaries ===
The ] has published the Gita in multiple Indian languages.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.business-standard.com/article/current-affairs/after-selling-580-mn-books-gita-press-facing-existential-crisis-115090700780_1.html|title=After selling 580 mn books, Gita Press faces labour crisis|date=8 September 2015|newspaper=Business Standard|first=Virendra Singh|last=Rawat|access-date=12 October 2019|archive-date=19 October 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171019210916/http://www.business-standard.com/article/current-affairs/after-selling-580-mn-books-gita-press-facing-existential-crisis-115090700780_1.html|url-status=live}}</ref> ] translated the Gita into Tamil in the sandam metre poetic form.<ref>{{Citation|title=Bhagavadgita|year=1997|publisher=Bharati Publications|location=Chennai, India}}</ref> The ] associated with ISKCON has re-translated and published A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada's 1972 English translation of the Gita in 56 non-Indian languages.<ref>{{cite web |title=Bhagavad Gita As It Is |author=A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada |display-authors=etal |year=2015 |publisher=Bhaktivedanta Book Trust (1972 edition) |url=http://files.krishna.com/2016/01-Jan/BBT_Books_Printed_SEP15.pdf |access-date=6 October 2017 |archive-date=6 October 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171006212036/http://files.krishna.com/2016/01-Jan/BBT_Books_Printed_SEP15.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Davis 2014 page=168"/>{{refn|group=note|Teachings of ] (ISKCON), a ] religious organisation which spread rapidly in North America in the 1970s and 1980s, are based on a translation of the Gita called '']'' by ].<ref>{{harvnb|Jones|Ryan|2007|page=199}}</ref> These teachings are also illustrated in the ]s of ] in Los Angeles, California.<ref>{{cite journal|title=F.A.T.E. – the First American Theistic {{sic|Exib|ition|nolink=y}} – Back To Godhead|journal=]|date=1 July 1977|volume=12|issue=7|pages=16–23|url=http://www.backtogodhead.in/f-a-t-e-the-first-american-theistic-exibition/|access-date=8 February 2018|archive-date=11 March 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180311140924/http://www.backtogodhead.in/f-a-t-e-the-first-american-theistic-exibition/|url-status=live}}</ref>}} ] has written the Geeta in ] as Geetai (or "Mother Geeta") in a similar shloka form. ] retold the complete text in ] prose as ''Bhagavad Gita: Dialog Arjuna dan Krishna di Kurukshetra'' (2021).
The Bhagavad Gita is referenced in the '']'' and numerous scholars wrote commentaries on it, including ], ], ], ], and ].{{sfn|Eliot Deutsch|Rohit Dalvi|2004|p=60}}{{sfn|Flood|1996|page=124}} Many of these commentators state that the Gita is "meant to be a ''moksa-shastra'' (''moksasatra''), and not a ''dharmasastra'', an ''arthasastra'' or a ''kamasastra''".<ref>{{cite book|author=Abhinavagupta (Rājānaka.)|translator=]|title= Gītārthasaṅgraha|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=U9oUAAAAIAAJ |year=1983|publisher=Brill Academic|isbn=90-04-06736-1| pages=30–31 with footnotes}}</ref>


=== Adaptations in popular culture ===
====Śaṅkara (c. 800 CE)====
] retold the story of Gandhi's early development as an activist in South Africa through the text of the Gita in the opera '']'' (1979). The entire libretto of the opera consists of sayings from the Gita sung in the original Sanskrit.<ref group=web>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/14/arts/music/14saty.html|title=Fanciful Visions on the Mahatma's Road to Truth and Simplicity|last=Tommasini|first=Anthony|date=14 April 2008|work=The New York Times|access-date=16 October 2009|archive-date=17 April 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090417090620/http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/14/arts/music/14saty.html|url-status=live}}</ref>
The oldest and most influential surviving commentary was published by ] (Śaṅkarācārya).<ref name="Zaehner, p. 3">{{harvnb|Zaehner|1969|page=3}}</ref><ref name="Flood 1996 page=124">{{harvnb|Flood|1996|page=124}}</ref> Shankara interprets the Gita in a monist, nondualistic tradition (]).<ref>{{cite book| title= The Bhagavad Gita with the Commentary of Sri Sankaracharya| author=Alladi Mahadeva Sastry|publisher= Samata| url=https://archive.org/details/Bhagavad-Gita.with.the.Commentary.of.Sri.Shankaracharya/page/n0| year=1980}}</ref> Shankara prefaces his comments by stating that the Gita is popular among the laity, that the text has been studied and commented upon by earlier scholars (these texts have not survived), but that "I have found that to the laity it appears to teach diverse and quite contradictory doctrines". He calls the Gita "an epitome of the essentials of the whole ]".<ref>{{cite book| title= The Bhagavad Gita with the Commentary of Sri Sankaracharya| author=Alladi Mahadeva Sastry|publisher= Samata| url=https://archive.org/details/Bhagavad-Gita.with.the.Commentary.of.Sri.Shankaracharya/page/n0| year=1980| pages=ii, 1–6}}</ref> To Shankara, the teaching of the Gita is to shift an individual's focus from the outer, impermanent, fleeting objects of desire and senses to the inner, permanent, eternal atman-Brahman-Vasudeva that is identical, in everything and in every being.<ref>{{cite book|author=N.V. Isaeva|title=Shankara and Indian Philosophy |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J43SDe9ilOsC |year=1993|publisher=State University of New York Press |isbn=978-0-7914-1282-4|pages=211–214}}</ref>


In ] ''Arjuna's Dilemma'', the philosophical dilemma faced by Arjuna is dramatised in operatic form with a blend of Indian and Western music styles.<ref group=web>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/07/arts/music/07arju.html|title=Warrior Prince From India Wrestles With Destiny|last=Tommasini|first=Anthony|date=7 November 2008|work=The New York Times|access-date=16 October 2009|archive-date=24 June 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170624221254/http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/07/arts/music/07arju.html|url-status=live}}</ref>
====Abhinavagupta (c. 1000 CE)====
] was a theologian and philosopher of the Kashmir Shaivism (]) tradition.<ref name="Flood 1996 page=124"/> He wrote a commentary on the Gita as ''Gitartha-Samgraha'', which has survived into the modern era. The Gita text he commented on is a slightly different recension than the one of Adi Shankara. He interprets its teachings in the Shaiva Advaita (monism) tradition quite similar to Adi Shankara, but with the difference that he considers both Self and matter to be metaphysically real and eternal. Their respective interpretations of ''jnana yoga'' are also somewhat different, and Abhinavagupta uses Atman, Brahman, Shiva, and Krishna interchangeably. Abhinavagupta's commentary is notable for its citations of more ancient scholars, in a style similar to Adi Shankara. However, the texts he quotes have not survived into the modern era.<ref>{{cite book|author=Abhinavagupta (Rājānaka.)|translator=]|title= Gītārthasaṅgraha|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=U9oUAAAAIAAJ |year=1983|publisher=Brill Academic|isbn=90-04-06736-1| pages=30–35, 41–47 with footnotes}}</ref>


The 1993 Sanskrit film, '']'', directed by ] won the ] ] for ].<ref group=web name="40thaward">{{cite web|url=http://iffi.nic.in/Dff2011/Frm40thNFAAward.aspx|title=40th National Film Awards|publisher=]|access-date=2 March 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160602174839/http://iffi.nic.in/Dff2011/Frm40thNFAAward.aspx|archive-date=2 June 2016|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref group=web name="40thawardPDF">{{cite web|url=http://dff.nic.in/2011/40th_nff_1993.pdf|title=40th National Film Awards (PDF)|publisher=]|access-date=2 March 2012|archive-date=9 March 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160309053748/http://dff.nic.in/2011/40th_nff_1993.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref>
====Rāmānuja (c. 1100 CE)====
] was a Hindu theologian, philosopher, and an exponent of the Sri Vaishnavism (]) tradition in 11th and early 12th century. Like his Vedanta peers, Ramanuja wrote a '']'' (commentary) on the Gita - ].<ref>{{harvnb|Sampatkumaran|1985|page=xx}}</ref> Ramanuja's commentary disagreed with Adi Shankara's interpretation of the Gita as a text on nondualism (Self and Brahman are identical), and instead interpreted it as a form of dualistic and qualified monism (]).<ref>{{cite book|author=William M. Indich|title=Consciousness in Advaita Vedanta|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=7ykZjWOiBMoC|year=1995|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass|isbn=978-81-208-1251-2|pages=1–2, 97–102}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=C.J. Bartley |title=The Theology of Rāmānuja: Realism and Religion|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=9SpTAQAAQBAJ| year=2013| publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-85306-7|pages=2–3, 87–91}}</ref>


The 1995 novel by Steven Pressfield, and its adaptation as the 2000 golf movie '']'' by ] has parallels to the Bhagavad Gita, according to Steven J. Rosen. Steven Pressfield acknowledges that the Gita was his inspiration, the golfer character in his novel is Arjuna, and the caddie is Krishna, states Rosen. The movie, however, uses the plot but glosses over the teachings unlike in the novel.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140804211632/http://hinduismtoday.com/modules/smartsection/item.php?itemid=3988 |date=4 August 2014 }}, Steven Rosen</ref>
====Madhva (c. 1250 CE)====
], a commentator of the Dvaita (modern taxonomy) Tatvavada (actually quoted by Madhva) Vedanta school,<ref name="Flood 1996 page=124"/> wrote a commentary on the Bhagavad Gita, which exemplifies the thinking of the Tatvavada school (]).<ref name="Zaehner, p. 3"/> According to Christopher Chapelle, in Madhva's school there is "an eternal and complete distinction between the Supreme, the many Selfs, and matter and its divisions".{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pages=xxiii–xxiv}} His commentary on the Gita is called {{IAST|Gita Bhāshya}}. Madhva's commentary has attracted secondary works by pontiffs of the ] monasteries such as ], ], and ].<ref>{{harvnb|Rao|2002|page=86}}</ref>


==Duty (''svadharma'') and the caste-system==
====Keśava Kāśmīri (c. 1479 CE)====
Keśava Kāśmīri Bhaṭṭa, a commentator of Dvaitādvaita Vedanta school, wrote a commentary on the Bhagavad Gita named {{IAST|Tattva-prakāśikā}}. The text states that ''Dasasloki''—possibly authored by Nimbarka—teaches the essence of the Gita; the ''Gita tattva prakashika'' interprets the Gita also in a hybrid monist-dualist manner.<ref name="Nadkarni2016p37"/><ref name="archive.org">SGS Sadhale ( 1936), , Volume 2 of 3</ref>


===Neo-Hindu interpretation of ''svadharma''===
====Gauḍīya Vaiṣṇava Commentaries====
Arjuna is advised by Krishna to do his ''sva-dharma'', the "dharma of a particular ]."{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=264}} Since Arjuna belongs to the warrior ('']'') varna (social class), Krishna is telling Arjuna to act as a warrior.{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=264}} Neo-Hindus, preceded by medieval commentators like Dnyaneshwar, have preferred to translate ''svadharma'' not as class-related duty, or ''dharma'' as religion, but interpret it as "everyone must follow his ''sva-dharma''."{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|pp=261–262}}
*] (b. 1486 CE). Commentaries on various parts of the Gita are in the ] Bhakti Vedanta tradition (''].'';{{refn|group=note|According to Edwin Bryant and Maria Ekstrand, this school incorporates and integrates aspects of "qualified monism, dualism, monistic dualism, and pure nondualism".<ref name=ekstrand175>{{cite book|author1=Edwin Bryant|author2=Maria Ekstrand|title=The Hare Krishna Movement: The Postcharismatic Fate of a Religious Transplant |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mBMxPdgrBhoC&pg=PA175 |year=2004|publisher=Columbia University Press|isbn=978-0-231-50843-8|pages=175–176}}</ref>}}


According to ] (1275–1296), the Gita ultimately shows that caste differences are not important. For Dnyaneshwar, people err when they see themselves as distinct from each other and Krishna, and these distinctions vanish as soon as they accept, understand and enter with love unto Krishna.<ref>{{cite book |author1=Doranne Jacobson |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3WcMAQAAMAAJ |title=From untouchable to Dalit: essays on the Ambedkar Movement |author2=Eleanor Zelliot |author3=Susan Snow Wadley |publisher=Manohar Publications |year=1992 |isbn=978-81-85425-37-5 |pages=21–22 |author3-link=Susan Snow Wadley}}</ref>{{sfn|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pp=232–233}}
====Others====
Other classical commentators include:
* ] ({{circa|900 CE}}) disagreed with Adi Shankara, wrote his own commentary on both Bhagavad Gita and ''Brahma Sutras'' in the {{IAST|Bhedābheda}} tradition.<ref name="Nadkarni2016p37">{{harvnb|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pp=37–38}}</ref> According to Bhaskara, the Gita is essentially Advaita, but not quite exactly, suggesting that "the ''Atman'' (Self) of all beings are like waves in the ocean that is Brahman". Bhaskara also disagreed with Shankara's formulation of the ''Maya'' doctrine, stating that prakriti, atman and Brahman are all metaphysically real.<ref name="Nadkarni2016p37"/>
* ], Ramanuja's teacher, summarised the teachings of the Gita in his ''Gitartha sangraham''.
* ] (1162 CE) followed Bhaskara, but it is unclear if he ever wrote a commentary. The commentary ''Gita tattva prakashika'' is generally attributed to a student named Kesava Bhatta in his tradition, written in a hybrid monist-dualist manner, which states that ''Dasasloki''—possibly authored by Nimbarka—teaches the essence of the Gita.<ref name="Nadkarni2016p37"/><ref name="archive.org"/>
* ] (1290 CE)<ref name=Dnyandevfull>{{Citation|last1 = Dnyandev | last2 = Pradhan| first2= Vitthal Ganesh| title = Dnyaneshwari : Bhāvārthadipikā | publisher =State University of New York Press | editor-last = Lambert | editor-first = Hester Marjorie |year = 1987 |pages = x–xi |url =https://books.google.com/books?id=Xxg0RI7dSWIC |isbn = 978-0-88706-487-6}}</ref><ref>W. Doderet (1926), '']https://www.jstor.org/stable/607401 {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181016125844/https://www.jstor.org/stable/607401 |date=16 October 2018 }} The Passive Voice of the Jnanesvari]'', Bulletin of the School of Oriental Studies, Cambridge University Press, Vol. 4, No. 1 (1926), pp. 59–64</ref> commentary '']'' ({{aka}} ''Jnaneshwari'' or ''Bhavarthadipika'')<ref>{{harvnb|Gyaānadeva|Pradhan|1987}}</ref> is the oldest surviving literary work in the ],<ref name="Sircar1996"/> one of the foundations of the Varkari tradition (the ], ], ]) in Maharashtra .<ref name="Sircar1996">{{cite book|author=D.C. Sircar|title=Indian Epigraphy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hXMB3649biQC|year=1996|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass|isbn=978-81-208-1166-9|pages=53–54|access-date=16 October 2018|archive-date=15 April 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230415073744/https://books.google.com/books?id=hXMB3649biQC|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Ranade1997">{{cite book|author=R.D. Ranade|title=Tukaram| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZOWIAwAAQBAJ |year=1997| publisher=State University of New York Press|isbn=978-1-4384-1687-8|pages=9–11}}</ref><ref name="Melton2011">{{cite book|author=J. Gordon Melton|title=Religious Celebrations: An Encyclopedia of Holidays, Festivals, Solemn Observances, and Spiritual Commemorations|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lD_2J7W_2hQC |year=2011|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=978-1-59884-206-7|pages=373–374}}</ref> The commentary interprets the Gita in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.<ref>{{Citation|last1 = Dnyandev | last2 = Pradhan| first2= Vitthal Ganesh| title = Dnyaneshwari : Bhāvārthadipikā | publisher =State University of New York Press | editor-last = Lambert | editor-first = Hester Marjorie |year = 1987 |page =xviii with footnote 1 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Xxg0RI7dSWIC |isbn= 978-0-88706-487-6}}</ref> Dnyaneshwar belonged to the ] yogi tradition. His commentary on the Gita is notable for stating that it is the devotional commitment and love with inner renunciation that matters, not the name ''Krishna'' or ''Shiva'', either can be used interchangeably.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Karine Schomer|author2=W.H. McLeod|title=The Sants: Studies in a Devotional Tradition of India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OkKhOivXrhgC&pg=PA222|year=1987|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |isbn=978-81-208-0277-3|pages=219–223}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Christian Novetzke |editor=Guy L. Beck|title=Alternative Krishnas: Regional and Vernacular Variations on a Hindu Deity|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0SJ73GHSCF8C |year=2005|publisher=State University of New York Press |isbn=978-0-7914-6415-1|pages=113–118}}</ref>
* Vallabha II, a descendant of ] (1479 CE), wrote the commentary ''Tattvadeepika'' in the Suddha-Advaita tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* ] commentary ''Gudhartha Deepika'' is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* Hanumat's commentary ''Paishacha-bhasya'' is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* Anandagiri's commentary ''Bhashya-vyakhyanam'' is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* Nilkantha's commentary ''Bhava-pradeeps'' is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* Shreedhara's (1400 CE) commentary ''Avi gita'' is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* Dhupakara Shastri's commentary ''Subodhini'' is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* ] (1548-1596), commentary ''Prameyadīpikā Bhavabodha'' is in the ] tradition.{{Sfn|Sharma|2000|p=266}}
* ] (1595-1671) commentary ''Artha samgraha'' is in the ] tradition.<ref name=sadhale/>
* Vanamali Mishra's (1650-1720) commentary ''Gitagudharthacandrika'' is quite similar to Madhvacharya's commentary and is in the Dvaita Vedanta tradition.{{Sfn|Sharma|2000|p=391}}


According to ] (1838–1894), to render ''svadharma'' in English one must ask 'What is the sva-dharma for the non-Hindus', as the Lord did not ordain ''dharma'' only for Indians and "make all the others dharma-less."{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|pp=261–262}} According to Hacker, this is an attempt to "universalize Hinduism."{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|pp=261–262}}
=== Modern-era commentaries ===
* Among notable modern commentators of the Bhagavad Gita are ], ], ] (who called its philosophy Anasakti Yoga), ], ], ], ], and ]. Chinmayananda took a syncretistic approach to interpret the text of the Gita.<ref>For Aurobindo, Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, and Chinmayananda as notable commentators see: {{harvnb|Sargeant|2009|page=xix}}</ref><ref>For Aurobindo as notable commentators, see: {{harvnb|Gambhirananda|1997|page=xix}}</ref>
* Tilak wrote his commentary ''Shrimadh Bhagavad Gita Rahasya'' while in jail during the period 1910–1911 serving a six-year sentence imposed by the ] in India for ].<ref>Stevenson, Robert W., "Tilak and the Bhagavadgita's Doctrine of Karmayoga", in: {{harvnb|Minor|1986|page=44}}</ref> While noting that the Gita teaches possible paths to liberation, his commentary places most emphasis on Karma yoga.<ref>Stevenson, Robert W., "Tilak and the Bhagavadgita's Doctrine of Karmayoga", in: {{harvnb|Minor|1986|page=49}}</ref>
* No book was more central to Gandhi's life and thought than the Bhagavad Gita, which he referred to as his "spiritual dictionary".<ref name="Minor,p.88">Jordens, J.T.F., "Gandhi and the Bhagavadgita", in: {{harvnb|Minor|1986|page=88}}</ref> During his stay in Yeravada jail in 1929,<ref name="Minor,p.88"/> Gandhi wrote a commentary on the Bhagavad Gita in ]. The Gujarati manuscript was translated into English by Mahadev Desai, who provided an additional introduction and commentary. It was published with a foreword by Gandhi in 1946.<ref>{{harvnb|Gandhi|2009}}, First Edition 1946. Other editions: 1948, 1951, 1956.</ref><ref>A shorter edition, omitting the bulk of Desai's additional commentary, has been published as: ''Anasaktiyoga: The Gospel of Selfless Action''. Jim Rankin, editor. The author is listed as M.K. Gandhi; Mahadev Desai, translator. (Dry Bones Press, San Francisco, 1998) {{ISBN|1-883938-47-3}}.</ref>
* The version by ], entitled ''],'' is "by far the most widely distributed of all English Gīta translations" due to the efforts of ].<ref name="Davis 2014 page=168">{{harvnb|Davis|2014|pages=167–168, 175}}</ref> Its publisher, the {{IAST|Bhaktivēdānta Book Trust}}, estimates sales at twenty-three million copies, a figure which includes the original English edition and secondary translations into fifty-six other languages.<ref name="Davis 2014 page=168"/> The Prabhupada commentary interprets the Gita in the ] tradition of Chaitanya,<ref name="Davis 2014 page=168"/> quite similar to ] Dvaita Vēdanta ideology.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|pages=xxiv–xxvi}} It presents Krishna as the Supreme, a means of saving mankind from the anxiety of material existence through loving devotion. Unlike in Bengal and nearby regions of India where the '']'' is the primary text for this tradition, the devotees of Prabhupada's ISKCON tradition have found better reception for their ideas by those curious in the West through the Gita, according to Richard Davis.<ref name="Davis 2014 page=168"/>
* In 1966, Mahārishi Mahesh Yogi published a partial translation.<ref name="Davis 2014 page=168"/>
* An abridged version with 42 verses and commentary was published by ].<ref>{{cite book|author=Arthur Osborne|title=The Collected Works of Ramana Maharshi|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_rdMEhgClvEC|year=1997|publisher=Weiser|isbn=978-0-87728-907-4|pages=101–104}}</ref>
* ''Bhagavad Gita – The song of God'', is a commentary by ].<ref name=SongOfGod>{{cite web|url=http://www.holy-bhagavad-gita.org/|title=Bhagavad Gita The Song of God, Commentary by Swami Mukundananda|access-date=25 November 2017|archive-date=1 December 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171201035940/http://www.holy-bhagavad-gita.org/|url-status=live}}</ref>
* ] two-volume commentary on the Bhagavad Gita, called '']'', was released in 1995 and is available in 4 languages and as an English e-book.<ref>{{harvnb|Yogananda|1995}}</ref> The book is significant in that unlike other commentaries of the Bhagavad Gita, which focus on ], ], and ] in relation to the Gita, Yogananda's work stresses the training of one's mind, or ].<ref name="Taylor & Francis"/> It is published by ]/].
* ] commentary interprets the Gita for his collection of problems of daily modern life.<ref>{{harvnb|Easwaran|1993}}</ref>
* Other modern writers such as ] and Sādhu Vāsvāni have published their own commentaries.<ref>{{cite book|author=A. Pārthasārathy|title=Bhagavad Gita|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=ZVC5AwAAQBAJ |year=2013| isbn= 978-93-81094-13-6}}</ref>
* Academic commentaries include those by Jeaneane Fowler,{{sfn|Fowler|2012}} Ithamar Theodor,{{sfn|Theodor|2010}} and Robert Zaehner.{{sfn|Zaehner|1969}}
* A collection of Christian commentaries on the Gita has been edited by Catherine Cornille, comparing and contrasting a wide range of views on the text by theologians and religion scholars.<ref>{{cite book|author=Catherine Cornille|title=Song Divine: Christian Commentaries on the Bhagavad Gītā |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=F8DxPDYHgbEC|year=2006|publisher=Peeters Publishers|isbn=978-90-429-1769-9}}</ref>
* The book ''The Teachings of Bhagavad Gita: Timeless Wisdom for the Modern Age'' by Richa Tilokani offers a woman's perspective on the teachings of the Bhagavad Gita in a simplified and reader-friendly spiritual format.<ref>{{cite web |title=Richa Tilokani's The Teachings of Bhagavad Gita: Timeless Wisdom for the Modern Age |url=https://www.ritzmagazine.in/richa-tilokanis-the-teachings-of-bhagavad-gita/ |website=Ritz Magazine |date=28 June 2021 |access-date=28 July 2021 |archive-date=23 July 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210723102003/https://www.ritzmagazine.in/richa-tilokanis-the-teachings-of-bhagavad-gita/ |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Who Would Want a Woman's Perspective on the Bhagavad Gita? A Writer's Story |url=https://www.shethepeople.tv/personal-stories/womans-perspective-on-the-bhagavad-gita/ |website=She The People |date=8 June 2021 |access-date=28 July 2021 |archive-date=28 July 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210728090511/https://www.shethepeople.tv/personal-stories/womans-perspective-on-the-bhagavad-gita/ |url-status=live }}</ref>
*] published a four-volume Bhagavad Gītā, Home Study Course in 1998 based on transcripts from his teaching and commentary of the Bhagavad Gītā in the classroom. This was later published in 2011 in a new edition and nine volume format.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Dayananda Saraswati|first=Swami|title=Bhagavad Gītā Home Study Course.|publisher=Arsha Vidya Research and Publication Trust, Chennai.|year=2011|isbn=978-93-80049-39-7|language=English}}</ref>
*Galyna Kogut and Rahul Singh published ''An Atheist Gets the Gita'', a 21st-century interpretation of the 5,000-year-old text.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://rupapublications.co.in/authors/rahul-singh/|title=About Rahul Singh|publisher=Rupa|access-date=23 Dec 2021|archive-date=23 December 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211223082732/https://rupapublications.co.in/authors/rahul-singh/|url-status=live}}</ref>


