Īśāvāsyam and the Non-Zero-Sum World
Why Coveting Ruins Empires: A Geopolitical Reading of the Isha Upanishad The opening verse of the Isha Upanishad—”Enjoy through renunciation; do not covet anyone’s wealth”—offers not a moral prescription but a realist maxim for survival in an interdependent, finite system. Over the last eighty years, geopolitical disasters from Iraq to Afghanistan, from nuclear brinkmanship to climate inaction, share a common pathology: the violation of Mā gṛdhaḥ (do not covet). When nations pursue absolute security or resource dominance, they trigger the security dilemma’s self-defeating spiral. Voluntary self-limitation, far from being weakness, represents the coldest realism for a non-zero-sum world where the other is never truly separate from the self. Treaty-based restraint succeeds where coercive dominance fails, not because of altruism but because of ontological fact. Do not grasp, for the hand that closes on another’s wealth Finds only the mirror of its own fear staring back The wor...