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Madhava | A Wisdom Archive on Madhava |  | Madhava A selection of articles related to Madhava |  |
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madhava, Madhava
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Madhava | |
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 |  |  | Madhava: Devotional Worship And Service to All If we meet no Gods, its because we harbour none, said Emerson. For us, God is not a remote, abstract figure; He is a living, loving Presence. The nirguna or formless God of Shankara’s Advaita is difficult to relate to - but give Him a sweet form and through saguna upasana or worship He can become your very own because of the wonderful ease it creates in human divine encounter. The predominant religious motif of practising Hinduism is this archanam andpadasevanam - the worship and adoration of a God made visible to our eyes in beautiful images, in homes and in temples. It is the ornamental centrepiece of the Vaishnav bhakti tradition set in motion by acharyas like Ramanuja, Madhava and Vallabha. (See also: Hindu Worship, God and Religion, Peace on Earth, Peace of Mind, Love and Happiness, Life and Beyond, Body Mind and Soul)
Read more here: » Hindu Worship: Devotional Worship And Service to All |
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 |  |  | Madhava: Encyclopedia II - Kerala School - Keralese Mathematicians
Kerala School - Narayana Pandit c. 1340-1400.
Narayana Pandit, the earliest of the notable Keralese mathematicians, is known to have definitely written two works, an arithmetical treatise called Ganita Kaumudi and an algebraic treatise called Bijganita Vatamsa. He was strongly influenced by the work of Bhaskara II, which proves work from the classic period was known to Keralese mathematicians and was thus influential in the continued progress of the subject. Due to this influence Narayana is also th ...
See also:Kerala School, Kerala School - Keralese Mathematicians, Kerala School - Narayana Pandit c. 1340-1400, Kerala School - Madhava of Sangamagramma 1340-1425, Kerala School - Parameshvara c. 1370-1460, Kerala School - Nilakantha Somayaji 1444-1544, Kerala School - Jyesthadeva c. 1500-1575, Kerala School - Sankara Varman Early 1800s, Kerala School - Possible transmission of Keralese mathematics to Europe Read more here: » Kerala School: Encyclopedia II - Kerala School - Keralese Mathematicians |
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 |  |  | Madhava: Encyclopedia II - Kerala School - Possible transmission of Keralese mathematics to EuropeThere are a number of publications, including a recent paper of great interest written by D. Almeida, J. John and A. Zadorozhnyy, which suggest Keralese mathematics may have been transmitted to Europe. Kerala was in continuous contact with China, Arabia, and from around 1500, Europe as well, thus transmission would have been possible. There is no evidence by way of relevant manuscripts but the evidence of methodological similari ...
See also:Kerala School, Kerala School - Keralese Mathematicians, Kerala School - Narayana Pandit c. 1340-1400, Kerala School - Madhava of Sangamagramma 1340-1425, Kerala School - Parameshvara c. 1370-1460, Kerala School - Nilakantha Somayaji 1444-1544, Kerala School - Jyesthadeva c. 1500-1575, Kerala School - Sankara Varman Early 1800s, Kerala School - Possible transmission of Keralese mathematics to Europe Read more here: » Kerala School: Encyclopedia II - Kerala School - Possible transmission of Keralese mathematics to Europe |
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 |  |  | Madhava: Encyclopedia II - History of calculus - Controversy Newton Leibnitz... or Madhava?Madhava of Sangamagrama and the Kerala school were the first to come up with the important ideas of calculus in the 14th century and some [3] propose these ideas may have been transmitted to Europe by the 17th century. There is no evidence by way of relevant manuscripts but the evidence of methodological similarities, communication routes and a suitable chronology for transmission is hard to dismiss.
In the controversy between Newton and Leibniz, suggestions were made that the work of Leibniz was not independent, as he claimed, but in ...
See also:History of calculus, History of calculus - Invention of Calculus, History of calculus - Controversy Newton Leibnitz... or Madhava?, History of calculus - Rigorous foundations, History of calculus - Integrals, History of calculus - Symbolic methods, History of calculus - Calculus of variations, History of calculus - Applications Read more here: » History of calculus: Encyclopedia II - History of calculus - Controversy Newton Leibnitz... or Madhava? |
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 |  |  | Madhava: Encyclopedia II - History of calculus - Invention of CalculusMany of the results of Newton and Leibniz were known to mathematicians in Kerala, India almost 300 years previously. In 1835, Charles Whish published an article in the Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, in which he claimed that the work of the Kerala school "laid the foundation for a complete system of fluxions." It was not until the 1940s however, that historians of mathematics verified Whish's claims, but their work is still underplayed in modern accounts of history ...
