Science and Technology Through the Ages
Introduction
India's contributions to world science include: algebra and algorithm, the concept of zero, surgery, atomic theory, alchemy, metallurgy, chess, and the martial art of Karate (via Kalaripayat). Arabs called mathematics "Hindisat" — the Indian art — acknowledging their debt to India.
MATHEMATICS (GANITA)
Mathematics in India is called Ganita and includes:
| Sanskrit Term | Branch |
|---|---|
| Pattin Ganita / Anka Ganita | Arithmetic |
| Bija Ganita | Algebra |
| Rekha Ganita | Geometry |
| Khagolshastra | Astronomy |
| Jyotisa | Astrology |
- Town planning of Harappa shows knowledge of measurement and geometry
- Bijaganita = 'the other mathematics' (Bija = another/second); recognised as a parallel system of computation alongside conventional mathematics; links to mathematics in Vedic literature
- Algebra and the concept of zero originated in India
Key Mathematicians
Baudhayana (6th century BC)
- Wrote the earliest book on mathematics: Sulvasutra
- Contains mention of 'Pi' and concepts similar to Pythagoras theorem
- Pi = used to calculate area and circumference of a circle
Apastamba (2nd century BC)
- Introduced practical geometry: acute angles, obtuse angles, right angles
- Applied for construction of fire altars
Aryabhatta (~499 AD)
- Wrote Aryabhattiya — four sections:
- Method of denoting big decimal numbers by alphabets
- Number theory, geometry, trigonometry, Bijaganita 3 & 4. Astronomy
- Studied at Khagol — famous astronomical laboratory at Nalanda
- Key contributions:
- Earth is round and rotates on its own axis
- Formulated area of a triangle
- Discovered algebra
- Value of Pi more accurate than the Greeks
- Eclipse explanation: Lunar eclipse = Earth's shadow falls on Moon; Solar eclipse = Moon's shadow falls on Earth (rejected demon-swallowing orthodox theory)
- Astronomy aims: calendar accuracy, climate/rainfall, navigation, horoscopes, tides and stars (for crossing deserts/seas)
Brahmagupta (7th century AD)
- Book: Brahmasputa Siddhantika
- First to mention Zero as a number
- Introduced negative numbers (described as debts) and positive numbers (as fortunes)
Concept of Zero: 'Zero' or Shunya = derived from the concept of void in Hindu Philosophy. The concept of Shunya influenced South-East Asian culture through the Buddhist concept of Nirvana ('attaining salvation by merging into the void of eternity').
Mahaviracharya (9th century AD)
- Wrote Ganit Sara Sangraha — first textbook on arithmetic in present-day form
- Described the current method of finding Lowest Common Multiple (LCM) — NOT John Napier but Mahaviracharya who invented it in actual form
Bhaskaracharya (12th century AD)
- Book: Siddhanta Shiromani — four sections:
- Lilavati (Arithmetic)
- Beejganita (Algebra)
- Goladhyaya (Spheres)
- Grahaganita (Mathematics of planets)
- Introduced Chakrawat/Cyclic method to solve algebraic equations (in Lilavati)
- Lilavati translated into Persian by Faizi (in Akbar's court)
- Beejaganita also translated by Faizi; Akbar made mathematics a subject of study
Medieval Period
- Narayan Pandit: Ganitakaumudi, Bijaganitavatamsa
- Nilakantha Somasutvan: Tantrasamgraha — rules of trigonometric functions
- Nilakanatha Jyotirvida: Tajik — Persian technical terms in astronomy
Astronomical Observatories
- Feroz Shah Tughlaq: Observatory in Delhi
- Feroz Shah Bahamani: Observatory at Daulatabad
- Mahendra Suri (court astronomer of Feroz Shah Bahmani): invented Yantaraja (astronomical instrument)
- Sawai Jai Singh: Set up 5 astronomical observatories at Delhi, Jaipur, Varanasi, Ujjain, and Mathura
MEDICINE
- Vedic times: Ashwini Kumars = practitioners of medicine (divine status); Dhanvantari = God of medicine
