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![]() I'm having trouble finding a suitable program, from the huge selection of "planetarium" software out there, which will help me identify stars that could correspond to a set of rather ancient names found in Vedic texts. There is a strong tradition about these names, but no reliable evidence that what these names signify today are the same as what they did long ago. What is known is the following: 1. An initial set of 27 asterisms were named for a lunar calendar based on the 27+ day sidereal period. (Later a vestigial 28th name was added.) That is, the moon "moved" from one asterism to the next roughly on every solar day, so somewhat equal spacing is implied. 2. These asterisms lie close to or on the ecliptic: basically, the band that can be occluded by the moon. Of course, exceptions are allowed if there's no suitable star within the band but a nice bright star nearby. (I'm no astronomer, but I believe Betelgeuse could be an example of this.) 3. The names are invariably listed in a specific order, i.e. always starting with the same name, and where the lists vary, the new names are unique and not transpositions. There is a tradition as to the direction in which these names circle the ecliptic, but as this is an exercise in letting the texts "speak for themselves", there is no prejudice against the "wrong way around the sky". 4. There is some internal evidence from the names themselves. (a) Some names are singular, some are plural, and some specifically mean a pair. The indefinite plural probably means a relatively tight group of fainter stars where there isn't a suitably bright star in the vicinity. (b) Three pairs of sequential names are prefixed with adjectives meaning "earlier" and "later" (or "prior" and "posterior"), suggesting proximity. Can anyone suggest software with suitable features to analyse the problem of finding suitable sets of stars (with their modern names)? For completeness, the list looks like this, in terms of the information in (4) above, with 'P' standing for the indefinite (ie. 3+) plural: 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 1, P, P, Early 2, Later 2, 1, 1, 1, 2, 1, 1, 2, Early P, Later P, [28th here], 1, 1, 1, Early P, Later P, 1, 2, P The insertion point of the 28th could correspond to a relatively largish gap. Thanks! |
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On Mon, 22 Sep 2003 05:42:27 +0100, Arjun Ray wrote:
I'm having trouble finding a suitable program, from the huge selection of "planetarium" software out there, which will help me identify stars that could correspond to a set of rather ancient names found in Vedic texts. There is a strong tradition about these names, but no reliable evidence that what these names signify today are the same as what they did long ago. Look in some History of Indian Astronomy book. Names of the Nakshatryas with their Arabic names are often given in those books. Almost all planetarium programs would recognise the Arabic names. The rest is useed only for astrology - so deleted. -- Gautam Majumdar |
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In , Gautam Majumdar
wrote: | On Mon, 22 Sep 2003 05:42:27 +0100, Arjun Ray wrote: | There is a strong tradition about these names, but no reliable evidence | that what these names signify today are the same as what they did long | ago. | | Look in some History of Indian Astronomy book. Names of the Nakshatryas | with their Arabic names are often given in those books. I haven't seen a single one of them back that up with *analysis*. They all simply parrot the received tradition, for which the hard evidence peters out a little before Aryabhat - which is on the order of at least a millenium - that's a thousand freaking years, by the way - after the times that my post was about. | The rest is useed only for astrology - so deleted. Wrong. Astrology is what the received tradition is about. If you had bothered to read my post, I was interested in the *original* provenance of the names, not their use (or misuse) in latter days. Thanks for your input, anyway. |
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On Mon, 22 Sep 2003 07:53:16 +0100, Arjun Ray wrote:
In , Gautam Majumdar wrote: | On Mon, 22 Sep 2003 05:42:27 +0100, Arjun Ray wrote: | There is a strong tradition about these names, but no reliable | evidence that what these names signify today are the same as what | they did long ago. | | Look in some History of Indian Astronomy book. Names of the | Nakshatryas with their Arabic names are often given in those books. I haven't seen a single one of them back that up with *analysis*. They all simply parrot the received tradition, for which the hard evidence peters out a little before Aryabhat - which is on the order of at least a millenium - that's a thousand freaking years, by the way - after the times that my post was about. | The rest is useed only for astrology - so deleted. Wrong. Astrology is what the received tradition is about. If you had bothered to read my post, I was interested in the *original* provenance of the names, not their use (or misuse) in latter days. Sorry if I offended you by mentioning astrology. But part of your post did suggest to me that you are after some astrological info. Anyway, a quick google search revealed a number of interesting sites. I suggest you look at http://www.geocities.com/vijayabalak...akshathra.html This site gives details of all 27 Nakshatras with their Arabic/Latin names where available, SAO & HD catalogue numbers, brightness, etc. From that it should be easy to find them on any planetarium program. Abhijita (Vega), the 28th Nakshatra, is not mentioned though, probably because it was added later to get the lunar cycle in sync with observed period. HTH -- Gautam Majumdar |
