Free Essays - The Four Castes of Orthodox Hinduism in SiddharthaThe Four Castes of Orthodox Hinduism in Siddhartha
The four castes of Orthodox Hinduism are Dharma, Artha, Kama, and Moksha. These four castes are the four stages of a man’s life and four legitimate ends that a man may pursue. Author Hermann Hesse applied each of these four stages to the different phases of Siddhartha’s path leading to peace.
The novel Siddhartha relates the story of a young man traveling the path leading to peace. This young man is Siddhartha. Throughout the novel, Siddhartha changes his religion and “thoughts” about the ways of the world several times. Other characters, who influence Siddhartha, are his father, the prostitute Kamala, the rich merchant Kamaswami, best friend Govinda, and the river merchant Vasudeva.
The first caste, Dharma, is adherence to the holy law, careful performance of rituals, and avoidance of taboos. Siddhartha experienced Dharma while living with his father, “he performed his holy ablutions, his holy offerings” (Hesse 3). Siddhartha regularly performed the religious rituals. While he seemed content, he was not. He soon left his father to pursue peace.
The second caste, Artha, is the acquisition and preserving of wealth. Siddhartha experienced Artha by the means of the rich merchant Kamaswami. Kamaswami asked Siddhartha questions and he learned how clever he was. Therefore, . . . read more. |
||
Save EssayReport this Essay |
||
Essay DetailsPages2 pagesWords398 wordsViews0 viewsSubmitted ByGuest Date SubmittedJuly 02, 2010 10:58 AM Tags
|
||