Hello Agniveda,
Thankyou for your thoughtful replies and for your patience in replying.
I have also seen "nishkama karma" being translated as "selfless action". What is selfless action? Let us take an example of a mother who shares a fruit with a child. The child asks for the mother's share as well and the mother gives her share to the child. For the mother the joy of seeing her child gobbling up the entire fruit was greater than eating the fruit herself.
Ultimately, the percieved fruit of an action may not be material at all. For the painter it is the joy of painting, for the mother it is the joy of being a mother. They are both doing their dharma and enjoying it as well. But are their actions truly selfless? Would their actions count as "nishkama karma"?
Would appreciate your views.
Regards.
Thankyou for your thoughtful replies and for your patience in replying.
Ah! That makes sense. But then there arises more doubtsAgnideva said:So, you’re right - motivation is definitely necessary to perform any action, but the motivation should be (a) to follow dharma and (b) eventual liberation.
What according to you would count as fruits of action? Let us take an example of a painter who finds immense joy in painting. Once he finishes a painting and it is sold he earns a handsome amount. In this case what would be the fruit? The money he earns or the joy he finds in the act of painting itself? The reason he paints is not so much to earn money as much as to pursue his happiness. So the result of his action logically would be the enjoyment of his action itself? If you take out the joy factor then, there remains no motivation for action.Agnideva said:The concept of nishkama karma is described in detail in the Bhagavad-Gita. It means doing something just because it is your dharma, but not because you want something out of it. Traditionally this involves performing actions and saying I offer the fruits of this action to God. So, one has to be motivated to perform action, but not motivated by the results of that action. Obviously this is a hard standard to live by.
I have also seen "nishkama karma" being translated as "selfless action". What is selfless action? Let us take an example of a mother who shares a fruit with a child. The child asks for the mother's share as well and the mother gives her share to the child. For the mother the joy of seeing her child gobbling up the entire fruit was greater than eating the fruit herself.
Ultimately, the percieved fruit of an action may not be material at all. For the painter it is the joy of painting, for the mother it is the joy of being a mother. They are both doing their dharma and enjoying it as well. But are their actions truly selfless? Would their actions count as "nishkama karma"?
Would appreciate your views.
Regards.