Saturday, December 27, 2008

India ... Just to good


Sanskrit is the one of the original language which has retained its crystal purity. Sanskrit diction maintained its affable style and original structure its age old vocabulary works even today as it was in old civilisation and primitve ages, the past.
An ancient literature of the world, the Vedas, book for humanity of minds development the Upanishads and their richness connecting old Indian values with modern value, still available in the same form as were written since ages. There are lot many mentors in India who can interpret them today, as they were during their original framing.Vedas interpretation comes by continous steady process of assimilation of knowledge linking a variety of disciplines via Sanskrit.

Veda meaning knowledge or Wisdom in Sanskrit related to Vedic (VAY-dik) Tradition (Hinduism), the oldest living system of thought on earth. Vedas envisage Vedic concepts, teachings, philosophy, scriptures, sciences and everything that we can think of related to the Sanatana Dhrama or also known as Hindu tradition.

The Vedic tradition of knowledge, based on the extensive Vedic literature, is the oldest
tradition of knowledge in the world. Though it has been long preserved in India, this traditional wisdom has been almost lost in recent centuries-due in part to repeated foreign invasions. The Vedic tradition includes detailed information on a wide range of topics-from astronomy to music, architecture to health care, administration to economy. But it is all based on the knowledge of consciousness-including technologies of consciousness, and evolution to the highest state of consciousness (enlightenment).

Albert Einstein:"We owe a lot to Indians who taught us how to count, without which no worthwhile scientific discovery could have been made."

Mark Twain (1835-1910)
"Land of religions, cradle of human race, birthplace of human speech,
grandmother of legend, great grandmother of tradition. The land that
men with intellectual bent desire to see and having seen once even by
a glimpse, would not give that glimpse for the shows of the rest of
the globe combined."

Julius Robert Oppenheimer (1904-1967) One of the world's greatest
physicists, known as 'the father of the atomic bomb'
"Access to the Vedas is the greatest privilege this century may claim
over all previous centuries."

T. S. Eliot

" Indian philosophers' subtleties make most of the great European
philosophers look like schoolboys."

George Bernard Shaw,
(1856-1950) Dramatist, Nobel Laureate in
Literature

"The Indian way of life provides the vision of the natural, real way
of life. We western veil ourselves with unnatural masks. On the face
of India are the tender expressions which carry the mark of the
Creators hand."

H. G. Wells
(1866-1946), English author and political philosopher

There is space in its philosophy for everyone,
which is one reason why India is a home to every single religion in
the world.

Sir William Jones,
English philologist

"Wherever we direct our attention to Hindu literature, the notion of
infinity presents itself."

Ralph Waldo Emerson
(1803-1882) American author, essayist, lecturer,
philosopher, Unitarian minister

"I owed a magnificent day to the Bhagavad-Gita. It was as if an empire
spoke to us, nothing small or unworthy, but large, serene, consistent,
the voice of an old intelligence which in another age and climate had
pondered and thus disposed of the same questions which exercise us."

Andrew Tomas
(1906- 2001) an Australian UFO pioneer, author of
several physics, astronomy and spiritual books

The atomic structure of matter is mentioned in the Hindu treatises
Vaisesika and Nyaya. The Yoga Vasishta says, there are vast
worlds within the hollows of each atom, multifarious as the specks in
a sunbeam - which we have now assumed as true.

Arthur Schopenhauer
(1788-1860), great German
philosopher and writer

"In the whole world there is no study so beneficial and so elevating
as that of the Upanishads. It has been the solace of my life; and it
will be the solace of my death. They are the product of the highest
wisdom."

Francois Marie Voltaire
(1694-1774) France's greatest writers and
philosophers.
" I am convinced that everything has come down to us from the banks of
the Ganga - astronomy, astrology, metempsychosis, etc."
" It is very important to note that some 2,500 years ago at the least
Pythagoras went from Samos to the Ganga (Ganges) to learn
geometry...But he would certainly not have undertaken such a strange
journey had the reputation of the Brahmins' science not been long
established in Europe"

Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831),
great German philosopher

"India has created a special momentum in world history as a country to
be searched for knowledge."