According to ] (1863–1902), ''sva-dharma'' in the Gita does not mean "caste duty", rather it means the duty that comes with one's life situation (mother, father, husband, wife) or profession (soldier, judge, teacher, doctor). For Vivekananda, the Gita was an egalitarian scripture that rejected caste and other hierarchies because of its verses such as 13.27—28, which states "He who sees the Supreme Lord dwelling equally in all beings, the Imperishable in things that perish, he sees verily. For seeing the Lord as the same everywhere present, he does not destroy the Self by the Self, and thus he goes to the highest goal."{{sfn|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pp=96–97}}{{efn|This view in the Gita of the unity and equality in the essence of all individual beings as the hallmark of a spiritually liberated, wise person is also found in the classical and modern commentaries on Gita verses 5.18, 6.29, and others.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=100, 118–119}}{{sfn|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pp=233–234}}}}
==Reception==
{{Main|Influence of Bhagavad Gita}}
=== Praise and commendation ===
The Bhagavad Gita has been highly praised, not only by prominent Indians including ] and ],<ref>''Modern Indian Interpreters of the Bhagavad Gita'', by Robert Neil Minor, 1986, p. 161</ref> but also by ], ], ],{{sfn|Hijiya|2000}} ], ], ],<ref name="bansi">{{harvnb|Pandit|2005|page=27}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Hume|1959|page=29}}</ref> and ] among others.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.telegraphindia.com/1021114/asp/opinion/story_1363040.asp|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20021123210030/http://www.telegraphindia.com/1021114/asp/opinion/story_1363040.asp|url-status=dead|archive-date=23 November 2002|title=The Telegraph – Calcutta : Opinion|work=The Telegraph|location=Kolkota}}</ref>


] (1872–1950) modernises the concept of ''dharma'' by internalising it, away from the social order and its duties towards one's capacities, which leads to radical individualism,{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=266}} "finding the fulfilment of the purpose of existence in the individual alone."{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=266}} He deduced from the Gita the doctrine that "the functions of a man ought to be determined by his natural turn, gift, and capacities",{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=266}} that the individual should "develop freely"{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=266}} and thereby would be best able to serve society.{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=266}}
] referred to the Gita as "a bouquet composed of the beautiful flowers of spiritual truths collected from the ]."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ramakrishnavivekananda.info/vivekananda/volume_2/jnana-yoga/the_freedom_of_the_soul.htm|title=Complete-Works/Volume 2/Jnana-Yoga/CHAPTER X/THE FREEDOM OF THE SOUL|access-date=2023-05-08|archive-date=8 May 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230508062444/https://www.ramakrishnavivekananda.info/vivekananda/volume_2/jnana-yoga/the_freedom_of_the_soul.htm|url-status=live}}</ref>


Gandhi's (1869–1948) view differed from Aurobindo's view.{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=267}} He recognised in the concept of ''sva-dharma'' his idea of ''svadeshi'' (sometimes spelt ''swadeshi''), the idea that "man owes his service above all to those who are nearest to him by birth and situation."{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=267}} To him, ''svadeshi'' was "''sva-dharma'' applied to one's immediate environment."{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|page=268}}
At a time when ] were seeking an indigenous basis for social and political action against colonial rule, Bhagavad Gita provided them with a rationale for their activism and fight against injustice.<ref>{{harvnb|Robinson|2006|page=70}}</ref> ] and ] used the text to help inspire the Indian independence movement.{{refn|group=note|For B.G. Tilak and Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi as notable commentators see: {{harvnb|Gambhirananda|1997|page=xix}}}}{{refn|group=note|For notability of the commentaries by B.G. Tilak and Gandhi and their use to inspire the independence movement see: {{harvnb|Sargeant|2009|page=xix}}}} Mahatma Gandhi expressed his love for the Gita in these words:
{{blockquote|I find a solace in the ''{{IAST|Bhagavadgītā}}'' that I miss even in the ]. When disappointment stares me in the face and all alone I see not one ray of light, I go back to the ''{{IAST|Bhagavadgītā}}''. I find a verse here and a verse there and I immediately begin to smile in the midst of overwhelming tragedies – and my life has been full of external tragedies – and if they have left no visible, no indelible scar on me, I owe it all to the teaching of ''{{IAST|Bhagavadgītā}}''.<ref>Quotation from M.K. Gandhi. ''Young India''. (1925), pp. 1078–79, is cited from {{harvnb|Radhakrishnan|1993}} ''Front matter''.</ref>}}
], the first Prime Minister of independent India, commented on the Gita:
{{blockquote|The ''Bhagavad-Gita'' deals essentially with the spiritual foundation of human existence. It is a call of action to meet the obligations and duties of life; yet keeping in view the spiritual nature and grander purpose of the universe.<ref>{{harvnb|Londhe|2008|page=191}}</ref>}}
], the 11th President of India, despite being a Muslim, used to read Bhagavad Gita and recite its mantras.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ndtv.com/opinion/dr-kalam-indias-most-non-traditional-president-1201311?site=full|title=Dr Kalam, India's Most Non-Traditional President|access-date=28 July 2015|archive-date=20 March 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160320080739/http://www.ndtv.com/opinion/dr-kalam-indias-most-non-traditional-president-1201311?site=full|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://archive.mid-day.com/news/2002/jun/25726.htm|title=Kalam a puppet of votebank politics|access-date=28 July 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150731014324/http://archive.mid-day.com/news/2002/jun/25726.htm|archive-date=31 July 2015|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.outlookindia.com/article/kalam-and-islam/216493|title=Kalam And Islam|access-date=28 July 2015|archive-date=30 July 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150730222205/http://www.outlookindia.com/article/kalam-and-islam/216493|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rediff.com/news/2002/jun/22sai.htm|title=Kalam, Islam and Dr Rafiq Zakaria|access-date=28 July 2015|archive-date=31 July 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150731032229/http://www.rediff.com/news/2002/jun/22sai.htm|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title = Three books that influenced APJ Abdul Kalam deeply – Firstpost|date = 28 July 2015|url = http://www.firstpost.com/living/three-books-that-influenced-apj-abdul-kalam-deeply-2367912.html|access-date = 4 August 2015|url-status = live|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150730195411/http://www.firstpost.com/living/three-books-that-influenced-apj-abdul-kalam-deeply-2367912.html|archive-date = 30 July 2015}}</ref>


According to ], the universalist neo-Hindu interpretations of ''dharma'' in the Gita are modernist readings, though any study of pre-modern distant foreign cultures is inherently subject to suspicions about "control of knowledge" and bias on the various sides.<ref name="hirst1997p502">{{cite book |author=Jacqueline Hirst |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tk9YBPOl36UC&pg=PA48 |title=The Fruits of Our Desiring: An Enquiry Into the Ethics of the Bhagavadgītā for Our Times |publisher=Bayeux |year=1997 |isbn=978-1-896209-30-2 |editor=Julius Lipner |pages=50–51}}</ref> Hindus have their own understanding of ''dharma'' that goes much beyond the Gita or any particular Hindu text.<ref name="hirst1997p502" /> Further, states Hirst, the Gita should be seen as a "unitary text" in its entirety rather than a particular verse analyzed separately or out of context. Krishna is presented as a teacher who "drives Arjuna and the reader beyond initial preconceptions". The Gita is a cohesively knit pedagogic text, not a list of norms.<ref>{{cite book |author=Jacqueline Hirst |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tk9YBPOl36UC&pg=PA48 |title=The Fruits of Our Desiring: An Enquiry Into the Ethics of the Bhagavadgītā for Our Times |publisher=Bayeux |year=1997 |isbn=978-1-896209-30-2 |editor=Julius Lipner |pages=50–58}}</ref>
], the 14th prime minister of India, called the Bhagavad Gita "India's biggest gift to the world".<ref>{{cite news|url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Gita-is-Indias-biggest-gift-to-the-world-Modi/articleshow/41530350.cms|title=Gita is India's biggest gift to the world: Modi|website=]|date=2 September 2014|access-date=2 December 2017|archive-date=2 December 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171202203624/https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Gita-is-Indias-biggest-gift-to-the-world-Modi/articleshow/41530350.cms|url-status=live}}</ref> Modi gave a copy of it to the then President of the United States of America, ] in 2014 during his U.S. visit.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/narendra-modi-gifts-bhagavad-gita-to-obama/|title=Narendra Modi gifts Bhagavad Gita to Obama|date=30 September 2014|access-date=2 December 2017|archive-date=3 December 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171203082808/http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/narendra-modi-gifts-bhagavad-gita-to-obama/|url-status=live}}</ref>


===Criticism of svadharma and caste-system===
According to the Indian historian and writer ], ]'s famous poem "]" is "the essence of the message of the Gita in English."<ref>], {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131213061351/http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?211656 |date=13 December 2013 }}, 2001</ref>
The Gita has also been cited and criticized as a Hindu text that supports ''varna-dharma'' (personal duty) and the caste system.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Olcott |first=Mason |year=1944 |title=The Caste System of India |journal=American Sociological Review |publisher=Sage Publications |volume=9 |issue=6 |pages=648–657 |doi=10.2307/2085128 |jstor=2085128}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author=Susan Bayly |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HbAjKR_iHogC |title=Caste, Society and Politics in India from the Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-521-79842-6 |pages=13–14}}</ref>{{sfn|Maitra|2018|p=22}} ], born in a ] family and served as the first Law Minister in the ], criticized the text for its stance on caste and for "defending certain dogmas of religion on philosophical grounds".{{sfn|Maitra|2018|p=22}} According to Jimmy Klausen, Ambedkar in his essay ''Krishna and his Gita'' stated that the Gita was a "tool" of Brahmanical Hinduism and for its latter-day saints such as Mahatma Gandhi and ]. To Ambedkar, states Klausen, it is a text of "mostly barbaric, religious particularisms" offering "a defence of the ''Kshatriya'' duty to make war and kill, the assertion that ''varna'' derives from birth rather than worth or aptitude, and the injunction to perform ''karma''" neither perfunctorily nor egotistically.<ref>{{cite book |author=Jimmy Casas Klausen |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9QLfAQAAQBAJ |title=Disobedience: Concept and Practice |publisher=Routledge |year=2013 |isbn=978-1-135-14383-1 |editor=Elena Loizidou |pages=71–72}}</ref>


In his ''Myth and Reality'', ] argued that "practically anything can be read into the Gita by a determined person, without denying the validity of a class system."<ref name=":1">] (1962) '']'' p. 19. (Popular Prakashail, Bombay)</ref> Kosambi argued that the Gita was a scripture that supported the superiority of the higher varnas while seeing all other varnas as "defiled by their very birth, though they may in after-life be freed by their faith in the god who degrades them so casually in this one."<ref name=":1" /> He quotes the Gita which states that Krishna says "The four-caste (class) division has been created by Me."<ref name=":1" />{{sfn|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pp=231–238}}{{efn|Scholars have contested Kosambi's criticism of the Gita based on its various sections on karma yoga, bhakti yoga and jnana yoga.{{sfn|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pp=231–238}}}} Similarly, ] also argues that the Gita states that God created the caste (varna) system.<ref name=":0">V. R. Narla (2010), ''The Truth About the Gita,'' pp. 154-159. Prometheus Books.</ref> Narla also critiques the Gita for stating that those who are not kshatriyas or Brahmins are "born from sinful wombs".<ref name=":0" />
With its translation and study by Western scholars beginning in the early 18th century, the Bhagavad Gita gained a growing appreciation and popularity.<ref group=web name="EB-BG" />


== The Gita and War ==
] of the ] was the first detonation of a ], which led Oppenheimer to recall verses from the Bhagavad Gita, notably being: "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds".]]
], from the '']''. {{circa|1820{{nbsp}}CE}}]]
], American physicist and director of the ], learned Sanskrit in 1933 and read the Bhagavad Gita in the original form, citing it later as one of the most influential books to shape his philosophy of life. Oppenheimer later recalled that, while witnessing the explosion of the ], he thought of verses from the Bhagavad Gita (XI,12):
{{blockquote|दिवि सूर्यसहस्रस्य भवेद्युगपदुत्थिता यदि भाः सदृशी सा स्याद्भासस्तस्य महात्मनः॥११- १२॥


=== Allegory of war ===
If the radiance of a thousand suns were to burst at once into the sky, that would be like the splendor of the mighty one&nbsp;...{{sfn|Jungk|1958|p=201}}}}
Unlike any other religious scripture, the Bhagavad Gita broadcasts its message in the centre of a battlefield.<ref>{{harvnb|Krishnananda|1980|pages=12–13}}</ref> Several modern Indian writers have interpreted the battlefield setting as an allegory for "the war within".{{sfn|Easwaran|2007|p=15}} ] writes that the Gita{{'}}s subject is "the war within, the struggle for self-mastery that every human being must wage if he or she is to emerge from life victorious".<ref>{{harvnb|Easwaran|2007|page=15}}</ref>
Years later he would explain that another verse had also entered his head at that time:
{{blockquote|We knew the world would not be the same. A few people laughed, a few people cried. Most people were silent. I remembered the line from the Hindu scripture, the Bhagavad Gita; ] is trying to persuade the ] that he should do his duty and, to impress him, takes on ] and says, 'Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.' I suppose we all thought that, one way or another.<ref name="The Decision to Drop the Bomb" />{{refn|group=note|Oppenheimer spoke these words in the television documentary '''' (1965).<ref name="The Decision to Drop the Bomb">{{cite web | url = http://www.atomicarchive.com/Movies/Movie8.shtml | title = J. Robert Oppenheimer on the Trinity test (1965) | access-date = May 23, 2008 | publisher = Atomic Archive | archive-date = 16 May 2008 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080516104658/http://www.atomicarchive.com/Movies/Movie8.shtml | url-status = live }}</ref> Oppenheimer read the original text in ], "{{IAST|kālo'smi lokakṣayakṛtpravṛddho lokānsamāhartumiha pravṛttaḥ}}" (XI,32), which he translated as "I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds". In the literature, the quote usually appears in the form ''shatterer'' of worlds, because this was the form in which it first appeared in print, in ] on 8 November 1948.<ref>{{cite news |newspaper=] |date=8 November 1948 |title=The Eternal Apprentice |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,853367-8,00.html |archive-url=https://archive.today/20110819005552/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,853367-8,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=19 August 2011 |access-date=6 March 2011}}</ref> It later appeared in Robert Jungk's ''Brighter than a Thousand Suns: A Personal History of the Atomic Scientists'' (1958),{{sfn|Jungk|1958|p=201}} which was based on an interview with Oppenheimer. See Hijiya, ''The Gita of Robert Oppenheimer''{{sfn|Hijiya|2000|pp=123–124}}}}}} In a letter to his brother, Oppenheimer wrote that the ''Gita'' was "very easy and quite marvelous", and called the text "the most beautiful philosophical song existing in any known tongue". He later gave copies of it as presents to his friends and kept a personal, worn-out copy on the bookshelf by his desk.{{sfn|Roy|2018|p=157}}


], takes Arjuna as an allegory of Ātman, Krishna as an allegory of ], Arjuna's chariot as the body, and Dhritarashtra as the ignorant mind.{{refn|group=note|{{harvnb|Nikhilananda|Hocking|2006|page=2}} "Arjuna represents the individual Self, and Sri Krishna the Supreme Self dwelling in every heart. Arjuna's chariot is the body. The blind king Dhritarashtra is the mind under the spell of ignorance, and his hundred sons are man's numerous evil tendencies. The battle, a perennial one, is between the power of good and the power of evil. The warrior who listens to the advice of the Lord speaking from within will triumph in this battle and attain the Highest Good."}} Nikhilananda's allegorical interpretation is shared by Huston Smith.{{sfn|Sargeant|2009|p=x}} ] interprets the first discourse in the Gita as well as the "Kurukshetra war" allegorically.<ref>{{Citation|last=Vivekananda|first=Swami|title=The Complete works of Swami Vivekananda |volume=9 |chapter=] }}</ref> Vivekananda states that "when we sum up its esoteric significance, it means the war which is constantly going on within man between the tendencies of good and evil".{{Sfn|Vivekananda|1998}}
], remarked the following after his first study of the Gita, and thereafter frequently quoted the text in his journals and letters, particularly the "work with inner renunciation" idea in his writings on man's quest for spiritual energy:{{sfn|Miller|1986|pp=147–149}}
{{blockquote|I owed – my friend and I owed – a magnificent day to the ''Bhagavad Geeta''. It was the first of books; it was as if an empire spoke to us, nothing small or unworthy, but large, serene, consistent, the voice of an old intelligence which in another age and climate had pondered and thus disposed of the same questions which exercise us.{{sfn|Miller|1986|pp=147–149}}}}


], in his commentary on the Gita,<ref>see {{harvnb|Gandhi|2009}}</ref> interprets the battle as an allegory in which the battlefield is the soul and Arjuna embodies man's higher impulses struggling against evil.<ref>{{harvnb|Fischer|2010|pages=15–16}}</ref>
]
], the first ] member of the ] has often mentioned the immense infuence of ''Bhagavad Gita'' principles of ''karma'' and ''dharma'' in her life.<ref name="Sanneh">{{Cite news|last=Sanneh|first=Kelefa|date=October 30, 2017|title=What Does Tulsi Gabbard Believe?|newspaper=New Yorker|url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/11/06/what-does-tulsi-gabbard-believe|url-status=live|access-date=January 13, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200607114820/https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/11/06/what-does-tulsi-gabbard-believe|archive-date=June 7, 2020}}</ref><ref name=huffpo-1stHindu>{{cite news|last=Sacirbey|first=Omar|title=Tulsi Gabbard, Hawaii Democrat, Poised To Be Elected First Hindu In Congress|url=https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/02/tulsi-gabbard-hawaii-democrat-hindu-in-congress_n_2062358.html|access-date=November 11, 2012|date=November 2, 2012}}</ref> During her time serving in the war zone of Iraq, she meditated daily with her personal copy of the ''Gita'' upon the fact that "my essence was spirit, not matter, that I was not my physical body, and that I didn't need to worry about death because I knew that I would continue to exist".<ref name=huffpo-1stHindu/>. Among her favorite verses from the ''Gita'', are:
{{blockquote|-- ''That which pervades the entire body you should know to be indestructible. No one is able to destroy that imperishable soul.'' (2:17)
-- ''The soul can never be cut into pieces by any weapon, nor can he be burned by fire, nor moistened by water, nor withered by the wind.''(2.23)<ref name=huffpo-1stHindu/>}}


