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Ideas of Mathematical Proof in Classical India:. A Reading of the Aryabhatiyabhashya of Nilakantha Somayajin. Why Do This??. The Five Sheaths of the Human Person (Taittiriya Upanishad). Layer 1: Annamayakosha.
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Ideas of Mathematical Proof in Classical India: A Reading of the Aryabhatiyabhashya of Nilakantha Somayajin
Layer 1: Annamayakosha Now a man here is formed from the essence of food. This here is his head. This is his right wing; this is his left wing. This is his torso, and this is his tail on which he rests.
Layer 2: Pranamayakosha • Different from and lying within this self formed from the essence of food is the self consisting of life-breath … . The head is simply the out-breath, the right wing is the inter-breath, the left wing is the in-breath; the torso is space, and the tail on which it rests is the earth. • “Life-breath – gods breathe along with it, as do men and beasts …”
Manomayakosha • Different from and lying within this self consisting of life-breath is the self consisting of mind, which suffuses this other self completely … . The head is simply the Yajus formulas, the right wing is the Rig verses; the left wing is the Saman chants; the torso is the rule of substitution, and the tail is the Atharva-Angirases. • “Before they reach it, words turn back, together with the mind…”
Layer 4: Vijnanamayakosha • Different from and lying within this self consisting of mind is the self consisting of understanding … The head is simply faith; the right wing is the truth; the left wing is the real; the torso is the performance, and the tail on which it rests is the celebration. • “It’s understanding that conducts the sacrifice; it’s understanding that performs the rites. It’s understanding that all the gods venerate as the foremost brahman.”
Layer 5: Anandamayakosha • Different from and lying within this self consisting of understanding is the self consisting of bliss, which suffuses this other self completely … Of this self, the head is simply the pleasure; the right wing is the delight; the left wing is the thrill; the torso is the bliss, and the tail on which it rests is the brahman.
Vedic Ritual ReenactmentKerala, South India, 1975(courtesy IGNCA)
Agni Manthin Verbal root manth: 1. To churn
Agni Manthin Verbal root manth: • To churn • To agitate, disturb
Agni Manthin Verbal root manth: • To churn • To agitate, disturb • To apply friction to any part of a body in order to produce offspring
Kalpa (layout of sacrificial area, construction of ritual devices) Jyotisha (“star science”, began as timing of Vedic rituals, eventually turned to astronomy/astrology) Two Main Applications of Mathematics in India
Aryabhata • Born 476 CE • Astronomer, mathematician • Author of the Aryabhatiya • “taught by Brahma” • Rotating earth
Nilakantha Somayajin • Nilakantha = “blue-throated” • Somayajin = “soma-sacrificer”
Nilakantha • 1444 – 1545 CE • Kerala, South India • Namputiri Brahmin • Learned in Nyaya logic, Vedanta philosophy • Investigations in the scientific method, “science and religion” issues
Jyotirmimamsa This is what some think: “Pleased by feats of asceticism, Brahma taught to Aryabhata [the characteristics] of the planets .. Because of Brahma’s omniscience, freedom from passion, etc., how can there be criticism of Aryabhata?” Stupid! It is not thus. The favor of a deity causes mental clarity only. Neither Brahma nor the Sun-god taught it – only Aryabhata.
The Aryabhatiyabhashya • Composed “late in his life;” • Written on multiple levels; • Commentary on the Ganitapada alone is 180 pages; • Detailed proofs, but no diagrams!
Typical Commentarial Tasks • Grammatical analysis of the current verse • Argue why the rule is best stated this way • Show that the rule is useful • Show that the verse is pretty poetry • Justify its placement in the sequence of verses • Prove the rule • Never, ever embarrass the Teacher (even if he’s wrong)!
Aryabhatiya 7 The area of a circle is just half its circumference multiplied by the radius. That [area], multiplied by its own square root, is exactly the volume of a sphere.
Nila comments: How then is a circle made? Scratching it out using just the tip of a paint brush with some heated lamp-black – let that be done by skilled artists only! At least that’s how it’s commonly attempted. But in that case one doesn’t get an even circumference, due to the lack of [constant] extension.
How to get the area formula: The portions of the area of a circular figure all have the form of needles, because, all around [the center], the portions are wheel-spokes, rounded and separated at the ends. Because of their infinity, you can make [the wide ends] as small as you like. Their needle-form is due to the fact that all of the cut-up portions touch the center [of the circle].
When all of them are placed together, tip-to-end in pairs, “rectangle-ness” occurs.
But what about that volume? • Aryabhata is saying: