Monday 7 October 2024

WOMEN OF INDIA -I

या देवी सर्वभूतेषु शक्ति-रूपेण संस्थिता।
नमस्तस्यै नमस्तस्यै नमस्तस्यै नमो नमः॥

We come now to Manu the great lawgiver. Now, in this book there is an elaborate description of how a child should be educated. We must remember that it was compulsory with the Aryans that a child be educated, whatever his caste. After describing how a child should be educated, Manu adds: "Along the same lines, the daughters are to be educated—exactly as the boys [1]

I have often heard that there are other passages where women are condemned. I admit that in our sacred books there are many passages which condemn women as offering temptation; you can see that for yourselves. But there are also passages that glorify women as the power of God. And there are other passages which state that in that house where one drop of a woman's tear falls, the gods are never pleased and the house goes to ruin. Drinking wine, killing a woman and killing a Brahmin are the highest crimes in the Hindu religion. I admit there are condemnatory sentences [in some of our books]; but here I claim the superiority of these Hindu books, for in the books of other races there is only condemnation and no good word for a woman.

Next, I will come to our old dramas. Whatever the books say, the dramas are the perfect representation of society as it then existed. In these, which were written from four hundred years before Christ onward, we find even universities full of both boys and girls. We would not [now] find Hindu women, as they have since become cut off from higher education [1] . But [at that time], they were everywhere pretty much the same as they are in this country—going out to the gardens and parks to take promenades.

There is another point which I bring before you and where the Hindu woman is still superior to all other women in the world—her rights. The right to possess property is as absolute for women in India as for men—and has been for thousands and thousands of years.
 
To Be Continued..
- Swami Vivekananda (New Discoveries, Vol. 2, pp. 411–26)
--
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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Sunday 6 October 2024

WOMEN OF INDIA -I

या देवी सर्वभूतेषु बुद्धि-रूपेण संस्थिता।
नमस्तस्यै नमस्तस्यै नमस्तस्यै नमो नमः॥

The oldest Sanskrit poem in existence, the Rāmāyana, has embodied the loftiest Hindu ideal of a woman in the character of Sitā. We have not time to go through her life of infinite patience and goodness. We worship her as God incarnate, and she is named before her husband, Rāma. We say not "Mr. and Mrs.", but "Mrs. and Mr." and so on, with all the gods and goddesses, naming the woman first.

There is another peculiar conception of the Hindu. Those who have been studying with me are aware that the central conception of Hindu philosophy is of the Absolute; that is the background of the universe. This Absolute Being, of whom we can predicate nothing, has Its powers spoken of as She—that is, the real personal God in India is She. This Shakti of the Brahman is always in the feminine gender.

Rāma is considered the type of the Absolute, and Sitā that of Power. We have no time to go over all the life of Sitā, but I will quote a passage from her life that is very much suited to the ladies of this country.

The picture opens when she was in the forest with her husband, whither they were banished. There was a female sage whom they both went to see. Her fasts and devotions had emaciated her body.

Sitā approached this sage and bowed down before her. The sage placed her hand on the head of Sitā and said: "It is a great blessing to possess a beautiful body; you have that. It is a greater blessing to have a noble husband; you have that. It is the greatest blessing to be perfectly obedient to such a husband; you are that. You must be happy".

Sitā replied, "Mother, I am glad that God has given me a beautiful body and that I have so devoted a husband. But as to the third blessing, I do not know whether I obey him or he obeys me. One thing alone I remember, that when he took me by the hand before the sacrificial fire—whether it was a reflection of the fire or whether God himself made it appear to me—I found that I was his and he was mine. And since then, I have found that I am the complement of his life, and he of mine".

Portions of this poem have been translated into the English language. Sitā is the ideal of a woman in India and worshipped as God incarnate.

To Be Continued..
- Swami Vivekananda (New Discoveries, Vol. 2, pp. 411–26)
--
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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Saturday 5 October 2024

WOMEN OF INDIA -I

या देवी सर्वभूतेषु चेतनेत्य भिधीयते।
नमस्तस्यै नमस्तस्यै नमस्तस्यै नमो नमः॥
Coming to the next stratum of literature, our epics, we find that education has not degenerated. Especially in the caste of princes this ideal was most wonderfully held.

In the Vedas we find this idea of marrying—the girls chose for themselves; so the boys. In the next stratum they are married by their parents, except in one caste.

Even here I would ask you to look at another side. Whatever may be said of the Hindus, they are one of the most learned races the world has ever produced. The Hindu is the metaphysician; he applies everything to his intellect. Everything has to be settled by astrological calculation.

The idea was that the stars govern the fate of every man and woman. Even today when a child is born, a horoscope is cast. That determines the character of the child. One child is born of a divine nature, another of a human, others of lower character.

The difficulty was: If a child who was of a monster-character was united with a child of a god-character, would they not have a tendency to degenerate each other?

The next difficulty was: Our laws did not allow marriage within the same clans. Not only may one not marry within his own family—or even one of his cousins—but one must not marry into the clan of his father or even of his mother.

A third difficulty was: If there had been leprosy or phthisis or any such incurable disease within six generations of either bride or bridegroom, then there must not be a marriage.

Now taking [into account] these three difficulties, the Brahmin says: "If I leave it to the choice of the boy or girl to marry, the boy or girl will be fascinated with a beautiful face. And then very likely all these circumstances will bring ruin to the family". This is the primary idea that governs our marriage laws, as you will find. Whether right or wrong, there is this philosophy at the background. Prevention is better than cure.

That misery exists in this world is because we give birth to misery. So the whole question is how to prevent the birth of miserable children. How far the rights of a society should extend over the individual is an open question. But the Hindus say that the choice of marriage should not be left in the hands of the boy or girl.

I do not mean to say that this is the best thing to do. Nor do I see that leaving it in their hands is at all a perfect solution. I have not found a solution yet in my own mind; nor do I see that any country has one.

We come next to another picture. I told you that there was another peculiar form of marriage (generally among the royalty) where the father of the girl invited different princes and noblemen and they had an assembly. The young lady, the daughter of the king, was borne on a sort of chair before each one of the princes in turn. And the herald would repeat: "This is Prince So-and-so, and these are his qualifications". The young girl would either wait or say, "Move on". And before the next prince, the crier would also give a description, and the girl would say, "Move on". (All this would be arranged beforehand; she already had the liking for somebody before this.) Then at last she would ask one of the servants to throw the garland over the head of the man, and it would be thrown to show he was accepted. (The last of these marriages was the cause of the Mohammedan invasion of India ) These marriages were specially reserved for the prince caste.

To Be Continued..
- Swami Vivekananda (New Discoveries, Vol. 2, pp. 411–26)

--
कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Friday 4 October 2024

WOMEN OF INDIA -I

या देवी सर्वभूतेषु विष्णुमायेति शब्दिता |
नमस्तस्यै नमस्तस्यै नमस्तस्यै नमो नमः॥

This is the first glimpse of women's work in the Vedas. As we go on, we find them taking a greater share—even officiating as priests. There is not one passage throughout the whole mass of literature of the Vedas which can be construed even indirectly as signifying that woman could never be a priest. In fact, there are many examples of women officiating as priests.

Then we come to the last portion of these Vedas—which is really the religion of India—the concentrated wisdom of which has not been surpassed even in this century. There, too, we find women preeminent. A large portion of these books are words which have proceeded from the mouths of women. It is there—recorded with their names and teachings.

There is that beautiful story of the great sage Yājnavalkya, the one who visited the kingdom of the great king Janaka. And there in that assembly of the learned, people came to ask him questions. One man asked him, "How am I to perform this sacrifice?" Another asked him, "How am I to perform the other sacrifice?" And after he had answered them, there arose a woman who said, "These are childish questions. Now, have a care: I take these two arrows, my two questions. Answer them if you can, and we will then call you a sage. The first is: What is the soul? The second is: What is God [Brihadāranyaka Upanished 3.8.1–12]

Thus arose in India the great questions about the soul and God, and these came from the mouth of a woman. The sage had to pass an examination before her, and he passed well.

To Be Continued..
- Swami Vivekananda (New Discoveries, Vol. 2, pp. 411–26)

--
कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Thursday 3 October 2024

WOMEN OF INDIA -I

सर्वमंगल मांगल्ये शिवे सर्वार्थ साधिके।
शरण्ये त्र्यंबके गौरी नारायणि नमोस्तुते॥

IN SPEAKING ABOUT THE women of India, ladies and gentlemen, I feel that I am going to talk about my mothers and sisters in India to the women of another race, many of whom have been like mothers and sisters to me. But though, unfortunately, within very recent times there have been mouths only to curse the women of our country, I have found that there are some who bless them too. I have found such noble souls in this nation as Mrs. [Ole] Bull and Miss [Sarah] Farmer and Miss [Frances] Willard, and that wonderful representative of the highest aristocracy of the world, whose life reminds me of that man of India, six hundred years before the birth of Christ, who gave up his throne to mix with the people. Lady Henry Somerset has been a revelation to me. I become bold when I find such noble souls who will not curse, whose mouths are full of blessing for me, my country, our men and women, and whose hands and hearts are ever ready to do service to humanity.

I first intend to take a glimpse into times past of Indian history, and we will find something unique. All of you are aware, perhaps, that you Americans and we Hindus and this lady from Iceland [Mrs. Sigrid Magnusson] are the descendants of one common ancestry known as Aryans. Above all, we find three ideas wherever the Aryans go: the village community, the rights of women and a joyful religion.

The first [idea] is the system of village communities—as we have just heard from Mrs. Bull concerning the North. Each man was his own [lord?] and owned the land. All these political institutions of the world we now see, are the developments of those village systems. As the Aryans went over to different countries and settled, certain circumstances developed this institution, others that.

The next idea of the Aryans is the freedom of women. It is in the Aryan literature that we find women in ancient times taking the same share as men, and in no other literature of the world.

Going back to our Vedas—they are the oldest literature the world possesses and are composed by your and my common ancestors (they were not written in India—perhaps on the coast of the Baltic, perhaps in Central Asia—we do not know).

Their oldest portion is composed of hymns, and these hymns are to the gods whom the Aryans worshipped. I may be pardoned for using the word gods; the literal translation is "the bright ones". These hymns are dedicated to Fire, to the Sun, to Varuna and other deities. The titles run: "such-and-such a sage composed this verse, dedicated to such-and-such a deity".

In the tenth chapter comes a peculiar hymn—for the sage is a woman—and it is dedicated to the one God who is at the background of all these gods. All the previous hymns are spoken in the third person, as if someone were addressing the deities. But this hymn takes a departure: God [as the Devi] is speaking for herself. The pronoun used is "I". "I am the Empress of the Universe, the Fulfiller of all prayers [ Vide "Devi Sukta", Rig-Veda 10.125.]

To Be Continued..
- Swami Vivekananda (New Discoveries, Vol. 2, pp. 411–26)
--
कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Wednesday 14 August 2024

Discussion

Excerpts from Dharampalji's book Indian Science and Technology in the 18th Century (1971)

After reading the above excerpts, it is natural to wonder how our ancestors could achieve all this without access to libraries, computers, and other sophisticated equipment. It is also natural to reflect on the present situation in India, which is quite different. Most of the research work in the leading Indian institutions is motivated by ideas and problems generated in Western countries. In most fields, we have become followers rather than leaders. Why have the springs of creativity dried up? Is it because the present educational system stifles the spirit of enquiry? Is it because a large proportion of the people engaged in teaching and research do not really enjoy their vocation? Is it because the hustle and bustle of modern living, with its attendant insecurities, deadlines, and distractions provide little time for contemplation? Is it because centuries of indigenous knowledge about various procedures and processes were abandoned, over a relatively short period, in favour of the current scientific approach? Is it because our ancestors observed nature more keenly than we do nowadays? As a hymn from the Rig Veda puts it: "Who knows for certain? Who shall here declare it?"



Fig. 1 The Observatory at Benares (reproduced from Barker, 1777, with permission from the Royal Society of London).

Acknowledgement: I am very grateful to Shri Dharampal for permitting me to reproduce excerpts from his book, and the Royal Society of London for permission to reproduce Fig. 1 from Barker (1777). The first part of the title is taken from a book entitled "The Wonder that was India" by A.L. Basham, Picador, London (2004). The introduction and section 1.1 were published in the Asian Journal of Professional Ethics and Management 10 (2018) 5-8.

