Thursday, November 24, 2022

ulupi

 Chitrāngadā (Sanskritचित्रांगदाCitrāṅgadā), in the Hindu epic Mahabaratha, was the warrior princess of Manipur and the only heir of king Chitravahana. She had a son named Babhruvahana with Arjuna. The story of Chitrangada is adapted by Indian writer, Rabindranath Tagore in his play, Chitra.

Manipur was a kingdom in India during Mahabaratha period. It was ruled by a king named Chitravahana. He had a daughter named Chitrangada, whom he named after Madhulika flower. For multiple generations, the dynasty did not have more than one heir. Since Chitravahana did not have any other heir, he trained Chitrangada in warfare and rule. Chitrangada was well-versed in warfare and acquired the skills to protect the people of her land.

It is not described in Mahabaratha as to how Arjuna, the Pandava prince met Chitrangada. The account is described inRabindranath Tagore,s play Chitra, where Tagore depicts Chitrangada (she had a maid called Sujata) as a warrior dressed in male clothes.Arjuna fell in love with her on account of her honesty and courage.Arjuna's wanderings, during his period of exile, also took him to the ancient kingdom of Manipura Visiting king Chitravahana, the ruler of Manipura, he beheld his beautiful daughter Chitrangada and fell in love with her. When he approached the king to seek her hand in marriage, the king told him the story of his ancestor Prabhanjana who was childless and undertook severe austerities to obtain offspring. Finally, Mahadeva appeared to Prabhanjana, granting him the boon that each successive descendant of his race will always have a child, but only one. As Chitravahana's one child was a daughter, he made her his heir according to the customs of the people. This meant that any child she had with Arjuna couldn't be in the Kuru line of succession. Arjuna readily agreed to this condition. Marrying Chitrangada, he stayed with her for three years. When Chitrangada had given birth to a son, Arjuna embraced her affectionately and took leave of her and her father to resume his wanderings.

Arjuna left her and returned to Hastinapura, promising her that he would take her back to his kingdom. Chitrangada started bringing up her son Babruvahana. Mahabharata loses mention about Chitrangada and her kingdom for several chapters. On the other side, the Pandavas went through various ordeals and finally winning the war against the Kauravas. Yudhistira became the king of Hastinapura. On the advice of sages, he conducted Ashvameda yagna, where a decorated horse would be sent across the kingdom and wherever it goes unopposed, the land would be acquired by the king who sent it. Arjuna was tasked to take care of the horse. While the horse moved towards the North-east, a young man opposed Arjuna. While Arjuna asked about the identity of the young man, he said he was the prince of the land and that was enough introduction to start a fight.

A fierce fight started and Arjuna was shocked to see the dexterity with which arrows were pouring at him. He was finally hit by one of the arrows, realizing who Babruvahana was just before being rendered unconscious. Chitrangada came crying to the spot hearing of the incident and she met Arjuna at his death bed. Ulupi, another wife of Arjuna, came to the spot with the Nagamani, a mythical gem capable of bringing back dead men to life. She told Chitrangada and Babruvahana that Arjuna was cursed by the Vasus that he would be killed by his own son because he was responsible for the fall of Bhishma (the eighth Vasu) and that with the incident he was relieved of his curse. Arjuna was woken up with the stone and he was happy to see both his wives and his son. Arjuna took Ulupi, Chitrangada and her son Babhruvahana to Hastinapura, where Chitrangada readily became the servant of Gandhari, the aunt of Arjuna.

Upon the onset of the Kali yuga, the Pandavas along with Drupadi retired and left the throne to their only heir Arjuna's grandson, Parikshit Giving up all their belongings and ties, they made their final journey of pilgrimage to the Himalayas, accompanied by a dog. Chitrangada went back to her kingdom, Manipur.

Wednesday, November 23, 2022

BR

Emi Ruchira, Enta Ruchira from Ramadasu:



O Rama Ninamamu Emi Ruchira, Enta Ruchira?


Meaning: ( O Rama How tasty your name?)