Friedrich Hegel
(1770-1831), great German philosopher

"It strikes everyone in beginning to form an acquaintance with the
treasures of Indian literature, that a land so rich in intellectual
products and those of the profoundest order of thought"

Roger-Pol Droit
French philosopher, and Le Monde journalist,

"The Greeks loved so much Indian philosophy that Demetrios Galianos
had even translated the Bhagavad-Gita". There is absolutely not a
shadow of a doubt that the Greeks knew all about Indian philosophy."

Frederich von Schlegel,
(1772-1829), German philosopher, critic, and
writer, the most prominent founder of German Romanticism

"There is no language in the world, even Greek, which has the clarity
and the philosophical precision of Sanskrit," adding that " India is
not only at the origin of everything she is superior in everything,
intellectually, religiously or politically and even the Greek heritage
seems pale in comparison."

Voltaire,
(1694-1774), France's greatest writers
and philosophers,
"the Veda was the most precious gift for which the West had ever been
indebted to the East."

Alfred North Whitehead,
British Mathematician

The vastest knowledge of today cannot transcend the buddhi of the
Rishis in ancient India; and science, in its most advanced stage now,
is closer to Vedanta than ever before.

Dr. Fritjof Capra,
American physicist
To the Indian Rishis the divine play was the evolution of the cosmos
through countless aeons. There is an infinite number of creations in
an infinite universe. The Rishis gave the name kalpa to the
unimaginable span of time between the beginning and the end of
creation.

Herman Hesse
(1877-1962) German poet
novelist, awarded the Nobel
Prize for literature in 1946 says:
"The marvel of the Bhagavad-Gita is its truly beautiful revelation of
life's wisdom which enables philosophy to blossom into religion."

Henry David Thoreau
(1817-1862), American Philosopher, writer,
Unitarian, social critic, transcendentalist:

"In the morning I bathe my intellect in the stupendous and cosmogonal
philosophy of the Bhagavad Gita in comparison with which our modern
world and its literature seems puny."

John Archibald Wheeler,
(1911 - 2008) American physicist,
he was the first involved in the theoretical development of the atomic bomb and first to coin the ‘Black Hole' who later occupies the chair that was held
by Einstein.

It is curious that people like Schroedinger, Niels Bohr, and
Oppenheimer were Upanishad scholars.

Ella Wheeler Wilcox,
(1850-1919) famous American poetess
and journalist

" India - the land of Vedas, the remarkable works contains not only
religious ideas for a perfect life, but also facts which science has
proved true. Electricity, radium, electronics, airship, all are known
to the seers who founded the Veda.

Hans Torwesten,
German philosopher and writer

The Vedas and the Upanishads are India's proudest and most ancient
possessions. They are the world's oldest intellectual legacies. They
are the only composition in the universe invested with Divine origin,
and almost Divine sanctity. They are said to emanate from God, and are
held to be the means for attaining God. Their beginnings are not
known. They have been heirlooms of the Hindus from generation to
generation from time immemorial.

Professor F. Max Muller,
German philosopher , philologist

"The Vedic literature opens to us a chapter in what has been called
the education of the human race, to which we can find no parallel
anywhere else."

Jean-Sylvain Bailly,
great French Astronomer

"The motion of the stars calculated by the Hindus before some 4500
years vary not even a single minute from the tables of Cassine and
Meyer (used in the 19-th century). "The Hindu systems of astronomy are
by far the oldest and that from which the Egyptians, Greek, Romans and
- even the Jews derived from the Hindus their knowledge."

Aldous Huxley
'Hinduism, the perennial philosophy' that is at the core of all
religions.

Arthur Schopenhauer
(1788-1860), German philosopher and writer

"How entirely does the Upanishad breathe throughout the holy spirit of
the Vedas! How is every one, who by a diligent study of its Persian
Latin has become familiar with that incomparable book, stirred by that
spirit to the very depth of his Soul !'

Romain Rolland
(1866-1944) French Nobel laureate, Historian

"Religious faith in the case of the Hindus has never been allowed to
run counter to scientific laws, moreover the former is never made a
condition for the knowledge they teach, but there are always
scrupulously careful to take into consideration the possibility that
by reason both the agnostic and atheist may attain truth in their own
way. Such tolerance may be surprising to religious believers in the
West, but it is an integral part of Vedantic belief."

Julius Robert Oppenheimer
(1904-1967) Nuclear physicist, philosopher,
The famour scientist and was the developer of the atomic bomb
'The Gita, the most beautiful philosophical song existing in any known
tongue.'