References :

Barker, R., The process of making ice in the East Indies, Phil. Trans.65 (1775) 252-257.
Barker, R., An account of the Bramin's observatory at Benares, Phil. Trans., Roy. Soc. London, 67 (1777) 598-607.
Burrow, R., A proof that the Hindoos had the binomial theorem, Asiatic Researches, II (1790), 487-497.
Burton, D.M., The History of Mathematics, Allyn and Bacon, 1985.
Coult, Ro., An account of the diseases of Bengall (letter from Ro.Coult to Dr.Oliver
Coult, 10 February 1731). It is on ff.271v-272r in Add.MS.4432 among the Royal Society papers in the British Museum.
Franklin, J., The mode of manufacturing of iron in central India, 1835, India Office 
Library, MS EUR D154.
Heyne, B., Tracts on India, 1814, p.363.
Holwell, J.Z., An account of the manner of inoculation for the smallpox in the East Indies, Report addressed to the President and Members of the College of Physicians in London, 1767.
Majumdar, R., Raychaudhuri, H.C., and Datta, K., 1967 An Advanced History of India, 3rd ed., p.564.
Mushet, D. Experiments on Wootz or Indian steel, British Museum 727 k.3, 65-662.
Scott, H., Aspects of technology in Western India (Extracts from letters sent by Dr.Scott to Sir J.Banks, President, Royal Society of London, 1790-1801). Add MS 33979 (ff 1-13; 127-130; 135-6; 233-6); Add MS 33980 (ff 305-310) and Add MS 35262 (ff 14-5) in the British Museum.
Pearson, G., Experiments and observations to investigate the nature of a kind of steel, manufactured at Bombay, and there called Wootz; with remarks on the properties and composition of different states of iron, Phil. Trans, 85 (1795) 322-346.
Playfair, J. 1790 Remarks on the astronomy of the Brahmins. Trans. Roy. Soc.
Edinburgh, II (1790), part I, 135-192.
Walker, A. (ca.1820), Indian agriculture. Walker of Bowland papers, National Library of Scotland, 184a.3, 577-654.

By K. Kesava Rao
Department of Chemical Engineering
Indian Institute of Science
Bengaluru 560012, India
kesava@iisc.ac.in

--
कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Tuesday 13 August 2024

Indian Agriculture (Walker, ca. 1820)

Excerpts from Dharampalji's book Indian Science and Technology in the 18th Century (1971)

Nothing should surprise us more in the present condition of the Indian cultivator than his preserving industry, and well cultivated fields. Any other than a people of a buoyant spirit would have sunk under these circumstances.

The Hindoos have been long in possession of one of the most beautiful and useful inventions in agriculture. This is the Drill Plough. This instrument has been in use from the remotest times in India. I never, however, observed it in Malabar, as it is not required in rice cultivation in which its advantages have been superseded by transplanting. The system of transplanting is only in fact another method of obtaining the same object as by drill husbandry. It would be but just to adduce this, as another proof of ingenuity of this people and of their successful attention to this branch of labour.

[Dharampal notes that the drill plough is said to have been first used in Europe by one Joseph Locatelli of Carinthia (Austria) in 1662. Its introduction in England dates from 1730.]

They have a variety of implements per husbandry process, some of which have only been introduced into England in the course of our recent improvements. They clean their fields both by hoeing and hand weeding; they have weeding ploughs, which root out and extirpate the weeds. A roller would be useless on rice grounds, which are always wet and frequently an equal mixture of water and mud. The place of the roller is supplied by an instrument which levels or smooths the grounds, without turning on an axis. They have also mallets for breaking clods, the usual assortment of hoes, harrows and rakes.

It is the practice in many parts of India to sow different species of seeds in the same field. This practice has been censured, but it is probably done for the same reason that our farmers sow rye-grass and clover with wheat, barley, or oats; tares with rye; beans with peas; vetches and corn, etc

It has been found by experience that these crops not only thrive in the same field; but improve each other. Rye and oats for instance, serve to support the weak creeping tares, and add besides to the bulk of the crop by growing through the interstices. Clover and rye grass are sheltered by the corn. This analogy will apply to the husbandry of India. These similar experiments may be carried further, where the climate and soil are superior. In India different kinds of seeds when sown in the same field are kept separate by the Drill, or they are mixed together, and sown broadcast. In the last case they are commonly cut down as forage. A plant called sota gowar, is sown broadcast with sugar cane in Guzerat (Gujarat). The gowar serves as a shelter to the sugar cane, from the violent heat of the sun, during the most scorching season of the year. Joar and badgery are sown together, in the same country late, not for the sake of a crop, but for straw, which is very nutritive, and very abundant. This is one of the instances in which the natives provide a green crop for their cattle. Other grains are sown both together and separately, merely for their straw. Soondea, darrya joar, rateeja and goograjoar are sown together: but with the exception, of goograjoar which is allowed to ripen, the rest are reapt while they are green.

It is evident that these examples are not founded on bad principles, and that they are in conformity with the best practice of farming. They evince the care of the Hindoo husbandman to provide food for his labouring cattle. This is an object to which I have generally seen him attentive; but in many parts of India during the dry season it is extremely difficult, and often exceeds the impoverished means of the cultivator, to lay in a sufficient supply. He is sensible enough of the want, and does his utmost to scrape together, all the heterogeneous substances that are within his reach. In some parts of India, hay is not
made, in other parts it is a regular crop, stacked and preserved. This is the case in Guzerat, and some other pergunnahs. The hay is cut down not by the scythe but by the reapers hook: It is dried and brought home in carts. The stacks are generally of an oblong shape something like our own, but often of much larger dimensions than any that I have seen in England. The stack is not thatched merely, but covered by a movable roof. In those parts of India where hay is not made and which are I believe unfavourable to this kind of crop, the cattle are fed with the roots of grass, very like our fiorin, with straw, and especially with the straw of joaree, all the which are considered to be very nourishing food. The roots of this grass are preferred by our own people in the Carnatic to hay. Besides the Hindoo in many parts of India, prepares crops of pulse, solely for the use of his domestic animals. In some place he feeds them with carrots.

The practice of watering and irrigation is not peculiar to the husbandry of India, but it has probably been carried there to a great extent, and more laborious ingenuity displayed in it than in any other country. The vast and numerous tanks, reservoirs, and artificial lakes as well as dams of solid masonry in rivers which they constructed for the purpose of fertilizing their fields, show the extreme solicitude which they had to secure this object. [Dharampal notes that the above observation is in dramatic contrast to the present day book accounts of the comparative absence of artificial irrigation in eighteenth century India
(Majumdar et al., 1967).]

Besides the great reservoirs for water, the country is covered with numerous wells which are employed for watering the fields. The water is raised by wheel either by men or by bullocks, and it is afterwards conveyed by little canals which diverged on all sides, so as to convey sufficient quantity of moisture to the roots of the most distant plants. When these are seen in operation it gives the most cheerful picture of quiet and useful industry, that can occur even to the imagination. The very sight of it conveys to the mind peace and tranquillity.

By K. Kesava Rao
Department of Chemical Engineering
Indian Institute of Science
Bengaluru 560012, India
kesava@iisc.ac.in
...To be continued ...

