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The funniest thing is that in spite of so much of kamasutra and sexual allowance given to certain sections (many state ministers have had two or even three wives) ....most common people are monogamous and believe in strict family values (even if some men do stray around a bit sometimes). The divorce rate in India even today is about 1.3%.
So...IMO all these sex related books and temple carvings don't make any difference to family values....if these values are inculcated the right way. As children we have seen many temple carvings with women showing their bosom. Even many goddesses are bare bodied. We have never thought of them as wrong or bad.
The female bosom always represented motherhood to us....somehow.
Well the liberal attitudes were gone a long time ago, mostly by the 15th century. Bosoms are now rarely seen in public where, even 50 years ago, breastfeeding in public was not an issue. These days India and really all of the East can only be described as repressed and more puritanical than the West.
I am not sure about being 'liberal'. 'Liberal' in the modern context means letting everyone live as they please. Most people today have no definite ideology or clear idea of what is right and wrong in life. Religion and spirituality have lost their authority and the safest way forward seems to be to let everyone live as they want as long as they don't harm someone else.
Who are we to judge?! That is being 'liberal'.
India was never liberal in the above sense. Indians have always had a very clear idea of what life meant, what was right and wrong and what was expected of people. There was no confusion in this.
Hinduism only had different norms for different people.....which is like having different expectations from a two year old as compared to a 5 year old... and similarly from a ten year old as compared to a twenty year old.
Just as we have different expectations from young and the old...from women and men. We have different expectations from doctors and soldiers.....and from prostitutes and nuns. From butchers and monks.....and so on.
No one is a sinner if he or she is performing their duty and lives in line with their nature. A prostitute having sex with many men was not a sinner condemned to hell or any such nonsense. However a household woman who has a good husband and family, having a secret love affair was a sinner. A king using a prostitute was not a sinner...but a brahmin doing the same thing was a sinner.
No one was condemned to hell for all eternity..of course. Everyone had to be born again to wok out their karma. Its all about how the karmic energies accumulate in an individual.
In fact, even punishments were dependent on the person and his social level. If a low caste person receives one punishment for stealing, a vaishya (business class) would receive double the punishment, a kshtrya (warrior class) would receive three times...and a brahmin would receive four times the punishment...for the same crime.
Dharma is very complex and should always be seen in the context of the situation. Lying, stealing and murder are not always sins. It depends on the intent, who does it and in what context.