In ]'s view, Krishna was a historical figure, but his significance in the Gita is as a "symbol of the divine dealings with humanity",<ref>{{harvnb|Aurobindo|2000|pages=15–16}}</ref> while Arjuna typifies a "struggling human soul".<ref name =THD/> However, Aurobindo rejected the interpretation that the Gita, and the ''Mahabharata'' by extension, is only "an allegory of the inner life" and therefore that it has nothing to do with our outward human life and actions.<ref name =THD>{{harvnb|Aurobindo|2000|pages=20–21}}</ref>{{refn|group=note|Aurobindo writes, "...&nbsp;That is a view which the general character and the actual language of the epic does not justify and, if pressed, would turn the straightforward philosophical language of the Gita into a constant, laborious and somewhat puerile mystification&nbsp;... the Gita is written in plain terms and professes to solve the great ethical and spiritual difficulties which the life of man raises, and it will not do to go behind this plain language and thought and wrest them to the service of our fancy. But there is this much of truth in the view that the setting of the doctrine, though not symbolical, is certainly typical.<ref name="THD"/>}}
The world's largest Bhagavad Gita is in the ], which is the world's largest sacred book of any religion. It weighs 800&nbsp;kg and measures over 2.8 metres by 2.0 metres. It was unveiled by ], the Prime Minister of India on 26 February 2019.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://pib.nic.in/newsite/PrintRelease.aspx?relid=188970|title=English rendering of Text of PM's speech at Unveiling ceremony of world's largest Bhagavad Gita|website=pib.nic.in|access-date=9 February 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://pib.nic.in/newsite/PrintRelease.aspx?relid=188967|title=PM attends Gita Aradhana Mahotsav at ISKCON, New Delhi|website=pib.nic.in|access-date=9 February 2020}}</ref> On 27 February 2021, the Bhagavad Gita was launched into ] on a ], aboard a ] rocket launched by the ] (ISRO) from the ] in ].<ref>{{cite web|url = https://www.deccanchronicle.com/nation/current-affairs/280221/brazils-amazonia-1-on-board-with-bhagavad-gita.html|title = Brazil's Amazonia-1 on board with Bhagavad Gita|date = 28 February 2021|access-date = 28 February 2021|archive-date = 28 February 2021|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210228091406/http://www.deccanchronicle.com/nation/current-affairs/280221/brazils-amazonia-1-on-board-with-bhagavad-gita.html|url-status = live}}</ref>


=== Criticisms and apologetics === === Promotion of just war and duty ===
Scholars such as Steven Rosen, Laurie L. Patton and Stephen Mitchell have seen in the Gita a religious defence of the warrior class (] ]) duty (''svadharma''), which is to wage war with courage. They do not see only an allegorical teaching but also a real defence of ].<ref>Rosen, Steven; Krishna's Song: A New Look at the Bhagavad Gita, p. 22.</ref><ref>Patton, Laurie L.; The Failure of Allegory in ''Fighting Words''</ref>
==== Varna and svadharma ====
The Gita has been cited and criticized as a Hindu text that supports ''varna-dharma'' and the caste system.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Olcott |first=Mason |year=1944 |title=The Caste System of India |journal=American Sociological Review |publisher=Sage Publications |volume=9 |issue=6 |pages=648–657 |doi=10.2307/2085128 |jstor=2085128}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author=Susan Bayly |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HbAjKR_iHogC |title=Caste, Society and Politics in India from the Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-521-79842-6 |pages=13–14}}</ref>{{sfn|Maitra|2018|p=22}} ], born in a ] family and served as the first Law Minister in the ], criticized the text for its stance on caste and for "defending certain dogmas of religion on philosophical grounds".{{sfn|Maitra|2018|p=22}} According to Jimmy Klausen, Ambedkar in his essay ''Krishna and his Gita'' stated that the Gita was a "tool" of Brahmanical Hinduism and for its latter-day saints such as Mahatma Gandhi and ]. To Ambedkar, states Klausen, it is a text of "mostly barbaric, religious particularisms" offering "a defence of the ''kshatriya'' duty to make war and kill, the assertion that ''varna'' derives from birth rather than worth or aptitude, and the injunction to perform ''karma''" neither perfunctorily nor egotistically.<ref>{{cite book |author=Jimmy Casas Klausen |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9QLfAQAAQBAJ |title=Disobedience: Concept and Practice |publisher=Routledge |year=2013 |isbn=978-1-135-14383-1 |editor=Elena Loizidou |pages=71–72}}</ref>


] like ] and ] saw the Gita as a text which defended war when necessary and used it to promote armed rebellion against colonial rule. Lajpat Rai wrote an article on the "Message of the Bhagavad Gita". He saw the main message as the bravery and courage of Arjuna to fight as a warrior.<ref name="ReferenceA">{{harvnb|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pp=Chapter 4}}</ref> ] saw the Gita as defending killing when necessary for the betterment of society, such as, for example, the killing of ].<ref name="ReferenceA"/>
In his ''Myth and Reality'', ] argued that "practically anything can be read into the Gita by a determined person, without denying the validity of a class system."<ref name=":1">] (1962) '']'' p. 19. (Popular Prakashail, Bombay)</ref> Kosambi argued that the Gita was a scripture that supported the superiority of the higher varnas while seeing all other varnas as "defiled by their very birth, though they may in after-life be freed by their faith in the god who degrades them so casually in this one."<ref name=":1" /> He quotes the Gita which states that Krishna says "The four-caste (class) division has been created by Me."<ref name=":1" /><ref name="Nadkarni2016p2322">{{harvnb|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pp=231–238}}</ref> Similarly, ] also argues that the Gita states that God created the caste (varna) system.<ref name=":0">V. R. Narla (2010), ''The Truth About the Gita,'' pp. 154-159. Prometheus Books.</ref> Narla also critiques the Gita for stating that those who are not kshatriyas or Brahmins are "born from sinful wombs".<ref name=":0" />


=== Pacifism and the Gita ===
The Gita presents its teaching in the context of a war where the warrior Arjuna is in inner crisis about whether he should renounce and abandon the battlefield, or fight and kill the enemy (which includes many relatives and friends of his). He is advised by Krishna to do his ''sva-dharma'', a term that has been variously interpreted. According to the Indologist ], the contextual meaning in the Gita is the "dharma of a particular ]".{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=264}} In this case, Arjuna is part of the warrior ('']'') varna (social class), so Krishna is telling Arjuna to do what warrior social class must do by virtue of his belonging to that class.{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=264}}
Because by the end of the Gita, Krishna convinces Arjuna that it is his right and duty to fight, the Gita has been argued by some as pro-war, while others argue it is neither pro- nor anti-war.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://shc.stanford.edu/stanford-humanities-center/events/fields-religious-interpretation-bhagavad-gita-and-war |title=Fields of Religious Interpretation: The Bhagavad Gita and War |date=5 January 2016 |access-date=8 March 2023 |archive-date=8 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230308002101/https://shc.stanford.edu/stanford-humanities-center/events/fields-religious-interpretation-bhagavad-gita-and-war |url-status=live }}</ref>


Noted author ] suffered the death of his father in WWI and saw no serious effort by the Allies to avoid plunging head-on into the next war. In his novels, '']'', he describes life in Germany as the Nazis rose to power. In the late 1930s, with advice from and influence of ] and ]<ref>{{cite book |last= Sawyer |first= Dana |date= 2002|title= Aldous Huxley: A Biography |publisher= Crossroads Publishing Company |page= 99|isbn= 0-8245-1987-6}}</ref> he became a practising pacifist and ], working with the Quakers, doing alternative service to help settle Jewish refugees fleeing the war.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1986-01-06-me-13515-story.html |title=Obituary in the Los Angeles Times |website=] |date=6 January 1986 |access-date=8 March 2023 |archive-date=7 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230307212742/https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1986-01-06-me-13515-story.html |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1986/01/06/obituaries/christopher-isherwood-is-dead-at-81.html |title=Obituary in the NY Times |website=] |date=6 January 1986 |access-date=8 March 2023 |archive-date=7 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230307195733/https://www.nytimes.com/1986/01/06/obituaries/christopher-isherwood-is-dead-at-81.html |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last= Isherwood |first= Christo6pher |date= 1996|title= Diaries: Volume 1, 1939-1960, Edited and Introduced by Katherine Bucknell |publisher= HarperFlamingo|page= Introduction XII|isbn= 978-0061180002}}</ref> In 1944, Isherwood worked with ] of the ] to translate the ] into English.<ref>{{cite book |last= Isherwood |first= Christo6pher |date= 199|title= Diaries: Volume 1, 1939-1960, Edited and Introduced by Katherine Bucknell |publisher= HarperFlamingo|page= 117|isbn= 978-0061180002}}</ref> In the Appendix, there is an essay written by Isherwood titled, ]. He argues that in certain circumstances, it would be quite alright to refuse to fight. In Arjuna's particular circumstances, since it is a righteous war, and he's a warrior by birth and trade, he must fight.<ref>]</ref>
Neo-Hindus such as ], states Hacker, have preferred to not translate it in those terms, or "dharma" as religion, but leave ''Gita's'' message as "everyone must follow his ''sva-dharma''".{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|pp=261–262}} According to Chatterjee, the Hindus already understand the meaning of that term. To render it in English for non-Hindus for its better understanding, one must ask ''what is the sva-dharma for the non-Hindus''? The Lord, states Chatterjee, created millions and millions of people, and he did not ordain ''dharma'' only for Indians and "make all the others dharma-less", for "are not the non-Hindus also his children"? According to Chatterjee, the Krishna's religion of Gita is "not so narrow-minded".{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|pp=261–262}} This argument, states Hacker, is an attempt to "universalize Hinduism".{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|pp=261–262}}
<Blockquote>
...every action, under certain circumstances and for certain people, maybe a stepping-stone to spiritual growth—if it is done in the spirit of non-attachment. There is no question, here, of doing evil that good may come. The Gita does not countenance such opportunism. Arjuna is to do the best he knows, in order to pass beyond that best to better.<ref>Bhagavad Gita – The Song of God, 2023 Edition, The Gita and War, page 149</ref>
</Blockquote>


=== Ethics, war and violence ===
Nadkarni and Zelliot present the opposite view, citing early Bhakti saints of the Krishna-tradition such as the 13th-century saint ].{{sfn|Maitra|2018|pp=22–23}} According to Dnyaneshwar, the Gita starts off with the discussion of ''sva-dharma'' in Arjuna's context but ultimately shows that caste differences are not important. For Dnyaneshwar, people err when they see themselves distinct from each other and Krishna, and these distinctions vanish as soon as they accept, understand and enter with love unto Krishna.<ref>{{cite book |author1=Doranne Jacobson |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3WcMAQAAMAAJ |title=From untouchable to Dalit: essays on the Ambedkar Movement |author2=Eleanor Zelliot |author3=Susan Snow Wadley |publisher=Manohar Publications |year=1992 |isbn=978-81-85425-37-5 |pages=21–22 |author3-link=Susan Snow Wadley}}</ref>{{sfn|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pp=232–233}}
Soon after ], Krishna in the Gita persuades Arjuna to wage war where the enemy includes some of his own relatives and friends. In light of the '']'' (non-violence) teachings in Hindu scriptures, the Gita has been criticized as violating the ''Ahimsa'' value, or alternatively, as supporting political violence.{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=65–73}} The justification of political violence when peaceful protests and all else fails, states Varma, has been a fairly common feature of modern Indian political thought along with the mighty antithesis of Gandhian thought on non-violence. During the independence movement in India, Indians (especially the Hindus) considered the active burning and drowning of British goods. While technically illegal under colonial legislation, these acts were viewed as a moral and ] for the sake of liberty and righteous values of the type that the Gita discusses.<ref name="Varma1990p232">{{cite book |author=Vishwanath Prasad Varma |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bLrp0c0hizAC |title=The Political Philosophy of Sri Aurobindo |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |year=1990 |isbn=978-81-208-0686-3 |pages=232–235}}</ref> According to Nicholas Owen, the influential ] (and the father of ]) ] often turned to ] such as the Bhagavad Gita, arguing that the text justified violence against those who would harm ].<ref>Nicholas Owen (2007), ''The British Left and India: Metropolitan Anti-Imperialism, 1885-1947'', Oxford University Press, p.67</ref>


], in his book-length critique of the text titled ''The Truth About the Gita,'' criticizes the ethical teachings of the Gita. He argues that the ethics of the Gita are so ambiguous, that one can use it to justify any ethical position and primarily supports a warrior ethos.<ref>V. R. Narla (2010), ''The Truth About the Gita,'' pp. 126-135. Prometheus Books.</ref> In his ''Myth and Reality'', the Indian historian ] argued that the Gita was written as a religious text that could provide support for the actions of the upper castes, including the warrior caste. These sorts of exhortations to battle would not have been uncommon in ancient India as it was the job of Indian bards. Kosambi writes that in the Gita, "the high god repeatedly emphasizes the great virtue of non-killing (''ahimsa''), yet the entire discourse is an incentive to war."<ref name=":2">] (1962) '']'' p. 21. (Popular Prakashail, Bombay).</ref> He also cites the Gita, which states: "If slain, you gain heaven; if victorious, the earth; so up, son of Kunti, and concentrate on fighting."<ref name=":2" /> Kosambi argues that the injunctions and excuses for killing found in the Gita are unethical.<ref name=":2" />
According to ], ''sva-dharma'' in the Gita does not mean "caste duty", rather it means the duty that comes with one's life situation (mother, father, husband, wife) or profession (soldier, judge, teacher, doctor). For Vivekananda, the Gita was an egalitarian scripture that rejected caste and other hierarchies because of its verses such as 13.27—28, which states "He who sees the Supreme Lord dwelling equally in all beings, the Imperishable in things that perish, he sees verily. For seeing the Lord as the same everywhere present, he does not destroy the Self by the Self, and thus he goes to the highest goal."{{sfn|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pp=96–97}}{{refn|This view in the Gita of the unity and equality in the essence of all individual beings as the hallmark of a spiritually liberated, wise person is also found in the classical and modern commentaries on Gita verses 5.18, 6.29, and others.{{sfn|Fowler|2012|pp=100, 118–119}}{{sfn|M.V. Nadkarni|2016|pp=233–234}} Scholars have contested Kosambi's criticism of the Gita based on its various sections on karma yoga, bhakti yoga and jnana yoga.<ref name="Nadkarni2016p2322" />|group=note}}


The Indian jurist and politician ] interpreted the Gita as an unethical defence of violence based on the eternity of the soul (atman). Ambedkar wrote, "To say that killing is no killing because what is killed is the body and not the soul is unheard of defence of murder...If Krishna were to appear as a lawyer acting for a client who is being tried for murder and pleaded the defence set out by him in the Bhagavad Gita there is not the slightest doubt that he would be sent to the lunatic asylum." Ethicist Jeremy Engels notes that in contrast to Ambedkar's view, other readers, including ] and ], as well as "most pandits and yogis", understand the Gita's message not as a literal call to war, but as an allegory for the inner battle between good and evil in the human soul.<ref>Engels, Jeremy David (2021). ''The Ethics of Oneness: Emerson, Whitman, and the Bhagavad Gita'', pp. 14-15. University of Chicago Press.</ref>
] modernises the concept of ''dharma'' by internalising it, away from the social order and its duties towards one's personal capacities, which leads to a radical individualism,{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=266}} "finding the fulfilment of the purpose of existence in the individual alone."{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=266}} He deduced from the Gita the doctrine that "the functions of a man ought to be determined by his natural turn, gift, and capacities",{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=266}} that the individual should "develop freely"{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=266}} and thereby would be best able to serve society.{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=266}}


In his introduction to his translation of the Gita, ] argues that while Arjuna appears as a pacifist, concerned with ], Krishna "is the ]" who convinces him to kill.<ref name=":3">P. Lal (2019). '','' Introduction''.'' Orient Paperbacks</ref> According to Lal, Krishna makes use of a "startling" argument to convince Arjuna to kill, which Lal outlines as "the ] is eternal; only the body dies; so, go ahead and kill - you will kill only the body, the atman will remain unaffected ."<ref name=":3" /> Lal states that "there could hardly be a better example of forked-tongue speciousness."<ref name=":3" /> Lal further argues that: "the truth of the matter surely is that no rational refutation is possible of the essential humanist position that killing is wrong...many of the answers given by Krishna appear to be evasive and occasionally sophistic. When logic fails, Krishna apparently resorts to divine magic."<ref name=":3" /> According to Lal, in the Gita, Krishna "stuns Arjuna with a glorious 'revelation' of psychedelic intensity." This "confidence trick" is problematic for Lal, who sees Arjuna's plight as a "painful and honest problem that Krishna should have faced on its own terms, painfully and honestly, and did not."<ref name=":3" />
Gandhi's view differed from Aurobindo's view.{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=267}} He recognised in the concept of ''sva-dharma'' his idea of ''svadeshi'' (sometimes spelled ''swadeshi''), the idea that "man owes his service above all to those who are nearest to him by birth and situation."{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|p=267}} To him, ''svadeshi'' was "''sva-dharma'' applied to one's immediate environment."{{sfn|Hacker|Halbfass|1995|page=268}}


Mahatma Gandhi credited his commitment to ''ahimsa'' to the Gita. For Gandhi, the Gita is teaching that people should fight for justice and righteous values and that they should never meekly suffer injustice to avoid a war. According to the Indologist Ananya Vajpeyi, the Gita does not elaborate on the means or stages of war, nor on ''ahimsa'', except for stating that "''ahimsa'' is virtuous and characterizes an awakened, steadfast, ethical man."<ref name="Vajpeyi2012p66">{{cite book |author=Ananya Vajpeyi |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=knCDsvJYy1EC&pg=PA66 |title=Righteous Republic: The Political Foundations of Modern India |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=2012 |isbn=978-0-674-06728-8 |pages=66–67}}</ref> For Gandhi, states Vajpeyi, ''ahimsa'' is the "relationship between self and other" as he and his fellow Indians battled against colonial rule. Gandhian ahimsa is in fact "the essence of the entire Gita", according to Vajpeyi.<ref name="Vajpeyi2012p66" /> The teachings of the Gita on ''ahimsa'' are ambiguous, states Arvind Sharma, and this is best exemplified by the fact that Nathuram Godse stated the Gita as his inspiration to do his dharma after he ].{{sfn|Sharma|1986|pp=xiv–xv}}<ref>{{Cite news |date=2015-01-29 |title=Gita, Gandhi and Godse |url=https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/gita-gandhi-and-godse/article6835411.ece#:~:text=Godse%20used%20similar%20arguments%20to%20justify%20the%20killing,and%20bigotry,%20but%20inspiration%20for%20compassion%20and%20confluence. |access-date=2024-09-20 |work=The Hindu |language=en-IN |issn=0971-751X}}</ref> ], the Trappist monk and author of books on Zen Buddhism, concurs with Gandhi and states that the Gita is not teaching violence nor propounding a "make war" ideology. Instead, it is teaching peace and discussing one's duty to examine what is right and then act with pure intentions, when one faces difficult and repugnant choices.{{sfn|Miller|1986|pp=149–150}}
According to ], the universalist neo-Hindu interpretations of ''dharma'' in the Gita are modernist readings, though any study of pre-modern distant foreign cultures is inherently subject to suspicions about "control of knowledge" and bias on the various sides.<ref name="hirst1997p502">{{cite book |author=Jacqueline Hirst |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tk9YBPOl36UC&pg=PA48 |title=The Fruits of Our Desiring: An Enquiry Into the Ethics of the Bhagavadgītā for Our Times |publisher=Bayeux |year=1997 |isbn=978-1-896209-30-2 |editor=Julius Lipner |pages=50–51}}</ref> Hindus have their own understanding of ''dharma'' that goes much beyond the Gita or any particular Hindu text.<ref name="hirst1997p502" /> Further, states Hirst, the Gita should be seen as a "unitary text" in its entirety rather than a particular verse analyzed separately or out of context. Krishna is presented as a teacher who "drives Arjuna and the reader beyond initial preconceptions". The Gita is a cohesively knit pedagogic text, not a list of norms.<ref>{{cite book |author=Jacqueline Hirst |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tk9YBPOl36UC&pg=PA48 |title=The Fruits of Our Desiring: An Enquiry Into the Ethics of the Bhagavadgītā for Our Times |publisher=Bayeux |year=1997 |isbn=978-1-896209-30-2 |editor=Julius Lipner |pages=50–58}}</ref>

====Modern-Hinduism====
Novel interpretations of the Gita, along with apologetics on it, have been a part of the modern era revisionism and renewal movements within Hinduism.{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=34–35, 131–133, 147–149}} Bankim Chandra Chatterji, the author of '']'' – the national song of India, challenged orientalist literature on Hinduism and offered his interpretations of the Gita, states Ajit Ray.{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=34–43}}{{sfn|Hacker|1958|p=261}} Bal Gangadhar Tilak interpreted the ''karma yoga'' teachings in Gita as a "doctrine of liberation" taught by Hinduism,{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=44–57}} while ] stated that the Bhagavad Gita teaches a universalist religion and the "essence of Hinduism" along with the "essence of all religions", rather than a private religion.{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=154, 161–163}}

] people in Kolkata, 24th December {{circa|2023{{nbsp}}CE}}.]]

