Acharya Prashant asserts that no true revolution is possible without the wisdom of the Bhagavad Gita, which he defines broadly as any wisdom literature that uplifts human consciousness from slavery to liberation. He explains that human beings are not born free; rather, birth itself is a state of bondage to physical impulses, fear, and temptation. Therefore, liberation is not a given but something that must be actively attained through a revolution of the mind. He highlights that even revolutionaries like Shri Subhas Chandra Bose and Bhagat Singh, who are often viewed solely through a political or atheistic lens, were deeply rooted in spiritual scriptures and the Gita. He argues that it is impossible to achieve greatness in any field without a spiritual foundation, which he defines as the awakening of consciousness and the education of the self. He further explains that spirituality is the ego's urge for its liberated state and the realization that true 'bigness' is the prerogative of the infinite Self, or Atma. Since the material world is finite and enumerable, it can never satisfy the inherent human hunger for the infinite. Acharya Prashant describes Shri Subhas Chandra Bose's quest for political independence as an external manifestation of an internal spiritual quest for liberation from the slavery of nature. He emphasizes that without this internal fire, external actions remain lukewarm and driven by the fear of death or failure. By following the Gita's teachings to tolerate the hardships of the body and fight for right action, one can overcome the fear of failure and achieve true independence.