Ambedkar as a Political Philosopher (EPW)
Valerian Rodrigues
Existing studies on B R Ambedkar largely focus on his
substantive religious, sociological, political and
constitutional concerns, and not on the concepts he
deployed for the purpose or modes of his
argumentation. His body of work demonstrates that he
formulated a number of concepts to take stock of the
social reality that he confronted, and/or reformulated
existing concepts by critically engaging with the body of
scholarship available to him. With regard to the
conception of the political, he advanced a
comprehensive and consistent design of what it means
to live as a public and how best to do so in a setting very
different from the West.
There is much in Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar’s writings
and social practices to consider him a philosopher in the
traditional sense. His association with certain philosophers such as John Dewey is well known and in his later years,
he closely followed the teachings of the Buddha and philosophical schools that claimed to be inheritors of Buddha’s
teachings. He was familiar with the debates around socialism,
particularly revolving around the critique of capitalism that
informed the Fabian school. He followed the works of the
Bri tish idealists very closely, including their interface with
German philosophy, and classical Greek thought. He demonstrates critical readings of certain philosophical texts of
India—the major Upanishads and the six systems of philosophy,1
particularly Samkhya and Badarayana’s Uttara Mimansha. He
wrote a small treatise on the Bhagavad Gita. Among his
contempo raries, he closely followed the work of M K Gandhi,2
Sakhya Buddhism (wrote an introduction to the second edition
of Narasu’s What Is Buddhism), the Theosophical School, and
strands of Buddhist thought in Ceylon and Burma. Further, his
work is replete with familiarity with the major currents of European enlightenment thought.
His philosophical interest revolved around (i) metaphysical
questions such as the nature of the self and being human; relationship of the self with the other; nature and consciousness;
causality; human telos; human action and its consequences,
etc; (ii) epistemological questions such as modes of and
approaches to knowledge; the problem of subject and object;
intersubjectivity and communication; truth, interpretation and
social practices; the nature of scientifi c method; and (iii) ethical
questions, particularly the relationship between morality and
regimes of rights on the one hand, and societal values and
human freedom on the other. Certain concerns of political philosophy such as justice, liberty, equality, community, democracy,
authority, legitimacy and recognition were his lifelong pursuits.
While he approached and formulated the above-mentioned
metaphysical, epistemic and moral questions in his own distinct
way, the focus of this paper is limited to highlighting certain
central concerns of his political philosophy.
Political Philosophy
The term political philosophy has no single connotation;
although we do not call everyone who comments on public life
a political philosopher. We think that Plato was a political philosopher and in recent years, John Rawls. In modern-day
India, some of the thinkers who came closest to being political
philosophers were M K Gandhi (Parekh 1989; Parel 2006),
Aurobindo Ghose (Singh 2014), Rabindranath Tagore in his
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work “Nationalism” (Tagore 1917: 1996) and The Religion of Man
(Tagore 1931: 1996), and Allama Iqbal in The Reconstru ction of
Religious Thought in Islam (Iqbal 1930: 2003). Gandhi advanced a foundational critique of modernity and proposed a
distinct conception of freedom as swaraj. Aurobindo Ghosh
attempted to reconnect man to his inner self as well as to a
distinct conception of nation and the cosmos. Tagore closely
associated nationalism with the inexorable march of positivist
modernity and saw in it a threat to our sense of belonging, humanity and cross-fertilisation of cultures. Iqbal critiqued
Western modernity for its one-sidedness and saw in Islam the
possibility of recasting modernity on new foundations.
Political philosophers consider the basic categories or concepts around which we envisage our public life, relate them to
one another, and advance arguments defending/refuting a
concept(s) on one hand and its relation to other concepts on
the other. The evidence for the arguments might be drawn
from the mundane, empirical and philosophical stances that
encompass a concept. An exercise of this kind lends itself to
scrutiny and contestation of the existing positions on an issue,
including the modes and processes of undertaking such an
exercise. Reasoning of this kind may suggest the desirable and
the feasible, or the signifi cant and commendable in public life
and policy as well as the preconditions and processes for their
realisation. It is important to point out that a robust public life
can contribute much for the thriving of political philosophy,
although wherever public life thrives there need not necessarily be an engaged political philosophy. In the latter case, public
life might be held together through other ways such as customs, authority or power. Political philosophy, of course,
draws attention to such realities as the nature of public power,
its extent and limitations, modes of its constitution, relation
between the rulers and the ruled on one hand and among the
rulers themselves on the other, the entitlements of citizens
and persons, and what would be a good life to live in common.
Specifi cally, an exercise in political philosophy may draw
our attention to an aspect of public life which we may have
been relatively inattentive to and build its interconnections to
the basic units constituting our political understanding. Antonio Gramsci, the Italian Marxist philosopher, for instance,
draws attention to the concept of civil society or hegemony,
which was not hitherto central in socialist political discourse,
with profound implications for our understanding of the state,
power and political legitimacy (Gramsci 2009: 210–76); or for
that matter, John Rawls draws attention to the limitations of
utilitarianism and why the pursuit of net aggregate satisfactions of the members of a political community is morally
indefensible (Rawls 1972: 22–33 and 184–90). Political philosophy may also propose concepts which throw light on a facet of political reality in very different ways than we are hitherto accustomed to see. Sometimes, it may dwell on commonsense and suggest which elements of it are defensible
and reasons for the same. At times, political philosophy
might just reconstruct an argument or revisit a concept
because the existing versions are simply inadequate. Exertions of this kind involve reordering priorities in the relation
among concepts such as swaraj, justice, freedom, etc, and
advancing reasons for the same.
In recent years, several political philosophers have raised
doubts concerning the universality of political philosophy.
While scholars from the non-Christian world have charged
political philosophy for being close to the Judeo-Christian
frame, others have seen it as upholding an “imperialism of
categories.” Scholars from the global South and postcolonial
societies have rallied together to explore an alternative/
different conception of the political which can speak closely to
the experiences or the cultural repertoire of the people of
these societies.
Ambedkar’s Political Queries
In this paper, I wish to suggest that Ambedkar either formulated or revisited many a concept and relations across them,
with regard to the conception of the political that advances a
relatively comprehensive and consistent design of what it
means to live as a public, and how best to do so in a setting
very different from the West. The questions that he asked
were: What does it mean to be human and a citizen? How does
one live a tradition? If the modern public is an autonomous
sphere made of free and equal members, how to ensure its continuity over time and inter-generationally? Is there a place for
religion in our public life and if so, what is the nature of such
religion? What is the basis of social cooperation in societies
where there are multiple forms and levels of inequalities
founded not merely on exploitation but complex modes of
oppression? How can diversities founded on distinct conceptions of ultimate ideals and refl ected in ways of life as well as
specifi c institutions cohabit a shared public? How do we engage with a suffi ciently large group which makes a claim to
pursue its distinct ways and conceptions of life? What is the
role and limits of power? Some of the central concepts of the
political such as power, representation, legitimacy, citizen,
demo cracy, freedom, equality, rights and justice are deeply
bound with these questions. While all political philosophers
ask these questions or at least some of them, they also ask
them in specifi c philosophical and social contexts. Ambedkar
did the same. His philosophical context was the one inaugurated by the enlightenment and his social context was the
Indian society in its colonial encounter and postcolonial travails. Much of the attention hitherto has been confi ned to the
context, such as existence of untouchability, decolonisation or
plurality of religious belonging, rather than the central political philosophical issues that Ambedkar raised. Often the limited attention extended to Ambedkar as the icon of a social
group does not invite attention to the conceptual frame that
justifi es and orders his concerns on a scale of priority.
There are some methodological problems that we need to
attend to while regarding Ambedkar as a political philosopher: He is caught in far too many concerns that a political
philosopher would not be generally involved in. Often his
modes of presentation, disputation and argumentation are not
philosophical but sociological, legal, moral, public policy-driven and even rhetorical. Further, in the national movement in
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India several political philosophical questions, such as freedom,
human equality and representation, became issues of interrogation on a day-to-day basis making it diffi cult to distinguish
his contribution from those of others. At the same time, it is
important to emphasise that while Ambedkar did not engage
in a systematic pursuit of political philosophy his writings and
practices were informed by it. The concepts that he employed
and the relations that he proposed across them demonstrated
a remarkable consistency and coherence. Further, while he
shared many ideas in common with the anti- colonial thinkers,
there is much that distinguishes him from others.
