The Fool and The Algorithm – Two Ancient Jātakas for the Digital Age (Ārāmadūsaka-Jātaka 46 and Vāruṇi-Jātaka 47)
How monkeys uprooting trees and an apprentice salting wine teach us about the methodological error we repeat every day before our screens
Welcome to this journey through two ancient Buddhist tales that speak directly to our present time.
Today we explore Level 2, Scene 4 of our path: *The Mind's Short Circuit – The Misapplication of a Rule*. At the heart of this scene are two twin Jātakas: the Ārāmadūsaka-Jātaka (46) and the Vāruṇi-Jātaka (47).
I have created an animated video that brings these stories to life through 12 illustrations inspired by traditional Indian and Thai miniature painting. Below you will find the video, accompanied by commented descriptive images.
The Video: The Fool and The Algorithm
Watch the video to discover the complete animated version of the two Jātakas.
The Commented Images
Here are the 11 illustrations that make up the video, with a brief explanation of each.
Ārāmadūsaka-Jātaka (46) – The Monkeys Who Killed the Garden
Introduction
The Buddha sits in the garden of Kosala while the gardener points to a barren space. The monks listen. This is the beginning of a teaching that spans centuries.
Chapter 1: The Festival in the City
The gardener entrusts the water skins to the king of the monkeys. In the background, the city celebrates. An innocent pact is about to trigger disaster.
Chapter 2: The Perfect Method
The monkeys uproot the trees to examine the roots. The king watches with satisfaction. The logic is impeccable; the result will be catastrophic.
Chapter 3: The Wisdom of the Fool
The wise man looks dismayed at the monkey proudly showing him the uprooted tree. "'Tis knowledge crowns endeavour with success," he declares.
Conclusion of the Jātaka
The Buddha reveals to the monks the connection between lives: the boy who destroyed the garden was that monkey king. The teaching is complete.
Vāruṇi-Jātaka (47) – The Apprentice Who Spoiled the Wine
Introduction
At Jetavana, the Buddha teaches Anāthapiṇḍika. The story of the apprentice is about to be revealed.
Chapter 1: The Tavern Keeper and the Apprentice
The tavern keeper leaves precise instructions with the young apprentice. Great responsibility, little understanding.
Chapter 2: The Flawed Observation
The apprentice watches customers eating salt while drinking. A light bulb lights up in his mind: "It lacks salt!" A fatally wrong intuition.
Chapter 3: The Revelation of Disaster
The customers spit out the salted wine and abandon the tavern. The apprentice stands frozen, the bowl of ruined wine before him.
Conclusion of the Jātaka
The Bodhisatta, as Treasurer of Benares, pronounces the same truth: the fool, even with every desire to do good, is thwarted by his own foolishness.
The Fool and The Algorithm
The two Jātakas conclude, but their teaching continues to live on. Today, as then, we fall into the same mental short circuit.
The monkeys who uproot trees to water them better are the managers who apply corporate methodologies without adapting them to context. The apprentice who salts the wine are the social media algorithms that, designed to maximize engagement, end up polarizing public discourse.
We see that something works somewhere, but we never ask why it works. We extract the rule without the context. And so, with the best intentions, we produce the worst results.
Ancient wisdom offers us a way out: stop, observe, understand. Always ask yourself: "Am I watering the garden or uprooting it? Am I improving the wine or ruining it?"
Ironic tale
Here is a small ironic tale that blends the two Jātakas into a contemporary and light narrative, keeping their teaching intact.
Business Consulting for Monkeys and Apprentices
Or: How to Ruin Everything with the Best Intentions
An ironic tale in two acts and an epilogue
Act I: The Reunion
It was a spring evening when the Monkey King and the Tavern Keeper's Apprentice met for the first time. It happened in a dream, as often happens at important meetings, or perhaps in that moment suspended between sleep and wakefulness in which the brain desperately tries to make sense of its daily idiocies.
The Monkey King was seated on a makeshift throne made of broken branches, looking regal but vaguely perplexed. Next to him, the Apprentice held a clay bowl with suspicious contents in his hand.
'You,' said the Monkey King, 'look familiar. Isn't it by chance that you too ruined something beautiful trying to improve it?"
