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Ethics, the 
          dictionary defines, is the discipline dealing with what is good and 
          bad and with moral duty and obligation. It adds: "ethics has been 
          called the science of the ideal of human character." The second 
          definition reads: "The principles of conduct governing an individual 
          or group."  
           
          A deeper study takes us to the gigantic tree of philosophy and there 
          we see it as a branch of normative science as distinguished from the 
          formal sciences. History of thought in the so-called Western 
          civilization begins with Greece. So the earliest signs of Ethics begin 
          in the 5th century BCE. Since then, we have the Greek schools of 
          Ethics, early Christian Ethics, Ethics after the Reformation, Ethics 
          since Darwinism, and the recent trend, since Bertrand Russell, is that 
          Ethics should mean complete participation in the life of society with 
          the freedom to express one's nature.  
           
          As to what is good and what is bad, each school of ethics has its own 
          definition, from cynicism to existentialism. And we have lists of 
          prescriptions and proscriptions, do's and don'ts, prepared by each 
          school. From the Doctrines of Pythagoras through the Bible and the 
          Qur'an to the published writings of George Edward Moore, we have books 
          that run into several hundred pages each. 
           
          And it has been these prescriptions and proscriptions of Ethics that 
          have shaped and reshaped the culture/s the Western civilization 
          cultivates. 
           
          Keeping in view the above process over 2500 years, now we turn to 
          Zoroaster, or to pronounce his name in his language, Zarathushtra, to 
          see if he had anything that would fit with the variety in this wide 
          field. He precedes the date. He lived 3770 years ago. He is not from 
          the West. He lived his life in eastern Iran. What did he say and how 
          much did he say? He lived before the age of writing. Are his sayings 
          retold by his disciples or narrated as a part of his life story by a 
          third party well after him, and then later put in writing?  
           
          That brings us to the Indo-Europeans, particularly the Indo-Iranians. 
          They had their way of preserving their literary compositions: Poetry, 
          a precise practice of preservation. A song becomes popular, is 
          precisely sung in the words and tune of the composer, and lives as 
          long as its singers live and like it. No paraphrasing, adulteration, 
          no third party narration, only the very words of the poet. 
           
          Zoroaster, like his contemporary Rig Vedic rishis, composed his 
          songs that have survived in his very words to this day. The same holds 
          true about volumes and volumes of Indo-Iranian poetic literature. They 
          are the proof of the capacity of human memory. We had a Professor of 
          Persian Literature in the Tehran University who had over 70,000 
          couplets in his memory. One thousand to 20,000 couplets are a common 
          thing in the memories of literature teachers in the Indo-Iranian 
          countries. 
           
          How many couplets did Zarathushtra compose to preserve his Doctrine? 
          Only 241 stanzas that make 17 songs! They are Gatha, meaning "Sublime 
          Songs." Here is the booklet of some 40 pages. Too small to hold a 
          Doctrine! Let us see if our remark is true. 
           
          A quick glance shows that it has 93 answering questions, a masterpiece 
          of poetry that makes the questions provide their own answers and more 
          over, provoke thoughts. The songs define what is good and what is bad, 
          and at the same time speak of the full freedom of will to make the 
          choice. Learning wisdom helps to make the right choice. Ignorance 
          keeps one in dark. Good brings better returns and bad results in bad 
          consequences. Experience makes one grow wiser, a process that helps 
          every individual to ultimately make the right choice. The good choice 
          leads to perfection and perfection knows no defect, decay or death. It 
          means eternity. They explain the establishment of a free democratic 
          way of life by the wise people for the wise people. And the songs 
          guide one to study his/herself, the society, the environment, and the 
          universe to realize, through his/her good mind, the wisdom that 
          creates, regulates, maintains and promotes the Cosmos. That wisdom, a 
          reality, an essence, is the Creator, Maintainer, and Promoter of the 
          Universe. Zarathushtra coins a name for IT. Mazda, which means 
          Super-wisdom and since it is a reality, it is also Ahura, the 
          Essence, the Being. He has two words to describe what we say 'God': 
          Mazda Ahura or Ahura Mazda - The Super-wisdom Essence.  
           
          With Mazda Ahura in mind, the songs become simultaneously loving 
          Prayers to God and kindly Guidance to Mankind. Naturally they have no 
          myth, no magic, no miracle, no legend, and no story to tell. Just a 
          prayerful guidance. 
           
          Zarathushtra uses some twenty abstract terms to prescribe the way of 
          promoting mental and physical faculties of soul to achieve perfection 
          and immortality.  He calls them "the Primal Principles of life."  They 
          are the universal principles of existence, the natural way of living. 
          They, at the same time, make the faculties that have been endowed to 
          mankind. 
           
