Sunday, August 3, 2008

Significance to Some of the Namas

4.5.1 Ploughing these scientific ideas back to the Naamaavali of the first sloka,

 He is the universe (Viswam).
 He is spread everywhere, like the electron in an atom (Vishnu).
 He makes things happen, by the vast amount of energy stored and released (Vashat karah).
 He is the Lord of the past, the origin of the universe, the present, its evolution and creation of life and its sustenance and of the future of what is going to happen to this nebulae (Bhuta Bhavya Bhavat Prabhuh).
 He created everything conceivable (Bhutakrit).
 He bears them all (Bhutabrit) but does not form part of them.
 Like the blades of a spinning fan appearing to be present everywhere simultaneously, as electrons, He is present at once everywhere and no where (Bhavah).
 He who dwells in all beings but is with in them, whom none of the beings knows, whose body is all beings and who controls all beings from within your own self (Bhutaatmaa). No where else this concept is better explained than in chapter 3, section 7 of Brihadaranyaka Upanishad. At sea level, at a temperature of O0 C, one cubic centimeter of air (size of a sugar cube, contains 45 billion billion molecules and they are in every cubic centimeter of air. Atoms are tiny. Half a million of them lined up from shoulder to shoulder, could hide behind the thickness of a human hair. The atoms are also long lived and durable. Every atom in our body had been earlier, parts of millions of organisms before becoming part of us. We are each so atomically numerous and so vigorously recycled at death that a significant number of our atoms, it has been suggested, probably once belonged to a Prahlada, a Ravana and a Vikramaditya. And that is how, we have a mix of the Satwa, Tamo and Rajoguna, all in one, albeit in different proportions. This is also perhaps the reason as to why the ashes of a departed soul are immersed in various holy rivers, seas etc so that some of the atoms of the great people could be recycled! Can the concept of ‘Bhutaatmaa’ be more scientifically explained?

 Significance to the names of Vishnu in first sloka.
 Vashatkaarah – make things happen.
 Bhuta Bhavya Bhavat Prabhuh.
 Bhutakrit Bhutabrit bhavah.
 Bhutatma- atoms are long –lived and vigorously recycled.
 Bhuta bhavanah-Sustains all that has been created.
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4.5.2 If the very first sloka itself can have so much of spiritual and scientific import as now understood, one can visualize the importance and implications of Vishnu Sahasranama as a whole. It is, therefore, proposed to dwelve further only on a few more namas, at random.

4.6. AVYAYAH 2nd Sloka, 13th Nama.

Avyayam-Changeless.
 Quote from Viveka Choodamani.
 Thermodynamics is applicable at the atomic level of chemical reaction also.
 Entropy in physics and mutation of genes.
 Change is the only permanent thing in physics or biology.
 But God, who makes these happen is himself Changeless –Avyayam.


4.6.1 The word, in a literal sense, means changeless. This is an important word in Sanskrit grammar as well, not subjected to any gender, number or voice but yet of great usage in many contexts and is immutable.






4.6.2. In Viveka Choodamani, in slokas 254 to 266, while dealing on aids to Meditation, Adisankara defines Brahman as that which has no caste, creed, family or lineage, which is without name or form, merit and demerit which is beyond space, time and sense objects which is untouched by the six waves of sorrow, namely hunger and thirst, grief and delusion, decay and death , which never reduces, hence immutable and changeless (Avyayah) and hence free from the six modifications namely birth, growth, change, decay, disease and death. We saw in the first sloka that He is the creator and sustainer of these very objects and senses but, He himself is beyond all these and “ You are that Brahman, meditate on this in your mind “, says Adisankara.

4.6.3. In 1875-78, Willard Gibbs of Yale University produced a series of papers elucidating the thermodynamic principles of gases, mixtures, solids, phase behaviour, chemical reaction, sedimentation and osmosis and showed that thermodynamics did not apply simply to heat and energy on a large scale like a steam engine, but is also applicable at the atomic level of chemical reactions. At the heart of thermodynamics, is a process, known as Entropy. Entropy is a way of measuring just how disordered a pack of card is, when shuffled, and of determining the likelihood of particular outcomes with further shuffles. Rutherford discovered that atomic elements were transmutable and indeed that the Greek word ‘Atom’ which means ‘uncuttable’, was no longer so and, therefore, inappropriate. Henry Joe Muller, a Jewish scientist discovered what was applicable in physics is also applicable in biology and proved that genes are artificially mutable. This laid the foundation of a whole science of molecular biology and the eventual identification of the structure of DNA and how it is unique to each individual.

4.6.4. The short story is that, while change is the only permanent thing in both physics and biology, the Lord, who makes all these things happen all the time, is himself beyond change, and is changeless, Avyayah.

4.7. Kshetragna and Akshara (Yeva Cha) (Sloka 2, Namas 16 and 17)
4.7.1. Kshetragna is translated as ‘knower of the field (Purusha). The whole of chapter 13 of Bhagwat Geeta is called Kshetra Kshetragna Vibhaga yoga or the yoga of the discrimination of the Prakriti and Purusha. Lord Krishna says “ the body is called Kshetra (Prakriti), the field and he who knows it is called Kshetragna, by the sages”. Prakriti by itself is inert; Purusha on its own does not function. But, when the two join, life results and functions in different ways depending upon the type of Prakriti (body) where the Purusha (Kshetragna) has entered. The Purusha functions, as ‘Upadrshta’ (spectator), ‘Anumanta’ (permitter), ‘Bharta’ (supporter), Bhokta (enjoyer) ‘Maheswara’ (the Great Lord) and ‘Paramatma’ (Supreme Self), in that order, depending upon the level of intellect of this relationship.

