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Sankhya-1
Oriental Philosophy of Nature
Science and the Vedas(rev. 2008Feb25)
This ppt file and sankya-2.doc contains all of our current shows on the above topics. Sometimes there are Notes below. Please use them properly. Anjana Suta Academy WWW.JayaRama.US
Index
1. How Cats See Ghosts: This was originally our Bharatiya Sanskriti II presentation at San Marcos University in Lima Peru …. 2-16
2. Philosophy Science & Politics - Where is the World Going?: Bharatiya Sanskriti III additions, BSDM history and quotes from Quantum Question…. 19 – 48
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NIOSNorth American Institute for Oriental and Classical Studies•Established 12 January 2004.•Faculty and Advisors: Harvard, Oxford, distiguished professors from Indian and North and South America.
San Marcos UniversityLima, Perú•Oldest university in the Western world.•Established 450 years ago.•More than 50,000 students.www.unmsm.edu.pe
Friday1. How Cats See Ghosts Sankhya – Analysis of Nature2. Applications Vastu – Architecture Gandharva – Music y Dance3. Songs of the Acharyas
Saturday1. Three Minutes with a GeniusUpadesamrta of Rupa Goswami2. Caste System, Natural or Un-
natural3. The Game of Dice – Drama
from the Mahabharata
Philosophy of Nature in Classical India
10-11 March 2006 Universidad San Marcos
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Hanumatpresaka SwamiH. H. Robinson
January 1948Guam, Marianas Islands
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University of California Electrical Enginrering Biological Engineering Psychology, ФВҚ
North-Western UniversityMentor Donald T. Campbell Second City Theater Okinawa Karate Bengali Vaisnava 1974
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Occidental Oriental
A Lover’s QuarrelProf. Harvey CoxHarvard University
Srimad Bhagavatam
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The Throne of Reason
• Paracelsus y Magnus
• Mechanical Philosphers• Chemical Philosophers Alchemy
Theology
Sociology
Psychology
Psychiatry
Biology
Chemistry
Physics
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Oriental
Adi purusha – Govinda(Peter Pan)
Purusha avataras – Yamaraja(Prison Warden)
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Oriental
•PSYCHOLOGICAL
Ahankara – Reflected Ego
Buddhi – Knowledge
Manas – Mind, Calculation
Indriya – Physical Body
• Purushas - Transcendental
Tiempo
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Oriental
Ahankara – Reflected Ego
Buddhi – Knowledge
Manas – Mind
Indriya – Gross Body $500
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•PSICOLÓGICO Ahankara – Ego Reflejado
Buddhi – Knowledge
Manas – Mind
• Carl Jung
Tavistock Lectures
Hopi Indians
• Black Poetess
• An Invalid Hand
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Oriental
• Purushas - Transcendental
•PSICOLÓGICO
• Indriya – Cuerpo Físico
Kham – Space
Vayu – Tactile
Anala – Visual
Apa – Taste
Bhumi - Olfactory
Tiempo
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Oriental
EspacioMarshall Mc Luhan Media is the Massage, Understanding Media
E. T. Hall The Hidden Dimension, Beyond Culture
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Sankhya
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Oriental
Tactile / Mass
How Cats See How Cats See GhostsGhosts
Karate
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Occidental Oriental
Teología
Sociología
Psicología
Psiquiatría
Biología
Química
Física
Ahankara – Ego reflejado
Buddhi – Perspectiva
Manas – Mente, Cálculo
Kham – Espacio
Vayu – Tácto
Anala – Vista
Apa – Gusto
Bhumi - Olfato
Adi purusha – GovindaAvataras – Yamaraja
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Thank you, please do not throw stones.
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PhilosophyScience
&Politics
Where is the World Going?
San Marcos University - NIOS
1 & 2 March 2007
Lima, Peru
Part One: Philosophy & Science
III Bharatiya-sanskriti - Festival of Classical Indian Culture
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B. S. Damodara Swami
Dr. T. D. Singh
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B. S. Damodara SwamiDr. T. D. Singh
ManipurThe Forbidden Kingdom
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Manipur
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FlowersSiroi LillyOrchids
24AnimalsBrow Antler Dear
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Origin of Polo
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Manipur
Calcutta University – Chemistry
University of Buffalo
University of California
Srila A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami
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B. S. Damodara SwamiDr. T. D. Singh
1984 Bombay1st World Congress for the Synthesis of Science and Religion
1990 San Francisco1st International Seminar on the Study of Consciousness in Science
1997 Calcutta2nd World Congress for the Synthesis of Science and Religion
Charles Townes
Nobel Prize - Laser
Sir John EcclesNobel Prize
Neurophysiology
George WaldNobel Prize -
Chemistry
Dalai LamaNobel Prize -
Peace
Paulos GregoriousPresident of
World Council of Churches
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CONTENT
A Rapid Sanskrit Method Profesor George Hart, Universidad de California
Catalogus Catalogorum – 160,000
• Vastu-veda – Arquitectura• Ayurveda – Medicina• Yantra-vidhi – Mecánica• Jyotisha-veda– Astronomy, astrology• Gandharva-veda – Music, Dance, Drama• Danda-veda – Ciencias Políticas
• Sankhya – General Philosophy of Nature
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Bhagavad-gītā 7.4bhūmir āpo 'nalo vāyuh
kham mano buddhir eva caahankara itīyam me
bhinna prakrtir astadha
Earth, water, fire, air, space, mind, intelligence and false ego — all
together these eight constitute My separated material energies.