          Of these asha, precision, has been mentioned more than 150 
          times and merezhdika, compassion, only once. We shall only 
          briefly define those mentioned most in the Gathas: 
           
          Spenta Mainyu, the progressive mentality stands for the 
          creative faculty of God.  It creates, sustains, and promotes the 
          creation.  It leads to perfection and immortality. It makes mankind to 
          be creative, maintainer and promoter of society and the environment. 
           
          Vohu manah, the good mind is the source of all that is good and 
          wise.  It was through his own good mind that Zarathushtra discovered, 
          understood, and reached God.  Good mind leads to refined speech, 
          which, in turn, turns into noble actions.  Zarathushtra's doctrine 
          rests on three pillars--Humata, H\FBkhta, Hvarshta--Good thoughts, Good 
          Words, and Good Deeds.  Good mind helps one to discriminate between 
          good and bad.  It defines the sources of happiness and sorrow.  In 
          fact, it is the bliss some call "heaven."  Two other cognate abstracts 
          are khratu, intellect, and chisti, comprehension, which enhance one's 
          knowledge for better work. 
           
          Asha or arta is the old Indo-Iranian law of "truth, 
          precision, righteousness" that governs the universe-the stars, sun, 
          moon, earth, seasons and all.  It is precision and order in the 
          universe that points to the Creator, Maintainer, and Promoter.  It has 
          been enacted to maintain the creation.  It is the road to perfection.  
          In human society, asha is the right thing, done at the right time and 
          right place, and with the right means to obtain the right result.  
          This promotes a society to perfection.  It ensures justice for all.  
          It safeguards the rights of every member of society.  It provides 
          every individual with what he or she has contributed to society.  Asha 
          in a society sees that neither the society nor any individual exploits 
          any person.  And, above all, asha gives freedom of thought, word and 
          deed to every member. 
           
          Seraosha is the divine voice one gets in tune with after one is 
          fully conversant with good mind and righteousness.  It is the guiding 
          inner self of a person.  It is divine inspiration. 
           
          Athra, fire in the Gathas is mental light, warmth, and energy, 
          three qualities that help one become as creative as one can.  The 
          physical fire, used as the best of altars, represents the mental Athra, 
          a sublime object to observe and mentally to see the light, feel the 
          warmth and enjoy the energy to translate Good Thoughts into Good Words 
          and Good Deeds. 
           
          Ushta is enlightenment that comes through meditation, 
          concentration of mental faculties.  It is the true happiness that 
          radiates happiness to others without any discrimination, social or 
          otherwise. 
           
          Daena is clear conception.  It is "conscience" in an individual 
          and "religion" for a fellowship of individuals who actively join to 
          promote the living world in accordance with the Primal Principles of 
          Existence. 
           
          Good mind, precision and other principles create perfect order.  
          Zarathushtra calls it khshathra.  It means settlement, 
          dwelling, domain, dominion, and sovereignty.  It is the "desired," the 
          "good," and the "chosen" government of the righteous, yet it belongs 
          to God.  It is the "ideal" order on the earth established by human 
          beings who are wise, enlightened, experienced, sincere, and above all 
          devoted to the promotion of the living world. It is mental and 
          material, spiritual and physical democracy. 
           
          Fresho-kereti, continuous refreshing, renewing and 
          modernizing keeps the good order up-to-date, in fact up-to-minute. 
          Progress, progress, progress! A Zoroastrians pledges to modernize the 
          world in his/her daily prayers. 
           
          Aramaiti, serenity and tranquility, thrives under a good 
          progressive order.  A tranquil order promotes health and happiness. 
          Mind and body grow together to evolve into: 
           
          Haurvatat, entirety, perfection.  Evolution to entirety means 
          continuity, and continuity stands for immortality--ameretat.  
          Entirety and immortality make human beings godlike and make them live 
          in eternal bliss, the ultimate goal of the Zarathushtrian doctrine. 
           
          Zarathushtra uses more principles among abstract qualities that could 
          help mankind to make the world an ideal place to live in peace and 
          harmony with every living being, and to achieve the divine eternity 
          ordained by God. 
           
          It is these Primal Principles that make his Ethics. They make a 
          guiding map for the wise to reach the destination. And a map need not 
          run into hundreds of pages of prescriptions and proscription. Forty 
          pocketbook pages of Seventeen Songs suffice to make a good traveler to 
          undertake the journey and reach the destination safe and sound. 
           
          The Seventeen Songs are a map that guides the traveler to reflect. The 
          Zoroastrian Doctrine of Ethics is reflective and not prescriptive. Its 
          seventeen songs provoke one's thinking faculty to think, to ponder, to 
          consider and to decide on the basis of time, place and means. Yes, 
          reflective, renovative and inventive. That makes it ever fresh, ever 
          modern. Prescriptions and proscriptions fall behind and get outdated. 
           
          There arises a question: What is good and what is bad? 
           
