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Aruneshwar Gupta

Aruneshwar Gupta

Started reading beyond school (in Jodhpur (Raj.)) while I was in class IV (1961),from a library in Public Park, both in Hindi and English. Moved from Phantom and Mandrake comics to biographies of Bhagat Singh, Chandrasekhar Azad, Vikramaditya, Maharana Pratap…, abridged versions of Shakespeare - Julius Caesar, Macbeth, Merchant of Venice,... more »
  • New Delhi - 110048, DL, india
  • member since October 23 2007

Public Notes

 
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Displaying 1-20 of 97 notes
  • Dr. Bill R. Path

    Dr. Bill R. Path says

    Greetings Aruneshwar,

    I really appreciate you accepting my Shelfari friendship request. If you are interested, I would like to invite you to be among the first readers to review my new book "Moments of Forever: Discovering the True Power and Importance of Your Life" (a registered Shelfari title). It is a practical study in metaphysics that will help you find greater meaning in your life. Please help me launch this special book with your personal Shelfari review.

    Thank you!

    posted 8 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Cassandra Richmond

    Cassandra Richmond says

    Thanks for your comment. I add soon.

    posted 8 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Cassandra Richmond

    Cassandra Richmond says

    Your profile is so excellent...

    posted 9 months ago. ( send a note )
  • sushil g

    sushil g says

    What impresses me the most about you is the vast range of reading that you carry with you. You seem to be constantly engaged with authors of all hues. You sound almost like a mini-walking-cyclopedia. And also your capacity to articulate yourself well. The brief inter-action that I had with you on the portals of Shelfari delighted me and stimulated me a great deal intellectually. We had some kind of a shastrartha on spirituality, religion and atheism. We expressed our views without convincing either way. Both of us are staunch in our views. In our late sixties we are hardly likely to revise our stands.
    May I recommend a book that I enjoyed reading lately: The Meaning of Life by Terry Eagleton, Oxford University Press, 2008, a very short introduction, 100 pages. All the best.

    posted 9 months ago. ( send a note )
  • sushil g

    sushil g says

    Dear Arun,
    I shall like you to list my novel The Fourth Monkey among the books that you have read. Your feedback on it will be additionally welcome. You can also access the website that my publisher has created for it: www.thefourthmonkey.co.in
    Shall be glad to renew my contact with you. All the best.

    posted 10 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Mini

    Mini says

    Hiiiiiii
    Nice msg Thankyou .
    Have a good time.

    posted 10 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Ajita Sahu

    Ajita Sahu says

    happy new year to you too..
    lucknow is great...it has made me fall in love with winter all over again..
    how are u keeping up?

    posted 12 months ago. ( send a note )
  • kaushal42

    kaushal42 says

    In retrospect , i t was hardly surprising that i should find you here. Books tell a lot about a person and one can see that you have a discerning taste in books

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Mini

    Mini says

    Hi
    How r u ?
    Smiles
    Mini

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Ajita Sahu

    Ajita Sahu says

    that's very nice. im in lucknow right now. will be here for a while.
    worked for the commonwealth youth games that happened in pune recently. it was quite an experience. so the quest is still on...

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Ajita Sahu

    Ajita Sahu says

    no reason at all...how have u been? long time..

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Mana S

    Mana S says

    I am the Moon everywhere and nowhere.
    Do not seek me outside;
    I abide in your very life.
    Everybody calls you towards himself;
    I invite you nowhere except to yourself.
    Poetry is like the boat and its meaning is like the sea:
    Come onboard at once!
    Let me sail this boat!


    –Rumi

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Krish

    Krish says

    Dear Arun
    How are you ?
    I would request you to join me in our New Prayer Posting activity for Universal peace
    Kindly have a look at
    http://www.shelfari.com/groups/12965/discussions/75156/Million-Prayers-for-Universal-Peace-(1-000-000)
    You have to just add your prayer :
    Very simple
    Just type Prayer followed by the count.
    See the previous count, add plus one and post it..
    I wish to reach 1 Million prayer posts at the earliest.
    Please do post now.
    With Love
    Krish

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Ajita Sahu

    Ajita Sahu says

    "LEAP" gave rise to a chain of events totally out of my control... should i give in? trust the current? does He have a bigger plan in mind?

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • sushil g

    sushil g says

    Dear Arun,
    We belong to opposite camps not in the sense of a war, but in the sense of two parties to a debate: atheism vs spirituality/religion/scriptures. S/R/S is well entrenched in the world since the infancy of human thought. It is not only as old as the faculty of human wonder it is also numerically heavily weighted, 96 to 4. It is well organized (Pope, Khalifa, Jagadguru et al), engross people with various rituals (pilgrimages, prayers and other forms of worship, fasting and other denials/prohibitions), literatue (Bible, Koran, Upanishads/Gita), punishments (blasphemy laws, beheadings, conversions, crusades, jehads), posthumous metaphysics (kingdom of heaven, lure of paradise, cycle of births-deaths), larger-than-life icons (Jesus, Mohammed, Krishna/Rama/Hanuman...). To an average man who is weighted with scores of problems (physical/financial/social/psychological) S/R/S offers other-worldy and posthumous panacea. Against this gargantuan octopus-like vice over the human psyche, atheism offers nothing except a rational enlightenment and a pointer to the hollowness of the claims of S/R/S. In a way atheism is a big burden to carry with little social approval and a perpetual feel of ostracism. Our intellectual integrity and a conviction that though in minority we are right. Galileo-like (one man against the entire papacy) we know that the earth is round, rotates on its axis and goes round the sun. It took mankind three-to-four centuries to acknowledge the truth. Analogically, atheism is Galileo's manifesto.
    I am glad that Gita has given you solace and inspiration through out your life. Sorry, it doesn't work for me. It is not that I have not tried to read it (right now I am making an effort to read your presentation of it), but it just doesn't appeal to me or even make much sense. Over millenia great men have sought inspiration from it. They are welcome to it. You must have been greatly inspired to not only repackage its wisdom but to get it published and circulate it among your friends who may be ignoring it by default. I am sure many will appreciate your gesture - a pity, I am not one of them.
    The debate can go on. Meanwhile, do read The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins whose one book you already are familiar with.
    With best wishes.
    Sushil Gupta