While within the scope of this paper I cannot dwell on an
analytical scrutiny of all the themes and concepts that he
engaged in, I will deliberate only on two issues: (i) provide an
outline of the major concepts that he proposed, and (ii) test
the mode of his argumentation by dwelling on an aspect of his
theory of social justice.
Central Concepts
Critical review of texts and historiography: Like many other
Dalit–Bahujan thinkers, such as Jotirao Phule and Iyothee
Thass before him, Ambedkar thought that it is important to
reopen the question of interpreting texts and approaches to
history. Texts and historiography too are sites of reproduction
and contestation of power relations as other domains of social
life are. Many of the hallowed texts were replete with selective
deployment of evidence, displacement, silence, contradictions,
exaggeration, interpolations and heteronomy. They could subserve partisan ends. In spite of such fl aws they confi dently
engaged with cause–effect relations and assumed normative
stances. Often the authority of such texts was seldom challenged. He thought that many a time uncritical reading of such
texts and their endorsement upheld existing social relations,
sustained dominance, and denied people refl ective probings
into such texts. While this is generally true, in the Indian context, texts have been very effi caciously employed to sustain a
ranked social order and uphold the principle of graded inequality.
Further, the injunctions with regard to reading and study explicitly excluded large sections of people from any access to
the texts, depriving them even of the possibility of participating in public reason.3
At the same time, even hallo wed texts
contained accounts and reasoning that could be deeply subversive.4 Besides there are texts and traditions such as those of
Buddhism, which not merely expose the sanctity and truth of
dominant texts and traditions but propose alternatives to them
as well. A critical reading of tika and interpretative engagement with vyakhyana texts and traditions was central to
Ambedkar’s political perspective.5
He rejected, in no uncertain
terms, a positivist rendering of texts.
Human equality: For Ambedkar, human equality is an overriding principle and his writings advance some of the most
complex arguments in defence of this principle: The ethical
norm of human equality makes place for worth rather than
birth; does not assign people to fi xed slots in advance; enables
struggle against dominance, and advances a level-playing fi eld
to all against social prejudices (Rodrigues 2005). Ontologically,
all human beings, irrespective of race, gender and culture,
share certain foundational attributes in common—feelings
and sentiments, love and compassion, reason and refl ection,
solidarity and bonding, and assuming responsibility for their
actions—although domination and social codes may tie them
down to modes of action that are subservient and acceptable
to a social order. Interestingly, none of these arguments and
assumptions that he makes, appeal to any divine element as
foundational to the human. They all appeal to a set of lexically
prior values and assumptions grounded, as far as Ambedkar
was concerned, in reason. The signifi cance of equality justifi es
certain modes of political action: struggle against untouchability, the caste system, colonialism and class domination, and
for recognition, dignity and culture. Equality, therefore, is not
a unilinear pursuit but an overladen consideration and is clearly
tilted towards the worst-off. It is also an encompassing value:
the majority are not justifi ed in pursuing a course of action in
the name of equality that subjects the rest to unequal consideration. Every consideration extended to people has to justify
itself against the benchmark of equality. Ambedkar is very
critical of liberal democracy for its inability to institute equality in any meaningful sense, and sometimes thinks that the rise
of fascism has much to do with the yawning inequalities in
societies subscribing to this political perspective (Ambedkar
1990: BAWS, Vol 9, pp 185–88). He fi nds notions such as
equality before law and equality of treatment inadequate to
encompass equality, and suggests that equality means treating
people as equals by factoring in the entire gamut of social
relations they are subject to. He also feels that much of
inequality is scripted by assigning people to stigmatised
groups, and the voices of such groups and their demands are
then made integral to considerations of equality. Natural and
social circumstances can also make the lot of many people
deeply unequal to that of others, in spite of their efforts. Equality as a level playing fi eld cannot leave people to the whims of
such circumstances.
State and democracy: State as an organised power that
claims for itself sovereignty can be envisaged as an instrument
of dominance but also as a collective resolve for the furtherance of a set of objectives. In the latter sense, Ambedkar
thought that the state can be a civilising agency and a resource
to undermine dominance. Since all resolutions could prove
tentative, state as the collective power and resolve of the society need to be in place to ensure that the collective resolve is in
place. It makes Ambedkar inveigh strongly against such propositions as the withering away of the state. The principle that
should guard over the state is democracy. Democracy as a way
of life charts a course independent of the state, redefi ning the
scope and place of the latter. But democracy also contends
against the pervasive presence of power in everyday life and
transforms it into self-regulation. Ambedkar attempted to
reformulate the idea of democracy, by trying to rescue it from
the economistic binary of liberal and social democracy, and
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proposing it as the only defensible mode of public life
appropriate for human dignity and equality. Democracy is not
merely an institutionalised arrangement, which of course it is,
but the only way of life befi tting human fulfi lment. It makes
people reach out to others, and lets others reach out to them,
thereby, bringing collective resources to bear on one’s striving.
As a way of life it invariably demands that we treat people with
respect. Mutual communication and fonts of bonding that are
constantly renewed and revisited form the nerve centres of
any democracy. While democracy has to be institutionalised,
in order to endure, particularly in deeply complex and plural
societies such as India, he saw it as an open-ended system
which defi nes and redefi nes itself in the indefi nite future
(Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, pp 57–77 and 94–96).
Need for religion: How does one sustain a social order made
of equal and free citizens who elect themselves as a people
continuously? What is it that makes them bond together?
Rights and constitutional morality are important but in spite
of them confl icts might erupt, and they may not provide bonds
of solidarity in cases of pervasive social control, or social power
concentrated in a few hands. Therefore, a people need to
acknowledge themselves as welded together almost in a permanent sense and feel a sense of common belonging, although
nothing prevents them from revisiting those bonds afresh. For
Ambedkar, the name of such a permanent substratum is religion. He, therefore, affi rmed strongly the “necessity for a religion” and quoted Edmund Burke, to say, “True religion is the
foundation of society, the basis on which all true civil government rests, and both their sanction” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS,
Vol 1, p 76). He rejected the liberal idea that religion is a private
affair, but saw it as the anchor that holds a society together. He
felt that religious ideals, in general, have a hold on mankind,
irrespective of an earthly gain, that secular ideas never have
(Ambedkar 1987: “Philosophy of Hinduism,” BAWS, 1987, Vol 3,
p 23). It never fails to work so long as there is faith in that ideal. To ignore religion is to ignore “a live wire” (Ambedkar 1987:
“Philosophy of Hinduism,” BAWS, 1987, Vol 3, p 23). At the
same time he distinguished between “true religion” and a
false one. The former is based on “principles” while the latter
appeals to rules and rituals. The former is centred on society
and appeals to morality, while the latter is centred on the
individual and makes morality an instrument of one’s purpose
(Ambedkar 1982: “Annihilation of Caste,” BAWS, Vol 1, p 47;
Ambedkar 1987: “Philosophy of Hinduism,” BAWS, Vol 3,
pp 67–71). A true religion cannot come in the way of man’s
search for himself, dwarfi ng him against a transcendental
benchmark (Ambedkar 2003: “Buddha and the Future of His
Religion,” BAWS, Vol 17, part two, pp 97–108). At the same
time, a true religion cultivates responsibility for one’s actions.
He thought that
A religious act may not be a correct act but must at least be a responsible act. To permit of this responsibility, religion must mainly be a
matter of principles only. It cannot be a matter of rules. The moment it
degenerates into rules it ceases to be religion as it kills responsibility
which is the essence of a truly religious act. (Ambedkar 1982: “Annihilation of Caste,” BAWS, Vol 1, p 75)
While Ambedkar generally used the case of Brahminical
Hinduism to highlight what a true religion should not be, his
understanding on this issue was not merely limited to it. For
him, a true religion cannot be a set of fi xed beliefs laid down
for all times but that which remains open for contestation and
renewal. Eventually, he came around to suggest that only
Buddhism or more correctly, a reformed version of the same
measures up to the criterion of being a true religion.
Cultural question and social relations: Ambedkar did not
endorse a position that there are two opposed cultures pitted
against each other in India or elsewhere, although culture is
widely employed as a mode of dominance and to sustain
servility of large masses. Cultures are not seamless entities out
there, but ways of life, beliefs, values and institutions that
need to be revisited by foregrounding the human and the principles of equality, liberty, democracy and morality. Cultures,
like nations, are available for interrogation and are subject to
“daily plebiscite” and any attempt to arrest them or lay down
its contours could beget institutionalisation of dominance.
