History of Indian Science, an Essay in Grolier Encyclopaedia, 2000
by Subhash Kak, PhD
Indian literature provides us with considerable layered evidence related to
the development of science. The chronological time frame for this history is
provided by the archaeological record which has been traced in an unbroken tradition
to about 7000 BC. Prior to this we have records of rock paintings that are believed
to be as old as 40000 BC. The earliest textual source is the Rig Veda which
is a compilation of very early material. There are astronomical references in
this and the other Vedic books which recall events in the third or the fourth
millennium BC and earlier. The recent discovery that Sarasvati, the preeminent
river of the Rig Vedic times, went dry around 1900 BC due to tectonic upheavels
implies that the Rig Veda is to be dated prior to this epoch. According to traditional
history, Rig Veda is prior to 3100 BC.
Indian writing goes back to the beginning of the third millennium
BC. The later historical script called Brahmi evolved out of this writing. The
invention of the symbol for zero appears to have been made around 50 BC to 50
AD.
Vedic Science
Briefly, the Vedic texts present a tripartite and recursive
world view. The universe is viewed as three regions of earth, space, and sky
which in the human being are mirrored in the physical body, the breath (prana),
and mind.
In the Vedic world view, the processes in the sky, on earth,
and within the mind are taken to be connected. The Vedic seers were aware that
all descriptions of the universe lead to logical paradox. The one category transcending
all oppositions was termed brahman. Understanding the nature of consciousness
was of paramount importance in this view but this did not mean that other sciences
were ignored. Vedic ritual was a symbolic retelling of this world view.
Knowledge was classified in two ways: the lower or dual;
and the higher or unified. The seemingly irreconciliable worlds of the material
and the conscious were taken as aspects of the same transcendental reality.
The idea of complementarity was at the basis of the systematization
of Indian philosophic traditions as well, so that complementary approaches were
paired together. We have the groups of: logic (Nyaya}) and physics (Vaisheshika),
cosmology (Sankhya) and psychology (Yoga), and language (Mimamsa) and reality
(Vedanta). Although these philosophical schools were formalized in the post-Vedic
age, we find the basis of these ideas in the Vedic texts.
The Sankhya and the Yoga systems take the mind as consisting
of five components: manas, ahankara, chitta, buddhi, and atman. Manas is the
lower mind which collects sense impressions. Ahankara is the sense of I-ness
that associates some perceptions to a subjective and personal experience. Once
sensory impressions have been related to I-ness by ahankara, their evaluation
and resulting decisions are arrived at by buddhi, the intellect. Chitta is the
memory bank of the mind. These memories constitute the foundation on which the
rest of the mind operates. But chitta is not merely a passive instrument. The
organization of the new impressions throws up instinctual or primitive urges
which creates different emotional states. This mental complex surrounds the
innermost aspect of consciousness, which is called atman, the self, or brahman.
Physics and Chemistry
The Vaisheshika system considers nine classes of substances,
some of which are nonatomic, some atomic, and others all-pervasive. The nonatomic
ground is provided by the three substances ether, space, and time, which are
unitary and indestructible; a further four, earth, water, fire, and air are
atomic composed of indivisible, and indestructible atoms; self (atman}), which
is the eighth, is omnipresent and eternal; and, lastly, the ninth, is the mind
(manas), which is also eternal but of atomic dimensions, that is, infinitely
small.
The atoms combine to form different kinds of molecules which
break up under the influence of heat. The molecules come to have different properties
based on the influence of various potentials (tanmatras).
Heat and light rays are taken to consist of very small particles
of high velocity. Being particles, their velocity is finite.
The gravitational force was perceived as a wind. The other
forces were likewise mediated by atoms of one kind or the other.
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.
Geometry and mathematics
Indian geometry began very early in the Vedic period in altar
problems as in the one where the circular altar (earth) is to be made equal
in area to a square altar (heavens). Two aspects of the ``Pythagoras'' theorem
are described in the texts by Baudhayana and others. The geometric problems
are often presented with their algebraic counterparts. The solution to the planetary
problems also led to the development of algebraic methods.
Binary numbers
Binary numbers were known at the time of Pingala's Chhandahshastra.
Pingala, who lived about the fifth century BC used binary numbers to classify
Vedic meters. The knowledge of binary numbers indicates a deep understanding
of arithmetic.
Astronomy
Using hitherto neglected texts, an astronomy of the third
millennium BC has been discovered recently. Yajnavalkya (1800 BCE ?) knew of
a 95-year cycle to harmonize the motions of the sun and the moon and he also
knew that the sun's circuit was asymmetric.
Astronomical numbers played a central role in Vedic ritual.
Part of the ritual was to devise geometrical schemes related to the lengths
of the solar and the lunar years. The organization of the Vedic books was also
according to an astronomical code. To give just one example, the total number
of verses in all the Vedas is 20,358 which equals 261 x 78, a product of the
sky and atmosphere numbers of Vedic ritual!
The second millennium text Vedanga Jyotisha of Lagadha went
beyond the earlier calendrical astronomy to develop a theory for the mean motions
of the sun and the moon. This marked the beginnings of the application of mathematics
to the motions of the heavenly bodies. An epicycle theory was used to explain
planetary motions. Later theories consider the motion of the planets with respect
to the sun, which in turn is seen to go around the earth.
Cosmology
The doctrine of the three constituent qualities: sattva,
rajas, and tamas, plays a very important role in the Sankhya physics and metaphysics.
