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THE SCIENCE OF VEDIC MATHEMATICS AND HOW IT MEASURES QUANTUM VALUES

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Swami Ram interviewed on radio station

Swami talks about quantum theory among other topics in this interviewListen to

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Coordinates of Birth and Death

First we have to remember that everything has a beginning and an end. All things in the universe have a birth coordinate and a death coordinate. Nothing is more sure and certain than these two. In physics, we have had uncertainty within principles. Now we can attain the certainty within them.

Birth Coordinates  ———————————————————Death Coordinates

What happens in between these two coordinates is what we are concerned about. We will refer to these two coordinates as the birth code and death code. We will refer to the midpoint of these two as the change code.

Imagine that you are traveling on a road and there are no signs in the crossroad. You would not know where to turn and may even get lost.

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The Pirate Plank example of a BASE Reality

Let’s say you were captured by pirates and after deciding you fate, the pirates of the ship have concluded that you need to walk the plank. The first thing that comes to mind is the reality of the length of the plank, the minute that you would set foot on the plank; your thoughts would race at what you would do to save yourself from reaching the end of that plank. One conclusion that is definite is that before you reach the end, the chance of escaping death exists. However, once you reach the end, all thoughts of being rescued will disappear and acceptance of death will take its place.

Take a look at the following sections of the plank, as I will illustrate and define it as a BASE10 reality:

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Thoughts Beginning Connecting Reproducing Building Changing Accepting Praying Gaining or losing Terminating
A B C D E F G H I J

Continuing with our Pirate story above, when the victim is at point 5 of the plank, which is at exactly half of the plank, he will hope that there will be some change of heart in the pirates and so he will look back at them in a begging way hoping that they can tell him to come back. By the time he gets to the 6th point of the plank, which is point G, he will become angry at them for not giving him another chance and develops a hatred for his killers. At point 7 he will have thoughts of his life’s history and may begin to pray and ask God for forgiveness. And then on arrival at point 8, he will hope to gain some sort of hope in the situation. By the time he gets to point 9, he will give up all thoughts of being rescued and accept his death and termination.

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Quantum Mathematics using the BASE System

QUANTUM MATHEMATICS USING THE BASE SYSTEM

If all things were coded with a value in the universe, then there would be a system so that an equation could be developed that would explain each reality that is experienced by us human beings. In addition, each experience could be predicted without flaw and failure by taking into account other known variables to our equation. A system under Life Code would prevent people from being in danger, making wrong decisions on major events in life, being in poverty, having health problems, and other numerous negative situations.

Let us observe a hypothetical conversation between two mathematical realities. If a base 10 alien met a base 2 alien on earth, here is how the following conversation would be:

210 was an alien from galaxy one who met with 22 from galaxy two on earth. As they were driving past a farm building sitting on a green pasture on the side of the road, they both looked at it.

210 said, “Do you see that building? I’m sure it’s about 12 feet tall.”

“No,” answered 22. “I don’t agree. I see that it is 1100 feet tall.”

“No, that’s not true. According to my measurements, it is 5 feet tall,” said 210

As they were having this argument, a third alien arrived. His name was 24

“What are you guys arguing about?” he said to them.

“I’m glad you’re here,” said 210 “My friend 22 insists that the building is 20 feet tall when I know for sure that it is 4 feet. Can u help us solve this problem, 24?”

“No, I measured it, and I see that it is 30 feet,” replied 24

“WHAT? That is not how I see it at all!” said 210. “No, you are both wrong. Let’s called 26, he is on the spaceship. He should be able to settle this for us.”

26 decided, after hearing about the controversy, to bring out the rest of the crew of aliens, now 23 came along with 25, 27, and 29. They all came and provided their measurements. 26 saw it as 20 feet, 23 saw it as 110 feet, 25 saw it as 22 feet, 27 saw it as 15 feet and 29 saw it as 13 feet.

210 exclaimed, “This is crazy! How can all of you have different measurements? Something is wrong!” he insisted.

Just as he said that, he was interrupted by the buzzing of another space ship approaching. “We have a visitor”, exclaimed 25. “Oh I know who that is, it’s 510. He is the manager of this galaxy.”

“I think he will be able to help us” exclaimed 210 excitedly.

As soon as the space ship landed and the door opened everyone was elated to see 510 step out and approach them.

“What seems to be the problem?” he asked.

They all replied, “Can you help us 510? We all disagree on the measurement of this building here on earth.”

“Let’s see” said 510 after measuring the building himself.

He concluded that 210 was right in his measurement. But he also surprised the others by saying, “All of you are correct in your measurements. Since 210 and myself, 510 are both from earth type planets; we see the building as 12 feet high. However, since every one of you are from a different planet or galaxy, our measurement of 12 feet will appear differently in each one of your planets or galaxies. For example, if this building was on 23’s planet, instead of measuring 12 feet, it will measure 110 feet. His system of counting is limited to BASE3. Similarly, 22’s unit of measurement on his planet is limited to the binary system of ones and zeros, so his measurement of the building would be 1100 feet. So as you can see, depending on your units of measurement, and the base systems you are using, each of you would have concluded correctly the measurement of the building in your own view and reality.”

What can be drawn from the story above is that it can be concluded that there are multiple realities of one object presented. And so anything above the base number is considered a repetition or a higher level of that reality, which will be unseen and unobserved by the lower level of realities below that base point. For example, the two-based reality will be unable to observe the realities occurring in those under the BASE4 realities. Similarly, within one base system, realities within the base numbers are divided in view, quality, interactions, and behavior. For now, we will look at the sub-realities that exist within our own BASE10 system, as this affects our own reality today.

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HISTORY OF MATHEMATICS IN INDIA

In all early civilizations, the first expression of mathematical understanding appears in the form of counting systems. Numbers in vey early societies were typically represented by groups of lines, though later different numbers came to be assigned specific numeral names and symbols (as in India) or were designated by alphabetic letters (such as in Rome). Although today, we take our decimal system for granted, not all ancient civilizations based their numbers on a ten-base system. In ancient Babylon, a sexagesimal (base 60) system was in use.

The Decimal System in Harappa

In India a decimal system was already in place during the Harappan period, as indicated by an analysis of Harappan weights and measures. Weights corresponding to ratios of 0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.5, 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, and 500 have been identified, as have scales with decimal divisions. A particularly notable characteristic of Harappan weights and measures is their remarkable accuracy. A bronze rod marked in units of 0.367 inches points to the degree of precision demanded in those times. Such scales were particularly important in ensuring proper implementation of town planning rules that required roads of fixed widths to run at right angles to each other, for drains to be constructed of precise measurements, and for homes to be constructed according to specified guidelines. The existence of a gradated system of accurately marked weights points to the development of trade and commerce in Harappan society.