--
कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
Read n Get Articles, Magazines, Books @ http://prakashan.vivekanandakendra.org

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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Monday 12 August 2024

Iron and Steel - Dharampal’s comments on Indian steel

Excerpts from Dharampalji's book Indian Science and Technology in the 18th Century (1971)

The substance which seems to have evoked most scientific and technical interest in the Britain of the 1790s was the sample of wootz steel sent by Dr. Scott to Sir J. Banks, the President of the British Royal Society. The same went through examination and analysis by several experts (Mushet, Pearson, 1795). It was found in general to match the best steel then available in Britain, and according to one user, "promises to be of importance to the manufactures of Britain (Heyne, 1814). He found it "excellently adapted for the purpose of fine cutlery, and particularly for all edge instruments used for surgical purposes". After its being sent as a sample in 1794 and its examination and analysis in late 1794 and early 1795, it began to be much in demand; and some 18 years later the afore quoted user of
steel stated, "I have at this time a liberal supply of Wootz, and I intend to use it for many purposes. If a better steel is offered to me, I will gladly attend to it; but the steel of India is decidedly the best I Have yet met with" (Heyne, 1814).

Whatever may have been the understanding in the other European countries regarding details of the processes employed in the manufacture of Indian steel, the British, at the time wootz was examined and analysed by them, concluded "that it is made directly from the ore; and consequently that it has never been in the state of wrought iron" (Pearson, 1795). Its qualities were thus ascribed to the quality of the ore from which it came and these equalities were considered to have little to do with the techniques and processes employed by the Indian manufacturers. In fact it was felt that the various cakes of wootz were of uneven texture and the cause of such imperfection and defects was thoughts to lie in the crudeness of the techniques employed.

It was only some three decades later that this view was revised. An earlier version in fact, even when confronted with contrary evidence as was made available by other observers in the Indian techniques and processes, was an intellectual impossibility. "That iron could be converted into cast steel by fusing it in a closed vessel in contact with carbon" was yet to be discovered, and it was only in 1825 that a British manufacturer "took out a patent for converting iron into steel by exposing it to the action of carburreted hydrogen gas in a closed vessel, at a very high temperature, by which means the process of conversion is completed in a few hours, while by the old method, it was the work of from 14 to 20 days" (Heath, cited in Mushet).

According to J. M. Heath, founder of the Indian Iron and Steel Company, and later prominently associated with the development of steel making in Sheffield, the Indian process appear to combine both of the above early 19th century British discoveries. He observed: "Now it appears to me that the Indian process combines the principles of both the above desired methods. On elevating the temperature of the crucible containing pure iron, and dry wood, and green leafs, an abundant evolution of carburreted hydrogen gas would take place from the vegetable matter, and as its escape would be prevented by the luting at the mouth of the crucible, it would be retained in contact with the iron, which, at a high temperature, appears (from the above-mentioned patent process) to have a much greater affinity for gaseous then for concrete carbon; this would greatly shorten the operation and probably yet a much lower temperature then were the iron in contact with charcoal powder." (Cited in Mushet)

And he added: "In no other way can I account for the fact that iron is converted into cast steel by the natives of India, in 2 hours and a half, with an application of heat, that, in this country, would be considered quite inadequate to produce such an effect; while at Sheffield it requires at least four 4 hours to melt blistered steel in wind-furnaces of the best construction, although the crucibles in which the steel is melted are at a white heat when the material is put into them, and in the Indian process, the crucibles are put into the furnace quite cold".

The above quoted British authority however did not imply that the Indian practice was based on a knowledge "of the theory of his operations" by the Indian manufacturer. He felt it to be impossible "that the process was discovered by any scientific induction, for the theory of it can only be explained by the lights of modern chemistry".

By K. Kesava Rao
Department of Chemical Engineering
Indian Institute of Science
Bengaluru 560012, India
kesava@iisc.ac.in
...To be continued ...

--
कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
Read n Get Articles, Magazines, Books @ http://prakashan.vivekanandakendra.org

Let's work on "Swamiji's Vision - Eknathji's Mission"

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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Sunday 11 August 2024

Iron and Steel - Excerpt from letters sent by Scott (1790-1801)

Excerpts from Dharampalji's book Indian Science and Technology in the 18th Century (1971)

I enclose in one of the boxes a specimen of a kind of steel which is called wootz and is in high esteem among Indians. It appears to admit of a harder temper than anything we are acquainted with. I should be happy to have your opinion of its quality and composition. It is employed here for covering that part of gun-locks which the flint strikes, for cutting iron on a lathe, for chisels for cutting stones, for files and saws and for every purpose where excessive hardness is necessary. You must carefully observe that it cannot bear anything, beyond a very slight heat, which makes its working very tedious to the blacksmiths. It has a still greater inconvenience. It cannot be welded with iron or steel. It is only joined to them by screws and other contrivances. The blacksmiths, who work in wootz, generally consider it is a separate art and so do not work in iron. When the heat is a little raised above a slight red heat, part of the mass seems to run and the whole is lost as if the substance consisted to metals of different degrees of fusibility.

By K. Kesava Rao
Department of Chemical Engineering
Indian Institute of Science
Bengaluru 560012, India
kesava@iisc.ac.in
...To be continued ...

--
कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
Read n Get Articles, Magazines, Books @ http://prakashan.vivekanandakendra.org

Let's work on "Swamiji's Vision - Eknathji's Mission"

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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Saturday 10 August 2024

Iron and Steel - Manufacture of Iron in central India (Franklin, 1835)

Excerpts from Dharampalji's book Indian Science and Technology in the 18th Century (1971)

Charcoal is universally used in India for smelting iron, as the natives have no knowledge of coal, nor could they use it with their present refineries, because they are totally inadequate to the reduction of highly carbonised metal.

Their smelting furnaces, though rude in appearance, are nevertheless very exact in their interior proportions, and it has often surprised me to see men who are unquestionably ignorant of their principle, construct them with precision, in so simple a manner.

The iron was made over to Captain Presgrave of the Sagar Mint (an officer Very capable of judging with regard of its quality). He wrought it up into bars and rods for an iron suspension bridge on which he was then employed and the following is his report. 
"I tried all the descriptions of ore and made experiments on roasting it – result of which could only be ascertained by making the iron, the first six marks constituted the bulk of the quantity submitted for trial, and their iron results may be safely taken as a fair average; the other three are the result of my experiments on roasting of the ore – previous to smelting. The first six marks, afford bar iron (as far as my knowledge allows me to judge) of most excellent quality, possessing all the desirable properties of malleability, ductility at different temperatures and tenacity for all of which I think cannot be surpassed by the best Swedish iron; the second description consisting of three last numbers in the accompanying statement has produced very good bars, but in forging and working it up, the iron appears somewhat harder, probably from it still containing a portion of carbon; the different marks varied in yielding from 50 – 60.25 % in bars, the average from the whole being rather more than 55.74 %".