O Rama nee naama memi ruchira


Meaning: O Rama, how tasty your name is



Sri Rama nee naama mentha ruchira


Meaning: Sri Rama, how delicious your name is

Madhu rasamula kante dadhi ghruthamula kante adhikamou


Meaning: It is sweeter than nectar and sweeter than yogurt or ghee



nee namam emi ruchira


Meaning: Your name is so tasty



Draksha phalamula kanna ikshu rasamula kanna


Meaning: It is tastier than grapes and tastier than sugar cane juice



Pakshi vahana nee namam emi ruchira


Meaning: O Lord who rides on an eagle (Garuda), your name is so tasty



Anjana thanaya hruth kanja dalamulandu ranjillu


Meaning: O Rama, your name resides in the petals of a lotus flower which is the heart of Lord Hanuman who is the son of Anjani



nee namam emi ruchira


Meaning: Your name is so tasty



Sada sividu madi sada bhajinchedi Sadanamdamagu


Meaning: Parama Shiva chants your name all the time, chanting your name gives happiness all the time



namam emi ruchira


Meaning: Your name is so tasty



Saramuleni samsaramunaku Shanthakaramagu


Meaning: To this flavorless life, your name gives peace



namam emi ruchira


Meaning: Your name is very tasty



Sarananna janamula saraguna rakshimchu


Meaning: You come straight away to protect people who ask for your help



Birudu kaligina namam emi ruchira


Meaning: That is what your title is and your name is so tasty



Kari raja Prahlada Dharanija Vibhishanula kachina


Meaning: Kari raja (Gajendra), Prahlada and Goddess Sita who is the daughter of goddess earth were saved by saying your name



nee namam emi ruchira


Meaning: your name is very tasty



Kadali Kharjura phala rasamula kadhikamu


Meaning: Your name is tastier than the fruit juices of bananas and dates



pathitha pavana nee namam emi ruchira


Meaning: You save people who are unfortunate (or unlucky). Your name is very tasty.



Thumburu Naradulu dambu meeraga


Meaning: Sages like Thumburu and Narada very proudly



ganambu chesedi nee namam emi ruchira


Meaning: sing your name(or sing your stories). Your name is very tasty.



Araya Bhdrachala Sri Ramadasuni prema nelina


Meaning: O Rama, you looked after Bhadrachala Ramadasu with affection



namam emi ruchira


Meaning: Your name is very tasty.




Kancharla Gopanna (Telugu: కంచర్ల గోపన్న) (c. 1620 – 1688), popularly known as Bhakta Ramadasu or Bhadrachala Ramadasu (Telugu: భద్రాచల రామదాసు), was a 17th-century devotee of the Hindu god Rama, a saint-poet and a composer of Carnatic music. He is a famous Vaggeyakara (classical composer)[a] from the Telugu classical era. He was born in the village of Nelakondapalli in Khammam district, and orphaned as a teenager. He spent his later years in Bhadrachalam and 12 years in solitary confinement at the Golconda prison during the Qutb Shahi-rule. Different mythical stories about his life circulate in the Telugu tradition. He is renowned for constructing the famous Sita Ramachandraswamy Temple and pilgrimage center on the banks of river Godavari at Bhadrachalam. His devotional kirtana lyrics to Rama illustrate the classical Pallavi, Anupallavi and Caranam genre composed mostly in Telugu, some in Sanskrit and with occasional use of Tamil language. These are famous in South Indian classical music as Ramadaasu Keertanalu.


Bhadrachala Ramadasu

Ramadasu was a Sri Vaishnava.[1] Ramadasu was a writer of Telugu satakams. He wrote the Daasarathi Satakamu (దాశరథి శతకము) with a 'makuTamu' (మకుటము) 'Daasarathee Karunaa payonidhee' (దాశరథీ కరుణా పయోనిధీ!), a collection of nearly 108 poems dedicated to Rama.[2]



Sunday, November 20, 2022

Do i matter

 Another by Pat A Fleming. I,m still here. 

My looks are nothing special

My face reveals my age

My body shows some wear and tear

And my energy is not the same.


Too often my memory fails me

And I loose things all the time.

One minute I know what I plan to do

And the next it may just slip my mind.


