Skip to main content

A prediction for the Future


 Something is coming...

Maybe
Evolutionary Biology, Neuroscience, Genomics, Physics, Psychology and Game Theory. The sciences are converging. I will say this- Don't think you can ressurect Indian philosophy simply by dogmatically reading an old book and coming up with a fancy new interpretation. The job of a philosopher is going to be exponentially harder in this millennium.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Woman at the well- How did an Indian story enter the Gospel?

Sometime around 305 BCE, Seleucus Nicator, the general of Alexander, tried to wrest back control of North West India. He came into contention with the young Chandragupta Maurya. The same Maurya whose grandson Asoka would play the second most critical role in Buddhism after the Tathagata himself. His Indian ambitions thwarted, Seleucus had to settle for a peace treaty with loss of the eastern Satrapies. Turning his attention back to the Mediterranean, Seleucus went on to fight many wars and built many new cities. Including Antioch in Anatolia, Edessa and Seluicia in Mesopotamia. Also, around 300 BCE, he built the city of Dura Europos in present day Syria, on what would later be a hotbed of imperial contentions and hotpot of cultural hybridization. On the ephemeral borderlands of the Seleucid, Roman, Parthian and Persian empires. A city that was lost to the sands in 257 CE until excavated in the 20th century. It has revealed, among many things, substantial syncretism. A synagogue,...

Andhras- The world's oldest(surviving) tribe?

The Aitareya Brahmana is special. On many counts. For one, it is pretty old. In fact it is the oldest brahmana and it belongs to the Rig Veda. Secondly, it contains a profusion of curious historical information about bronze age Indian society, contemporary kings and sages, kingdoms as well as quite a few obscure and named tribes who are yet to plunge into the Vedic pale. The 'Vedic pale', we know from several other indicators, was in the earliest Rig Vedic times and before it restricted to what is now Haryana and it's thereabouts. One such reference is to be found in verse VII.18 of the text. Visvāmitra had a hundred and one sons, fifty older than  Madhuchandas, fifty younger. Those that were older did not think this  right..Them he cursed (saying) “Your offspring shall inherit the ends" (of the earth). These are the (people), the Andhras, Pundras, Sabaras, Pulindas, and Mütibas ,” who live in large numbers beyond the borders; most of the Dasyus are the descend...

Tura Kavaseya- The first Philosopher?

Abstract : It has become a general premise of indology that the poetry of the Samhitas, the ritualistic prose of the Brahmanas and the philosophical outpourings of the Upanishads, their development and content are chronologically and qualitatively exclusive of each other i.e. they represent successive stages of Vedic literature, history and philosophy. On closer look, the view fails to hold either in the concern of composition, compilation or even of concept. One safe path across this chronological obscurity is to search out the references to historical personalities, contemporary or reminiscent, contained within these texts. The line of teachers of Vedantic philosophy recorded in Brihadaranyaka Upanishad VI.5 offers a unique opportunity in this regard. Keywords: Tura Kavaseya, Upanishads, Aitareya, Kausitaki, Shatapatha, Kavasa Ailusa, Brihadaranyaka, Sudasa, Somaka, Sahadeva, Janamejaya, Rig Veda, Yajur Veda. The story of philosophy, no doubt, begins with the ...