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Is it just me or has every "isolationist" Alt Right-ish influencer turned raging imperialista just hours after Trump attacked Venezuela and captured Maduro? Complete frauds. But perhaps I shouldn´t be surprised. After all, I´m old enough to remember when Trump dropped the MOAB (Mother Of All Bombs) on the Taliban in Afghanistan, making every MAGA supporter on Twitter cheer along.
OK, this was interesting. A Russian investment czar allied with Putin blasts Zohran Mamdani, while portraying Russia as a bastion of anti-Woke traditionalism...and capitalism. He even sarcastically refers to the new NYC mayor as "comrade"!
Must be some *really* smart people in this terrorist cell, known as the Volcano Group. I´m sure depriving 45,000 homes of electricity during the Christmas season (a.k.a. winter) will make them more motivated to fight against climate change...
A kind of sequel to my blog post "God´s suicide". Efilism is an extreme form of anti-natalism and sounds either like trolling or like an "intellectualized" version of a clinical depression! I suppose you could call it "the philosophy of a school shooter"...
What is "efilism"?
Efilism is a radical philosophical position that argues that sentient life is inherently negative and should be brought to an end.1
The term was coined by the YouTube philosopher and activist Gary Mosher (known online as Inmendham).2 It is essentially "Life" spelled backward, with the "L" replaced by "EFI" (an acronym for Extinction For Itself).
While it shares DNA with Antinatalism, Efilism goes much further in its scope and its "solution" to suffering.
1. The Core Argument: The "Meat-Machine"
Efilism is rooted in a hard-materialist view of biology.3 It argues that:
Sentience is a trap: Nature is described as an "asymmetrical" system where pain is far more intense and frequent than pleasure.
The DNA Scam: Efilists believe that biological life is simply a "meat-machine" controlled by DNA. DNA has no consciousness or morality; it just wants to replicate itself. Humans and animals are merely the "vehicles" used by DNA to continue its existence, regardless of how much suffering that replication causes.
No Purpose: Since there is no God or cosmic plan, all the "blood, sweat, and tears" of evolution are for nothing—they serve only to produce more entities capable of feeling pain.
2. Efilism vs. Antinatalism
It is important to distinguish between these two, as they are often confused:
Feature
Antinatalism
Efilism
Scope
Mostly focused on human reproduction.
Focuses on all sentient life (animals, insects, etc.).
Main Argument
The "Consent" argument (you can't ask a baby if they want to be born).
The "Suffering" argument (the biology of sensation is a design flaw).
The Goal
Humans should stop having children.
All sentient life should be "liquidated" to stop the cycle of pain.
3. The "Red Button" Thought Experiment
Efilists often use a hypothetical scenario called the "Red Button":
If there was a button that could instantly and painlessly delete all sentient life in the universe, would you press it?
An Efilist would answer "Yes." They argue that pressing the button is the ultimate act of mercy because it prevents the trillions of years of future suffering that would otherwise occur in the animal kingdom and human history. By deleting life, you "solve" the problem of pain permanently.
4. Connection to Other Philosophies
Efilism can be seen as a modern, "digital-age" version of older pessimistic traditions:
Mainländer’s Legacy: Like Philipp Mainländer, Efilists see the universe as a tragic mistake that should move toward non-existence.
Negative Utilitarianism: This is the branch of ethics that prioritizes minimizing suffering over maximizing happiness.4 Efilism takes this to its absolute logical extreme: if the only way to reach "Zero Suffering" is "Zero Life," then the latter is the ethical choice.
5. Common Criticisms
The Problem of Agency: Critics argue that humans have no right to decide the fate of other species (like animals) who might "want" to live despite the struggle.
Nihilistic Extremism: Many find the philosophy's end-goal (total extinction) to be a form of "cosmic psychopathy" that ignores the intrinsic value of beauty, love, and consciousness.
Evolutionary Futility: Scientists point out that even if life on Earth were wiped out, the same biological "trap" could simply evolve again elsewhere in the universe or on Earth after millions of years.
Would you like to explore the specific ethical debates regarding "Wild Animal Suffering," which is a major focus for Efilists, or perhaps look at the psychology behind philosophical pessimism?
Will this happen within our lifetime? The European Union (with Scotland as the newest member-state) will ally with Canada against the United States. There will be US attacks against some Canadian province (Alberta has oil) and Greenland. Russia will ally with the United States, at least diplomatically.
China and Russia will eventually have a fallout, leading to a shooting war between them...or between the Chinese and India (an ally of Russia). Euro-Canada will ally itself with China against Russia. The Russians will effectively lose control of Siberia to Beijing.
Just speculating, of course. But I wouldn´t be surprised if the "prophecy" above comes true!
Some context to the claim that Venezuela has the world´s largest oil reserves. TL/DR: No, they don´t really have that. Much of their oil is of very low quality, something I read somewhere before. The link goes to X.
I think this will be the last part of this long Sunday lecture on the Pancaratra (or Pancharatra) tradition within Hinduism. Fittingly, it´s about God himself.