          GOOD AND EVIL 
          Because of the sufferings in what appears to be a hostile world of 
          natural disasters and human cruelties, the existence of "evil" has all 
          along posed a perplexed problem.  Intellectuals of all ages and lands 
          have tried to solve it.  Most of them have acknowledged it as a 
          stubborn fact of life.  
           
          People's attitude towards evil range from optimism, pessimism, 
          cynicism to skepticism.  There are those who do not believe in evil 
          and state that it does not exist; those who argue that just as 
          darkness is nothing but the absence of light, evil darkens where good 
          does not shine; those who say that one cannot fight evil and therefore 
          should submit to it; those who want to escape evil and retire from the 
          world by leaving behind all human wishes and desires; and those who 
          acknowledge shortcomings and want to overcome them by facing them.  
          People necessarily do not belong strictly to one of these broad 
          classifications.  Many share a little of each theory and have mixed 
          philosophies, or express different ideas at different times.  
           
          People are divided again on the source of evil.  Those who believe in 
          a strict patriarchal/matriarchal divinity/divinities and see the 
          sufferings as punishments for wrong deeds.  Those who think that just 
          as there are good and bad chiefs and kings, there are good and evil 
          entities, which bring happiness or misery.  Those who believe that the 
          gods have created human beings as their toys and enjoy playing around 
          with them.  Those who believe in a rebel divinity who is causing all 
          the trouble.  Those who are dualists and maintain that both good and 
          evil are primal and co-existing.  Those who see the two as positive 
          and negative poles that meet to create energy and existence.  Those 
          who see the world as imperfect or in its infancy, and that its 
          sufferings are the experiences toward perfection.  All have their 
          logic, philosophy, stories, legends, or myths to elaborate.  Many 
          believe that evil exists in the universe and many confine it, some in 
          vague terms, to the human world.  
           
          Zarathushtra observes the universe as a good creation of God and sees 
          no evil in it.  It is a cosmos -- an orderly harmonious system.  
          However, there are indications that he sees the universe in its 
          infancy, complete in every form but growing to perfection and 
          immortality.  
           
          As regards good and evil, he confines both to human mind, not outside, 
          not in the cosmos.  Man thinks and thinks constantly.  His thoughts 
          are good or bad, beneficial or harmful.  When translated in speech or 
          action, they yield the result -- good or bad.  
           
          The two represent the duality only and only in the human mind and 
          within the human society.  The dualism in the Gathas is pure ethical 
          in nature.  
           
          The criterion for "better" or "more progressive" thought, word, and 
          deed is the beneficial effect on the human society in particular and 
          the world in general.  If not, it is "bad" or "retarding." 
           
          THE HUMAN SOCIETY  
          The Gathic dualism lies only in "asha," "right, precision, 
          righteousness" and "druj," "harmful, wrong".  The human world is 
          divided into two camps: the righteous, truthful and progressive, and 
          the wrongful, retarding and destructive.  The Gathas advocate a free, 
          peaceful, prudent, and progressive society, both in spirit and 
          matter.  Spirituality makes people realize the divine in creation, and 
          conceive the force and order -- the wisdom -- behind it.  It makes 
          them conceive God.  It promotes them to commune with God, and be 
          godlike.  Materiality makes people understand their social environment 
          and the living world.  It teaches them the philosophy of living and 
          letting others live, and of living in harmony with nature.  
           
          Only responsible men and women make the Gathic society.  Carefree and 
          parasitic people have no place in it.  A person, be he or she wise, 
          naive, strong, or weak, has his or her responsibilities in the 
          society.  Zarathushtra stands for freedom of thought, word and deed, 
          and stands against suppression and exploitation.  He condemns all 
          "wrong done by evil power, deeds, words, conception, and mind."  He 
          repeatedly reminds people that good has a good reward, and bad has a 
          bad consequence.  And to be good is to be selflessly good.  
           
          In a true Zarathushtrian society, all are free to work for a better 
          world without harming others.  Every person receives in reward what 
          one does in renovating human life.  Every task is undertaken by fully 
          qualified persons; the better the qualifications, the higher the 
          position.  Society is led by the very wise.  Men and women are equal 
          and their superiority lies in their wisdom and righteousness.  Race, 
          color, class, and nationalism have no place in it. The smallest unit 
          in the society is the family, then the community, next the country, 
          the fellowship, and last the world. The Zoroastrian society is global. 
           
          HEAVEN AND HELL 
          Zarathushtra speaks very little about a world from which no one 
          has returned to tell us the tale.  He never indulges in speculations.  
          He does not thrive on speculations, but on conclusions from what one 
          discovers and understands.  He mentions certain terms, which give one 
          an idea of a higher and sublimer spiritual life.  They are the "House 
          of Song," "House of Good Mind," and the "Eternal Best Existence of 
          Good Mind."  Only once, he uses the term "future existence."  It is 
          where one lives with God.  The language is so that one understands 
          that such a sublime state is both mental and physical in this world, 
          but only mental when the soul attains its perfection and immortality.
           
