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Showing posts from June, 2025

BRIHAS: Advantages And Disadvantages Of Fixed Dose Combin...

BRIHAS: Advantages And Disadvantages Of Fixed Dose Combin... : Advantages 1. Simplified Treatment Regimen One of the primary advantages of FDC drugs is that they combine two or more active pharmaceuti...

More Than Just Numbers: The Cultural Mechanics Behind Hindu Displacement

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  When Demographics Aren’t Just Statistics Every census has a story behind it. And sometimes, that story is about who feels safe, who migrates silently, and who loses voice in the land they were born. Our new blog uncovers this reality—where Sharia-aligned social norms override constitutional freedoms. Educational Video on the topic Sharia Without a Gavel No Islamic court needs to pass a law. Yet: ·          Interfaith marriages are threatened ·          Local stores stop selling “un-Islamic” goods ·          Non-Muslim shopkeepers are shunned This is Sharia—not by legal force, but by community enforcement. It is crowd-law, not court-law. Real Consequences for Real People In Malda, Ram Navami processions are blocked. In Kairana, 350 Hindu families left their homes. In Mewat, Hindu festivals happen under police protection, if at all. No official fatw...

The Vanishing Middle: Why Moderate Voices Are Drowning in Doctrinal Rigidity

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  The Illusion of Balance In any debate around religion and law, we're told there are always two sides. Extremes are loud, but moderation exists—somewhere. But what if, in certain systems, moderation is not just rare—it’s structurally suppressed? This appears to be the case when examining how classical Sharia law dominates Islamic legal discourse , often leaving no space for true pluralism. Related Educational Video Moderate Muslims Exist—But Are They Heard? You’ll often hear of Sufi Islam, liberal reformists, or peace-advocating imams. They exist. They do important work. But how many are placed in positions of influence? How often do their voices make headlines when doctrinal rigidity fuels conflict or limits interfaith harmony? In most cases, these moderates are sidelined by clerical institutions that continue to propagate exclusionary interpretations. Their impact is limited not by their message—but by the system that marginalizes them. Why Doctrine Matters More T...

The Forgotten Operating System: How Your Rishi Lineage Shapes You

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 Rebooting Dharma in a Digital Age Today, everything runs on a system. Your phone, your car, your decisions. But the deepest operating system —the one that controls your instincts, your karmic load, and even your spiritual inclination—was written long before computers. It’s called Genetic Vedic Lineage Wisdom , and it lives within your Gotra. What Is Gotra, Really? To most modern minds, Gotra is a ritual formality or a relic of social customs. But its original purpose was highly scientific and spiritual . Gotra was not about exclusion—it was about precision. A way to maintain genetic distance, yes—but also to preserve energetic alignment between souls and the cosmos. Your Gotra is your default karmic profile . It doesn’t control you, but it configures you. Why This Still Matters In a world obsessed with self-discovery through therapy, apps, and genome kits, we’re ignoring the system that already encoded our behavior patterns into generations. Gotra wasn’t imposed. It ...

108 and the Vedic Mind: Numbers That Mapped the Universe

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  When Numbers Were Cosmic Tools A graphic comparing the Earth-Sun and Earth-Moon distance ratios with 108 In modern science, we revere numbers like π (pi), the golden ratio, and Avogadro’s constant. They define the fabric of physical laws. But in ancient Bharat, another number held that sacred status: 108 . In the Vedic worldview, 108 meaning was never just a cultural habit—it was a tool to model the cosmos and align human consciousness with universal order. This blog looks at how 108 served as the unit of cosmic calibration in Hindu traditions. Watch the Educational Video on the subject: Vedic Astronomy: Observing Before Instruments Long before telescopes or satellites, Vedic seers made precise celestial calculations. They developed systems like the Surya Siddhanta , which mapped planetary motion with astonishing accuracy. Why was 108 so prominent? Because they noticed something remarkable: ·          Earth’s distance to the Sun...

Vimana Shastra: Soaring into Ancient India’s Technological Past

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  A Skyward Revolution Picture ancient India’s skies filled with Vimanas—flying machines crafted with precision and power, as detailed in the Vaimanika Shastra. This ancient Sanskrit text, rooted in Hindu wisdom, challenges the idea that advanced flight is a modern invention. Far from being mythical tales, these descriptions suggest a civilization with remarkable aeronautical knowledge. This blog offers a preview of the deep dive awaiting you on HinduInfopedia.org, where "Vaimanika Shastra: Ancient Hindu Aeronautics Unveiled" explores this extraordinary legacy. Watch Educational Video on the Topic The Artistry of Vimana Designs The Vaimanika Shastra, rediscovered in 1875 from a South Indian temple, categorizes Vimanas into three striking types: Shakuna, resembling a bird with graceful wings; Sundara, a streamlined marvel for speed; and Tripura, a multi-tiered structure for versatility. These designs incorporate aerodynamic shapes that minimize drag, a principle central to...

Encoded in the Cosmos: How Hindu Calendars Timed a Civilization

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Introduction: When the Stars Wrote the Script What if our history books left out one of the most advanced systems of timekeeping ever created? In ancient Bharat, the sky wasn’t just for gazing—it was for guiding. The Hindu calendar system, deeply embedded in the Ramayana and Mahabharata, turned planetary motion into civilizational rhythm. This wasn’t folklore. It was functional astronomy. The Hindu way of measuring time was not just about when —it was about why and how . And it shaped the way an entire civilization thought, moved, celebrated, and fought. Educational Hindi Video on the subject: Lunisolar Intelligence: The Science Behind Hindu Timekeeping Most modern calendars are either lunar (like the Islamic calendar) or solar (like the Gregorian calendar). The Hindu calendar, however, is lunisolar —it follows both the sun and the moon with intricate adjustments. That’s what makes it so resilient. This dual system allowed ancient Indians to: ·      ...

Cycles of Cosmos: How the Hindu Calendar Structures Time

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  Introduction: Order in the Sky, Order on Earth   In today’s age of digital clocks and atomic seconds, we rarely ask: why do we divide time the way we do? Why are there seven days in a week, and who decided which one comes after the other? The answers, as it turns out, lie not in Rome or Babylon but in Bharat—in the Hora-based Hindu calendar system that gave a structure to time based on the cosmos itself. The Hora Principle: A Celestial Blueprint   Related Educational Video: The Hindu concept of timekeeping, found in ancient texts like the Surya Siddhanta, assigns every hour of the day to one of seven planetary entities or grahas. The planet ruling the first hour after sunrise determines the name and nature of the day. This method—called the Hora system—is elegant in its logic. It generates a seven-day week purely by applying cyclic repetition to planetary hour assignments. Algorithmic Time, Not Arbitrary Ritual   This isn’t a tradition invented for spiritual sy...