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • sushil g

    sushil g says

    A few things are obvious to me. We stand on the opposite sides of the fence where God and scriptures are concerned. You have just written a book on Bhagwat Gita, presenting the message of the book in a simpler form for the edification of the masses. I can visualise your having been engaged in the process for at least two years, if not more, not to mention a life time of meditation on the subject. You have been a prolific reader of books and your reading has been quite eclectic. You consider it a mission of your life to spread the message of God and to convert as many people to this line of thinking as you can.
    I belong to the other camp. There is bound to be friction in our exchange of views. I hope we can keep it amenable.
    You advise: LEAP - Live your dream and be a person you want to be. I am quite content to be where I am. I have no desire to Leap/Jump/Run at the behest of someone else, who presumes he knows better. I am living my dream and am a person I want to be. I am not at all suffering from any great vacuum in life which I ought to fill. I am not wealthy, I am not powerful, but nor am I poor nor a weakling nor illiterate. I am quite happy to be where I am. Right now I am in reasonably good health, which I understand in future will give way to usual infirmities man is subject to.
    Embrace uncertainty of events...Well?
    Surrender to God. Never. Surrender to God is surrender to Ignorance and Superstition. Belief in God has been the greatest single source of misery in the history of mankind, greater than all the natural calamities like earthquakes, tsunamis, floods, plagues... No two individuals seem to agree on a common definition of God. Everyone has his own take and is willing to kill the other for disagreeing with him: Jihad, Crusades and Conversions. We atheists do not persecute others for not sharing our viewpoint. We are amused at the sight of all organised religious activities carried on in the name of diverse gods.
    Appreciate miracles. Sure we do. But we do not assign them to the will of an omnipotent deity. We can applaud the miracles and at times try to discover the rationale behind them.
    Pain, mistakes and failure help in expanding understanding and experience. Sure, no quarrel with that.

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • drjayeshsharma

    drjayeshsharma says

    yes i can suggest an alternative, but its not practical. i know, sir, that you are way senior to me, but i have come to a conclusion in my decade & a half of adulthood that there are things one can change & things one can not.

    One concept i believe in more than choice is the concept of Informed Choice. The so-called poor boys & girls who wanted to be a doctor didn't know what they were getting into, they didn't know what being a doctor involved, so they stumbled upon it & got it without deserving it.
    Another poor soul, who wanted it as much, if not more, put in much more work, & deserved it much more, was denied because he came from the wrong caste. If there is one message to take away from Ayn Rand, its the concept of merit, earning what you have. This is what's lacking in public discourse. In today's world its not polite to say that some individuals will always be poor. Again, i'm sayig some individuals, not some casts. I have studied with, & been friends with peoples of all casts & creeds & firmly believe that intelligence & ability is distributed pretty fairly amongst all sects, and am against any sort of discrmination against any people, neither the so-called lower casts, nor the so-called upper ones.
    I hear you when you say that there are historical wrongs that need to be corrected, but i'm not sure this is the way to go about it. will be happy to hear what you have to say about justice without reverse injustice.

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • drjayeshsharma

    drjayeshsharma says

    Thank you for your kind comments, sir. i'm sick of the reverse discrimination system. i studied in a medical college & saw that the poor students who came in only because of reservations were themselves miserable because they were not able to compete, they eventually passed out, of course, & were on the most part unable to set up a mainstream practice, so what we have now is a large proportion of these students just serving the government, & not exactly elevating the quality of public healthcare. everyone loses, except the sleazy politicians & their cronies...... such a sad state of affairs for our great country

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • drjayeshsharma

    drjayeshsharma says

    I'm honored by your offer of friendship & like intellectual discussions, but i'm afraid i'm not in tune with what seems to be your way of life. I am an atheist & proud to be so, mystical talk leaves me cold. i have too much to experience & accomplish in the world that my brain perceives to waste my time on worlds my brain can't perceive.

    To reply to your comment, I bear no ill-will towards any caste, just towards the government & its agents fomenting hatred & retarding the progress by not leaving us well alone.

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • sushil g

    sushil g says

    Dear Arun,
    By quoting from the Gita 'the man of perfect knowledge...' you have just confirmed the point I had made on p.296 of my novel: 'we simply quote the scriptures and damn one another'. No fruitful dialogue can be pursued if one arrogates to oneself the infallibility of one's stand. I am an avowed atheist while you are a great believer in God and His word as enshrined in the scriptures. Let me assure you that you are in good company as 96% of the global population are believers. If some day you are in a more receptive mood I shall like to recommend that you read THE GOD DELUSION by Prof Richard Dawkins. It happens to be the most talked about book doing the rounds in academic circles abroad. I am one with the book. You might find yourself across the fence. Since you are a voracious reader I am sure you don't mind reading the argument of the opposite camp.
    With warm regards,
    Sushil Gupta

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
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Displaying 1-20 of 97 notes