See also:History of calculus, History of calculus - Invention of Calculus, History of calculus - Controversy Newton Leibnitz... or Madhava?, History of calculus - Rigorous foundations, History of calculus - Integrals, History of calculus - Symbolic methods, History of calculus - Calculus of variations, History of calculus - Applications Read more here: » History of calculus: Encyclopedia II - History of calculus - Invention of Calculus |
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 |  |  | Madhava: Encyclopedia II - Indian mathematics - Keralese Mathematics 1300 CE -1600 CEThe Kerala School was a school of mathematics and astronomy founded by Madhava in Kerala (in South India) which included as its prominent members Parameshvara, Neelakanta Somayaji, Jyeshtadeva, Achyuta Pisharati, Melpathur Narayana Bhattathiri and Achyuta Panikkar. It flourished between the 14th and 16th centuries and has its intellectual roots with Aryabhatta who lived in the 5th century. The lineage continues down to modern times but the original research seems to have ended with Narayana Bhattathiri (1559-1632). These astronomers, in atte ...
See also:Indian mathematics, Indian mathematics - Indian contributions to mathematics, Indian mathematics - Harappan Mathematics 3300 BC - 1700 BC, Indian mathematics - Vedic Mathematics 1500 BC - 500 BC, Indian mathematics - Vedas 1500 BC - 500 BC, Indian mathematics - Samhitas 1500 BC - 500 BC, Indian mathematics - Lagadha 1350 BC - 800 BC, Indian mathematics - Yajnavalkya 1000 BC - 600 BC, Indian mathematics - Sulba Sutras 800 BC - 500 BC, Indian mathematics - Ancient Period 500 BC - 400 CE, Indian mathematics - Panini 500 BC - 400 BC, Indian mathematics - Pingala 400 BC - 200 BC, Indian mathematics - Vaychali Ganit 300 BC - 200 BC, Indian mathematics - Katyayana 200 BC, Indian mathematics - Jaina Mathematics 400 BC - 400 CE, Indian mathematics - Surya Siddhanta 300 CE - 400 CE, Indian mathematics - Classical Period 400 CE - 1200 CE, Indian mathematics - Aryabhata I 476-550, Indian mathematics - Bhaskara I 600-680, Indian mathematics - Brahmagupta 598-668, Indian mathematics - Shridhara Acharya 650-850, Indian mathematics - Mahavira Acharya 850, Indian mathematics - Aryabhata II 920-1000, Indian mathematics - Shripati Mishra 1019-1066, Indian mathematics - Nemichandra Siddhanta Chakravati 1100, Indian mathematics - Bhaskara Acharya Bhaskara II 1114-1185, Indian mathematics - Keralese Mathematics 1300 CE -1600 CE, Indian mathematics - Narayana Pandit 1340-1400, Indian mathematics - Madhava of Sangamagramma 1340-1425, Indian mathematics - Parameshvara 1370-1460, Indian mathematics - Nilakantha Somayaji 1444-1544, Indian mathematics - Jyesthadeva 1500-1575, Indian mathematics - Charges of Eurocentrism Read more here: » Indian mathematics: Encyclopedia II - Indian mathematics - Keralese Mathematics 1300 CE -1600 CE |
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 |  |  | Madhava: Encyclopedia II - History of calculus - IntegralsNiels Henrik Abel seems to have been the first to consider in a general way the question as to what differential expressions can be integrated in a finite form by the aid of ordinary functions, an investigation extended by Liouville. Cauchy early undertook the general theory of determining definite integrals, and the subject has been prominent during the 19th century. Frullani's theorem (1821), Bierens de Haan's work on the theory (1862) and his elaborate tables (1867), Dirichlet's lectures (1858) embodied in Meyer's treatise (1871), and num ...
See also:History of calculus, History of calculus - Invention of Calculus, History of calculus - Controversy Newton Leibnitz... or Madhava?, History of calculus - Rigorous foundations, History of calculus - Integrals, History of calculus - Symbolic methods, History of calculus - Calculus of variations, History of calculus - Applications Read more here: » History of calculus: Encyclopedia II - History of calculus - Integrals |
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 |  |  | Madhava: Encyclopedia II - Indian mathematics - Ancient Period 500 BC - 400 CESathanang Sutra, Bhagvati Sutra and Anoyogdwar Sutra are famous books of this time. Apart from these the book titled Tatvarthaadigyam Sutra Bhashya by Jaina philosopher Omaswati (135 BC) and the book titled Tiloyapannati of Aacharya (Guru) Yativrisham (176 BC) are famous writings of this time.
