An account of travel to the five Indian kingdoms – 723 CE
113 points by omk 2 years ago | 17 comments- rnk 2 years agoThere are so many fascinating stories about real things that happened. So much that was lost. It's always stunning to read these stories, or things like Marco Polo's travels - people really could travel thousands of miles and see things and survive? There was all these intermixing of cultures that it's hard to account for in the modern world.
- tsol 2 years agoIt's really something to think. There was real mystery in the world of natural science. For all you knew, those stories of dragons and giant monsters were true. Anything could be out there. I suppose there's still some mystery in the ocean and at a microscopic level. But we certainly won't be finding any giant monsters
- tsol 2 years ago
- braindead_in 2 years agoIs there a full translation available? The 7th century was a momentous century for India. The golden age of Maurya's was over, Buddhism was at it's peak, Adi Shankaracharya was challenging it and the Islamic invasions were just starting. It would have been a fascinating time to visit India.
- jaldhar 2 years agoAlthough travelers paint a rosy picture (what’s a Buddhist monk going to tell the folks at home?) the best days of Indian Buddhism were already in the past by the 7th century. Shankaracharya (who was actually a century later in the opinion of most historians) actually doesn’t criticize Buddhism that much; the main philosophical opposition came from Nyaya and Mimamsa and at the popular level from Shaivism/Shaktism and Vaishnavism.
- rg111 2 years agoIt is more like Nyaya-Vaisheshika was the only school that could barely confront Buddhism.
And Sankara had many ideas that were similar to Buddhism, like disdain for rituals, liberation through knowledge, disregard of caste hierarchy, etc.
He was later attacked by rival Vedanta schools for being opposed to rituals as rituals are central to the Vedas.
But he did attack Buddha and Buddhist ideas. The point of conflict was the existence of self.
But he used many strawman arguments, and criticised Buddha for saying things he didn't say. Sankara didn't know and didn't care.
He was a great philosopher, though.
- jaldhar 2 years agoThat’s a rather tendentious way of putting it. There was a vigorous back and forth between the Nyaya and Buddhist logicians as acknowledged by thinkers on both sides. And barely or not, Nyaya did eventually prevail.
Shankaracharyas problems with Buddhism are because he was criticizing something that had already ceased to be a living vigorous tradition in his time.
- jaldhar 2 years ago
- prox 2 years agoI am not too well versed in the politics of those times. But was it also a change in patronship that set a new direction? Did rulers change to Shaivism/Shaktism and Vaishnavism and the population followed?
- jaldhar 2 years agoWe know more about changes at the elite level because the archaeological and literary evidence favors it and yes there was a significant shift in patronage but the Bhakti movements grew at the popular level too.
Buddhism in that time and place was entirely monastic. If you were a layman you could support the sangha but you kept your existing dharmic commitments. You were not exclusively “Buddhist” unless you became a monk. Also it seems the condition of nuns had become rather bad.
Shaivism etc. by contrast had a complete path that addressed worldly concerns as well as liberation, for householders as well as ascetics and accessible to men and women of all castes.
- lazyninja987 2 years ago
- jaldhar 2 years ago
- rg111 2 years ago
- jaldhar 2 years ago
- ggambetta 2 years ago> In the winter the snows accumulate in Kapisa. This is the reason for the cold.
I don't know why, but I find this super cute in a naive way, like something a 5 year old would say. But I guess that was state-of-the-art weather science back then!
- Tor3 2 years agoBut the statement is perfectly fine. It's not naive. It explains, correctly, why Kapisa stays cool in the summer: The accumulated snow from the winter stays throughout the summer, or most of the summer (that would be in mountains, mostly), and that leads to cool summers. It's exactly the same where I live: Surrounded by snow-covered mountains far into the summer, and even when warm winds come from south-east they have to pass across those mountains - the result: Cooler winds when they arrive here. When the snows finally retreat most of the way and those mountains aren't white anymore we can finally feel the hot winds.
- ggambetta 2 years agoI took it more as "there's snow, and that causes cold" than "it's cold, therefore snow forms"?
- ggambetta 2 years ago
- Tor3 2 years ago
- morbidious 2 years ago"There is a great stupa which constantly glows.", is that metaphorical or real?
- moogleii 2 years agoMaybe it was capped in gold or something
- GolfPopper 2 years agoOr luminous gems: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luminous_gemstones#Mineralogic...
(I'm not remotely an expert, but it seems like at least a possibility for an explanation, and it's a interesting and seemingly little-known class of phenomena.)
- GolfPopper 2 years ago
- moogleii 2 years ago
- dr_dshiv 2 years ago“No translations available yet for this record”