Tag: Comparative Studies

  • How to Read Darśana with Rigor: Vedic Hermeneutics Beyond Comparative Bias

    How to Read Darśana with Rigor: Vedic Hermeneutics Beyond Comparative Bias

    Darśana is more than a synonym for philosophy: it is a disciplined way of seeing that connects knowledge, practice, and liberation. This analysis explains why Vedic and Hindu texts must first be reconstructed through their own language, genre, epistemology, and commentarial history. It provides a technical introduction to Mīmāṃsā, Uttara Mīmāṃsā, pramāṇa theory, sentence meaning,…

  • Powerful Sanskrit Roots: The Revealing Link Between Latin, Greek and Vedic Knowledge

    Powerful Sanskrit Roots: The Revealing Link Between Latin, Greek and Vedic Knowledge

    Sanskrit, Latin and Greek are deeply connected through the Indo-European language family, and their shared roots transformed the modern study of language. This article explains how scholars such as Sir William Jones recognized systematic similarities in grammar, verbal roots and vocabulary. It explores Sanskrit dhatus such as Vart, Mr, Dyu, Pra, Pu, Jna and Vid,…

  • Beyond the Flood: Decoding Matsya–Manu vs Noah’s Ark with Dharmic Depth and Clarity

    Beyond the Flood: Decoding Matsya–Manu vs Noah’s Ark with Dharmic Depth and Clarity

    Scholars and readers often conflate the Hindu Matsya–Manu narrative with the Biblical story of Noah’s Ark, but the two emerge from distinct cosmologies and theological aims. The Puranic account unfolds within cyclical timekalpas, manvantaras, and yugaswhere avataric guidance preserves seeds, sages, and Vedic knowledge through pralaya. Genesis, by contrast, frames a one-time moral judgment and…

  • Echoes of the Vedas in Native American Lifeways: A Scholarly, Empathic Comparison

    Echoes of the Vedas in Native American Lifeways: A Scholarly, Empathic Comparison

    A careful comparative analysis reveals functional resonances between Vedic culture and Native American lifeways without claiming direct historical links. Drawing on the testimony of Felicity O’rourke (Anishnaabi), the discussion shows how ancestral teachings often survived as lived lifestyle under the pressures of boarding school assimilation. Parallels emerge around sacred fire and smoke, ritual sound, directional…

  • Shattering the Myth: Why Valmiki’s Ramayana Has No Maya SitaEvidence and Dharma

    Shattering the Myth: Why Valmiki’s Ramayana Has No Maya SitaEvidence and Dharma

    The Maya Sita motifan illusory duplicate of Sitadoes not appear in Valmiki’s Ramayana. Textual criticism across northern and southern manuscript families confirms its absence, especially in the Yuddha Kanda where Sita’s Agni-praveśa serves as public vindication. Later Puranic and bhakti-era tellings, such as the Adhyātma Rāmāyaṇa, introduce Maya Sita to offer a theologically protective reading…

  • Kubera and Mammon Unveiled: How Icons of Wealth Shape Ethics, Society, and Spiritual Life

    Kubera and Mammon Unveiled: How Icons of Wealth Shape Ethics, Society, and Spiritual Life

    Wealth has long stirred both aspiration and anxiety. This comparative study of Kubera in Hinduism and Mammon in the Aramaic and Christian traditions clarifies how cultures transform riches into ethical guidance. It shows how Hindu texts situate prosperity within dharma and community welfare, while biblical teachings personify Mammon to warn against greed. Readers gain practical…

  • Dandakaranya and Germany’s Black Forest: Unraveling Sacred Myths, Memory, and Nature’s Power

    Dandakaranya and Germany’s Black Forest: Unraveling Sacred Myths, Memory, and Nature’s Power

    This comparative exploration of the Dandakaranya Forest in the Ramayana and Germany’s Black Forest reveals how sacred geography, mythology, and ecology co-create cultural identity. Readers gain clear context on Dandakaranya’s role in vanvas and dharma, alongside the Schwarzwald’s deep ties to European folklore. The analysis highlights forests as narrative thresholds that test ethics and inspire…

  • Plato in Dialogue with Dharmic Wisdom: Insights from a Three-Day Symposium at SKUAST-Kashmir

    Plato in Dialogue with Dharmic Wisdom: Insights from a Three-Day Symposium at SKUAST-Kashmir

    A three-day international symposium at SKUAST-Kashmir brought Plato into conversation with Dharmic traditions, emphasizing unity in spiritual diversity. Scholars and students explored ethics, political philosophy, and the Socratic method alongside the Upanishads, Buddhist dialectics, Jain Anekantavada, and Sikh ethical reflection. The program modeled rigorous comparative studies and civil discourse, strengthening critical thinking and textual analysis.…

  • Proven Benefits of Sacred Study: Discover Focus, Memory, and Clarity through Dharmic Texts

    Proven Benefits of Sacred Study: Discover Focus, Memory, and Clarity through Dharmic Texts

    Sacred study in the dharmic traditions functions as a sattvika yagyadisciplined effort without attachment to resultsconsistent with Gita Ch 17.11. Practitioners across Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism use chant, memorization, and contemplative reading to strengthen attention, memory, and equanimity. Contemporary research on neuroplasticity supports these practices, linking structured oral traditions to improvements in language processing…

  • From India to Bharat

    From India to Bharat

    This thought-provoking blog post delves into the dichotomy between India’s current state and its Dharmic essence, contemplating a transition from Euro-Christian impositions to a society aligned with its ancient Dharmic roots. Referencing J Sai Deepak’s insights, the narrative emphasizes the imperative of decolonizing mindsets to reclaim a genuine Indic past and chart a Dharmic future.…