You are on page 1of 14

Fibonacci Sequence: The Connection

To Vedas, Role Of Sanskrit, And A Look


Into What Drove Science In Ancient
India
byYaajnaseni-Nov 27, 2019 06:50 AM
4KSHARES

(Source: Twitter)

Snapshot
 ‘Fibonacci day’ is celebrated on 23 November. It is important for us Indians to know
the origin of this number series and understand the importance of Sanskrit.

Sanskrit is the language of not only several great works of literature like
Mahabharata but also of mathematics, medicine, sexual and mental well-being,
astronomy, philosophy, and so on because it is the most suitable language to transmit
knowledge.
The 23rd of November is celebrated as ‘Fibonacci day’ because when the date is
written in the mm/dd format (11/23), the digits in the date form a Fibonacci
sequence: 1,1,2,3.

The Fibonacci sequence - a sequence of numbers with an inherent pattern -


appears surprisingly often in nature. Their appearance is so fascinating that an
entire journal is dedicated to the Fibonacci numbers, in the Fibonacci Quarterly.

The name ‘Fibonacci’ is due to a 13th-century Italian mathematician Leonardo of


Pisa, who later came to be known as Fibonacci. However, what we Indians popularly
call ‘Fibonacci numbers’ find their earliest mention in the 2nd century BCE work of
Acharya Pingala.

Fibonacci is also credited with introducing Indian numerals in the West, and in his
historic work, Liber Abaci, he expresses his attraction to learning the Modus Indorum
-  the method of the Indians.

What Are Fibonacci Numbers?

In the Fibonacci sequence, each number is the sum of the previous two, starting
from 0 and 1. Therefore, the sequence looks like this:

0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, and so on.

The ratio of consecutive Fibonacci numbers approaches the ‘golden ratio’ or phi =
1.618. (In mathematics, two quantities are in the golden ratio if their ratio is the
same as the ratio of their sum to the larger of the two quantities; that is, (a+b)/a =
a/b; if a is larger than b).
The Fibonacci sequence is manifested in the pattern of branching in trees, in the
arrangement of leaves on a stem, in the fruit sprouts of a pineapple, etc.

An Indian Institute of Science paper investigated the pattern on the conch shells


and found that it satisfied the Fibonacci patterns. The shape of galaxies, along with
the arrangement of piano keys also follows the Fibonacci pattern.

Fibonacci And The Sanskrit Connect

Before we discuss the work of Rishi Pingala, it is crucial that we devote some time
to understanding the role played by the Sanskrit language in making scientific work
in ancient India possible.

The readers will soon discover the connection with the Fibonacci.

Sanskrit is the language of not only several great works of literature


like Mahabharata but also of mathematics, medicine, sexual and mental well-being,
astronomy, philosophy, and so on because it is the most suitable language to
transmit knowledge.

An article on Guruprasad’s Portal beautifully brings out these aspects of the Sanskrit


language.

The article argues that the rules of the language were designed in such a fashion
that poetry became an efficient medium of conveying scientific principles.
Remember that the Vedic civilisation was dependent more on experiential learning
and oral transmission, therefore an efficient language was key.
This was best summarised by Jagadguru Shankaracharya Swami Bharatikrishna
Tirtha (the Shankaracharya of Govardhana matha in Puri, Odisha, from 1925 to
1960):

“In order to help the pupil to memorise the material studied and assimilated, they
made it a general rule of practice to write even the most technical and abstruse
textbooks in Sutra or in verse [format] (which is so much easier -- even for the
children -- to memorize).”

When we look at the knowledge that has survived through centuries, including the
subject we are currently discussing - Fibonacci - we must remember that the
resilience of the ancient language is to be credited for the same.

One example of Sanskrit poetry that shows how the language went beyond
aesthetics of the words is Magha’s Shishupala Vadha.  The seventh-century poet’s
work is taken as one of the Maha-Kavyas in the Sanskrit language.

