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The doctrine of Karma is the prominent theory of the religions originated in India viz. Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism etc. It asserts that every individual will eventually face the consequences of his or her actions. In essence, one must pay for one’s deeds according to whether deeds had been good or bad. At first glance, this appears to be a noble and useful theory. It can serve as a moral deterrent, discouraging people from committing sins or harmful acts. Religious communities often uphold Karma as a safeguard against horrific crimes, claiming that the fear of karmic retribution keeps the society in check.
However, when confronted with deeper questions, such as why good people suffer while immoral individuals often seem to prosper - they explain that justice will be delivered in the next life. The virtuous people will be rewarded, and the wicked ones will be punished after rebirth.
Alright! It’s clear. But this reasoning creates significant confusion. Consider the case of a sinner who, in his supposed previous birth, committed a heinous act such as killing a child after brutal rape. In his present life, he has no memory or awareness of that past crime. If he is punished now without making him to realize his sin, the punishment may not lead to his reform. Instead, it could foster resentment in his mind and drive him toward becoming an even more dreadful criminal. So, where is the scope for genuine rehabilitation in this case? Punishment without telling about the crime achieves no moral progress. It neither reform the criminal, nor it makes him suffer. There is no use of the justice not served in time.
Moreover, the doctrine often leads to harmful social attitudes. It encourages people to believe that those who are suffering (for e.g. through poverty, illness, disability or misfortune), must have committed sins in their past lives. This perspective breeds indifference and even cruelty towards the downtrodden, as society may justify neglecting their suffering by attributing it to their supposed karmic debt. Rather than inspiring compassion, it risks reinforcing inequality and victim-blaming.
For these reasons, the doctrine of Karma, while may appear correct and appealing in theory, it can be deeply problematic in practice. It does not reform criminals and fails to provide a rational explanation for human suffering. Instead, it contributes in perpetuated cycles of guilt, confusion, and social prejudice. That is why many critics argue that Karma, as presented in religious traditions, is one of the most flawed doctrines that was ever offered.
What is your opinion about it?
I agree with your view. It resembles a case where medicine becomes a disease. !LADY, !LOLZ, !PIZZA
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Like you've mentioned, the person facing certain karma may not exactly be aware of what they did in the past to go through what they're are going through in the present but the good thing about karma is that it can always be worked off.
This doesn't necessarily mean the person would go through the same pain they inflicted upon others in their past lives but something similar that could teach them a 'specific lesson or better still, make them turn a new leaf. Once this is achieved, they have automatically worked off their karma(knowingly or unknowingly) and life goes on.
This simply means, karma isn't always a conscious thing.