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- 16:37, 19 January 2026 Ancient-education/Philosophers and Scholars/Yijing (hist | edit) [3,487 bytes] Shital Shah (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Yijing (635–713 CE): The Buddhist Scholar and Traveler of Nalanda == === Overview === Yijing, also known as I-ching or I-tsing, was a Tang-era Chinese Buddhist monk, translator, and travel writer who made significant contributions to the understanding of Buddhism in both India and Southeast Asia. His travel accounts, particularly A Record of Buddhist Practices Sent Home from the Southern Sea and Buddhist Monk's Pilgrimage of the Tang Dynasty, it provides valuable i...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "Ancient-education/Indian Philosophers and Scholars/Yijing"
- 14:46, 15 January 2026 Samveda/Samaveda (hist | edit) [11,125 bytes] Parida (talk | contribs) (Created page with "= The Samaveda as the Veda of Music and the Spiritual Power of Chanting = === Introduction: === The Sāmaveda holds a unique position among the four Vedas. Its importance is acknowledged by Lord Kṛṣṇa in Bhagavadgita वेदानां सामवेदोऽस्मि (Vedanāṃ Sāma-vedoasmi), meaning “Among the Vedas, I am the Sāmaveda.” Such a statement alone suggests that this Veda represents a special spiritual character. Brihadevata states that...") Tag: Visual edit
- 16:14, 13 January 2026 Hi/आधुनिक पुनर्जागरण/सामाजिक-धार्मिक सुधार/रामकृष्ण मिशन (hist | edit) [28,051 bytes] Preeti Shukla (talk | contribs) (स्वामी विवेकानंद द्वारा 1897 में स्थापित रामकृष्ण मिशन ने सुधार का एक अलग और व्यवहारिक रास्ता दिखाया।) Tag: Visual edit
- 11:52, 13 January 2026 Hi/आधुनिक पुनर्जागरण/सामाजिक-धार्मिक सुधार/ब्रह्म समाज (hist | edit) [38,682 bytes] Preeti Shukla (talk | contribs) (राजा राम मोहन राय ने 20 अगस्त 1828 को आधिकारिक रूप से ब्रह्मो सभा की स्थापना की।) Tag: Visual edit
- 11:21, 13 January 2026 Hi/आधुनिक पुनर्जागरण/सामाजिक-धार्मिक सुधार (hist | edit) [24,713 bytes] Preeti Shukla (talk | contribs) (उन्नीसवीं सदी और बीसवीं सदी की शुरुआत भारत के लिए बड़े बदलावों का समय था।) Tag: Visual edit
- 16:51, 12 January 2026 Saints/Sankardev/Literary Works of Sankardev (hist | edit) [13,545 bytes] Pallavi Kumar (talk | contribs) (Created page with " == Literary Works of Srimanta Sankardev == Srimanta Sankardev stands as one of the greatest literary figures in Assamese history. His work laid the foundation for Assamese devotional literature and helped shape the spiritual and cultural landscape of mediaeval Assam. Sankardev used language, poetry, drama and music to communicate his devotional ideas. He wrote mainly in the Assamese language of the period so that the common people could read and understand them. But for...") Tag: Visual edit
- 19:27, 8 January 2026 Invasions and Impact/Colonial Disruption to Cultural Renaissance/DESTRUCTION OF THE INDIAN SYSTEM OF EDUCATION (hist | edit) [110 bytes] Admin (talk | contribs) (Approved public submission)
- 17:11, 8 January 2026 Spiritual Icons/Swami Vivekananda (hist | edit) [21,807 bytes] Pallavi Kumar (talk | contribs) (Created page with " == Swami Vivekananda == alt=Swami Vivekananda— like a lake of knowledge in the dry and scanty desert of darknesses...|left|thumb|528x528px The Modern Indian Renaissance was a broad cultural, intellectual, and spiritual awakening that unfolded in India during the nineteenth century under colonial rule. Renewed engagement with India's classical traditions and critical interaction with Western ideas such as rationalism, s...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "Modern-Renaissance/Swami Vivekananda"
- 16:33, 7 January 2026 Saints/Sankardev (hist | edit) [18,215 bytes] Pallavi Kumar (talk | contribs) (Created page with " == Srimanta Sankardev == alt=Shree Mant Sankardev, (Imaginary portrait by Bishnu Prasad Rabha)|left|456x456px Srimanta Sankardev was a significant 15th–16th century religious reformer, saint, poet, playwright, musician, and one of the most influential figures in the cultural and religious history of Assam. Sankardev played a central role in the Bhakti movement in Assam and is remembered for shaping its spiritual and cultural traditions. He...") Tag: Visual edit
- 08:50, 7 January 2026 Sanatan Dharma Roots/Sanatan Dharma - a rare book by Central Hindu College, Benaras, 1902 (hist | edit) [244 bytes] Admin (talk | contribs) (Approved public submission)
