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You’ve heard the theory. A long time ago there was only a chunk. Or perhaps it was only chemicals. Everything was in an undeveloped state; there was only potential. The changes kicked into gear with an explosion. The ruins from that event gave way to the progression of the species, leading to the intelligent human being that we have today. With this theory in mind, the guess is that man from past ages was less intelligent. He didn’t know the right way to do things; he wasn’t progressive. From the Vedic perspective, however, everything started with the most intelligent being. In fact, doing a role reversal, the intelligent man from ages past can observe today’s man and have a fun time.
From Vedic texts we get more detail. That explosion the scientists guess to have happened billions of years ago is actually the exhaling of the Supreme Lord. And this occurs through one of His expansions. Think of it like typing with your two hands while holding a conversation with someone else. Think of it like writing the most complex computer program while you are sleeping. This begins to describe the ease with which Bhagavan creates this and many other universes.
The skeptic will claim that this is all guesswork.
No one knows who Vishnu is. No one has seen Brahma. So how can we know that there is intelligence to the creation?
For starters, we have the ancient texts themselves. They contain not merely historical information. There is the highest philosophy ever seen in this world in those works. The Bhagavad-gita is still studied to this day by people from all walks of life. Though it was last spoken to a distressed warrior on a battlefield some five thousand years ago, the speaker says that the wisdom dates back to the beginning of the creation.
“The Blessed Lord said: I instructed this imperishable science of yoga to the sun-god, Vivasvan, and Vivasvan instructed it to Manu, the father of mankind, and Manu in turn instructed it to Ikshvaku.” (Bhagavad-gita, 4.1)
The typical view of the ancient man is that he wasn’t very wise. He was a Neanderthal. He didn’t know how to do anything. He came up with marriage as a way to subjugate women. The women didn’t know any better. The people lived off the land because they hadn’t yet developed machines. They worshiped God because they didn’t know any other way to get their stuff. They hadn’t yet figured out how to exploit the nature around them.
“Besides this inferior nature, O mighty-armed Arjuna, there is a superior energy of Mine, which are all living entities who are struggling with material nature and are sustaining the universe.” (Lord Krishna, Bg. 7.5)
The person from the past could have equally as good a time observing the people from today; and their observations don’t rely on guesswork. Imagine this scenario. A person from the past time travels to the present, lives among us for a few months and then gives the following report upon returning home:
“I saw many odd things indeed. In order to put food on the table, the people spend upwards of two hours a day travelling. They sit very miserably, crammed inside of these tiny cars they call trains. Everyone rushes towards the train headed for work in the morning, lest they be late. Then they sit in a building for upwards of eight hours, only to rush back to the train to return home. Upon reaching home they are so tired that they can’t think of doing anything.
The people are constantly intoxicated. That is their leisure time fun. Another odd thing they do is pay an establishment to allow them to lift heavy objects. After visiting a few times in the beginning, they cease going, though they still get charged every month. The men and women are always quarrelling. They have invented this thing called divorce, where if the marriage doesn’t go well, both parties split. Marriages now happen as a mere formality, as many cohabitate first upon mutual attraction based on the body. They’ve even developed marriages between men and men and women and women.
Some of the people spend hours a day trying to fix a device that they purchased. These devices allow them to communicate with others very quickly, to read the news from other communities, and to take photographs of themselves. The photograph is like an image in a mirror, only lasting much longer. Though these devices can do so much, the people run into problems with them all the time. Overall, I see that they are very frustrated. No one is happy. They are in decline.”
It is natural to wonder how someone from a previous time lived. The typical fuddy-duddy bemoans the conditions of the present. They speak of how when they were young they endured so many hardships and had no problem whatsoever. They say that the present generation could never survive in similar circumstances.
In Closing:
If man from past today to have a look,
And back to his time information he took,
Of unhappiness of people he’d say,
How in progression they’d lost their way.
From the start intelligence existing,
Wisdom of Gita to today persisting.
In any age boon of life same to be found,
Transcendence, divine love free of bounds.