Kshetragna and Akshara – Knower of the field and eternal.
 Examples of the field and Knower of the field.
 Akshara as alphabets , conjugation, pronunciation change and decay over time in intonation.
 Alphabets themselves are eternal.
 51 Sakthi peetas referred to as 51 Aksharas.




4.7.2 We may further illustrate this by two examples. Electricity by itself, cannot manifest as light. But, when it passes through a bulb it is manifested as light. Similarly, a good seed is only a potential tree and can germinate only in a good nutrient soil. At the other extreme, virus is a strange entity, a piece of nucleic acid. In isolation they are inert and harmless. But, introduced into a suitable host, they burst into life, afflicting us with hundreds of diseases from flu through Small Pox to Polio and AIDS. Electricity, seeds, virus are different ‘Kshetragna’ (Purusha), inactive and inert by themselves but they know how and when to get active, and so is the Lord.

4.7.3 ‘AKSHARA’ is defined as ‘eternal’ or ‘without end’. God could have been simply defined as ‘eternal’ but, why add ‘Yeva Cha’ (and also) by bringing in a symbiotic relationship between ‘Kshetragna’ and ‘Aksharah’. Let us see a little more in detail.

4.7.4 ‘Akshara’ in common parlance reflects the alphabets. All beings are perishable and the ‘Kutastha’ (the immutable) is called the imperishable (Akshara). As the screen is the background for motion pictures in a Cinema hall, Brahman is the substratum, basis and background of the panorama of this universe. The changes that take place in the world do not affect the Brahman, even as the various scenes in a picture do not affect the screen. It is, therefore, called Aksharam, the imperishable. The five elements, on the other hand, are Ksharam or perishable. The physical structure of the Reality is made up of the elements. It is with the aid of the element that the sentient is revealing itself. Beings require the elements for their embodiment. For example, a nut is identified by its embodiment by the shell, both for its existence and preservation. Similarly, in articulation, the part that the consonants play clinging to the vowels is analogous to the function of the elements.
4.7.5.An important development in the history of Indian Science was the pioneering work of Panini ( 6th century BCE) in the field of Sanskrit grammar. It had a profound impact on all mathematical treatises that followed. He provided formal definitions and rules of Sanskrit grammar (Vyakaranam) in his treatise called Ashtaadyaayi. Basic elements such as vowels and consonants, parts of speech like nouns and verbs, and the construction of compound words and sentences were all laid down. Ingermann, in his paper titled ‘Panini Backus Form” finds Panini’s notation to be equivalent in its power to that of Backus Form used to describe the syntax of modern computer languages. ( Source: Website tripod- South Asian History, History of Mathematics in India “)

4.7.6 The conjugation of letters or the scripts in the form of words and its pronunciation is very important in Vedas. The process is known as ‘Siksha’, the most important of the six ‘Angas’ of the Vedas. The very first chapter of the popular Taitareeya Upanishad deals with the pronunciation of these words and the meaning each of these conjugations convey and is called “Sikshavalli”. There are elaborate guidelines like Padam, Kramam etc laid down for pronunciation and intonation of each one of the words. When correctly done, they produce the appropriate vibrations, in the different nerves which , in turn, produce the desired effect in the overall health and personality of the individual.

4.7.7 Not withstanding this, each one of the Vedas and their practices got concentrated in certain areas, over a period of time. They also got subjected to the local pronunciation, intonation and nondifferentiation between certain letters in different places and also evolved into a number of branches. For instance, Va and Ba are pronounced synonymously in Bengal Ja and Ya in North and La and LLa in South. The Brahmi script , which is considered oldest in India and in which many of the ancient eddicts are found, is totally different from the current Devanagari script of Sanskrit. Similarly, the Grantha script, which is the mother of the scripts of Dravidian languages like Tamil and Malayalam is more or less disappearing. Thus, while the pronunciation, script and intonation over a period of time, got corrupted by local influence, the Akshara remained the same. From the Vedic times till now, this Kutasta or the cosmic Purusha, has undergone changes only of names, forms and attributes according to the attitudes and attainments of the worshippers but Akshara remains eternal. Comparative Philology of the different languages is an ocean by itself in this regard.

4.7.8 The 51 Aksharas or letters in Sanskrit came from the Vedas. They are called ‘Matruka’. The Saakta Philosophy believes that these 51 Aksharas indeed depict the 51 parts of the Goddess Paraasakti and the 51 Sakti peetas in our country depict these 51 Aksharas represented by 51 parts of Her body.

4.7.9 Thus, the immutable ‘Purusha’ called ‘Akshara’ or the alphabets and the ‘Kshetregna Purusha’ are verily the same and represent Lord Vishnu. The reconfirmation by ‘Yeva Cha- and also’ has become necessary by the subsequent corruption in pronunciation intonation and script of the immutable Aksharas”.

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