- 18:33, 6 January 2026 Hi/लोक परंपराएँ/कथा (hist | edit) [22,512 bytes] Preeti Shukla (talk | contribs) (कथा (या कथ्या) धार्मिक कहानी कहने की एक भारतीय शैली है, जिसका प्रदर्शन हिंदू धर्म में एक अनुष्ठानिक कार्यक्रम है।) Tag: Visual edit
- 18:09, 6 January 2026 Hi/लोक परंपराएँ/मौखिक परंपरा (hist | edit) [20,463 bytes] Preeti Shukla (talk | contribs) (भारत की सांस्कृतिक और आध्यात्मिक पहचान को उसकी मौखिक परंपराओं ने गहराई से आकार दिया है, जो लंबे समय से अतीत और वर्तमान के बीच जीवंत सेतु के रूप में काम करती रही है।) Tag: Visual edit
- 17:34, 5 January 2026 Hi/लोक परंपराएँ/लोक संस्कार (hist | edit) [27,638 bytes] Preeti Shukla (talk | contribs) (लोक-संस्कार और ग्रामीण रीति-रिवाज भारत के पारंपरिक समाज की जीवंत नब्ज, आस्था, कृतज्ञता और सामूहिक पहचान की अभिव्यक्तियों का निर्माण करते हैं जो समुदायों को प्रकृति और भगवान की लय से बांधते हैं।) Tag: Visual edit
- 12:35, 5 January 2026 Spiritual Icons (hist | edit) [4,854 bytes] Pallavi Kumar (talk | contribs) (Created page with " == Indian Spiritual Icons, Philosophers, and Scholars: A Timeless Intellectual Heritage == India has a long and rich tradition of spiritual thought and intellectual enquiry. For thousands of years, spiritual icons, philosophers, scholars, mathematicians, and astrologers have shaped the way people in India understood life, the universe, and human responsibility. Their ideas influenced not only religion but also education, science, ethics, art, and daily living. This heri...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "Spiritual Icons/Spiritual Icons of India"
- 12:03, 5 January 2026 Fairs (hist | edit) [5,860 bytes] Pallavi Kumar (talk | contribs) (Created page with " == Fairs in India: A Living Expression of Faith, Culture, and Community == India is a land where faith, culture, and daily life are deeply connected. The fairs held across the country serve as one of the most visible and vibrant expressions of this connection. These fairs are not merely places of trade or entertainment. They are sacred gatherings that reflect the timeless values of the Sanatan Dharma, the ancient spiritual tradition of India, which emphasises harmony, d...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "Fairs/Fairs in India"
- 12:01, 5 January 2026 Hi/लोक परंपराएँ/लोक ज्ञान (hist | edit) [16,943 bytes] Preeti Shukla (talk | contribs) (जैसे-जैसे आधुनिक समाज प्रगति और परंपरा के बीच संतुलन चाहते हैं, लोक ज्ञान नम्रता, सह-अस्तित्व और सामूहिक कल्याण में निहित शाश्वत पाठ प्रस्तुत करता है।) Tag: Visual edit
- 07:00, 3 January 2026 Ramayan/Hanuman Chalisa (hist | edit) [104 bytes] Admin (talk | contribs) (Approved public submission)
- 21:03, 2 January 2026 Hi/महाकाव्य साहित्य/संस्कृत महाकाव्यों की उत्पत्ति (hist | edit) [15,385 bytes] Vandana Pandey (talk | contribs) (यह भारतीय संस्कृति का शुद्ध दर्पण है|) Tag: Visual edit
- 20:58, 2 January 2026 महाकाव्य साहित्य/India's Dharma Legacy (Atithi Satkar) (hist | edit) [6,568 bytes] Vandana Pandey (talk | contribs) ("Atithi Devo Bhava") Tag: Visual edit
- 16:25, 2 January 2026 Folk Traditions/Katha (hist | edit) [9,332 bytes] Pallavi Kumar (talk | contribs) (Created page with " == Kathas and Katha Kalakshepam – Storytelling Devotion Across India == Katha (or Kathya) is an Indian style of religious storytelling, performances of which are a ritual event in Hinduism. It often involves priest-narrators (kathavachaks, or vyas) who recite stories from Hindu religious texts, such as the Puranas, the Ramayana, or the Bhagavata Purana, followed by a commentary (Pravachan). Kathas and Katha Kalakshepam represent one of India’s most vibrant and spir...") Tag: Visual edit
- 13:17, 2 January 2026 Modern-Renaissance (hist | edit) [18 bytes] Balaji (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Modern-Renaissance") Tag: Visual edit
- 13:27, 1 January 2026 Mahabharat (hist | edit) [4,560 bytes] Vandana Pandey (talk | contribs) (our intellectual heritage feels incomplete, like a body without bones.) Tag: Visual edit originally created as "What is the Mahabharata"
- 21:00, 31 December 2025 Modern Renaissance/Institutional Revival/Chinmaya Mission (hist | edit) [14,682 bytes] Nilanjana (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Chinmaya Mission: A Living Renaissance of Vedanta and Sanatan Dharma Chinmaya Mission was founded in 1953 by the spiritual teacher Swami Chinmayananda Saraswati (born Balakrishna Menon), a Himalayan-trained Vedanta scholar and disciple of Swami Tapovan Maharaj.1 He embarked on a journey to make Advaita Vedanta—the nondual philosophical heart of Hinduism accessible to ordinary people. His first Gita knowledge-yajna (scripture exposition) in 1951 in Pune marked the begi...") Tag: Visual edit
