Table of Contents
Context: Subhas Chandra Bose was not merely a military commander; he was a sophisticated political philosopher who sought a “higher synthesis” between Eastern spiritualism and Western material dynamism.
Subhas Chandra Bose: Philosophical Foundations
- Rejection of Maya: Early in his life, Bose was influenced by Shankaracharya’s Advaita Vedanta. However, he eventually discarded the Doctrine of Maya (the world as an illusion), arguing that a revolutionary could not fight for a world that wasn’t real.
- Reality as Spirit: In his autobiography, An Indian Pilgrim (1937), he redefined the world as a manifestation of Spirit, an evolving, real entity driven by a moral core, which he defined simply as Love.
- Hegelian Dialectics: Bose synthesized Hindu thought with Western logic. He adopted Hegel’s Dialectics, believing that progress occurs through the conflict between a Thesis and an Antithesis, resulting in a Synthesis.
Also Read: Biography of Subhas Chandra Bose
Samyavada: The Doctrine of Harmonious Equality
- Bose’s unique political contribution was Samyavada, a term derived from the Sanskrit Sāmya (equality/harmony) and vāda (doctrine).
- Synthesis of Ideologies: In The Indian Struggle (1934), he proposed that India should work out a synthesis embodying the strengths of both efficiency and national unity from the former, and social justice and internationalism from the latter.
- Anti-Copycat Approach: He believed Samyavada was India’s specific contribution to world civilization, following the legacies of British Constitutionalism, French Liberty, and Russian Marxism.
- The Socialist State: In practice, Samyavada aimed for:
- Complete national independence.
- Social ownership of the means of production.
- Scientific large-scale industrialization.
- A “New Order” built on social justice and the removal of caste and communal barriers.
Scientific Reconstruction and Authoritarianism
- Industrialization: Unlike the Gandhian emphasis on rural self-sufficiency, Bose was a staunch advocate of scientific industrialization.
- As Congress President at Haripura (1938), he argued that eradicating poverty required the social control of both production and distribution.
- The Adarsha Sangh: Bose believed that a newly independent, impoverished India would require a strong Central Government during the period of reconstruction.
- He advocated for a “strong Adarsha Sangh” (Model Organization) with a degree of authoritarianism to bypass the slow-moving nature of decentralized democracy in a fractured society.

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