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My separated material energies.
False ego - I am independent of God.
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TOMMORROW
Danda-veda -- Political Science, Social Philosophy
Classical Indian Philosophy can supply a Philosophy of Nature that integrates the study of physical, psychological, ethical and intuitive levels.
Continued study: Pada-padma, the first two cantos of Srimad Bhagavatam
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Fundamental Questions
1. If the Sankhya is so great then why haven’t we heard about it before?
2. Can make a heaven on earth?
3. What about weapons for self defense?
4. What do the Scientists say about this?
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A Well Kept Secret
Max MuellerColonialismo
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Heaven on Earth
Psychotic CoreMichael Eigen, April 2004
Everyone is possessed of a fundamental narcissistic complex in which the self has become both the subject and object of its own erotic potency.
Mental hospital.Therapeutically perfect.
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What do the Scientists say?
QUANTUM QUESTIONSKen Wilbur, Shambala, 1984
Albert EinsteinETHICAL DIMENSIONThe scientific method can teach us nothing else beyond how facts are related to, and conditioned by each other. The aspiration toward such objective knowledge belongs to the highest of which man is capable, and you will certainly not suspect me of wishing to belittle the achievements and the heroic efforts of man in this sphere. Yet it is equally clear that knowledge of what is does not open the door directly to knowledge of what should be.
INTUITION & MOTIVATIONThis knowledge of objective truth as such is wonderful, but it is so little capable of acting as a guide that it cannot prove even the justification and the value of the aspiration toward that very knowledge of truth. Here we face, therefore, the limits of the purely rational conception of our existence.Pg 106
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What do the Scientists say?
Prince Louis de Broglie
INTUITION & MOTIVATIONThe great epoch-making discoveries of the history of science (think, for example, of that of universal gravitation) have been sudden lightening flashes, making us perceive in one single glance a harmony up untill then unsuspected, and it is to have, from time to time, the divine joy of discovering such harmonies that pure science works without sparing its toil or seeking for profit.Pg. 117
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What do the Scientists say?
Prince Louis de Broglie
ETHICAL DIMENSIONIn the last chapter of his great work, The Two Sources of Morality and Religion, Henri Bergson, having reached almost the end of his book, showed to us a humanity in the formidable grip of mechanism, and as if succumbing under the weight of the discoveries and inventions which the creative ability of its mind had been able to realize.Bergsen rightly says: Machines which move on petrol, on coal, hydro-electric power and which convert into motion the potential energies accumulated during millions of years, have given to our organism so vast an extension and so formidable a power, so disproportionate to its dimensions and strength, that surely it had never been foreseen in the plan of the structure of the species.
And wishing to make us appreciate the essential point and the disquieting side of the problem, he adds: Now, in this excessively enlarged body, the spirit remains what it was, too small now to fill it, too feeble too direct it. Now this increased body awaits a supplement of the soul, now the mechanism demands a mysticism.
Finally, the work finishes on these words, pregnant with meaning: Humanity groans half-crushed under the weight of the advances that it has made. It does not know sufficiently that its future depends on itself. It is for it, above all, to make up its mind if it wishes to continue to live.Pg. 122
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What do the Scientists say?
Max PlanckI might put the matter in another way and say that the freedom of the ego here and now, and its independence of the causal chain, is a truth that comes from the immediate dictate of the human consciousness.Pg. 150
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What do the Scientists say?
Werner Heisenberg(From his book, Wolfgang Pauli’s Philosophical Outlook)Very early in his career Pauli had followed the road of skepticism based in rationalism right to the end, and he then tried to trace out those elements of the cognitive process that precede a rational understanding in depth.Pg 158
Wolfgang Pauli
Werner Heisenberg
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What do the Scientists say?
Sir Arthur EddingtonWhat is the truth about ourselves? Various answers suggest themselves. We are a bit of stellar matter gone wrong. We are physical machinery, puppets that strut and talk and laugh and die as the hand of time pulls the strings beneath. But there is one elementary inescapable answer. We are that which asks the question. Whatever else there may be in our natures, responsibility towards truth is one of its attributes. This side of our nature is aloof from the scrutiny of the physicist. I do not think it is sufficiently covered by admitting a mental aspect of our being. It has to do with conscience rather than consciousnessPg 178
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What do the Scientists say?
Sir Arthur EddingtonThe materialist who is convinced that all phenomena arise from electrons and quanta and the like controlled by mathematical formulae, must presumably hold the belief that his wife is a rather elaborate differential equation, but he is probably tactful enough not to obtrude this opinion in domestic life. If this kind of scientific dissection is felt to be inadequate and irrelevant in ordinary personal relationships, it is surely out of place in the most personal relationship of all, that of the human soul to the divine spirit.Pg 207
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