What concrete role does Narayana play? For instance, is he worshipped in the form of a reclining god on Ananta-Shesha, and so on? Is Pancaratra the original cult of Narayana?
This is an excellent question, because it gets to the concrete cultic core of Pāñcarātra and clears up a lot of later anachronisms.
I’ll answer in three layers:
What Nārāyaṇa is in Pāñcarātra
How he is concretely worshipped (forms, icons, postures)
Whether Pāñcarātra is the “original” cult of Nārāyaṇa
1. What concrete role does Nārāyaṇa play in Pāñcarātra?
In Pāñcarātra, Nārāyaṇa is not one deity among others. He is:
The supreme, eternal Lord
The source of the vyūhas
The final goal of ritual ascent
The resident deity of the temple icon (arcā)
Crucially:
Pāñcarātra is not “about Viṣṇu in general” — it is about Nārāyaṇa as supreme sovereign presence.
Other forms (Viṣṇu, Kṛṣṇa, avatāras) are secondary manifestations of him.
2. Is Nārāyaṇa worshipped as the reclining god on Ananta-Śeṣa?
Yes — very explicitly, and this is one of the most important concrete cultic forms in Pāñcarātra.
(a) The śayana (reclining) form
The Ananta-śayana / Yoga-nidrā form of Nārāyaṇa is:
Canonical in Pāñcarātra
Theologically loaded
Ritually central in many temples
In this form:
Nārāyaṇa reclines on Ananta / Śeṣa
Lakṣmī is at his feet or chest
Creation emanates during his “sleep”
This is not decorative mythology — it expresses core doctrine:
Element
Meaning
Reclining posture
Transcendence + effortless sovereignty
Ananta-Śeṣa
Infinite support / cosmic order
Sleep (yoga-nidrā)
Creation without exertion
Lakṣmī
Mediating śakti, grace
The famous temples of Śrīraṅgam, Tiruvanantapuram, Melkote all reflect this Pāñcarātric logic, even when later traditions reinterpret it.
(b) Other canonical icon forms
Pāñcarātra allows multiple authorized arcā forms of Nārāyaṇa:
Standing (sthānaka)
– For kingship, protection, public darśan
Seated (āsana)
– For teaching, bestowal of grace
Reclining (śayana)
– For cosmic sovereignty and emanation
But in all cases:
The deity is Nārāyaṇa, not a local Viṣṇu or avatāra.
3. Nārāyaṇa and the vyūha system (his most distinctive role)
Nārāyaṇa’s most concrete doctrinal role is that:
He does not descend directly
He emanates vyūhas
Thus:
Vāsudeva = Nārāyaṇa in his purest mode
The temple icon ultimately represents Vāsudeva
This means:
Worship is not historical or narrative
It is ontological alignment
4. Is Pāñcarātra the original cult of Nārāyaṇa?
Short answer:
No — but it is the first systematized, temple-centered, theologically rigorous cult of Nārāyaṇa.
Longer answer:
(a) Pre-Pāñcarātra Nārāyaṇa
Nārāyaṇa appears earlier in:
Late Vedic texts
Mahābhārata
Early Upaniṣadic material
But there:
He is cosmic
Abstract
Not embedded in a full ritual-temple system
There was no unified Nārāyaṇa cult with icons, mantras, and initiation.
(b) What Pāñcarātra does that is new
Pāñcarātra:
Makes Nārāyaṇa the exclusive supreme deity
Builds a complete ritual system
Integrates:
Mantra
Icon
Temple architecture
Liberation theory
Subordinates all avatāras to him
In that sense:
Pāñcarātra creates Nārāyaṇa as a lived, temple-based religious reality.
5. Relationship to later Vaiṣṇavism
Later traditions inherit but reinterpret this:
Śrīvaiṣṇavism
Retains Nārāyaṇa’s supremacy
Keeps reclining iconography
Philosophically reframes him via Vedānta
Gauḍīya Vaiṣṇavism
Marginalizes Nārāyaṇa
Elevates Kṛṣṇa
Retains Pāñcarātra ritual mechanics only
Purāṇic Hinduism
Absorbs Nārāyaṇa into “Viṣṇu”
Makes avatāras dominant
Weakens the vyūha structure
6. One-sentence synthesis
In Pāñcarātra, Nārāyaṇa is the eternal sovereign whose reclining, iconic presence anchors ritual, cosmology, and liberation, while all other forms exist only as his functional manifestations.
7. Bottom line
Yes, Nārāyaṇa is concretely worshipped, especially as Ananta-śayana
He is the central, supreme, ritual deity
Pāñcarātra is not the earliest mention of Nārāyaṇa
But it is the first full religious system built around him
If you want, the next logical step would be:
Why “Viṣṇu” replaces “Nārāyaṇa” in popular Hinduism
Or a direct comparison: Nārāyaṇa vs Kṛṣṇa vs Śiva as supreme
Or how temple iconography encodes Pāñcarātra metaphysics
Our never-ending series on Pancaratra and related problematiques continue. This is part 15. Seems I can do this all day long!