Therefore, the domain of culture is caught in a distinct order
of struggle. Ambedkar thought that power is dispersed across
the entire ensemble of social relations. It is manifest in everyday relations either in the way of directing a course of action
or simply in the complex structures of everyday life, division of
labour, access to resources and opportunities, linguistic usages, signs and symbols. “Religion, social status and property are
all sources of power and authority” (Ambedkar 1982: “Annihilation of Caste,” BAWS, Vol 1, p 45). In the context of India,
caste, for instance, is not merely a matter of status but more
importantly, power. Given the differences in social relations
across societies, particularly regulative norms and modes of
social control, the diffusion of power assumes different forms
in them. Any attempt to radically transform power relations
has to grapple not merely with the diffusion of power across
the different levels of society but has to take the specifi c context of its articulation into account.
The self and human agency: Implicit in all this is a conception of self, which in many ways is new to modern political
philosophising, woven around the concept of self as subject.
Ambedkar, taking a cue from Dewey initially and Buddha later,
denied any essentialised conception of the self. We constitute
ourselves, in a way, in and through the social world that we
inhabit, through all the stimulations that we are exposed to
and responding to them in turn. A society can enhance or mar
the prospects of human realisation. It can condemn people to
the netherworld of untouchability or slavery, or open up the
prospects of human fulfi lment by letting people access its
resources as equals and extending support in this endeavour
through supports. Above all, there is a celebration of human
agency and its transformative potentiality in Ambedkar’s writings.6 While social relations of oppression subdue and even
deny human agency there are familial and community relations, protest traditions such as those inspired by the Buddha,
Kabir or Phule, and even negative sociality that can prove a
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trigger not merely to inspire a person to act but precipitate collective transformative action. In this context, it is important to
recall his advice to Dalit activism—“educate, agitate, organise.”
Mode of Argumentation
Doing philosophy, and particularly political philosophy, involves constructing arguments that could sustain themselves
across all possible attempts to refute them. We can test the way
Ambedkar went about forging his arguments by studying the
way he makes a case for his distinct conception of representation. Instead of analytically dwelling on this idea, I will try to
demonstrate the way he tried to construct an argument with
regard to representation as integral to his theory of social justice.
Inadequacy of virtual representation: Quite early on, in his
statement to the Southborough Committee in 1919, Ambedkar
argued that virtual representation, that is, representation
through a general electorate is inadequate to meet the concerns of the marginalised and the disadvantaged (Ambedkar
1982: BAWS, Vol 1, pp 243–78). In such a mode of representation, the voice of these communities and social groups may be
subdued or even ignored. According to him, the fi rst purpose
of representation is “to transmit the force of individual opinion
and preference into public action” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS,
Vol 1, p 247). When a group or community is denied representation, or denied it in fair measure, then its beliefs and preferences have little bearing in shaping public policy. In India, the
untouchables formed such a group. There was an impassable
barrier between the touchables and untouchables, and between them there were “no shared bonds of aims, beliefs, aspirations, knowledge and common understanding” (Ambedkar
1982: BAWS, Vol 1, p 255). Therefore, virtual representation can
present the case of the untouchables very little. Besides the
disadvantaged, and among them particularly the untouchables, have much to gain or lose depending on the kind and extent of representation available to them. The untouchables, for
instance, may not have “large property to protect from confi scation. But they have their very person confi scated” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, p 255). Representation can help them to
seek rights and resources to pursue their aims and objectives.
Fair representation for new associations: The idea of fair
representation is closely bound up with a concrete context and
the social relations in which it is embedded. It is the context
which specifi es the appropriate modes and extent of representation. There are no ideal-typical models holding good everywhere. The progress of franchise in any society does not lay
down a model for other societies to follow. Britain in this
regard, Ambedkar felt, cannot be a model for India. There is no
guarantee that a limited franchise produces a better government either. Narrow franchise aimed at elite representation
may bolster the importance of some communities to the detriment of others (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 2, p 262). Unlike
generally believed, communal representation need not necessarily harden social divisions: it could be a way of dissolving
them by bringing together “men from diverse castes who
would not otherwise mix together in the legislative council”
(Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, p 266) and by creating conditions to beget new forms of associated life. Such associations
can threaten “fossilised” ways of life and help dissolve “set
attitudes” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, p 266).
Adequate representation for minorities: He argued that a
minority7
should fi nd not numerical but adequate representation. But it should not be so preponderant as to dictate terms to
the majority. In the context of the Simon Commission and his
plea for joint electorate with reservation for Scheduled Castes,
Ambedkar argued that minority representation should be of
such a magnitude “as would make it worth the while of many a
party from the majority to seek an alliance with the minority. If
the party is compelled to seek an alliance with a minority, the
minority is undoubtedly in a position to dictate. If it is drawn
for the alliance, then it is adequately represented” (Ambedkar
1982: BAWS, Vol 2, p 362). While giving due consideration to
the educational and economic status of minorities, he felt that
the actual fi gure “be the ratio of its population to the total seats
multiplied by some factor which is greater than one and less
than two” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 2, p 363). The lower is the
standing of the community, the greater should be its electoral
advantage over the rest. If a minority is not protected with
“weightage” and adequacy, it will be entirely submerged.
Weightage, he felt, could be determined by employing fourfold
criteria: numbers, social standing, education and economic
strength. While keeping the demographic composition in view,
those who are economically and socially backward with low
educational accomplishments deserve additional consideration.
Separate electorate for untouchables: For Ambedkar, joint
electorate or separate electorate8 as modes of representation
are not a matter of principle but mechanisms to achieve certain ends. Separate electorates guarantee that a representative
enjoys the confi dence of the electorate who are his special concern. It is justifi ed in the context when social identities closed
on themselves hold on to their particular interests with few
prospects of forging stable common interests. If there is homogeneity of interests, then joint electorates with reservation for
affected groups seems to be, in his opinion, a better option
(Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, p 374).9 Far from the argument
that separate electorate for untouchables, whom he clearly recognised as the bearers of a set of particular interests, will lead
to fi ssures within Hinduism, Ambedkar felt, “social considerations and not religious affi liation is the basis of the acceptance
of the electorate.”10 He considered the argument that separate
electorates will reinforce anti-national spirit baseless, as every
group that demands separate electorate was not anti-national.
The demand need not necessarily have religious or communal
considerations. However, a majo rity, according to him, cannot
have separate electorate as it would be a permanent domination of the majority over the minorities. When political units
are primarily communal, majority-rule based on a community
is unjustifi able as it could perpetuate its rule confi ning other
communities to its tutelage.
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Social inclusion and public presence: Ambedkar’s second argument for preferential representation is based on social inclusion and the signifi cance of public presence. Preferential treatment provides an opportunity to persons and groups who have
been hitherto denied social presence and are excluded, to be
reckoned in public life. Presence in public life affords an
opportunity to actively participate “in the process of government” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, p 247) and other walks of
life. Besides, participation in associated life begets social bonds
and stakes. This makes a big difference in certain societies such
as India where, he felt, there were no shared bonds of aims,
beliefs, aspirations, knowledge and common understanding
and therefore, little “endosmosis” across social groups. As a
consequence, “given two candidates belonging to different groups
but purporting to represent the same interest, the voters will
mark their votes on the person belonging to the same community”
(Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, 251) or someone they regard as
their “man” or “woman.” It may result in an entire group or
community from being counted out. He felt, untouchable communities suffered the baneful effects of such exclusion the most.
Personal representation: Representation of opinions and
preferences alone is not an adequate measure for democracy.
It requires personal representation as well. The latter involves
“representation of opinions as well as representation of persons.” “A government for the people, but not by the people, is
sure to educate some into masters and others into subjects;
because it is by refl ex effects of association that one can feel
and measure the growth of personality” (Ambedkar 1982:
BAWS, Vol 1, p 251). It requires that adequate representatives
are drawn from the concerned groups. Territorial representation fails to provide adequate and effective representation to
minority groups. Such a situation gets further exasperated if
the majority and minorities in that area are relatively stable
made of specifi c social, religious and ethnic cleavages and
looked down upon by the majority.