]'s works contained numerous references to the Gita, such as his lectures on the four yogas – Bhakti, Jnana, Karma, and Raja.<ref>{{harvnb|Minor|1986|page=131}}</ref> Through the message of the Gita, Vivekananda sought to energise the people of India to reclaim their dormant but strong identity.<ref>{{harvnb|Minor|1986|page=144}}</ref> Aurobindo saw Bhagavad Gita as a "scripture of the future religion" and suggested that Hinduism had acquired a much wider relevance through the Gita.<ref>{{harvnb|Robinson|2006|page=69}}</ref> Sivananda called Bhagavad Gita "the most precious jewel of Hindu literature" and suggested its introduction into the curriculum of Indian schools and colleges.<ref>{{harvnb|Robinson|2006|page=102}}</ref>

According to Ronald Neufeldt, it was the ] that dedicated much attention and energy to the allegorical interpretation of the Gita, along with religious texts from around the world, after 1885 and given H. P. Blavatsky, Subba Rao and Anne Besant writings.{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=11–14}} Their attempt was to present their "universalist religion". These late 19th-century theosophical writings called the Gita as a "path of true spirituality" and "teaching nothing more than the basis of every system of philosophy and scientific endeavor", triumphing over other "Samkhya paths" of Hinduism that "have degenerated into superstition and demoralized India by leading people away from practical action".{{sfn|Minor|1986|pp=11–14}}

=== Adaptations ===
] retold the story of Gandhi's early development as an activist in South Africa through the text of the Gita in the opera '']'' (1979). The entire libretto of the opera consists of sayings from the Gita sung in the original Sanskrit.<ref group=web>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/14/arts/music/14saty.html|title=Fanciful Visions on the Mahatma's Road to Truth and Simplicity|last=Tommasini|first=Anthony|date=14 April 2008|work=The New York Times|access-date=16 October 2009|archive-date=17 April 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090417090620/http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/14/arts/music/14saty.html|url-status=live}}</ref>

In ] ''Arjuna's dilemma'', the philosophical dilemma faced by Arjuna is dramatised in operatic form with a blend of Indian and Western music styles.<ref group=web>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/07/arts/music/07arju.html|title=Warrior Prince From India Wrestles With Destiny|last=Tommasini|first=Anthony|date=7 November 2008|work=The New York Times|access-date=16 October 2009|archive-date=24 June 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170624221254/http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/07/arts/music/07arju.html|url-status=live}}</ref>

The 1993 Sanskrit film, '']'', directed by ] won the ] ] for ].<ref group=web name="40thaward">{{cite web|url=http://iffi.nic.in/Dff2011/Frm40thNFAAward.aspx|title=40th National Film Awards|publisher=]|access-date=2 March 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160602174839/http://iffi.nic.in/Dff2011/Frm40thNFAAward.aspx|archive-date=2 June 2016|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref group=web name="40thawardPDF">{{cite web|url=http://dff.nic.in/2011/40th_nff_1993.pdf|title=40th National Film Awards (PDF)|publisher=]|access-date=2 March 2012|archive-date=9 March 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160309053748/http://dff.nic.in/2011/40th_nff_1993.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref>


== Psychotherapeutic interpretation ==
The 1995 novel by Steven Pressfield, and its adaptation as the 2000 golf movie '']'' by ] has parallels to the Bhagavad Gita, according to Steven J. Rosen. Steven Pressfield acknowledges that the Gita was his inspiration, the golfer character in his novel is Arjuna, the caddie is Krishna, states Rosen. The movie, however, uses the plot but glosses over the teachings unlike in the novel.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140804211632/http://hinduismtoday.com/modules/smartsection/item.php?itemid=3988 |date=4 August 2014 }}, Steven Rosen</ref>
Prominent Indian psychiatrists considered the Gita as a source for developing a culturally sensitive ] model.<ref name=":4">{{Cite journal |last=Balodhi |first=JP |last2=Keshavan |first2=MS |date=1986 |title=Bhagavadgita and Psychotherapy |url=https://nimhans.ac.in/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/11.Bhagvadgita-and-Psychotherapy_139-143.pdf |journal=NIMHANS |volume=4 |issue=2 |pages=139-143}}</ref> Krishna, has been compared to a cognitive therapist, in relation to Arjuna, who suffers from both physical and psychological symptoms of mental disturbance. Physically, Arjuna's mouth dries up, his limbs tremble, and his hairs stand on their ends. Psychologically, he faces anxiety, confusion, and negative self-evaluation.<ref name=":4" /> Krishna corrects Arjuna's cognitive state by introducing a new framework of action, which is removed from anticipation of the outcome. The concepts of ''Jnana'', ''karma'', and ''bhakti'' can be taken as three steps for cognitive restructuring.<ref name=":4" />


== See also == == See also ==
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==Notes== ==Notes==
{{notelist}} {{notelist|35em|refs=
<!-- S -->
<!-- "synthesis" -->
{{efn|name="synthesis"|Synthesis of traditions:
* {{harvtxt|Minor|1986|pp=74–75, 81}} states that the Gita is "more clearly defined as a synthesis of Vedanta, Yoga and Samkhya" philosophies.
* According to the Gita translator Radhakrishnan, quoted in a review by Robinson, Krishna's discourse is a "comprehensive synthesis" that inclusively unifies the competing strands of Hindu thought such as "Vedic ritual, Upanishadic wisdom, devotional theism and philosophical insight" {{harv|Robinson|2006|p=95}}.
* According to {{harvtxt|Cornille|2006|p=2}}, the Gita presents the main beliefs of Hinduism, stressing upon the importance of detachment, duty, the prevalence of ], the difference between body and immortal soul, and its ].
* According to {{harvtxt|Raju|1992|p=211}}, the Bhagavad Gita is a great synthesis of impersonal spiritual monism with personal God, of "the ''yoga'' of action with the ''yoga'' of transcendence of action, and these again with the ''yogas'' of devotion and knowledge" .
* Aurobindo described the text as a synthesis of various ]s.}}
}}
{{reflist|group=note|2}} {{reflist|group=note|2}}


==References== ==References==
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{{Refend}}
* {{cite book| last =Zaehner | first =Robert Charles | year =1973 | title =The Bhagavad-gītā|publisher= Oxford University Press|isbn =978-0-19-501666-6 | url =https://books.google.com/books?id=nY6PRhqdlJsC}}
====Online sources====
{{refend}}

===Online sources===
{{reflist|group=web}} {{reflist|group=web}}

== Further reading ==
* {{Citation |last=Sargeant |first=Winthrop |editor= Christopher Key Chapple|title=The Bhagavad Gītā: Twenty-fifth Anniversary Edition |year=2009 |publisher=State University of New York Press |isbn=978-1-4384-2841-3 |title-link=Bhagavad Gita (Sargeant) | ref=none }} word-by word translation
* {{cite book| last =Robinson | first =Catherine A. | year =2014 | title =Interpretations of the Bhagavad-Gita and Images of the Hindu Tradition: The Song of the Lord | publisher =Taylor & Francis | isbn =978-1-134-27891-6 | ref=none}}


== External links == == External links ==
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* {{Wikisource-inline|The Bhagavad Gita}} * {{Wikisource-inline|The Bhagavad Gita}}
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Latest revision as of 10:28, 22 December 2024

Major Hindu scripture Several terms redirect here. For other uses, see Bhagavad Gita (disambiguation) and Gita (disambiguation).

Bhagavad Gita
Bhagavad Gita's revelation: Krishna tells the Gita to Arjuna
Information
ReligionHinduism
AuthorTraditionally attributed to Vyasa
LanguageSanskrit
Chapters18
Verses700
Full text
The Bhagavad Gita at English Wikisource

The Bhagavad Gita (/ˈbʌɡəvəd ˈɡiːtɑː/; Sanskrit: भगवद्गीता, IPA: [ˌbʱɐɡɐʋɐd ˈɡiːtɑː], romanizedbhagavad-gītā, lit.'God's song'), often referred to as the Gita (IAST: gītā), is a Hindu scripture, dated to the second or first century BCE, which forms part of the epic Mahabharata. It is a synthesis of various strands of Indian religious thought, including the Vedic concept of dharma (duty, rightful action); samkhya-based yoga and jnana (knowledge); and bhakti (devotion). It holds a unique pan-Hindu influence as the most prominent sacred text and is a central text in Vedanta and the Vaishnava Hindu tradition.

While traditionally attributed to the sage Veda Vyasa, the Gita is probably a composite work composed by multiple authors. Incorporating teachings from the Upanishads and the samkhya yoga philosophy, the Gita is set in a narrative framework of dialogue between the pandava prince Arjuna and his charioteer guide Krishna, an avatar of Vishnu, at the onset of the Kurukshetra War.

Though the Gita praises the benefits of yoga in releasing man's inner essence from the bounds of desire and the wheel of rebirth, the text propagates the Brahmanic idea of living according to one's duty or dharma, in contrast to the ascetic ideal of seeking liberation by avoiding all karma. Facing the perils of war, Arjuna hesitates to perform his duty (dharma) as a warrior. Krishna persuades him to commence in battle, arguing that while following one's dharma, one should not consider oneself to be the agent of action, but attribute all of one's actions to God (bhakti).

The Gita posits the existence of an individual self (jivatman) and the higher Godself (Krishna, Atman/Brahman) in every being; the Krishna-Arjuna dialogue has been interpreted as a metaphor for an everlasting dialogue between the two. Numerous classical and modern thinkers have written commentaries on the Gita with differing views on its essence and essentials, including on the relation between the individual self (jivatman) and God (Krishna) or the supreme self (Atman/Brahman). The Gita famously mentions, in chapter XIII verse 24–25, the four ways to see the self, interpreted as four yogas, namely through meditation (raja yoga), insight/intuition (jnana yoga), work/right action (karma yoga) and devotion/love (bhakti yoga), an influential division that was popularized by Swami Vivekananda in the 1890s. The setting of the text in a battlefield has been interpreted by several modern Indian writers as an allegory for the struggles and vagaries of human life.

Etymology

The Gita in the title of the Bhagavad Gita means "song". Religious leaders and scholars interpret the word Bhagavad in several ways. Accordingly, the title has been interpreted as "the song of God", "the word of God" by theistic schools, "the words of the Lord", "the Divine Song", and "Celestial Song" by others.

In India, its Sanskrit name is often written as Shrimad Bhagavad Gita or Shrimad Bhagavadgita (श्रीमद् भगवद् गीता or भगवद्गीता) where the Shrimad prefix is used to denote a high degree of respect. The Bhagavad Gita is not to be confused with the Bhagavata Puran, which is one of the eighteen major Puranas dealing with the life of the Hindu God Krishna and various avatars of Vishnu.

The work is also known as the Iswara Gita, the Ananta Gita, the Hari Gita, the Vyasa Gita, or the Gita.

Dating and authorship

Dating

An old torn paper with a painting depicting the Mahabharata war, with some verses recorded in Sanskrit.
A manuscript illustration of the battle of Kurukshetra, fought between the Kauravas and the Pandavas, recorded in the Mahabharata. c. 1700 – c. 1800 CE

The text is generally dated to the second or first century BCE, though some scholars accept dates as early as the 5th century BCE.

According to Jeaneane Fowler, "the dating of the Gita varies considerably" and depends in part on whether one accepts it to be a part of the early versions of the Mahabharata, or a text that was inserted into the epic at a later date. The earliest "surviving" components therefore are believed to be no older than the earliest "external" references we have to the Mahabharata epic. The Mahabharata – the world's longest poem – is itself a text that was likely written and compiled over several hundred years, one dated between "400 BCE or little earlier, and 2nd century CE, though some claim a few parts can be put as late as 400 CE", states Fowler. The dating of the Gita is thus dependent on the uncertain dating of the Mahabharata. The actual dates of composition of the Gita remain unresolved.

According to Arthur Basham, the context of the Bhagavad Gita suggests that it was composed in an era when the ethics of war were being questioned and renunciation to monastic life was becoming popular. Such an era emerged after the rise of Buddhism and Jainism in the 5th century BCE, and particularly after the semi-legendary life of Ashoka in the 3rd century BCE. Thus, the first version of the Bhagavad Gita may have been composed in or after the 3rd century BCE.

Winthrop Sargeant linguistically categorizes the Bhagavad Gita as Epic-Puranic Sanskrit, a language that succeeds Vedic Sanskrit and precedes classical Sanskrit. The text has occasional pre-classical elements of the Vedic Sanskrit language, such as aorists and the prohibitive instead of the expected na (not) of classical Sanskrit. This suggests that the text was composed after the Pāṇini era, but before the long compounds of classical Sanskrit became the norm. This would date the text as transmitted by the oral tradition to the later centuries of the 1st-millennium BCE, and the first written version probably to the 2nd or 3rd century CE.

Kashi Nath Upadhyaya dates it a bit earlier, but after the rise of Buddhism, by which it was influenced. He states that the Gita was always a part of the Mahabharata, and dating the latter suffices in dating the Gita. based on the estimated dates of Mahabharata as evidenced by exact quotes of it in the Buddhist literature by Asvaghosa (c. 100 CE), Upadhyaya states that the Mahabharata, and therefore the Gita, must have been well known by then for a Buddhist to be quoting it. This suggests a terminus ante quem (latest date) of the Gita be sometime before the 1st century CE. He cites similar quotes in the dharmasutra texts, the Brahma sutras, and other literature to conclude that the Bhagavad Gita was composed in the fifth or fourth-century BCE.

Authorship

In the Indian tradition, the Bhagavad Gita, as well as the epic Mahabharata of which it is a part, is attributed to the sage Vyasa, whose full name was Krishna Dvaipayana, also called Veda-Vyasa. Another Hindu legend states that Vyasa narrated it when the lord Ganesha broke one of his tusks and wrote down the Mahabharata along with the Bhagavad Gita.

Scholars consider Vyasa to be a mythical or symbolic author, in part because Vyasa is also the traditional compiler of the Vedas and the Puranas, texts dated to be from different millennia.

According to Alexus McLeod, a scholar of Philosophy and Asian Studies, it is "impossible to link the Bhagavad Gita to a single author", and it may be the work of many authors. This view is shared by the Indologist Arthur Basham, who states that there were three or more authors or compilers of Bhagavad Gita. This is evidenced by the discontinuous intermixing of philosophical verses with theistic or passionately theistic verses, according to Basham.

J. A. B. van Buitenen, an Indologist known for his translations and scholarship on Mahabharata, finds that the Gita is so contextually and philosophically well-knit within the Mahabharata that it was not an independent text that "somehow wandered into the epic". The Gita, states van Buitenen, was conceived and developed by the Mahabharata authors to "bring to a climax and solution the dharmic dilemma of a war".

Pancaratra Agama

Vāsudeva-Krishna, on a coin of Agathocles of Bactria c. 180 BCE. This is "the earliest unambiguous image" of the deity.

According to Dennis Hudson, there is an overlap between Vedic and Tantric rituals within the teachings found in the Bhagavad Gita. He places the Pancaratra Agama in the last three or four centuries of 1st-millennium BCE, and proposes that both the tantric and vedic, the Agama and the Gita share the same Vāsudeva-Krishna roots. Some of the ideas in the Bhagavad Gita connect it to the Shatapatha Brahmana of Yajurveda. The Shatapatha Brahmana, for example, mentions the absolute Purusha who dwells in every human being.

According to Hudson, a story in this Vedic text highlights the meaning of the name Vāsudeva as the 'shining one (deva) who dwells (Vasu) in all things and in whom all things dwell', and the meaning of Vishnu to be the 'pervading actor'. In the Bhagavad Gita, similarly, 'Krishna identified himself both with Vāsudeva, Vishnu and their meanings'. The ideas at the centre of Vedic rituals in Shatapatha Brahmana and the teachings of the Bhagavad Gita revolve around this absolute Person, the primordial genderless absolute, which is the same as the goal of Pancaratra Agama and Tantra.

Manuscripts and layout

Photograph of four pieces of paper with verses in Sanskrit.
A Sanskrit manuscript of the Bhagavad Gita in the Devanagari script. c. 1800 – c. 1900 CE

The Bhagavad Gita manuscript is found in the sixth book of the Mahabharata manuscripts – the Bhisma-parvan. Therein, in the third section, the Gita forms chapters 23–40, that is 6.3.23 to 6.3.40. The Bhagavad Gita is often preserved and studied on its own, as an independent text with its chapters renumbered from 1 to 18. The Bhagavad Gita manuscripts exist in numerous Indic scripts. These include writing systems that are currently in use, as well as early scripts such as the now dormant Sharada script. Variant manuscripts of the Gita have been found on the Indian subcontinent Unlike the enormous variations in the remaining sections of the surviving Mahabharata manuscripts, the Gita manuscripts show only minor variations.

According to Gambhirananda, the old manuscripts may have had 745 verses, though he agrees that “700 verses is the generally accepted historic standard." Gambhirananda's view is supported by a few versions of chapter 6.43 of the Mahabharata. According to Gita exegesis scholar Robert Minor, these versions state that the Gita is a text where "Kesava spoke 574 slokas, Arjuna 84, Sanjaya 41, and Dhritarashtra 1". An authentic manuscript of the Gita with 745 verses has not been found. Adi Shankara, in his 8th-century commentary, explicitly states that the Gita has 700 verses, which was likely a deliberate declaration to prevent further insertions and changes to the Gita. Since Shankara's time, "700 verses" has been the standard benchmark for the critical edition of the Bhagavad Gita.

Structure

The Bhagavad Gita is a poem written in the Sanskrit language. Its 700 verses are structured into several ancient Indian poetic meters, with the principal being the shloka (Anushtubh chanda). It has 18 chapters in total. Each shloka consists of a couplet, thus the entire text consists of 1,400 lines. Each shloka has two-quarter verses with exactly eight syllables. Each of these quarters is further arranged into two metrical feet of four syllables each. The metered verse does not rhyme. While the shloka is the principal meter in the Gita, it does deploy other elements of Sanskrit prosody (which refers to one of the six Vedangas, or limbs of Vedic statues). At dramatic moments, it uses the tristubh meter found in the Vedas, where each line of the couplet has two-quarter verses with exactly eleven syllables.

Characters

Narrative

The Gita is a dialogue between Krishna and Arjuna right before the start of the climactic Kurukshetra War in the Hindu epic Mahabharata. Two massive armies have gathered to destroy each other. The Pandava prince Arjuna asks his charioteer Krishna to drive to the centre of the battlefield so that he can get a good look at both the armies and all those "so eager for war". He sees that some among his enemies are his relatives, beloved friends, and revered teachers. He does not want to fight to kill them and is thus filled with doubt and despair on the battlefield. He drops his bow, wonders if he should renounce and just leave the battlefield. He turns to his charioteer and guide, Krishna, for advice on the rationale for war, his choices and the right thing to do. The Bhagavad Gita is the compilation of Arjuna's questions and moral dilemma and Krishna's answers and insights that elaborate on a variety of philosophical concepts.

Vintage Hindu God Krishan Gita Birth Litho Print Original Vasudeo Pandya. c. 1932 CE

The compiled dialogue goes far beyond the "rationale for war"; it touches on many human ethical dilemmas, philosophical issues and life's choices. According to Flood and Martin, although the Gita is set in the context of a wartime epic, the narrative is structured to apply to all situations; it wrestles with questions about "who we are, how we should live our lives, and how should we act in the world". According to Huston Smith, it delves into questions about the "purpose of life, crisis of self-identity, human Self, human temperaments, and ways for the spiritual quest".

The Gita posits the existence of two selves in an individual, and its presentation of the Krishna-Arjuna dialogue has been interpreted as a metaphor for an eternal dialogue between the two.

Textual significance

Synthesis prioritizing dharma and bhakti

A didactic print that uses the Gita scene as a focal point for general religious instruction. c. 1960 – c. 1970 CE
See also: Smarta tradition

The Bhagavad Gita is a synthesis of Vedic and non-Vedic traditions, reconciling renunciation with action by arguing that they are inseparable; while following one's dharma, one should not consider oneself to be the agent of action, but attribute all one's actions to God. It is a Brahmanical text that uses Shramanic and Yogic terminology to propagate the Brahmanic idea of living according to one's duty or dharma, in contrast to the ascetic ideal of liberation by avoiding all karma. According to Hiltebeitel, the Bhagavad Gita is the sealing achievement of the consolidation of Hinduism, merging Bhakti traditions with Mimamsa, Vedanta, and other knowledge based traditions.

The Gita discusses and synthesizes sramana- and yoga-based renunciation, dharma-based householder life, and devotion-based theism, attempting "to forge a harmony" between these three paths. It does this in a framework addressing the question of what constitutes the virtuous path that is necessary for spiritual liberation or release from the cycles of rebirth (moksha), incorporating various religious traditions, including philosophical ideas from the Upanishads samkhya yoga philosophy, and bhakti, incorporating bhakti into Vedanta. As such, it neutralizes the tension between the Brahmanical worldorder with its caste-based social institutions that hold society together, and the search for salvation by ascetics who have left society.