In the third stanza, Magha uses only 4 consonants. In the 66th, he uses just two and
in the 114th stanza, Magha uses just one consonant!

दाददो दुद्ददुद्दादी दाददो दद


ू दीददोः ।
दुद्दादं दददे दुद्दे दादाददददोऽददः ॥

Using just one consonant, Magha conveys the following to the reader:

“Sri Krishna, the giver boons, the destroyer of the evil, the purifier, the one whose
arms destroy the wicked who cause suffering to others, shot his powerful arrow at
the enemy.”

Magha also creates the most exquisite palindromes.


In the 44th stanza, each line has a palindrome. The 88th stanza is a palindrome as a
whole - syllable-for-syllable:

तं श्रिया घनयानस्तरुचा सारतया तया ।


यातया तरसा चारुस्तनयानघया श्रितं ॥

The 34th stanza is the 33rd stanza written backward, conveying a totally different
meaning.

The 27th stanza, which Martin Gardner called the “the most complex and exquisite
type of palindrome ever invented” in his book Mathematical Circus, reveals the same
sequence of syllables when read forwards, backwards, down, or up:

सकारनानारकास-
कायसाददसायका ।
रसाहवा वाहसार-
नादवाददवादना ॥

sa kā ra nā nā ra kā sa
kā ya sā da da sā ya kā
ra sā ha vā vā ha sā ra
nā da vā da da vā da nā

And the lines reversed :

nā da vā da da vā da nā
ra sā ha vā vā ha sā ra
kā ya sā da da sā ya kā
sa kā ra nā nā ra kā sa
This stanza is called ‘Sarvatobhadra’, that is ‘perfect in all directions’.

The syllables of the 29th stanza form the shape of a “drum”.

सा से ना गमनारम्भे
रसे नासीदनारता ।
तारनादजनामत्त
धीरनागमनामया ॥

Here’s how it works: read the first line sequentially; then starting from the left-most
syllable on the first line, follow the shape of a U/V to move to the subsequent lines;
you will find that you are reading the same syllables as that of the first line!

sā se nā ga ma nā ra mbhe


ra se nā sī da  nā ra tā
tā ra nā da ja nā ma tta
dhī ra nā ga ma nā ma yā

Also, an inverted drum is visible between the first and the last rows. This has the
same syllables as the last line. In addition, three drums can be seen in the top two
lines (inverted-upright-inverted) - with same syllables as the second row. The
bottom two rows also have three drums (upright-inverted-upright) - these make for
the third line.

Therefore, no matter on what syllable one puts her finger on, it is part of a drum
structure, along with a row.

Similarly, there are stanzas that can be arranged into the fascinating shapes of a
sword, zigzag, etc.
The 120th stanza ends with a wheel design with spokes. It is
called chakrabandha, wherein the syllables can be arranged in the form of a wheel
with six spokes.

Undoubtedly, some mathematical planning would have been required before


writing out these verses. One is inevitably reminded of the graphs in mathematics
classes while looking at these.

Another fascinating work is Daivagya Surya Pandita's Rama Krishna Viloma


Kavyam  which when read from the first letter to the last gives the story of Sri Rama
and when read in reverse, of Sri Krishna.

There are several other examples of the creative usage of Sanskrit language that
mixes devotional literature with mathematical principles.

Pierre-Sylvain Filliozat calls such compositions in the verse form, “the unexpected
processes for the exposition of technical matter that have been the rule in all the
vast Sanskrit mathematical literature.”

Filliozat, in his work, elaborates on the “techniques of oral transmission of the text


of the Vedas, and the earliest exposition of geometry in the context of Vedic rites of
building brick altars, the numeration system, the arithmetical and geometrical
concept of square.”