Necessity of self-representation: Ambedkar also felt that there
were some constituencies such as untouchables who could be
represented by representatives from those groups and communities only (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, p 256). Illustrating the
case with regard to the untouchables, he felt that others did not
understand their situation of dehumanisation, subjugation,
denial of respect which one man owes to another as a human
being and the denial of rights of citizenship that ensues from
such a disposition. In such ins tances, representatives should
not merely hail from the concerned group or community but be
able to effectively highlight its concerns, monitor them across
contending interests and pursue their implementation. Further, such representation should be “in such numbers as will
constitute a force suffi cient to claim redress.” But such cases of
exclusive representation, he felt, should be rare and minimum,
and need to be given up once inclusive considerations prevail.
Healthy and confi dent self: Ambedkar’s third argument for
appropriate representation appeals to the requisites of constituting a human self, sure of itself: opportunities for social interaction afforded through presence are indispensible for the
constitution of a healthy and confi dent self. In interaction with
others, a person becomes who he or she is. Valued or degraded
understanding of oneself has to do with one’s location in such
interactions to a great extent. “What one is as a person is what
one is as associated with others” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS,
Vol 2, p 54). Social exclusion can greatly impair the growth of
the human person and communities as has been the case with
untouchables in India. Untouchables have been denied their
very personhood and consequently the basis of their treatment
as equals. They “have their very persona confi scated. The
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Understanding the Potentialities: Ethnographic Study of Rural Dalit Women Leaders – Archana Singh
The Weavers of Banaras – Nita Kumar
The Time of Youth: Joblessness, Politics and Neo-religiosity in Uttar Pradesh – Satendra Kumar
Facts and Fiction about How Muslims Vote in India: Evidence from Uttar Pradesh – Rahul Verma, Pranav Gupta
Identity Equations and Electoral Politics: Investigating Political Economy of Land, Employment and Education – Prashant K Trivedi, Surinder Kumar,
Srinivas Goli, Fahimuddin
The Demand for Division of Uttar Pradesh and Its Implications – Ajit Kumar Singh
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Economic & Political Weekly EPW APRIL 15, 2017 vol liI no 15 107
socio-religious disabilities have dehumanised the untouchables
and their interests at stake are, therefore, the interests of
humanity.” What they have been deprived of is something basic that is “incomparably of greater interest than interests of
property” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 2, p 54). Social interactions treat untouchables as despicable and others try to construct superior selves of themselves on that basis. The former,
he says, are like “Plato’s slaves” who “accept from another the
purposes which control their conduct.” They are denied their
ability to make their choices and consequently, their agency.
They are socialised “never to complain” or expect “improve ment
in their lot” or to expect “common respect which one man
owes to another” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 2, p 54). The
consequence of social dispositions as expressed in untouchability is to deprive its victims from claiming the right of citizenship embodying such claims as personal liberty, equality
before laws, liberty of conscience, freedom of opinion and
speech, right of assembly, right of representation in country’s
government and right to hold offi ce.
Conclusions
I have tried to demonstrate in this paper how Ambedkar
went about forging concepts, and setting up arguments with
regard to public life. Taken together, these concepts propose
a distinct ordering of political life that at the same time
responds to the cultural context of one’s belonging. Unlike
the popular perception, Ambedkar does not subscribe to a
disembodied modernity11 but proposes a critical interpretative method to read culture and traditions. He argues for a
critical retrieval of culture rather than commit oneself to a
partisan other. Interactive social relations are the agency that
makes us the human that we are, and they set the preconditions for what we can be. The human is humanly engendered
rather than by a superhuman being. Invariably, democracy is
the essential condition for the fullest development of the
human self in such contexts. Democracy demands that equal
con sideration be extended to everyone and afford them equal
opportunity to participate in public affairs. Extending equal
consideration may require meting out unequal treatment to
people and the latter has to take the concrete context into
account. Ambedkar sees religion as the anchor for such a
pursuit, but in the process redefi nes religion truly as thisworldly affair. The test of a true religion is its capacity to
enable human self-realisation. Emancipation is a this-worldly
affair and the responsibility for the same lies on every man
and woman.
Notes
1 The six systems of philosophy are Mimansa,
Vedanta, Samkhya, Yoga, Vaisesika and Nyaya.
All of them accept the primacy of the Vedas
unlike the Sramanik (Buddhist, Jain, etc) and
Lokayata modes of thought.
2 Ambedkar’s major work What Congress and
Gandhi Have Done to the Untouchables is one of
the best illustrations of his close monitoring of
the life and work of M K Gandhi (Ambedkar
1948).
3 This theme runs through the writings of
Ambedkar throughout (see, “The Annihilation
of Caste,” BAWS, Vol 1, pp 23–99; “Philosophy
of Hinduism,” BAWS, Vol 3, pp 3–94; and The
Buddha and His Dhamma, BAWS, Vol 11, 1992).
Supportive evidence can be found in secondary
literature (Queen 1994 and Rodrigues 1993).
4 Ambedkar’s work on the Shudras is an excellent
illustration for reading a subversive lineage in
the hallowed tradition. See Who Were the
Shudras? How They Came to Be the Fourth
Varna in the Indo–Aryan Society (BAWS, Vol 7,
1990, pp 1–238). Similarly, the contest between
Vashista, the high-priest of the Brahmin establishment, and Vishwamitra, the Kshatriya,
who strove to be a high priest through rigorous
tapasya, recurs in many of his writings.
5 Kapil Kapoor’s Text and Interpretation: The
Indian Tradition provides a useful, although
contested, outline in this regard. There are
scholars who have located Ambedkar in this
interpretative tradition (Gokhale 2008).
6 One of his refl ective stances in this regard goes
as follows: “If time, nature, necessity and so
on, be the sole cause of the occurrence of an
event, then who are we? Is man merely a puppet in the hands of time, nature, chance, Gods,
fate, necessity? What is the use of man’s existence, if he is not free?” (Rathore and Verma
2011: 133)
7 Ambedkar considered Dalits as a minority.
Anupama Rao (2010) has highlighted this issue
forcefully.
8 This distinction evoked much controversy in
the Indian national struggle, particularly
around the conjuncture of the Poona Pact. For
the Poona Pact, see Pyarelal (1958); and Ravindra Kumar (1987).
9 Ambedkar, however, favoured joint electorate
only during certain phases—in his deputation
before the Simon Commission; during the Poona
Pact and in its immediate aftermath; and
during the phase of constitution-making for
free India. At other times, he demanded separate electorate in an emphatic way. In the
former instances, he saw greater openness
between communities with a disposition to
reach out to others.
10 For Ambedkar, a policy measure is justifi ed by
its social bearing and not religious implications.
11 This is one such representative comment:
“Ambedkar was an unalloyed modernist. He
believed in science, history, rationality and
above all, in the modern state for the actualisation of human reason” (Chatterjee 2006: 77).
References
Ambedkar, B R (1948): What Congress and Gandhi
Have Done to the Untouchables, Bombay:
Thacker & Co.
— (1982–2003): Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar Writings
and Speeches (BAWS), Vols 1–17, Bombay:
Government of Maharastra, Department of
Education.
Chatterjee, Partha (2006): “B R Ambedkar and
Troubled Times of Citizenship,” Political Ideas
in Modern India, V R Mehta and Thomas
Pantham (eds), New Delhi: Sage, pp 73–90.
Gokhale, Pradeep P (ed) (2008): The Philosophy of
B R Ambedkar, Pune: Sugava.
Gramsci, Antonio (2009): Selections from the Prison Notebooks, Quintin Hoare and Geoffrey
Nowell Smith (eds), New Delhi: Orient
Blackswan.
Iqbal, Muhammad (1930: 2003): The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam, Srinagar:
Gulshan.
Kapoor, Kapil (2005): Text and Interpretation: The
Indian Tradition, New Delhi, DK.
Kumar, Ravindra (1987): “Gandhi, Ambedkar and
the Poona Pact, 1932,” Struggling and Ruling,
Jim Masselos (ed), New Delhi: Sterling.
Narasu, Lakshmi P (1946): What Is Buddhism,
Colombo: Mahabodhi Society.
Parekh, Bhikhu (1989): Gandhi’s Political Philosophy: A Critical Examination, London: The
Macmillan Press.
Parel, Anthony J (2006): Gandhi’s Philosophy and
the Quest for Harmony, New Delhi: Cambridge.
Pyarelal (1958): The Epic Fast, Ahmedabad: Navjivan.
