The annual Indian Science Congress, which just concluded, had its usual share of controversies about history of Indian science and I have been asked to weigh in. It so turns out that I did precisely that in a brief account titled “Science” for Stanley
Wolpert’s Encyclopaedia of India (2005) and since that is freely available online, I shall be more selective of themes in this
revision of the previous essay. This account does not include the modern period
for which many excellent histories exist.
Indian archaeology and
literature provide considerable layered evidence related to the development of
science. The chronological time frame for this history is provided
by the archaeological record that
has been traced, in an unbroken tradition, to about 8000 BCE. Prior to this date,
there are records of rock paintings that are considerably older. The earliest
textual source is the Ṛgveda, which is a compilation of very ancient material.
The astronomical references in the Vedic books recall events of the third or
the fourth millennium BCE and earlier. The discovery that Sarasvati, the
preeminent river of the Ṛgvedic times, went dry around 1900 BCE, if not
earlier, suggests that portions of the Ṛgveda may be dated prior to this epoch.
The third millennium
urbanization is characterized by a very precise system of weights and
monumental architecture using cardinal directions. Indian writing (the
so-called Indus script) goes back to the beginning of the third millennium BCE,
but it has not yet been deciphered. However, statistical analysis shows that
the later historical script called Brahmi evolved from this writing.
Laws and cosmology
The Vedic texts assert
that the universe is governed by ṛta (laws) and that
consciousness transcends materiality. The universe is taken to be infinite in
size and infinitely old. By the time of the Purāṇas, other worlds were
postulated beyond our solar system.
It is asserted that
language (as a formal system) cannot describe reality completely and linguistic
descriptions suffer from paradox. Because of this limitation, reality can only
be experienced and never described fully. Knowledge was classified in two ways:
the lower or dual अपरा; and the
higher or unified परा. The
seemingly irreconcilable worlds of the material and the conscious were taken as
aspects of the same transcendental reality.
The texts present a tripartite and recursive view of the world. The three regions of earth, space, and sky are
mirrored in the human being in the physical body, the breath (prāṇa), and mind. The processes in the sky, on earth, and within the mind are assumed to be connected.
This connection is a consequence of a binding (bandhu) between
various inner and outer phenomena and
it is because of this binding that it is possible to know the world.
The connection between
the outer and the inner cosmos is seen most strikingly in the use of the number
108 in Indian religious and artistic expression. It was known that this number is the
approximate distance from Earth to the sun and the moon, in sun and moon
diameters, respectively. This number was probably obtained by taking a pole of
a certain height to a distance 108 times its height and discovering that the
angular size of the pole was the same as that of the sun or the moon. It is a
curious fact that the diameter of the sun is also approximately 108 times the
diameter of Earth.
This number of dance
poses (karaṇas) given in the Nāṭya Śāstra is 108, as is the number of
beads in a japamālā. The distance between the
body and the inner sun is also taken to be 108, and thus there are 108 names of
the gods and goddesses. The number of marmas (weak points) in
Āyurveda is 107, because in a chain 108 units long, the number of weak points
would be one less.
Ancient Indian views of
the universe
are more subtle than the corresponding Western views.
Physical laws and motion
The history of Indian
physics goes back to Kaṇāda (कणाद) (~ 600 BCE) who asserted that all that is knowable is based on motion, thus giving centrality to analysis in the
understanding of the universe.
Kaṇāda asserted that
there are nine classes of substances: ether, space, and time, which are
continuous, and four kinds of atoms two of which have mass and two are
massless. He also made a distinction between mind and the self, or
consciousness. The conscious subject is separate from material reality but is,
nevertheless, able to direct its evolution. Kaṇāda
presented laws of motion and also spoke of invariants. He saw the
atom to be spherical since it should appear the same from all directions.
The atoms combined to
form different kinds of molecules that break up under the influence of heat.
The molecules come to have different properties based on the influence of
various potentials.
Indian chemistry
developed many different alkalis, acids, and metallic salts by processes of
calcination and distillation, often motivated by the need to formulate
medicines. Metallurgists developed efficient techniques of extraction of metals
from ore.
Astronomy
We know quite a bit about
how astronomical
science evolved in India. The Yajurvedic sage Yājñavalkya knew of a ninety-five-year cycle to harmonize the motions of the sun and the moon, and he also knew that the sun’s circuit was asymmetric. The second millennium BCE text Vedanga Jyotisa of Lagadha went beyond the earlier calendrical astronomy to develop a theory for the mean motions of the sun and the moon. An epicycle theory was used to explain planetary motions. Given the different periods of the planets, it became necessary to assume yet longer periods to harmonize their cycles. This led to the notion of mahāyugas and kalpas with periods of billions of years.
The innovations of the
division of the circle into 360 parts and the zodiac into 27 nakṣatras and 12 rāśis took
place first in India. The schoolbook accounts of how these
innovations first emerged in Mesopotamia in the 7th century BCE and then
arrived in India centuries later are incorrect.
