The Two Wings of Human Wholeness: Intellect and Spirit in Hindu Thought There is a peculiar kind of suffering that does not announce itself loudly. It does not come from poverty or physical illness. It comes from a person who has read everything, achieved much, argued brilliantly — and yet feels hollow. Hindu thought recognized this condition thousands of years ago and gave it a clear diagnosis: the intellect has grown, but the spirit has been left behind. The world is currently crowded with intellectuals who have an opinion on everything but are morally and spiritually hollow. Most are performative and utterly devoid of honesty. The Katha Upanishad draws a sharp distinction between shreya, that which is truly good for the soul, and preya, that which merely pleases the senses and the mind. Modern civilization has become extraordinarily skilled at pursuing preya — comfort, information, technology, debate — while largely abandoning shreya. The result is not progress. It is a more sophi...