Hindu saints and sages proceed to the
study of what man should be and what he should pursue, and so
they discovered what is described in this Sanskrit work "Purushartha".
This word when translated means the 'values of life'.
To Western thinkers the 'ultimate values' referred to as
Truth, Goodness and Beauty. But 'Purushartha' means
and connotes the aims and purposes of life or the
Fundamental Aspirations of man.
The term 'Purushartha' not only
denotes what the objectives of life should be but it also means
what the objectives of life are as the result of the
psychological tendencies of the individual. These 'Purusharthas'
are said to be four in number.The Agni Purana states clearly that
Dharma, Artha, Kaama and Moksha are the four
'Purusharthas'.
Dharmaartha-kaama-mokshashcha
Purushartha Udaahrithah. This Purushartha classification is
so well-established that it forms part of the Samkalpa which
is recited by every Hindu supposedly before any ritual,
ceremony or other religious or charitable act is begun. Dharma-arth-kaama-moksha-
Chaturvigh-Purushaarth-Sidhyartham Karma Karishye. It is a well
established principle that every ritual, ceremony or other
religious act is performed for the purpose of enabling the
worshiper or individual who performs it to realize these four Purusharthas
of life. Whenever these are mentioned the order has
always been that Dharma was the first, Artha
was the second, Kama was the third, and the fourth
and last was Moksha.
No Hindu has ever thought even in
gesture to change this sequence, to mention these four in any
different order. So we see the order in which they are referred
to, has great significance and there is meaning behind it. A
change in the order may alter the scope, content and relative
importance of these four objects of life. Man longs, therefore,
for pure joy, unalloyed, ever-lasting happiness, free from the
least trace of misery and pain. Here on earth "we look
before and after and pine for what is not real; our sincerest
laughter is fraught with pain, and our sweetest songs are those
that tell of saddest thoughts".
Death, disease, old age, poverty and
want bring in their train untold misery. The human heart is sick
with hope deferrred, expectations blasted, ambition wrecked and
desire unfulfilled. Dharma is the stability of
society, the maintenance of social order, and the general welfare
of mankind. And whatever conduces to the fulfillment of this
purpose is called 'dharma'.
Artha is the acquisition
of wealth, is regarded as the primary purpose of life, as without
it, human existence is impossible. One has to live before one can
live well. Artha is the foundation upon which the
whole structure of life has been built and all the other Purusharthas
can be achieved only by the fulfillment of this primary purpose
in life. Kaama means desires. Desires of varying
degrees. It is from Dharma that Artha
and Kaama result. Man recognises here that Artha
and Kama satisfy the psychological tendencies of
man and they form essentially the two fundamental aspirations of
every individual.
Now the word Moksha
literally, means deliverance, that is deliverance of the soul
from bondage. Our great philosophers argue that, so long as the
soul is imprisoned in the body, subject to the shackles of the
human tendencies and inclinations and enmeshed in sordid matter,
it will never be free from the taint of misery, pain and
suffering of the three kinds, Adhi-bhautika, Adhi-atmika,
and Adhi- daivika, bodily, mental and God-made, the tapa-traya
. Moksha results from the extinction of false knowledge, which
causes the extinction of lust and hate, which extinguish all
karmas, which again results in the cessation of all birth, which
again results in the annulment of sorrow.
When birth is at an end,
sorrow ceases and Moksha is attained where the soul
is free from the cycle of births and deaths. Hence according to
our Hindu saints and sages, moksha is that perfect
state of supreme bliss where there is the cessation of the
effects of karma.