http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/toi-edit-page/is-indian-science-a-circus-the-irony-is-that-ancient-india-did-have-real-achievements-in-science-and-math/

Is Indian Science a circus? The irony is that ancient India did have
real achievements in science and math

January 16, 2016, 12:01 AM IST Pavan K Varma in TOI Edit Page | Edit
Page, India | TOI

The 103rd Indian Science Congress met in Mysuru this month from the
3rd to 7th. Like last year, this session too was not without its
controversies. In 2014, one of the presenters made the claim that
there were planes in the Vedic age that could make trans-continental
flights.

This year, controversy was generated when one of the invited lecturers
sought to project Lord Shiva as the ‘greatest environmentalist in the
world’. Another esteemed panelist, belonging to the IAS, began his
presentation by blowing a conch for a full two minutes; he followed
this up by claiming that the sound of the conch could eliminate key
disorders afflicting humankind.

Not surprisingly, 2009 Nobel laureate Venkat Ramakrishnan pithily
dismissed the Congress as a ‘circus’ and vowed never to attend one
again. Noted biologist P M Bhargava, founder of the Centre for
Cellular and Molecular Biology in Hyderabad, also exasperatedly said
that the event had deteriorated over the years and was now ‘an
absolute waste of money’.

There is no doubt that an ancient tradition of excellence in science
existed in India. Scholars believe that the Indus Valley Civilisation,
that flourished 2,500 years before the Christian era, used a system of
weights and measures based on an awareness of the decimal system. It
is clear too that the cities of this civilisation could not have been
built without knowledge of simple geometry.

In later times mathematics emerged as the single largest contribution
of India to the world of science. The term ganita, meaning the science
of calculation, occurs with great frequency in Vedic literature.

As far back as possibly 500 BC, the Jyotish Vedanga used sophisticated
methods of calculation to fix the position of the new and full moon
and other astronomical inferences. A group of 16 sutras or word
formulae were used widely in Vedic times to solve arithmetic and
algebraic problems, and attempts are now being made to resurrect this
science under the rubric of ‘Vedic math’. [This claim is, however,
completely erroneous. These sutras are not to found anywhere in the
Vedas, nor these were developed in the Vedic times*. - Sukla]

In later times Hindu astronomers and mathematicians, of whom the most
famous were Aryabhata I (5th century), Brahmagupta (6th century),
Mahavira (9th century) and Bhaskara (12th century), made
groundbreaking contributions to the development and elaboration of
mathematical concepts, unknown to the West until the Renaissance or
even later.

Aryabhata I, for instance, had calculated that the earth revolves
around the sun about a thousand years before Galileo was persecuted
for the same claim. It is well known that the concept of the zero,
called the shunya, and the decimal system, originated in India, and
reached the West through the Arabs, who for long called mathematics
Hindsat, the ‘science of India’.

The Syrian astronomer-monk Severus Sebokht wrote with awe in the 7th
century of the rational system of mathematics of the Hindus, ‘and of
their method of calculation which no words can praise strongly
enough’. A L Basham, the world- renowned historian of ancient India,
writes that the ‘unknown man’ who devised the decimal system ‘was from
the world’s point of view, after the Buddha, the most important son of
India’.

Given this lineage, why is it that today, self-styled evangelists of
‘Hindu India’ attempt to glorify our past in such jejune and puerile
terms? Are outlandish claims, such as ‘jumbo planes’ fitted with
‘ancient radar systems’ that have no basis in either history or
science and rely solely on mythology, the only way to pay tribute to
our scientific heritage?

Lord Shiva is the central pillar of Hindu philosophy’s audacious leap
into the realm of metaphysics. Must he be devalued by projecting him
as the ‘world’s greatest environmentalist’? There could, perhaps, be a
discussion on how even Vedic sacrificial altars were built to precise
scientific specifications. But, is the blowing of a conch the only way
to trumpet such and other path-breaking achievements?

Under the section on Fundamental Duties, article 51A (h) of our
Constitution enjoins every citizen of India ‘to develop the scientific
temper, humanism and the spirit of enquiry and reform’. Is this
purpose served by Prime Minister Narendra Modi (who inaugurated this
year’s Congress) when he proclaimed in 2014 that Lord Ganesha’s
elephant head is proof that advanced cosmetic surgery existed in
ancient India, and that the way Kunti conceived in the Mahabharata was
evidence of the practice of invitro fertilisation millennia ago?

The tragedy is that the evaluation of our remarkable scientific past
has fallen prey to a double jeopardy. On the one hand we have right
wing Hindutva evangelists who confuse mythology with science and make
a mockery of our legitimate scientific achievements. And, on the other
hand, we have ‘reflex’ secularists who see in any reference to our
ancient refinements a communal conspiracy.

Alas, such an attitude of disdainful dismissal is often rooted in
ignorance, mistaken too long for ‘modernity’. A random survey could
well reveal that many in the metropolitan salons of India, who believe
that any reference to ancient India is tantamount to communalism, are
so culturally rootless that they cannot even render a line-by-line
meaning of the national anthem!
The Indian Science Congress, and much of modern India’s cultural
discourse, will need to find a sane middle ground between these two
extremes, in order to do true justice to our civilisational heritage.


* "One appreciates the desire of these people to work for Indian
traditions. ***But where in the Vedas is “Vedic mathematics” to be
found? Nowhere. Vedic mathematics has no relation whatsoever to the
Vedas.*** [Emphasis added.] It actually originates from a book
misleadingly titled Vedic Mathematics by Bharati Krishna Tirtha. The
book admits on its first page that its title is misleading and that
the (elementary arithmetic) algorithms expounded in the book have
nothing to do with the Vedas. This is repeated on p. xxxv: “Obviously
these formulas are not to be found in the present recensions of
Atharvaveda.” I have been pointing this out since 1998. Regrettably,
the advocates of “Vedic mathematics,” though they claim to champion
Indian tradition, are ignorant of the actual tradition in the Vedas.
Second, they do not even know what is stated in the book — the real
source of “Vedic mathematics.” Third, they are unaware of scholarly
writing on the subject. When education policy is decided by such
ignorant people, they only end up making a laughing stock of
themselves and the Vedas, and thus do a great disservice to the very
tradition which they claim to champion."
(Source: 
<http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/nothing-vedic-in-vedic-maths/article6373689.ece>.)

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