Anuvrat Philosophy
Everything is not changeable in our world, something is immortal. Nature is immortal. Human nature is also eternal. It has got the habits and because of these habits, anger, respect, illusion, greed etc., goodness also exists. All these are of long standing and eternal, only the form is changing Elements are changing, world is changing then why the human being is not changing? Anuvrat is the philosophy of transformation. Anuvrat enables a human being to inspect the nature of the self, understand it and practice to bring change into it. Religion without moral conduct has encouraged the religious fanaticism. Religion has become secondary and the sect became primary, where as it is required that the religion to be primary and sect, the secondary. In this context, Anuvrat gave a new outlook. It established sect free religion. Anuvrat is only a religion not the sect. It is not associated with any religion. It is not Jainism, Buddhism, Islam or Christianity. There for it may be called a non attributed religion.
Discipline is being neglected in social life and education. As a result the society is being victimized by the tendencies of drug addiction, gambling and other social evils. A student must be taught practically at initial stage the slogan sanyamh khalu jeevanam "Sobriety - restraint is life", and imbibed in social life; only then the life can get a new turn and expansion. This is the purpose of including the practical application of "Science of Living" in education.
Step towards character building is the fundamental truth. Anuvrat is keeping this truth at its front and marching ahead. Its slogan is - "Change in an individual will bring changes in the society and thus the nation will be changed automatically". The change in society is possible only by the change in an individual. The journey of social change moves ahead in the direction of national change. The dream of establishing a society and nation totally depends on a change in an individual. The charter building of an individual is the foundation of Anuvrat philosophy.