Higher education around the
world is facing a crisis. Students are caught between the ever increasing cost
of tuition and the permanent loss of jobs due to automation and AI.
Several things are being
considered to mitigate the crisis and these include use of technology to reduce
the cost of education and creating programs which focus more on principles
rather than specific tools that are quickly outdated. It is increasingly accepted
that education must focus on methods that give the students the capacity to
reinvent themselves by learning required skills on their own to suit the
changing demands of the times.
There is a rising voice in the West for reemphasizing a classics-based curriculum that includes the earliest texts of the Western tradition. Educators in India have also begun to speak of a similar classics-based curriculum for India, although there hasn’t been much of a follow-up and new universities such as Ashoka merely copy the Western curriculum.
An Indian-culture centered
classics curriculum should be dedicated to universal values and principles and
in addition to material on literature, philosophy, polity (arthaśāstra as well
as earlier texts that speak of checks and balance between the minister and the
king), and history it must include scientific classics.
This will help the student
get a sense of the historical changes associated with the
Indian sciences and understand the relationship of these
sciences with other aspects of culture. It will also help the student
appreciate the Yoga-Vāsiṣṭha, which should be in the curriculum, for it is, in
my view, the greatest novel ever written.
In this article, I focus only on the science component of the classics
curriculum because the material on general subjects such as literature
and history is well known.
India’s scientific classics
There is general ignorance about India’s scientific tradition. It is granted that Indians had philosophy and religion, medicine, mathematics and the symbol zero, but it is believed that there was little hard science.
Nothing could be farther from
the truth. India had many sciences that
were based on fundamental principles, axioms, logical inference, and
empirical observations. These sciences, in which there is no mention of gods or
anything that a modern scientist will consider unreasonable, were generally
written down in texts that were called śāstras and sūtras.
A śāstra is a body of
teaching or discipline that is obtained using the instrument (śastra) of
logic (śastra can also be an invocation in some contexts).
The word sūtra, Sanskrit for thread, is cognate with the
Latin sutura (or English, suture), which
is the silken thread that was used to hold the seam together after surgery.
A sūtra is a pithy representation of a key element of the
knowledge basis. Taken in totality, the sutras, along with an appropriate
commentary, provide a full representation of the science.
Some of the more famous
mathematical treatises before the astronomical siddhāntas of Āryabhaṭa,
Brahmagupta and their successors are the Śulba-sūtra (SS) of Baudhāyana, the
Chandaḥ-sūtra (CS) of Piṅgala, and the Nyāya-sūtra (NS) of Gotama.
SS is the subject of geometry
and it includes the Pythagoras theorem several centuries prior to its later
discovery in Greece; CS is the mathematics of meters and it includes the
earliest description of binary numbers, which now are at the basis of
computers; and NS is the first formal description of logic, which predates the
logic of Aristotle.
Indians were not only into
theory and abstract speculation. Apart from the careful study of motion,
vibratory phenomena, acoustics, and transforming power of fire were studied. It
was known that lightning bolts had electricity. Magnetism
was also known and the Suśruta Saṃhitā speaks of how a loose unbarbed
arrow lodged in a wound with a broad mouth can be withdrawn by the use of a
magnet. A compass consisting of an iron fish floating in a pan of oil is
described. The attraction of a piece of iron to a magnet is mentioned in the
epic poem Kumārasambhava by the poet Kālidāsa.
There are accounts of temples with levitating images as in Somnath, which was destroyed by Mahmud of Ghazni in 1025–1026. When the temple fell “the king directed a person to go and feel all around and above it with a spear, which he did but met with no obstacle. One of the attendants then stated his opinion that the canopy was made of loadstone [a magnetized rock], and that the idol was iron and that the ingenious builder had skillfully contrived that the magnet should not exercise a greater force on any one side — hence the idol was suspended in the middle. When two stones were removed from the summit the idol swerved on one side, when more were taken away it inclined still further, until it rested on the ground.”
Physics and the observer
Another classic that must be
part of any classics curriculum is the
Vaiśeṣika-sūtra (VS) of Kaṇāda. This is physics which includes laws
of motion as well as general principles to describe the physical reality.
Kaṇāda in his sutras enumerates real entities irrespective of whether they can be perceived through the sense organs or not. These are the building blocks of Kaṇāda’s world described through their attributes and motion.
The Vaiśeṣika system has
categories not only for space-time-matter but also for attributes related to
perception of matter. It starts with six categories that are nameable and
knowable. Nothing beyond these six fundamentals is necessary, because they are
sufficient to describe everything in the universe from concrete matter to the
abstract atom. The six categories are: substance, quality, motion, universal,
particularity, and inherence.
There are nine classes of
substances, some of which are non-atomic, and some atomic. Every substance was
taken to be composed of four different kinds of atoms, two of which had mass
and two did not.
Kaṇāda in the VS presents laws of motion and two of them almost read identical to Newton’s laws of motion. It also deals with laws and symmetries, atoms and molecules, transformations and evolution.
It is fascinating that the
ideas of VS were communicated by Swami Vivekananda to Nikola Tesla in
connection with the possibility of conversion of
mass into energy.
Music and drama
The curriculum should also
have a component devoted to music and drama. Recent research has shown
that music lessons improve
cognitive skills and even raise the IQ of students. It is
regrettable that music education is not compulsory in schools in India and
perhaps it could be made a part of the classics curriculum by teaching it while
speaking of the Nāṭya Śāstra of Bharata Muni and the Saṅgīta Ratnākara of
Śārṅgadeva.
The Nāṭya Śāstra, sometimes
called the fifth Veda, classifies the diverse arts that are embodied in the
classical Indian concept of the drama,
including dance, music, poetics, and general aesthetics. Bharata
explains the relationship between the bhāvas, the emotions evoked
in the spectators, and the rasa, essence of the performance or the
work of art. He says that the artist should be conscious of the bhāva and the rasa
that is being sought to be established.
Yoga and consciousness science
The study of the mind and consciousness take
us to the highest reaches of Indian science. While yoga, in its physical
aspects, has become very widely known throughout the world, its deeper
scientific foundations for consciousness science are less understood. The
classics curriculum should include material on this topic, which is a subject
of continuing relevance to not only neuroscience, but
also physics and philosophy.
This material could be
supplemented by a popular presentation of quantum theory in which the observer
plays a central role and the interpretation and philosophy of which has many parallels with
Vedanta.
Ayurveda and personalized medicine
Modern (allopathic) medicine
has not been particularly successful against chronic diseases and it also faces
a reproducibility crisis in its
research. Some are now looking for new ways to fashion the treatment to the patient’s specific situation in what has been called personalized medicine.
The Ayurveda system is a
holistic approach to treatment and well-being. It is based on empirical
evidence and it includes both the physical and the psychological states of the
patient. Some material from the Ayurveda classics should be a part of the
curriculum.
Author is also a Scientist.
First published
here. eSamskriti has obtained permission from the author to share on its
platform.
To read all articles
by author
Also read
1 Talks
on Maths in metrical form
2 The
story of Pythagoras