The Śatapatha Brāhmaṇa which was compiled soon after the Vedas says: “The sun strings these worlds [the earth, the planets, the atmosphere] to himself on a thread. This thread is the same as the wind…” This suggests a central role to the sun in defining the motions of the planets and ideas such as these must have ultimately led to the theory of expanding and shrinking epicycles. Astronomical texts called
siddhāntas begin appearing sometime in the first millennium BCE.
According to the tradition there were eighteen early siddhāntas, of which only a few have survived. Each siddhānta is an astronomical system with its own constants. The Sūrya Siddhānta speaks of the motion of planets governed by “cords of air” that bind them, which is a conception like that of the field.
The great astronomers and
mathematicians include Āryabhaṭa (b. 476), who took Earth to spin on its own
axis and who spoke of the
relativity of motionand provided outer planet orbits with respect to the sun. This work and that of Brahmagupta (b. 598) and Bhāskara (b. 1114) was passed on to Europe via the Arabs. The Kerala School with figures such as Mādhava (c. 1340–1425) and Nīlakaṇṭha (c. 1444–1545) came up with new innovations of analysis based on advanced mathematics.
Evolution of Life
The Sāṅkhya system speaks
of evolution both at the levels of the individual as well as the cosmos. The
Mahābhārata and the Purāṇas have material on creation and the rise of humankind. It is said that man arose at the end of a chain that began with plants and various kind of animals. In Vedic evolution the urge to evolve into higher forms is taken to be inherent in nature. A system of an evolution from inanimate to progressively higher life is assumed to be a consequence of the different proportions of the three basic attributes of the guṇas (qualities): sattva (“truth” or “transparence”), rajas (activity), and tamas (“darkness” or “inertia”). In its undeveloped state, cosmic matter has these qualities in equilibrium. As the world evolves, one or the other of these becomes preponderant in different objects or beings, giving specific character to each.
Geometry and mathematics
Indian geometry began
very early in the Vedic period in altar problems, as in the one where the
circular altar is to be made equal in area to a square altar. The historian of
mathematics, Abraham Seidenberg, saw the birth of geometry and mathematics in the solution
of such problems. Two aspects of
the “Pythagoras” theorem are described in the texts by Baudhāyana and others.
Problems are often presented with their algebraic counterparts. The solution to
planetary problems also led to the development of algebraic methods.
Binary numbers were known at the time of Piṅgala’s Chandaḥśāstra. Piṅgala, who might have lived as early as fourth century BCE used binary numbers to classify Vedic meters. The knowledge of binary numbers indicates a deep understanding of arithmetic.
The sign
for zero within the place value decimal number system that was to revolutionize mathematics
and facilitate development of technology appears to have been devised around 50 BCE
to 50 CE. Indian numerals were introduced to Europe by Fibonacci
(13th century) who is now known for a sequence that was described earlier by Virahaṅka
(between 600 and 800), Gopāla (prior to 1135) and Hemacandra (~1150 CE).
Nāryāna Paṇḍit (14th century) showed that these numbers were a special case of
the multinomial coefficients.
Bharata’s Nāṭya Śāstra has results on combinatorics and discrete mathematics, and
Āryabhaṭa has material on mathematics including methods to solve numerical
problems effectively. Later source materials include the works of Brahmagupta, Lalla (eighth century),
Mahāvīra (ninth century), Jayadeva, Śrīpati (eleventh century), Bhāskara, and Mādhava. In particular, Mādhava’s derivation and use of infinite series predated similar development in Europe, which is normally seen as the beginning of modern calculus. Some scholars believe these ideas were carried by Jesuits from India to Europe and they eventually set in motion the
Scientific Revolution.
A noteworthy contribution was by the school of New Logic (Navya Nyāya) of Bengal and Bihar. At its zenith during the time of Raghunātha (1475–1550), this school developed a methodology for a precise semantic analysis of language. Navya
Nyāya foreshadowed mathematical logic and there is evidence
that it influenced modern machine theory.
Grammar
Pāṇini’s grammar Aṣṭādhyāyī (Eight chapters) of the fifth century BCE provides four thousand rules that describe Sanskrit completely. This grammar is acknowledged to be one of the greatest intellectual achievements of all time. The great variety of language mirrors, in many ways, the complexity of nature and, therefore, success in describing a language is as impressive as a complete theory of physics. Scholars have shown that the grammar of Pāṇini represents a universal grammatical and computing system. From this perspective, it anticipates the logical
framework of modern computers.
Medicine
Āyurveda, the Indian medicine system, is a holistic approach to health that builds upon the tripartite Vedic approach to the world. Health is maintained through a balance between three basic humors (doṣa) of wind (vāta), fire (pitta), and water (kapha). Each of these humors had five varieties. Although literally meaning “air,” “bile,” and “phlegm,” the doṣas represented larger principles. Its division of states into three categories rather than two is more efficient than the binary
division of other medicine
systems.