Queen, Christopher S (1994): “Ambedkar, Modernity
and the Hermeneutics of Buddhist Liberation,”
Dr Ambedkar, Buddhism and Social Change,
A K Narain and D C Ahir (eds), Delhi,
B R Publishing, pp 99–122.
Rao, Anupama (2010): The Caste Question, Ranikhet:
Permanent Black.
Rathore, A S and Ajay Verma (eds) (2011): Introduction, The Buddha and His Dhamma: A
Critical Edition by B R Ambedkar, New Delhi:
Oxford.
Rawls, John (1972): A Theory of Justice, Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
Rodrigues, Valerian (1993): “Making a Tradition
Critical: Ambedkar’s Reading of Buddhism,”
Dalit Movements and the Meanings of Labour in
India, Peter Robb (ed), Delhi: Oxford University
Press, pp 299–338.
— (2005): “Ambedkar on Preferential Treatment,” Seminar, 549, pp 55–61.
Singh, Vijendra (2014): “The Secular and Spiritual
Domains: A Study of the Ideas on Self, Nation
and Cosmos in Aurobindo Ghose,” PhD dissertation, New Delhi, Centre for Political Studies,
JNU (unpublished).
Tagore, Rabindranath (1917: 1996): “Nationalism,”
The English Writings of Rabindranath Tagore,
Vol 2, New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi, pp 419–66.
— (1931: 1996): “The Religion of Man,” The English
Writings of Rabindranath Tagore, Vol 3,
Valerian Rodrigues
Existing studies on B R Ambedkar largely focus on his
substantive religious, sociological, political and
constitutional concerns, and not on the concepts he
deployed for the purpose or modes of his
argumentation. His body of work demonstrates that he
formulated a number of concepts to take stock of the
social reality that he confronted, and/or reformulated
existing concepts by critically engaging with the body of
scholarship available to him. With regard to the
conception of the political, he advanced a
comprehensive and consistent design of what it means
to live as a public and how best to do so in a setting very
different from the West.
There is much in Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar’s writings
and social practices to consider him a philosopher in the
traditional sense. His association with certain philosophers such as John Dewey is well known and in his later years,
he closely followed the teachings of the Buddha and philosophical schools that claimed to be inheritors of Buddha’s
teachings. He was familiar with the debates around socialism,
particularly revolving around the critique of capitalism that
informed the Fabian school. He followed the works of the
Bri tish idealists very closely, including their interface with
German philosophy, and classical Greek thought. He demonstrates critical readings of certain philosophical texts of
India—the major Upanishads and the six systems of philosophy,1
particularly Samkhya and Badarayana’s Uttara Mimansha. He
wrote a small treatise on the Bhagavad Gita. Among his
contempo raries, he closely followed the work of M K Gandhi,2
Sakhya Buddhism (wrote an introduction to the second edition
of Narasu’s What Is Buddhism), the Theosophical School, and
strands of Buddhist thought in Ceylon and Burma. Further, his
work is replete with familiarity with the major currents of European enlightenment thought.
His philosophical interest revolved around (i) metaphysical
questions such as the nature of the self and being human; relationship of the self with the other; nature and consciousness;
causality; human telos; human action and its consequences,
etc; (ii) epistemological questions such as modes of and
approaches to knowledge; the problem of subject and object;
intersubjectivity and communication; truth, interpretation and
social practices; the nature of scientifi c method; and (iii) ethical
questions, particularly the relationship between morality and
regimes of rights on the one hand, and societal values and
human freedom on the other. Certain concerns of political philosophy such as justice, liberty, equality, community, democracy,
authority, legitimacy and recognition were his lifelong pursuits.
While he approached and formulated the above-mentioned
metaphysical, epistemic and moral questions in his own distinct
way, the focus of this paper is limited to highlighting certain
central concerns of his political philosophy.
Political Philosophy
The term political philosophy has no single connotation;
although we do not call everyone who comments on public life
a political philosopher. We think that Plato was a political philosopher and in recent years, John Rawls. In modern-day
India, some of the thinkers who came closest to being political
philosophers were M K Gandhi (Parekh 1989; Parel 2006),
Aurobindo Ghose (Singh 2014), Rabindranath Tagore in his
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work “Nationalism” (Tagore 1917: 1996) and The Religion of Man
(Tagore 1931: 1996), and Allama Iqbal in The Reconstru ction of
Religious Thought in Islam (Iqbal 1930: 2003). Gandhi advanced a foundational critique of modernity and proposed a
distinct conception of freedom as swaraj. Aurobindo Ghosh
attempted to reconnect man to his inner self as well as to a
distinct conception of nation and the cosmos. Tagore closely
associated nationalism with the inexorable march of positivist
modernity and saw in it a threat to our sense of belonging, humanity and cross-fertilisation of cultures. Iqbal critiqued
Western modernity for its one-sidedness and saw in Islam the
possibility of recasting modernity on new foundations.
Political philosophers consider the basic categories or concepts around which we envisage our public life, relate them to
one another, and advance arguments defending/refuting a
concept(s) on one hand and its relation to other concepts on
the other. The evidence for the arguments might be drawn
from the mundane, empirical and philosophical stances that
encompass a concept. An exercise of this kind lends itself to
scrutiny and contestation of the existing positions on an issue,
including the modes and processes of undertaking such an
exercise. Reasoning of this kind may suggest the desirable and
the feasible, or the signifi cant and commendable in public life
and policy as well as the preconditions and processes for their
realisation. It is important to point out that a robust public life
can contribute much for the thriving of political philosophy,
although wherever public life thrives there need not necessarily be an engaged political philosophy. In the latter case, public
life might be held together through other ways such as customs, authority or power. Political philosophy, of course,
draws attention to such realities as the nature of public power,
its extent and limitations, modes of its constitution, relation
between the rulers and the ruled on one hand and among the
rulers themselves on the other, the entitlements of citizens
and persons, and what would be a good life to live in common.
Specifi cally, an exercise in political philosophy may draw
our attention to an aspect of public life which we may have
been relatively inattentive to and build its interconnections to
the basic units constituting our political understanding. Antonio Gramsci, the Italian Marxist philosopher, for instance,
draws attention to the concept of civil society or hegemony,
which was not hitherto central in socialist political discourse,
with profound implications for our understanding of the state,
power and political legitimacy (Gramsci 2009: 210–76); or for
that matter, John Rawls draws attention to the limitations of
utilitarianism and why the pursuit of net aggregate satisfactions of the members of a political community is morally
indefensible (Rawls 1972: 22–33 and 184–90). Political philosophy may also propose concepts which throw light on a facet of political reality in very different ways than we are hitherto accustomed to see. Sometimes, it may dwell on commonsense and suggest which elements of it are defensible
and reasons for the same. At times, political philosophy
might just reconstruct an argument or revisit a concept
because the existing versions are simply inadequate. Exertions of this kind involve reordering priorities in the relation
among concepts such as swaraj, justice, freedom, etc, and
advancing reasons for the same.
In recent years, several political philosophers have raised
doubts concerning the universality of political philosophy.
While scholars from the non-Christian world have charged
political philosophy for being close to the Judeo-Christian
frame, others have seen it as upholding an “imperialism of
categories.” Scholars from the global South and postcolonial
societies have rallied together to explore an alternative/
different conception of the political which can speak closely to
the experiences or the cultural repertoire of the people of
these societies.
Ambedkar’s Political Queries
In this paper, I wish to suggest that Ambedkar either formulated or revisited many a concept and relations across them,
with regard to the conception of the political that advances a
relatively comprehensive and consistent design of what it
means to live as a public, and how best to do so in a setting
very different from the West. The questions that he asked
were: What does it mean to be human and a citizen? How does
one live a tradition? If the modern public is an autonomous
sphere made of free and equal members, how to ensure its continuity over time and inter-generationally? Is there a place for
religion in our public life and if so, what is the nature of such
religion? What is the basis of social cooperation in societies
where there are multiple forms and levels of inequalities
founded not merely on exploitation but complex modes of
oppression? How can diversities founded on distinct conceptions of ultimate ideals and refl ected in ways of life as well as
specifi c institutions cohabit a shared public? How do we engage with a suffi ciently large group which makes a claim to
pursue its distinct ways and conceptions of life? What is the
role and limits of power? Some of the central concepts of the
political such as power, representation, legitimacy, citizen,
demo cracy, freedom, equality, rights and justice are deeply
bound with these questions. While all political philosophers
ask these questions or at least some of them, they also ask
them in specifi c philosophical and social contexts. Ambedkar
did the same. His philosophical context was the one inaugurated by the enlightenment and his social context was the
Indian society in its colonial encounter and postcolonial travails. Much of the attention hitherto has been confi ned to the
context, such as existence of untouchability, decolonisation or
plurality of religious belonging, rather than the central political philosophical issues that Ambedkar raised. Often the limited attention extended to Ambedkar as the icon of a social
group does not invite attention to the conceptual frame that
justifi es and orders his concerns on a scale of priority.
