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5000 YEAR OLD VEDIC MANUSCRIPT DESCRIBES TV, ATOMIC ENERGY & SPACE TRAVEL

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Published on 10 Oct 2020 / In News and Politics

The Rig Veda is 5,000 years old, the oldest textbook of modern astronomy, and one of the oldest surviving texts in the world, was written by Rig Veda seers - scientists. Pre-Rig Veda astronomers had explained such advanced concepts as the sphericity of the Earth (whilst most of the Western world will believe the Earth is flat), heliocentricity (meanwhile and for quite some time afterwards, Western scientists would still talk about the Earth being the center - geocentricity); the Pre-Rig Veda astronomers had provided an astronomical explanation for the seasons, as well as for the auroral displays. The earliest reference to the zodiacal signs can be found in the Rig Veda.

A Vimana is the name for the flying machines frequently described in Hindu scripture. The Ramayana and the Mahabharata are the two major epics of Ancient India - both often mention the Vimana. As a matter of fact, they circulate around the fact that deities and half-deities exist and communicate with the earthlings, passing down advanced knowledge and advising humanity. It becomes a much more believable fact once you realize just how much today's modern science is described in the ancient scriptures, humans alone could never have written something so relevant without having seen the Earth from space, measured the distance from the Earth to the Sun, and traveled to then unreachable continents.

The Ramayana speaks of "two storied celestial chariots with many windows" that “roar like off into the sky until they appear like comets.” Whilst the Mahabharata mentions “chariots, powered by winged lighting…it was a ship that soared into the air, flying to both the solar and stellar regions.”

The Vedas (Sanskrit for “knowledge”, also oldest Sanskrit scripture - 1500–1000 BCE) contain revolutionary contents which have practically built the base of modern science once you realize how many "modern" scientists were fascinated by Sanskrit scripture. To name a few, Carl Sagan, Pierre Simon de Laplace (the nebular hypothesis of the origin of the solar system), J. Robert Oppenheimer - the developer of the atomic bomb (who studied Sanskrit and read the Bhagavad Gita in its original language, later citing it as one of the most influential books that shaped his philosophy of life).

Here are a few excerpts from the Vedas:

“Through astronomy, geography, and geology, go thou to all the different countries of the world under the sun. Mayest thou attain through good preaching to statesmanship and artisanship, through medical science obtain knowledge of all medicinal plants, through hydrostatics learn the different uses of water, through electricity understand the working of ever lustrous lightening. Carry out my instructions willingly.” (Yajur-veda 6.21)

“O royal skilled engineer, construct sea-boats, propelled on water by our experts, and airplanes, moving and flying upward, after the clouds that reside in the mid-region, that fly as the boats move on the sea, that fly high over and below the watery clouds. Be thou, thereby, prosperous in this world created by the Omnipresent God, and flier in both air and lightning.” (Yajur-veda 10.19)

Earth as a sphere:

“The Sun does never set nor rise, when people think the Sun is setting (it is not so). For after having arrived at the end of the day it makes itself produce two opposite effects, making night to what is below and day to what is on the other side…Having reached the end of the night, it makes itself produce two opposite effects, making day to what is below and night to what is on the other side. In fact, the Sun never sets….” (Aitareya Brahmana 3.44)

The Markandeya Puarana states the phrases of the Moon, the cause of twilight, and the reason why the sky is blue (scattered sunlight). (78.8 and 103.9)

The sun as the center of the solar system, and stars being suns:

Not only did the Vedas recognize the sun as the source of light, life and warmth, the center of creation and of the spheres (heliocentricity), they also contemplated the idea of multiple suns (stars): “There are suns in all directions, the night sky being full of them.”

Two thousand years before Pythagoras, Indian philosophers believed that graviation was the force which held the solar system together, and the most massive object (the sun), must be at its center.

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