Acharya Prashant explains that the results one achieves are directly proportional to the magnitude of their desires. While small desires yield petty results and relatively larger desires lead to inventions and discoveries, neither provides lasting satisfaction. He points out that despite numerous scientific advancements, man's restless and tumultuous mind remains uncalmed. Inventions often become accessories to violence and war because the underlying human restlessness is far greater than the creative force of the discovery itself. Therefore, the relatively big is insufficient, and man ultimately seeks the absolutely big, which is found through meditation and the desire for realization. He clarifies that spirituality is not opposed to science but is a step beyond it. While science investigates material reality, it fails to account for consciousness or the observer to whom the world appears. Science is wonderful but incomplete because it does not ask who is perceiving the world or why. Spirituality completes science by addressing these fundamental questions. A spiritual person does not reject science or technology; rather, they do not stop there. They possess a mammoth desire for the absolute, often called devotion, which provides something far greater than any physical invention or technological achievement.