There are some methodological problems that we need to
attend to while regarding Ambedkar as a political philosopher: He is caught in far too many concerns that a political
philosopher would not be generally involved in. Often his
modes of presentation, disputation and argumentation are not
philosophical but sociological, legal, moral, public policy-driven and even rhetorical. Further, in the national movement in
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India several political philosophical questions, such as freedom,
human equality and representation, became issues of interrogation on a day-to-day basis making it diffi cult to distinguish
his contribution from those of others. At the same time, it is
important to emphasise that while Ambedkar did not engage
in a systematic pursuit of political philosophy his writings and
practices were informed by it. The concepts that he employed
and the relations that he proposed across them demonstrated
a remarkable consistency and coherence. Further, while he
shared many ideas in common with the anti- colonial thinkers,
there is much that distinguishes him from others.
While within the scope of this paper I cannot dwell on an
analytical scrutiny of all the themes and concepts that he
engaged in, I will deliberate only on two issues: (i) provide an
outline of the major concepts that he proposed, and (ii) test
the mode of his argumentation by dwelling on an aspect of his
theory of social justice.
Central Concepts
Critical review of texts and historiography: Like many other
Dalit–Bahujan thinkers, such as Jotirao Phule and Iyothee
Thass before him, Ambedkar thought that it is important to
reopen the question of interpreting texts and approaches to
history. Texts and historiography too are sites of reproduction
and contestation of power relations as other domains of social
life are. Many of the hallowed texts were replete with selective
deployment of evidence, displacement, silence, contradictions,
exaggeration, interpolations and heteronomy. They could subserve partisan ends. In spite of such fl aws they confi dently
engaged with cause–effect relations and assumed normative
stances. Often the authority of such texts was seldom challenged. He thought that many a time uncritical reading of such
texts and their endorsement upheld existing social relations,
sustained dominance, and denied people refl ective probings
into such texts. While this is generally true, in the Indian context, texts have been very effi caciously employed to sustain a
ranked social order and uphold the principle of graded inequality.
Further, the injunctions with regard to reading and study explicitly excluded large sections of people from any access to
the texts, depriving them even of the possibility of participating in public reason.3
At the same time, even hallo wed texts
contained accounts and reasoning that could be deeply subversive.4 Besides there are texts and traditions such as those of
Buddhism, which not merely expose the sanctity and truth of
dominant texts and traditions but propose alternatives to them
as well. A critical reading of tika and interpretative engagement with vyakhyana texts and traditions was central to
Ambedkar’s political perspective.5
He rejected, in no uncertain
terms, a positivist rendering of texts.
Human equality: For Ambedkar, human equality is an overriding principle and his writings advance some of the most
complex arguments in defence of this principle: The ethical
norm of human equality makes place for worth rather than
birth; does not assign people to fi xed slots in advance; enables
struggle against dominance, and advances a level-playing fi eld
to all against social prejudices (Rodrigues 2005). Ontologically,
all human beings, irrespective of race, gender and culture,
share certain foundational attributes in common—feelings
and sentiments, love and compassion, reason and refl ection,
solidarity and bonding, and assuming responsibility for their
actions—although domination and social codes may tie them
down to modes of action that are subservient and acceptable
to a social order. Interestingly, none of these arguments and
assumptions that he makes, appeal to any divine element as
foundational to the human. They all appeal to a set of lexically
prior values and assumptions grounded, as far as Ambedkar
was concerned, in reason. The signifi cance of equality justifi es
certain modes of political action: struggle against untouchability, the caste system, colonialism and class domination, and
for recognition, dignity and culture. Equality, therefore, is not
a unilinear pursuit but an overladen consideration and is clearly
tilted towards the worst-off. It is also an encompassing value:
the majority are not justifi ed in pursuing a course of action in
the name of equality that subjects the rest to unequal consideration. Every consideration extended to people has to justify
itself against the benchmark of equality. Ambedkar is very
critical of liberal democracy for its inability to institute equality in any meaningful sense, and sometimes thinks that the rise
of fascism has much to do with the yawning inequalities in
societies subscribing to this political perspective (Ambedkar
1990: BAWS, Vol 9, pp 185–88). He fi nds notions such as
equality before law and equality of treatment inadequate to
encompass equality, and suggests that equality means treating
people as equals by factoring in the entire gamut of social
relations they are subject to. He also feels that much of
inequality is scripted by assigning people to stigmatised
groups, and the voices of such groups and their demands are
then made integral to considerations of equality. Natural and
social circumstances can also make the lot of many people
deeply unequal to that of others, in spite of their efforts. Equality as a level playing fi eld cannot leave people to the whims of
such circumstances.
State and democracy: State as an organised power that
claims for itself sovereignty can be envisaged as an instrument
of dominance but also as a collective resolve for the furtherance of a set of objectives. In the latter sense, Ambedkar
thought that the state can be a civilising agency and a resource
to undermine dominance. Since all resolutions could prove
tentative, state as the collective power and resolve of the society need to be in place to ensure that the collective resolve is in
place. It makes Ambedkar inveigh strongly against such propositions as the withering away of the state. The principle that
should guard over the state is democracy. Democracy as a way
of life charts a course independent of the state, redefi ning the
scope and place of the latter. But democracy also contends
against the pervasive presence of power in everyday life and
transforms it into self-regulation. Ambedkar attempted to
reformulate the idea of democracy, by trying to rescue it from
the economistic binary of liberal and social democracy, and
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proposing it as the only defensible mode of public life
appropriate for human dignity and equality. Democracy is not
merely an institutionalised arrangement, which of course it is,
but the only way of life befi tting human fulfi lment. It makes
people reach out to others, and lets others reach out to them,
thereby, bringing collective resources to bear on one’s striving.
As a way of life it invariably demands that we treat people with
respect. Mutual communication and fonts of bonding that are
constantly renewed and revisited form the nerve centres of
any democracy. While democracy has to be institutionalised,
in order to endure, particularly in deeply complex and plural
societies such as India, he saw it as an open-ended system
which defi nes and redefi nes itself in the indefi nite future
(Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, pp 57–77 and 94–96).
Need for religion: How does one sustain a social order made
of equal and free citizens who elect themselves as a people
continuously? What is it that makes them bond together?
Rights and constitutional morality are important but in spite
of them confl icts might erupt, and they may not provide bonds
of solidarity in cases of pervasive social control, or social power
concentrated in a few hands. Therefore, a people need to
acknowledge themselves as welded together almost in a permanent sense and feel a sense of common belonging, although
nothing prevents them from revisiting those bonds afresh. For
Ambedkar, the name of such a permanent substratum is religion. He, therefore, affi rmed strongly the “necessity for a religion” and quoted Edmund Burke, to say, “True religion is the
foundation of society, the basis on which all true civil government rests, and both their sanction” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS,
Vol 1, p 76). He rejected the liberal idea that religion is a private
affair, but saw it as the anchor that holds a society together. He
felt that religious ideals, in general, have a hold on mankind,
irrespective of an earthly gain, that secular ideas never have
(Ambedkar 1987: “Philosophy of Hinduism,” BAWS, 1987, Vol 3,
p 23). It never fails to work so long as there is faith in that ideal. To ignore religion is to ignore “a live wire” (Ambedkar 1987:
“Philosophy of Hinduism,” BAWS, 1987, Vol 3, p 23). At the
same time he distinguished between “true religion” and a
false one. The former is based on “principles” while the latter
appeals to rules and rituals. The former is centred on society
and appeals to morality, while the latter is centred on the
individual and makes morality an instrument of one’s purpose
(Ambedkar 1982: “Annihilation of Caste,” BAWS, Vol 1, p 47;
Ambedkar 1987: “Philosophy of Hinduism,” BAWS, Vol 3,
pp 67–71). A true religion cannot come in the way of man’s
search for himself, dwarfi ng him against a transcendental
benchmark (Ambedkar 2003: “Buddha and the Future of His
Religion,” BAWS, Vol 17, part two, pp 97–108). At the same
time, a true religion cultivates responsibility for one’s actions.
