Tag: Biology

  • Vedic Palm Manuscript Atreya Siksha In Germany In Tamil

    When I posted an article on the information that Sri.Bandibatla Viswanatham Sastry, Rajamundry, Andhra Pradesh went to Germany and helped the germans to develop V-Rockest, which was used effectively by Hitler in World War II, thought there were positive comments, there was also derision that I was quoting from hearsay and legends which do not have authenticity.

    I proceed in my quest to seek the Truth about Santana Dharma, despite some , from our soil, asking me to desist from pursuing the antiquity of Sanatna Dharma.

    Aitreya Palm Leaf manuscript in Germany. in Tamil.jpg Aitreya Palm Leaf manuscript in Germany. in Tamil.

    I followed up the notion that the Vedic Texts were smuggled to Germany.

    For this, I took my grandfather Professor. Geometry Narayana Iyer’s words, for if a grandson does not belive a grandfather, who else would?

    I think my grandfather would be happy, wherever he is now.

    The Aitreya Shiksha is in Germany and to the surprise of many it is in ancient Tamil !

    This also proves my Theory that Sanatana Dharma was in place in the South, probably even before the Sarasvati Valley!

    The irony is that the Link was found, of all places in Pakistan defence Forum!

    http://defence.pk/threads/help-recover-the-rare-text-on-vedic-phonology-from-germany.236826/

    Here is the story.

    Here is the long-awaited Ātreya Śikṣā. There are two versions, one is text only, the other is the critical edition with 141 footnotes.

    http://is1.mum.edu/vedicreserve/shiksha/atreya_shiksha.pdf

    Critical Edition: http://www.peterffreund.com/shiksha/atreya1_shiksha.pdf

    We were originally attracted to Ātreya Śikṣā because it was chosen by Dr. Tony Nader, author of the landmark work, Human Physiology: Expression of Veda and Vedic Literature, who correlated the structure and function of the main texts of Shiksha with the 36 pairs of autonomic ganglia on each side of the spine. The Ātreya Śikṣā was specifically correlated with the Mesentericum inferius, one of the autonomic ganglia not located along the spine, but found in the gut, located at the origin of the inferior mesenteric artery where it branches off from the aorta. This ganglion contains the sympathetic neurons innervating the descending and sigmoid colon. (See attached picture at the bottom of this email!)  But this correlation of Ātreya Śikṣā with a small bundle of nerve fibers in the abdominal cavity, did not prepare us for the grand synthesis of the knowledge of Sanskrit phonetics which Ātreya presents in this work. Starting with the alphabet which the beginning student learns, he lays out a course of Vedic study, leading to complete mastery of the science of pronunciation. Pronunciation is for the sake of perfect recitation of the Veda. Vedic recitation is a means of gaining perfection, Pāṭha mātreṇa siddhyati, “Through mere recitation, one gains perfection.” Letter-perfect recitation of the Veda–because the Veda is the blueprint of Natural Law at the basis of the whole creation, the Constitution of the Universe–leads to the complete awakening of intelligence in the individual, awareness rising to command the total potential of Natural Law, in the highest state of consciousness, Unity Consciousness, which Ātreya calls Para Brahman. The knowledge of phonetics is placed in the broader context of culturing enlightenment in the individual, unfolding the hidden latent potential within the individual. Towards this end, Ātreya incorporates all the main themes and threads of Sanskrit phonetics, to create a comprehensive vision that unites the science of phonetics with the age-old tradition of Vedic recitation, and the experience of higher states of consciousness in the individual.

    Picture of the aorta and (2/3 of the way down) the place where the Inferior mesenteric artery branches off from the aorta. The nerve ganglion around that branching point, the inferior mesenteric ganglion, is correlated with this Atreya Shiksha.Jpg Picture of the aorta and (2/3 of the way down) the place where the Inferior mesenteric artery branches off from the aorta. The nerve ganglion around that branching point, the inferior mesenteric ganglion, is correlated with this Atreya Shiksha.