- Atharva Veda = first book mentioning diseases, cures, and medicines (diseases caused by demons; cured by magical charms and spells); diseases mentioned: diarrhoea, sores, cough, leprosy, fever, seizure
- Rational medicine emerged around 600 BC; centres: Takshila and Varanasi
- Before Charak and Sushruta, Atreya and Agnivesa dealt with Ayurveda principles (~800 BCE)
Charak Samhita
- Deals with Ayurveda — use of plants and herbs for medicinal purposes
- Eight components of Ayurveda:
| Component | Subject |
|---|---|
| Kaya Chikitsa | General Medicine |
| Kaumara-Bhrtya | Paediatrics |
| Shalya Chikitsa | Surgery |
| Salakya Tantra | Ophthalmology/ENT |
| Buta Vidya | Demonology/Psychiatry |
| Agada Tantra | Toxicology |
| Rasayana Tantra | Elixirs |
| Vajikarana Tantra | Aphrodisiacs |
- Extensive notes on digestion, metabolism, and immune system
- Human body depends on three Doshas: (1) Bile, (2) Phlegm, (3) Wind — produced by blood, flesh, marrow; disease = imbalance; drugs restore balance
- Emphasis on prevention rather than cure
- Genetics also mentioned in Charak Samhita
Sushruta Samhita
- Deals with Surgery (Sastrakarma) and Obstetrics
- Sushruta studied anatomy using a human dead body
- Key specialisations:
- Rhinoplasty — restoration of a mutilated nose through plastic surgery (greatest contribution)
- Ophthalmology — ejection of cataract using simple surgical tools
- Buddhist monks took Ayurveda to Tibet and China; both books translated into Arabic
Medieval Medicine
- Sarangdhara Samhita (13th century): use of opium in medicines; urine examination in laboratories
- Rasachikitsa system: treatment using mineral medicines
- Unani system: came from Greece via book Firdausu Hikmat by Ali-bin-Rabban
PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY
Panchbhootas (Five Elements)
From Vedic times, materials classified into Panchmahabhootas, each associated with a human sense:
| Element | Sanskrit | Sense |
|---|---|---|
| Earth | Prithvi | Smell |
| Fire | Agni | Vision |
| Air | Maya | Feeling |
| Water | Apa | Taste |
| Ether | Akasha | Sound |
- Buddhist philosophers rejected ether and replaced it with life, joy, and sorrow
- Last indivisible particle = Parmanu (five types for five elements) → Indian philosophers conceived idea of splitting an atom
- Kanada and Pakudha Katyayana (6th century BC) first coined the idea of atoms
- Kanada: material world made of kana — invisible, indestructible particles (aligns with modern atomic theory)
Chemistry (Rasayan Shastra)
Chemistry in India = Rasayan Shastra / Rasatantra / Rasa Vidya / Rasakriya (all mean science of liquids)
- Chemical laboratory = Rasakriya Shala
- Chemist = rasadanya
Areas of chemical application:
- Metallurgy, distillation of perfumes, making of dyes/pigments, extraction of sugar, production of paper, production of gunpowder, casting of cannons
Metallurgy:
- Developed from Bronze Age → Iron Age
- Evidence of Indian metallurgy: Iron Pillar of Mehrauli (Delhi) and idol of Gautama Buddha at Sultanganj (Bihar) — both rust-free after thousands of years
- May have borrowed smelting idea from Mesopotamia
Nagarjuna (Born Gujarat, 931 AD):
- Famous alchemist — transforming base metals into gold
- Wrote Rasaratnakara (dialogue between him and Gods; mainly deals with preparation of liquids — mainly mercury; metallurgy and alchemy)
- Also wrote Uttaratantra — supplement to Sushruta Samhita; deals with preparation of medicinal drugs
- Produced metals with gold-like yellowish brilliance (useful for imitation jewellery)
- Arabs took the idea of transformation of metals from Indian books
- Also wrote four Ayurvedic treatises when interest shifted to organic chemistry
Rasarnava (12th century Sanskrit text):
- Deals with Tantrism; work on tantra includes metallic preparations and alchemy under chemistry
