Posts

Showing posts from July, 2024

Concept of Time in General and Particular in Ancient India and todays world(Part III)

  Experiments must be carried out when eclipses take place solar eclipse and lunar eclipse , in Sanskrit Chandragrahana and Suryagrahana . That is totally represented by full moon and new moon. Experiments carried out in the world should start 2 days before that. Actual experiment and your prototype experiment will be 2 days earlier for starting at proper time. This is nothing but formal logic, including negative numbers and complex numbers and imaginary numbers. You should have measuring rod at the time of experiment called conics; in ancient India it was called as Shankhu which means    a conic, top. Shankhu is a scientific instrument based on the model of conches. Because conics are most developed branch in mathematics, analytical geometry, topological geometry, algebra geometry and arithmetic put together. That day you have to start measuring directions and measuring time. For doing this we should have 4 junior people sitting one in east, west, north and south respe...

Concept of Time in General and Particular in Ancient India and todays world(Part II)

Image
  Before starting Part II, Lets summarize the topics we understood in last blog. We tried to understand the etymology of Dika Sadhana, applications, requirements, qualifications and prerequisites etc. of the same. We learnt the concept of water levelling required for it, importance of circles, rule of three and much more. If you missed reading the last blog Kindly read it. Now lets start Part II.   All these 3 are dynamically moving in their own orbital way, Kakśa , Parimaṇḍala. So Earth is rotating, Moon is rotating and Sun is rotating and they are rotating around others also. And from this we have to decide the fate of local configuration. Before that we should remind Bhartṛhari who is a grammarian, mathematician and also the  philosopher. In the course of deciding time we must know that everything is practically is related to time but time is abstract that we cannot see time, measure time. Space we see, any moving object we see but we cannot see time. We cannot me...

Concept of Time in General and Particular in Ancient India and as in todays world (Part I)

  This is very important topic in any textbook   may it be scientific, religious etc. in Indian tradition starts with Dika -Kala-Gati-Kriya-Krama i.e Space-Time-Motion-Action-Sequence or Order. Therefore it assumes to be important and for us when we go in the realm of Science. The references which we are going to discuss are directly taken from the Vedic tradition which does not have any divisions and restrictions Jainism, Buddhism etc. It is a common tradition and this aspect of time is almost also common to all branches of knowledge. So any activity whether empirical, reflective or transcendental in Sanskrit Vyavahārika, Prātibhāsika and Pāramārthika . You have to consider Dika-Sadhana . Instrument which decides the frame of reference. It means geographical mapping.so it means first we have to decide the space and then directions, directional mapping. Sadhana means instrument, device or method of deciding the thing. So the word Dika means Disha, Asha , or directional q...

Difference between Dhārmika and Dharmātmā

The word dharma has roots in the Sanskrit dhr-, which means to hold or to support, and is related to Latin firmus (firm, stable). From this, it takes the meaning of "what is established or firm", and hence "law". It is derived from an older Vedic Sanskrit n-stem dharman-, with a literal meaning of "bearer, supporter", in a religious sense conceived as an aspect of Rta. In the Rigveda , the word appears as an n-stem, dhárman-, with a range of meanings encompassing "something established or firm" (in the literal sense of prods or poles). Figuratively, it means "sustainer" and "supporter" (of deities). It is semantically similar to the Greek themis ("fixed decree, statute, law"). In Charaka Samhita meanings of two words derived from Dharma are given namely Dhārmika and Dharmātmā. Dictionary meaning of both these words is given as “pious” but it is partially correct. The word Dhārmika (External) means showing t...