Ancient Indian Astronomy and Mathematics: A Brief History
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概要
he speaker examines ancient Indian mathematics and astronomy, beginning with the Jantar Mantar's Samrat Yantra in Jaipur—a 90-foot stone sundial accurate to two seconds. This paradox of monumental, low-tech construction achieving microsecond precision frames a broader argument: ancient Indian science operated on a completely different "operating system" than the West's linear, segmented tradition.
Central to this worldview was kāla, or time, conceived as recursive and granular. Texts like the Surya Siddhanta defined the truti—29.6 microseconds—derived not by measurement but by mathematical reasoning that time, like matter, must have an atomic unit. This theoretical ladder extended from microseconds to kalpas of 4.32 billion years, demonstrating a conceptual comfort with cosmic scales that Western cosmology lacked until modernity.
The speaker profiles key mathematician-astronomers: Aryabhata (b. 476 CE) proposed Earth's rotation, calculated pi to 3.1416, and developed the kutaka ("pulverizer") algorithm for solving indeterminate equations. Brahmagupta formalized zero as a number with operational rules and systematized negative numbers as "debts." Bhaskara II (12th century) approached calculus concepts, recognizing instantaneous velocity and solving Pell's equation via the chakravāla method. The Kerala School (14th century), led by Madhava, developed infinite series for pi and trigonometric functions—predating Newton and Leibniz by 300 years.
Crucially, this science was not secular but spiritual: mathematics was the language of dharma, the cosmic order. Ritual requirements for precise Vedic altars drove geometric discovery; accurate horoscopes demanded algorithms predicting planetary positions centuries ahead. The decimal system and zero transformed mathematics into a "dynamic machine," enabling complex computation impossible with Roman numerals. This tradition, the speaker concludes, proves that profound scientific insight emerges not only from instruments but from pure reason treating mathematics as discovered eternal truth.
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