H. G. Wells
(1866-1946), English author
and political philosopher
Hinduism is synonymous with humanism. That is its essence and its
great liberating quality."

Lord Curzon
(1859-1925) British statesman, Viceroy of India from 1899
to 1905, and later became chancellor of Oxford University

" India has left a deeper mark upon the history, the philosophy, and
the religion of mankind,than any other terrestrial unit in the universe."

William Butler Yeats
(1856-1939) Irish poet, dramatist, and essayist
and Nobel Laureate

"It was only my first meeting with the Indian philosophy that
confirmed my vague speculations and seemed at once logical and boundless."

Mark Tully
former BBC correspondent in India, author

But I do profoundly believe that India needs to be able to say with
pride,"Yes, our civilization has a Hindu base to it."

Paul William Roberts Professor at Oxford , award-winning television
writer, producer, journalist, critic and novelist.

'India is the only country that feels like home to me,
the only country whose airport tarmac I have ever kissed upon
landing.'

Pierre Simon de Laplace
( 1749-1827) French mathematician,
philosopher, and astronomer, a contemporary of Napoleon.
Laplace is best known for his nebular hypothesis of the origin of the solar
system. " It is India that gave us the ingenious method of expressing all
numbers by ten symbols, each receiving a value of position as well as
an absolute value, a profound and important idea which appears so
simple to us now that we ignore its true merit. But its very
simplicity, the great ease which it has lent to all computations, puts
our arithmetic in the first rank of useful inventions
, and we shall
appreciate the grandeur of this achievement the more when we remember
that it escaped the genius of Archimedes and Appollnius, two of the
greatest men produced by antiquity."

Source: http://www.pr-inside.com/greatmen-talks-of-vedas-india-r781105.htm

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Did We Land On The Moon ? Think Again....

Do you think the Moon landings took place? Or was the whole event faked by the US as a propaganda exercise?

During the 60s, a 'space race' raged between the US and Russia. But there was also another struggle happening - the Cold War. Conquering the Moon would be a powerful political statement. Russia had already put the first person into space - so America was keen to outdo them by landing on the Moon.

Conspiracy theorists say the landings are an elaborate hoax that has fooled the world for over 30 years. But 12 lunar astronauts tell a different story.

See the below videos and U decide ( Your always welcome for Comments )












Njoy ...

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Quantum

In physics, a quantum (plural: quanta) is an indivisible entity of a quantity that has the same units as the Planck constant and is related to both energy and momentum of elementary particles of matter (called fermions) and of photons and other bosons. The word comes from the Latin "quantus," for "how much." Behind this, one finds the fundamental notion that a physical property may be "quantized", referred to as "quantization". This means that the magnitude can take on only certain discrete numerical values, rather than any value, at least within a range. There is a related term of quantum number.

A photon is often referred to as a "light quantum." The energy of an electron bound to an atom (at rest) is said to be quantized, which results in the stability of atoms, and of matter in general. But these terms can be a little misleading, because what is quantized is this Planck's constant quantity whose units can be viewed as either energy multiplied by time or momentum multiplied by distance....

Usually referred to as quantum "mechanics," it is regarded by virtually every professional physicist as the most fundamental framework we have for understanding and describing nature at the infinitesimal level, for the very practical reason that it works. It is "in the nature of things", not a more or less arbitrary human preference.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Chaos Theory

In mathematics, chaos theory describes the behavior of certain dynamical systems – that is, systems whose state evolves with time – that may exhibit dynamics that are highly sensitive to initial conditions (popularly referred to as the butterfly effect). As a result of this sensitivity, which manifests itself as an exponential growth of perturbations in the initial conditions, the behavior of chaotic systems appears to be random. This happens even though these systems are deterministic, meaning that their future dynamics are fully defined by their initial conditions, with no random elements involved. This behavior is known as deterministic chaos, or simply chaos.

Chaotic behaviour is also observed in natural systems, such as the weather. This may be explained by a chaos-theoretical analysis of a mathematical model of such a system, embodying the laws of physics that are relevant for the natural system.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Déjà vu


Déjà vu "already seen"; also called paramnesia, from Greek παρα para, "near" + μνήμη mnēmē, "memory") is the experience of feeling sure that one has witnessed or experienced a new situation previously (an individual feels as though an event has already happened or has repeated itself). The term was coined by a French psychic researcher, Émile Boirac (1851–1917) in his book L'Avenir des sciences psychiques (The Future of Psychic Sciences), which expanded upon an essay he wrote while an undergraduate. The experience of déjà vu is usually accompanied by a compelling sense of familiarity, and also a sense of "eeriness", "strangeness", or "weirdness". The "previous" experience is most frequently attributed to a dream, although in some cases there is a firm sense that the experience "genuinely happened" in the past.

