Self Realization (Brahma Jnana): Why Is It Necessary Only for Human Beings?

Among all living beings, the human is perhaps the most dangerous — not because of physical strength, but because of consciousness misused.

Man has forgotten himself.

He has lost awareness of his true nature.
He has abandoned inner peace.
Compassion, love, and divinity within him have faded beneath ambition and ego.
In the name of progress, he performs a silent dance of domination.

He measures oceans, splits the atom, touches distant planets —
yet fails to conquer the unrest within.

No other creature violates its inherent nature.
The lion hunts for hunger, not ideology.
The tree gives shade without discrimination.
Nature functions in harmony with its law.

Only man divides —
by caste, religion, race, wealth, borders, beliefs.
He conquers others and calls it victory.
He imprisons the world in his fist and calls it power.

The root of this fall is not intelligence — it is ego.

The same power of thought that could lead to liberation
has become a weapon of destruction.

This is why Brahma Jnana is necessary.

Brahma Jnana is not about conquering the outer world.
It is about dissolving the inner arrogance.

It reminds man:

You are not the owner.
You are not the controller.
You are not separate.

You are a fragment of the Infinite.
The universe is not your possession —
you are a note within its cosmic symphony.

When this understanding dawns,
violence dissolves,
division weakens,
compassion awakens.

Human birth is not meant to dominate creation but to recognize unity.

Only man needs Brahma Jnana
because only man has forgotten who he truly is.

And only he must remember.