Mathematical Activity in the Vedic Period

In the Vedic period, records of mathematical activity are mostly to be found in Vedic texts associated with ritual activities. However, as in many other early agricultural civilizations, the study of arithmetic and geometry was also impelled by secular considerations. Thus, to some extent early mathematical developments in India mirrored the developments in Egypt, Babylon and China . The system of land grants and agricultural tax assessments required accurate measurement of cultivated areas. As land was redistributed or consolidated, problems of mensuration came up that required solutions. In order to ensure that all cultivators had equivalent amounts of irrigated and non-irrigated lands and tracts of equivalent fertility – individual farmers in a village often had their holdings broken up in several parcels to ensure fairness. Since plots could not all be of the same shape – local administrators were required to convert rectangular plots or triangular plots to squares of equivalent sizes and so on. Tax assessments were based on fixed proportions of annual or seasonal crop incomes, but could be adjusted upwards or downwards based on a variety of factors. This meant that an understanding of geometry and arithmetic was virtually essential for revenue administrators. Mathematics was thus brought into the service of both the secular and the ritual domains.

Arithmetic operations (Ganit) such as addition, subtraction, multiplication, fractions, squares, cubes and roots are enumerated in the Narad Vishnu Purana attributed to Ved Vyas (pre-1000 BC). Examples of geometric knowledge (rekha-ganit) are to be found in the Sulva-Sutras of Baudhayana (800 BC) and Apasthmaba (600 BC) which describe techniques for the construction of ritual altars in use during the Vedic era. It is likely that these texts tapped geometric knowledge that may have been acquired much earlier, possibly in the Harappan period. Baudhayana’s Sutra displays an understanding of basic geometric shapes and techniques of converting one geometric shape (such as a rectangle) to another of equivalent (or multiple, or fractional) area (such as a square). While some of the formulations are approximations, others are accurate and reveal a certain degree of practical ingenuity as well as some theoretical understanding of basic geometric principles. Modern methods of multiplication and addition probably emerged from the techniques described in the Sulva-Sutras.

Pythagoras – the Greek mathematician and philosopher who lived in the 6th C B.C was familiar with the Upanishads and learnt his basic geometry from the Sulva Sutras. An early statement of what is commonly known as the Pythagoras theorem is to be found in Baudhayana’s Sutra: The chord which is stretched across the diagonal of a square produces an area of double the size. A similar observation pertaining to oblongs is also noted. His Sutra also contains geometric solutions of a linear equation in a single unknown. Examples of quadratic equations also appear. Apasthamba’s sutra (an expansion of Baudhayana’s with several original contributions) provides a value for the square root of 2 that is accurate to the fifth decimal place. Apasthamba also looked at the problems of squaring a circle, dividing a segment into seven equal parts, and a solution to the general linear equation. Jain texts from the 6th C BC such as the Surya Pragyapti describe ellipses.

Modern-day commentators are divided on how some of the results were generated. Some believe that these results came about through hit and trial – as rules of thumb, or as generalizations of observed examples. Others believe that once the scientific method came to be formalized in the Nyaya-Sutras – proofs for such results must have been provided, but these have either been lost or destroyed, or else were transmitted orally through the Gurukul system, and only the final results were tabulated in the texts. In any case, the study of Ganit i.e mathematics was given considerable importance in the Vedic period. The Vedang Jyotish (1000 BC) includes the statement: “Just as the feathers of a peacock and the jewel-stone of a snake are placed at the highest point of the body (at the forehead), similarly, the position of Ganit is the highest amongst all branches of the Vedas and the Shastras.”

(Many centuries later, Jain mathematician from Mysore, Mahaviracharya further emphasized the importance of mathematics: “Whatever object exists in this moving and non-moving world, cannot be understood without the base of Ganit (i.e. mathematics)”.)

Panini and Formal Scientific Notation

A particularly important development in the history of Indian science that was to have a profound impact on all mathematical treatises that followed was the pioneering work by Panini (6th C BC) in the field of Sanskrit grammar and linguistics. Besides expounding a comprehensive and scientific theory of phonetics, phonology and morphology, Panini provided formal production rules and definitions describing Sanskrit grammar in his treatise called Asthadhyayi. Basic elements such as vowels and consonants, parts of speech such as nouns and verbs were placed in classes. The construction of compound words and sentences was elaborated through ordered rules operating on underlying structures in a manner similar to formal language theory.

Today, Panini’s constructions can also be seen as comparable to modern definitions of a mathematical function. G G Joseph, in The crest of the peacock argues that the algebraic nature of Indian mathematics arises as a consequence of the structure of the Sanskrit language. Ingerman in his paper titled Panini-Backus form finds Panini’s notation to be equivalent in its power to that of Backus – inventor of the Backus Normal Form used to describe the syntax of modern computer languages. Thus Panini’s work provided an example of a scientific notational model that could have propelled later mathematicians to use abstract notations in characterizing algebraic equations and presenting algebraic theorems and results in a scientific format.

Philosophy and Mathematics

Philosophical doctrines also had a profound influence on the development of mathematical concepts and formulations. Like the Upanishadic world view, space and time were considered limitless in Jain cosmology. This led to a deep interest in very large numbers and definitions of infinite numbers. Infinite numbers were created through recursive formulae, as in the Anuyoga Dwara Sutra. Jain mathematicians recognized five different types of infinities: infinite in one direction, in two directions, in area, infinite everywhere and perpetually infinite. Permutations and combinations are listed in the Bhagvati Sutras (3rd C BC) and Sathananga Sutra (2nd C BC).

Jain set theory probably arose in parallel with the Syadvada system of Jain epistemology in which reality was described in terms of pairs of truth conditions and state changes. The Anuyoga Dwara Sutra demonstrates an understanding of the law of indeces and uses it to develop the notion of logarithms. Terms like Ardh Aached , Trik Aached, and Chatur Aached are used to denote log base 2, log base 3 and log base 4 respectively. In Satkhandagama various sets are operated upon by logarithmic functions to base two, by squaring and extracting square roots, and by raising to finite or infinite powers. The operations are repeated to produce new sets. In other works the relation of the number of combinations to the coefficients occurring in the binomial expansion is noted.

Since Jain epistemology allowed for a degree of indeterminacy in describing reality, it probably helped in grappling with indeterminate equations and finding numerical approximations to irrational numbers.