By K. Kesava Rao
Department of Chemical Engineering
Indian Institute of Science
Bengaluru 560012, India
kesava@iisc.ac.in
...To be continued ...

--
कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
Read n Get Articles, Magazines, Books @ http://prakashan.vivekanandakendra.org

Let's work on "Swamiji's Vision - Eknathji's Mission"

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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Friday 9 August 2024

Ice making - (Barker, 1775)

Excerpts from Dharampalji's book Indian Science and Technology in the 18th Century (1971)

The process of making ice in the East Indies having become a subject of speculation, I beg permission to present you with the method by which it was performed at Allahabad, Mootegil, and Calcutta, in the East Indies, lying between 25.5 and 23.5 degrees on North latitude. At the latter place I never heard of any persons having discovered natural ice in the pools or cisterns, or in any waters collected in the roads; nor has the thermometer been remarked to descend to the freezing point; and at the former very few only have discovered ice, and that but seldom. But in the process of making ice at these places it was usual to collect a quantity every morning, before the sun-rise (except in some particular kinds of weather, which I shall specify in the sequel) for near three months in the year: viz. from December till February.

The ice-maker belonging to me at Allahabad (at which place I principally attended to this enquiry) made a sufficient quantity in the winter for the supply of the table during the summer season. The methods he pursued were as follows: on a large open plain, three or four excavation were made, each about thirty feet square and two deep; the bottoms of which were strewed about eight inches or a foot thick with sugar-cane or the stems of the large Indian corn dried. Upon this bed were placed in rows, near to each other, a number of small, shallow, earthen pans, for containing the water intended to be frozen. These are unglazed scarce a quarter of an inch thick, about an inch and a quarter in depth, and made of an earth so porous, that it was visible from the exterior part of the pans, the water had penetrated the whole substance. Towards the dusk of the evening, they were filled with soft water, which had been boiled, and then left in the afore-related situation. The ice-makers attended the pits usually before the sun was above the horizon, and collected in baskets what was frozen, by pouring the whole contents of the pans into them, and thereby retaining the ice, which was daily conveyed to the grand receptacle or place or
preservation, prepared generally on some high dry situation, by sinking a pit of fourteen or fifteen feet deep, lined with straw, and then with a coarse kind of blanketing, where it is beat down with rammers, till at length its own accumulated cold again freezes and forms one solid mass. The mouth of the pit is well secured from the exterior air with straw and blankets, in the manner of the lining, and a thatched roof is thrown over the whole. It is here necessary to remark, that the quantity of ice depends materially on the weather; and consequently, it has sometimes happened that no congelation took place. At others,
perhaps, half the quantity will be frozen; and I have often seen the whole contents formed into a perfect cake of ice: For I have frequently remarked, that after a very sharp cold night, to the feel of the human body, scarce any ice has been formed; when at other times the night has been calm and serene, and sensibly warmer, the contents of the pans will be frozen through. The strongest proof of the influence of the weather appears by the water in one pit being more congealed than the same preparation for freezing will be in other situations, a mile or more distant.

To reason physically upon this process of making ice, it may be said, that had the thermometer been suspended in the air, free from every other body capable of communicating heat, in some parts of the night during the cold months of December, January, and February, the quicksilver might have `descended to the freezing point the water, being artfully placed in a similar situation contained in thin porous pans, and supported by a substance little capable of communicating heat from the earth might also freeze, and continue in a state of congelation till the heat of the morning came on. I say this may be possible; but at the same time I must beg leave to observe, that during my residence in that quarter of the globe, I never saw any natural ice. I cannot declare that the thermometer has not descended to the freezing point during the night, because I never made the necessary observations; but the water in every other situation, excepting in the pans, has not appeared to be in a freezing state. The climate may probably contribute in some measure to facilitate the coagulation of water, when placed in a situation free from the heat of the earth, since those nights in which the greatest quantity of ice has been
produced, were as I before observed, perfectly serene, the atmosphere sharp and thin, with very little dew after midnight. Many gentlemen, now in England, have made the same remarks, in their frequent visits with me to the ice-pits. The spongy nature of sugar-canes, or stems of the Indian corn, appears well calculated to give a passage under the pans to the cold air; which, acting on the exterior parts of the vessels, may carry off by evaporation a proportion of the heat. The porous substance of the vessels seems equally well qualified for the admission of the cold air internally; and their situation being full a foot beneath the plane of the ground, prevents the surface of the water from being ruffled by a by small current of air, and thereby preserves the congealed particles from disunion. Boiling the water is esteemed a necessary preparative to this method of congelation; but how far this may be consonant with philosophical reasoning, I will not presume to determine.

By K. Kesava Rao
Department of Chemical Engineering
Indian Institute of Science
Bengaluru 560012, India
kesava@iisc.ac.in
...To be continued ...

--
कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
Read n Get Articles, Magazines, Books @ http://prakashan.vivekanandakendra.org

Let's work on "Swamiji's Vision - Eknathji's Mission"

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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Thursday 8 August 2024

Surgery - (Scott, Extracts of letters to J. Banks, 1790-1801)

Excerpts from Dharampalji's book Indian Science and Technology in the 18th Century (1971)

You will think the paper on putting on noses on those who have lost them in an extraordinary one. I hope to send you by the later ships some of the Indian cement for uniting animal parts.

In medicine I shall not be able to praise their science very much. It is one of those arts which is too delicate in its nature to bear war and oppression and the revolutions of governments. The effects of surgical operation are more obvious, more easily acquired and lost by no means so readily. Here I should have much to praise. They practice with great success the operation of depressing the chrystalline lens when become opaque (formation of a cataract) and from the time immemorial they have cut for the stone at the same place which they now do in Europe. These are curious facts and I believe unknown before to us.

By K. Kesava Rao
Department of Chemical Engineering
Indian Institute of Science
Bengaluru 560012, India
kesava@iisc.ac.in
...To be continued ...

