I should
dismiss VarahaMihira as a superstitious peddler of astrological nonsense,
making ridiculous predictions about the effects of stars and planets on people,
kings, cows and donkeys. Like most scientifically minded admirers of Indian
astronomy and mathematics, I should wax lyrical on Aryabhata and Bhaskara, bask
in the glories of their obscure mathematics and intricate algorithms, and
merely mention VarahaMihira’s Pancha Siddhantikaa, but indlugently tut-tuh his
extensive horoscopic horrors in Brihat Samhitaa.
I have
been asked once to talk on Indian Astronomy, specifically debunking astrology.
I declined. While I don’t personally believe in astrology and horoscopes and
the ability to predict events in the life of men and beasts, based on their
place and time of birth, millions believe in such things, and it is not my
intention to deliberately insult them or injure their feelings. I’d rather talk
write and explain, what I do understand, and that which others may be eager or
curious to learn.
VarahaMihira
is perhaps the most prolific of Indian astronomers, based simply on his works
that have survived. While Aryabhata’s treatise Aryabhateeyam (also called Aryaashtashata)
is the famous for its brevity, Brihat
Samhita by its very name – the Grand Compilation – is not.
Pancha Siddhantikaa is a comparative study of five
great astronomical texts, excluding remarkably, AryabhaTeeyam. The latter is perhaps the most commented and
translated Indian text, long after several of its axioms, data, formulae, and
algorithms became outdated or were shown to be wrong or improved by later
astronomers. The average science afficionado, and several writers have showered
encomiums on Aryabhata for his brilliant scientific work, while often passing
lightly over the fact that he has not included a single scientific proof in his
text. Nor have most later Indian astronomers in theirs. This lacuna has led
some to claim that mathematical proofs are purely a Greek invention.
Strangely,
the only scientific explanation of an astronomical phenomenon, which can be
understood even by an illiterate person with common sense, needs no
mathematical expertise, simply but logically overturns the old religious
superstition, and is verifiable by any observer, is provided by VarahaMihira in
his Brihat Samhitaa. I refer to the
first few slokas in the chapter on Raahuchaara,
which explains how eclipses are caused, not by mythological snakes Rahu and
Kethu, but by the shadows of the earth on the moon and the moon blocking the
sun. Remarkably, unlike Brahmagupta who severely condemns and insults earlier
astronomers like Aryabhata and Vishnuchandra, though in enjoyably poetic
hyperbole, VarahaMihira is respectful of religious tradition and makes no
personal attacks whatsoever.
VarahaMihira
uses four arguments - Geometry, Direction, Timing, and Size Difference - to
explain the eclipses as shadows and debunk the snake explanation.
वृक्षस्य
स्वच्छाया यथैकपार्श्वे भवति धीर्घचया
।
निशि निशि तद्वद्भूमेरावरणवशाद्दिनेशस्य
॥
Transliteration vRukshasya(of tree) svacchaayaa(self
shadow) yatha (how) eka paarshvE (on one side) bhavathi (becomes) dheerghachayaa
(increases)
nishi(night)
nishi(night) tadvad(so too) bhumEH(of Earth) aavaraNavashaath (covers)
dinEshasya (the Sun’s)
Meaning As tree’s shadow grows longer on
one side, so the Earth’s shadow elongates on one side, because of the Sun.
This
is a simple, obvious, but profound, metaphor, to show that the
Earth casts a shadow in space, like a tree casts a shadow on the ground!
भूच्छायां
स्वग्रहणे भास्करमर्कग्रहे प्रविशतिन्दुः ।
प्रग्रहणमतः
पश्च्चान्नेन्दोर्भानोश्च पूर्वार्द्धात् ॥
Transliteration bhu (Earth) chaayam(shadow) sva
grahaNE (in self eclipse, i.e. lunar eclipse) bhaaskaram (Sun’s disc) arka
grahE (in solar eclipse) pravishath (enters) indu (the Moon)
pragrahaNam(Eclipse)
athaH(hence) paschaath(from west) na(not) indu(Moon) bhaanu(Solar) cha(and)
poorvaardhaath(from east)
Meaning In a lunar eclipse, the Moon
enters the shadow of the Earth. In a solar eclipse, it enters the Sun’s disc.
Hence, lunar eclipse does not begin in the western side, and solar eclipse does
not begin in eastern side.
Invariant
Direction This
is proof by direction. VarahaMihira explains why eclipses always proceed in one
direction, east to west for lunar; west to east for solar. This is because both
eclipses are caused by the Moon’s orbit, which is from west to east around the
Earth.
Hence
the direction of the lunar eclipse (which is Earth’s shadow on the moon) is
East to West. See picture for visual explanation. In a solar eclipse, the Moon
continues to move from West to East relative to the Earth, so covers the Sun
from the Sun’s western edge onward.