Rejection of sramanic non-action

Knowledge is indeed better than practice;
Meditation is superior to knowledge;
Renunciation of the fruit of action is better than meditation;
Peace immediately follows renunciation.

Bhagavad Gita, chapter XII, verse 12

According to Gavin Flood and Charles Martin, the Gita rejects the shramanic path of non-action, emphasizing instead "the renunciation of the fruits of action". According to Gavin Flood, the teachings in the Gita differ from other Indian religions that encouraged extreme austerity and self-torture of various forms (karsayanta). The Gita disapproves of these, stating that not only is it against tradition but against Krishna himself, because "Krishna dwells within all beings, in torturing the body the ascetic would be torturing him", states Flood. Even a monk should strive for "inner renunciation" rather than external pretensions. It further states that the dharmic householder can achieve the same goals as the renouncing monk through "inner renunciation" or "motiveless action". One must do the right thing because one has determined that it is right, states Gita, without craving for its fruits, without worrying about the results, loss or gain. Desires, selfishness, and the craving for fruits can distort one from spiritual living.

Vedanta

The Bhagavad Gita is part of the Prasthanatrayi, which also includes the Upanishads and the Brahma sutras, the foundational texts of the Vedanta school of Hindu philosophy.

Vaishnavism

The Gita is a revered text in the Vaishnava tradition, mostly through the Vaishnava Vedanta commentaries written on it, though the text itself is also celebrated in the Puranas, for example, the Gita Mahatmya of the Varaha Purana. While Upanishads focus more on knowledge and the identity of the self with Brahman, the Bhagavad Gita shifts the emphasis towards devotion and the worship of a personal deity, specifically Krishna. There are alternate versions of the Bhagavad Gita (such as the one found in Kashmir), but the basic message behind these texts is not distorted.

Modern prominence

The Trinity test of the Manhattan Project was the first detonation of a nuclear weapon, which led Oppenheimer to recall verses from the Bhagavad Gita, notably being: "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds".
Mass recitation of the Bhagavad Gita by one lakh people in Kolkata, 24th December c. 2023 CE.

While Hinduism is known for its diversity and the synthesis derived from it, the Bhagavad Gita holds a unique pan-Hindu influence. Gerald James Larson – an Indologist and scholar of classical Hindu philosophy, states that "if there is any one text that comes near to embodying the totality of what it is to be a Hindu, it would be the Bhagavad Gita."

Yet, according to Robinson, "it is increasingly recognized by scholars that the extraordinary prominence of the Bhagavad Gita is a feature of modernity despite disagreement over the date at which it became dominant." According to Eric Sharpe, this change started in the 1880s, and became prominent after 1900. According to Arvind Sharma, the Bhagavad Gita was always an important scripture but became prominent in the 1920s.

With its translation and study by Western scholars beginning in the early 18th century, the Bhagavad Gita gained a growing appreciation and popularity in the West. Novel interpretations of the Gita, along with apologetics on it, have been a part of the modern era revisionism and renewal movements within Hinduism. According to Ronald Neufeldt, it was the Theosophical Society that dedicated much attention and energy to the allegorical interpretation of the Gita, along with religious texts from around the world, after 1885 and given H. P. Blavatsky, Subba Rao and Anne Besant writings. Their attempt was to present their "universalist religion." These late 19th-century theosophical writings called the Gita a "path of true spirituality" and "teaching nothing more than the basis of every system of philosophy and scientific endeavour", triumphing over other "Samkhya paths" of Hinduism that "have degenerated into superstition and demoralized India by leading people away from practical action".

Hindu reform movements

Main article: Hindu reform movements

Neo-Hindus and Hindu nationalists have celebrated the Bhagavad Gita as containing the essence of Hinduism and taking the Gita's emphasis on duty and action as a clue for their activism for Indian nationalism and independence. Bankim Chandra Chatterjee (1838–1894) challenged orientalist literature on Hinduism and offered his interpretations of the Gita, states Ajit Ray. Bal Gangadhar Tilak (1856–1920) interpreted the karma yoga teachings in Gita as a "doctrine of liberation" taught by Hinduism, while Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan (1888–1975) stated that the Bhagavad Gita teaches a universalist religion and the "essence of Hinduism" along with the "essence of all religions", rather than a private religion.

Vivekananda's (1863–1902) works contained numerous references to the Gita, such as his lectures on the four yogas – Bhakti, Jnana, Karma, and Raja. Through the message of the Gita, Vivekananda sought to energise the people of India to reclaim their dormant but strong identity. Aurobindo (1872–1950) saw the Bhagavad Gita as a "scripture of the future religion" and suggested that Hinduism had acquired a much wider relevance through the Gita.

Neo-Vedanta and yoga

He who in this way knows the Spirit
And material nature, along with the qualities ,
In whatever stage of transmigration he may exist,
Is not born again.

Some perceive the Self in the Self
By the Self through meditation;
Others by the discipline of Sankhya
And still others by the yoga of action.

Yet others, not knowing this,
Worship, having heard it from others,
And they also cross beyond death,
Devoted to what they have heard.

Bhagavad Gita, chapter XIII, verse 23-25 Main articles: Neo-Vedanta and Three Yogas

While the Upanishads refer to yoga as yoking or restraining the mind, the topic of BG chapter 6, the Bhagavad Gita introduces "the famous three kinds of yoga, 'knowledge' (jnana), 'action' (karma), and 'love' (bhakti). BG XIII verse 23-25 famously mentions four kinds of yoga, or ways of seeing the self, adding meditation to the three yogas. Yet, the practice of dhyana (meditation), is a part of all three classical paths in Hinduism. Knowledge or insight, discerning the true self (purusha) from matter and material desires (prakriti), is the true aim of classical yoga, in which meditation and insight cannot be separated. Furthermore, the Gita "rejects the Buddhist and Jain path of non-action, emphasizing instead renunciation of the fruits of action" and devotion to Krishna.

The systematic presentation of Hindu monotheism as divided into these four paths or "Yogas" is modern, advocated by Swami Vivekananda from the 1890s in his books on Jnana Yoga,Karma Yoga, Bhakti Yoga and Raja Yoga, emphasizing Raja Yoga as the crowning achievement of yoga. Vivekananda, who was strongly inspired by the Gita, viewed all spiritual paths as equal. Yet, Vivekananda also noted that "The reconciliation of the different paths of Dharma, and work without desire or attachment — these are the two special characteristics of the Gita." Similarly, Cornille states that the Gita asserts that the path of Bhakti (devotion) is the foremost and the easiest of them all.

According to Huston Smith, a notable neo-Vedantin, referring to BG XIII verse 23–25, the Gita mentions four ways to see the self, based on the Samkhya-premise that people are born with different temperaments and tendencies (guṇa). Some individuals are more reflective and intellectual, some are effective and engaged by their emotions, some are action-driven, yet others favour experimentation and exploring what works. According to Smith, BG XIII verse 24-25 lists four different spiritual paths for each personality type respectively: the path of knowledge (jnana yoga), the path of devotion (bhakti yoga), the path of action (karma yoga), and the path of meditation (raja yoga).

Medieval commentators argued which path had priority. According to Robinson, modern commentators have interpreted the text as refraining from insisting on one right marga (path) to spirituality. According to Upadhyaya, the Gita states that none of these paths to spiritual realization is "intrinsically superior or inferior", rather they "converge in one and lead to the same goal".

Chapters and content

The Bhagavad Gita contains 18 chapters and 700 verses found in the Bhishma Parva of the epic Mahabharata. Because of differences in recensions, the verses of the Gita may be numbered in the full text of the Mahabharata as chapters 6.25–42 or as chapters 6.23–40. The number of verses in each chapter vary in some manuscripts of the Gita discovered on the Indian subcontinent. However, variant readings are relatively few in contrast to the numerous versions of the Mahabharata it is found embedded in.

Adi Shankara with Disciples, by Raja Ravi Varma (c. 1904 CE). Shankara published 700 verses of the Gita (c. 800 CE), now the standard version.

The original Bhagavad Gita has no chapter titles. Some Sanskrit editions that separate the Gita from the epic as an independent text, as well as translators, however, add chapter titles. For example, Swami Chidbhavananda describes each of the eighteen chapters as a separate yoga because each chapter, like yoga, "trains the body and the mind". He labels the first chapter "Arjuna Vishada Yogam" or the "Yoga of Arjuna's Dejection". Sir Edwin Arnold titled this chapter in his 1885 translation as "The Distress of Arjuna".

The chapters are:

Chapter Name of Chapter Total Verses
1 Arjuna Vishada Yoga 46
2 Samkhya Yoga 72
3 Karma Yoga 43
4 Jnana Karma Sanyasa Yoga 42
5 Karma Sanyasa Yoga 29
6 Atma Samyama Yoga 47
7 Jnana Vijnana Yoga 30
8 Akshara Brahma Yoga 28
9 Raja Vidya Raja Guhya Yoga 34
10 Vibhuti Yoga 42
11 Vishvarupa Darshana Yoga 55
12 Bhakti Yoga 20
13 Kshetra Kshetrajna Vibhaga Yoga 35
14 Gunatraya Vibhaga Yoga 27
15 Purushottama Yoga 20
16 Daivasura Sampad Vibhaga Yoga 24
17 Shraddha Traya Vibhaga Yoga 28
18 Moksha Sanyasa Yoga 78
Total 700

Chapter 1: Arjuna Vishada Yoga (46 verses)

Main article: Arjuna Vishada-yoga

Translators have variously titled the first chapter as Arjuna Vishada-yoga, Prathama Adhyaya, The Distress of Arjuna, The War Within, or Arjuna's Sorrow. The Bhagavad Gita is opened by setting the stage of the Kurukshetra battlefield. Two massive armies representing different loyalties and ideologies face a catastrophic war. With Arjuna is Krishna, not as a participant in the war, but only as his charioteer and counsel. Arjuna requests Krishna to move the chariot between the two armies so he can see those "eager for this war". He sees family and friends on the enemy side. Arjuna is distressed and in sorrow. The issue is stated Arvind Sharma, "Is it morally proper to kill?" This and other moral dilemmas in the first chapter are set in a context where the Hindu epic and Krishna have already extolled ahimsa (non-violence) to be the highest and divine virtue of a human being. The war feels evil to Arjuna and he questions the morality of war. He wonders if it is noble to renounce and leave before the violence starts, or should he fight, and why.

Chapter 2: Sankhya Yoga (72 verses)

Main article: Samkhya Yoga (Bhagavad Gita)

Deeds without Expections of the Result

॥ कर्मण्येवाधिकारस्ते मा फलेषु कदाचन ।
मा कर्मफलहेतुर्भुर्मा ते सङ्गोऽस्त्वाकर्मणि॥

One has the right to perform their expected duty,
But not to the right to the fruits of action;
One should not consider oneself as the doer of the action,
Nor should one attach oneself to inaction.

- Bhagavad Gita 2 : 47

Translators title the chapter as Sankhya Yoga, The Book of Doctrines, Self-Realization, or The Yoga of Knowledge (and Philosophy). The second chapter begins the philosophical discussions and teachings found in the Gita. The warrior Arjuna whose past had focused on learning the skills of his profession now faces a war he has doubts about. Filled with introspection and questions about the meaning and purpose of life, he asks Krishna about the nature of life, Self, death, afterlife and whether there is a deeper meaning and reality. Krishna teaches Arjuna about the eternal nature of the soul (atman) and the temporary nature of the body, advising him to perform his warrior duty with detachment and without grief. The chapter summarizes the Hindu idea of rebirth, samsara, eternal Self in each person (Self), universal Self-present in everyone, various types of yoga, divinity within, the nature of knowledge of the Self and other concepts. The ideas and concepts in the second chapter reflect the framework of the Samkhya and Yoga schools of Hindu philosophy. This chapter is an overview of the remaining sixteen chapters of the Bhagavad Gita. Mahatma Gandhi memorized the last 19 verses of the second chapter, considering them as his companion in his non-violent movement for social justice during colonial rule.

Chapter 3: Karma Yoga (43 verses)

Main article: Karma Yoga (Bhagavad Gita)

Translators title the chapter as Karma yoga, Virtue in Work, Selfless Service, or The Yoga of Action. After listening to Krishna's spiritual teachings in Chapter 2, Arjuna gets more confounded and returns to the predicament he faces. He wonders if fighting the war is "not so important after all" given Krishna's overview on the pursuit of spiritual wisdom. Krishna replies that there is no way to avoid action (karma) since abstention from work is also an action. Krishna states that Arjuna must understand and perform his duty (dharma) because everything is connected by the law of cause and effect. Every man or woman is bound by activity. Those who act selfishly create the Karmic cause and are thereby bound to the effect which may be good or bad. Those who act selflessly for the right cause and strive to do their dharmic duty are doing God's work. Those who act without craving fruits are free from the Karmic effects because the results never motivate them. Whatever the result, it does not affect them. Their happiness comes from within, and the external world does not bother them. According to Flood and Martin, chapter 3 and onwards develops "a theological response to Arjuna's dilemma".

Chapter 4: Jnana Karma Sanyasa Yoga (42 verses)

Main article: Jnana Karma Sanyasa Yoga

Translators title the fourth chapter as Jñāna–Karma-Sanyasa yoga, The Religion of Knowledge, Wisdom in Action, or The Yoga of Renunciation of Action through Knowledge. Krishna reveals that he has taught this yoga to the Vedic sages. Arjuna questions how Krishna could do this, when those sages lived so long ago, and Krishna was born more recently. Krishna reminds him that everyone is in the cycle of rebirths, and while Arjuna does not remember his previous births, he does. Whenever dharma declines and the purpose of life is forgotten by Man, says Krishna, he returns to re-establish dharma. Every time he returns, he teaches about the inner Self in all beings. The later verses of the chapter return to the discussion of motiveless action and the need to determine the right action, performing it as one's dharma (duty) while renouncing the results, rewards, and fruits. The simultaneous outer action with inner renunciation, states Krishna, is the secret to the life of freedom. Action leads to knowledge, while selfless action leads to spiritual awareness, state the last verses of this chapter. The 4th chapter is the first time where Krishna begins to reveal his divine nature to Arjuna.

Chapter 5: Karma Sanyasa Yoga (29 verses)

Main article: Karma-Sanyasa Yoga

Translators title this chapter as Karma–Sanyasa yoga, Religion by Renouncing Fruits of Works, Renounce and Rejoice, or The Yoga of Renunciation. The chapter starts by presenting the tension in the Indian tradition between the life of sannyasa (monks who have renounced their household and worldly attachments) and the life of grihastha (householder). Arjuna asks Krishna which path is better. Krishna answers that both are paths to the same goal, but the path of "selfless action and service" with inner renunciation is better. The different paths, says Krishna, aim for—and if properly pursued, lead to—Self-knowledge. This knowledge leads to the universal, transcendent Godhead, the divine essence in all beings, to Brahman – to Krishna himself. The final verses of the chapter state that the self-aware who have reached self-realization live without fear, anger, or desire. They are free within, always. Chapter 5 shows signs of interpolations and internal contradictions. For example, states Arthur Basham, verses 5.23–28 state that a sage's spiritual goal is to realize the impersonal Brahman, yet the next verse 5.29 states that the goal is to realize the personal God who is Krishna.

Selfless service

It is not those who lack energy
nor those who refrain from action,
but those who work without expecting a reward
who attain the goal of meditation,
Theirs is true renunciation(sanyāsā).

—Bhagavad Gita 6.1
Eknath Easwaran

Chapter 6: Atma Samyama Yoga (47 verses)

See also: Samyama

Translators title the sixth chapter as Dhyana yoga, Religion by Self-Restraint, The Practice of Meditation, or The Yoga of Meditation. The chapter opens as a continuation of Krishna's teachings about selfless work and the personality of someone who has renounced the fruits that are found in chapter 5. Krishna says that such self-realized people are impartial to friends and enemies, are beyond good and evil, equally disposed to those who support them or oppose them because they have reached the summit of consciousness. Verses 6.10 and after proceed to summarize the principles of Yoga and meditation in a format similar to but simpler than Patanjali's Yogasutra. It discusses who is a true yogi, and what it takes to reach the state where one harbours no malice towards anyone. Verse 6.47 emphasizes the significance of the soul's faith and loving service to Krishna as the highest form of yoga.

Chapter 7: Jnana Vijnana Yoga (30 verses)

Main article: Jnana-Vijnana Yoga

Translators title this chapter as Jnana–Vijnana yoga, Religion by Discernment, Wisdom from Realization, or The Yoga of Knowledge and Judgment. The seventh chapter opens with Krishna continuing his discourse. He discusses jnana (knowledge) and vijnana (realization, understanding) using the Prakriti-Purusha (matter-Self) framework of the Samkhya school of Hindu philosophy, and the Maya-Brahman framework of the Vedanta school. The chapter states that evil is the consequence of ignorance and attachment to the impermanent, the elusive Maya. Maya is described as difficult to overcome, but those who rely on Krishna can easily cross beyond Maya and attain moksha. It states that Self-knowledge and union with Purusha (Krishna) are the highest goals of any spiritual pursuit.

Chapter 8: Akshara Brahma Yoga (28 verses)

Main article: Akshara Brahma Yoga

Translators title the chapter as Aksara–Brahma yoga, Religion by Devotion to the One Supreme God, The Eternal Godhead, or The Yoga of the Imperishable Brahman. The chapter opens with Arjuna asking questions such as what is Brahman and what is the nature of karma. Krishna states that his own highest nature is the imperishable Brahman and that he lives in every creature as the adhyatman. Every being has an impermanent body and an eternal Self, and that "Krishna as Lord" lives within every creature. The chapter discusses cosmology, the nature of death and rebirth. This chapter contains eschatology of the Bhagavad Gita. The importance of the last thought before death, the differences between material and spiritual worlds, and the light and dark paths that a Self takes after death are described. Krishna advises Arjuna about focusing the mind on the Supreme Deity within the heart through yoga, including pranayama and chanting sacred mantra "Om" to ensure concentration on Krishna at the time of death.

Chapter 9: Raja Vidya Raja Guhya Yoga (34 verses)

Translators title the ninth chapter as Raja–Vidya–Raja–Guhya yoga, Religion by the Kingly Knowledge and the Kingly Mystery, The Royal Path, or The Yoga of Sovereign Science and Sovereign Secret. Chapter 9 opens with Krishna continuing his discourse as Arjuna listens. Krishna states that he is everywhere and in everything in an unmanifested form, yet he is not in any way limited by them. Eons end, everything dissolves and then he recreates another eon subjecting them to the laws of Prakriti (nature). He equates himself to being the father and the mother of the universe, to being the Om, to the three Vedas, to the seed, the goal of life, the refuge and abode of all. The chapter recommends devotional worship of Krishna. According to theologian Christopher Southgate, verses of this chapter of the Gita are panentheistic, while German physicist and philosopher Max Bernhard Weinstein deems the work pandeistic. It may, in fact, be neither of them, and its contents may have no definition with previously developed Western terms.

A frieze in the Virupaksha temple (Pattadakal) depicting Mahabharata scenes involving Arjuna-Krishna chariot. Pattadakal is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. c. 700 CE

Chapter 10: Vibhuti Yoga (42 verses)

Translators title the chapter as Vibhuti–Vistara–yoga, Religion by the Heavenly Perfections, Divine Splendor, or The Yoga of Divine Manifestations. When Arjuna asks of the opulence (Vibhuti) of Krishna, he explains how all the entities are his forms. He reveals his divine being in greater detail as the ultimate cause of all material and spiritual existence, as one who transcends all opposites and who is beyond any duality. Nevertheless, at Arjuna's behest, Krishna states that the following are his major opulence: He is the atman in all beings, Arjuna's innermost Self, the compassionate Vishnu, Surya, Indra, Shiva-Rudra, Ananta, Yama, as well as the Om, Vedic sages, time, Gayatri mantra, and the science of Self-knowledge. Krishna says, "Among the Pandavas, I am Arjuna," implying he is manifest in all the beings, including Arjuna. He also says that he is Rama when he says, "Among the wielders of weapons, I am Rama". Arjuna accepts Krishna as the purushottama (Supreme Being).

Chapter 11: Vishvarupa Darshana Yoga (55 verses)

See also: Vishvarupa

Translators title the chapter as Vishvarupa–Darshana yoga, The Manifesting of the One and Manifold, The Cosmic Vision, or The Yoga of the Vision of the Cosmic Form. On Arjuna's request, Krishna displays his "universal form" (Viśvarūpa). Arjuna asks Krishna to see the Eternal with his own eyes. The Krishna then "gives" him a "heavenly" eye so that he can recognize the All-Form Vishvarupa of the Supreme God Vishnu or Krishna. Arjuna sees the divine form, with his face turned all around as if the light of a thousand suns suddenly burst forth in the sky. And he sees neither end, middle nor beginning. And he sees the gods and the host of beings contained within him. He also sees the Lord of the gods and the universe as the Lord of time, who devours his creatures in his "maw". And he sees people rushing to their doom in haste. And the Exalted One says that even the fighters are all doomed to death. And he, Arjuna, is his instrument to kill those who are already "killed" by him. Arjuna folds his hands trembling and worships the Most High. This is an idea found in the Rigveda and many later Hindu texts, where it is a symbolism for atman (Self) and Brahman (Absolute Reality) eternally pervading all beings and all existence. Chapter 11, states Eknath Eswaran, describes Arjuna entering first into savikalpa samadhi (a particular form), and then nirvikalpa samadhi (a universal form) as he gets an understanding of Krishna. A part of the verse from this chapter was recited by J. Robert Oppenheimer in a 1965 television documentary about the atomic bomb.