--
कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
Read n Get Articles, Magazines, Books @ http://prakashan.vivekanandakendra.org

Let's work on "Swamiji's Vision - Eknathji's Mission"

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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Wednesday 7 August 2024

Medicine - Dharampal’s comments on inoculation

Excerpts from Dharampalji's book Indian Science and Technology in the 18th Century (1971)

Till 1720, when the wife of the then British Ambassador in Turkey, having got her children successfully inoculated, began to advocate its introduction into Britain, the practice of inoculation was unknown to the British medical and scientific world. Proving relatively successful, though for a considerable period vehemently opposed by large sections of the medical profession and the theologians of Oxford etc., awareness grew about its value and the various medical men engaged themselves in enquiries concerning it in different lands.

Inoculation against the smallpox seems to have been universal, if not throughout, in large parts of Northern and Southern India, till it was banned in Calcutta and other places under the Bengal Presidency (and perhaps elsewhere) from around 1802-3. Its banning undoubtedly was done in the name of 'humanity', and justified by the Superintendent General of Vaccine Inoculation in his first report in March 1804. (A vaccine, from the Latin vacca, meaning cow, for use in the inoculating against small pox was manufactured by Dr. E. Jenner in 1798. From then on this vaccine replaced the previous 'variolous' matter, taken from human agents. Hence the method using the 'vaccine' came to be called 'Vaccine Inoculation'.)

After giving the details of the indigenous practice, Holwell stated "When the before recited treatment of the inoculated is strictly followed, it is next to a miracle to hear, that one in a million fails of receiving the infection, or of one that miscarried under it." It is possible that Holwell's information was not as accurate as of the newly appointed Superintendent General of Vaccine Inoculation in 1804. According to the latter fatalities amongst the inoculated were around one in two hundred amongst the Indian population and amongst the Europeans in Calcutta, etc. "one in sixty or seventy". The wider risk, however, seems to have been in the spreading of disease by contagion from the inoculated themselves to those who for one reason or another had not been inoculated.

So what, till the latter part of the eighteenth century, when practised universally in any tract, was a relatively successful method and involved no contagious effect, as all were then similarly inoculated, by 1800 had begun to seem a great hazard to the Europeans in Calcutta. But in spite of the banning, prohibitions, etc. resorted to in Calcutta and other cities and towns, the introduction of vaccine inoculation was very halting. Such halting development must have been caused by insufficient provisions of resources or by sheer indifference. Or as hinted by the officiating Superintendent General of Vaccination for
N.W.P. (the present U.P.) in 1870, it may also have been caused by the peoples' reluctance to get vaccinated as, according to this authority, this indigenous inoculation possessed more "protective power than is possessed by vaccination performed in a damp climate". Whatever the causes, the indigenous inoculation seems to have been still practised around 1870. For areas near Calcutta those who were not so inoculated are estimated at 10% of the population about 1870 and for the Benares area at 36%. The frequent smallpox epidemics which were rampant in various parts of India in the nineteenth and early
twentieth century may largely be traced back on the one hand to the state's backwardness and indifference in making the requisite arrangement for universal vaccination, and on the other hand to having difficult by not only withdrawing all support to it but also forcing it to be practised secretly and stealthily.

By K. Kesava Rao
Department of Chemical Engineering
Indian Institute of Science
Bengaluru 560012, India
kesava@iisc.ac.in
...To be continued ...

--

कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
Read n Get Articles, Magazines, Books @ http://prakashan.vivekanandakendra.org

Let's work on "Swamiji's Vision - Eknathji's Mission"

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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Tuesday 6 August 2024

Medicine - Method of inoculation for smallpox (Holwell, 1767)

Excerpts from Dharampalji's book Indian Science and Technology in the 18th Century (1971)

Inoculation is performed in Indostan by a particular tribe of Bramins, who are delegated annually for this service from the different colleges of Bindobund, Eleabas, Banaras, etc. over all the distant provinces; dividing themselves into small parties, of three or four each, they plan their travelling circuits in such wise as to arrive at the places of their perspective destination some weeks before the usual return of disease; they organise commonly in the Bengall provinces early in February, although they some years they do not begin to inoculate before March, deferring it until they consider the state of the season, and acquire information of the state of the distemper.

The inhabitants of Bengall, knowing the usual time when the Bramins annually return, observe strictly the regimen enjoined, whether they determine to be inoculated or not; this preparation consists only in abstaining for a month from fish, milk, and ghee (a kind of butter made generally of buffalo's milk); the prohibition of fish respects only the native Portuguese and Mahomedans, who abound in every province of the empire.

When the Bramins begin to inoculate, they pass from house to house and operate at the door, refusing to inoculate any who have not, on a strict security, duly observed the preparatory course enjoined them. It is no uncommon thing for them to ask the parents how many pocks they choose their children should have: Vanity, we should think, urged a question on a matter seemingly so uncertain in the issue; but true it is, that they hardly ever exceed, or are different, in the number required.

When the before recited treatment of the inoculated is strictly followed, it is next to a miracle to hear, that one in a million fails of receiving the infection, or of one that miscarries under it; of the multitudes I have seen inoculated in that country, the number of pustules have been seldom less than fifty, and hardly ever exceeded two hundred. Since, therefore, this practice of the East has been followed without variation, and with uniform success from the remote known times, it is but justice to conclude, it must have been originally founded on the basis of rational principles and experiment.

By K. Kesava Rao
Department of Chemical Engineering
Indian Institute of Science
Bengaluru 560012, India
kesava@iisc.ac.in
...To be continued ...

--
कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
Read n Get Articles, Magazines, Books @ http://prakashan.vivekanandakendra.org

Let's work on "Swamiji's Vision - Eknathji's Mission"

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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Monday 5 August 2024

Medicine - Operation of inoculation of the smallpox as performed in Bengall (Coult, 1731):

Excerpts from Dharampalji's book Indian Science and Technology in the 18th Century (1971)

Here follows one account of the operation of inoculation of the smallpox as performed here in Bengal taken from the concurring accounts of several Bhamans and physicians of this part of India.

The operation of inoculation called by the natives tikah has been known in the kingdom of Bengall as near as I can learn, about 150 years and according to the Bhamanian records was first performed by one Dununtary, a physician of Champanager, a small town by the side of Ganges about half way to Cossimbazar, whose memory is now held in great esteem as being thought the author of this operation, which secret, they say, he had immediately of God in a dream.

Their method of performing this operation is by taking a little of the pus (when the smallpox are come to maturity and are of a good kind) and dipping these in the point of a pretty large sharp needle. Therewith make several punctures in the hollows under the deltoid muscle or sometimes in the forehead, after which they cover the part with a little paste made of boiled rice.

When they want the operation of the inoculated matter to be quick they give the patient a small bolus made of a little of the pus, and boiled rice immediately after the operation which is repeated the two following days at noon.

