Description
This book seeks to restore the timeless principle of Indian life philosophy which upholds agriculture as the highest calling, trade as moderate, salaried employment as restrictive, and begging as a last resort. It argues that modern education systems, job-oriented mindsets, and economic misconceptions have distanced Indian society from its foundational balance of Dharma–Artha–Karma.
Drawing upon scriptures, scientific reasoning, logical analysis, and the author’s lived experiences, the book presents agriculture not merely as an occupation, but as the very foundation of life and a pathway to inner freedom. Trade is described as a vehicle of self-reliance and dignity, while salaried employment is viewed as a form of dependency that limits human potential. Begging, it asserts, stands in opposition to the essential dignity of human existence.
More than a socio-economic argument, this work is a call for intellectual and cultural transformation—a reawakening of civilizational wisdom that integrates livelihood, ethics, spirituality, and self-sufficiency into a harmonious way of living.
About The Author
Dr. Suman Kumar Das (Swami Sumananandnath) is a scholar, entrepreneur, agriculturist, and a distinguished interpreter of Indian life philosophy. Born in Mithila and educated at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) and the Pushkin Institute in Moscow, he achieved professional success abroad before dedicating his resources and life to spiritual and social service.
He founded Lalita Divyashram in Khajuraho as a center for integrated living and spiritual practice. With over 35 years of experience in meditation, agricultural experimentation, Tantra–Mantra research, and community service, he advocates a holistic model integrating agriculture, dharma, wealth creation, and meditation.
His writings reflect a rare synthesis of lived truth, scientific perspective, and timeless Sanatan values.






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