He thought that
A religious act may not be a correct act but must at least be a responsible act. To permit of this responsibility, religion must mainly be a
matter of principles only. It cannot be a matter of rules. The moment it
degenerates into rules it ceases to be religion as it kills responsibility
which is the essence of a truly religious act. (Ambedkar 1982: “Annihilation of Caste,” BAWS, Vol 1, p 75)
While Ambedkar generally used the case of Brahminical
Hinduism to highlight what a true religion should not be, his
understanding on this issue was not merely limited to it. For
him, a true religion cannot be a set of fi xed beliefs laid down
for all times but that which remains open for contestation and
renewal. Eventually, he came around to suggest that only
Buddhism or more correctly, a reformed version of the same
measures up to the criterion of being a true religion.
Cultural question and social relations: Ambedkar did not
endorse a position that there are two opposed cultures pitted
against each other in India or elsewhere, although culture is
widely employed as a mode of dominance and to sustain
servility of large masses. Cultures are not seamless entities out
there, but ways of life, beliefs, values and institutions that
need to be revisited by foregrounding the human and the principles of equality, liberty, democracy and morality. Cultures,
like nations, are available for interrogation and are subject to
“daily plebiscite” and any attempt to arrest them or lay down
its contours could beget institutionalisation of dominance.
Therefore, the domain of culture is caught in a distinct order
of struggle. Ambedkar thought that power is dispersed across
the entire ensemble of social relations. It is manifest in everyday relations either in the way of directing a course of action
or simply in the complex structures of everyday life, division of
labour, access to resources and opportunities, linguistic usages, signs and symbols. “Religion, social status and property are
all sources of power and authority” (Ambedkar 1982: “Annihilation of Caste,” BAWS, Vol 1, p 45). In the context of India,
caste, for instance, is not merely a matter of status but more
importantly, power. Given the differences in social relations
across societies, particularly regulative norms and modes of
social control, the diffusion of power assumes different forms
in them. Any attempt to radically transform power relations
has to grapple not merely with the diffusion of power across
the different levels of society but has to take the specifi c context of its articulation into account.
The self and human agency: Implicit in all this is a conception of self, which in many ways is new to modern political
philosophising, woven around the concept of self as subject.
Ambedkar, taking a cue from Dewey initially and Buddha later,
denied any essentialised conception of the self. We constitute
ourselves, in a way, in and through the social world that we
inhabit, through all the stimulations that we are exposed to
and responding to them in turn. A society can enhance or mar
the prospects of human realisation. It can condemn people to
the netherworld of untouchability or slavery, or open up the
prospects of human fulfi lment by letting people access its
resources as equals and extending support in this endeavour
through supports. Above all, there is a celebration of human
agency and its transformative potentiality in Ambedkar’s writings.6 While social relations of oppression subdue and even
deny human agency there are familial and community relations, protest traditions such as those inspired by the Buddha,
Kabir or Phule, and even negative sociality that can prove a
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trigger not merely to inspire a person to act but precipitate collective transformative action. In this context, it is important to
recall his advice to Dalit activism—“educate, agitate, organise.”
Mode of Argumentation
Doing philosophy, and particularly political philosophy, involves constructing arguments that could sustain themselves
across all possible attempts to refute them. We can test the way
Ambedkar went about forging his arguments by studying the
way he makes a case for his distinct conception of representation. Instead of analytically dwelling on this idea, I will try to
demonstrate the way he tried to construct an argument with
regard to representation as integral to his theory of social justice.
Inadequacy of virtual representation: Quite early on, in his
statement to the Southborough Committee in 1919, Ambedkar
argued that virtual representation, that is, representation
through a general electorate is inadequate to meet the concerns of the marginalised and the disadvantaged (Ambedkar
1982: BAWS, Vol 1, pp 243–78). In such a mode of representation, the voice of these communities and social groups may be
subdued or even ignored. According to him, the fi rst purpose
of representation is “to transmit the force of individual opinion
and preference into public action” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS,
Vol 1, p 247). When a group or community is denied representation, or denied it in fair measure, then its beliefs and preferences have little bearing in shaping public policy. In India, the
untouchables formed such a group. There was an impassable
barrier between the touchables and untouchables, and between them there were “no shared bonds of aims, beliefs, aspirations, knowledge and common understanding” (Ambedkar
1982: BAWS, Vol 1, p 255). Therefore, virtual representation can
present the case of the untouchables very little. Besides the
disadvantaged, and among them particularly the untouchables, have much to gain or lose depending on the kind and extent of representation available to them. The untouchables, for
instance, may not have “large property to protect from confi scation. But they have their very person confi scated” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, p 255). Representation can help them to
seek rights and resources to pursue their aims and objectives.
Fair representation for new associations: The idea of fair
representation is closely bound up with a concrete context and
the social relations in which it is embedded. It is the context
which specifi es the appropriate modes and extent of representation. There are no ideal-typical models holding good everywhere. The progress of franchise in any society does not lay
down a model for other societies to follow. Britain in this
regard, Ambedkar felt, cannot be a model for India. There is no
guarantee that a limited franchise produces a better government either. Narrow franchise aimed at elite representation
may bolster the importance of some communities to the detriment of others (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 2, p 262). Unlike
generally believed, communal representation need not necessarily harden social divisions: it could be a way of dissolving
them by bringing together “men from diverse castes who
would not otherwise mix together in the legislative council”
(Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, p 266) and by creating conditions to beget new forms of associated life. Such associations
can threaten “fossilised” ways of life and help dissolve “set
attitudes” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, p 266).
Adequate representation for minorities: He argued that a
minority7
should fi nd not numerical but adequate representation. But it should not be so preponderant as to dictate terms to
the majority. In the context of the Simon Commission and his
plea for joint electorate with reservation for Scheduled Castes,
Ambedkar argued that minority representation should be of
such a magnitude “as would make it worth the while of many a
party from the majority to seek an alliance with the minority. If
the party is compelled to seek an alliance with a minority, the
minority is undoubtedly in a position to dictate. If it is drawn
for the alliance, then it is adequately represented” (Ambedkar
1982: BAWS, Vol 2, p 362). While giving due consideration to
the educational and economic status of minorities, he felt that
the actual fi gure “be the ratio of its population to the total seats
multiplied by some factor which is greater than one and less
than two” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 2, p 363). The lower is the
standing of the community, the greater should be its electoral
advantage over the rest. If a minority is not protected with
“weightage” and adequacy, it will be entirely submerged.
Weightage, he felt, could be determined by employing fourfold
criteria: numbers, social standing, education and economic
strength. While keeping the demographic composition in view,
those who are economically and socially backward with low
educational accomplishments deserve additional consideration.
Separate electorate for untouchables: For Ambedkar, joint
electorate or separate electorate8 as modes of representation
are not a matter of principle but mechanisms to achieve certain ends. Separate electorates guarantee that a representative
enjoys the confi dence of the electorate who are his special concern. It is justifi ed in the context when social identities closed
on themselves hold on to their particular interests with few
prospects of forging stable common interests. If there is homogeneity of interests, then joint electorates with reservation for
affected groups seems to be, in his opinion, a better option
(Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, p 374).9 Far from the argument
that separate electorate for untouchables, whom he clearly recognised as the bearers of a set of particular interests, will lead
to fi ssures within Hinduism, Ambedkar felt, “social considerations and not religious affi liation is the basis of the acceptance
of the electorate.”10 He considered the argument that separate
electorates will reinforce anti-national spirit baseless, as every
group that demands separate electorate was not anti-national.
The demand need not necessarily have religious or communal
considerations. However, a majo rity, according to him, cannot
have separate electorate as it would be a permanent domination of the majority over the minorities. When political units
are primarily communal, majority-rule based on a community
is unjustifi able as it could perpetuate its rule confi ning other
communities to its tutelage.
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Social inclusion and public presence: Ambedkar’s second argument for preferential representation is based on social inclusion and the signifi cance of public presence. Preferential treatment provides an opportunity to persons and groups who have
been hitherto denied social presence and are excluded, to be
reckoned in public life. Presence in public life affords an
opportunity to actively participate “in the process of government” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, p 247) and other walks of
life. Besides, participation in associated life begets social bonds
and stakes. This makes a big difference in certain societies such
as India where, he felt, there were no shared bonds of aims,
beliefs, aspirations, knowledge and common understanding
and therefore, little “endosmosis” across social groups. As a
consequence, “given two candidates belonging to different groups
but purporting to represent the same interest, the voters will
mark their votes on the person belonging to the same community”
(Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, 251) or someone they regard as
their “man” or “woman.” It may result in an entire group or
community from being counted out. He felt, untouchable communities suffered the baneful effects of such exclusion the most.