    The course of Vedic study begins with memorization of the Saṁhitā, and here the Taittirīya recension of Kṛiṣhṇa Yajur Veda is promoted as the first Veda to be learned by the student. After learning the Saṁhitā by heart through constant repetition, repeating it over and over with the teacher, like a gramophone record, the student begins a long and somewhat arduous journey of investigation into the detailed fabrics of the Saṁhitā text. The student starts this journey by learning the word by word recitation of the Vedic text. Whereas the words are put together in the Saṁhitā text, and there is mixing of sounds at the boundaries of words, called Sandhi, the Sandhi is resolved and the words are pulled apart in the Pada Pāṭha, or word by word recitation. Letters that are dropped or changed in Sandhi have to be restored in the Pada Pāṭha recitation, and there are many ambiguities which cannot be decided by inspection: Is the final n after long ā really a final n, or is it actually a final t which has been changed to n by Sandhi? If a long ā is followed by a voiced consonant at the start of the next word, was there originally a visarga (ḥ) which has been dropped by Sandhi, or was there just long ā? There is an entire class of texts, in Sanskrit phonetics, dealing with these issues, and serving as aids in the memorization of the Pada Pāṭha recitation. This group of texts includes the Ingya Ratnam which we have already visited, and they include also a group of texts called Sapta Lakṣaṇam. We will examine Sapta Lakṣaṇam and some of the other texts in this category in a future Ātreya Śikṣā mailing. Ātreya devotes one section to explaining the intricacies of the word by word recitation, particularly as regards the treatment of compound words.

    After mastering the Pada Pāṭha, the student is now ready to begin the Krama recitation of the Veda. In the Krama recitation, two words at a time from the Pada Pāṭha are combined together with Sandhi, and recited: The first and the second, the second and the third, and then the third and the fourth, so that each word is repeated twice, once together with the previous word and once together with the following word. Some details of this recitation are explained in the section on Krama in Ātreya Śikṣā, and there are also some rare Śikṣā texts on this topic which we are trying to obtain.

    The Saṁhitā and Krama recitations are called Prakṛiti recitations, because the original sequence of the Vedic text is maintained in these recitations. There are also more complex recitations of the words of the Veda, called Vikṛiti, and Ātreya devotes a section to explaining the first of these, called Jaṭā. In the Jaṭā recitation, each pair of words that are repeated in the Krama recitation, are now repeated three times, once forward in their normal sequence, then backward, in the reverse order, and then again forward in the normal sequence, ie.,1-2, 2-1, 1-2. There is a class of texts dealing with the Jaṭā recitation, and we will be visiting a half-dozen of these in a future Ātreya Śikṣā mailing. In addition to Jaṭā, there are seven other modes of Vikṛiti recitation, and these are discussed in another group of phonetic texts, one of which, Vyāla Śikṣā, we have already visited.

    After the study of the Vikṛiti recitations of the Vedic text, which take many years to master, there is yet another level of recitation which explores in excruciating detail all the fine points of Vedic phonology. This is the Varṇakrama recitation. Varṇakrama means literally, letter by letter, and there are five kinds of Varṇakrama recitations, each increasingly more complex: The added complexity is not through alteration of sequence, but through giving more and more details of the phonological characteristics of each letter in sequence(1), the associated accent(2), the length (Kāla) of the sound(3), demarcation of plosives by what are called aṅgas (limbs of each vowel)(4) until in the fifth kind of Varṇakrama, called Varṇasārabhūta Varṇakrama(5), eight different parameters are described for each vowel, eight for each consonant, and ten different parameters for each Vedic accent, including the jāti (caste), and devatā of each letter. The description of the Varṇakrama recitation begins with verse 46.2 and continues through verse 281, as Detlef Eichler has so kindly pointed out. Thus the study of Varṇakrama forms the bulk of the content of Ātreya Śikṣā, There is one other well-known text which deals exclusively with Varṇakrama (although Varṇakrama itself is not well known) and that is Pāri Śikṣā. An excellent version of Pāri Śikṣā with numbered verses and clearly marked sections is included in the Hamburg palm leaves where Ātreya Śikṣā is also found, and there it is called Pañchavarṇakrama Lakṣaṇam. We will go into detail about the Varṇakrama recitation as described in Ātreya Śikṣā in the light of the description of Varṇakrama in Pāri Śikṣā in a future Ātreya Śikṣā mailing. The Varṇakrama recitation demands perfection in the letter perfect preservation and recitation of the Vedic text. Its treatment completes the unfoldment of Sanskrit phonetics in Ātreya Śikṣā.