Chapter 12: Bhakti Yoga (20 verses)

See also: Bhakti yoga

Translators title this chapter as Bhakti yoga, The Religion of Faith, The Way of Love, or The Yoga of Devotion. In this chapter, Krishna glorifies the path of love and devotion to God. Krishna describes the process of devotional service (Bhakti yoga). Translator Eknath Easwaran contrasts this "way of love" with the "path of knowledge" stressed by the Upanishads, saying that "when God is loved in personal aspect, the way is vastly easier". He can be projected as "a merciful father, a divine mother, a wise friend, a passionate beloved, or even a mischievous child". The text states that combining "action with inner renunciation" with the love of Krishna as a personal God leads to peace. In the last eight verses of this chapter, Krishna states that he loves those who have compassion for all living beings, are content with whatever comes their way, and live a detached life that is impartial and selfless, unaffected by fleeting pleasure or pain, neither craving for praise nor depressed by criticism.

Chapter 13: Kshetra Kshetrajna Vibhaga Yoga (35 verses)

Sanskrit, Malayalam script (Kerala) c. 1500 – c. 1600 CESanskrit, Kannada script (Karnataka) c. 1700 – c. 1800 CEBhagavad Gita and related commentary literature exists in numerous Indian languages.

Translators title this chapter as Ksetra–Ksetrajna Vibhaga yoga, Religion by Separation of Matter and Spirit, The Field and the Knower, or The Yoga of Difference between the Field and Field-Knower. The chapter opens with Krishna continuing his discourse. He describes the difference between the transient perishable physical body (kshetra) and the immutable eternal Self (kshetrajna). The presentation explains the difference between ahamkara (ego) and atman (Self), from there between individual consciousness and universal consciousness. The knowledge of one's true self is linked to the realization of the Self. The 13th chapter of the Gita offers the clearest enunciation of the Samkhya philosophy, states Basham, by explaining the difference between field (material world) and the knower (Self), prakriti and purusha. According to Miller, this is the chapter which "redefines the battlefield as the human body, the material realm in which one struggles to know oneself" where human dilemmas are presented as a "symbolic field of interior warfare".

Chapter 14: Gunatraya Vibhaga Yoga (27 verses)

Translators title the fourteenth chapter as Gunatraya–Vibhaga yoga, Religion by Separation from the Qualities, The Forces of Evolution, or The Yoga of the Division of Three Gunas. Krishna continues his discourse from the previous chapter. Krishna explains the difference between purusha and prakriti, by mapping human experiences to three Guṇas (tendencies, qualities). These are listed as sattva, rajas and tamas. All thoughts, words and actions are filled with sattva (truthfulness, purity, clarity), rajas (movement, energy, passion) or tamas (darkness, inertia, stability). These gunas influence future rebirths, with sattva leading to higher states, rajas to continued material existence, and tamas to lower forms of life. Whoever understands everything that exists as the interaction of these three states of being can gain knowledge, transcend all three gunas and achieve liberation. When asked by Arjuna how he recognizes the one who has conquered the three gunas, Krishna replies that it is one who remains calm and composed when a guna 'arises', who always maintains equanimity, who is steadfast in joy and sorrow, who remains the same when he is reviled or admired, who renounces every action (from the ego), detaches himself from the power of the gunas. Liberation can also be reached by unwavering devotion to Krishna, which enables one to transcend the three gunas and become one with Brahman. All phenomena and individual personalities are thus a combination of all three gunas in varying and ever-changing proportions. The gunas affect the ego, but not the Self, according to the text. This chapter also relies on Samkhya theories.

Chapter 15: Purushottama Yoga (20 verses)

See also: Purushottama

Translators title the chapter as Purushottama yoga, Religion by Attaining the Supreme Krishna, The Supreme Self, or The Yoga of the Supreme Purusha. The fifteenth chapter expounds on Krishna's theology, in the Vaishnava Bhakti tradition of Hinduism. Krishna discusses the nature of God wherein Krishna not only transcends the impermanent body (matter) but also transcends the atman (Self) in every being. The chapter uses the metaphor of the Ashvattha (banyan) tree to illustrate the material world's entanglements, emphasizes detachment as the means to liberation, highlights the importance of true knowledge, and explains that those who realize this knowledge transcend the need for Vedic rituals. It follows an image of an upside tree with roots in the sky, without a beginning and end. It is necessary to cut down its shoots (sense objects), branches and solid root with the axe of equanimity and detachment and thereby reach the original person (adyam purusham). Later, Krishna says that he is known as Purushottama in both common speech and the Veda, sustaining and governing the entire threefold world and that he is greater than the kshara (perishable), which includes all living beings, and the akshara (imperishable), which is beyond kshara. Whoever truly recognizes this has reached the ultimate goal. According to Franklin Edgerton, the verses in this chapter, in association with select verses in other chapters, make the metaphysics of the Gita to be dualistic. However, its overall thesis, according to Edgerton, is more complex because other verses teach the Upanishadic doctrines and "through its God, the Gita seems after all to arrive at an ultimate monism; the essential part, the fundamental element, in everything, is after all One — is God."

Chapter 16: Daivasura Sampad Vibhaga Yoga (24 verses)

Translators title the chapter as Daivasura–Sampad–Vibhaga yoga, The Separateness of the Divine and Undivine, Two Paths, or The Yoga of the Division between the Divine and the Demonic. According to Easwaran, this is an unusual chapter where Krishna describes two types of human nature: divine (daivi sampad), leading to happiness, and demonic (asuri sampad), leading to suffering. He states that truthfulness, self-restraint, sincerity, love for others, desire to serve others, being detached, avoiding anger, avoiding harm to all living creatures, fairness, compassion and patience are marks of the divine nature. The opposite of these are demonic, such as cruelty, conceit, hypocrisy and being inhumane, states Krishna. Some of the verses in Chapter 16 may be polemics directed against competing Indian religions, according to Basham. The competing tradition may be the materialists (Charvaka), states Fowler.

Chapter 17: Shraddhatraya Vibhaga Yoga (28 verses)

Translators title the chapter as Shraddhatraya-Vibhaga yoga, Religion by the Threefold Kinds of Faith, The Power of Faith, or The Yoga of the Threefold Faith. Krishna qualifies various aspects of human life, including faith, thoughts, deeds, and eating habits, in relation to the three gunas (modes): sattva (goodness), rajas (passion), and tamas (ignorance). Krishna explains how these modes influence different aspects of human behaviour and spirituality, and how one can align with the mode of goodness to advance on their spiritual journey. The final verse of the Chapter stresses that genuine faith (shraddha) is essential for spiritual growth. Actions without faith are meaningless, both in the material and spiritual realms, highlighting the significance of faith in one's spiritual journey.

Chapter 18: Moksha Sanyasa Yoga (78 verses)

Translators title the chapter as Moksha–Sanyasa yoga, Religion by Deliverance and Renunciation, Freedom and Renunciation, or The Yoga of Liberation and Renunciation. In the final and longest chapter, the Gita offers a final summary of its teachings in the previous chapters. It gives a comprehensive overview of Bhagavad Gita's teachings, highlighting self-realization, duty, and surrender to Krishna to attain liberation and inner peace. It begins with the discussion of spiritual pursuits through sannyasa (renunciation, monastic life) and spiritual pursuits while living in the world as a householder. It teaches "karma-phala-tyaga" (renunciation of the fruits of actions), emphasizing the renunciation of attachment to the outcomes of actions and performing duties with selflessness and devotion.

Themes

Dharma

Main article: Dharma

Dharma is a prominent paradigm of the Mahabharata, and it is referenced in the Gita as well. The term dharma has several meanings. Fundamentally, it refers to that which is right or just. Contextually, it also means the essence of "duty, law, class, social norms, ritual and cosmos itself" in the text, in the sense "the way things should be in all these different dimensions". According to Zaehner, the term dharma means "duty" in the Gita's context; in verse 2.7, it refers to the "right ", and in 14.27 to the "eternal law of righteousness".

Few verses in the Bhagavad Gita deal with dharma, according to the Indologist Paul Hacker, but the theme of dharma is broadly important. In Chapter 1, responding to Arjuna's despondency, Krishna asks him to follow his sva-dharma, "the dharma that belongs to a particular man (Arjuna) as a member of a particular varna, (i.e., the kshatriya – the warrior varna)". According to Paul Hacker, the term dharma has additional meanings in the context of Arjuna. It is more broadly, the "duty" and a "metaphysically congealed act" for Arjuna. According to the Indologist Jacqueline Hirst, the dharma theme is "of significance only at the beginning and end of the Gita" and this may have been a way to perhaps link the Gita to the context of the Mahabharata.

According to Malinar, "Arjuna's crisis and some of the arguments put forward to call him to action are connected to the debates on war and peace in the Udyoga Parva." The Udyoga Parva presents many views about the nature of a warrior, his duty and what calls for heroic action. While Duryodhana presents it as a matter of status, social norms, and fate, Vidura states that the heroic warrior never submits, knows no fear and has the duty to protect people. The Bhishma Parva sets the stage for two ideologies in conflict and two massive armies gathered for what each considers as a righteous and necessary war. In this context, the Gita advises Arjuna to do his holy duty (sva-dharma) as a warrior: fight and kill.

According to the Indologist Barbara Miller, the text frames heroism not in terms of physical abilities, but instead in terms of effort and inner commitment to fulfil a warrior's dharma on the battlefield. War is depicted as a horror, the impending slaughter a cause for self-doubt, yet at stake is the spiritual struggle against evil. The Gita's message emphasizes that personal moral ambivalence must be addressed, the warrior needs to rise above "personal and social values" and understand what is at stake and "why he must fight". The text explores the "paradoxical interconnectedness of disciplined action and freedom".

The first reference to dharma in the Bhagavad Gita occurs in its first verse, where Dhritarashtra refers to the Kurukshetra, the location of the battlefield, as the Field of Dharma, "The Field of Righteousness or Truth". According to Fowler, dharma in this verse may refer to the sanatana dharma, "what Hindus understand as their religion, for it is a term that encompasses wide aspects of religious and traditional thought and is more readily used for religion". Therefore, the "field of dharma" implies the field of righteousness, where the truth will eventually triumph, states Fowler. According to Jacqueline Hirst, the "field of dharma" phrase in the Gita epitomizes that the struggle concerns dharma itself. This dharma has "resonances at many different levels".

Asceticism, renunciation and ritualism

The Gita rejects ascetic life, renunciation as well as Brahminical Vedic ritualism where outward actions or non-actions are considered a means of personal reward in life, the afterlife or as a means of liberation. Instead, it recommends the pursuit of an active life where the individual adopts "inner renunciation", and acts to fulfil what he determines to be his dharma, without craving for or being concerned about personal rewards, viewing this as an "inner sacrifice to the personal God for a higher good".

According to Edwin Bryant, the Indologist with publications on Krishna-related Hindu traditions, the Gita rejects "actionless behaviour" found in some Indic monastic traditions. It also "relegates the sacrificial system of the early Vedic literature to a path that goes nowhere because it is based on desires", states Bryant.

Moksha - liberation

Main article: Moksha

The Bhagavad Gita accommodates dualistic and theistic aspects of moksha. The Gita, while including impersonal Nirguna Brahman as the goal, mainly revolves around the relationship between the Self and a personal God or Saguna Brahman. A synthesis of knowledge, devotion, and desireless action is offered by Krishna as a spectrum of choices to Arjuna; the same combination is suggested to the reader as a way to moksha. Christopher Chapple---a scholar focusing on Indian religions---in Winthrop Sargeant's translation of the Gita, states that "In the model presented by the Bhagavad Gita, every aspect of life is a way of salvation."

Spiritual discipline

Main article: Sadhana

The Gita treats three forms of spiritual discipline - jnana, bhakti and karma – to attain the divine. However, states Fowler, it "does not raise any of these to a status that excludes the others". The theme that unites these paths in the Gita is "inner renunciation" where one is unattached to personal rewards during one's spiritual journey.

Karma yoga - selfless action

Main article: Karma yoga

The Gita teaches the path of selfless action in Chapter 3 and others. It upholds the necessity of action. However, this action should "not simply follow spiritual injunctions", without any attachment to personal rewards or because of craving for fruits. The Gita teaches, according to Fowler, that the action should be undertaken after proper knowledge has been applied to gain a full perspective on "what the action should be".

The concept of such detached action is also called Nishkama Karma, a term not used in the Gita but equivalent to other terms such as karma-phala-tyaga. This is where one determines what the right action ought to be and then acts while being detached to personal outcomes, to fruits, to success or failure. A karma yogi finds such work inherently fulfilling and satisfying. To a karma yogi, right work done well is a form of prayer, and karma yoga is the path of selfless action.

According to Mahatma Gandhi, the object of the Gita is to show the way to attain self-realization, and this "can be achieved by selfless action, by desireless action; by renouncing fruits of action; by dedicating all activities to God, i.e., by surrendering oneself to Him, body and Self." Gandhi called the Gita "The Gospel of Selfless Action". According to Jonardon Ganeri, the premise of "disinterested action" is one of the important ethical concepts in the Gita.

Bhakti yoga - devotion

Main article: Bhakti yoga
How does a Gita recitation sound? Verse 2.21 from the Bhagavad Gita (15 secs)
On motives Verse 2.47, "act without craving for fruits" (16 secs)
On meditation Verse 2.56, "Who is a sage" (14 secs)
Problems playing these files? See media help.

While the Upanishads focus more on knowledge and the identity of the self with Brahman, the Bhagavad Gita shifts the emphasis towards devotion and the worship of a personal deity, specifically Krishna. In the Bhagavad Gita, bhakti is characterized as the "loving devotion, a longing, surrender, trust and adoration" of the divine Krishna as the ishta-devata. While bhakti is mentioned in many chapters, the idea gathers momentum after verse 6.30, and chapter 12 is where is fully developed. According to Fowler, the bhakti in the Gita does not imply renunciation of "action", but the bhakti effort is assisted with "right knowledge" and dedication to one's dharma. Theologian Catherine Cornille writes, "The text offers a survey of the different possible disciplines for attaining liberation through knowledge (Jnana), action (karma), and loving devotion to God (bhakti), focusing on the latter as both the easiest and the highest path to salvation."

According to M. R. Sampatkumaran, a Bhagavad Gita scholar, Gita's message is that mere knowledge of the scriptures cannot lead to final release, but "devotion, meditation, and worship are essential." The Gita likely spawned a "powerful devotional" movement, states Fowler, because the text and this path were simpler and available to everyone.

Jnana yoga -discernment of the true self

Main article: Jnana yoga

Jnana yoga is the path of knowledge, wisdom, and direct realization of the Brahman. In the Bhagavad Gita, it is also referred to as buddhi yoga and its goal is the discernment of the true self. The text states that this is the path that intellectuals tend to prefer. The chapter 4 of the Bhagavad Gita is dedicated to the general exposition of jnana yoga. The Gita praises the path, calling the jnana yogi to be exceedingly dear to Krishna, but adds that the path is steep and difficult.

Raja yoga - meditation

Some scholars treat the "yoga of meditation," yoga proper, to be a distinct fourth path taught in the Gita, referring to it as Raja yoga. Others consider it a progressive stage or a combination of Karma yoga and Bhakti yoga. Some, such as Adi Shankara, have considered its discussion in the 13th chapter of the Gita and elsewhere to be an integral part of Jnana yoga.

Metaphysics

To build its metaphysical framework, the text relies on the theories found in the Samkhya and Vedanta schools of Hinduism.

Prakriti and maya

The Gita considers the world to be transient, all bodies and matter as impermanent. Everything that constitutes prakriti (nature, matter) is process-driven and has a finite existence. It is born, grows, matures, decays, and dies. It considers this transient reality as Maya. Like the Upanishads, the Gita focuses on what it considers real in this world of change, impermanence, and finitude.

Atman

The Gita, states Fowler, "thoroughly accepts" atman as a foundational concept. In the Upanishads, this is the Brahmanical idea that all beings have a "permanent real self", the true essence, the Self it refers to as Atman (Self). In the Upanishads that preceded the Gita, such as the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, the salvational goal is to know and realize this Self, a knowledge that is devoid of the delusions of the instinctive "I, mine" egoism typically connected with the body and material life processes that are impermanent and transient. The Gita accepts atman as the pure, unchanging, ultimate real essence.

Krishna and Brahman

Chapter 11 of the Gita refers to Krishna as Vishvarupa (above). This is an idea found in the Rigveda. The Vishvarupa omniform has been interpreted as symbolism for Absolute Reality, God or Self that is in all creatures, everywhere, eternally.

The Gita teaches both the personalized God, in the form of Krishna, and the abstract nirguna Brahman. The text blurs any distinction between a personalized God and impersonal absolute reality by amalgamating the two and using the concepts interchangeably in later chapters, though it projects the nirguna Brahman as higher than saguna or personalized Brahman, where the nirguna Brahman "exists when everything else does not". This theme has led scholars to call the Gita panentheistic, theistic as well as monistic.

The Gita adopts the Upanishadic concept of Absolute Reality (Brahman), a shift from the earlier ritual-driven Vedic religion to one abstracting and internalizing spiritual experiences. According to Jeaneane Fowler, the Gita builds on the Upanishadic Brahman theme, conceptualized to be that which is everywhere, unaffected, constant Absolute, indescribable and nirguna (abstract, without features). This Absolute in the Gita is neither a He nor a She, but a "neuter principle", an "It or That".

Relation between Atman and Krishna

The Upanishads developed the equation "Atman = Brahman", states Fowler and this belief is central to the Gita. This equation is, however, interpreted in several ways by different sub-schools of Vedanta. In the Gita, the Self of each human being is considered to be identical to every other human being and all beings, but it "does not support an identity with the Brahman", according to Fowler. According to Raju, the Gita supports this identity and spiritual monism, but as a form of synthesis with a personal God. According to Edgerton, the authors of the Gita rely on their concept of a personalized God (Krishna) to ultimately arrive at an ultimate monism, where the devotee realizes that Krishna is the essential part, the real fundamental element within everyone and everything. Krishna is simultaneously one and all. According to Huston Smith, the Gita is teaching that "when one sees the entire universe as pervaded by the single Universal Spirit , one contemplates, marvels, and falls in love with its amazing glory. Having experienced that Truth oneself, all doubts are dispelled. This is how the flower of devotion evolves into the fruit of knowledge."

Commentaries

Classical Bhashya (commentaries)

Bhagavad Gita integrates various schools of thought, notably Vedanta, Samkhya and Yoga, and other theistic ideas, but its composite nature also leads to varying interpretations of the text and scholars have written bhashya (commentaries) on it.

Many "classical and modern Hindu" intellectuals have written commentaries on the Gita. According to Mysore Hiriyanna, the Gita is "one of the hardest books to interpret, which accounts for the numerous commentaries on it—each differing from the rest in one essential point or the other".

The Gita has attracted much scholarly interest in Indian history and some 227 commentaries have survived in the Sanskrit language alone. It has also attracted commentaries in regional vernacular languages for centuries, such as the one by Sant Dnyaneshwar in Marathi (13th century).

The Bhagavad Gita is referenced in the Brahma Sutras and numerous scholars wrote commentaries on it, including Shankara, Bhaskara, Abhinavagupta, Ramanuja, and Madhvacharya. Many of these commentators state that the Gita is "meant to be a moksa-shastra (moksasatra), and not a dharmasastra, an arthasastra or a kamasastra".

Śaṅkara (c. 800 CE)

The oldest and most influential surviving commentary was published by Adi Shankara (Śaṅkarācārya). Shankara interprets the Gita in a monist, nondualistic tradition (Advaita Vedanta). Advaita Vedanta affirms on the non-dualism of Atman and Brahman. Shankara prefaces his comments by stating that the Gita is popular among the laity, that the text has been studied and commented upon by earlier scholars (these texts have not survived), but that "I have found that to the laity it appears to teach diverse and quite contradictory doctrines". He calls the Gita "an epitome of the essentials of the whole Vedic teaching". To Shankara, the teaching of the Gita is to shift an individual's focus from the outer, impermanent, fleeting objects of desire and senses to the inner, permanent, eternal atman-Brahman-Vasudeva that is identical, in everything and every being.

Abhinavagupta (c. 1000 CE)

Abhinavagupta was a theologian and philosopher of the Kashmir Shaivism (Shiva) tradition. His commentary, the Gitartha-Samgraha, has survived into the modern era. The Gita text he commented on is a slightly different recension than the one of Adi Shankara. He interprets its teachings in the Shaiva Advaita (monism) tradition quite similar to Adi Shankara, but with the difference that he considers both Self and matter to be metaphysically real and eternal. Their respective interpretations of jnana yoga are also somewhat different, and Abhinavagupta uses Atman, Brahman, Shiva, and Krishna interchangeably. Abhinavagupta's commentary is notable for its citations of more ancient scholars, in a style similar to Adi Shankara. However, the texts he quotes have not survived into the modern era.

Rāmānuja (c. 1100 CE)

Ramanuja was a Hindu theologian, philosopher, and an exponent of the Sri Vaishnavism (Vishnu) tradition in the 11th and early 12th centuries. Like his Vedanta peers, Ramanuja wrote a bhashya (commentary) on the Gita - Gita Bhashya. Ramanuja's commentary disagreed with Adi Shankara's interpretation of the Gita as a text on nondualism (Self and Brahman are identical), and instead interpreted it as a form of dualistic and qualified monism (Vishishtadvaita).