What role does Shri / Lakshmi play in Pancaratra?
Śrī / Lakṣmī plays a foundational, not merely consort-level role in Pāñcarātra. In fact, without Śrī, Pāñcarātra theology and ritual do not function at all. Her role is ontological, soteriological, and ritual-mediatory, and it is one of the most distinctive features of the tradition.
Below is a structured explanation.
1. Śrī is not “just the consort”
In Pāñcarātra, Śrī is:
Co-eternal with Nārāyaṇa
Ontologically necessary
The power (śakti) without which Viṣṇu does not act
Many Pāñcarātra Saṃhitās explicitly state:
Nārāyaṇa never exists or acts without Śrī.
This already differentiates Pāñcarātra from many Purāṇic forms of Vaiṣṇavism.
2. Ontological status: Śrī as inseparable śakti
Śrī is:
Not created
Not an avatāra
Not subordinate
She is:
Viṣṇu’s intrinsic śakti
The principle of:
Manifestation
Grace
Mediation
In some texts, she is described as:
anādi (beginningless)
nitya (eternal)
sarvaśakti-svarūpiṇī (embodiment of all powers)
3. Śrī as mediatrix of liberation
This is perhaps her most important role.
The soteriological logic
Viṣṇu is:
Supreme
Transcendent
Just
Śrī is:
Compassionate
Accessible
Relational
Therefore:
Liberation flows through Śrī’s recommendation.
She:
Softens Viṣṇu’s sovereignty
Advocates for the devotee
Makes grace possible
This logic is later fully developed in Śrīvaiṣṇava theology, but it is already present in Pāñcarātra.
4. Ritual centrality
In Pāñcarātra ritual:
Mantras are:
Often Śrī–Nārāyaṇa mantras
Nyāsa frequently places:
Śrī first
Viṣṇu second
Pūjā sequences:
Invoke Śrī before Viṣṇu
The ritual assumption is:
Approach Viṣṇu through Śrī.
5. Śrī and the vyūha system
Śrī participates in the vyūha structure:
She is associated especially with:
Vāsudeva
She is not duplicated as separate vyūhas
She remains:
Unified
Transcendent
Present at all levels
Thus:
Vyūhas = Viṣṇu’s self-differentiation
Śrī = enabling presence across differentiation
6. Śrī as cosmic regulator
Śrī governs:
Prosperity
Order
Fertility
Stability
But in Pāñcarātra this is not merely worldly:
Cosmic order itself is an expression of her grace
Without Śrī, manifestation would collapse
7. Comparison with other Vaiṣṇava systems
Tradition
Śrī’s role
Pāñcarātra
Ontological co-principle, mediator
Vaikhānasa
Revered but less central
Purāṇic Vaiṣṇavism
Consort, prosperity goddess
Śrīvaiṣṇava
Mediatrix, co-savior
Gauḍīya
Secondary to Rādhā
Pāñcarātra is the bridge between Purāṇic Lakṣmī and Śrīvaiṣṇava Śrī.
8. Why this mattered historically
Śrī’s elevation allowed Pāñcarātra to:
Integrate feminine divine power
Soften ritual hierarchy
Provide a relational path to grace
Influence later bhakti theologies
This is one reason Śrīvaiṣṇavas could adopt Pāñcarātra so thoroughly.
9. One-sentence synthesis
In Pāñcarātra, Śrī is the power that makes Viṣṇu accessible, grace operative, and liberation possible.
10. Bottom line
Śrī / Lakṣmī in Pāñcarātra is:
Eternal
Co-equal
Mediatory
Ritually central
Soteriologically indispensable
She is not peripheral ornamentation but the hinge on which the entire system turns.
If you want next, we could:
Compare Śrī in Pāñcarātra vs Śrīvaiṣṇava Vedānta
Examine Lakṣmī mantras and nyāsa in specific Saṃhitās
Or contrast Śrī–Nārāyaṇa vs Rādhā–Kṛṣṇa theologies
Does Pancaratra mysticism have some kind of stages? After all, there are several different emanations, Vasudeva being the highest.
Yes. Pāñcarātra does have a staged mystical structure, but it is not a “ladder of experiences” in the later bhakti or yogic sense. Its stages are ontological, cosmological, and ritual–mystical at once. The system you are intuiting—the emanations with Vāsudeva at the summit—is exactly where this staging lives.
What follows is a careful, technical explanation, because Pāñcarātra mysticism is often misunderstood as either “pure ritualism” or “crude emanationism,” neither of which is accurate.
1. The foundational model: the caturvyūha
Classical Pāñcarātra metaphysics is organized around the four vyūhas (emanations):
Vāsudeva
Saṅkarṣaṇa
Pradyumna
Aniruddha
These are not “avatars” but graded self-manifestations of Nārāyaṇa.