    Having completed the discussion of Varṇakrama, in the remaining verses, Ātreya describes the goal of Vedic study, the attainment of Brahman consciousness, and strongly emphasizes the importance of daily recitation of the Veda as taught by the guru.

    Atreya Shiksha has 14 chapters and 64 named sections in those chapters. The verse count is said to be 294, but we seem to have 295. The verses are numbered in both manuscripts although sparsely. The Tirupati manuscript was said to be 500 to 600 years old; the Hamburg manuscript is probably 150 to 200 years old. But differences between the Hamburg and the Tirupati manuscripts are very few: these are noted with footnotes. Only rarely was the reading in the Tirupati manuscript clearer or more sound. The Hamburg manuscript has one more verse than the Tirupati manuscript, but this verse seems to belong. The Hamburg manuscript has three lines in a different position than in the Tirupati manuscript. We have settled with the position given them by the Hamburg manuscript. Further differences are more subtle. Only readings that were clearly different, and not due to poor penmanship (or insect damage) have been noted.

    The chapters are noted with numbers in the Hamburg manuscript: The numbers are written on the left margin of the palm leaf, associated with the section title of the last section of the chapter. In the Tirupati manuscript, the end of the second chapter is marked with the word “dvaya.” This gives a hint that the chapter divisions are indeed authentic, and perhaps even original. But there is some lack of clarity as to where actually the chapter boundaries fall, since only sections are marked in the text, and only these little clues of numbers written after specific sections give indication of where the chapters start and end. The sections are occasionally noted with colophons; more frequently they are noted with a long horizontal line with a wave at the end, appearing at the end of a verse. Sometimes the section title will include the word “ādi” indicating that the section starts with the verse that begins with those words and that will establish the starting point of the section. Some sections are quite clear from their subject matter; while others are gauged more crudely by the position of the title notation in the margin. Since each line has about one and a quarter anustubh verses, there is some ambiguity for the starting point of some sections.

    There are surprisingly few shared verses in Ātreya Śikṣā. Shared verses have been a hallmark of authenticity in Śikṣā texts, and there are just enough to convince us that we have an authentic, original text. There are 32 shared lines in Ātreya Śikṣā, which is about 5% of the whole. There are 18 different Śikṣā texts which have at least one shared line with Ātreya Śikṣā. Top of the list is Pāri Śikṣā with 17 shared lines, then Āpiśali with 7, Śambhu with 5, Kauṇḍinya (Mysore) with 3, Veda Śikṣā, Yajñavalkya, Varṇaratnapradīpikā, Kālanirṇaya, Pāṇini, Śaunaka, Śaiśirīya Śikṣā and Svarāṣṭaka with 2 lines each, and Lomaśi, Sarvasaṁmata, KauhalIya, Cārāyaṇīya, Svara Śikṣā, and Vyāsa Śikṣā each with one shared line. Quite surprisingly, Ātreya Śikṣā is the first text that we have come across which has shared lines with Vyāsa Śikṣa. Although there is a paucity of shared verses, and many verses with the same content and vocabulary have been apparently purposely reworked by one or the other author so that they do not match, like a school-boy being careful to avoid plagiarism, still there are enough shared verses to give the sense of Ātreya belonging to the community of Śikṣākāra’s, the ancient writers of phonetic treatises. As discussed before, Pāri Śikṣā is especially close in content to the Ātreya Śikṣā, and the number of shared verses does not reveal the intimate connection between the two texts: There are many more verses, many of them cited in the footnotes, which exhibit great similarity between Ātreya and Pāri Śikṣā, and many of the chapter titles of the two works are the same. Most of Pāri Śikṣā is in Triṣṭubh meter, with 22 syllables per line, while most of Ātreya Śikṣā is in the more common Anuṣṭubh meter, with only 16 syllables per line. This of course makes it more difficult for one to borrow from the other, but in verse 106, Ātreya does just that, using one and a quarter lines to quote a Triṣṭubh line, apparently from Pāri Śikṣā, concluding with iti proktās te, “Thus they said in ancient times.” This is a hint which gives some measure of validation to the proposal of Detlef Eichler, that Ātreya has simply reworked the material of the earlier Pāri Śikṣā, adding only a few additional sections at the beginning and the end. But regardless of the antecedents, and there are such connections precisely because he does stand within the tradition of Vedic Science, nevertheless, Ātreya’s borrowing does not detract from his accomplishment: Ātreya achieves what no other Śikṣā writer has attempted, namely, he presents to the world a textbook of enlightenment through Vedic recitation.

