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Vedas & Upaniṣads
This is a portal into a living world — not a library of ancient books, but a breathing architecture of sound, realisation, and contemplative inquiry that spans four millennia and remains, in its essential form, as alive as the questions it asks. Here, Svarloka begins.
What is Vēda?
The word Vēda comes from the Sanskrit root vid — to know, to see, to realise. But there is a precise difference between knowing about something and truly knowing it through experience.
The word Jñāna (knowledge) comes from jña — to know as information. Vēda is something beyond Jñāna. Vēda is wisdom — the direct, living experience of what the information points toward.
Consider chocolate. The statement "chocolate is sweet" is knowledge — information held in the mind. But the actual taste of chocolate — that is wisdom. Someone who has never tasted chocolate may know intellectually that it is sweet, but they cannot tell you which chocolate tastes better. They lack the experience.
The same holds between those who know the Vedic texts and those in whom the Vēda has become lived realisation. Many scholars read Vedic words and never taste the chocolate.
Vēda is described as apauruṣeya — impersonal, not of individual authorship. This is a precise epistemological statement: wisdom does not belong to any one person. Can you say the "sense of number" belongs to only one individual? Does 1+2=3 change from person to person? Because wisdom is in and around us and cannot be owned, it is called impersonal wisdom.
The Four Vedas
The Bṛhadāraṇyaka Upaniṣad (1.5.5) gives us the key: Vāgēva Rig-Vēdaḥ · Prāṇaḥ Sāma-Vēdaḥ · Manō Yajur-Vēdaḥ — Uttered Word is Rig Veda, Breath is Sāma Veda, Mind is Yajur Veda. The four Vedas are not merely textual corpora. They are four modes of cosmic intelligence as it manifests through us.
Rig Veda
Vāk · Uttered Word · LightThe word Rik means both "a rumbling sound of vocal cords" and "a ray of light." When a word is uttered, it kindles a stir of thought — which we rightly call a light bulb of ideas. Rig Veda is that mode of wisdom associated with uttered sound and the kindling of light in the intellect. 10,552 mantras, ten Maṇḍalas — including the Nāsadīya Sūkta and the Puruṣa Sūkta.
Sāma Veda
Prāṇa · Breath · Rhythm · MelodyTo utter a word, we need breath. Prāṇa is not the air itself but the capacity to periodically breathe — the regulated pulsation of life. Beating heart, breathing lungs, waking and sleeping cycles: these periodical manifestations form the melody of life. That mode of wisdom which presides over this pulsating nature is Sāma Veda — hence its texts are sung, not merely recited.
Yajur Veda
Manas · Mind · Act · IntentionYajus means a selfless act, and act is steered by Mind. Mind acts as the link between the physical body and the non-physical self. In Vedic lore, all physical bodies — stone, plant, animal, human — carry a mind in different states of awakening. The mode of wisdom that manifests through all these different states of mind is Yajur Veda.
Atharva Veda
The Lower Jaw · Structure · ArticulationThe seers call Rig, Sāma, and Yajur the Trayī — three-fold wisdom — and compare it to the upper jaw. Can you speak with only an upper jaw? No. Atharva Veda is the lower jaw: that mode of wisdom which gives practical structure to the Trayī and helps us utter forth the wisdom of all three. It makes wisdom functional. Home of Muṇḍaka and Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣads.
The Vedic Tree
Each Veda is not a single text. It is a tradition — a river flowing through four kinds of expression, from cosmic hymn to ritual commentary to forest meditation to philosophical realisation. Vedic texts are only a means to bliss, not the bliss itself — just as Rāmaṇa Maharṣi and Sri Ramakrishna barely read the texts, yet their teachings are the very essence of the Vēda.
One must be careful: "Vēdas are eternal" makes no sense if we mean the physical texts. But when Vēda means the wisdom itself — for example, the periodicity that governs heartbeat, planetary cycles, and cosmic rhythms (Sāma Vēda) — yes, that principle precedes and outlasts any text. Vēdas are eternal.
Six Keys to Vedic Wisdom
The Vedic wisdom is encoded — not to obscure, but to protect. When morals are at their lowest, unearthing the deepest secrets of nature leads to catastrophe (we have seen this with atomic energy). The six Vedāṅgas are the six keys that decode this encoding. They are not peripheral disciplines — they are the operating system of Vedic transmission. Each key applied to every other gives 6×6 = 36 approaches; and the seventh key is the Self itself.