           
          But if a person lives a life of "harmful, wrong" in a human society, 
          promotes an evil and deceitful government, sows seeds of discord among 
          people, disregards social rules and regulations, and takes pleasure in 
          harming the living world, he or she suffers the consequences of his or 
          her actions and teachings, and remains in the "House of Wrong."  He 
          singles out bad rulers and evil priests as the foremost among such 
          persons.  Another term for this is the "House of the Worst Mind."  The 
          soul of a wrongful person returns from the "sorting bridge" back into 
          the world of deceit.  This bridge separates the righteous from the 
          wrongful.  The righteous progress but the wrongful remain in the world 
          to perfect themselves.  Does this mean reincarnation or that the soul 
          lingers on without a physical body until it is perfected?  Perhaps, 
          but only a thought provoking hint without any speculations.  
           
          This does not mean that there is no salvation for the wrongful.  Their 
          souls suffer the consequences of their words and deeds until they 
          realize the divine truth and choose to turn righteous, and work for 
          their own perfection and immortality.  This life is but a refinery in 
          which the souls are refined to perfection.  To sum up, the pristine 
          doctrine of Zarathushtra's "heaven and hell" is more of a mental bliss 
          and torment than the two physical places reserved for ultimate sensual 
          enjoyment or suffering.  
           
          The resurrection with all its details of how the dead would rise for 
          the final judgment is again absent in the Gathas.  The consequences of 
          people's words and deeds in this world and the progress toward 
          perfection and immortality are a continuous process.  There are no 
          pauses, no waiting. 
           
          God's creation moves forward and we, souls and bodies, are a part of 
          it. 
           
          The First Missionary Religion: 
          Zarathushtra is the foremost in founding a universal religion. He 
          taught to learn, consider and choose his Divine Doctrine first to 
          practice and then teach and preach to others - all with a "sweet 
          tongue" and with logic. He trained the first missionaries. Yet we have 
          no reports at all of force, push, dictation, insistence, persuasion 
          and temptation. The teaching was free and the listening free. "Hear 
          the best with your ears, ponder over it with your bright mind and 
          then, each of you, man and woman, decide for yourself to choose or 
          not" was the watchword. 
           
          Through the history of one thousand years of Zoroastrian supremacy, we 
          have not a single report of any religious war. No religious war with 
          the Roman Empire and no religious war with the Christian Byzantine 
          Empire. Religious wars between nations of different religions are only 
          1500 years old. 
           
          THE CULTURE: 
          It is with these guiding ethics that the Zoroastrian Doctrine 
          cultivated a culture, a culture that was based on knowledge, order, 
          participation, cooperation, federation, alliance, and devotion. We see 
          it in bloom when Cyrus the Great (550-529 BCE) united the 
          ever-fighting nations of Afro-Eurasia into the first so-called empire. 
          We see the comparatively peaceful occupation of lands with no 
          enslavement and destruction followed. We see the captive nations freed 
          and fully rehabilitated. We see freedom of worship, ownership, 
          settlement, trade, travel, and above all, tolerance. We see 
          transcontinental highways. We see what we know as pony postal service. 
          And we see monetary coins and standard weights that facilitate 
          commerce. 
           
          This brought unprecedented peace and prosperity over a vast area that 
          had been wasted by wars. It brought the nations close to one another 
          so much so that they began exchanging their knowledge and culture. 
          From "a" Armenians to "t" Thracians, in all 26 nations pooled their 
          skills to promote from "a" of architecture to "z" of zoology. And it 
          was during these days, the Achaemenian era of 220 years during which 
          we see knowledge advanced with rapid steps. Science boomed and bloomed 
          forth. We have the Greek philosophers appear and almost disappear with 
          the downfall of the empire at the hand of Alexander of Macedonia. 
           
          The Macedonian occupation did not crush or change the situation. It 
          divided the federation into a number of camps. Yet the urge of unity 
          put an end of the division within a century. But the Zoroastrian unity 
          of globalization was not restored. The world split into the Roman 
          Empire in the west and the Parthian in the east. Parthians as 
          Zoroastrians showed tolerance towards all other nations and religions. 
           
          The Zoroastrian Ethics and Culture should be acknowledged as the 
          jumpstart of the civilization we all enjoy in the East and the West. 
          Let me end by reciting a sentence from our daily prayers:   
          
          "And may we be 
          among those  
          who make this life fresh!  
          You, lords of wisdom,  
          who bring happiness through righteousness,  
          come, let us be single-minded  
          in the realm of inner intellect." 
          
           
          Let the Zoroastrian Ethics and Culture continue to contribute to the 
          harmony among nations and religions! 
                    
          
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