Niraj Kumar Jha
मेरा पक्ष
नीरज कुमार झा
बुधवार, 2 अप्रैल 2025
Ghiblism
Niraj Kumar Jha
LPG to Imperialism
रविवार, 30 मार्च 2025
A Call for Democratic Ideation Practice
Ideas attract people in adherence, generally, when these are delivered well-packaged or in a dramatised way. This is how working ideas originate and spread. Ordinary people can hardly ideate based on their own experiences and engagements. Ideas come to people from seats of tradition, mavericks, or leaders at the helm of extraordinary events. The Western world presents a well-documented history of its ideational journey, and we can see that most of the lasting ideas originated during very short spans of history. What happens is that a grand idea discredits too many good little ideas and prohibits the emergence of another great idea.
My humble submission is that people's everyday experiences should lead to idea formation and be shared; this should be a continuous interactive process, and people should value their lived experiences. The next great idea must be democratically generated.
This is why I always respect the sharing of ideas on social media. Indeed, there is a great possibility and occurrences of wrong ideas being circulated and believed. However, my other contention is that curated ideas emanating from established media may be trapped within worse ideational frameworks.
People who believe they are in the know should not be perfectly assured of their correctness. They may be wrong, too. At the same time, people who think that good knowledge should prevail bear the responsibility to engage with other people with an open mind and respect. Generally, the so-called elite disseminators of ideas are haughty, disrespectful and patronising to commoners. They are unlikely to abandon their exalted lofty locations. People themselves must be aware of self-worth. It is a pedagogical challenge, but I do not think that practitioners are aware of this crying need.
Niraj Kumar Jha
बुधवार, 26 मार्च 2025
The Centurial Repeat of History
The early and later parts of the 20th century were eras in contrast. The early part was almost an anarchic world where power primarily ruled the roost. In the second half, what followed was the era of dichotomous consensus. Despite the disturbing manoeuvres of the competing blocks, people knew what to believe, follow, and oppose. The presence of an ideational ingredient intertwined with an idealistic claim was extraordinary. Finally, in the war of ideas, the evolving one stood the test of time.
The winning idea is now nowhere visible, not even the bipartite interplay of ideas preceding it. Does history repeat itself during the following century?
Niraj Kumar Jha
सोमवार, 24 मार्च 2025
Knowledge Foundation
Niraj Kumar Jha
बुधवार, 12 मार्च 2025
The Problem of Taking Assumptions as Facts
A concerned person must study reading materials and events with an open mind. Knowing is a human responsibility. Examining any idea based on historical and social genesis, its linkages with existential anxieties, and actors and factors sustaining those ideas is a duty on the part of each one.
Niraj Kumar Jha
Reimgining Democracy
With the help of its civilizational norms, India reinvented itself as a full-blooded democracy and the deepening of its democratic norms and practices continues.
However, the point is that democracy emerged in response to monarchism and offshore imperialism. Democracy did come with the awareness of its essential concern, i.e. mutual and collective guarantees of the dignity and well-being of each and all. It did get its mechanisms: constitutions containing guaranteed rights, separation of powers, and periodic elections. Nonetheless, it only put everything as an icing on the existing cake. Besides, when the American republic was founded during the concluding years of the eighteenth century, the fastest means of communications, executing all these, were saddled horses. Not even the abandoned telegraph by now was there. Now we are in the age of zeroed live communication, vastly reduced physical transportation, and artificial intelligence. Everything is in the rapid change mode along with the magical tech revolutions. Despite all these, the basic mechanisms of democracy remain of the age of horse-drawn carts and homing pigeons. Is this not a time for making democracy's makeover for reflecting the current realities?
Niraj Kumar Jha