    We are grateful to the Hamburg Staats-Universitaets Bibliothek (Library) for the preservation of this manuscript bundle and the extraordinarily clear photographs of the palm leafs. We would also like to thank Detlef Eichler for his many excellent suggestions and recommended changes of the typescript. And thanks again to all the Kickstarter Project supporters for your support and your patience. We now have the content needed to move ahead with the rewards promised as part of the Atreya Shiksha Project fundraising. And of course, the monthly updates will continue as we progress with the transcription of the 40 other texts in this manuscript bundle.

    Gratefully yours,

    Peter Freund and Vivek Vaidyanathan

    Citations with eternal gratitude to.

    https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1871038000/atreya-shiksha/posts/736483

    • It may be noticed that the script in the Image is in Tamil (ancient)
    • Dr.Chandrasekhar had pointed it out rightly.

    I have written to Professor Peter Freund.

    support@kickstarter.com

    6:53 PM (2 hours ago)

    to me

    Thanks for contacting Kickstarter.

    We’ve received your request and a member of our Community Support team will get back to you within 1-2 business days. Our support hours are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. ET.

    Thank you for your patience and please visit our FAQ and other help resources in the meantime:

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    Venkata Ramanan

    Aug 13, 9:23 AM

    The image that is in the article, showing Atreya Suktha,- the writing in the manuscript is Not Sanskrit.

    It is Tamil, an ancient language of India, which is very much alive and has an ancient History matching Sanskrit and in fact it runs parallel to Sanskrit and The Vedas ,Puranas and Ithihasas of Sanskrit quote Tamil and Tamil also quotes them.

    Surprising that how this has happened considering the nature of the Project.

    Kindly effect necessary changes

    This Manuscript in Tamil is an enormous find and would even alter Sanatana Dharma History.

    My gratitude for such an intersting article.

    I have cited this in my blog.

    Your Post https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1871038000/atreya-shiksha/posts/736483

    Image url https://ksr-ugc.imgix.net/projects/453013/photo-original.jpg?v=1397809633&w=1536&h=1152&fit=crop&auto=format&q=92&s=ad3be5dbc87bf312335bb7968d6e3b46https://ksr-ugc.imgix.net/projects/453013/photo-original.jpg?v=1397809633&w=1536&h=1152&fit=crop&auto=format&q=92&s=ad3be5dbc87bf312335bb7968d6e3b46

    Regards

    S.V.Ramanan

  • Cell Division under New Microscope Video

    One of the mysteries of Life is the division of Cells.

    Viewing it under Microscope is an experience.

    Now a New Microscope has been developed an it can provide interesting 3 D viewing.

    The microscope uses a technique called lattice light-sheet microscopy, which involves scanning a cell with ultra-thin sheets of light. This process allows scientists to collect high-resolution images while minimizing light damage to the cells. The research was described in a paper published online in the journal Science on Oct. 24.

    “There are many cells you could look at forever in 3D,” Dr. Eric Betzig, a physicist, inventor, and engineer at the institute who developed the microscope, said in a written statement. “We know what the microscope can offer in terms of the imaging, but I think there are a lot of applications we haven’t even thought of yet.”

    Watch the Video.

    http://vimeo.com/109402304

    News Source.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/10/24/microscope-cells-in-action_n_6041638.html?utm_hp_ref=mostpopular

  • Microbiology Darwinism In Ancient Hindu Texts Vedas

     

    Ancient Vedic Indians, during the Vedic period have developed advanced knowledge in Microbiology.

     

    Biology and Surgery were developed and practiced.

     

    They knew the classification of Species.

     

    Charles Darwin’s Theory of Evolution , Survival of the Fittest was expressed.

