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‘’apraṇītaḥ tu mātsyanyāyaṃ udbhāvayati.
balīyān abalaṃ hi grasate daṇḍadharābhāve. ‘’
The phrase "matsyanyaya" appears in the
ancient Indian political treatise Arthashastra by Chanakya (Kautilya): it refers to a law of nature where the strong
devour the weak, similar to how larger fish eat smaller fish.
In Arthashastra,
historians tell us,Chanakya uses the theory to explain why a state should
increase its size and security. He argues that without a government or rule of law, society will
degenerate into anarchy, where the strong will exploit the weak.
Chanakya emphasizes the
importance of "danda" (strong authority) to prevent the law of
"matsyanyaya" from prevailing. He believed that government,
rulers, and laws are necessary to overcome this natural law and protect the
weak.
The idea of
"matsyanyaya" is similar to the idea that the state ensures
protection to the small, while in nature the big overwhelms the small.One can
easily connect it to the Darwinian theory of ''survival of the fittest'' or
even to the food chain theory.
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