- Direct UPSC Mains PYQ (2012): significance of Rasarnava in history of Indian Chemistry
Paper production: Began in medieval period; centres: Kashmir, Patna, Murshidabad, Ahmedabad, Aurangabad, Mysore
Gunpowder: After advent of Mughals; saltpetre + sulphur + charcoal in different ratios; casting of cannons mentioned in Tujuk-i-Baburi
Perfumes: Ain-i-Akbari discusses Akbar's 'regulation of perfume office'; mother of Noorjahan credited with discovery of attar of roses
Varahamihira (Gupta Period)
- Among nine gems in court of Vikramaditya; given title 'Varaha' for accuracy of predictions
- Claimed presence of termites (Deemak) and plants could indicate presence of water (gave list of 6 animals + 36 plants)
- Propounded earth cloud theory in Brihat Samhita — related earthquakes to plants, animals, underground water, undersea activities, unusual cloud formation
- Also contributed to Jyotish shastra (astrology)
SHIP BUILDING AND NAVIGATION
- Sanskrit and Pali literature mention ship building and navigation
- Yukti Kalpa Taru = Sanskrit treatise on techniques of ship building during ancient times (details: types, sizes, materials)
Ship Classification
By class:
- Samanya (Ordinary class) — for sea voyage; two types:
- Dirgha — long and narrow hull
- Unnata — higher hull
- Vishesha (Special class)
By length and cabin position:
| Ship Type | Cabin Position | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Sarvamandira | Cabins from one end to another | Royal voyage and horses |
| Madhyamandira | Cabins in middle | Pleasure trips |
| Agramandira | — | Warfare |
Sanskrit terminologies for ship parts:
| Part | Sanskrit Term |
|---|---|
| Anchor | Nava bandhan kilaha |
| Sail | Vata vastra |
| Rudder | Jeni pata / Karna |
| Keel | Nava tala |
| Compass | Machayantra (fish machine — in shape of a fish) |
SPORTS OF ANCIENT INDIA
Kalaripayat
- Martial art from Kerala
- Transmitted to China in 5th century BC by sage Bodhidharma
- Origin of Judo and Karate
Chess (Chaturanga)
- Ancient name: Chaturanga = 'four bodies'
- Played with counters and Aksha (dice)
- Also called Astapada = 'game of eight steps'
- Mentioned in Mahabharata (Kauravas vs Pandavas)
Applied Anchors
- India's scientific legacy as soft power: Zero, algebra, chess, atomic theory, surgery — India's ancient scientific contributions are now integral to India's cultural diplomacy and nation-branding globally ('Incredible India' → 'Scientific India').
- Varahamihira and ecology: His claim that termites and specific plants indicate groundwater is a proto-ecological observation — connecting ancient Indian science to modern hydrogeology and traditional ecological knowledge (TEK), which UNESCO now recognises as valuable.
- Ayurveda and global health: Charak Samhita's emphasis on prevention over cure and the three-dosha theory anticipates holistic medicine — directly relevant to India's push for AYUSH in global health diplomacy.
- Iron Pillar of Mehrauli: The rust-free Iron Pillar (Delhi) is a UNESCO-acknowledged marvel of ancient metallurgy, still studied by materials scientists — connecting cultural heritage to contemporary science.
- Zero and Buddhist philosophy: The philosophical origin of Shunya (zero) in Hindu void concept, and its influence on Nirvana in Buddhism and then on South-East Asian mathematics, demonstrates how Indian philosophy and science cannot be separated — a point relevant for civilisational soft power narratives.
- Nagarjuna as alchemist: His Rasaratnakara bridged medicine, chemistry, and metallurgy — representing India's tradition of applied science, directly addressed in UPSC Mains 2012.
Exam Traps
- Bijaganita = Algebra (NOT arithmetic or geometry). Arithmetic = Pattin/Anka Ganita; Geometry = Rekha Ganita. This is a direct exam question.