     

    Microbiology in The Vedas
    Vedic Microbiology. Image credit Chakradhar

     

    An Santi Parva of Mahabharata,Section XV Arjuna speaks of the world of Microbes,’which ,though not seen by the naked eyes, support Life”

     

    Talks of Darwinism when he says that the strongest survive by feeding and annihilating them.

     

    The Mobile and the Immobile world is Food for Living creatures.

     

    Jainism had such an advanced knowledge and Piety, the Jain Monks use to sweep the path they travel gently with a fan made of Peacock feathers to make sure that the smaller organisms are not unintentionally killed by them.

     

    Kara , Dhooshana,  Inderjith and Ravana’s Moola Sena were adept at fighting biological warfare.

     

    Our Vedic literature recorded about 740 plants and 250 animals.

    ¨      The first attempt of classification is observed in Chandyogya Upanishad, which classified animals into three categories — Jivaja(Viviparous = giving birth to young ones), e.g. mammals, Andaja(Oviparous = egg lying), e.g. birds, reptiles, insects and worms, andUdbhija (Vegetal origin), e.g. minute animals. Post-Vedic Indian literature, such as Susruta Samhita (600 BC) classified all ‘substances’ into sthavara (immobile), e.g. plants, jangama (mobile), e.g. animals.

    ¨      Plants were further subdivided into Vanaspati (fruit yielding non-flowering plants), Vriksha (both fruit yielding and flowering plants),Virudha (shrubs and creepers), and Osadhi (plants that die with ripening of fruits).

    Susruta described in detail the parts of plants, such as Ankura (sprout), Mula (root), Kanda (bulb or stem), Patra (leaf),Pushpa (flower), Phala (fruit), etc.

    ¨      Susruta Samhita also mentioned about classification of animals, such as Kulacara (those herbivores who frequent the river banks, e.g. elephant, buffalo, etc.), Matsya (fish), Janghala (wild herbivorous quadrupeds, e.g. deer), Guhasaya (carnivorous quadrupeds like tiger, lion, etc.). Susruta Samhita also records some observations on snakes (both venomous and non-venomous) and leeches.

     

    They knew about Microbes and about fermentation.

     

    They were aware of the exact combinations and temperatures at which fermentation takes place in preparing Buttermilk,Curds,Liquor.

     

    The existence of Lives , which are smaller and Microscopic was analysed.

     

    Germ theory of diseases was first established by Vedic Rishis and was recorded in Vedas.

     Vedas are first text in the world to record nexus between microbes and disease.

    In Vedas, prime etiological factors of diseases mentioned are–

     

    a) Endogenous toxins, its accumulations, and causation of a disease; b) ‘Krimi’ –’Drisya’ (visible), ‘Adrisya’ (invisible); and c) Imbalance of tridosha.

    Rigveda, Yajurveda, and Atharvaveda followed by Āyurvedas provide rich insight into microbial sciences that existed in Bharat many thousands of years ago.

    In Rigveda (1/191), Rishị Agastya pinpoints out that there are two types of poisonous creatures viz. those exceedingly poisonous and others are less poisonous.

    Of them, some are visible venomous, while others are invisible one.

    Some of them live in water, while others live on earth.

    Perhaps Ṛsị Agastya is the first person to state that invisible creatures are also toxin producers.

    He also prescribes antidotes as remedy for the poison. Atharvaveda reiterates that whenever there is accumulation of toxins within the body, disease results.

    Use of Biological weapons of Mass Destruction was known.

    There are large number of suktas in the Vedas which provides information about microbiological knowledge in the ancient Vedic texts.

    KankotanSukta by Rishi Agastaya (Rigveda 1/191); KrimighnamSukta (Atharvaveda 5/23), KriminashnamSukta (AV. 2/32), KrimijambhanamSukta

    (AV. 2/31) all by Rishi Kanva; RakshognamSukta (AV. 5/29) by Rishi Chatan; KriminashnamSukta (AV. 4/37) by Rishi Badrayani and other suktas

    provides insight into the Microbial sciences in Vedas.

    Not only the Vedas, Ayurvedic texts like Charaka Samhita, Susruta Samhita, Ashtanga Hridaya and many others provides rich insight into Vedic Microbiology.