Śikṣā
Key of Intonation · PhoneticsThe key of vocal utterance — phonemes, accent, pitch, duration, and the three stages of tone: Anu-Mandra (base), Mandra (normal), and Tāra (upper). The same Vedic mantra uttered with different tones carries entirely different meaning and energetic effect. This is why Rig Veda and Sāma Veda share mantras but are different Vedas — the singing changes everything. Śikṣā is the "nose" of the Vedic body.
Kalpa
Key of Ritual · The Sacred DramaEvery Vedic ritual is a depiction of divine drama on the physical plane. An altar of three boundaries of seven bricks = 3×7 = 21 — the permanence of the septenary in three states of existence. The same formula appears in the Puruṣa Sūkta: Trisapta samidaḥ kṛtāḥ. The Kalpa Sūtras contain geometry that is not merely physical — a point is the father, a line the mother, and the triangle their child. This is the "arms" of the Vedic body.
Vyākaraṇa
Key of Grammar · Discovered, Not InventedVedic grammar is not man-made — it is discovered from the structure of nature. In Sanskrit, gender follows principle: any source is masculine, its expressive nature feminine, and their unity neutral. A glowing candle's wick is masculine, its light feminine. The same object can hold all three genders depending on the mode of its existence. Pāṇini's Aṣṭādhyāyī is the supreme expression — but even he did not invent it. He revealed it. This is the "mouth" of the Vedic body.
Nirukta
Key of Etymology · Root MeaningsSeers always mean the root rather than the derived meaning. Aśva (horse) breaks into A+Śva — Śva means "what has a death," Aśva is "what has no death" — eternal Prāṇa. Gau (cow) carries the root Ga meaning divine light, so "360 cows feeding one calf" means "360 rays of sunlight feeding one year." Without this key, scholars mistake living allegory for literal description, and everything collapses into confusion.
Chandas
Key of Metre · The Measure of RealityChandas measures not just syllables but the cosmic principles associated with those numbers. Gāyatrī (24 syllables) = 24 Hōrās of the day ruled by the Sun. Triṣṭubh (11 syllables) = the 11 Rudras, lords of vibratory spaces — M-theory also posits 11-dimensional spacetime. Anuṣṭubh (8) = the 8 Vasus. When the same mantra is expressed in Triṣṭubh versus Jagatī, its import completely changes. Chandas is the "feet" of the Vedic body.
Jyotiṣa
Key of Astrology · The Eye of the VedaCalled "the eye of the Veda" — the key that illuminates Vedic cosmological statements. The Rig Veda mentions wheels of 1, 2, 3 … 360 … 720 spokes: these are the divisions of the stellar belt. Every planet is a soul having a body; every star is a senior consciousness. Without this key, "the cow of four feet jumps hither and thither" seems absurd. With it, one sees the four-limbed movement of planetary consciousness through the zodiac.
Ṛṣi · Chandas · Devatā
Every Vedic mantra carries three identifiers: its Ṛṣi (the seer), its Chandas (the metre), and its Devatā (the cosmic principle addressed). These are not decorative headers. They are a complete theory of revelation.
The Ṛṣi Is a Ray of Light
A Ṛṣi's name does not point to an individual person. It points to the Light that kindled a grand vision. Viśvāmitra is not a personal name — it is Viśvā+Mitra, "the Sun of the cosmos," the light that enlightens the cosmos. The seer is whoever or whatever was illumined by that Light. The Sāvitri mantra addresses the solar deity and seeks enlightenment of the intellect — perfectly matching its seer's name.
This is why Vedic mantras are attributed as dṛṣṭa — "seen by" — not composed. The Ṛṣi sees. The Ṛṣi does not make.
Chandas — Form That Carries Force
The Taittirīya Upaniṣad's Śikṣāvalli begins: Varṇa Svaraḥ Mātrā Balaṃ — the uttered syllable and its properties of tone and duration are the strength of the utterance. Without knowing the exact tonal and metrical qualities of a mantra, one only hears the surface. The full revelation remains sealed.
Gāyatrī is not just 24 syllables — it carries the 24-hour solar principle. The metre is the cosmological signature of its content.
yat piṇḍe tat brahmāṇḍe
"What is in the individual, that is in the cosmos."
Taste cannot reside in chocolate — only atoms are there. The one who has consciousness can taste. Similarly, numbers are not in objects but in us — we are born with two hands, two eyes, 32 teeth. Numbers preceded us and exist in us. If wisdom is in us and we are part of creation, the same wisdom is around us. The Ṛṣi does not travel to a cosmic library. In the depths of inner silence, the same reality that organises the cosmos recognises itself.