I try hard to avoid my mirror 

There are things I would rather not see

And even those times when I just catch a glimpse

I can no longer recognize me.


The things I used to do with ease

Can now cause aches and pains

And the quality of the things I do

Will never be quiet the same.


I always compare my older self

To those younger versions of me

And I know I am wasting too much time

Missing who I used to be.


But the thing that really makes me sad

Is despite what people see

Underneath my tattered worn out shell

I'm still the same old me.


My heart can still feel endless love

And at times it still can ache

My heart can fill with so much joy 

And then it can suddenly break.


My soul can still feel sympathy

And long for forgiveness and peace

And there are times it shines boldly through

And times when it longs for release.


It's true may be now that I am older

Feeling lonely may be status quo

But it also has made me more willing

To forgive and past conflicts go


So although not as strong as before

I'm still here and want so much to live

I'm still quiet aware of the beauty inside

And no one out there is quiet like me.


Saturday, November 19, 2022

Peeral.

 Shanka Chakra Gadha Pane Dwarka Nilaya Achyutha Govindha Pundarikaksha Rakshamam Sharangatham”is.h the best one which comes to rescue, which was recited by Draupadhi during Vasthra haranam in Kuru Sabhai . The “Govindha” Sabhda protected her.

Recollecting “Moittha Val Vinayul Nindra. Moondru Ezhutthudaya Peraal Kathirbandhumanee — Thirumaalai Pasuram

Friday, November 18, 2022

Two.

 


Kooratazhvan’s eyesight was lost due to the fanaticism of a king. The person responsible for provoking the king to commit this heinous act was a man named Naalooraan. Ramanujacharya, who was the preceptor of Kooratazhvan, wanted him to sing in praise of Lord Varadaraja of Kanchi. Ramanuja’s hope was that Kooratazhvan would ask for his sight to be restored. Kooratazhvan sang Varadaraja Stava in praise of Lord Varadaraja, said Kazhiyur B. Devarajan, in a discourse. But instead of asking for restoration of his eyesight, Kooratazhvan prayed that his eyes should see nothing but the Lord and his Acharya — Ramanuja. He also prayed that Naalooran be granted moksha.

Three mantras are important for Sri Vaishnavas — ashtakshara, dhvaya and charama sloka. Of these three, dhvaya mantra is considered the gem, and Vedanta Desika says that nothing can give more welfare to a person than the recitation of dhvaya mantra. So significant is the dhvaya mantra that even the asktakshara mantra and charama sloka are explained in terms of dhvaya mantra. Thiruvaimozhi is said to be an elaboration of dhvaya. Dhvaya mantra has 10 segments. Thiruvaimozhi has 10 divisions, each of which is an explanation of a segment of dhvaya. Stotra Ratna of Alavandar and Saranagati Gadya of Ramanuja are also elaborations of dhvaya mantra. Dhvaya mantra is the crux of Visishtadvaita philosophy. Kooratazhvan, following in the footsteps of his predecessors, composed Varadaraja Stava to convey the meaning of dhvaya.


Connection.





Jaina mathematics

It is a little hard to define Jaina mathematics. Jainism is a religion and philosophy which was founded in India around the 6th century BC. To a certain extent it began to replace the Vedic religions which, with their sacrificial procedures, had given rise to the mathematics of building altars. The mathematics of the Vedic religions is described in the article Indian Sulbasutras.


Now we could use the term Jaina mathematics to describe mathematics done by those following Jainism and indeed this would then refer to a part of mathematics done on the Indian subcontinent from the founding of Jainism up to modern times. Indeed this is fair and some of the articles in the references refer to fairly modern mathematics. For example in [16] Jha looks at the contributions of Jainas from the 5th century BC up to the 18th century AD.


This article will concentrate on the period after the founding of Jainism up to around the time of Aryabhata in around 500 AD. The reason for taking this time interval is that until recently this was thought to be a time when there was little mathematical activity in India. Aryabhata's work was seen as the beginning of a new classical period for Indian mathematics and indeed this is fair. Yet Aryabhata did not work in mathematical isolation and as well as being seen as the person who brought in a new era of mathematical investigation in India, more recent research has shown that there is a case for seeing him also as representing the end-product of a mathematical period of which relatively little is known. This is the period we shall refer to as the period of Jaina mathematics.