Sanskrit Prosody Or Chandas

Chandas is the study of Sanskrit verses and their rhythmic structure, called poetic
metres. Chandas was used to maintain the purity of the text (and integrity of the
principle mentioned via the text).
The earliest known treaty of the Chandas Shastra is written by Acharya Pingala. The
10th-century mathematician Halayudha wrote a commentary on the Chandas
Shāstra and expanded it.

Chandas Shāstra presents the first known work of a binary numeral system. Instead
of 0 or 1, Acharya Pingala calls it Laghu (light) and Guru  (heavy)  syllables.

The Guruprasad Portal article uses the example of music. Laghu syllables are those


that need one beat and Guru syllables are those that require two beats. Tabla
players use the same concept, where they call short syllable as “Dhin” and long
syllable as “Dha”.

The article states that a poet can create an exquisite work of poetry if he plans in
advance how to arrange the Laghu and Guru  syllables in each shloka, and how many
such combinations are possible for each shloka.

Let’s use 0 and 1 for Laghu and Guru respectively, where 1 as Guru  requires two


beats.

For a shloka  with just one beat, the number of combinations


of Laghu and  Guru possible is one (0 only). For a shloka  with two beats, the possible
combinations are two (00, 1). And for a shloka  with three beats, the number of
combinations possible are three (000, 01, 10).

For a shloka  with four beats, the number of combinations is five (0000, 001, 100,
010, 11). For a shloka  with five beats, the possibilities are eight (00000, 1000, 110,
0001, 011, 0010, 0100, 101).

Do you see the Fibonacci sequence in the underlined numbers above? Fascinating,
isn’t it?
Pingala also conceptualised a pyramid of stacked numbers that he claimed
converges to the golden mean, calling them Maatra Meru, Sumeru.

Like Pascal’s triangle (written hundreds of years after Pingala), the Maatra-


meru of Pingala consists of a pyramid in which adjacent proportions converge
towards the golden ratio.

Several later scholars built up upon Pingala’s Chhanda Shastra.  Carnatic music has


also imbibed the principle of the Fibonacci series.

The fifth-century scholar Varahamihira uses Pingala’s work in his theory of binomial


coefficients. Halayudha's commentary (tenth century) includes a presentation
of Meruprastāra.  Pascal’s triangle, therefore, is also known as Halayudha triangle.

A clear exposition of the Fibonacci series is provided by Virahanka (700 CE).


Unfortunately, his original work is lost and is now known through a quotation in the
work of the 12th-century mathematician, Gopala. 11th-century
Ratnakarashanti's Chandoratnakara is another example.

The works of Pingala and  Varahmihira were related to their own fields, but the
12th-century scholar, Acharya Hemchandra,  a Jain scholar in the court of the
Chalukyan king Kumarapala, wrote a comprehensive commentary on the Fibonacci
numbers. This was around 50 years before Fibonacci.

Sanatana  Epistemology

With the above discussion, one needs to see the principle of ‘unity in diversity’
visible in the Sanatana epistemology, where  Jnana (knowledge) is not just food for
the mind, but also for the soul.
Unfortunately, our modern education has conditioned us to label our traditional
expressions of knowledge as ‘superstitious’.

We must certainly be cautious against pseudo-science but we must also be open-


minded enough to accept that the knowledge about human existence can be in
various forms and expressions, at least with reference to the saint-scholars
mentioned above.

The ace mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan, a deeply religious Hindu, credited his
acumen to his Goddess Mahalakshmi of Namakkal and said that by her grace he
could see complex mathematical content unfolding before his eyes.

Those of us who are not well-versed with the Sanatana  way,  would mistakenly
picture the above, thanks to Bollywood perhaps, as a dramatic scene filled with
“magic” that replaces the hard mental work required to work out those equations.

(Spiritual path is certainly deeply personal, mystical and full of inexplicably blissful
and profound experiences. However, here the term “magic” is used to refer to the
fetishisation and misrepresentation of the former as an overly dramatic short-cut
to attaining money, fame, power or revenge.)