Personal representation: Representation of opinions and
preferences alone is not an adequate measure for democracy.
It requires personal representation as well. The latter involves
“representation of opinions as well as representation of persons.” “A government for the people, but not by the people, is
sure to educate some into masters and others into subjects;
because it is by refl ex effects of association that one can feel
and measure the growth of personality” (Ambedkar 1982:
BAWS, Vol 1, p 251). It requires that adequate representatives
are drawn from the concerned groups. Territorial representation fails to provide adequate and effective representation to
minority groups. Such a situation gets further exasperated if
the majority and minorities in that area are relatively stable
made of specifi c social, religious and ethnic cleavages and
looked down upon by the majority.
Necessity of self-representation: Ambedkar also felt that there
were some constituencies such as untouchables who could be
represented by representatives from those groups and communities only (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 1, p 256). Illustrating the
case with regard to the untouchables, he felt that others did not
understand their situation of dehumanisation, subjugation,
denial of respect which one man owes to another as a human
being and the denial of rights of citizenship that ensues from
such a disposition. In such ins tances, representatives should
not merely hail from the concerned group or community but be
able to effectively highlight its concerns, monitor them across
contending interests and pursue their implementation. Further, such representation should be “in such numbers as will
constitute a force suffi cient to claim redress.” But such cases of
exclusive representation, he felt, should be rare and minimum,
and need to be given up once inclusive considerations prevail.
Healthy and confi dent self: Ambedkar’s third argument for
appropriate representation appeals to the requisites of constituting a human self, sure of itself: opportunities for social interaction afforded through presence are indispensible for the
constitution of a healthy and confi dent self. In interaction with
others, a person becomes who he or she is. Valued or degraded
understanding of oneself has to do with one’s location in such
interactions to a great extent. “What one is as a person is what
one is as associated with others” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS,
Vol 2, p 54). Social exclusion can greatly impair the growth of
the human person and communities as has been the case with
untouchables in India. Untouchables have been denied their
very personhood and consequently the basis of their treatment
as equals. They “have their very persona confi scated. The
Uttar Pradesh—Vortex of Change
December 31, 2016
Uttar Pradesh, circa 2017 – Ravi Srivastava
Deciphering Growth and Development: Past and Present – Ravi Srivastava, Rahul Ranjan
Third Democratic Upsurge in Uttar Pradesh – A K Verma
RSS, BJP and Communal Polarisation in Uttar Pradesh Polls – Radhika Ramaseshan
Understanding the Potentialities: Ethnographic Study of Rural Dalit Women Leaders – Archana Singh
The Weavers of Banaras – Nita Kumar
The Time of Youth: Joblessness, Politics and Neo-religiosity in Uttar Pradesh – Satendra Kumar
Facts and Fiction about How Muslims Vote in India: Evidence from Uttar Pradesh – Rahul Verma, Pranav Gupta
Identity Equations and Electoral Politics: Investigating Political Economy of Land, Employment and Education – Prashant K Trivedi, Surinder Kumar,
Srinivas Goli, Fahimuddin
The Demand for Division of Uttar Pradesh and Its Implications – Ajit Kumar Singh
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email: circulation@epw.in
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Economic & Political Weekly EPW APRIL 15, 2017 vol liI no 15 107
socio-religious disabilities have dehumanised the untouchables
and their interests at stake are, therefore, the interests of
humanity.” What they have been deprived of is something basic that is “incomparably of greater interest than interests of
property” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 2, p 54). Social interactions treat untouchables as despicable and others try to construct superior selves of themselves on that basis. The former,
he says, are like “Plato’s slaves” who “accept from another the
purposes which control their conduct.” They are denied their
ability to make their choices and consequently, their agency.
They are socialised “never to complain” or expect “improve ment
in their lot” or to expect “common respect which one man
owes to another” (Ambedkar 1982: BAWS, Vol 2, p 54). The
consequence of social dispositions as expressed in untouchability is to deprive its victims from claiming the right of citizenship embodying such claims as personal liberty, equality
before laws, liberty of conscience, freedom of opinion and
speech, right of assembly, right of representation in country’s
government and right to hold offi ce.
Conclusions
I have tried to demonstrate in this paper how Ambedkar
went about forging concepts, and setting up arguments with
regard to public life. Taken together, these concepts propose
a distinct ordering of political life that at the same time
responds to the cultural context of one’s belonging. Unlike
the popular perception, Ambedkar does not subscribe to a
disembodied modernity11 but proposes a critical interpretative method to read culture and traditions. He argues for a
critical retrieval of culture rather than commit oneself to a
partisan other. Interactive social relations are the agency that
makes us the human that we are, and they set the preconditions for what we can be. The human is humanly engendered
rather than by a superhuman being. Invariably, democracy is
the essential condition for the fullest development of the
human self in such contexts. Democracy demands that equal
con sideration be extended to everyone and afford them equal
opportunity to participate in public affairs. Extending equal
consideration may require meting out unequal treatment to
people and the latter has to take the concrete context into
account. Ambedkar sees religion as the anchor for such a
pursuit, but in the process redefi nes religion truly as thisworldly affair. The test of a true religion is its capacity to
enable human self-realisation. Emancipation is a this-worldly
affair and the responsibility for the same lies on every man
and woman.
Notes
1 The six systems of philosophy are Mimansa,
Vedanta, Samkhya, Yoga, Vaisesika and Nyaya.
All of them accept the primacy of the Vedas
unlike the Sramanik (Buddhist, Jain, etc) and
Lokayata modes of thought.
2 Ambedkar’s major work What Congress and
Gandhi Have Done to the Untouchables is one of
the best illustrations of his close monitoring of
the life and work of M K Gandhi (Ambedkar
1948).
3 This theme runs through the writings of
Ambedkar throughout (see, “The Annihilation
of Caste,” BAWS, Vol 1, pp 23–99; “Philosophy
of Hinduism,” BAWS, Vol 3, pp 3–94; and The
Buddha and His Dhamma, BAWS, Vol 11, 1992).
Supportive evidence can be found in secondary
literature (Queen 1994 and Rodrigues 1993).
4 Ambedkar’s work on the Shudras is an excellent
illustration for reading a subversive lineage in
the hallowed tradition. See Who Were the
Shudras? How They Came to Be the Fourth
Varna in the Indo–Aryan Society (BAWS, Vol 7,
1990, pp 1–238). Similarly, the contest between
Vashista, the high-priest of the Brahmin establishment, and Vishwamitra, the Kshatriya,
who strove to be a high priest through rigorous
tapasya, recurs in many of his writings.
5 Kapil Kapoor’s Text and Interpretation: The
Indian Tradition provides a useful, although
contested, outline in this regard. There are
scholars who have located Ambedkar in this
interpretative tradition (Gokhale 2008).
6 One of his refl ective stances in this regard goes
as follows: “If time, nature, necessity and so
on, be the sole cause of the occurrence of an
event, then who are we? Is man merely a puppet in the hands of time, nature, chance, Gods,
fate, necessity? What is the use of man’s existence, if he is not free?” (Rathore and Verma
2011: 133)
7 Ambedkar considered Dalits as a minority.
Anupama Rao (2010) has highlighted this issue
forcefully.
8 This distinction evoked much controversy in
the Indian national struggle, particularly
around the conjuncture of the Poona Pact. For
the Poona Pact, see Pyarelal (1958); and Ravindra Kumar (1987).
9 Ambedkar, however, favoured joint electorate
only during certain phases—in his deputation
before the Simon Commission; during the Poona
Pact and in its immediate aftermath; and
during the phase of constitution-making for
free India. At other times, he demanded separate electorate in an emphatic way. In the
former instances, he saw greater openness
between communities with a disposition to
reach out to others.
10 For Ambedkar, a policy measure is justifi ed by
its social bearing and not religious implications.
11 This is one such representative comment:
“Ambedkar was an unalloyed modernist. He
believed in science, history, rationality and
above all, in the modern state for the actualisation of human reason” (Chatterjee 2006: 77).
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