Madhva (c. 1250 CE)

Madhva, a commentator of the Dvaita (modern taxonomy) Tatvavada (actually quoted by Madhva) Vedanta school, wrote a commentary on the Bhagavad Gita, which exemplifies the thinking of the Tatvavada school (Dvaita Vedanta). According to Christopher Chapelle, in Madhva's school there is "an eternal and complete distinction between the Supreme, the many Selfs, and matter and its divisions". His commentary on the Gita is called Gita Bhāshya. Madhva's commentary has attracted secondary works by pontiffs of the Dvaita Vedanta monasteries such as Padmanabha Tirtha, Jayatirtha, and Raghavendra Tirtha.

Keśava Kāśmīri (c. 1410 CE)

Keśava Kāśmīri Bhaṭṭa, a commentator of Dvaitādvaita Vedanta school, wrote a commentary on the Bhagavad Gita named Tattva-prakāśikā. The text states that Dasasloki—possibly authored by Nimbarka—teaches the essence of the Gita; the Gita tattva prakashika interprets the Gita also in a hybrid monist-dualist manner.

Gauḍīya Vaiṣṇava commentaries

Others

Other classical commentators include:

  • Bhāskara (c. 900 CE) disagreed with Adi Shankara, wrote his commentary on both Bhagavad Gita and Brahma Sutras in the Bhedābheda tradition. According to Bhaskara, the Gita is essentially Advaita, but not quite exactly, suggesting that "the Atman (Self) of all beings are like waves in the ocean that is Brahman". Bhaskara also disagreed with Shankara's formulation of the Maya doctrine, stating that prakriti, atman and Brahman are all metaphysically real.
  • Yamunacharya, Ramanuja's teacher, summarised the teachings of the Gita in his Gitartha sangraham.
  • Nimbarkacharya (620 CE) Bhagavadgītā-Vākyārtha, A lost commentary on Bhagavad gītā.
  • Dnyaneshwar's (1290 CE) commentary Dnyaneshwari (a.k.a. Jnaneshwari or Bhavarthadipika) is the oldest surviving literary work in the Marathi language, one of the foundations of the Varkari tradition (the Bhakti movement, Eknath, Tukaram) in Maharashtra . The commentary interprets the Gita in the Advaita Vedanta tradition. Dnyaneshwar belonged to the Nath yogi tradition. His commentary on the Gita is notable for stating that it is the devotional commitment and love with inner renunciation that matters, not the name Krishna or Shiva, either can be used interchangeably.
  • Vallabha II, a descendant of Vallabha (1479 CE), wrote the commentary Tattvadeepika in the Suddha-Advaita tradition.
  • Madhusudana Saraswati's commentary Gudhartha Deepika is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.
  • Hanumat's commentary Paishacha-bhasya is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.
  • Anandagiri's commentary Bhashya-vyakhyanam is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.
  • Nilkantha's commentary Bhava-pradeeps is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.
  • Shreedhara's (1400 CE) commentary Avi gita is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.
  • Dhupakara Shastri's commentary Subodhini is in the Advaita Vedanta tradition.
  • Raghuttama Tirtha's (1548–1596), commentary Prameyadīpikā Bhavabodha is in the Dvaita Vedanta tradition.
  • Raghavendra Tirtha's (1595–1671) commentary Artha samgraha is in the Dvaita Vedanta tradition.
  • Vanamali Mishra's (1650–1720) commentary Gitagudharthacandrika is quite similar to Madhvacharya's commentary and is in the Dvaita Vedanta tradition.


Modern-era commentaries

  • Among notable modern commentators of the Bhagavad Gita are Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Vinoba Bhave, Mahatma Gandhi (who called its philosophy Anasakti Yoga), Sri Aurobindo, Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, B. N. K. Sharma, Osho, Sri Krishna Prem and Chinmayananda. Chinmayananda took a syncretistic approach to interpret the text of the Gita.
  • Tilak wrote his commentary Shrimadh Bhagavad Gita Rahasya while in jail during the period 1910–1911 serving a six-year sentence imposed by the colonial government in India for sedition. While noting that the Gita teaches possible paths to liberation, his commentary places most emphasis on Karma yoga.
  • No book was more central to Gandhi's life and thought than the Bhagavad Gita, which he referred to as his "spiritual dictionary". During his stay in Yeravada jail in 1929, Gandhi wrote a commentary on the Bhagavad Gita in Gujarati. The Gujarati manuscript was translated into English by Mahadev Desai, who provided an additional introduction and commentary. It was published with a foreword by Gandhi in 1946.
  • The version by A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, entitled Bhagavad-Gita as It Is, is "by far the most widely distributed of all English Gīta translations" due to the efforts of ISKCON. Its publisher, the Bhaktivēdānta Book Trust, estimates sales at twenty-three million copies, a figure which includes the original English edition and secondary translations into fifty-six other languages. The Prabhupada commentary interprets the Gita in the Gaudiya Vaishnavism tradition of Chaitanya, quite similar to Madhvacharya's Dvaita Vēdanta ideology. It presents Krishna as the Supreme, a means of saving mankind from the anxiety of material existence through loving devotion. Unlike in Bengal and nearby regions of India where the Bhagavata Purana is the primary text for this tradition, the devotees of Prabhupada's ISKCON tradition have found better reception for their ideas by those curious in the West through the Gita, according to Richard Davis.
  • In 1966, Mahārishi Mahesh Yogi published a partial translation.
  • An abridged version with 42 verses and commentary was published by Ramana Maharishi.
  • Bhagavad Gita – The song of God, is a commentary by Swami Mukundananda.
  • Paramahansa Yogananda's two-volume commentary on the Bhagavad Gita, called God Talks with Arjuna: The Bhagavad Gita, was released in 1995 and is available in 4 languages and as an English e-book. The book is significant in that unlike other commentaries of the Bhagavad Gita, which focus on karma yoga, jnana yoga, and bhakti yoga in relation to the Gita, Yogananda's work stresses the training of one's mind, or raja yoga. It is published by Self-Realization Fellowship/Yogoda Satsanga Society of India.
  • Eknath Easwaran's commentary interprets the Gita for his collection of problems of daily modern life.
  • Other modern writers such as Swami Parthasarathy and Sādhu Vāsvāni have published their own commentaries.
  • Academic commentaries include those by Jeaneane Fowler, Ithamar Theodor, and Robert Zaehner.
  • A collection of Christian commentaries on the Gita has been edited by Catherine Cornille, comparing and contrasting a wide range of views on the text by theologians and religious scholars.
  • The book The Teachings of Bhagavad Gita: Timeless Wisdom for the Modern Age by Richa Tilokani offers a woman's perspective on the teachings of the Bhagavad Gita in a simplified and reader-friendly spiritual format.
  • Swami Dayananda Saraswati published a four-volume Bhagavad Gītā, Home Study Course in 1998 based on transcripts from his teaching and commentary of the Bhagavad Gītā in the classroom. This was later published in 2011 in a new edition and nine-volume format.
  • Galyna Kogut and Rahul Singh published An Atheist Gets the Gita, a 21st-century interpretation of the 5,000-year-old text.
  • A compact edition by Satyanarayana Dasa arranges the Sanskrit words so that their corresponding meanings form complete sentences. This method, known as 'anvaya' in Sanskrit, follows the traditional way of presenting the meaning. Additionally, the book includes extensive footnotes that clarify difficult concepts.

Translations and modern commentaries

Persian translations

In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, in the Mughal Empire, multiple Persian translations of the Gita were completed.

English translations

English translations
Title Translator Year
The Bhãgvãt-Gēētā; or, Dialogues of Kreeshna and Arjoon, in Eighteen Lectures with Notes Charles Wilkins 1785
Bhagavad-Gita August Wilhelm Schlegel 1823
The Bhagavadgita J.C. Thomson 1856
La Bhagavad-Gita Eugene Burnouf 1861
The Bhagavad Gita Kashninath T. Telang 1882
The Song Celestial Sir Edwin Arnold 1885
The Bhagavad Gita William Quan Judge 1890
The Bhagavad-Gita with the Commentary of Sri Sankaracarya A. Mahadeva Sastry 1897
Young Men's Gita Jagindranath Mukharji 1900
Bhagavadgita: The Lord's Song L.D. Barnett 1905
Bhagavad Gita Anne Besant and Bhagavan Das 1905
Die Bhagavadgita Richard Garbe 1905
Srimad Bhagavad-Gita Swami Swarupananda 1909
Der Gesang des Heiligen Paul Deussen 1911
Srimad Bhagavad-Gita Swami Paramananda 1913
La Bhagavad-Gîtâ Emile Sénart 1922
The Bhagavad Gita According to Gandhi Mohandas K. Gandhi 1926
The Bhagavad Gita W. Douglas P. Hill 1928
The Bhagavad-Gita Arthur W. Ryder 1929
The Song of the Lord, Bhagavad-Gita E.J. Thomas 1931
The Geeta Shri Purohit Swami 1935
The Yoga of the Bhagavat Gita Sri Krishna Prem 1938
The Message of the Gita (or Essays on the Gita) Sri Aurobindo, edited by Anilbaran Roy 1938
Bhagavadgita Swami Sivananda 1942
Bhagavad Gita Swami Nikhilananda 1943
The Bhagavad Gita Franklin Edgerton 1944
Bhagavad Gita - The Song of God Swami Prabhavananda and Christopher Isherwood 1944
The Bhagavad Gita Swami Nikhilananda 1944
The Bhagavadgita S. Radhakrishnan 1948
The Bhagavadgita Shakuntala Rao Sastri 1959
The Bhagavad Gita Juan Mascaró 1962
Bhagavad Gita C. Rajagopalachari 1963
The Bhagavadgita Swami Chidbhavananda 1965
The Bhagavad Gita Maharishi Mahesh Yogi 1967
The Bhagavadgita: Translated with Introduction and Critical Essays Eliot Deutsch 1968
Bhagavad-Gītā As It Is A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada 1968
The Bhagavad Gita R.C. Zaehner 1969
The Bhagavad Gita: A New Verse Translation Ann Stanford 1970
The Holy Gita, Translation & Commentary Swami Chinmayananda 1972
Srimad Bhagavad Gita Swami Vireswarananda 1974
Bhagavad Gita: A Verse Translation Geoffrey Parrinder 1974
The Bhagavad Gita Kees. W. Bolle 1979
The Bhagavad Gita Winthrop Sargeant (Editor: Christopher K Chapple) 1979
The Bhagavadgita in the Mahabharata J.A.B. van Buitenen 1981
The Bhagavad-Gita Winthrop Sargeant 1984
Srimad Bhagavad Gita Bhasya of Sri Samkaracharya A.G. Krishna Warrier 1984
The Bhagavadgita Eknath Easwaran 1985
Srimad Bhagavad Gita Swami Tapasyananda 1985
Bhagavad Gita Srinivasa Murthy 1985
The Bhagavad-Gita: Krishna's Counsel in Time of War Barbara Stoler Miller 1986
Bhagavad-Gita Raghavan Iyer 1986
The Bhagavad-Gita Ramananda Prasad 1988
Bhagavad-Gita for You & Me M.S. Patwardhan 1990
Bhagavad Gita Antonio T. De Nicholas 1991
Bhagavad Gita Sachindra K. Majumdar 1991
Bhagavad Gita O.P. Ghai 1992
Ramanuja Gita Bhashya Swami Adidevananda 1992
Gita Bhashya Jagannatha Prakasha 1993
Bhagavad Gita: Translation & Commentary Richard Gotshalk 1993
The Bhagavad Gita P. Lal 1994
The Bhagavad-Gita W.J. Johnson 1994
God Talks with Arjuna: The Bhagavad Gita Paramahansa Yogananda 1995
Bhagavad Gita (The Song of God) Ramananda Prasad 1996
Bhagavad Gita Vrinda Nabar and Shanta Tumkur 1997
The Living Gita: The Complete Bhagavat Gita: A Commentary for Modern Readers Swami Satchidananda 1997
Bhagavad-Gita Satyananda Saraswati 1997
Bhagavad-Gita with the Commentary of Sankaracarya Swami Gambhirananda 1998
Bhagavad Gita, With Commentary of Sankara Alladi M. Sastry 1998
Transcreation of the Bhagavad Gita Ashok K. Malhotra 1998
You Know Me: The Gita Irina Gajjar 1999
The Bhagavad Gita, Your Charioteer in the Battlefield of Life R.K. Piparaiya 1999
The Bhagavad Gita, an Original Translation V. Jayaram 2000
Bhagavad Gita: A Walkthrough for Westerners Jack Hawley 2001
Bhagavad Gita Rosetta Williams 2001
The Bhagavad Gita of Order Anand Aadhar Prabhu 2001
Bhagavad Gita: The Song Divine Carl E. Woodham 2001
The Bhagavat Gita (as part of the Wisdom Bible) Sanderson Beck 2001
Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation Stephen Mitchell 2002
Bhagavad Gita As a Living Experience Wilfried Huchzermeyer and Jutta Zimmermann 2002
Bhagvad Gita Alan Jacobs 2002
Bhagavad Gita: Translation and Commentary Veeraswamy Krishnaraj 2002
The Bhagavad Gita Richard Prime 2003
The Sacred Song: A New Translation of the Bhagavad Gita for the Third Millennium McComas Taylor and Richard Stanley 2004
Śrīmad Bhagavad Gītā   Swami Dayananda Saraswati 2007
The Bhagavad Gita Laurie L. Patton 2008
The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation George Thompson 2008
The New Bhagavad-Gita: Timeless Wisdom in the Language of Our Times Koti Sreekrishna, Hari Ravikumar 2011
The Bhagavad Gita, A New Translation Georg Feuerstein 2011
The Bhagavad Gita: A Text and Commentary for Students Jeaneane D. Fowler 2012
The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation Gavin Flood, Charles Martin 2012
Bhagavad Gītā: Sāra-samanvitā. Translation and Summary Satyanarayana Dasa 2015
Bhagavad Gita: Rhythm of Krishna (Gita in Rhymes) Sushrut Badhe 2015
Bhagavad Gita (Complete edition): The Global Dharma for the Third Millennium Parama Karuna Devi 2016
Philosophy of the Bhagavad Gita Keya Maitra 2018
The Bhagavad Gita Chapter 1 to 13 – English ISBN 978-93-87578-96-8 Ravi Shankar 2018
The Bhagavad Gita Bibek Debroy 2019
The Teachings of Bhagavad Gita: Timeless Wisdom for the Modern Age Richa Tilokani 2023
The Poetic Saga of Mahabharata Shiva Ramnath Pillutla 2022
Bhagavad Gita - The Song of God, Study Edition with Verse Markings Swami Prabhavananda and Christopher Isherwood 2023

The first English translation of the Bhagavad Gita was published by Charles Wilkins in 1785. The Wilkins translation had an introduction to the Gita by Warren Hastings. Soon the work was translated into other European languages such as French (1787), German, and Russian. In 1849, the Weleyan Mission Press, Bangalore published The Bhagavat-Geeta, Or, Dialogues of Krishna and Arjoon in Eighteen Lectures, with Sanskrit, Canarese and English in parallel columns, edited by Rev. John Garrett, with the effort being supported by Sir Mark Cubbon.

Cover pages of early Gita translations. Left: Charles Wilkins (c. 1785 CE); Center: Parraud re-translation of Wilkins (c. 1787 CE); Right: Wesleyan Mission Press (c. 1849 CE).

In 1981, Larson stated that "a complete listing of Gita translations and a related secondary bibliography would be nearly endless". According to Larson, there is "a massive translational tradition in English, pioneered by the British, solidly grounded philologically by the French and Germans, provided with its indigenous roots by a rich heritage of modern Indian comment and reflection, extended into various disciplinary areas by Americans, and having generated in our time a broadly based cross-cultural awareness of the importance of the Bhagavad Gita both as an expression of a specifically Indian spirituality and as one of the great religious "classics" of all time."

According to Sargeant, the Gita is "said to have been translated at least 200 times, in both poetic and prose forms". Richard Davis cites a count by Callewaert & Hemraj in 1982 of 1,891 translations of the Bhagavad Gita in 75 languages, including 273 in English. These translations vary, and are in part an interpretative reconstruction of the original Sanskrit text that differ in their "friendliness to the reader", and in the amount of "violence to the original Gita text".

The translations and interpretations of the Gita have been so diverse that these have been used to support contradictory political and philosophical values. For example, Galvin Flood and Charles Martin note that interpretations of the Gita have been used to support "pacifism to aggressive nationalism" in politics, from "monism to theism" in philosophy. According to William Johnson, the synthesis of ideas in the Gita is such that it can bear almost any shade of interpretation. A translation "can never fully reproduce an original and no translation is transparent", states Richard Davis, but in the case of the Gita the linguistic and cultural distance for many translators is large and steep which adds to the challenge and affects the translation. For some native translators, their personal beliefs, motivations, and subjectivity affect their understanding, their choice of words and interpretation. Some translations by Indians, with or without Western co-translators, have "orientalist", "apologetic", "Neo-Vedantic" or "guru phenomenon" biases.

According to the exegesis scholar Robert Minor, the Gita is "probably the most translated of any Asian text", but many modern versions heavily reflect the views of the organization or person who does the translating and distribution. In Minor's view, the Harvard scholar Franklin Edgerton's English translation and Richard Garbe's German translation are closer to the text than many others. According to Larson, the Edgerton translation is remarkably faithful, but it is "harsh, stilted, and syntactically awkward" with an "orientalist" bias and lacks "appreciation of the text's contemporary religious significance".

The Gita in other European languages

In 1808, passages from the Gita were part of the first direct translation of Sanskrit into German, appearing in a book through which Friedrich Schlegel became known as the founder of Indian philology in Germany. The most significant French translation of the Gita, according to J. A. B. van Buitenen, was published by Émile Senart in 1922. More recently, a new French translation was produced by the Indologist Alain Porte in 2004. Swami Rambhadracharya released the first Braille version of the scripture, with the original Sanskrit text and a Hindi commentary, on 30 November 2007.

Paramahansa Yogananda's commentary on the Bhagavad Gita called God Talks with Arjuna: The Bhagavad Gita has been translated into Spanish, German, Thai and Hindi so far. The book is significant in that, unlike other commentaries of the Bhagavad Gita, which focus on karma yoga, jnana yoga, and bhakti yoga in relation to the Gita, Yogananda's work stresses the training of one's mind, or raja yoga.

Indian languages

The Gita Press has published the Gita in multiple Indian languages. R. Raghava Iyengar translated the Gita into Tamil in the sandam metre poetic form. The Bhaktivedanta Book Trust associated with ISKCON has re-translated and published A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada's 1972 English translation of the Gita in 56 non-Indian languages. Vinoba Bhave has written the Geeta in Marathi as Geetai (or "Mother Geeta") in a similar shloka form. Uthaya Sankar SB retold the complete text in Bahasa Malaysia prose as Bhagavad Gita: Dialog Arjuna dan Krishna di Kurukshetra (2021).

Adaptations in popular culture

Philip Glass retold the story of Gandhi's early development as an activist in South Africa through the text of the Gita in the opera Satyagraha (1979). The entire libretto of the opera consists of sayings from the Gita sung in the original Sanskrit.

In Douglas Cuomo's Arjuna's Dilemma, the philosophical dilemma faced by Arjuna is dramatised in operatic form with a blend of Indian and Western music styles.

The 1993 Sanskrit film, Bhagavad Gita, directed by G. V. Iyer won the 1993 National Film Award for Best Film.

The 1995 novel by Steven Pressfield, and its adaptation as the 2000 golf movie The Legend of Bagger Vance by Robert Redford has parallels to the Bhagavad Gita, according to Steven J. Rosen. Steven Pressfield acknowledges that the Gita was his inspiration, the golfer character in his novel is Arjuna, and the caddie is Krishna, states Rosen. The movie, however, uses the plot but glosses over the teachings unlike in the novel.

Duty (svadharma) and the caste-system

Neo-Hindu interpretation of svadharma

Arjuna is advised by Krishna to do his sva-dharma, the "dharma of a particular varna." Since Arjuna belongs to the warrior (kshatriya) varna (social class), Krishna is telling Arjuna to act as a warrior. Neo-Hindus, preceded by medieval commentators like Dnyaneshwar, have preferred to translate svadharma not as class-related duty, or dharma as religion, but interpret it as "everyone must follow his sva-dharma."

According to Dnyaneshwar (1275–1296), the Gita ultimately shows that caste differences are not important. For Dnyaneshwar, people err when they see themselves as distinct from each other and Krishna, and these distinctions vanish as soon as they accept, understand and enter with love unto Krishna.

According to Bankim Chandra Chatterjee (1838–1894), to render svadharma in English one must ask 'What is the sva-dharma for the non-Hindus', as the Lord did not ordain dharma only for Indians and "make all the others dharma-less." According to Hacker, this is an attempt to "universalize Hinduism."

According to Swami Vivekananda (1863–1902), sva-dharma in the Gita does not mean "caste duty", rather it means the duty that comes with one's life situation (mother, father, husband, wife) or profession (soldier, judge, teacher, doctor). For Vivekananda, the Gita was an egalitarian scripture that rejected caste and other hierarchies because of its verses such as 13.27—28, which states "He who sees the Supreme Lord dwelling equally in all beings, the Imperishable in things that perish, he sees verily. For seeing the Lord as the same everywhere present, he does not destroy the Self by the Self, and thus he goes to the highest goal."

Aurobindo (1872–1950) modernises the concept of dharma by internalising it, away from the social order and its duties towards one's capacities, which leads to radical individualism, "finding the fulfilment of the purpose of existence in the individual alone." He deduced from the Gita the doctrine that "the functions of a man ought to be determined by his natural turn, gift, and capacities", that the individual should "develop freely" and thereby would be best able to serve society.