In its undeveloped state, cosmic matter has these qualities in equilibrium.
As the world evolves, one or the other of these become preponderant in different
objects or beings, giving specific character to each.
The recursive Vedic world-view requires that the universe
itself go through cycles of creation and destruction. This view became a part
of the astronomical framework and ultimately very long cycles of billions of
years were assumed. Indian evolution takes the life forms to evolve into an
increasingly complex system until the end of the cycle. The categories of Sankhya
operate at the level of the individual as well. Life mirrors the entire creation
cycle and cognition mirrors a life-history.
Cosmological speculations led to the belief in a universe
that goes through cycles of creation and destruction with a period of 8.64 billion
years. Related to this was the notion that light traveled with a speed of 186,000
miles per second. Since these numbers were not obtained throught experimentation,
the accuracy of these figures must be seen as remarkable coincidence.
Grammar
Panini's grammar (5th century BC) provides 4,000 rules that
describe the Sanskrit of his day 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.
It is remarkable that Panini set out to describe the entire grammar in terms
of a finite number of rules. Scholars have shown that the grammar of Panini
represents a universal grammatical and computing system. From this perspective
it anticipates the logical framework of modern computers.
Medicine
Ayurveda, 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 (dosha) of wind (vata),
fire (pitta), and water (kapha). Charaka and Sushruta are two famous early physicians.
Indian surgery was quite advanced. The caesarian section
was known, bone-setting reached a high degree of skill, and plastic surgery
was known.
The Medieval Period
Astronomical texts called siddhantas begin appearing sometime
in the first millennium BC. According to tradition there were 18 early siddhantas
of which only a few have survived. Each siddhanta is an astronomical system
with its own constants. Some of the famous astronomer-mathematicians that arose
in India's long medieval period are listed below.
Aryabhata
In his book Aryabhatiyam, Aryabhata (born 476) sketched his
mathematical, planetary, and cosmic theories. The parameters of Aryabhatiyam
have, as their origin, the date of Friday, 18th February, 3102 BC. Aryabhata
took the earth to spin on its axis; this idea appears to have been his innovation.
Aryabhata was aware of the relativity of motion as is clear from this passage
in his book,``Just as a man in a boat sees the trees on the bank move in the
opposite direction, so an observer on the equator sees the stationary stars
as moving precisely toward the west.''
Brahmagupta
Born in 598 in Rajasthan, Brahmagupta wrote his masterpiece,
Brahmasphuta Siddhanta, in 628. His school, which was a rival to that of Aryabhata,
has been very influential in western and northern India. Brahmagupta's work
was translated into Arabic in the eighth century at Baghdad and it became famous
in the Arabic world as Sindhind and it influenced Islamic astronomy.
One of Brahmagupta's chief contributions is the solution
of a certain second order indeterminate equation which is of great significance
in number theory.
Bhaskara
Belonging to the Karnataka region, Bhaskara (born 1114),
was an outstanding mathematician and astronomer. Amongst his mathematical contributions
is the concept of differentials. He was the author of Siddhanta Shiromani, a
book in four parts: (i) Lilavati on arithmetic, (ii) Bijaganita on algebra,
(iii) Ganitadhyaya, (iv) Goladhyaya on astronomy. He epicyclic-eccentric theories
of planetary motions are more developed than in the earlier siddhantas.
Madhava
Subsequent to Bhaskara we see a flourishing tradition of
mathematics and astronomy in Kerala which saw itself as a successor to the school
of Aryabhata. Of these, Madhava (c. 1340-1425) developed a procedure to determine
the positions of the moon every 36 minutes. He also provided methods to estimate
the motions of the planets. He gave power series expansions for trigonometric
functions, and for pi correct to eleven decimal places.
Nilakantha Somayaji
A very prolific scholar who wrote several works on astronomy,
Nilakantha (c. 1444-1545) found the correct formulation for the equation of
the center of the planets and his model must be considered a true heliocentric
model of the solar system. He also improved upon the power series techniques
of Madhava. The methods developed by the Kerala mathematicians were far ahead
of the European mathematics of the day.
Another noteworthy contribution was by the school of New
Logic (Navya Nyaya) of Bengal and Bihar. At its zenith during the time of Raghunatha
(1475-1550), this school developed a methodology for a precise semantic analysis
of language. Its formulations are equivalent to mathematical logic.
The Modern period
Entering its modern era with the arrival of the English,
India in the last two centuries has witnessed a renaissance of its science and
a proper appreciation of the past achievements.
Some of the most important scientists born in the 19th century
who made international mark are Jagadish Bose (1858- 1937) in electromagnetics
and plant life, Srinivas Ramanujan (1887- 1920) in mathematics, Chandrasekhar
Venkata Raman (1888- 1970) in physics, Meghnad Saha (1893- 1956) in astrophysics,
and Satyendra Bose (1894- 1974) in quantum theory. More recent contributions
of Indian science are part of the story of the contemporary world science.
Subhash Kak, PhD is the author of The Astronomical Code of the Rigveda,
In Search of the Cradle of Civilization as well as many papers on early Indian
science including a landmark paper in Current Science(Vol 73, 1997, pp 624-627)
which establishesthat the 'standard' chronology of ancient Indian texts is wrong."--
c.j.s. wallia
Subhash Kak, PhD
Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering
Louisiana State University
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
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