Buddhist literature also demonstrates an awareness of indeterminate and infinite numbers. Buddhist mathematics was classified either as Garna (Simple Mathematics) or Sankhyan (Higher Mathematics). Numbers were deemed to be of three types: Sankheya (countable), Asankheya (uncountable) and Anant (infinite).

Philosophical formulations concerning Shunya – i.e. emptiness or the void may have facilitated in the introduction of the concept of zero. While the zero (bindu) as an empty place holder in the place-value numeral system appears much earlier, algebraic definitions of the zero and it’s relationship to mathematical functions appear in the mathematical treatises of Brahmagupta in the 7th C AD. Although scholars are divided about how early the symbol for zero came to be used in numeric notation in India, (Ifrah arguing that the use of zero is already implied in Aryabhatta) tangible evidence for the use of the zero begins to proliferate towards the end of the Gupta period. Between the 7th C and the 11th C, Indian numerals developed into their modern form, and along with the symbols denoting various mathematical functions (such as plus, minus, square root etc) eventually became the foundation stones of modern mathematical notation.

The Indian Numeral System

Although the Chinese were also using a decimal based counting system, the Chinese lacked a formal notational system that had the abstraction and elegance of the Indian notational system, and it was the Indian notational system that reached the Western world through the Arabs and has now been accepted as universal. Several factors contributed to this development whose significance is perhaps best stated by French mathematician, Laplace: “The ingenious method of expressing every possible number using a set of ten symbols (each symbol having a place value and an absolute value) emerged in India. The idea seems so simple nowadays that its significance and profound importance is no longer appreciated. It’s simplicity lies in the way it facilitated calculation and placed arithmetic foremost amongst useful inventions.”

Brilliant as it was, this invention was no accident. In the Western world, the cumbersome roman numeral system posed as a major obstacle, and in China the pictorial script posed as a hindrance. But in India, almost everything was in place to favor such a development. There was already a long and established history in the use of decimal numbers, and philosophical and cosmological constructs encouraged a creative and expansive approach to number theory. Panini’s studies in linguistic theory and formal language and the powerful role of symbolism and representational abstraction in art and architecture may have also provided an impetus, as might have the rationalist doctrines and the exacting epistemology of the Nyaya Sutras, and the innovative abstractions of the Syadavada and Buddhist schools of learning.

Influence of Trade and Commerce, Importance of Astronomy

The growth of trade and commerce, particularly lending and borrowing demanded an understanding of both simple and compound interest which probably stimulated the interest in arithmetic and geometric series. Brahmagupta’s description of negative numbers as debts and positive numbers as fortunes points to a link between trade and mathematical study. Knowledge of astronomy – particularly knowledge of the tides and the stars was of great import to trading communities who crossed oceans or deserts at night. This is borne out by numerous references in the Jataka tales and several other folk-tales. The young person who wished to embark on a commercial venture was inevitably required to first gain some grounding in astronomy. This led to a proliferation of teachers of astronomy, who in turn received training at universities such as at Kusumpura (Bihar) or Ujjain (Central India) or at smaller local colleges or Gurukuls. This also led to the exchange of texts on astronomy and mathematics amongst scholars and the transmission of knowledge from one part of India to another. Virtually every Indian state produced great mathematicians who wrote commentaries on the works of other mathematicians (who may have lived and worked in a different part of India many centuries earlier). Sanskrit served as the common medium of scientific communication.

The science of astronomy was also spurred by the need to have accurate calendars and a better understanding of climate and rainfall patterns for timely sowing and choice of crops. At the same time, religion and astrology also played a role in creating an interest in astronomy and a negative fallout of this irrational influence was the rejection of scientific theories that were far ahead of their time. One of the greatest scientists of the Gupta period – Aryabhatta (born in 476 AD, Kusumpura, Bihar) provided a systematic treatment of the position of the planets in space. He correctly posited the axial rotation of the earth, and inferred correctly that the orbits of the planets were ellipses. He also correctly deduced that the moon and the planets shined by reflected sunlight and provided a valid explanation for the solar and lunar eclipses rejecting the superstitions and mythical belief systems surrounding the phenomenon. Although Bhaskar I (born Saurashtra, 6th C, and follower of the Asmaka school of science, Nizamabad, Andhra ) recognized his genius and the tremendous value of his scientific contributions, some later astronomers continued to believe in a static earth and rejected his rational explanations of the eclipses. But in spite of such setbacks, Aryabhatta had a profound influence on the astronomers and mathematicians who followed him, particularly on those from the Asmaka school.

Mathematics played a vital role in Aryabhatta’s revolutionary understanding of the solar system. His calculations on pi, the circumferance of the earth (62832 miles) and the length of the solar year (within about 13 minutes of the modern calculation) were remarkably close approximations. In making such calculations, Aryabhatta had to solve several mathematical problems that had not been addressed before, including problems in algebra (beej-ganit) and trigonometry (trikonmiti).

Bhaskar I continued where Aryabhatta left off, and discussed in further detail topics such as the longitudes of the planets; conjunctions of the planets with each other and with bright stars; risings and settings of the planets; and the lunar crescent. Again, these studies required still more advanced mathematics and Bhaskar I expanded on the trigonometric equations provided by Aryabhatta, and like Aryabhatta correctly assessed pi to be an irrational number. Amongst his most important contributions was his formula for calculating the sine function which was 99% accurate. He also did pioneering work on indeterminate equations and considered for the first time quadrilaterals with all the four sides unequal and none of the opposite sides parallel.

Another important astronomer/mathematician was Varahamira (6th C, Ujjain) who compiled previously written texts on astronomy and made important additions to Aryabhatta’s trigonometric formulas. His works on permutations and combinations complemented what had been previously achieved by Jain mathematicians and provided a method of calculation of nCr that closely resembles the much more recent Pascal’s Triangle. In the 7th century, Brahmagupta did important work in enumerating the basic principles of algebra. In addition to listing the algebraic properties of zero, he also listed the algebraic properties of negative numbers. His work on solutions to quadratic indeterminate equations anticipated the work of Euler and Lagrange.

Emergence of Calculus

In the course of developing a precise mapping of the lunar eclipse, Aryabhatta was obliged to introduce the concept of infinitesimals – i.e. tatkalika gati to designate the infinitesimal, or near instantaneous motion of the moon, and express it in the form of a basic differential equation. Aryabhatta’s equations were elaborated on by Manjula (10th C) and Bhaskaracharya (12th C) who derived the differential of the sine function. Later mathematicians used their intuitive understanding of integration in deriving the areas of curved surfaces and the volumes enclosed by them.

Applied Mathematics, Solutions to Practical Problems

Developments also took place in applied mathematics such as in creation of trigonometric tables and measurement units. Yativrsabha’s work Tiloyapannatti (6th C) gives various units for measuring distances and time and also describes the system of infinite time measures.

