[INDOLOGY] bhakti/Vedic astrology

Nagaraj Paturi nagarajpaturi at gmail.com
Tue Nov 15 07:55:43 UTC 2016


Luis and Martin,

That was just a model of solution I was trying to offer to get out of this
'problematic' (?) word 'Vedic' in the name of Vedic Astrology. My point was
that some method indicating name might solve the problem of source-claims.

Also, even if some such solution is ironed out, languages and names in them
are such tricky entities that they may not come fully under the control of
a group of scholars.

Best,

-N

On Tue, Nov 15, 2016 at 12:13 PM, Martin Gansten <martin.gansten at pbhome.se>
wrote:

> This is getting off the topic a bit, but just to clarify: both Babylonian
> and early Greek-language astrology was explicitly sidereal in the sense
> that it defined the vernal equinoctial point as falling somewhere within
> the sign Aries rather than Aries commencing from it. The same seems to have
> been true of pre-Islamic Persian astrology. So I agree with Luis that
> 'sidereal' won't do as a synonym of 'Indian'. Indian astrology differs in
> many other technical respects from its cousin traditions further west: some
> aspects of the Hellenistic system never made it to India, or only did so a
> millennium later with the Perso-Arabic transmission, and new methods were
> developed in India, some on the basis of indigenous lore such as the
> nakṣatras.
>
> Martin
>
>
>
> Den 2016-11-14 kl. 23:19, skrev Luis Gonzalez-Reimann:
>
> Nagaraj,
>
> It may also be a good idea to use 'Tropical' , 'Sidereal'  in the names of
> the two traditions since that indicates the method difference rather
> than giving scope for questions such as which part of the world Mesopotamia
> or Greece is the origin of western Astrology or whether the so called Vedic
> Astrology has got to do with the Vedas (alone) or not etc.
>
>
> There is also sidereal astrology in the " West," so that is not really a
> good marker of the difference. Also, at the time of Greek influence on
> Indian astronomy the two zodiacs more or less coincided, so there was no
> difference between sidereal and tropical (this applies to both Indian/South
> Asian astrology and to "Mediterranean" astrology). The date of when that
> happened will depend of exactly where one considers the beginning of Aries
> (the constellation) to be.
>
> Horoscopic astrology was mainly imported into India and then adapted, as
> shown by the *Yāvana Jataka*.
>
> Luis
>
>
>
>
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-- 
Nagaraj Paturi

Hyderabad, Telangana, INDIA.

Former Senior Professor of Cultural Studies

FLAME School of Communication and FLAME School of  Liberal Education,

(Pune, Maharashtra, INDIA )


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