[Advaita-l] Refutation of Koenraad Elst's article and video on vedāpaurusheyatvam
Raghav Kumar Dwivedula
raghavkumar00 at gmail.com
Sun Oct 27 07:27:38 EDT 2024
Namaste Rajaram ji
Would you assert that the specific mantras/verses referring to many
evidently Indic geographical and historical descriptions are ApauruSheya?
We would then need to give at least some rationale to account for the
serendipitous references to proper names like Himalayas, Sapta Sindhu or to
Gandhara (Qandahar), Mithila (modern day Bihar) and the flowing river
Saraswati, aligning with their actual geographical locations.
For example if we see a text mentioning proper nouns like "England, France
and Germany etc" with suitable geographically tenable locales mentioned for
them in a text, it would not be an unreasonable proposition to "date" such
a text based on such references. Or offer some alternative possibility to
explain such serendipity.
Om
Raghav
On Sun, 27 Oct, 2024, 6:16 am Rajaram Venkataramani via Advaita-l, <
advaita-l at lists.advaita-vedanta.org> wrote:
> https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1bg1p13sgpMThmJP/
>
> In this speech Koenraad Elst, who l respect for his contribution, does
> 'dahana kriya' of vedāpsurusheyatvs as one of the Hibdutva lieutenants put
> it. Does he really? No. First of all, he does not need 60 minutes as he
> makes only 3 arguments and should be able to do it in under 3 minutes.
> Before we go into the 3 arguments and how they are illogical, let me call
> out just one of the blatant errors in his speech, most of which is
> unrelated to the topic of vedāpaurusheyatvam. He says that mūrti pūja is
> non-vedic and at the 50th minute says that even the spoon used in yajnas is
> deified. So, he contradicts himself.
>
> Now, he says that apaurusheya means 'it is not of human origin' but
> apaurusheyatva is not even of divine origin and he equates
> vedāpaurusheyatvam with lslamic conception of Quran as eternal and
> uncreated. It shows that he does not understand the concept of
> apaurusheyatva. In lslam, the knowledge of Quran is eternal but not the
> sound as it would contradict the principle of Tawhid (oneness of God) and
> Allah's creatorship of everything. In the Vedic conception, the sabda
> (sound) itself is eternal in its pure form not only artha (meaning) and is
> manifested in every srshti by lshvara as before.
>
> So, what are his 3 arguments and why are they illogical?
>
> One, rishis live in a particular point in space and time as they refer to
> past and contemporary events. Two, they use the pronouns "l", "We" etc.,
> which are indicative of them being the authors. Three, they borrow mantras
> from other rishis, which wouldn't be the case if the mantras were
> apaurusheya.
>
> The first one is the logical fallacy of 'setting up a strawman'. It is not
> the vaidika sampradaya position that the rishis didn't live in a particular
> point in space and time. In fact, they did and the vedas sometimes do an
> anuvada (retelling) of what is known through pratyaksha and anumana. The
> first argument is without understanding of the sampradaya position. The
> addendum to he first argument is that the vedas can't be eternal because
> they talk about spacio-temporal events. This is category fallacy where he
> confuses the category of the text based on its content. For example, a text
> that talks about how to calculate pi is finite and is written at a point in
> space-time but the content, namely pi, is an eternal truth and infinite. On
> that basis, you can't say the text itself is eternal and infinite. The
> inverse applies here. The argument that the vedas are finite and limited in
> space-time is not true because some of their content is about
> spacio-temporal events. The second argument is a logical fallacy of
> 'fundamental attribution error'. If characters in a narrative or novel use
> subjective pronouns, it does not mean they are the authors. The third one
> is the 'fallacy of unique discovery' where one thinks that multiple rishis
> cannot discover the same mantras in different forms and 'composition
> fallacy' where one thinks no mantra by a rishi can be considered discovered
> because some mantras were borrowed.
>
> Now, Plato and other logical philosophers think that information (ideals)
> is fundamental the universe. This is also the view held by many Quantum
> Physicists that information is fundamental to the universe. So, science is
> moving towards what many philosophers knew about the ontology of knowledge.
> But within known and well established laws of science, is it possible for
> vedas to be apaurusheya? Yes, in one sense. Many mathematical and
> scientific discoveries have been discovered without a sense of agency as
> reported by Srinivasa Ramanujan, Poincare, August Kekule etc. In deep
> meditation and under the influence of certain herbs,, people lose a sense
> of agency and this has been verified using MRI studies. While the sense of
> agency is lost, truths or ideas appear in their mind.
>
> So, no 'dahana kriya' has been done. Perhaps a 'burial' but using logic, we
> will unearth the truth 😊
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