आवरणं महदिन्दोः कुणठविषाणस्ततोऽर्द्धसञ्छन्नः ।
स्वल्पं
रवेर्यतोऽतस्तीक्ष्णविषाणो रविर्भवति ॥
Transliteration aavaraNam (Covering) mahat
(Large) indOH (of the Moon, i.e. by the Earth) kuNTa (blunt) vishaaNaaH (horns)
tathaH (so) arddha sanchannaH (half covered)
su
alpam (small) ravEr (of the Sun) yathaH (because) athaH (then) theekshNa (sharp)
vishaaNaaH(horns) raviR(of sun) bhavathi(becomes)
Meaning The object covering the Moon is large,
hence, the shadow’s horns are blunt, whereas the object covering the Sun is
small, so the horns are sharp.
Size
Difference The horns
here refer to the uncovered portions of the Moon or Sun during partial
eclipses. KuNtaVishaaNaa and TheekshNaVishaaNa are beautiful scientific terms in
Sanskrit. VarahaMihira casually mentions that the two blocking objects are of
two different sizes, the Moon is smaller and the Earth’s shadow larger, which
would not be the case if they were blocked by the same Rahu.
Incidentally,
he reserves the term Kethu, for comets, and never uses the term in the context
of a solar or lunar eclipse.
Geometry
and Timing There
were several beliefs about Rahu: that he only has a head or tail, that he is a
full bodied snake, that he is dark and invisible except during eclipses. In
Jain astronomy, there are two Rahus. I have excluded these verses for brevity,
and only list below VarahaMihira’s verses refuting each of these concepts of
Rahu.
यदि मूर्त्तो भविचारी
शिरोऽथवा भवति मणडली राहुः ।
भगणार्द्धेनान्तरितौ
गृह्णाति कथं नियतचारः ॥
Transliteration Yadi (if) moorththO (body)
bhavichaari (sky goer) shira(head) athavaa(then) bhavathi(becomes) maNdalee (circular)
raahuH
bhagaNaarddhEna
(by half sky) antherithou(intervalled) grhNaathi (grasps) kaTham (how) niyathachaaraH
(fixed mover)
Meaning If Rahu has a body, and is
identified only by a head, how does he sieze the Sun or the Moon when they are
half the sky apart, when his motion is fixed (i.e. he moves in a regular orbit)
?
अनियतचारः खलु चेदुपलब्धिः
संख्यया कथं तस्य ।
पुच्छाननाभिधानोऽन्तरेण
कस्मान्न गृह्णाति ॥
Transliteration aniyathachaaraH (non-fixed
mover) khalu cheth (if only) upalabdhi (is obtained) sankhyayaa (by
calculation) kaTham (how) thasya (its)
puchcha
(tail) aanana (face) abhidhaana(names) antharENa kasmaath (how) na
(not) grhNaathi (grasps)
Meaning If his motion is not fixed, how
can the eclipses be calculated in advance (as astronomers have done for
centuries)? And if Rahu only has face and tail, why does he not seize the Sun
and Moon, except when they half-the sky apart?
अथ तु भुजगेन्द्ररूपः
पुच्छेन मुखेन वा स गृह्णाति ।
मुखपुच्छान्तरसंस्थं
स्थगयति कस्मान्न भगणार्द्धम् ॥
Transliteration Atha thu (Now, if) bhujagEndra
(snake king) roopa (form) pucchEna (by tail) mukhEna (by mouth) vaa (or) sa(he)
grhNaathi (grasps)
Mukha
puccha anthara samsTHam (region between face and tail) sThagayathi (covers) kasmaath
(how) na (not) bhagaNaarddham (half sky, i.e. half zodiac)
Meaning Now, if he is in the form of a full
snake, but only grasps by mouth or tail, why doesn't he hide all the stars
between the Sun and Moon, i.e half the Zodiac?
राहुर्द्व्यं यदि
स्याद् ग्रस्तेस्तमितेऽथवोदिते चन्द्रे ।
तत्समगतिनान्येन
ग्रस्तः सूर्योऽपि दृश्यते ॥
Transliteration Raahurdvayam (Two Rahus) yadi
(if) syaad (exist) grasthE (grasps) asthamithE (during setting) athavaa (or)
udithE (during rising) chandrE (of Moon)
Tat(That)
samagathi(co-moving) na (not) anyEna (by other) grasthaH sooryO(Sun) api(also)
drshyathE (is seen)
Meaning If there are two Raahus, then,
when one Rahu grasps the Moon during rising or setting, why does the other Rahu
not seen grasping the Sun simultaneously?
With
these arguments, weaving geometry timing and logic, VarahaMihira demolishes the
Rahu as snake theory, establishes that shadows and the Moon cause the
eclipses.
