Geeta-Physics

Introduction:

The first question a western trained mind would ask to a “Hindu” is, “Why do you have many Gods?“. This question has been asked by millions of people and most of those to whom this question is put, are helpless and succumb to unending discussions. How foolish it is of us to ask a biologist, “why do you guys have so many blood cells? Can’t a single cell be sufficient?” Even we think this is a foolish question, even though we are not biologists, because the question is meaningless i.e., we know for the fact that we have so many cells and hence biologists just stated what ever they discovered and they incorporated that info in their medical repositories. Similarly, the former question becomes meaningless when we understand that “we”, as explorers of LIFE, have discovered the multi functional aspect of Omnipresence and that is what we incorporated this fact in our “Spiritual Repositories“. 

These spiritual repositories were named “SCRIPTURES“. A scripture is not a BOOK but the wisdom of the book. Is maths a book or the wisdom in the book? Similarly in the spiritual repositories, we stored: The knowledge of Human Body, the knowledge of SELF, the knowledge of Dēvās/Angels, Knowledge of Sheaths, Knowledge of Worlds, etc.

Just like a scientific fact is stored in its Mathematical/Pictorial form, a spiritual fact is stored in its SYMBOLIC form. To unlock the symbol is the only way to know what is the “Knowledge” that is actually been passed down since the dawn of time. If one does not unlock this SYMBOL and approach a scripture, one is left with just a skeleton of story with no meaning and purpose. Sometimes it will also lead to paradoxes letting us conclude that the scripture is bogus.

Today, I want to explore some part of the MYTHICAL story of Puranjana and through it the SYMBOL of Human Being entangling in a Human Body. This story of Puranjana occurs in the 4th Canto of Bhāgavata Scripture. This story has clues within its story lines. Anyways, one should always keep in mind that Bāhgavata is written as a commentary to the Vēda (which is the wisdom of SELF) and hence it borrows a lot of seed principles from the Vēda. Without this, one is doomed to conclusions that help us in no way. Let us proceed first into the story, then into character mapping and then into the symbol.

We divide the story into two parts.

  1. Part 1 (this article) deals with the introduction of Puranjana, his consort and structure of his kingdom, etc. i.e., his life before and just after marriage.
  2. Part 2 (future article) deals with his later part of the marriage where his kingdom is attacked by many forces. We will briefly touch the aspect of his hunt in forest.

PS: Here we follow very closely, the symbolism given by Mastr.E.K in his Telugu commentary to Pōtana’s Bhagavatam. At first sight, it may seem to be equivalent to the symbolism of Puranjana’s story as given by Srila Prabhupada ji (https://www.vedabase.com/en/sb/4/25), but when looked closely, the symbolism differs in its heart rather than in its form. I referred both the expositions, in relation to Puranjana’s story, and I am sticking to Master.E.K’s way of decoding. Let us not comment on which one is better, but let us try to gain LIGHT from which ever source it seems to shed us enough light to explore the hidden secrets. 

The Story (in brief):

Once up on a time, there was a king named PURANJANA. He had a best friend by the name VIJÑĀTA. This friend never expressed himself, but silently observed Puranjana’s actions, even though he was one of the well-wishers. Puranjana was in search for a proper abode to establish himself. He went to many an abode and yet did not like even one. None of them was enough to satisfy his desires. Finally he found what he was looking for, at the southern forests of Himalayan mountains. . The kingdom was beautifully constructed with 9 doors, pillars, canals, gold, silver, curtains, stones, etc. He entered this kingdom and proceeded further. 

When he entered a garden, suddenly a lady appeared coming towards him. She is in her prime youth. She had a body-guard accompanying her. It is a snake with 5 heads. She had 10 more accompanying her. Each of them is accompanied by 100 more. She is beautiful and decorated…………. Who are you? Who is your father? Who are these 11 accompanying you? Who are those women accompanying them?” asked Puranjana………. He then asked, after falling for the beauty of hers, to marry him. She replied: “I do not know who I am or who my father is. But I do know that I exist here, in this kingdom of 9 doors. These people always accompany me. This snake guards me when I am asleep as well. Yes, I will marry you. ……..Please do take over this kingdom as yours and rule from here on for 100 years“. 

Since then, he has been residing in that kingdom, enjoying many a pleasure. Now the structure of his kingdom is described:

The Character Map:

The major part of the above story can be pictorially summarized as below.

Screenshot from 2019-07-11 18-28-09

Let us go point by point, according to story and see how this symbolism is worked out. It is beneficial if you read two of my earlier articles in relation to SYMBOLS for a better and refined understanding: 25) Universal Symbols28) The SIX Keys (Part-1)28) The Six Keys (part-2). Two points need to be kept in mind before going further.

In similar way, we are going to decode the whole myth of Puranjana in the following paragraphs:

Now that we have established the primary symbolism of Puranjana=Jīva, Lady=Buddhi and the accompanying agents=different organs and senses and mind, let us dive into the mapping of Puranjana’s kingdom in detail. Before that please note: when Puranjana was at particular door, he has an alternate name. The concept is that, when we see a beautiful image, we live as the joy of sight in that moment. When we taste some bad object, we live as a sad part of the taste in that moment. In that exact moment, we are not who we are, but we identify ourselves with the “attribute” of the sense. This is what is the clue to understand Puranjana’s alternate names and the names of his associated residence in the following.

This completes the Mapping of each character to our body with the logic inherent in the story itself. Let us now go into the SYMBOL.

The Symbol:

I will write this in a continuous form.

The jīva when wanders as a soul in the garden of Eden/the physical world, it encounters with physical body to enter (union of sperm and ova). The seed principles of Human minus the jīva i.e., Buddhi and other entities exist and lure him into their matrix. When jīva, by law of karma, falls pray for this luster, he forgets himself and becomes the alter-ego of the matrix newly formed. This matrix has some primary doors and organs through which he interacts with outer world, which binds him more and more and day by day. Mind forms an interface between him and his bodily entities. As long as the time permits (100 years is just a Gaussian average in earlier days) the jīva resides in the bodily matrix and enjoys the pleasure of their functionality. While he enjoys, he is also enslaved by the body. This slave attitude renders him unfit to stay longer as a ruler of the body and gets him killed (this comes in part-2). His desire for his Buddhi, which is feminine form relatively, marks a strong imprint on his inner-self which becomes a cause for his birth as a woman in next life.

The next part-2 will reveal the later part of jiva’s  journey in his life circle. After that we can elaborately go into the philosophy of the symbolism. 

Extra Note(s):

Conclusion:

In this part-1, we have seen an introduction of a being into a body. In the next, we will explore the pitfalls of the being when he associates himself with the body rather than associating himself with the Omnipresent. 

Stay tuned for Part-2

Dr. Tejaswi Katravulapally

PhD (Quantum Physics), M.Sc. (IIT Madras), B.Tech. (LNMIIT).

Bridging the depths of Science and the wisdom of the Vedas

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