The Apprentice sighed. "I salted a whole batch of palm wine. I just wanted to make it tastier. Customers had ordered salt, I thought..." His voice died out in a groan.
The Monkey King nodded understandingly. "I had the whole royal garden watered. Uprooting trees, of course, but for a just cause. I wanted to see the roots. It was a perfect method."
"Perfect," the Apprentice repeated bitterly. "Like my salty wine."
They looked at each other. For a long moment no one spoke. Then, in unison, they sighed.
"A consultant would be needed," the Monkey King proposed.
"A coach," the Apprentice agreed. "Someone to teach us the right method to apply the methods."
Act II: The Training Course
The consultant arrived the next morning. It was a badger, known for its proverbial wisdom and a certain inclination to get paid in dried fruit.
"Then," began the badger, adjusting his glasses on his muzzle, "let's try to understand. The two of you applied a rule literally, without considering the context, and the result was disastrous. Is that correct?"
"Very correct!" exclaimed the two students in chorus.
"Good. Then I will teach you the foolproof method to avoid this mistake. Listen carefully."
The badger took a twig and drew a complicated pattern on the ground, full of arrows and colored circles.
"There," he explained proudly. "It is called METHOD: Hermeneutic Matrix for the Optimal Transposition of Ordinary Decisions. It works like this: before applying any rules, you must fill out this form in triplicate. In the first column, write what you observed. In the second column, write what you think this means. In the third column, ask someone who knows more than you do. Then, and only then, take action. It's foolproof!"
The Monkey King and the Apprentice exchanged beaming glances. Finally a solution!
They returned to work full of enthusiasm. The Monkey King gathered his tribe and explained the new METHOD. "We have to fill out the form! Before watering, let's write!"
The monkeys, obedient, began to fill out form after form. Too bad that to write they had to hold the twig in their hands, and to hold the twig in their hands they had to put down the tools, and to put down the tools they stopped watering. After three days of intensive compilation, the trees were as dry as the parchment they wrote on.
The Apprentice, meanwhile, had instituted a strict verification protocol in the tavern. Before serving any beverage, he would fill out the form with customers. "Do you want salt? Yes? No? In what quantity? For what purpose? Can you describe your relationship with salt?" The customers, exasperated, left after the first drink.
The badger, when he returned for feedback, found his students surrounded by piles of forms and even more disastrous results than before.
"But how?" he asked, sincerely surprised. "I gave you a perfect method!"
Epilogue: The Wisdom of Coffee
That evening, the Monkey King and the Apprentice found themselves in the same dream, more depressed than before.
'I do not understand,' said the Monkey King. "First we applied a rule without a method. Then we applied a method with rules. The result is the same."
"Identical," the Apprentice agreed. "Maybe there's a universal law: the harder we try to do things right, the more we do them badly."
"So what's the solution? Do nothing?"
At that moment, out of nowhere, a steaming cup of coffee appeared. There was no one to serve her, she simply was. On the cup, written in large letters, stood a message:
"Stop. He observes. Breathe. Then you decide. But don't decide too quickly. And if you've made up your mind, ask yourself, 'Am I doing this for the garden or for my need to have a method?'"
The two looked at each other. Then they looked at the cup. Then they looked at each other again.
"Do you think we should follow this advice," asked the Apprentice?
"Well," the Monkey King pondered, "we could apply the METHOD to him. Fill out the form..."
"Or we could," interrupted the Apprentice, "just drink it and be quiet for a minute."
And so they did. They drank coffee in silence, listening to the wind in the trees that, for once, were not uprooted, and the wine that, for once, was not salted.
It was a perfect minute.
Then they woke up, and the next day they started making mistakes again. But every now and then, in the middle of a methodological error, one of them would stop for a moment, remember that cup of coffee, and at least for a second... he hesitated.
And in that hesitation, perhaps, wisdom began.
Moral: There are no infallible methods. There are only fallible beings who, when they remember, pause before ruining everything.
Credits
Stories adapted from the Jātakas (Nos. 46 and 47), translation by E. B. Cowell (Cambridge University Press, 1895). Illustrations generated with prompts inspired by traditional Indian and Thai miniature painting.
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