The Imperative Call for the Grammar of Learning: Towards an Indic Method in Research

Oct 24, 2025 - 14:28
Oct 24, 2025 - 14:28
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The Imperative Call for the Grammar of Learning: Towards an Indic Method in Research
“The Imperative Call for the Grammar of Learning: Towards an Indic Method in Research”
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24 Oct 2025
https://hindustanmetro.com/the-imperative-call-for-the-grammar-of-learning-towards-an-indic-method-in-research
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Without a good methodological source, research would not be possible.  To learn more, we need to look into Bharat's augmentative intellectual tradition, the history of knowledge production in the area, and the current state of academics and discussions in Bharat. Bharat must now establish a methodological framework that clarifies the values of its civilisation within the global academic context, where research both reflects and informs civilisation. For an extended period, Indian scholars have endeavoured to validate their expertise through the application of Western syllogisms, Eurocentric paradigms, and various external epistemologies.  The Western canon has significantly influenced how people discuss ideas today, but the Bharatiya academic legacy needs to be revitalised, redefined, and reborn based on Bharatiya ways of knowing. This argument assumes that every civilization learns in its own way. Academic methodology is shaped by centuries of cultural experience, ethical reflection, and linguistic subtleties. Western empiricism and rationalism originated from personal quests for truth and secular validation during the Enlightenment. Bharatiya methodology utilises jnana (knowledge), vijnana (systematic inquiry), and tattva(principled truth) to understand the universe and the self. Bringing in frameworks that don't take this unity into account hurts intellectual coherence and makes scholars feel like they don't belong to their own research traditions.

The desire for Bharatiya methodologies does not negate Western intellectual civilisation or nostalgia. British universities need to be strict, encourage students to think critically, and help them become more professional to advance science. Instead of just being a model, it should be a conversation partner that gets along with others. Bharat should promote contextual universality in peer-reviewed empiricism, utilising their unique epistemological framework. This view saw Bharatiya research as connected to other cultures and not hidden by Western ideas. Synthesis, a Bharatiya action, would utilise energy from various sources while maintaining autonomy in thought. This methodological revolution must change how higher education is taught, structured, and conducted, rather than just causing controversy. University students do not just think about theories; they use and borrow them. Changing anubhava to anusandhana and experience to exploration would give research new life through a new Bharatiya method. Prioritise moral observation, thoughtful analysis, and socially beneficial research over career advancement. Research can evolve into a yajña, promoting collective progress instead of functioning solely as a means to achieve tenure.