The place where the puncture were made commonly festures and comes to a small suppuration, and if not the operation has no effect and the person is still liable to have the smallpox but on the contrary if the punctures do suppurate and no fever or eruption ensues, then they are no longer subject to the infection.

The punctures blacken and dry up with other pustules.

The fever ensues later or sooner, according to the age and strength of the person inoculated, but commonly the third or fourth days. They keep the patient under the coolest regimen they can think of before the fever comes on and frequently use cold bathing.

If the eruption is suppressed they also use frequent cold bathing. At the same time they give warm medicine inwardly, but if they prove of the confluent kind, they use no cold bathing, but keep the patient very cool and giving cooling medicine.

By K. Kesava Rao
Department of Chemical Engineering
Indian Institute of Science
Bengaluru 560012, India
kesava@iisc.ac.in
...To be continued ...

--
कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Sunday 4 August 2024

Algebra (Burrow, 1790)

Excerpts from Dharampalji's book Indian Science and Technology in the 18th Century (1971)

I mean very shortly to publish translations of the Leelvatty and Beej Ganeta, or the Arithmetic and Algebra of the Hindoos. [As noted by Burton (1985), the Lilavati and the Vijagnita form the first two parts of Bhaskara's book Siddhanta Siromani. The book was written in 1150 A.D. and translated into Arabic in 1587 A.D.] With respect to the binomial theorem, the application of it to fractional indices will perhaps remain forever the exclusive property of Newton; but the following question and its solution shows that the Hindoos understood it in whole numbers to the full as well as Briggs, and much better than Pascal.
[Briggs (1561-1630) was an English mathematician who invented the logarithm to the base 10. Pascal (1623-1662) was a French mathematician, physicist, and philosopher. He developed 'Pascal's triangle', which displays the binomial coefficients.]

A Raja's palace had eight doors; now these doors may either be opened by one at a time; or by two at a time; or by three at a time; and so on through the whole, till at last all are opened together. It is required to tell the numbers of times that this can be done.

Set down the number of the doors, and proceed in order to gradually decreasing by one to unity and then in a contrary order as follows:
8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Divide the first eight by the unit beneath it, and the quotient eight shows the number of times that the doors can be opened by one at a time: multiply this eight by the next term seven, and divide the product by the two beneath it, and the result twenty-eight is the number of times that two doors may be opened; multiply the last found twenty-eight by the next figure six, and divide the product by the number three beneath it, and the quotient of fifty-six shows the number of times that three different doors may be opened: again this fifty-six multiplied by the next number five and divided by the four beneath it, is seventy, the number of times that four different doors may be opened: in the same manner fifty-six is the number of fives that can be opened: twenty-eight the number of times that six can be opened: eight the number of times that seven can be opened and lastly, one is the number of times the whole may be opened together, and the sum of all the different times is 255.

By K. Kesava Rao
Department of Chemical Engineering
Indian Institute of Science
Bengaluru 560012, India
kesava@iisc.ac.in
...To be continued ...
--
कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
Read n Get Articles, Magazines, Books @ http://prakashan.vivekanandakendra.org

Let's work on "Swamiji's Vision - Eknathji's Mission"

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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Saturday 3 August 2024

Astronomy - Remarks on the astronomy of the Brahmin’s (Playfair 1790)

Excerpts from Dharampalji's book Indian Science and Technology in the 18th Century (1971)

The tables, and methods, of the Brahmin's of Tirvalore, are, in many respects more singular than any that have yet been described. (Tirvalore is a small town on the Coromandel coast, about 12G miles west of Negapatnam, in Lat. 10 degrees, 44 minutes and east Long, from Greenwich 79 degrees, 42 minutes, by Rennell's map.)

These tables go far back into antiquity. Their epoch coincides with the famous era of the Calyougham, that is with the beginning of the year 3102 before Christ. (In order to calculate for a given time, the place of any of the celestial bodies, three things are requisite. The first is, the point of the body in some past instant of time, ascertained by observation; and this instant, from which every calculation must set out, is usually called the epoch of the tables.) When the Brahmins of Tirvalore would calculate the place of the Sun for a given time, they begin by reducing into days the interval between the time, and the commencement of Calyougham, multiplying the years by 365 days, 6 hours, 12 minutes, 30 seconds; and taking away 2 days, 3 hours, 32 minutes, 30 seconds, the astronomical epoch having begun that much later than the civil. They next find, by means of certain divisions, when the year current began, or how many days have elapsed since the beginning of it, and then, by the table of the duration of the months, they reduce these days into astronomical months, days, etc. which is the same with the signs, degrees and minutes of the Sun's longitude from the beginning of the zodiac. The Sun's longitude, therefore, is found.

The tables of Tirvalore, however, though they differ in form very much from those formerly described, agree with them perfectly in many of their elements. They suppose the same length of the year, the same mean motions, and the same inequalities of the Sun and Moon and they are adapted nearly to the same meridian. But a circumstance in which they seem to differ materially from the rest is, the antiquity of the epoch from which they take their date, the year 3102 before the Christian era. We must, therefore, enquire, whether this epoch is real or fictitious, that is, whether it has been determined by actual observation, or has been calculated from the modern epochs of the other tables.. For it may naturally be supposed, that the Brahmins having made observations in later times or having borrowed from the astronomical knowledge of other nations, have imagined to themselves a fictitious epoch, coinciding with the celebrated era of the Calyougham, to which through vanity or superstition, they have referred the places of the heavenly bodies and have only calculated what they pretend that their ancestors observed.

In doing this, however, the Brahmins must have furnished us with means, almost infallible, of detaching their imposture. It is only for astronomy, in its most perfect state, to go back to the distance of forty-six centuries and unto ascertain the situation of the heavenly body yet so remote a period. The modern astronomy of Europe, with all the accuracy that it derives from the telescope and the pendulum could not venture on so difficult a task, were it not assisted by the theory of gravitation, and had not the integral calculus, after a100 years of almost continual improvement, been able, at last, to determine the disturbances in our system, which arise from the action of the planets on one another.

Unless the corrections for these disturbances be taken into account, any system of astronomical tables, however accurate at the time of its formation, and however diligently copied from the heavens, will be found less exact for every instant, either before or after that time, and will continually diverge more and more from the truth, both for future and past ages. Indeed, this will happen not only from the neglect of these corrections, but also from small errors unavoidably committed in determining the main motions, which must accumulate with time and produce an effect that becomes every day more sensible, as we
retire, on either side, from the instant of observation. For both reasons it may be established as a maxim, that if there be given a system of astronomical tables, founded on observations of an unknown date, that date may be found, by taking the time when the tables represent the celestial motions most exactly.

