Karma Yoga and Moral Responsibility in Indian Ethical Philosophy: A Philosophical Analysis
Аннотация
Within the larger context of Indian ethical philosophy, this paper offers a critical philosophical critique of Karma Yoga and its implications for moral responsibility. I argue that Karma Yoga, as articulated primarily in the Bhagavad Gita and interpreted by classical and modern thinkers, offers a distinctive ethical paradigm that integrates action, intention, duty, and detachment into a coherent theory of moral agency. Karma Yoga emphasizes niṣkāma karma—selfless conduct carried out without attachment to the fruits—which redefines responsibility in terms of inner disposition and conscious participation rather than external outcomes alone, in contrast to traditional ethical systems that focus either consequences or norms. The paper examines the philosophical underpinnings of karma as a moral law of causation, emphasizing its sophisticated perspective on the interplay between freedom and determinism. It also looks at dharma’s function as a context-sensitive moral code that places personal accountability in the perspective of a larger cosmic and social order. By examining the idea of detachment (vairāgya), I show how ethical freedom is attained by changing one’s attitude toward action rather than by abstaining from it. The study demonstrates that Karma Yoga is still a living and practically applicable ethical philosophy by drawing on the interpretations of philosophers like Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, Swami Vivekananda, and Mahatma Gandhi. I come to the conclusion that it makes a significant contribution to the current ethical conversation by providing a comprehensive model of moral duty that balances social obligation, individual autonomy, and spiritual insight.
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