- 19:21, 31 December 2025 Ancient-education/Ancient Education in India (hist | edit) [2,951 bytes] Omkar (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Ancient Knowledge System == India’s civilizational wisdom is rooted in a timeless quest for truth (Satya) and knowledge (Vidya). The sacred foundation of learning evolved not merely as an intellectual pursuit but as a spiritual journey, a path to understanding the self, nature, and the cosmos. Ancient Indian education, shaped by the twin pillars of Śruti and Smṛti, drew upon divine revelation and remembered wisdom to preserve ethics, philosophy, and cultural orde...") Tag: Visual edit
- 17:54, 31 December 2025 /Modern-Renaissance (hist | edit) [19,088 bytes] Admin (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<!--SEO title="The Modern Renaissance of Sanatan Dharma and Its Global Influence" description="In the 20th and 21st centuries, the world has seen a strong revival of Dharmic philosophy. This modern revival connects ancient Indian wisdom with the global search for meaning, identity, and purpose." keywords="Modern Renaissance, Modern Renaissance of Sanatan Dharma, Sanatan Dharma, Dharmic philosophy, ancient Indian, Arya Samaj, Brahmo Samaj"--> ==The Modern Renaissance of...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "Modern-Renaissance"
- 17:00, 31 December 2025 Hi/वेद/वेद क्यों मायने रखते हैं: प्राचीन भारत का कालातीत ज्ञान (hist | edit) [35,096 bytes] Preeti Shukla (talk | contribs) ("वेद" शब्द संस्कृत धातु विद् से लिया गया है, जिसका अर्थ है "जानना"। वेद दुनिया के सबसे पुराने आध्यात्मिक ग्रंथ हैं, और वास्तव में, वे मानव बुद्धि के सबसे पुराने दस्तावेजों में से एक हैं।) Tag: Visual edit
- 16:16, 31 December 2025 Hi/आधुनिक पुनर्जागरण (hist | edit) [44,983 bytes] Preeti Shukla (talk | contribs) (20वीं और 21वीं सदी में, दुनिया ने धार्मिक दर्शन का एक मजबूत पुनरुत्थान देखा है। यह आधुनिक पुनरुत्थान प्राचीन भारतीय ज्ञान को अर्थ, पहचान और उद्देश्य की वैश्विक खोज से जोड़ता है।) Tag: Visual edit originally created as "Hi/आधुनिक पुनर्जागरण/सनातन धर्म का आधुनिक पुनर्जागरण और इसका वैश्विक प्रभाव"
- 12:23, 31 December 2025 Hi/महाकाव्य साहित्य/आधुनिक जीवन में श्रीमद्भगवद्गीता की प्रासंगिकता (hist | edit) [13,463 bytes] Vandana Pandey (talk | contribs) (गीता मानव जीवन की समस्याओं- कर्तव्य, कर्म, तनाव, असफलता, सफलता, अहंकार और आत्मबोध- का सार्वकालिक समाधान प्रस्तुत करती है।) Tag: Visual edit
- 12:13, 31 December 2025 Hi/महाकाव्य साहित्य/अहिंसा परमो धर्मः (hist | edit) [10,429 bytes] Vandana Pandey (talk | contribs) (अहिंसा परमो धर्मः, धर्महिंसा तथैव च।) Tag: Visual edit
- 12:04, 31 December 2025 Hi/महाकाव्य साहित्य/महाभारत में अतिथि सत्कार (hist | edit) [11,678 bytes] Vandana Pandey (talk | contribs) (महाभारत भारतीय संस्कृति और धर्मशास्त्र का महान ग्रंथ है, जिसमें अतिथि सत्कार को गृहस्थ धर्म का अनिवार्य अंग माना गया है।) Tag: Visual edit
- 11:32, 31 December 2025 Time Cycle/Indian Time and the Writing of History (hist | edit) [8,292 bytes] KhushiGupta3020 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Indian Time and the Writing of History == === Introduction === The writing of history in the modern world is dominated by a linear conception of time. Events are arranged in chronological order, causes are traced from earlier moments to later outcomes, and change is often described as progress or decline measured against a starting point. This approach has been productive for reconstructing political sequences and institutional development, yet it represents only one...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "TimeCycle Invasion and Impact/Indian Time and the Writing of History"
- 11:31, 31 December 2025 Time Cycle/Modern Interpretations of Cyclical Time in India (hist | edit) [7,396 bytes] KhushiGupta3020 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Modern Interpretations of Cyclical Time == === Introduction === The concept of cyclical time has been a central feature of Indian intellectual traditions since antiquity. In the modern period, Indian thinkers engaged with this inherited framework in response to new social, political, and scientific conditions. Rather than discarding cyclical models, they reinterpreted them to address colonial disruption, technological change, and emerging global challenges. At the sa...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "TimeCycle Invasion and Impact/Modern Interpretations of Cyclical Time"
