Ancient Science प्राचीन विज्ञान
Mathematics, astronomy, metallurgy — discoveries that were, in many cases, centuries ahead of their time.
Discoveries ahead of their time
Long before modern laboratories, Indian thinkers made discoveries that still shape our world. The zero and the decimal place-value system — without which no computer could function — were gifts of Indian mathematics.
From Aryabhata's astronomy to Sushruta's surgery, from the rust-free Iron Pillar of Delhi to Panini's algebra-like grammar, ancient India treated careful observation and reasoning as sacred. These are exactly the questions Vedanvesha revisits with modern method.
Ideas that changed the world
Zero & Decimals शून्य
India gave the world zero as a number and the place-value decimal system — the basis of all computing.
Aryabhata आर्यभट
In 499 CE he calculated pi, explained eclipses and proposed that the Earth rotates on its axis.
Sushruta's Surgery शल्य चिकित्सा
Cataract operations and plastic surgery described over 2,000 years ago — the roots of modern surgery.
Metallurgy धातु विज्ञान
The Iron Pillar of Delhi has resisted rust for 1,600 years; Wootz steel was prized across the world.
Pingala's Binary पिङ्गल
Around 300 BCE, Pingala described binary numbers and combinatorics in the study of poetic metre.
Sacred Geometry शुल्बसूत्र
The Sulba Sutras stated geometric theorems — including a form of the Pythagorean relation — for altar-building.
यत्र विश्वं भवत्येकनीडम् ।
Yatra viśvaṃ bhavaty eka-nīḍam
“Where the whole universe becomes one single nest.”
— Yajur Veda