The experience of déjà vu seems to be quite common among adults and children alike; in formal studies 70% of people report having experienced it at least once. References to the experience of déjà vu are also found in literature of the past, indicating it is not a new phenomenon. It has been extremely difficult to evoke the déjà vu experience in laboratory settings, therefore making it a subject of few empirical studies. Recently, researchers have found ways to recreate this sensation using hypnosis.




Butter-Fly Effect

The butterfly effect is a phrase that encapsulates the more technical notion of sensitive dependence on initial conditions in chaos theory. Small variations of the initial condition of a dynamical system may produce large variations in the long term behavior of the system. So this is sometimes presented as esoteric behavior, but can be exhibited by very simple systems: for example, a ball placed at the crest of a hill might roll into any of several valleys depending on slight differences in initial position.
The phrase refers to the idea that a butterfly's wings might create tiny changes in the atmosphere that may ultimately alter the path of a tornado or delay, accelerate or even prevent the occurrence of a tornado in a certain location. The flapping wing represents a small change in the initial condition of the system, which causes a chain of events leading to large-scale alterations of events. Had the butterfly not flapped its wings, the trajectory of the system might have been vastly different. Of course the butterfly cannot literally cause a tornado. The kinetic energy in a tornado is enormously larger than the energy in the turbulence of a butterfly. The kinetic energy of a tornado is ultimately provided by the sun and the butterfly can only influence certain details of weather events in a chaotic manner.

Recurrence, the approximate return of a system towards its initial conditions, together with sensitive dependence on initial conditions are the two main ingredients for chaotic motion. They have the practical consequence of making complex systems, such as the weather, difficult to predict past a certain time range (approximately a week in the case of weather).

Origin of the concept and the term

The term "butterfly effect" itself is related to the work of Edward Lorenz, based in Chaos Theory and sensitive dependence on initial conditions, first described in the literature by Jacques Hadamard in 1890 and popularized by Pierre Duhem's 1906 book. The idea that one butterfly could have a far-reaching ripple effect on subsequent events seems first to have appeared in a 1952 short story by Ray Bradbury about time travel (see Popular Media below), although Lorenz made popular the term. In 1961, Lorenz was using a numerical computer model to rerun a weather prediction, when, as a shortcut on a number in the sequence, he entered the decimal .506 instead of entering the full .506127 the computer would hold. The result was a completely different weather scenario. Lorenz published his findings in a 1963 paper for the New York Academy of Sciences noting that "One meteorologist remarked that if the theory were correct, one flap of a seagull's wings could change the course of weather forever." Later speeches and papers by Lorenz used the more poetic butterfly. According to Lorenz, upon failing to provide a title for a talk he was to present at the 139th meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1972, Philip Merilees concocted Does the flap of a butterfly’s wings in Brazil set off a tornado in Texas as a title.

Although a butterfly flapping its wings has remained constant in the expression of this concept, the location of the butterfly, the consequences, and the location of the consequences have varied widely.

Chk out Dasavatharam Movie its all about this....

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Moksha an Be-on-d...

In Indian religions, Moksha (Sanskrit: मोक्ष mokṣa, liberation) or Mukti (Sanskrit: मुक्ति, release) is liberation from samsara, the cycle of death and rebirth and all of the suffering and limitation of worldly existence. In Hindu philosophy, it is seen as a transcendence of phenomenal being, a state of higher consciousness, in which matter, energy, time, space, causation (karma) and the other features of empirical reality are understood as maya.

Liberation is experienced in this very life as a dissolution of the sense of self as an egoistic personality by which the underlying, eternal, pure spirit is uncovered. This desireless state concludes the yogic path through which conditioned mentality-materiality or nama-roopa (lit. name-form) has been dissolved uncovering one's eternal identity prior to the mind/spirit's identification with material form. Liberation is achieved by (and accompanied with) the complete stilling of all passions — a state of being known as Nirvana
Science is but a perversion of itself unless it has as its ultimate goal the betterment of humanity.
~ Nikola Tesla

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