There were mathematical texts from this period yet they have received little attention from historians until recent times. Texts, such as the Surya Prajnapti which is thought to be around the 4th century BC and the Jambudvipa Prajnapti from around the same period, have recently received attention through the study of later commentaries. The Bhagabati Sutra dates from around 300 BC and contains interesting information on combinations. From about the second century BC is the Sthananga Sutra which is particularly interesting in that it lists the topics which made up the mathematics studied at the time. In fact this list of topics sets the scene for the areas of study for a long time to come in the Indian subcontinent. The topics are listed in [2] as:-

... the theory of numbers, arithmetical operations, geometry, operations with fractions, simple equations, cubic equations, quartic equations, and permutations and combinations.

The ideas of the mathematical infinite in Jaina mathematics is very interesting indeed and they evolve largely due to the Jaina's cosmological ideas. In Jaina cosmology time is thought of as eternal and without form. The world is infinite, it was never created and has always existed. Space pervades everything and is without form. All the objects of the universe exist in space which is divided into the space of the universe and the space of the non-universe. There is a central region of the universe in which all living beings, including men, animals, gods and devils, live. Above this central region is the upper world which is itself divided into two parts. Below the central region is the lower world which is divided into seven tiers. This led to the work described in [3] on a mathematical topic in the Jaina work, Tiloyapannatti by Yativrsabha. A circle is divided by parallel lines into regions of prescribed widths. The lengths of the boundary chords and the areas of the regions are given, based on stated rules.


This cosmology has strongly influenced Jaina mathematics in many ways and has been a motivating factor in the development of mathematical ideas of the infinite which were not considered again until the time of Cantor. The Jaina cosmology contained a time period of 2^{588}2 

588

  years. Note that 2^{588}2 

588

  is a very large number!

2^{588}2 

588

  = 1013 065324 433836 171511 818326 096474 890383 898005 918563 696288 002277 756507 034036 354527 929615 978746 851512 277392 062160 962106 733983 191180 520452 956027 069051 297354 415786 421338 721071 661056.

So what are the Jaina ideas of the infinite. There was a fascination with large numbers in Indian thought over a long period and this again almost required them to consider infinitely large measures. The first point worth making is that they had different infinite measures which they did not define in a rigorous mathematical fashion, but nevertheless are quite sophisticated. The paper [6] describes the way that the first unenumerable number was constructed using effectively a recursive construction.


The Jaina construction begins with a cylindrical container of very large radius r^{q}r 

q

  (taken to be the radius of the earth) and having a fixed height hh. The number n^{q} = f(r^{q})n 

q

 =f(r 

q

 ) is the number of very tiny white mustard seeds that can be placed in this container. Next, r_{1} = g(r^{q})r 

1


 =g(r 

q

 ) is defined by a complicated recursive subprocedure, and then as before a new larger number n_{1} = f(r_{1})n 

1


 =f(r 

1


 ) is defined. The text the Anuyoga Dwara Sutra then states:-

Still the highest enumerable number has not been attained.

The whole procedure is repeated, yielding a truly huge number which is called jaghanya- parita- asamkhyata meaning "unenumerable of low enhanced order". Continuing the process yields the smallest unenumerable number.


Jaina mathematics recognised five different types of infinity [2]:-

... infinite in one direction, infinite in two directions, infinite in area, infinite everywhere and perpetually infinite.

The Anuyoga Dwara Sutra contains other remarkable numerical speculations by the Jainas. For example several times in the work the number of human beings that ever existed is given as 2^{96}2 

96

 .


By the second century AD the Jaina had produced a theory of sets. In Satkhandagama various sets are operated upon by logarithmic functions to base two, by squaring and extracting square roots, and by raising to finite or infinite powers. The operations are repeated to produce new sets.