In the 9th C, Mahaviracharya ( Mysore) wrote Ganit Saar Sangraha where he described the currently used method of calculating the Least Common Multiple (LCM) of given numbers. He also derived formulae to calculate the area of an ellipse and a quadrilateral inscribed within a circle (something that had also been looked at by Brahmagupta) The solution of indeterminate equations also drew considerable interest in the 9th century, and several mathematicians contributed approximations and solutions to different types of indeterminate equations.

In the late 9th C, Sridhara (probably Bengal) provided mathematical formulae for a variety of practical problems involving ratios, barter, simple interest, mixtures, purchase and sale, rates of travel, wages, and filling of cisterns. Some of these examples involved fairly complicated solutions and his Patiganita is considered an advanced mathematical work. Sections of the book were also devoted to arithmetic and geometric progressions, including progressions with fractional numbers or terms, and formulas for the sum of certain finite series are provided. Mathematical investigation continued into the 10th C. Vijayanandi (of Benares, whose Karanatilaka was translated by Al-Beruni into Arabic) and Sripati of Maharashtra are amongst the prominent mathematicians of the century.

The leading light of 12th C Indian mathematics was Bhaskaracharya who came from a long-line of mathematicians and was head of the astronomical observatory at Ujjain. He left several important mathematical texts including the Lilavati and Bijaganita and the Siddhanta Shiromani, an astronomical text. He was the first to recognize that certain types of quadratic equations could have two solutions. His Chakrawaat method of solving indeterminate solutions preceded European solutions by several centuries, and in his Siddhanta Shiromani he postulated that the earth had a gravitational force, and broached the fields of infinitesimal calculation and integration. In the second part of this treatise, there are several chapters relating to the study of the sphere and it’s properties and applications to geography, planetary mean motion, eccentric epicyclical model of the planets, first visibilities of the planets, the seasons, the lunar crescent etc. He also discussed astronomical instruments and spherical trigonometry. Of particular interest are his trigonometric equations: sin(a + b) = sin a cos b + cos a sin b; sin(a – b) = sin a cos b – cos a sin b;

The Spread of Indian Mathematics

The study of mathematics appears to slow down after the onslaught of the Islamic invasions and the conversion of colleges and universities to madrasahs. But this was also the time when Indian mathematical texts were increasingly being translated into Arabic and Persian. Although Arab scholars relied on a variety of sources including Babylonian, Syrian, Greek and some Chinese texts, Indian mathematical texts played a particularly important role. Scholars such as Ibn Tariq and Al-Fazari (8th C, Baghdad), Al-Kindi (9th C, Basra), Al-Khwarizmi (9th C. Khiva), Al-Qayarawani (9th C, Maghreb, author of Kitab fi al-hisab al-hindi), Al-Uqlidisi (10th C, Damascus, author of The book of Chapters in Indian Arithmetic), Ibn-Sina (Avicenna), Ibn al-Samh (Granada, 11th C, Spain), Al-Nasawi (Khurasan, 11th C, Persia), Al-Beruni (11th C, born Khiva, died Afghanistan), Al-Razi (Teheran), and Ibn-Al-Saffar (11th C, Cordoba) were amongst the many who based their own scientific texts on translations of Indian treatises. Records of the Indian origin of many proofs, concepts and formulations were obscured in the later centuries, but the enormous contributions of Indian mathematics was generously acknowledged by several important Arabic and Persian scholars, especially in Spain. Abbasid scholar Al-Gaheth wrote: ” India is the source of knowledge, thought and insight”. Al-Maoudi (956 AD) who travelled in Western India also wrote about the greatness of Indian science. Said Al-Andalusi, an 11th C Spanish scholar and court historian was amongst the most enthusiastic in his praise of Indian civilization, and specially remarked on Indian achievements in the sciences and in mathematics. Of course, eventually, Indian algebra and trigonometry reached Europe through a cycle of translations, travelling from the Arab world to Spain and Sicily, and eventually penetrating all of Europe. At the same time, Arabic and Persian translations of Greek and Egyptian scientific texts became more readily available in India.

The Kerala School

Although it appears that original work in mathematics ceased in much of Northern India after the Islamic conquests, Benaras survived as a center for mathematical study, and an important school of mathematics blossomed in Kerala. Madhava (14th C, Kochi) made important mathematical discoveries that would not be identified by European mathematicians till at least two centuries later. His series expansion of the cos and sine functions anticipated Newton by almost three centuries. Historians of mathematics, Rajagopal, Rangachari and Joseph considered his contributions instrumental in taking mathematics to the next stage, that of modern classical analysis. Nilkantha (15th C, Tirur, Kerala) extended and elaborated upon the results of Madhava while Jyesthadeva (16th C, Kerala) provided detailed proofs of the theorems and derivations of the rules contained in the works of Madhava and Nilkantha. It is also notable that Jyesthadeva’s Yuktibhasa which contained commentaries on Nilkantha’s Tantrasamgraha included elaborations on planetary theory later adopted by Tycho Brahe, and mathematics that anticipated work by later Europeans. Chitrabhanu (16th C, Kerala) gave integer solutions to twenty-one types of systems of two algebraic equations, using both algebraic and geometric methods in developing his results. Important discoveries by the Kerala mathematicians included the Newton-Gauss interpolation formula, the formula for the sum of an infinite series, and a series notation for pi. Charles Whish (1835, published in the Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland) was one of the first Westerners to recognize that the Kerala school had anticipated by almost 300 years many European developments in the field.

Yet, few modern compendiums on the history of mathematics have paid adequate attention to the often pioneering and revolutionary contributions of Indian mathematicians. But as this essay amply demonstrates, a significant body of mathematical works were produced in the Indian subcontinent. The science of mathematics played a pivotal role not only in the industrial revolution but in the scientific developments that have occurred since. No other branch of science is complete without mathematics. Not only did India provide the financial capital for the industrial revolution (see the essay on colonization) India also provided vital elements of the scientific foundation without which humanity could not have entered this modern age of science and high technology.

Notes:

Mathematics and Music: Pingala (3rd C AD), author of Chandasutra explored the relationship between combinatorics and musical theory anticipating Mersenne (1588-1648) author of a classic on musical theory.

Mathematics and Architecture: Interest in arithmetic and geometric series may have also been stimulated by (and influenced) Indian architectural designs – (as in temple shikaras, gopurams and corbelled temple ceilings). Of course, the relationship between geometry and architectural decoration was developed to it’s greatest heights by Central Asian, Persian, Turkish, Arab and Indian architects in a variety of monuments commissioned by the Islamic rulers.