It is
easy to forget that until the arrival of Vasco da Gama and subsequent Europeans,
paper was unknown to Indians, who for some reason, never imported it from China.
In India, paper became a popular medium of documentation only in the beginning
of the 19th century. Indians mostly used palm leaves and tree barks
for writing.
Additionally,
astronomy and mathematics were restricted to students of small schools. The
general public, even the well educated, would find it difficult to follow some
of these concepts. VarahaMihira intended this explanation only for astronomers.
Hence, it is no surprise that the general public continued to believe in the
two celestial snakes explanation.
In
schools today, eclipses are taught with rote instruction, as though only
Europeans explained them, and in very early classes. Since almost all teachers
of science are ignorant of Sanskrit, such a simple but elegant proof is not
included in any syllabus. Indian astronomers, except Aryabhata, are considered
orthodox and superstitious. But here is the very orthodox VarahaMihira, with a
very scientific explanation! If you are a school or college science teacher,
please feel free to use this material in your class.
References Mostly, I quote from Ramakrishna Bhat’s translation of Brihat Samhitaa. I also used Chidambaram Iyer’s
translation. I enjoyed reading Bhat’s book in the KV Sarma library and
discussing with and learning from “Nagupoliyan” Balasubramanian.
Postscript I remember reading in one of
VarahaMihira’s texts that eclipse shadows are convex, whereas if a snake were
to swallow the orbs, its concave mouth would cause a different shadow. But, I
cannot find it in either PanchaSiddhantikaa or Brihat Samhitaa. If anyone reading
this discovers that sloka, please let me know.
My earlier columns on VarahaMihira
1. VarahaMihira slokam on Agastya
2. Some slokas on Indian Astronomy
very nice Gopu!
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Great article on Varahamihira's eclipse proof.
ReplyDeleteI like the way you went about explaining it in a nice four-pronged approach based on Geometry, Direction, Timing, and Size Difference, aptly quoting the respective verses of Varahamihira. Thanks for unearthing them for us.
And yes, if taught this way, how much sense it makes to the students to know of the active process behind the discovery of things. Besides, this is a home-grown contribution, which we should have been celebrating.
This article makes me look for more of such contributions.
Nice foolosophy
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Hello. Thanks for this. In fact this seems that ONLY rational thing in Brihat Samhita. How could Varahamihira who wrote such a dense perfect technical scientific treatise - the Panchsiddhantika, also end up writing a book called Brihat Samhita which is honestly both unscientific and full of loopholes. Its basically a joke. Have you been able to find any other Indian astronomer who has referenced Brihat Samhita, or any commentary/ criticism on it? I am getting to believe that the Brihat Samhita was a later 'trash' book written and attributed to Varahamihira to make him and in turn Indians look stupid (possibly in colonial times). These things did happen. All treatises of classical Indian astronomy - Surya Siddhanta, Vedanga Jyotish, Aryabhattiya, Panchsiddhantika, Siddhanta Siromani, Tantrasamgraha etc. NONE have a single thing to say about astrology. Varahmihira himself is critical of these things in Panchsiddhantika. Then how could he write such weird book as Brihat Samhita. Your thoughts?
ReplyDeleteNo Varahamihira mentions the other book he authored - in one of the chapters of Brihat Samhita. He is also credited with authoring Brhat Jataka, a work exclusively on astrology.
DeleteBrihat Samhita is hard to classify - most scholars consider it the first encyclopedia. If so, it is not a comprehensive one. It is unique, very much like Pancha Siddhantika - can you name any other field in which such a book exists, which compares five different siddhantas with some slight and some major differences?
You are right, none of the other siddhantas like those of Aryabhata, Bhaskara, Brahmagupta etc discuss astrology, but perhaps that is explained by the fact that no other astronomer except Nilakantha Somayaji, was a polymath like Varahamihira.
As for utility, and whether this whole book should be dismissed as chaff because of the extensive treatment of astrology, which seems so unscientific, this sentiment was expressed by al-Beruni who commented on several of these jyotisha siddhantas. I too had the same feeling when I first read it, or actually, perused the English translations.
DeleteWe easily dismiss astrologers, but consider the market forces in society. Most people believe them and will pay for astrology even if their predictions are unsatisfactory or wrong. Who pays for astronomy? No one but government or self financing astronomers. And this is not exclusive to India, even in the Europe, I believe astrology was the main force to fund studies in astronomy (I believe Johannes Kepler and Tycho Brahe also practiced astrology for income), and very widespread in most parts of the world.
Anyway even as per scientific or mathematical interest, the chapter on gandha yukti in Brihat Samhita, for the first time in an Indian book I think, discusses combinatorics. For several centuries, even after Varahamihira, Indian astronomers didnt deal with combinatorics in their astronomy siddhantas.