- Sulvasutra by Baudhayana = earliest book on mathematics (6th century BC) — NOT Aryabhattiya. Aryabhattiya came ~499 AD.
- Brahmagupta mentioned Zero first as a NUMBER (7th century AD) — Zero as a concept existed before, but Brahmagupta formally introduced it as a number in Brahmasputa Siddhantika.
- LCM was described by Mahaviracharya (9th century AD) — NOT John Napier. This is an explicit statement in the source.
- Lilavati by Bhaskaracharya deals with Arithmetic (NOT algebra — that's Beejganita). UPSC often swaps these two sections.
- Chakrawat/Cyclic method introduced by Bhaskaracharya in Lilavati to solve algebraic equations — this pairing (Lilavati + algebraic equations) seems contradictory (since Lilavati = arithmetic section) but is what the source states.
- Charak Samhita = Ayurveda/Medicine (plants and herbs); Sushruta Samhita = Surgery and Obstetrics — these are swapped in trap options. Remember: Charak = prevention; Sushruta = surgery.
- Three Doshas in Charak: Bile, Phlegm, Wind — NOT four, NOT five. A trap inserts a fourth dosha.
- Rhinoplasty = plastic surgery of nose (NOT eyes). Ophthalmology (cataract removal) = also Sushruta, but Rhinoplasty was his greatest contribution.
- Unani system came from Greece (NOT Arabia or Persia); brought by Firdausu Hikmat of .
Quick Revision Points
- Ganita branches: Bija (Algebra), Rekha (Geometry), Anka (Arithmetic), Khagol (Astronomy), Jyotisa (Astrology)
- Earliest math book: Sulvasutra (Baudhayana, 6th century BC) → Pi + Pythagoras-like theorem
- Apastamba (2nd century BC): practical geometry; angles for fire altars
- Aryabhattiya (499 AD): earth is round + rotates; area of triangle; algebra; eclipse explanation; Pi more accurate than Greeks
- Brahmasputa Siddhantika (Brahmagupta, 7th century AD): Zero as number; negative numbers = debts; positive = fortunes
- Ganit Sara Sangraha (Mahaviracharya, 9th century AD): first arithmetic textbook; LCM
- Siddhanta Shiromani (Bhaskaracharya, 12th century AD): Lilavati (Arithmetic), Beejganita (Algebra), Goladhyaya, Grahaganita; Chakrawat method
- Dhanvantari = God of medicine; Atharva Veda = first book on diseases
- Charak Samhita: Ayurveda, plants/herbs, 8 components, 3 doshas (Bile/Phlegm/Wind), prevention > cure, Genetics
- Sushruta Samhita: Surgery (Sastrakarma), Obstetrics, Rhinoplasty (greatest contribution), Cataract removal
- Unani: from Greece; Firdausu Hikmat by Ali-bin-Rabban
- Panchbhootas: Earth (smell), Fire (vision), Air (feeling), Water (taste), Ether (sound)
- Parmanu = indivisible atom; Kanada + Pakudha Katyayana (6th century BC) = atomic theory
- Rasayan Shastra = Chemistry; Chemical lab = Rasakriya Shala; Chemist = rasadanya
- Nagarjuna (931 AD, Gujarat): Rasaratnakara (mercury, metallurgy, alchemy); Uttaratantra (supplement to Sushruta)
- Iron Pillar = Mehrauli, Delhi (rust-free); Buddha idol = Sultanganj, Bihar (rust-free)
- Rasarnava (12th century): Tantrism, metallic preparations, alchemy (UPSC Mains PYQ 2012)
- Varahamihira (Gupta period, 9 gems of Vikramaditya): Brihat Samhita (earth cloud theory, earthquakes); termites + plants = groundwater indicator
- Yukti Kalpa Taru: Sanskrit text on shipbuilding
- Ship classes: Samanya (Dirgha + Unnata) and Vishesha
- Ship by cabin: Sarvamandira (royal), Madhyamandira (pleasure), Agramandira (warfare)
- Compass = Machayantra (fish-shaped)
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