Transmission of the Indian Numeral System: Evidence for the transmission of the Indian Numeral System to the West is provided by Joseph (Crest of the Peacock):

Quotes Severus Sebokht (662) in a Syriac text describing the “subtle discoveries” of Indian astronomers as being “more ingenious than those of the Greeks and the Babylonians” and “their valuable methods of computation which surpass description” and then goes on to mention the use of nine numerals.

· Quotes from Liber abaci (Book of the Abacus) by Fibonacci (1170-1250): The nine Indian numerals are …with these nine and with the sign 0 which in Arabic is sifr, any desired number can be written. (Fibonaci learnt about Indian numerals from his Arab teachers in North Africa)

Influence of the Kerala School: Joseph (Crest of the Peacock) suggests that Indian mathematical manuscripts may have been brought to Europe by Jesuit priests such as Matteo Ricci who spent two years in Kochi (Cochin) after being ordained in Goa in 1580. Kochi is only 70km from Thrissur (Trichur) which was then the largest repository of astronomical documents. Whish and Hyne – two European mathematicians obtained their copies of works by the Kerala mathematicians from Thrissur, and it is not inconceivable that Jesuit monks may have also taken copies to Pisa (where Galileo, Cavalieri and Wallis spent time), or Padau (where James Gregory studied) or Paris (where Mersenne who was in touch with Fermat and Pascal, acted as an agent for the transmission of mathematical ideas).

References:

1.Studies in the History of Science in India (Anthology edited by Debiprasad Chattopadhyaya)

2.A P Juskevic, S S Demidov, F A Medvedev and E I Slavutin: Studies in the history of mathematics, “Nauka” (Moscow, 1974), 220-222; 302.

3. B Datta: The science of the Sulba (Calcutta, 1932).

4.G G Joseph: The crest of the peacock (Princeton University Press, 2000).

5. R P Kulkarni: The value of pi known to Sulbasutrakaras, Indian Journal Hist. Sci. 13 (1) (1978), 32-41.

6. G Kumari: Some significant results of algebra of pre-Aryabhata era, Math. Ed. (Siwan) 14 (1) (1980), B5-B13.

7. G Ifrah: A universal history of numbers: From prehistory to the invention of the computer (London, 1998).

8. P Z Ingerman: ‘Panini-Backus form’, Communications of the ACM 10 (3)(1967), 137.

9.P Jha: Contributions of the Jainas to astronomy and mathematics, Math. Ed. (Siwan) 18 (3) (1984), 98-107.

9b. R C Gupta: The first unenumerable number in Jaina mathematics, Ganita Bharati 14 (1-4) (1992), 11-24.

10. L C Jain: System theory in Jaina school of mathematics, Indian J. Hist. Sci. 14 (1) (1979), 31-65.

11. L C Jain and Km Meena Jain: System theory in Jaina school of mathematics. II, Indian J. Hist. Sci. 24 (3) (1989), 163-180

12. K Shankar Shukla: Bhaskara I, Bhaskara I and his works II. Maha-Bhaskariya (Sanskrit) (Lucknow, 1960).

13. K Shankar Shukla: Bhaskara I, Bhaskara I and his works III. Laghu-Bhaskariya (Sanskrit) (Lucknow, 1963).

14. K S Shukla: Hindu mathematics in the seventh century as found in Bhaskara I’s commentary on the Aryabhatiya, Ganita 22 (1) (1971), 115-130.

15. R C Gupta: Varahamihira’s calculation of nCr and the discovery of Pascal’s triangle, Ganita Bharati 14 (1-4) (1992), 45-49.

16. B Datta: On Mahavira’s solution of rational triangles and quadrilaterals, Bull. Calcutta Math. Soc. 20 (1932), 267-294.

17. B S Jain: On the Ganita-Sara-Samgraha of Mahavira (c. 850 A.D.), Indian J. Hist. Sci. 12 (1) (1977), 17-32.

18. K Shankar Shukla: The Patiganita of Sridharacarya (Lucknow, 1959).

19. H. Suter: Mathematiker

20. Suter: Die Mathematiker und Astronomen der Araber

21. Die philosophischen Abhandlungen des al-Kindi, Munster, 1897

22. K V Sarma: A History of the Kerala School of Hindu Astronomy (Hoshiarpur, 1972).

23. R C Gupta: The Madhava-Gregory series, Math. Education 7 (1973), B67-B70

24. S Parameswaran: Madhavan, the father of analysis, Ganita-Bharati 18 (1-4) (1996), 67-70.

25. K V Sarma, and S Hariharan: Yuktibhasa of Jyesthadeva : a book of rationales in Indian mathematics and astronomy – an analytical appraisal, Indian J. Hist. Sci. 26 (2) (1991), 185-207

26. C T Rajagopal and M S Rangachari: On an untapped source of medieval Keralese mathematics, Arch. History Exact Sci. 18 (1978), 89-102.

27. C T Rajagopal and M S Rangachari: On medieval Keralese mathematics, Arch. History Exact Sci. 35 (1986), 91-99.

28. A.K. Bag: Mathematics in Ancient and Medieval India (1979, Varanasi)

29. Bose, Sen, Subarayappa: Concise History of Science in India, (Indian National Science Academy)

30. T.A. Saraswati: Geometry in Ancient and Medieval India (1979, Delhi)

31.N. Singh: Foundations of Logic in Ancient India, Linguistics and Mathematics ( Science and technology in Indian Culture, ed. A Rahman, 1984, New Delhi, National Instt. of Science, Technology and Development Studies, NISTAD)

32. P. Singh: “The so-called Fibonacci numbers in ancient and medieval India, (Historia Mathematica, 12, 229-44, 1985)

33. Chin Keh-Mu: India and China: Scientific Exchange (History of Science in India Vol 2.)

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SOME EXAMPLES IN VEDIC MATHEMATICS:

1. If you want to multiply any number with 9, 99, 999,…just use this rule: eg. 999×343=342657 (second number -1)(subtract 9 from each of these new digits)ie. 342 and (9-3)(9-4)(9-2)

2. If you want to square a number that is closer to 10, 100, 1000, …: eg. 988^2=976144 (base number-(nearest ’0′ number – the base number))(square of the inner difference) ie. 988-(1000-988)and(1000-988)^2. I am at loss of words here, hope you get the idea.

