Abstract This paper proposes the Theory of Karmic Relativity, a Vedantic-psychological framework that reinterprets the classical doctrine of the four Yugas (Satya, Treta, Dwapara, and Kali) as subjective states of consciousness rather than fixed historical epochs. The theory argues that individuals living within the same external world may nevertheless inhabit different experiential realities according to their karmic conditioning, moral discernment, and level of conscious development. The framework integrates two complementary theoretical models: the Autonomous Consciousness Framework (ACF), which describes the architecture of self-governance within consciousness, and Karmic Intelligence Theory (KIT), which explains the mechanisms of moral discernment, karmic feedback, and conscious evolution. Together, these frameworks propose that ACF provides the internal architecture of consciousness, KIT governs ethical learning and karmic refinement, and the Theory of Karmic Relativity describes the resulting subjective Yuga experienced by the individual. The paper introduces the concepts of karmic density, Spiritual Gravity, subjective Yugas, and the phenomenology of subjective time, proposing that movement through the Yugas reflects progressive refinement of consciousness rather than the passage of cosmic time. This developmental process culminates in Kaivalya, the liberated state of Self-realization. Situated at the intersection of Vedantic philosophy, consciousness studies, contemplative psychology, and systems thinking, the Theory of Karmic Relativity offers a novel interdisciplinary model for understanding moral development, subjective reality, and spiritual evolution.
Kavita Jadhav (Thu,) studied this question.
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