His famous mantra, "Soham" (I am He), encapsulates this. The realization that you are not a separate entity groveling before a distant deity, but a spark of the divine itself, is the highest form of common sense.
Paramhansa Soham Swami (1858–1918), famously known as the "Tiger Swami" before his renunciation, remains one of the most provocative figures in modern Indian philosophy. His book, (also published under the title Common Sense, Or Ekatma Vignan ), serves as a bold intersection of Advaita Vedanta and rationalism. Unlike many spiritual texts that demand blind faith, this work challenges readers to use their inherent logical faculty to dismantle superstition and realize the non-dual nature of the Self. The Author: From Tiger Tamer to Sage Common Sense Soham Swami Book
: He was famously known as "Professor Banerjee" and was the first Indian tiger tamer, renowned for wrestling wild tigers with his bare hands. His famous mantra, "Soham" (I am He), encapsulates this
At the time of its publication, society was rife with ritualistic practices, caste discrimination, and irrational fears. Soham Swami used his book as a scalpel to dissect these malpractices. He posited that God is not a monarch sitting on a cloud demanding flattery, but a principle of Truth and Consciousness. His book, (also published under the title Common