The Upaniṣadic World
Upaniṣad means "sitting near" — the intimate transmission of wisdom from teacher to student in direct encounter. There are 108 Upaniṣads in the canonical enumeration. Ten are held as the principal Upaniṣads, commented on by Śaṅkara, expressing the complete Vedāntic teaching.
Īśa Upaniṣad
Śukla Yajur VedaEighteen mantras. The resolution of renunciation and action. Īśāvāsyam idaṃ sarvam — all this is pervaded by the Lord.
Kena Upaniṣad
Sāma Veda"By what is the mind impelled?" The inquiry into the witness-consciousness behind all cognition — not the eye, but that which enables seeing.
Kaṭha Upaniṣad
Kṛṣṇa Yajur VedaNaciketa's dialogue with Yama. The immortal self that is not destroyed when the body is. One of the most poetically magnificent.
Praśna Upaniṣad
Atharva VedaSix questions, six answers — through prāṇa, creation, dream, waking, and the syllable OM. A structured dialogue through the layers of being.
Muṇḍaka Upaniṣad
Atharva VedaHigher vs lower knowledge (Parā and Aparā Vidyā). The brahmavidyā by which all else is known. The two birds on the same tree.
Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣad
Atharva VedaTwelve mantras. Four states of consciousness — waking, dream, deep sleep, and the fourth (turīya) — and their identity with OM.
Taittirīya Upaniṣad
Kṛṣṇa Yajur VedaThe five sheaths (pañca kośa) from physical body inward through vital, mental, intellectual, and bliss to the ātman that pervades them all.
Aitareya Upaniṣad
Rig VedaCreation as an act of consciousness. Culminating in prajñānam brahma — consciousness is Brahman.
Chāndogya Upaniṣad
Sāma VedaHome of tat tvam asi. Nine illustrations of the identity of Brahman and ātman through Uddālaka Āruṇi's teachings to Śvetaketu.
Bṛhadāraṇyaka
Śukla Yajur VedaThe longest and most comprehensive. Yājñavalkya's teachings, Maitreyī dialogue, Gārgī dialogue. Home of aham brahmāsmi.
The 108 Upaniṣads
The Muktikā canon enumerates 108 Upaniṣads across all four Vedic streams. Expand each section to explore. Future pages will carry summaries, guided readings, and commentary for each.
How to Explore This World
Different students arrive with different needs. These five pathways help you enter at the point that calls to you — each complete in itself, all interconnected.
By Veda
Follow a single Vedic stream — Rig, Sāma, Yajur, or Atharva — from Saṃhitā through Brāhmaṇa, Āraṇyaka, and Upaniṣad. Understand how the same wisdom unfolds through the tradition's own layered architecture.
By Textual Layer
Move horizontally across Vedic traditions at the same textual depth. Compare how different Vedas treat the same ritual in their Brāhmaṇas, or how the same philosophical question arises differently across four Āraṇyaka traditions.
By Major Upaniṣad
Begin with one of the ten principal Upaniṣads and go deep. Each is a complete world — a particular angle of approach to the same central reality. The ten together cover the entire landscape of Vedāntic inquiry.
The Complete 108
The full Muktikā canon — all 108 Upaniṣads organised by Vedic affiliation, from the principal Upaniṣads to the more specialised texts of the Śaiva, Vaiṣṇava, and Śākta traditions.
Browse the 108 →By Theme
Trace a single philosophical concept across multiple Upaniṣads and Vedic texts. Watch how different Ṛṣis — different rays of the same Light — illuminate the same reality from different positions of realisation.
A Living Archive
This page is the entry point to a knowledge system that will grow continuously. What you see now is the structural scaffold. The complete architecture is being built text by text, concept by concept, commentary by commentary.
Each of the 108 Upaniṣads will receive a structured summary — philosophical orientation, key mantras, central teaching, and cross-text connections.
Curated sequences for different kinds of students — the philosophical beginner, the practitioner, the comparative thinker, the scholar.
Word-by-word commentary on key Vedic mantras drawing from the classical bhāṣya tradition and Dr. Tejaswi's own commentaries.
Demonstrations of how all six Vedāṅga keys together illuminate a single mantra or Upaniṣadic passage — the 6×6 matrix in practice.
Connections between Upaniṣadic teachings and the Bhagavad Gītā, Brahma Sūtras, Yoga Sūtras, and all related Svarloka pages.
Cross-links across all Svarloka pages — making this a true knowledge atlas where every page illuminates every other.