- 11:30, 31 December 2025 Time Cycle/Time in Indian Science and Medicine (hist | edit) [9,109 bytes] KhushiGupta3020 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Time in Indian Science and Medicine == === Introduction === Indian scientific and medical traditions developed with close attention to time. Observation of the sky, seasonal variation, and bodily rhythms shaped how knowledge was organized and applied. Astronomy provided methods for tracking regular natural patterns. Medicine and health disciplines used these patterns to regulate diagnosis, treatment, and daily conduct. This article examines how time functioned withi...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "TimeCycle Invasion and Impact/Time in Indian Science and Medicine"
- 19:32, 30 December 2025 Modern Renaissance/Knowledge Dissemination/Dharma in Contemporary Society (hist | edit) [15,872 bytes] Nilanjana (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Relevance of Dharma in Contemporary Society Why Dharma Matters Today The 21st century has seen great progress in science, technology, and economic growth. People are more connected than ever before. However, this progress has also brought serious problems. We face environmental damage, growing inequality, stress and mental health issues, political divisions, and a loss of purpose in life. Modern systems are very efficient and powerful, but they often lack values, balan...") Tag: Visual edit
- 17:43, 30 December 2025 Time Cycle/Time in Rituals and Festivals (hist | edit) [8,917 bytes] KhushiGupta3020 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Time in Rituals and Festivals Introduction Time in Indian civilization was not only a matter of philosophical reflection or political interpretation. It was embedded in the routines of daily life through rituals, festivals, and agricultural work. Ordinary activities such as worship, sowing crops, observing fasts, and holding community gatherings were all regulated by shared temporal frameworks. The most important of these frameworks was the Panchanga, the traditional I...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "TimeCycle Invasion and Impact/Time in Rituals and Festivals"
- 17:42, 30 December 2025 Time Cycle/Historical Change and Cycles in Indian Thought (hist | edit) [6,958 bytes] KhushiGupta3020 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Historical Change and Cycles in Indian Thought == === Introduction === Indian historical thought developed within a framework that emphasized recurrence, continuity, and moral causality. Instead of interpreting the past as a linear sequence of irreversible events, Indian traditions understood change as part of repeating patterns. Political authority, social institutions, and cultural forms were expected to rise, decline, and reappear across long periods. This perspec...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "TimeCycle Invasion and Impact/Historical Change and Cycles in Indian Thought"
- 17:39, 30 December 2025 Time Cycle/Spread of Indian Time Concepts in Southeast Asia (hist | edit) [8,651 bytes] KhushiGupta3020 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Spread of Indian Time Concepts in Southeast Asia == === Introduction === From the early centuries of the Common Era, cultural interaction between the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia resulted in the transmission of religious, artistic, and institutional ideas. Among these were concepts of time that linked cosmic order, ritual practice, and political authority. These ideas did not travel as fixed doctrines. They were adapted within local contexts and expressed t...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "TimeCycle Invasion and Impact/Spread of Indian Time Concepts in Southeast Asia"
