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The author specifically bridges Jensen Huang's technical world with the spiritual framework of the Bhagavad Gita by focusing on the relationship between the "Field" and the "Knower."
3 Deep Lessons on Spiritual "Smartness"
The Hardware-Software Divide (Kshetra vs. Kshetrajna): The author references Krishna’s teaching that the body is the Field (Kshetra), while the one who understands it is the Knower of the Field (Kshetrajna). This suggests that "smartness" isn't just about the physical "hardware" or data, but the consciousness that observes it.
The Algorithm of Bliss (BlissTech): While Jensen Huang defines smartness as an algorithm for solving technical problems, the author introduces BlissTech—a system from the Upanishads and Gita designed for self-realization. This "spiritual Wi-Fi" transforms input (ignorance) into output (clarity) through the realization of Sat-Chit-Anand (Truth-Consciousness-Bliss).
Intelligence as Liberation, Not Analysis: In the modern technical world, intelligence is measured by information density and predictive analysis. However, the author argues that the highest form of "smartness" is Moksh (liberation), where the individual self (Jivatman) realizes its unity with the universal self (Paramatman).
Tagline
"Technical smartness solves the problem; spiritual smartness solves the 'self'."
Would you like me to find the specific Sanskrit verses from Chapter 13 of the Gita that define this "Field" and "Knower" relationship?
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