Bindu Puri

This book reconstructs the philosophical issues informing the debate between the makers of modern India: Ambedkar and Gandhi. At one level, this debate was about a set of different but interconnected issues: caste and social hierarchies, untouchability, Hinduism, conversion, temple entry, and political separatism. The introduction to this book provides a brief overview of the engagements and conflicts in Gandhi and Ambedkar's central arguments. However, at another level, this book argues that the debate can be philosophically re-interpreted as raising their differences on the following issues:
The nature of the self,
The relationship between the individual self and the community,
The appropriate relationship between the constitutive encumbrances of the self and a conception of justice,
The relationship between memory, tradition, and self-identity.
Ambedkar and Gandhi’scontrary conceptions of the self, history,itihaas, community and justice unpack incommensurable world views. These can be properly articulated only as very different answers to questions about the relationship between the present and the past. This book raises these questions and also establishes the link between the Ambedkar--Gandhi debate in the early 20th century and its re-interpretation as it resonates in the imagination and writing of marginalized social groups in the present times.
By Way of Introduction: The Ambedkar–Gandhi Debate: Three Fundamental Questions
Memory, History and Itihaas: Ambedkar and Gandhi
Ambedkar and Gandhi: Self, Community and God
The Insurrectionary Gandhi and the Revolutionary Ambedkar: Caste and Varna
Impartiality and Samdarshita: Ambedkar and Gandhi on Justice
In Conclusion: Owners and Authors. Of Surplus, Generosity and Trust
Bindu Puri is a Professor of contemporary Indian Philosophy
at the Centre for Philosophy, School of Social Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru
University. Her main interests in philosophy are in the areas of contemporary
Indian philosophy and moral and political philosophy. She has been seriously
engaged with the philosophy of M.K Gandhi and her first monograph was on Gandhi
and the Moral Life (2004).She has also been keenly interested in the
philosophical issues involved in Gandhi’s debates with Savarkar, Ambedkar and Tagore.Her
monograph The Tagore-Gandhi Debate: On Matters of Truth and Untruth (
Springer,2015)was published in the series: Sophia Studies in Cross-cultural
Philosophy of Traditions and Cultures. She has edited seven volumes and has
written over 50 papers in edited anthologies and philosophical and
interdisciplinary journals including Sophia, Philosophia and the Journal of the
Indian Council of Philosophical Research. She has presented over 160 papers and
lectures at nationaland International forums. Professor Puri delivered the
prestigious annual ‘M K Gandhi lecture on Peace and the Humanities’ 2017 for
the Mahatma Gandhi Peace Council Of Ottawa, Canada and the Johnson and Hastings
lectures at the University of Mount Allison Canada for the same year.
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