- 17:38, 30 December 2025 Time Cycle/Temples and Architecture as Expressions of Time (hist | edit) [10,662 bytes] KhushiGupta3020 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Temples and Architecture as Expressions of Time == === Introduction === Indian temple architecture developed as a system that combined spatial design with recurring patterns of use. Temples were not constructed only as physical shelters for images. They were intended to regulate movement, ritual practice, and social participation across long periods. This made architecture an important medium through which ideas about time were expressed. Time in this context was no...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "TimeCycle Invasion and Impact/Temples and Architecture as Expressions of Time"
- 17:37, 30 December 2025 Time Cycle/Cyclical Time in Classical and Gupta India (hist | edit) [10,840 bytes] KhushiGupta3020 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Cyclical Time in Classical and Gupta India == === Introduction === The classical and Gupta periods represent a crucial phase in Indian intellectual and political history. During this time, earlier philosophical ideas about cyclical time were refined through systematic astronomy, mathematical calculation, and state administration. Time was no longer expressed only through ritual and narrative but also through observation, computation, and governance. This period witn...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "TimeCycle Invasion and Impact/Cyclical Time in Classical and Gupta India"
- 17:23, 30 December 2025 Time Cycle/Time in the Vedic and Epic Periods (hist | edit) [8,847 bytes] KhushiGupta3020 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Time in the Vedic and Epic Periods == === Introduction === Early Indian texts present a distinctive approach to time in which sacred order and human history are not sharply separated. In the Vedic and epic periods, time was understood simultaneously as a cosmic principle, a ritual framework, and a setting for human action. Rather than existing as a neutral background, time structured moral order, ritual practice, and narrative memory. This article examines how time...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "TimeCycle Invasion and Impact/Time in the Vedic and Epic Periods"
- 17:21, 30 December 2025 Civilisation (hist | edit) [9,729 bytes] KhushiGupta3020 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Time and Order in the Indus Valley Civilization == === Introduction === The Indus Valley Civilization was one of the earliest large scale urban societies of the ancient world. Active roughly between 2600 and 1900 BCE, it covered a wide geographic area and displayed a high degree of internal consistency. Unlike later Indian traditions, the Indus civilization left no deciphered written texts. As a result, any discussion of its understanding of time must rely on materia...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "TimeCycle Invasion and Impact/Time and Order in the Indus Valley Civilization"
- 17:19, 30 December 2025 Time Cycle/Kalpas and Manvantaras in Indian Cosmology (hist | edit) [10,586 bytes] KhushiGupta3020 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Kalpas and Manvantaras in Indian Cosmology == === Introduction === Indian cosmological thought is distinguished by its ability to conceptualize time on an immense scale. Rather than limiting time to human history or observable celestial cycles, Indian texts developed frameworks that extended across vast cosmic durations. Two key concepts within this system are kalpa and manvantara. These terms describe cycles of creation, preservation, and dissolution that operate fa...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "TimeCycle Invasion and Impact/Kalpas and Manvantaras in Indian Cosmology"
- 15:46, 30 December 2025 Saints (hist | edit) [3,917 bytes] Pallavi Kumar (talk | contribs) (Created page with " == Saints, Poet-Saints, and Spiritual Icons of India == India has a long spiritual history shaped by saints, poet-saints, and spiritual icons who guided society through faith, love, and wisdom. These devotional icons did not preach complex ideas meant only for scholars. Instead, they spoke the language of ordinary people and taught simple values such as truth, compassion, equality, and devotion to God. Their teachings continue to motivate millions even today. === The B...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "Saints/Bhakti Saints of India"
