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Purposes Met and Problems Solved: Twin Pillars of Human Progress

Dr. Reyaz Ahmad by Dr. Reyaz Ahmad
September 20, 2025
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  The story of human progress has always swung between lofty purposes met and tangible problems solved. A purpose represents vision—the destination we aim for—while problem-solving represents the step-by-step challenges overcome on the way. Both are essential, yet societies and nations often confuse one for the other.

In India and across the globe, history offers countless examples where big purposes were declared, but the struggle of solving problems made—or broke—the success. As Jawaharlal Nehru once said: “Great causes and little men go ill together.” Purposes need visionaries; problems need resolvers. Progress demands both.

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Purposes Met: The Big Picture of History

India’s independence in 1947 remains a shining example of a purpose met. Decades of resistance, sacrifice, and unity among Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs, and others culminated in freedom. Yet independence did not erase poverty, inequality, or illiteracy—the problems that still required careful solving.

Globally, the formation of the United Nations in 1945 symbolized another great purpose met: the collective prevention of another world war. But since then, countless conflicts, refugee crises, and humanitarian challenges have shown that solving problems requires continuous effort, not just a one-time declaration.

A timeless couplet reminds us:

“Safar ke har mod pe rukawat aati hai,
Maqsad wohi paate hain jo mushkilein suljhate hain.”
(At every turn, obstacles appear; only those reach their purpose who solve each problem along the way.)

Problems Solved: The Steps That Build Nations

A grand purpose is hollow without problem-solving. India’s Green Revolution (1960s–70s) illustrates this perfectly. The purpose was food security for a hungry nation. But the path was paved with numerous problems: lack of irrigation, low-yield seeds, outdated farming techniques, and farmer poverty. The introduction of high-yield varieties, new irrigation networks, fertilizer subsidies, and training programs solved those problems, transforming India from a food-deficit nation to a food-surplus exporter.

On the global front, the eradication of smallpox in 1980 stands out. Humanity’s purpose was clear: eliminate a deadly disease. But it was solving problems—vaccine distribution, last-mile delivery in remote areas, combating misinformation—that made it possible. Every solved problem was a brick that built the arch of success.

As Thomas Edison famously said: “Vision without execution is hallucination.”

India’s Balancing Act: Lofty Purposes vs. Daily Problems

India has often declared noble purposes—Digital India, Make in India, Swachh Bharat Abhiyan, Atmanirbhar Bharat. These capture the imagination of the nation. But the real test lies in problem-solving:

  • Digital India seeks to empower every citizen with internet access. The purpose is noble, but solving rural connectivity gaps, affordable devices, and digital literacy are ongoing challenges.
  • Swachh Bharat Abhiyan inspired millions with its purpose of a cleaner India. Yet waste management systems, recycling technologies, and behavioural changes are the problems still being solved.
  • Make in India aims to make India a global manufacturing hub. But issues of ease of doing business, supply-chain logistics, and skilling the workforce are the critical problems to fix.

Without solving these problems, the purposes risk remaining slogans.

Global Case Studies: The Twin Lens

  1. UN Climate Action (Paris Agreement, 2015)
    • Purpose met: A global consensus to limit warming to 1.5–2°C.
    • Problems solved (and unsolved): Some nations rapidly transitioned to renewables, but problems like fossil-fuel dependency, financing green projects, and political resistance still slow progress. The purpose is agreed upon, but the problems demand continuous action.
  2. European Union Formation (1993)
    • Purpose met: A vision of unity, trade integration, and peace in Europe.
    • Problems solved: Standardizing currencies (Euro), open-border agreements, and joint institutions.
    • Problems unsolved: Brexit highlighted unresolved issues of sovereignty and economic imbalance.
  3. COVID-19 Pandemic
    • Purpose met: Rapid development of vaccines (a miracle of science).
    • Problems solved: Distribution in many countries, temporary control of waves.
    • Problems unsolved: Global inequity in access, vaccine hesitancy, fragile health systems.

These examples show that purposes inspire—but problem-solving sustains.

Quotations to Reflect On

  • “We are kept from our goal not by obstacles but by a clear path to a lesser goal.” — Robert Brault
  • “First say to yourself what you would be; and then do what you have to do.” — Epictetus
  • “Boond boond se sagar banta hai” — Indian Proverb (Drop by drop, the ocean is formed).

Poetic Insight

The destination of new aspirations must be reached,
The roads must be cleared of sharp stones.
A purpose is not just a slogan of dreams,
Real victory lies in solving each problem.

        

Conclusion

The story of human progress is never linear. Nations and individuals alike move forward by constantly balancing between the grand vision of purposes met and the practical grind of problems solved. India’s rise—from the struggles of independence to the triumphs of the Green Revolution, from Chandrayaan-3 to the promise of Make in India—shows that no purpose can be achieved without first confronting and resolving countless challenges. Similarly, global achievements like eradicating smallpox, advancing climate action, or building resilient economies are testimonies to the same truth.

Purposes inspire us; problems ground us. One without the other is incomplete. To dream without solving problems is to sketch castles in the air. To solve problems without a larger purpose is to fix roads that lead nowhere. The two together form the architecture of true progress.

As an Indian proverb reminds us, “Boond boond se sagar banta hai”—drop by drop, the ocean is formed. Each problem solved is a drop, each purpose met is the ocean. Our task, as individuals and as nations, is to keep both in sight: to dream big, and to solve patiently. That is the only way to ensure that humanity not only survives its trials but thrives in its purposes.

The writer is member of Faculty of Mathematics, Department of General Education SUC, Sharjah, UAE. Email: reyaz56@gmail.com

 

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