02-05-2011, 03:13 PM
PREFACE
Religious extremism has been the root cause of most of the
world problems since time immemorial. It has decided the fates
of men and nations. In a vast nation like India, the imposition of
religious dogma and discrimination upon the people has taken
place after the upsurge of Hindu rightwing forces in the political
arena. As a consequence of their political ascendancy in the
northern states of India, they started to rewrite school textbooks
in an extremely biased manner that was fundamentalist and
revivalist. Not only did they meddle with subjects like history
(which was their main area of operation), but they also imposed
their religious agenda on the science subjects. There was a plan
to introduce Vedic Astrology in the school syllabus across the
nation, which was dropped after a major hue and cry from
secular intellectuals.
This obsession with ‘Vedic’ results from the fundamentalist
Hindu organizations need to claim their identity as Aryan (and
hence of Caucasian origin) and hence superior to the rest of the
native inhabitants of India. The ‘Vedas’ are considered ‘divine’
in origin and are assumed to be direct revelations from God.
The whole corpus of Vedic literature is in Sanskrit. The Vedas
are four in number: Rgveda, Saamaveda, Yajurveda and
Atharvaveda. In traditional Hinduism, the Vedas as a body of
knowledge were to be learnt only by the ‘upper’ caste Hindus
and the ‘lower castes’ (Sudras) and so-called ‘untouchables’
(who were outside the Hindu social order) were forbidden from
learning or even hearing to their recitation. For several
centuries, the Vedas were not written down but passed from
generation to generation through oral transmission. While
religious significance is essential for maintaining Aryan
supremacy and the caste system, the claims made about the
Vedas were of the highest order of hyperbole. Murli Manohar
Joshi, a senior Cabinet minister of the Bharatiya Janata Party
(BJP) that ruled India from 1999-2004 went on to claim that a
cure of the dreaded AIDS was available in the Vedas! In the
continuing trend, last week a scientist has announced that
NASA (of the USA) is using a Vedic formula to produce
electricity. One such popular topic of Hindutva imposition was
Vedic Mathematics. Much of the hype about this topic is based
on one single book authored by the Sankaracharya (the highest
Hindu pontiff) Jagadguru Swami Sri Bharati Krsna Tirthaji
Maharaja titled Vedic Mathematics and published in the year
1965, and reprinted several times since the 1990s [51]. This
book was used as the foundation and the subject was
systematically introduced in schools across India. It was
introduced in the official curriculum in the school syllabus in
the states of Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh. Further,
schools run by Hindutva sympathizers or trusts introduced it
into their curriculum. In this juncture, the first author of this
book started working on this topic five years back, and has since
met over 1000 persons from various walks of life and collected
their opinion on Vedic Mathematics. This book is the result of
those interactions.
In this book the authors probe into Vedic Mathematics (a
concept that gained renown in the period of the religious fanatic
and revivalist Hindutva rule in India): and explore whether it is
really ‘Vedic’ in origin or ‘Mathematics’ in content. The entire
field of Vedic Mathematics is supposedly based on 16 one-tothree-
word sutras (aphorisms) in Sanskrit, which they claim can
solve all modern mathematical problems. However, a careful
perusal of the General Editor’s note in this book gives away the
basic fact that the origin of these sutras are not ‘Vedic’ at all.
The book’s General Editor, V.S. Agrawala, (M.A., PhD.
D.Litt.,) writes in page VI as follows:
“It is the whole essence of his assessment of Vedic
tradition that it is not to be approached from a factual
standpoint but from the ideal standpoint viz., as the
Vedas, as traditionally accepted in India as the repository
of all knowledge, should be and not what they are in
human possession. That approach entirely turns the table
on all critics, for the authorship of Vedic mathematics
need not be labouriously searched for in the texts as
preserved from antiquity. […]
In the light of the above definition and approach
must be understood the author’s statement that the
sixteen sutras on which the present volume is based from
part of a Parisista of the Atharvaveda. We are aware that
each Veda has its subsidiary apocryphal text some of
which remain in manuscripts and others have been
printed but that formulation has not closed. For example,
some Parisista of the Atharvaveda were edited by
G.M.Bolling and J. Von Negelein, Leipzig,1909-10. But
this work of Sri Sankaracharyaji deserves to be regarded
as a new Parisista by itself and it is not surprising that
the Sutras mentioned herein do not appear in the hitherto
known Parisistas.
A list of these main 16 Sutras and of their sub-sutras
or corollaries is prefixed in the beginning of the text and
the style of language also points to their discovery by Sri
Swamiji himself. At any rate, it is needless to dwell
longer on this point of origin since the vast merit of
these rules should be a matter of discovery for each
intelligent reader. Whatever is written here by the author
stands on its own merits and is presented as such to the
mathematical world. [emphasis supplied]”
The argument that Vedas means all knowledge and hence
the fallacy of claiming even 20th century inventions to belong to
the Vedas clearly reveals that there is a hidden agenda in
bestowing such an antiquity upon a subject of such a recent
origin. There is an open admission that these sutras are the
product of one man’s imagination. Now it has become clear to
us that the so-called Vedic Mathematics is not even Vedic in
origin.
Next, we wanted to analyze the mathematical content and
its ulterior motives using fuzzy analysis. We analyzed this
problem using fuzzy models like Fuzzy Cognitive Maps (FCM),
Fuzzy Relational Maps (FRM) and the newly constructed fuzzy
dynamical system (and its Neutrosophic analogue) that can
analyze multi-experts opinion at a time using a single model.
The issue of Vedic Mathematics involves religious politics,
caste supremacy, apart from elementary arithmetic—so we
cannot use simple statistics for our analysis. Further any study,
when scientifically carried out using fuzzy models has more
value than a statistical approach to the same. We used linguistic
questionnaires for our data collection; experts filled in these
questionnaires. In many cases, we also recorded our interviews
with the experts in case they did not possess the technical
knowledge of working with our questionnaire. Apart from this,
several group discussions and meetings with various groups of
people were held to construct the fuzzy models used to analyze
this problem.
This book has five chapters. In Chapter I, we give a brief
description of the sixteen sutras invented by the Swamiji.
Chapter II gives the text of select articles about Vedic
Mathematics that appeared in the media. Chapter III recalls
some basic notions of some Fuzzy and Neutrosophic models
used in this book. This chapter also introduces a fuzzy model to
study the problem when we have to handle the opinion of multiexperts.
Chapter IV analyses the problem using these models.
The final chapter gives the observations made from our study.
The authors thank everybody who gave their opinion about
Vedic Mathematics. Without their cooperation, the book could
not have materialized. We next thank Dr.K.Kandasamy for
proof-reading the book. I thank Meena and Kama for the layout
and formatting of this book. Our thanks are also due to Prof.
Praveen Prakash, Prof. Subrahmaniyam, Prof. E. L.
Piriyakumar, Mr. Gajendran, Mr. S. Karuppasamy, Mr.
Jayabhaskaran, Mr. Senguttuvan, Mr. Tamilselvan, Mr. D.
Maariappan, Mr. P. Ganesan, Mr. N. Rajkumar and Ms.
Rosalyn for the help rendered in various ways that could
convert this book into a solid reality. We also thank the students
of All India Students Federation (AISF) and the Students
Federation of India (SFI) for their help in my work.
The authors dedicate this book to the great philosopher and
intellectual Rahul Sangridyayan who revealed and exposed to
the world many of the truths about the Vedas.
We have given a long list of references to help the
interested reader.
download full report
http://www.gallup.unm.edu/~smarandache/vedicmath.pdf