- 14:42, 30 December 2025 Modern Renaissance/Knowledge Dissemination/Sanatan Dharma Global Environmental Thought (hist | edit) [14,479 bytes] Nilanjana (talk | contribs) (Created page with " = Sanatan Dharma’s Contribution to Global Environmental Thought = Sanatan Dharma is a living and diverse way of life that has guided people in South Asia for thousands of years. It is not just a philosophy but something practiced every day through values, rituals, and ways of understanding the world. Over time, it has quietly shaped how people see the relationship between humans and nature. Its ideas about the universe, moral values, rituals, and body–mind practice...") Tag: Visual edit
- 12:32, 30 December 2025 Modern Renaissance/Knowledge Dissemination/Rediscovery of Vedic Knowledge (hist | edit) [15,784 bytes] Nilanjana (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Rediscovery of Vedic Knowledge: Ancient Wisdom for a Modern World In recent decades, the world has shown a renewed interest in the Vedas—the oldest sacred texts of India. Far from being seen as outdated or mythological, Vedic ideas are now appreciated as sources of holistic health, scientific insight, and ethical living. This rediscovery is global, cutting across cultures, universities, and wellness movements. The modern world is rediscovering the deep wisdom hidden...") Tag: Visual edit
- 12:29, 30 December 2025 Modern Renaissance/Knowledge Dissemination (hist | edit) [5,749 bytes] Nilanjana (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Rediscovery of Vedic Knowledge: Ancient Wisdom for a Modern World In recent decades, the world has shown a renewed interest in the Vedas—the oldest sacred texts of India. Far from being seen as outdated or mythological, Vedic ideas are now appreciated as sources of holistic health, scientific insight, and ethical living. This rediscovery is global, cutting across cultures, universities, and wellness movements. The modern world is rediscovering the deep wisdom hidden...") Tag: Visual edit
- 11:26, 30 December 2025 Invasions and Impact/Bhakti and Yogic Networks Beyond Mughal and Colonial Rule (hist | edit) [25,788 bytes] Pallavi Kumar (talk | contribs) (Created page with " == Devotion as Defense: How Bhakti and Yogic Networks Out-Lasted Mughal and Colonial Rule == Indian communities responded to Mughal and colonial invasions through a diverse and sophisticated array of strategies rooted in the spiritual traditions of Bhakti and Yoga. 1 These movements were not merely passive forms of coping but served as dynamic engines for building community strength, preserving cultural identity, providing social welfare, and mounting both non-violent...") Tag: Visual edit
- 06:49, 30 December 2025 Writer1Test3 (hist | edit) [16,251 bytes] Writer1 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "1") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "Writer1Test2"
- 16:58, 29 December 2025 Time Cycle/The Yuga System Structure and Meaning (hist | edit) [12,039 bytes] KhushiGupta3020 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== The Yuga System: Structure and Meaning == === Introduction === The Yuga system is one of the most distinctive frameworks through which Indian thought conceptualized time, morality, and cosmic order. Found primarily in the epics and Purāṇic literature, the system divides cosmic time into four recurring ages known as Satya, Treta, Dvapara, and Kali Yugas. These ages are distinguished not by technological progress or political development but by moral and spiritual c...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "TimeCycle Invasion and Impact/Ṛta and Dharma as Temporal Principles/Meaning of Kāla in Early Indian Texts/The Yuga System: Structure and Meaning"
- 16:56, 29 December 2025 Time Cycle (hist | edit) [10,652 bytes] KhushiGupta3020 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Meaning of Kāla in Early Indian Texts == === Kāla in the Vedic Tradition === The earliest Indian reflections on time are found in the Vedic corpus, particularly in the Ṛgveda and Atharvaveda. In the Ṛgveda, time does not yet appear as a fully abstract philosophical concept. Instead, it is embedded within natural and ritual cycles. The regular alternation of day and night, the movement of seasons, and the repetition of sacrificial rituals reflect an implicit awa...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "TimeCycle Invasion and Impact/Ṛta and Dharma as Temporal Principles/Meaning of Kāla in Early Indian Texts"
