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Who is smarter: someone who reduces the connotation of smartness to mechanical processes for material gains? Or someone who intuits workings of natural order, and understands that much of what we see today will not last forever — quite like the Guns N’ Roses song ‘November Rain’?Nothin’ lasts foreverAnd we both know hearts can changeAnd it's hard to hold a candleIn the cold November rain
While the song is about unrequited love and heartbreak, it is also a reminder of the temporality of life, and by extension, of technology that makes our lives easier.
So, when Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang responded to the question about who the smartest person he’s ever met, he came across as a reductionist—reducing words such as ‘technical’ and ‘smartness’ to mean ‘someone who sits at that intersection of being technically astute, having empathy and the ability to infer the unspoken, around the corners, the unknowables’.
Smartness, as it were, cannot be reduced to number-crunching, programming, or predictive analysis.
This is because the term ‘technology,’ in its dictionary sense, refers to methods, systems, and devices that are the result of scientific knowledge being used for practical purposes. Connotation of ‘technology’ cannot be limited to wires, motherboards, LED screens, and Wi-Fi routers. Technical systems—and methods used to arrive at them—can help us better understand both knowledge within our reach and systems beyond our ken.
Take, ‘algorithm.’ It comes from the Latinisation of 9th-c. Persian mathematician Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi’s name. An algorithm was-- and still is—a system. But somewhere along the way, the word was reduced to mean a computational system, a ‘computer algorithm’, a narrow description of a term that can expand to mean a flawless system—a sequence that must work so perfectly that if you alter even a single step, the whole collapses in the material realm.And then there is the Great Beyond, which can be known only through the Algorithm of Bliss, the outcome of which is the realisation of Sat-Chit-Anand, Truth-Consciousness-Bliss. The term ‘technology’ does not belong merely to the material realm. Technological systems, a spiritual Wi-Fi of sorts, can apply to consciousness, too. In that sense, Vedanta is an algorithm of consciousness. It is foundational BlissTech that carries us to the Great Beyond.
The Upanishads and Gita are, in fact, manuals of this BlissTech, detailing methods that can enable Self-realisation. The modern world equates intelligence with information density and analysis. Vedanta equates intelligence with moksh, liberation and eventual attainment of Brahmn. The unity of jivatman and Paramatman. Consciousness is the field in which this unity appears. Gita speaks of Kshetra and Kshetrajna.
Krishna says, ‘This body, Arjun, is termed as the Field (ksetra) and he who knows it is called the knower of the Field (ksetrajña) by the sages.
’The algorithm of awareness bridges kshetra and khetrajna, just as a circuit board connects all the hardware inside a computer. And while mechanical devices come and go, algorithm of bliss will remain unchanged. This is a reminder that technology is not confined to machines. It is any precise system that transforms input into output. BlissTech transforms ignorance into clarity, the grasping ego into a liberated soul, and the individual self into the realised Self.



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