Gandhi's (1869–1948) view differed from Aurobindo's view. He recognised in the concept of sva-dharma his idea of svadeshi (sometimes spelt swadeshi), the idea that "man owes his service above all to those who are nearest to him by birth and situation." To him, svadeshi was "sva-dharma applied to one's immediate environment."

According to Jacqueline Hirst, the universalist neo-Hindu interpretations of dharma in the Gita are modernist readings, though any study of pre-modern distant foreign cultures is inherently subject to suspicions about "control of knowledge" and bias on the various sides. Hindus have their own understanding of dharma that goes much beyond the Gita or any particular Hindu text. Further, states Hirst, the Gita should be seen as a "unitary text" in its entirety rather than a particular verse analyzed separately or out of context. Krishna is presented as a teacher who "drives Arjuna and the reader beyond initial preconceptions". The Gita is a cohesively knit pedagogic text, not a list of norms.

Criticism of svadharma and caste-system

The Gita has also been cited and criticized as a Hindu text that supports varna-dharma (personal duty) and the caste system. B. R. Ambedkar, born in a Dalit family and served as the first Law Minister in the First Nehru Ministry, criticized the text for its stance on caste and for "defending certain dogmas of religion on philosophical grounds". According to Jimmy Klausen, Ambedkar in his essay Krishna and his Gita stated that the Gita was a "tool" of Brahmanical Hinduism and for its latter-day saints such as Mahatma Gandhi and Lokmanya Tilak. To Ambedkar, states Klausen, it is a text of "mostly barbaric, religious particularisms" offering "a defence of the Kshatriya duty to make war and kill, the assertion that varna derives from birth rather than worth or aptitude, and the injunction to perform karma" neither perfunctorily nor egotistically.

In his Myth and Reality, D.D. Kosambi argued that "practically anything can be read into the Gita by a determined person, without denying the validity of a class system." Kosambi argued that the Gita was a scripture that supported the superiority of the higher varnas while seeing all other varnas as "defiled by their very birth, though they may in after-life be freed by their faith in the god who degrades them so casually in this one." He quotes the Gita which states that Krishna says "The four-caste (class) division has been created by Me." Similarly, V. R. Narla also argues that the Gita states that God created the caste (varna) system. Narla also critiques the Gita for stating that those who are not kshatriyas or Brahmins are "born from sinful wombs".

The Gita and War

A painting of Krishna recounting Gita to Arjuna during the Kurukshetra War, from the Mahabharata. c. 1820 CE

Allegory of war

Unlike any other religious scripture, the Bhagavad Gita broadcasts its message in the centre of a battlefield. Several modern Indian writers have interpreted the battlefield setting as an allegory for "the war within". Eknath Easwaran writes that the Gita's subject is "the war within, the struggle for self-mastery that every human being must wage if he or she is to emerge from life victorious".

Swami Nikhilananda, takes Arjuna as an allegory of Ātman, Krishna as an allegory of Brahman, Arjuna's chariot as the body, and Dhritarashtra as the ignorant mind. Nikhilananda's allegorical interpretation is shared by Huston Smith. Swami Vivekananda interprets the first discourse in the Gita as well as the "Kurukshetra war" allegorically. Vivekananda states that "when we sum up its esoteric significance, it means the war which is constantly going on within man between the tendencies of good and evil".

Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, in his commentary on the Gita, interprets the battle as an allegory in which the battlefield is the soul and Arjuna embodies man's higher impulses struggling against evil.

In Aurobindo's view, Krishna was a historical figure, but his significance in the Gita is as a "symbol of the divine dealings with humanity", while Arjuna typifies a "struggling human soul". However, Aurobindo rejected the interpretation that the Gita, and the Mahabharata by extension, is only "an allegory of the inner life" and therefore that it has nothing to do with our outward human life and actions.

Promotion of just war and duty

Scholars such as Steven Rosen, Laurie L. Patton and Stephen Mitchell have seen in the Gita a religious defence of the warrior class (Kshatriya Varna) duty (svadharma), which is to wage war with courage. They do not see only an allegorical teaching but also a real defence of just war.

Indian independence leaders like Lala Lajpat Rai and Bal Gangadhar Tilak saw the Gita as a text which defended war when necessary and used it to promote armed rebellion against colonial rule. Lajpat Rai wrote an article on the "Message of the Bhagavad Gita". He saw the main message as the bravery and courage of Arjuna to fight as a warrior. Bal Gangadhar Tilak saw the Gita as defending killing when necessary for the betterment of society, such as, for example, the killing of Afzal Khan.

Pacifism and the Gita

Because by the end of the Gita, Krishna convinces Arjuna that it is his right and duty to fight, the Gita has been argued by some as pro-war, while others argue it is neither pro- nor anti-war.

Noted author Christopher Isherwood suffered the death of his father in WWI and saw no serious effort by the Allies to avoid plunging head-on into the next war. In his novels, The Berlin Stories, he describes life in Germany as the Nazis rose to power. In the late 1930s, with advice from and influence of Aldous Huxley and Gerald Heard he became a practising pacifist and Conscientiousness Objector, working with the Quakers, doing alternative service to help settle Jewish refugees fleeing the war. In 1944, Isherwood worked with Swami Prabhavananda of the Vedanta Society of Southern California to translate the Bhagavad Gita into English. In the Appendix, there is an essay written by Isherwood titled, The Gita and War. He argues that in certain circumstances, it would be quite alright to refuse to fight. In Arjuna's particular circumstances, since it is a righteous war, and he's a warrior by birth and trade, he must fight.

...every action, under certain circumstances and for certain people, maybe a stepping-stone to spiritual growth—if it is done in the spirit of non-attachment. There is no question, here, of doing evil that good may come. The Gita does not countenance such opportunism. Arjuna is to do the best he knows, in order to pass beyond that best to better.

Ethics, war and violence

Soon after Krisna's peace mission failed, Krishna in the Gita persuades Arjuna to wage war where the enemy includes some of his own relatives and friends. In light of the Ahimsa (non-violence) teachings in Hindu scriptures, the Gita has been criticized as violating the Ahimsa value, or alternatively, as supporting political violence. The justification of political violence when peaceful protests and all else fails, states Varma, has been a fairly common feature of modern Indian political thought along with the mighty antithesis of Gandhian thought on non-violence. During the independence movement in India, Indians (especially the Hindus) considered the active burning and drowning of British goods. While technically illegal under colonial legislation, these acts were viewed as a moral and just war for the sake of liberty and righteous values of the type that the Gita discusses. According to Nicholas Owen, the influential Hindu nationalist (and the father of Hindutva) Veer Savarkar often turned to Hindu scriptures such as the Bhagavad Gita, arguing that the text justified violence against those who would harm Mother India.

Narla Venkateswara Rao, in his book-length critique of the text titled The Truth About the Gita, criticizes the ethical teachings of the Gita. He argues that the ethics of the Gita are so ambiguous, that one can use it to justify any ethical position and primarily supports a warrior ethos. In his Myth and Reality, the Indian historian Damodar Dharmananda Kosambi argued that the Gita was written as a religious text that could provide support for the actions of the upper castes, including the warrior caste. These sorts of exhortations to battle would not have been uncommon in ancient India as it was the job of Indian bards. Kosambi writes that in the Gita, "the high god repeatedly emphasizes the great virtue of non-killing (ahimsa), yet the entire discourse is an incentive to war." He also cites the Gita, which states: "If slain, you gain heaven; if victorious, the earth; so up, son of Kunti, and concentrate on fighting." Kosambi argues that the injunctions and excuses for killing found in the Gita are unethical.

The Indian jurist and politician B. R. Ambedkar interpreted the Gita as an unethical defence of violence based on the eternity of the soul (atman). Ambedkar wrote, "To say that killing is no killing because what is killed is the body and not the soul is unheard of defence of murder...If Krishna were to appear as a lawyer acting for a client who is being tried for murder and pleaded the defence set out by him in the Bhagavad Gita there is not the slightest doubt that he would be sent to the lunatic asylum." Ethicist Jeremy Engels notes that in contrast to Ambedkar's view, other readers, including Ralph Waldo Emerson and Walt Whitman, as well as "most pandits and yogis", understand the Gita's message not as a literal call to war, but as an allegory for the inner battle between good and evil in the human soul.

In his introduction to his translation of the Gita, Purushottama Lal argues that while Arjuna appears as a pacifist, concerned with ahimsa, Krishna "is the militarist" who convinces him to kill. According to Lal, Krishna makes use of a "startling" argument to convince Arjuna to kill, which Lal outlines as "the Ātman is eternal; only the body dies; so, go ahead and kill - you will kill only the body, the atman will remain unaffected ." Lal states that "there could hardly be a better example of forked-tongue speciousness." Lal further argues that: "the truth of the matter surely is that no rational refutation is possible of the essential humanist position that killing is wrong...many of the answers given by Krishna appear to be evasive and occasionally sophistic. When logic fails, Krishna apparently resorts to divine magic." According to Lal, in the Gita, Krishna "stuns Arjuna with a glorious 'revelation' of psychedelic intensity." This "confidence trick" is problematic for Lal, who sees Arjuna's plight as a "painful and honest problem that Krishna should have faced on its own terms, painfully and honestly, and did not."

Mahatma Gandhi credited his commitment to ahimsa to the Gita. For Gandhi, the Gita is teaching that people should fight for justice and righteous values and that they should never meekly suffer injustice to avoid a war. According to the Indologist Ananya Vajpeyi, the Gita does not elaborate on the means or stages of war, nor on ahimsa, except for stating that "ahimsa is virtuous and characterizes an awakened, steadfast, ethical man." For Gandhi, states Vajpeyi, ahimsa is the "relationship between self and other" as he and his fellow Indians battled against colonial rule. Gandhian ahimsa is in fact "the essence of the entire Gita", according to Vajpeyi. The teachings of the Gita on ahimsa are ambiguous, states Arvind Sharma, and this is best exemplified by the fact that Nathuram Godse stated the Gita as his inspiration to do his dharma after he assassinated Mahatma Gandhi. Thomas Merton, the Trappist monk and author of books on Zen Buddhism, concurs with Gandhi and states that the Gita is not teaching violence nor propounding a "make war" ideology. Instead, it is teaching peace and discussing one's duty to examine what is right and then act with pure intentions, when one faces difficult and repugnant choices.

Psychotherapeutic interpretation

Prominent Indian psychiatrists considered the Gita as a source for developing a culturally sensitive psychotherapeutic model. Krishna, has been compared to a cognitive therapist, in relation to Arjuna, who suffers from both physical and psychological symptoms of mental disturbance. Physically, Arjuna's mouth dries up, his limbs tremble, and his hairs stand on their ends. Psychologically, he faces anxiety, confusion, and negative self-evaluation. Krishna corrects Arjuna's cognitive state by introducing a new framework of action, which is removed from anticipation of the outcome. The concepts of Jnana, karma, and bhakti can be taken as three steps for cognitive restructuring.

See also

Notes

  1. "God" here denotes Krishna.
  2. ^ Synthesis of traditions:
    • Minor (1986, pp. 74–75, 81) states that the Gita is "more clearly defined as a synthesis of Vedanta, Yoga and Samkhya" philosophies.
    • According to the Gita translator Radhakrishnan, quoted in a review by Robinson, Krishna's discourse is a "comprehensive synthesis" that inclusively unifies the competing strands of Hindu thought such as "Vedic ritual, Upanishadic wisdom, devotional theism and philosophical insight" (Robinson 2006, p. 95).
    • According to Cornille (2006, p. 2), the Gita presents the main beliefs of Hinduism, stressing upon the importance of detachment, duty, the prevalence of gunas, the difference between body and immortal soul, and its transmigration.
    • According to Raju (1992, p. 211), the Bhagavad Gita is a great synthesis of impersonal spiritual monism with personal God, of "the yoga of action with the yoga of transcendence of action, and these again with the yogas of devotion and knowledge" .
    • Aurobindo described the text as a synthesis of various Yogas.
  3. ^ The Gita teaches that there are two selves within man--an individual self which may be identified with mind/ego/personality that is the false or apparent self, and the supreme Self within the sheath of the individual self which is called Atman and is thus Brahman, the Supreme Self. The individual self is mutable and in a state of subjection. The supreme Self is changeless and persists throughout all the experiences of life and survives the crisis of death; it is free. This Self is not the soul in the popular Western sense but is the Divine Lord. It is the core of inner calm where all tensions and fears cease. It is within every person.
  4. ^ the Self is the spectator who views the action of the empirical self. He is untouched by the experiences of the individual in which he dwells. He is in a real sense the core of inner calm, the Very Person within the mutable psychophysical self or personality. Man’s tragedy is his unawareness of this core of Reality--Self. There is some type of contact between this inner Self and the outer sheath of the thinking, feeling empirical self. When the absolute Self is in such contact it is called, as mentioned previously, jiva. Theos Bernard writes: "When a part of the Universal Breath becomes ensconced in the protoplasmic environment which it animates, it is called jiva." The body is the scene of this contact between the individual and the supreme Self. Some commentators interpret the scene between Arjuna and Krishna on the battlefield of Kurukshetra as a "timeless dialogue carried on in the recesses of every striving soul, the chariot being symbolic of the body of man (See Katha Upanishad 1.3.3.) The Gita thus would not disparage the physical body but would honour it as "a vehicle for the manifestation of the Eternal."
  5. ^ According to Deutsch & Dalvi (2004, pp. 61–62), the authors of the Bhagavad Gita must have seen the appeal of the soteriologies found in "the heterodox traditions of Buddhism and Jainism" as well as those found in "the orthodox Hindu traditions of Samkhya and Yoga." The Gita attempts to present a harmonious, universalist answer.
  6. According to religious interpreters such as Swami Vivekananda the text states that there is a Living God in every human being and the devoted service to this Living God in everyone – without craving for personal rewards – is a means to spiritual development and liberation.
  7. The Brahma sutras constitute the Nyāya prasthāna or the "starting point of reasoning canonical base", while the principal Upanishads constitute the Sruti prasthāna or the "starting point of heard scriptures", and the Bhagavad Gita constitutes the Smriti prasthāna or the "starting point of remembered canonical base" (Isaeva 1992, p. 35 with footnote 30).
  8. See Gita Mahatmya.
  9. Buitenen (2013, pp. 6–7): "Its importance as a religious text is demonstrated by its uniquely pan-Hindu influence".
  10. Liberation or moksha in Vedanta philosophy is not something that can be acquired. Ātman (Self) and Self-knowledge, along with the loss of egotistic ignorance, the goal of moksha, is always present as the essence of the self, and must be realized by each person by one's own effort. While the Upanishads largely uphold such a monistic viewpoint of liberation.
  11. Sivananda's commentary regards the eighteen chapters of the Bhagavad Gita as having a progressive order, by which Krishna leads "Arjuna up the ladder of Yoga from one rung to another" (Sivananda 1995, p. xvii). The influential commentator Madhusudana Sarasvati divided the Gita's eighteen chapters into three sections with six chapters each. Swami Gambhirananda characterises Madhusudana Sarasvati's system as a successive approach in which Karma yoga leads to Bhakti yoga, which in turn leads to Jnana yoga (Gambhirananda 1997, pp. xx, 16):
    * Chapters 1–6: Karma yoga, the means to the final goal
    * Chapters 7–12: Bhakti yoga or devotion
    * Chapters 13–18: Jnana yoga or knowledge, the goal itself
  12. This view in the Gita of the unity and equality in the essence of all individual beings as the hallmark of a spiritually liberated, wise person is also found in the classical and modern commentaries on Gita verses 5.18, 6.29, and others.
  13. Scholars have contested Kosambi's criticism of the Gita based on its various sections on karma yoga, bhakti yoga and jnana yoga.
  1. According to the Indologist and Sanskrit literature scholar Moriz Winternitz, the founder of the early Buddhist Sautrāntika school named Kumaralata (1st century CE) mentions both Mahabharata and Ramayana, along with early Indian history on writing, art and painting, in his Kalpanamanditika text. Fragments of this early text have survived into the modern era.
  2. The Indologist Étienne Lamotte used a similar analysis to conclude that the Gita in its current form likely underwent one redaction that occurred in the 3rd or 2nd-century BCE.
  3. This legend is depicted with Ganesha (Vinayaka) iconography in Hindu temples where he is shown with a broken right tusk and his right arm holds the broken tusk as if it was a stylus.
  4. According to Basham, passionately theistic verses are found, for example, in chapters 4, 7, 9, 10, 11, 14.1–6 with 14.29, 15, 18.54–78; while more philosophical verses with one or two verses where Krishna identifies himself as the highest god are found, for example, in chapters 2.38–72, 3, 5, 6, 8, 13 and 14.7–25, 16, 17 and 18.1–53. Further, states Basham, the verses that discuss Gita's "motiveless action" doctrine were probably authored by someone else and these constitute the most important ethical teaching of the text.
  5. The debate about the relationship between the Gita and the Mahabharata is historic, in part the basis for chronologically placing the Gita and its authorship. The Indologist Franklin Edgerton was among the early scholars and a translator of the Gita who believed that the Gita was a later composition that was inserted into the epic, at a much later date, by a creative poet of great intellectual power intimately aware of emotional and spiritual aspects of human existence. Edgerton's primary argument was that it makes no sense that two massive armies facing each other on a battlefield will wait for two individuals to have a lengthy dialogue. Further, he states that the Mahabharata has numerous such interpolations and inserting the Gita would not be unusual. In contrast, the Indologist James Fitzgerald states, like van Buitenen, that the Bhagavad Gita is the centrepiece and essential to the ideological continuity in the Mahabharata, and the entire epic builds up to the fundamental dharma questions in the Gita. This text, states Fitzgerald, must have been integral to the earliest version of the epic.
  6. Other parallelism includes verse 10.21 of Gita replicating the structure of verse 1.2.5 of the Shatapatha Brahmana.
  7. An alternate way to describe the poetic structure of Gita, according to Sargeant, is that it consists of "four lines of eight syllables each", similar to one found in Longfellow's Hiawatha.
  8. In the epic Mahabharata, after Sanjaya—counsellor of the Kuru king Dhritarashtra—returns from the battlefield to announce the death of Bhishma, he begins recounting the details of the Mahabharata war. Bhagavad Gita is a part of this recollection.
  9. This is called the doctrine of nishakama karma in Hinduism.
  10. Some editions include the Gita Dhyanam consisting of 9 verses. The Gita Dhyanam is not a part of the original Bhagavad Gita, but some modern era versions insert it as a prefix to the Gītā. The verses of the Gita Dhyanam (also called Gītā Dhyāna or Dhyāna Ślokas) offer salutations to a variety of sacred scriptures, figures, and entities, characterise the relationship of the Gītā to the Upanishads, and affirm the power of divine assistance.
  11. This is the avatara concept found in the Vaishnavism tradition of Hinduism.
  12. For alternate worded translations, see Radhakrishnan, Miller, Sargeant, Edgerton, Flood & Martin, and others.
  13. This contrasts with a few competing schools of Indian religions which denied the concept of Self.
  14. According to Edwin Bryant and Maria Ekstrand, this school incorporates and integrates aspects of "qualified monism, dualism, monistic dualism, and pure nondualism".
  15. Second edition in 1898
  16. Or Bhagavat-Gita, Edwin Arnold, reprinted by Dover Publications, New York, 1900
  17. Reprinted by Theosophical University Press, Los Angeles, California, 1967
  18. Reprinted by Theosophical Publishing House, Los Angeles, California, 1987
  19. Eventually published by Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad, 1946.
  20. Reprint 1995
  21. Reprint 1974
  22. Only the first six chapters were translated
  23. Reprint 1996
  24. A trans-creation rather than translation
  25. Originally translated in 1933
  26. Implicitly targeted at children, or young adults
  27. Originally translated in 2005 and also based on Critical Edition by BORI
  28. Sanskrit scholar Barbara Stoler Miller produced a translation in 1986 intended to emphasise the poem's influence and current context within English Literature, especially the works of T.S. Eliot, Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson. The translation was praised by scholars as well as literary critics. Similarly, the Hinduism scholar Jeaneane Fowler's translation and student text has been praised for its comprehensive introduction, quality of translation, and commentary.
  29. Teachings of International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON), a Gaudiya Vaishnava religious organisation which spread rapidly in North America in the 1970s and 1980s, are based on a translation of the Gita called Bhagavad-Gītā As It Is by A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada. These teachings are also illustrated in the dioramas of Bhagavad-gita Museum in Los Angeles, California.
  30. Nikhilananda & Hocking 2006, p. 2 "Arjuna represents the individual Self, and Sri Krishna the Supreme Self dwelling in every heart. Arjuna's chariot is the body. The blind king Dhritarashtra is the mind under the spell of ignorance, and his hundred sons are man's numerous evil tendencies. The battle, a perennial one, is between the power of good and the power of evil. The warrior who listens to the advice of the Lord speaking from within will triumph in this battle and attain the Highest Good."
  31. Aurobindo writes, "... That is a view which the general character and the actual language of the epic does not justify and, if pressed, would turn the straightforward philosophical language of the Gita into a constant, laborious and somewhat puerile mystification ... the Gita is written in plain terms and professes to solve the great ethical and spiritual difficulties which the life of man raises, and it will not do to go behind this plain language and thought and wrest them to the service of our fancy. But there is this much of truth in the view that the setting of the doctrine, though not symbolical, is certainly typical.

References

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