Permutations and combinations are used in the Sthananga Sutra. In the Bhagabati Sutra rules are given for the number of permutations of 1 selected from nn, 2 from n, and 3 from nn. Similarly rules are given for the number of combinations of 1 from nn, 2 from n, and 3 from nn. Numbers are calculated in the cases where nn = 2, 3 and 4. The author then says that one can compute the numbers in the same way for larger nn. He writes:-

In this way, 5, 6, 7, ..., 10, etc. or an enumerable, unenumerable or infinite number of may be specified. Taking one at a time, two at a time, ... ten at a time, as the number of combinations are formed they must all be worked out.

Interestingly here too there is the suggestion that the arithmetic can be extended to various infinite numbers. In other works the relation of the number of combinations to the coefficients occurring in the binomial expansion was noted. In a commentary on this third century work in the tenth century, Pascal's triangle appears in order to give the coefficients of the binomial expansion.


Another concept which the Jainas seem to have gone at least some way towards understanding was that of the logarithm. They had begun to understand the laws of indices. For example the Anuyoga Dwara Sutra states:-

The first square root multiplied by the second square root is the cube of the second square root.

The second square root was the fourth root of a number. This therefore is the formula

(√a).(√√a) = (√√a)^{3}(√a).(√√a)=(√√a) 

3

 .

Again the Anuyoga Dwara Sutra states:-

... the second square root multiplied by the third square root is the cube of the third square root.

The third square root was the eighth root of a number. This therefore is the formula

(√√a).(√√√a) = (√√√a)^{3}(√√a).(√√√a)=(√√√a) 

3

 .

Some historians studying these works believe that they see evidence for the Jainas having developed logarithms to base 2.


The value of π in Jaina mathematics has been a topic of a number of research papers, see for example [4], [5], [7], and [17]. As with much research into Indian mathematics there is interest in whether the Indians took their ideas from the Greeks. The approximation π = √10 seems one which was frequently used by the Jainas.


Finally let us comment on the Jaina's astronomy. This was not very advanced. It was not until the works of Aryabhata that the Greek ideas of epicycles entered Indian astronomy. Before the Jaina period the ideas of eclipses were based on a demon called Rahu which devoured or captured the Moon or the Sun causing their eclipse. The Jaina school assumed the existence of two demons Rahu, the Dhruva Rahu which causes the phases of the Moon and the Parva Rahu which has irregular celestial motion in all directions and causes an eclipse by covering the Moon or Sun or their light. The author of [23] points out that, according to the Jaina school, the greatest possible number of eclipses in a year is four.


Despite this some of the astronomical measurements were fairly good. The data in the Surya Prajnapti implies a synodic lunar month equal to 29\large\frac{16}{31}\normalsize29 

31

16


  days; the correct value being nearly 29.5305888. There has been considerable interest in examining the data presented in these Jaina texts to see if the data originated from other sources. For example in the Surya Prajnapti data exists which implies a ratio of 3:2 for the maximum to the minimum length of daylight. Now this is not true for India but is true for Babylonia which makes some historians believe that the data in the Surya Prajnapti is not of Indian origin but is Babylonian. However, in [22] Sharma and Lishk present an alternative hypothesis which would allow the data to be of Indian origin. One has to say that their suggestion that 3:2 might be the ratio of the amounts of water to be poured into the water-clock on the longest and shortest days seems less than totally convensing. 



 

Thursday, November 17, 2022

B D.

 God Bless you!

Today is blessings day. All the blessings you give today will come back to you manyfold in ways that will benefit you. 

I bless you with all my faith.  With all my love.  With all my affection.  With all my friendship.  With all my admiration.  With all my respect.  I bless you with all my heart.  I bless your life.  I bless your health.  I bless your economy.  Blessed are you in your house, blessed when you enter and blessed when you leave.  I bless your family.  I bless your children.  I bless your work.  I bless your spiritual life.  I bless all your projects and purposes.  May it always be so.  Today is *the day of blessing*.  It is recommended to bless as many people as possible with all your heart.  The more you bless, the more blessings will come to you and your family.  I am happy to bless you today on the *Blessing Day*.. So go on and bless people all around you.