Showing posts with label vishnu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vishnu. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

What ancient people thought about lightning in the sky?

Lightning plays a role in many mythologies.
by
Dr. Nitish Priyadarshi


Lightning and thunder have awed man and beats ever since these creatures made their appearance on earth. Inevitably, these forces of nature found their way into mythology and folklore. In ancient Rome, lightning have even played a political role.

Lightning plays a role in many mythologies, often as the weapon of a sky and storm god. As such, it is an unsurpassed method of dramatic instantaneous retributive destruction: thunderbolts as divine weapons can be found in many mythologies.

Various ancient societies associated the lightning with a wheel. Marija Gimbutas has shown that the Baltic thunder god, Perkunas, was thought to procure fire by rotating his lightning-club in the nave of the solar wheel. In India the thunderbolt was envisaged as a disc with a hole in the middle that rotated when launched and shot lightning in all directions. This disc was a form of the vajra, the sacred lightning weapon of Indra, and was later depicted in the hands of Vishnu as the chakra.

References to lightning and thunder can be traced to Akkadian times (2200 B.C.) and the works of Hittite (900 B.C.). For the Vikings, lightning was produced by Thor as his hammer struck an anvil while riding his chariot across the clouds. In the Hindu mythology, lightning is the weapon of lord Indra, the king of Devas. Reportedly, there is even a temple in Tibet that is consecrated to lightning.

In ancient Rome, the members of the college of Augurs searched the southern skies for lightning. A lightning bolt passing from east to west was a good omen. If it was from west to east, it meant something was wrong with current political situation. The Augurs reports were politically exploited to postpone unwanted meetings, to delay passage of laws and event to prevent election of magistrates!

Nearly all cultures believed that thunder and lightning were caused by the activity of sky gods. These sky gods were associated with planets; they reigned supreme, and thunderbolts were their emblem of power over heaven and Earth. In Scandinavia, it was the great god Thor swinging his mighty hammer. The Greeks believed that it was Zeus (Jupiter) who threw thunderbolts. In Germanic mythology, Thor is specifically the god of thunder and lightning, wielding Mjolnir. In Maya mythology, Huracan is sometimes represented as three lightning bolts.

The Goddess of Lightning, also called Dian Mu in Chinese, is a supernatural being that has magic power and is in charge of lighting in the heaven. It is said that she is the wife of the God of Thunder. She is viewed as the symbol of justice as she can distinguish good from evil and uphold justice.

The history of the Goddess of Lightning can date back to the period of Song Dynasty (960~1279). In ancient China, the image of the Goddess of Lightning was often depicted as a kind and elegant woman. She has two lightning mirrors, which can help her look carefully whether the person is good or evil.
There spread a legend about the Goddess of Lightning. The legend goes that, in ancient times, there was no lightning during the thunderstorm. One night, the God of Thunder killed a good woman by mistake. He blamed himself for a long time. Then he told the Jade Emperor about this woman. Jade Emperor also commiserated with the woman and conferred the Goddess of Lightning on her. From then on, the God of Thunder and the Goddess of Lightning worked together to chase away the evil spirits and punish the criminals. In order not to kill the good people, the Goddess of Lightning would use her mirror to judge first and then the God of Thunder will make thunder to punish the evil. Therefore, we can always see a flash of lightning before hearing the thunder during the thunderstorm.

There is a good reason why all mythologies in the world contain references to lightning. Most of the natural disasters like earthquakes, cyclones, floods etc., result in deaths of many people. But lightning seems to choose its individual victims! Apparently, the vengeful Gods punish only the erring individual! There must be something divine about lightning!

Even today, lightning and thunder can, and occasionally do, strike fear into the hearts of humans by their dazzling display of fire-works, by deafening roar and by their enormous destructive potential. Lightning wreaks havoc by causing forest fires, by interrupting power distribution, by disrupting communications, by destroying property and by causing injury and death to humans and other animals.

Friday, May 8, 2009

Similarities in concept of evolution of life on earth in Dashavatar and modern Geology.

There are many similarities between two theories.
by
Dr. Nitish Priyadarshi
Mankind has long sought to learn how, when and where life originated; and plants have come into existence.
Until the middle of the nineteenth century life was presumed to be created by some supernatural power either once or at successive intervals.
The biblical story of creation of world within six days was put forward by Spanish monk Father Sudrez. He described that the earth and heaven were created on the first day and sky on the second day. Third day the earth surface dried and the ancestors of plants and animals originated. The Sun, the moon, and the stars were created on the fourth day, the birds and the fishes appeared on the fifth day and finally man and beasts were created on the sixth day of creation. In the end of seventh day a woman was constructed from the 12th rib of the man.
According to Hindu mythology the world was created by God Brahma. Gods, men and devils developed from His head; birds from His chest; goats from His mouth, and plants from the hairs of the body.
According to ancient and mediaeval beliefs the life is distributed throughout the cosmos in the form of resistant spores of living forms, the Cosmozoa. These reached the earth accidentally from some other planets, and on getting favourable conditions for life these developed into organisms.
The entire life span of earth is called the geologic time. Plants and animals have changed gradually during the passage of geologic time and present a chronological sequence of events, which led to the evolution of more and more complex from the simple ones. These evolutionary changes are read in the form of fossils that are found in succeeding rock beds on the strata.

In Hindu mythology the concept of biological evolution (from fish to modern man) is clearly shown in the form of Dashavatar (ten avatars of Lord Vishnu). If we compare it with geologic time scale of biological evolution, there are few similarities. According to Dashavatar the first avatar of Lord Vishnu was in the form of fish on this earth. If we compare it biological events on different Geological Time Scale first developed life was also in the form of fish which originated during Cambrian period.

Second avatar was in the form of Tortoise(reptiles). In geology also first reptiles comes as second important evolution which originated in Mississippian period just after Amphibians.

Third avatar was in the form of Boar. In Tertiary periods all the big mammals originated.


Narasimha, the Man-Lion (Nara= man, simha=lion) was the fourth avatar. But in geology no such evidences are mentioned. It may have been related with Ape Man The term may sometimes refer to extinct early human ancestors, such as the undiscovered missing link between apes and humans.

Fifth avatar was in the form of Vamana, the dwarf man. It may be related with the first man originated during Pliocene. It may be related with Neanderthals. Neanderthals were generally only 12 to 14 cm (4½–5½ in) shorter than modern humans, contrary to a common view of them as "very short" or "just over 5 feet".


Parashurama, the man with an axe was the sixth avatar. It has the similarities with the first modern man originated during Quaternary period or the man of Iron age.
Lord Rama the prince of Ayodhya , Lord Krishna and Lord Buddha were the other avatars of Lord Vishnu. It indicates the physical and mental changes and evolution in the man from its time of appearance.

There may be difference in opinion regarding comparing time of evolution of different spices in Dashavatar and modern geological time scale. But it is also true that most of the sequence of evolution is same. Only difference is that in Dashavatar there is no concept of Dinosaurs or birds.
Sources:
Rastogi, V.B. 1988. Organic Evolution. Kedar Nath Ram Nath, New Delhi.
Cvancara, A.M. 1995. A field manual for the amateur geologist. John Wiley & sons, Inc. New York.
http://encyclopedia.farlex.com/_/viewer.aspx?path=hut&name=aa325261.jpg
http://www.topnews.in/files/Neanderthal.jpg
http://i6.photobucket.com/albums/y223/NigelWaring/Misc/BFMM340.jpg