Indian mathematicians during this period used notations for squares, cube and other exponents of numbers. They gave shape to Beezganit Samikaran (Algebraic Equations).
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See also:Indian mathematics, Indian mathematics - Indian contributions to mathematics, Indian mathematics - Harappan Mathematics 3300 BC - 1700 BC, Indian mathematics - Vedic Mathematics 1500 BC - 500 BC, Indian mathematics - Vedas 1500 BC - 500 BC, Indian mathematics - Samhitas 1500 BC - 500 BC, Indian mathematics - Lagadha 1350 BC - 800 BC, Indian mathematics - Yajnavalkya 1000 BC - 600 BC, Indian mathematics - Sulba Sutras 800 BC - 500 BC, Indian mathematics - Ancient Period 500 BC - 400 CE, Indian mathematics - Panini 500 BC - 400 BC, Indian mathematics - Pingala 400 BC - 200 BC, Indian mathematics - Vaychali Ganit 300 BC - 200 BC, Indian mathematics - Katyayana 200 BC, Indian mathematics - Jaina Mathematics 400 BC - 400 CE, Indian mathematics - Surya Siddhanta 300 CE - 400 CE, Indian mathematics - Classical Period 400 CE - 1200 CE, Indian mathematics - Aryabhata I 476-550, Indian mathematics - Bhaskara I 600-680, Indian mathematics - Brahmagupta 598-668, Indian mathematics - Shridhara Acharya 650-850, Indian mathematics - Mahavira Acharya 850, Indian mathematics - Aryabhata II 920-1000, Indian mathematics - Shripati Mishra 1019-1066, Indian mathematics - Nemichandra Siddhanta Chakravati 1100, Indian mathematics - Bhaskara Acharya Bhaskara II 1114-1185, Indian mathematics - Keralese Mathematics 1300 CE -1600 CE, Indian mathematics - Narayana Pandit 1340-1400, Indian mathematics - Madhava of Sangamagramma 1340-1425, Indian mathematics - Parameshvara 1370-1460, Indian mathematics - Nilakantha Somayaji 1444-1544, Indian mathematics - Jyesthadeva 1500-1575, Indian mathematics - Charges of Eurocentrism Read more here: » Indian mathematics: Encyclopedia II - Indian mathematics - Ancient Period 500 BC - 400 CE |
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 |  |  | Madhava: Encyclopedia II - Jiva Goswami - Jiva’s DemiseJiva Goswami passed away in 1596 CE (or 1618 according to some biographies). His samadhi (tomb) is located in the precincts of the Radha-Damdoara temple in Vrindavana.
According to followers of Gaudiya Vaishnavism, Jiva Goswami is considered to be the incarnation of Vilasa Manjari, an eternal maidservant of Krishna.
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See also:Jiva Goswami, Jiva Goswami - His Birth and Early Years, Jiva Goswami - Jiva Leaves Home, Jiva Goswami - Jiva in Vrindavana, Jiva Goswami - Jiva Goswami’s Contributions, Jiva Goswami - Achintya-bhedabheda Philosophy, Jiva Goswami - Jiva Goswami’s Literary Achievments, Jiva Goswami - 1-Harinamamrita Vyakarana, Jiva Goswami - 2-Sutra-malika, Jiva Goswami - 3-Dhatu-sangraha, Jiva Goswami - 4-Radha-Krishna Archana Chandrika, Jiva Goswami - 5-Rasamrita-sesa, Jiva Goswami - 6-Madhava-mahotsava, Jiva Goswami - 7-Sankalpa-kalpadruma, Jiva Goswami - 8-Gopala-virudavali, Jiva Goswami - 9-Bhavartha-suchaka-champu, Jiva Goswami - 10-Gopala-tapani Upanisad commentary, Jiva Goswami - 11-Commentary on Brahma-samhita, Jiva Goswami - 12-Commentary on Bhakti-rasamrita-sindhu, Jiva Goswami - 13-Commentary on Ujjvala-nilamani, Jiva Goswami - 14-Commentary on Yogasara-stavaka, Jiva Goswami - 15-Agni Puranastha gayatri-bhasya, Jiva Goswami - 16-Padma Puranokta Krishna-pada-padma-chihna, Jiva Goswami - 17-Sri Radhika-kara-pada-sthita-chihna, Jiva Goswami - 18-Laghu Vaishnava Toshani, Jiva Goswami - 19-Gopala-champu, Jiva Goswami - 20-Sad Sandarbhas Six Sandarbhas, Jiva Goswami - Jiva’s Demise, Jiva Goswami - Bibliography Read more here: » Jiva Goswami: Encyclopedia II - Jiva Goswami - Jiva’s Demise |
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