Geeta-Physics

The Knowledge Base

One path -
Three depths

Physics and mathematics. Music and yoga. The Geeta, the Vedas, the Upaniṣads. These are not separate subjects placed side by side for convenience.

They are different instruments for reading the same reality — the external universe, the inner instrument, and the nature of consciousness itself. This Knowledge Base is an attempt to present them as they were originally intended: as one coherent path of learning.

The Question

Every age has asked the same question: how should knowledge be transmitted?

In the ancient world, a seeker travelled to a teacher. The forest hermitage, the gurukula, and the monastery were places where knowledge was not merely stored — it was lived. Learning unfolded as a path. A student first learned to understand the world precisely. Then they learned to refine the mind that perceives the world. Finally, they encountered the deeper wisdom traditions that speak about the nature of consciousness itself.

"The teacher did not hand the student a book.
The teacher handed the student a way of seeing."

Today, knowledge exists everywhere and nowhere. Search engines return millions of answers, yet leave the seeker more fragmented than before. Physics exists in one corner of the internet. Music in another. Spiritual traditions in another — often stripped of their depth, reduced to content.

No one has mapped a path from one to the other. No one has said: begin here, refine yourself here, and then the deeper transmissions will land in an entirely different way.

This website attempts that architecture.

The Architecture

Not three subjects.
Three depths of one journey.

Instead of organising knowledge into disconnected subjects, this site follows an older idea from the Vedic tradition — the idea of three Lokas, or planes of experience. They are not separate worlds. They are three depths of the same human journey.

Bhūloka explores the external universe — through physics, mathematics, and language. It is the foundation. Without precision in understanding the world, every deeper inquiry remains vague.

Bhuvarloka refines the inner instrument. A mind that has not been disciplined through sound, breath, and contemplative practice cannot receive what the deeper traditions actually contain. It reads the words and misses the transmission.

Svarloka carries the wisdom traditions — the Geeta, the Vedas, the Upaniṣads. These texts are not complicated. They are simply speaking to a dimension of experience the unprepared mind has not yet reached.

The three Lokas are not a curriculum to complete in sequence. They are three simultaneous depths of the same journey — each one informing and deepening the others.

The Journey

Every seeker begins
somewhere.

Some enter through science — drawn by the precision and beauty of physical law. Some enter through music — where the body knows something the mind has not yet understood. Some enter through scripture — seeking a wisdom older than any curriculum.

Wherever the entry point, the journey eventually converges. Rigorous physics leads toward questions no equation can answer. Deep meditation leads toward the same silence the Upaniṣads describe. The path, at a certain depth, becomes one path.

"What is the nature of the one who knows?"

Enter through whichever door calls to you.

Write to Dr. Tejaswi

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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