     

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  • Multiverse,Other Worlds Part 1

    Multiverse or Meta Universe is a novel and Daring concept

    Parallel Unverses
    Multiverse

    .

    This Concept was formulated because of the improbability of the events/inadequate explanation of the recent findings of Science, which can not be explained by our present physical Laws.

    1. Biological Evolution  is found to be reversed in certain Species.

    “They sequenced five nuclear genes from each species, then applied statistical analyses to construct a tree of relationships called a phylogeny. And that’s when they saw it: deeply nested inside a large group of parasites were our everyday, non-parasitic, allergy-causing dust mites.”While this isn’t the first time that Dollo’s Law has been questioned, it’s the first strong evidence that parasitism might not be the evolutionary “blind alley” we tend to describe it as. The more scientists use genetics to study the evolutionary relationships between organisms, the more they find that Dollo’s Law is less law-like than once thought, broadening our understanding of evolution as a whole and challenging our assumptions about how it works. Which is, really, the brilliance and beauty of science — like life on this Earth, our understanding of the universe is constantly adapting and evolving.(ramanan50.wordpress.com)

    Either our understanding of Evolution is wrong, or there is some Laws which we can not understand.

    Cloning.

    In Cloning, the Oocytes produces a Primordial germ cell (PGC) which undergoes mitosis to form an oogonium. During oogenesis the oogonium becomes a primary oocyte.

    Now how and under what Laws, the Oocytes produce the PGC is not known.

    2.Geometry.

    How is it we are unable to conceive more shapes than  Squares, Rectangles,Circles, and variations of these and no other shapes?

    3.Brain.

    We do not understand many of the activities of the Brain at all.

    For instance, the Olfactory Bulb, in the rostral (forward) part of the brain, is responsible for the detection of Odors.

    There are two fundamental questions.

    a) How and  why does the Olfactory Bulb picks up only a particular Odor to the exclusion of all the Odors present in the same Object?

    Explanations are there as to the Function , not the cause.

    b)In ‘Seizure’ Syndrome’ it picks up Odors not present/

    Why and How?

    Does this imply that these Odors are present out there and were waiting to be picked up selectively?

    The same applies all the Functions of Perception.

    Put it simply, Things are out there and we register only certain things.

    In that case , if the Things were to exist independent of Our Perceiving them, how do things exist when we do not Perceive them and if so by what laws are they governed?

    3.Space and Time.

    Till date we do not have a satisfactory definition of Space and Time.

    Source:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloning

  • Diet Live Scorpions

    A Saudi Arabian has been living on a Diet of Live Scorpions!

    “His name is Majed Al-Maliki from Saudi Arabia; his diet is 22 live scorpions. By eating scorpions he kept a Guinness world record. I don’t whether it is delicious or not but it difficult to watch. The previous record held by American Dean Sheldon with 21 scorpions.

    Crazy Man Eats 22 Live Scorpions

    Man who eats 22 Scorpions daily.
    Majed Al-Maliki from Saudi Arabia.

    Composition of Scorpion Venom.

    Wuhan University researchers said their findings — from the first venom analysis of the arachnid — uncovered nine novel poison molecules never before seen in a scorpion species.

    The scientists led by Yibao Ma of the university’s Laboratory of Virology studied the sting of S. jendeki, a member of the family Euscorpiidae, which covers Europe, Asia, Africa and North America.

    “Our work greatly expands the current knowledge of scorpion venoms,” said Ma. “We found 10 known types and nine novel venom peptides and proteins. These molecules provide a rich, hitherto-unexplored resource for drug development, as well as clues into the evolution of the scorpion venom arsenal.”

    The study that included Ruiming Zhao, Yawen He, Songryong Li, Jun Liu, Yingliang Wu, Zhijian Cao and Wenxin Li appears in the journal BMC Genomics.

     

    Source:

    http://bestworldstuff.blogspot.in/2012/01/amazing-man-eat-live-scorpions.html
     http://www.upi.com/Science_News/2009/07/09/Analysis-shows-scorpion-venom-composition/UPI-77941247175067/#ixzz2UvM7KFh9