The moon's mean place for the beginning of the Calyougham (that is, for midnight between the 17th and 18th of February 3102, B.C. at Benaras), calculated from Mayer's tables, on the supposition that her motion has always been at the same rate as at the beginning of the present century, is 10s, 0 degrees, 51 minutes, 16 seconds. But, according to the same astronomer, the moon is subjected to a small, but uniform acceleration, such, that her angular motion, in any one age, is nine seconds greater than in the preceding, which, in an interval of 4801 years, must have amounted to 5 degrees, 45 minutes, 44
seconds. This must be added to the preceding, to give the real mean place of the moon, at the astronomical epoch of the Calyougham, which is therefore 10 seconds, 6 degrees, 37 minutes. Now, the same, by the Tables of Tirvalore, is 10s, 6 degrees, 0 minutes; the difference is less than two thirds of a degree, which for so remote a period, and considering that acceleration of the moon's motion for which no allowance could be made in an Indian calculation, is a degree of accuracy that nothing but actual; observation could have produced.

Thus have we enumerated no less than nine astronomical elements ( the inequality of the precession of the equinoxes; the acceleration of the moon; the length of the solar year; the equation of the sun's centre; the obliquity of the ecliptic; the place of Jupiter's aphelion; the equation of Saturn's centre; and the inequalities in the main motion of both these planets) to which the tables of India assigns such values as do, by no means, belong to them in these later ages, but such as the theory of gravity proves to have belonged to them three thousand years before the Christian era. At that time, therefore, or in the ages preceding it, the observations must have been made from which these elements were deduced. For it is abundantly evident, that the Brahmins of later times, however, willing they might be to adapt
their tables to so remarkable an epoch as the Calyougham, could never think of doing so, by substituting, instead of quantities which they had observed, others which they had no reason to believe had ever existed. The elements in question are precisely what these astronomers must have supposed invariable, and of which, had they supposed them to change, they had no rules to go by for ascertaining the variations; since, to the discovery of these rules is required, not only all the perfection to which astronomy is, at this day, brought in Europe, but all that which the sciences of motion and of extension have likewise attained. It is no less clear, that these coincidences are not the work of accident; for it will scarcely be supposed that chance has adjusted the errors of the Indian astronomy with such singular 
felicity, that observers, who could not discover the true state of heavens, at the age in which they lived, have succeeded in describing one which took place several thousand years before they were born.

In another part of the calculation of eclipses, a direct application is made of one of the most remarkable propositions in geometry. In order to have the semiduration of a solar eclipse, they subtract from the square of the sum of the semi-diameters of the sun and moon, the square of a certain line, which is a perpendicular from the centre of the sun on the path of the moon; and from the reminder, they extract the square root, which is the measure of the semiduration. The same thing is practised in lunar eclipses. These operations are all founded on a very distinct conception of what happens in the case of an
eclipse, and on a knowledge of this theorem, that in a right-angled triangle, the square of the hypotenuse is equal to the squares of the other two sides. It is curious to find the theorem of Pythagoras in India, where, for aught we know, it may have been discovered, and from whence that philosopher may have derived some of the solid, as well as visionary speculations, with which he delighted to instruct or amuse his disciples.

The preceding calculations must have required the assistance of many subsidiary tables, of which no trace has yet been found in India. Besides many other geometrical propositions, some of them also involve the ratio which the diameter of a circle was supposed to bear to its circumference, but which we would find it impossible to discover from them exactly, on account of small quantities that may have been neglected in their calculations. Fortunately, we can arrive at this knowledge, which is very material when the progress of geometry is to be estimated, from a passage in the Ayeen Akbary, where we
are told, that the Hindoos suppose the diameter of a circle to be to its circumference as 1250 to 3927, and where the author, who knew that this was more accurate than the proportion of Archimedes (7 to 22), and believed it to be perfectly exact, expresses his astonishment, that among so simple a people, there should be found a truth, which, among the wisest and most learned nations, had been sought for in vain.

The proportion of 1250 to 3927 is indeed a near approach to the quadrature of the circle; it differs little from that of Metius, 113 to 355, and is the same with one equally remarkable that of 1 to 3.1416. When found in the simplest and most elementary way, it requires a polygon of 768 size to be inscribed in a circle; an operation which cannot be automatically performed without the knowledge of some very curious properties of that curve, and, at least, nine extractions of the square root, each as far as ten places of decimals. All this must have been accomplished in India; for it is to be observed, that the above mentioned proportion cannot have been received from the mathematicians of the West. The Greeks left nothing on this subject more accurate than the theorem of Archimedes; and the Arabian mathematicians seem not to have attempted any nearer approximation. The geometry of modern Europe can much less be regarded as the source of this knowledge. Metius and Vieta (1540-1603 AD) were the first, who, in the quadrature of the circle, surpassed the accuracy of Archimedes; and they flourished at the very time when the Institutes of Akbar were collected to India.

On the grounds which have been explained, the following general conclusions appear to be established.

1. The observations, on which the astronomy of India is founded, were made more than 3000 years before the Christian era; and, in particular, the places of the Sun and Moon at the beginning of the Calyougham, were determined by actual observation.

This follows from the exact agreement of the radical places in the tables of Tirvalore, with those deduced for the same epoch from the tables of De La Caille and Mayer, and especially in the case of the moon, when regard is had to her acceleration.

Of such high antiquity, therefore, must we suppose the origin of this astronomy, unless we can believe, that all the coincidences which have been enumerated, are but the effects of chance or what is still more wonderful, that, some ages ago, there had arisen a Newton among the Brahmins, to discover that universal principle which connects not only the most distant regions of space, but the most remote periods of duration; and a De La Grange, to trace, through the immensity of both its most subtle and complicated operations.

[Dharampal notes that "the widespread prevalence of European ethnocentric bias" comes through in the above review by J. Playfair, professor of mathematics at the University of Edinburgh: "It became intellectually easier for him to concede this astronomy's antiquity rather than its sophistication and the scientific capacities of its underlying theories."]

By K. Kesava Rao
Department of Chemical Engineering
Indian Institute of Science
Bengaluru 560012, India
kesava@iisc.ac.in
...To be continued ...
--
कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
Read n Get Articles, Magazines, Books @ http://prakashan.vivekanandakendra.org

Let's work on "Swamiji's Vision - Eknathji's Mission"

Follow Vivekananda Kendra on   blog   twitter   g+   facebook   rss   delicious   youtube   Donate Online

मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26