Caraka and Suśruta are
two famous early physicians. According to Caraka, health and disease are not
predetermined, and life may be prolonged by human effort. Suśruta defines the
purpose of medicine to cure the diseases of the sick, to protect the healthy,
and to prolong life. The Saṃhitās speak of organisms that circulate in the
blood, mucus, and phlegm. In particular, the organisms in the blood that cause
disease are said to be invisible. It is suggested that physical contact and
sharing the same air can cause such diseases to spread. Inoculation
was practiced for protection against smallpox.
Indian surgery was quite
advanced. The caesarian section was known, as was plastic surgery, and bone
setting reached a high degree of skill. Suśruta classified surgical operations
into eight categories: incision, excision, scarification, puncturing, probing,
extraction, evacuation and drainage, and suturing. Suśruta lists 101 blunt and
20 sharp instruments that were used in surgery. The medical system tells us
much about the Indian approach to science. There was emphasis on observation
and experimentation.
Mind and consciousness
Vedic
deities represent cognitive centers.
It is asserted that parā-vidyā or ātma-vidyā (science
of consciousness) cannot be described in words or design. In the Śrī-yantra,
which is a representation of the cosmos, consciousness (Śiva) is
shown as an infinitesimal dot in the middle.
The interaction between matter and consciousness is
postulated in terms of an observation process called dṛṣṭi-sṛṣṭi (creation through observation), which is
consistent with a world governed by laws. In the orthodox interpretation of
quantum theory, consciousness is a separate category as in Vedanta.
Modern scientific
subjects like physics, computer science, and neuroscience have been unable to
explain the phenomenon of consciousness. Philosophy cannot reconcile our sense
of freedom and agency with the framework of machine-like laws. In physical theory
there is no place for the observer, computer science cannot explain how
awareness arises in the brain machine, and neuroscience has not found any neural correlate of
consciousness.
At the same time, the
very association of information with physical systems as is done using entropy
implies postulation of consciousness. So the use of the reductionist method in
the analysis of consciousness has hit a wall.
Indian texts assert that
the phenomenon of consciousness cannot be studied directly as a material
property. Their analysis of consciousness using indirect methods may very well
be relevant for further progress of this question in contemporary science.
Scientific speculations and more
Indian thought is unique
in the breadth and scope of its scientific speculations that are scattered
within its high literature. These range from airplanes (Rāmāyaṇa) to weapons
that can destroy the world (Mahābhārata), and to the most astonishing abstract
ideas in a text called Yoga-Vāsiṣṭha.
Many texts speak of the relativity of time and space — abstract concepts that developed in the scientific context just a hundred years ago. The Purāṇas describe countless universes and time flowing at different rates for different observers.
The Mahābhārata has an
account of an embryo divided into one hundred parts each becoming, after
maturation in a separate pot, a healthy baby; this is how the Kaurava brothers
are born. There is also mention of a conception in one womb transferred to
another: this is how Balarāma is a brother to Krishna although he was born to a
different mother. This Epic has a major section on battle with a space ship
whose occupants wear airtight suits (Saubha Parva). Are these to be seen as an
early form of science fiction?
Universes defined
recursively are described in the famous episode of Indra and the ants in Brahmavaivarta
Purāṇa. Here Viṣṇu in the guise of a boy, explains to Indra that the ants
he sees walking on the ground have all been Indras in their own solar systems
in different times. These flights of imagination are more than a
straightforward generalization of the motions of the planets into a cyclic
universe.
The context of modern
science fiction is clear: it is the liberation of the earlier modes of thought
by the revolutionary developments of the 20th century science and technology.
But how was science fiction integrated into the mainstream of Indian literary
tradition over two thousand years ago? What was the intellectual ferment in
which such sophisticated ideas arose?
Concluding, India’s civilization valued science and knowledge above all and some of the most extraordinary scientific advances took place there. These include the earliest astronomy, geometry, number theory, the Indian numeral system, the idea of physical laws and invariance, the earliest formal system to describe a complex natural phenomenon (as in Pāṇini’s computer program-like grammar that was not rivalled for 2,500 years), a very subtle Yoga psychology, and the idea of immunization in medicine.
This creativity did not end with the ancient period. For India’s continuing relevance in the world of science, see The Indian foundations of modern science.
Author is also a Scientist.
First published here. eSamskriti has obtained permission from the author to share on its
platform.
Also read
1 The
story of Pythagoras
2 Talks
on Maths in metrical form
3 Hindu
Astrology
4 Astrophysics
and why mantras are repeated 108 times
5 Understanding
mysticism through quantum physics
6 Yoga Vasishtha – A treasure house of philosophy
7 Tantraguna – The ancient criteria for scientific writing