3. If you want to square a number (that is not closer to 10, 1000,…): eg. 43^2=1849 (first digit x (the base number + second digit))(square of second digit) ie. (4 x (46))(3^2)=>1849

4. The square of any number ending in a five: (x5)^2 = [(x)(x+1)]25 Examples: 15^2 = ((1)(1+1))25 = 225 95^2 = (9(9+1))25 = 9025

5. The result of one over any number ending in a 9 can be computed in two very simple ways. I will give the easier example. 1/x9 ->

a. Take the digit x. Increment it by one.

b. Start with a 1 one on the left.

c. Multiply that number by (x+1) and write that number to the left of it.

d. Now take this new number. Multiply this number by (x+1).

e. Write the last digit of the result to the left of the result so far.

f. Any carry over, remember it.

g. Take the last digit of result entered. Multiply it with (x+1) and add the carry over remembered in step f.

h. Write the last digit of the result to the left of the result so far.

i. Any carry over, remember it.

j. Repeat the steps g, h, and i untill the result pattern starts repeating or you hit a zero as the result digit..

k. In most cases the pattern will repeat after every (x9 – 1) digits of result.

6. Here are examples, again for numbers closer to 10, 100, 1000… If you want to multiply two of these numbers, here are two cases: (Since folks are getting confused with syntax, I am just giving examples)

a. 95 x 97 = <97-(100-95)><(100-95)x(100-97)> = <92><5×3> = 9215 It is actually much easier when you write it on a piexe of paper.

b. if one of the numbers is over the ’0′ number: 94 x 104 = <104-(100-94)><(100-94)x(100-104)>. Here is where you use your intuition. The next step is (9800)-(24)=9776

This logic above cannot be used for numbers that are not close to 10, 100,1000 etc.

Vedic maths comes from the Vedic tradition of India. The Vedas are the most ancient record of human experience and knowledge, passed down orally for generations and written down about 5,000 years ago. Medicine, architecture, astronomy and many other branches of knowledge, including maths, are dealt with in the texts. Perhaps it is not surprising that the country credited with introducing our current number system and the invention of perhaps the most important mathematical symbol, 0, may have more to offer in the field of maths.

The remarkable system of Vedic maths was rediscovered from ancient Sanskrit texts early last century. The system is based on 16 sutras or aphorisms, such as: “by one more than the one before” and “all from nine and the last from 10″. These describe natural processes in the mind and ways of solving a whole range of mathematical problems. For example, if we wished to subtract 564 from 1,000 we simply apply the sutra “all from nine and the last from 10″. Each figure in 564 is subtracted from nine and the last figure is subtracted from 10, yielding 436.

This can easily be extended to solve problems such as 3,000 minus 467. We simply reduce the first figure in 3,000 by one and then apply the sutra, to get the answer 2,533. We have had a lot of fun with this type of sum, particularly when dealing with money examples, such as £10 take away £2. 36. Many of the children have described how they have challenged their parents to races at home using many of the Vedic techniques – and won. This particular method can also be expanded into a general method, dealing with any subtraction sum.

The sutra “vertically and crosswise” has many uses. One very useful application is helping children who are having trouble with their tables above 5×5. For example 7×8. 7 is 3 below the base of 10, and 8 is 2 below the base of 10.

The sutra “vertically and crosswise” is often used in long multiplication. Suppose we wish to multiply 32 by 44. We multiply vertically 2×4=8.

Then we multiply crosswise and add the two results: 3×4+4×2=20, so put down 0 and carry 2.

Finally we multiply vertically 3×4=12 and add the carried 2 =14. Result: 1,408.

We can extend this method to deal with long multiplication of numbers of any size. The great advantage of this system is that the answer can be obtained in one line and mentally. By the end of Year 8, I would expect all students to be able to do a “3 by 2″ long multiplication in their heads. This gives enormous confidence to the pupils who lose their fear of numbers and go on to tackle harder maths in a more open manner.

All the techniques produce one-line answers and most can be dealt with mentally, so calculators are not used until Year 10. The methods are either “special”, in that they only apply under certain conditions, or general. This encourages flexibility and innovation on the part of the students.

Multiplication can also be carried out starting from the left, which can be better because we write and pronounce numbers from left to right. Here is an example of doing this in a special method for long multiplication of numbers near a base (10, 100, 1,000 etc), for example, 96 by 92. 96 is 4 below the base and 92 is 8 below.

We can cross-subtract either way: 96-8=88 or 92-4=88. This is the first part of the answer and multiplying the “differences” vertically 4×8=32 gives the second part of the answer.

This works equally well for numbers above the base: 105×111=11,655. Here we add the differences. For 205×211=43,255, we double the first part of the answer, because 200 is 2×100.

When the children learn about Pythagoras’s theorem in Year 9 we do not use a calculator; squaring numbers and finding square roots (to several significant figures) is all performed with relative ease and reinforces the methods that they would have recently learned.

Dr. David Gray writes:

“The study of mathematics in the West has long been characterized by a certain ethnocentric bias, a bias which most often manifests not in explicit racism, but in a tendency toward undermining or eliding the real contributions made by non-Western civilizations. The debt owed by the West to other civilizations, and to India in particular, go back to the earliest epoch of the “Western” scientific tradition, the age of the classical Greeks, and continued up until the dawn of the modern era, the renaissance, when Europe was awakening from its dark ages.”

Dr Gray goes on to list some of the most important developments in the history of mathematics that took place in India, summarizing the contributions of luminaries such as Aryabhatta, Brahmagupta, Mahavira, Bhaskara and Maadhava. He concludes by asserting that “the role played by India in the development (of the scientific revolution in Europe) is no mere footnote, easily and inconsequentially swept under the rug of Eurocentric bias. To do so is to distort history, and to deny India one of its greatest contributions to world civilization.”

Revered Guruji used to say that he had reconstructed the sixteen mathematical formulae from the Atharvaveda after assiduous research and ‘Tapas’ (austerity) for about eight years in the forests surrounding Sringeri. Obviously these formulae are not to be found in the present recensions of Atharvaveda. They were actually reconstructed, on the basis of intuitive revelation, from materials scattered here and there in the Atharvaveda.

Use the formula ALL FROM 9 AND THE LAST FROM 10 to

perform instant subtractions.

For example 1000 – 357 = 643

We simply take each figure in 357 from 9 and the last figure from 10.

So the answer is 1000 – 357 = 643

And thats all there is to it!

This always works for subtractions from numbers consisting of a 1 followed by noughts: 100; 1000; 10,000 etc.

Similarly 10,000 – 1049 = 8951

For 1000 – 83, in which we have more zeros than

figures in the numbers being subtracted, we simply

suppose 83 is 083.

So 1000 – 83 becomes 1000 – 083 = 917

Using VERTICALLY AND CROSSWISE you do

not need the multiplication tables beyond 5 X 5.