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In , Gautam Majumdar
wrote: | On Mon, 22 Sep 2003 07:53:16 +0100, Arjun Ray wrote: | If you had bothered to read my post, I was interested in the *original* | provenance of the names, not their use (or misuse) in latter days. | Sorry if I offended you by mentioning astrology. But part of your post | did suggest to me that you are after some astrological info. It looks like my English must be even worse than that, if I'm failing to convey the basic point that using *later* texts - many, if not most, indeed astrologically oriented - to fix the meanings of *earlier* names is anachronistic thinking: Text 1, dated to (say) 1000 BCE, mentions Name X. Text 2, dated (say) 100 CE, says Name X means Star Such-and-such. Ergo, Name X in Text 1 is Star Such-and-such. No matter how much people may babble about "unbroken tradition" or whatnot, this kind of retroactive attributiun is fallacious. Another way to express this is to say that an "unbroken tradition" needs to be demonstrated rather than presumed. Do you see that? | Anyway, a quick google search revealed a number of interesting sites. I | suggest you look at | | http://www.geocities.com/vijayabalak...akshathra.html I found that - and a number of similar pages - a while back. It's an absolutely classic example of the kind of anachronistic reasoning that I'm trying to find a way around! All these so called analyses *start* with identifying kRttikA as the Pleiades (or just Alcyone). Now, this is in fact true of the *later* tradition. But it is by no means clear that the kRttikA of Vedic times - such as Taitiriya Samhita IV.4.10 or Taittiriya Brahmana 3.1.1.1 or AtharvaVeda XIX.7 - is also the Pleiades. And the say-so of a later tradition doesn't make it so anyway. Or, so one could hope. | This site gives details of all 27 Nakshatras with their Arabic/Latin | names where available, SAO & HD catalogue numbers, brightness, etc. | From that it should be easy to find them on any planetarium program. I was looking for a planetarium program that would help me examine sections of the ecliptic band for candidate asterisms that could be matched to the Vedic names on internal evidence alone - such as the hints provided by differences in grammatical number and the use of "purva" and "uttara" as prefixes for three pairs of names. Note that the later tradition has all names in the singular - which, not at all surprisingly, the Balakrishna article you referenced above takes as a "given" even for the Vedic names! But, for example, what is called the Ashwini (singular) asterism today - as part of a socalled "unbroken tradition", we are told - was in fact originally Ashwiyujau (dual). The point would be to determine several candidate sets as part of a "clean room analysis" and only *then* see if they can be winnowed down to a single set, and only *then* determine if the later tradition is consistent with the evidence from earlier times. Note that working backwards instead has led to a number of utterly fantastic claims. For example, it has been argued that kRttikA is first on the list because it was associated with the vernal equinox (i.e. a "first point of Aries"). This hasn't been true of the Pleiades since some time in the second millemnium BCE. Only crackpots would claim that the Shatapatha Brahmana, a work that shows knowledge of iron, goes back that far, but believe it or not, this kind of nonsense is actually being put forward in "Balakrishna, Ph.D." style as serious science! |
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On Tue, 23 Sep 2003 22:40:06 +0100, Arjun Ray wrote:
Text 1, dated to (say) 1000 BCE, mentions Name X. Text 2, dated (say) 100 CE, says Name X means Star Such-and-such. Ergo, Name X in Text 1 is Star Such-and-such. No matter how much people may babble about "unbroken tradition" or whatnot, this kind of retroactive attributiun is fallacious. Another way to express this is to say that an "unbroken tradition" needs to be demonstrated rather than presumed. Do you see that? I think I got what you are after. But the "unbroken tradition" is a myth. Historically we have a so called dark period between the Vedic period and the much later historical period with almost a thousand years hiatus. Very little hard facts are known for that period let alone any information about the scientific activity of the time. Moreover, the oldest written versions of virtually all ancient Indian texts come only from the 3rd or 4th century BCE. Thus some (or many) of the Vedic sutras might have already been altered between the time of their original composition and the time of the writing of the version that we have got today. I was looking for a planetarium program that would help me examine sections of the ecliptic band for candidate asterisms that could be matched to the Vedic names on internal evidence alone - such as the hints provided by differences in grammatical number and the use of "purva" and "uttara" as prefixes for three pairs of names. Note that the later tradition has all names in the singular - which, not at all surprisingly, the Balakrishna article you referenced above takes as a "given" even for the Vedic names! But, for example, what is called the Ashwini (singular) asterism today - as part of a socalled "unbroken tradition", we are told - was in fact originally Ashwiyujau (dual). We of course don't know anything about the convention used for naming the stars in the Vedic period. In later period all the Nakshatras were given singular female names to conform with the mythology - they are all daughters of Daksha & wives of the Moon. The point would be