Suppose you need 8 x 7

8 is 2 below 10 and 7 is 3 below 10.

Think of it like this:

The answer is 56.

You subtract crosswise 8-3 or 7 – 2 to get 5,

the first figure of the answer.

And you multiply vertically: 2 x 3 to get 6,

the last figure of the answer.

That’s all you do:

SO far the numbers are below 10, subtract

one number’s deficiency from the other number,

and multiply the deficiencies together.

7 x 6 = 42

Here there is a carry: the 1 in the

12 goes over to make 3 into 4.

Here’s how to use VERTICALLY AND CROSSWISE

for multiplying numbers close to 100.

Suppose you want to multiply 88 by 98.

Not easy,you might think. But with

VERTICALLY AND CROSSWISE

you can give the answer immediately,

using the same method as above

Both 88 and 98 are close to 100.

88 is 12 below 100 and 98 is 2 below 100.

You can imagine the sum set out like this:

As before the 86 comes from subtracting crosswise:

88 – 2 = 86 (or 98 – 12 = 86: you can subtract either way,

you will always get the same answer).

And the 24 in the answer is just 12 x 2: you

multiply vertically.

So 88 x 98 = 8624

Multiplying numbers just over 100.

103 x 104 = 10712

The answer is in two parts: 107 and 12,

107 is just 103 + 4 (or 104 + 3),

and 12 is just 3 x 4.

Similarly 107 x 106 = 11342

107 + 6 = 113 and 7 x 6 = 42

The easy way to add and subtract fractions.

Use VERTICALLY AND CROSSWISE

to write the answer straight down!

Multiply crosswise and add to get the top of the answer:

2 x 5 = 10 and 1 x 3 = 3. Then 10 + 3 = 13.

The bottom of the fraction is just 3 x 5 = 15.

You multiply the bottom number together.

Subtracting is just as easy: multiply

crosswise as before, but the subtract:

A quick way to square numbers that end in 5 using

the formula BY ONE MORE THAN THE ONE BEFORE.

752 = 5625

75² means 75 x 75.

The answer is in two parts: 56 and 25.

The last part is always 25.

The first part is the first number, 7, multiplied

by the number “one more”, which is 8:

so 7 x 8 = 56

Similarly 852 = 7225 because 8 x 9 = 72.

Method for multiplying numbers where the first

figures are the same and the last figures add up to 10.

32 x 38 = 1216

Both numbers here start with 3 and the last figures (2 and 8) add up to 10.

So we just multiply 3 by 4 (the next number up)

to get 12 for the first part of the answer.

And we multiply the last figures: 2 x 8 = 16 to

get the last part of the answer.

And 81 x 89 = 7209

We put 09 since we need two figures as in all the other examples.

An elegant way of multiplying numbers using a simple pattern

21 x 23 = 483

This is normally called long multiplication but actually

the answer can be written straight down using the

VERTICALLY AND CROSSWISEformula.

We first put, or imagine, 23 below 21:

There are 3 steps:

a) Multiply vertically on the left: 2 x 2 = 4.

This gives the first figure of the answer.

b) Multiply crosswise and add: 2 x 3 + 1 x 2 = 8

This gives the middle figure.

c) Multiply vertically on the right: 1 x 3 = 3

This gives the last figure of the answer.

And thats all there is to it.

Similarly 61 x 31 = 1891

6 x 3 = 18; 6 x 1 + 1 x 3 = 9; 1 x 1 = 1

Multiply any 2-figure numbers together by mere mental arithmetic!

If you want 21 stamps at 26 pence each you can

easily find the total price in your head.

There were no carries in the method given above.,/p>

However, there only involve one small extra step.

21 x 26 = 546

The method is the same as above

except that we get a 2-figure number, 14, in the

middle step, so the 1 is carried over to the left

(4 becomes 5).

So 21 stamps cost £5.46.

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AMAZING OBSERVATIONS IN QUANTUM MATH STUDIES

In the Pythagorean  9 represents completion. Take the English alphabet & it’s equivalent #s. A=1,B2, through to Z=26. Using the Pythagorean  to reduce two or more digit #’s. (A-I=1-9), (J-R=1-9), (S-Z=1-8)???

The pattern of numbers 1-9, repeats it’s self; until finaly we stop at Z=26 (2t6=8).

The number 9 represents completion. The number 8 represents infinity. Now add the alphanumerics backwards. i.e. Z-A, Y-B, X-C etc. The sum is always 9.Z=8 A=1, 8+1=9.

Y=7, B=2, 2+7=? & so on…

The whole number scale is a xMod 9 scale so 0 has similar properties to 9 since 9*(0)=0, similarly 9*(1)=9 9*(2)=18. Theyre all related on the mod 9 scale . Patterns in the stock market, the spiral trajectories of flying insects, large hadron collider, the frequency of prime numbers, .. it’s all there

what u re doing is that u re taking multiple of 9 in right hand side . And multiple of nine have the property that their digits sum is divisible by 9. So finaly the single digit sum has to come 9. 110-11 = 99

The Circle itself is the Zero.

The number 9 is very often associated with God or holiness. Those who are very superstitious hold important meetings on days adding upto 9 (9,18,27) of the month. Same for wedding dates. Saw someone having a signature with 9 circles in it. Often the State Transport officials in India auction the Car license plate numbers(eg GJT 2781 etc) that sum up to 9.

There may be other base systems where the number “base – 1 ” may have the same properties but this does not explain the significance of he number 9. A 3X3 magic square cannot exist in these systems. Also, nine is the ONLY square number composed of two consecutive cubes.

You should look into “The Law of Small Numbers” for an explanation of these things.

Modulus of 9. Fascinating, but you can set the modulus to any value whatsoever, thus making 9 infinitly common.

ivette sat 10 am villa – 786 543 9145 …..

joana jackie ivette luresa…..

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THE WONDERS OF QUANTUM MATHEMATICS

T.A. Ramasubban, who has penned a book on Vedic math, said, “The controversy arises because some people question how a cryptic Sanskrit verse that means several things can be safely interpreted as an arithmetic shortcut. For example, there is a verse in the Vedas (scriptures) that praises Lord Krishna in the Vedas. If the Sanskrit words are interpreted, the verse gives the value of pi to 30 decimal points.

“My point is that a verse may extol a god, but … if it also gives the value of pi to 30 decimals, it cannot be a coincidence or desperate translation

“Banish Your Poor Maths Skills Forever!” “Discover The Secret To Lightning Quick Mental Arithmetic With Vedic Mathematics! ”

If you are interested in never having to worry about your poor maths skills ever again, and if you have been searching for the easy way to discover how to … then this is going to be the most exciting message you will ever read!