to determine several candidate sets as part of a "clean room analysis" and only *then* see if they can be winnowed down to a single set, and only *then* determine if the later tradition is consistent with the evidence from earlier times. One possibility is to take a set of candidate stars and run the planetarium program backwards to see if any of them matches up a specific observation mentioned in the Vedic texts - such as a particular conjunction with a planet or the moon - in the likely timeframe. Note that working backwards instead has led to a number of utterly fantastic claims. For example, it has been argued that kRttikA is first on the list because it was associated with the vernal equinox (i.e. a "first point of Aries"). This hasn't been true of the Pleiades since some time in the second millemnium BCE. Only crackpots would claim that the Shatapatha Brahmana, a work that shows knowledge of iron, goes back that far, but believe it or not, this kind of nonsense is actually being put forward in "Balakrishna, Ph.D." style as serious science! We have to remember that many of the ancient texts are actually compilations of the works of many people though they often go by the name of a single author. This is often evident from the different writing styles. Many such texts are not internally consistent. As for the specific example of Shatapatha Brahmana, D P Chattopadhyaya in his book Science & Technology in Ancient India, suggested that some of the observational findings included were traditional, i.e., observed long time ago, possibly even in the Indus Valley period, but not checked for the authenticity at the time of compilation. Again, if the compilation was done over a long period, i.e., later authors added their own observations to the text, there will invariably be contradiction. -- Gautam Majumdar Please send e-mails to |
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In article ,
Gautam Majumdar wrote: On Mon, 22 Sep 2003 05:42:27 +0100, Arjun Ray wrote: I'm having trouble finding a suitable program, from the huge selection of "planetarium" software out there, which will help me identify stars that could correspond to a set of rather ancient names found in Vedic texts. There is a strong tradition about these names, but no reliable evidence that what these names signify today are the same as what they did long ago. Look in some History of Indian Astronomy book. Names of the Nakshatryas with their Arabic names are often given in those books. Almost all planetarium programs would recognise the Arabic names. Another good source is R.H. Allen's classic "Star Names, their Lore and Meaning": it has one charpter dedicated to these so-called "lunar mansions", and he deals with the Indian as well as the Arabic and the Chinese mansions. The rest is useed only for astrology - so deleted. -- Gautam Majumdar -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://www.stjarnhimlen.se/ http://home.tiscali.se/pausch/ |
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Arjun Ray wrote in message . ..
Sorry for the intrusion. I have the identical problem, including the egyptian, mayan and chinese constellations. The sources seem lacking. I don't even need a program, I need the (possibly authoritative) set of corelations. Here and there one finds a reference, but all in all, one seems lost... Claudio http://puck.dhs.org I'm having trouble finding a suitable program, from the huge selection of "planetarium" software out there, which will help me identify stars that could correspond to a set of rather ancient names found in Vedic texts. There is a strong tradition about these names, but no reliable evidence that what these names signify today are the same as what they did long ago. What is known is the following: 1. An initial set of 27 asterisms were named for a lunar calendar based on the 27+ day sidereal period. (Later a vestigial 28th name was added.) That is, the moon "moved" from one asterism to the next roughly on every solar day, so somewhat equal spacing is implied. 2. These asterisms lie close to or on the ecliptic: basically, the band that can be occluded by the moon. Of course, exceptions are allowed if there's no suitable star within the band but a nice bright star nearby. (I'm no astronomer, but I believe Betelgeuse could be an example of this.) 3. The names are invariably listed in a specific order, i.e. always starting with the same name, and where the lists vary, the new names are unique and not transpositions. There is a tradition as to the direction in which these names circle the ecliptic, but as this is an exercise in letting the texts "speak for themselves", there is no prejudice against the "wrong way around the sky". 4. There is some internal evidence from the names themselves. (a) Some names are singular, some are plural, and some specifically mean a pair. The indefinite plural probably means a relatively tight group of fainter stars where there isn't a suitably bright star in the vicinity. (b) Three pairs of sequential names are prefixed with adjectives meaning "earlier" and "later" (or "prior" and "posterior"), suggesting proximity. Can anyone suggest software with suitable features to analyse the problem of finding suitable sets of stars (with their modern names)? For completeness, the list looks like this, in terms of the information in (4) above, with 'P' standing for the indefinite (ie. 3+) plural: 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 1, P, P, Early 2, Later 2, 1, 1, 1, 2, 1, 1, 2, Early P, Later P, [28th here], 1, 1, 1, Early P, Later P, 1, 2, P The insertion point of the 28th could correspond to a relatively largish gap. Thanks! |
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