Here’s why:  Introducing the amazing little known, ” Vedic Mathematics”

This ancient amazing almost secret system will reveal everything you need to know about how to do mental arithmetic quickly and easily! Discover the secrets to lightning quick calculations – easily used methods you wished you had been taught in school!

Imagine being able to amaze your friends with these almost magical vedic mathmatics skills, and give your child a lifetime solid foundation in mental arithmetic. Wouldn’t that be great? What if you could discover how to quickly multiply and divide accurately? How would that feel if you could do this?

Imagine being able to know insider secrets to complex calculations. It truly is possible, but you need to know how.

You’ll never have to worry about your maths skills ever again!

Discover how to calculate long maths multiplication and

maths division without a calculator and without having to resort to

tradition methods!

An easily learnt method to multiplying any 2 or 3 digit number by   11 in less than 5 seconds!  Multiply two decimal numbers together quickly and easily!

Square any number ending in 5 inside 5 seconds!

Square any other number lightning fast!

AMAZING! Discover in a matter of minutes how to add fractions!

A proven strategy to make long division simple!

A little known secret to checking your answers quickly!

Pay close attention to unit figure in each of the examples above to see the pattern

What’s an ability like this worth? Priceless?

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QUANTUM MATEHMATICS

QUANTUM MATEHMATICS

Vedic Mathematic is really quantum mathematics

Base on Newton’s Law:” Action is equal to Reaction” we would have to accept the fact that the Universe is always in equilibrium or balance. If it was not,  then equation of number in mathematics world be one side and mathematical theories would never work.

Every situation needs to be in balance before any harmony can be reached. A simple equation such as A +B = C must be in balance or the equation is improvable. Like the X – axis in a graph the “0” indicates a division between Positive and Negative values and  must be at zero balance. ……+X – X = 0 ……in any value of X in an equation. In the case of Y – axis on the graph it could be the same.

In the case of a universe of singularity all values occurred along the x or y graph however, if the universe achieves some duality the complete values of the X & Y axis would move into a square or 2-dimendional value hence a value measued from also “0” would give birth to reality, where X + Y = Z identifying a point in the reality of space. The same would occur if the space was below zero such as (-x) + (-y) = (-z) at the same point opposite to each other if x as a real value or unreal value –x positive, negative; both sides should have to be in balance.

Lets use real figures, look at any equation:

12 + 14 = 26  -the equation

3  +   5 =  8   -the balance

It might seen like numerology but  it not – its Vedic Mathematics,, which I can refer to now in these modern times as Quantum Mathematics.

Quantum mathematics I interpret as a mathematics that goes beyond the reality of measuring physical objects. Quantum mathematics has the ability to measure intangible objects, which cannot be seen with the naked eye these measurements exist in the negative position of reality in our x – y graph. i.e. below the reality of material objects imagine having the ability to measure how a person feels and how long that feeling would last. Imagine if you could measure, the existence of danger before it happens. What if we could measure the feelings of parents when we were born? How about calculating the effect of a meal in your body, or the effect of a child in your life. What if we could determine failure or success before time and change the equation so the failure becomes success instead. Would that not be great for humans. The equation would look like this.

x + y = failure

x + y + a = success

Would not be great to know? Well Quantum Mathematics or Vedic Mathematics can do that.

Based purely on the mathematical fact that the Universe must be in equilibrium or balance at all times an unbalance in the equation would create an Action and a Reaction no matter how large or small the value of X or Y is …..

12 x 12 = 144

3 x   3 = 9

or

97  x  98 = 9506

7 x  8 = 56

7 x  8 =  11 ( 9 +5 + 0 + 6) or (20)

Now let us apply that to any objects in the Universe.

===============================================================

SWAMI RAM’s BOOK  THE EQUATION OF LIFE PROVIDES A VAST AMOUNT OF INFORMATION ON THIS SCIENCE OF QUANTUM MATHMATICS….

1.             What is Vedic Mathematics.

2.             The Natural Universe – A Mathematical balance at all times.

3.             Fast multiplication.

4.             Fast division.

5.             Fast addition and universal subtraction.

6.             Numbers – the language of the Gods.

7.             The Stockmarket Equations

8.             The Hereditary equations

QUANTUM MATEMATICS RULES THAT ARE FASCINATING AND AMAZING:

1.             Do your know that any number added to nine will result in the same number where 9 has a quantum quality of “zero’. For example 9 + 3 = 12 =>(1 +2=3)

2.             Do you know that any number multiplied by 9 will result in a 9 where 9 has a quantum quality of “One”. For example 9 X 7 = 63 è (6 +3 = 9)

3.             Do you know that the number of death 666 adds up to 18 which adds to 9 where 9 acts as a quantum quality of ending all things including life.

4.             DO you know that 12345 when added to 54321 will add up to 66666. Try doing 123456789 and see what you get…..

5.

6.             Did you know that if 911, flight 11 and amount of letters in New York City it add up to 18 or 666

7.             Multiply any number by ending in 5 by 9  the resulting answer will end in 5 also.

8.

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Mathematics and the human body

It is obvious that God used base10 to create humans as you come see we all have 10 fingers, and based on those 10 fingers one can use that basis to calculate the rest of the body parts in terms of those 10.

First of all there are 9 openings in the body. 2 nostrils, mouth, 2 ears, rectum, genital organs, and 2 eyes making the body complete in terms of base10.  As most of you know, 9 plus  any value gives the same value and 9 times any value gives you a value of 9 in the answer.  For example, 9+3=12 and 12=1+2=3…..9×3=27 and 2+7=9

Second of all, for the purpose of balance and equilibrium, all equations must have duality as singularity, cannot exist except by itself.

1-1=0 – Singularity

1+1=2 – Duality

This is why the human body must have duality in the form of left and right side, where all things on the left side must balance equally with all things in the right side

2 hands-equal

2 feet-equal

2 sets of ribs-equal

2 set of fingers-equal

2 nostrils-equal

2 testes-equal

2 ovaries-equal

2 breasts-equal

2 intestines-equal

2 sides of the heart

2 set of blood vessels-Ventricles and Arteries

2 sides of the brain

2 shoulders-equal

2 buttocks-equal

2 sets of toes

2 knees

……..

To place the body in balance, the spinal column becomes the y-axis that divides the body’s 2 sides like an equation.  The navel forms the zero point on the axis of the spine, where the x-axis of the body would cross.  The length of the diameter of the circle that makes the body would be the point from the navel to the feet opposite the point of the navel to the top of the hands, when a human body is stretched out. As shown below in the diagram:

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