This couldn’t be farther from the truth. When Ramanujan mentions the visions of
complex mathematical content, it doesn’t refer to something “magical” that
bypasses the intellect and mind of Ramanujan.

It simply reflects the Sanatana way of learning -- moving from the ‘part’ towards the
‘whole’ -- with sometimes the bigger picture offering a clue as to what’s the next
step, and the next step taking us towards the bigger picture.
Here the bigger picture is the Ultimate Truth;  for  Ramanujan, it manifests as the
loving mother Mahalakshmi,  and each mathematical equation as a step towards it,
as it unravels the truth of our existence more and more.

Each mathematical equation shows that the laws of existence are beyond and
above the narrow identities and afflictions that one mistakenly attaches oneself to,
and drives Ramanujan to shed the ego, the aham associated with
his samsaric existence. It liberates Ramanujan to understand things beyond
physicality.

This is why Ramanujan said, “An equation for me has no meaning, unless it
expresses a thought of God.”

The principle that several jnanis  of the Sanatana tradition have propounded -- that


by performing mere external rituals and dressing up as a Sadhu one cannot
attain Sadgati, -- is clearly affirmed here.

A person who simply claims to be a man of religion has no monopoly over spiritual


well-being and progress. A biologist, mathematician, physicist, medical researcher
are much ahead so long as they remain committed to finding the truth, and
resist ahamkaar (ego, self-indulgence, narrow-mindedness).

True, a scientist limits his domain to begin his research while the Ultimate Truth is
limitless. One such limitation is, for example, logic. The men of science refuse to
follow illogical or irrational leads. But as one progresses, they come to realise how
such limitations themselves dissolve, merge and evolve.

The illogical becomes logical and vice versa, and so do their understanding of the
limitations of right and wrong, correct and incorrect. Such is the path of the truth, it
liberates one from assumptions and the stereotypes (Punya-Apunya vivarjit
panthah).

The key is to remain open-minded and committed to the truth -- and not be
diverted by, say, ideology, identity, “magic” or worldly limitations.

We find several works, say Vatsayayana’s Kama Sutra  or Charaka’s treatises on


medicine that mention things and actions that the scriptures on social conduct
prohibited.

For example, Kama Sutra  elaborately mentions love-play in a river, whereas the


same is prohibited (under a broad category of prohibition of polluting the river with
bodily excretions).

Similarly, Charaka mentions the physiological effects of consuming cow’s meat,


which contemporary texts prohibit.

This is because both Vatsyayana and Charaka were committed to finding the truth
in their own domains. They were not writing a book on social or moral conduct, but
on their own subject-matter.

It was the job of an administrator to bring out the rules of conduct and decide the
rules of conduct based on various considerations, balancing different interests
(including their own, perhaps).

An example would be Manusmriti, which was written by a king and not


a Brahmana scholar.
Both Vatsyayana and Charaka strove to describe things as they are. Vatsyayana’s
goal is to provide a treatise for sexual well-being while Charaka’s is to provide one
for physical well-being.

The insights from such works were incorporated into customs and traditions,
through a downward filtration process, albeit, tweaked, amended and presented as
per the politico-social conditions by those in power.

As expected, this relationship, between those who discovered and those who
implemented was not without its tensions. Perhaps, the vast diversity among both
the groups provided for mitigation of crises quickly and at a suitable level.

Another factor could be the heavy exchange of knowledge between the two groups.
For example, texts mention several scholar Rishis, from their Ashramas in remote
areas, visiting kingdoms and having discussions with the kings.

On the other hand, kings as well as all grihasthas took Sanyasa and visited


such Ashramas in their old-age.

It is also important to note that the former category of works - written by


intellectuals and not administrators (or for administrative purposes) - encouraged
experimentation, debate, and dissent.

On the other hand, the administrative works, by design, carried authority and often
proposed divine consequences for bad actions, to ensure compliance.

Today, many of the insights of out scholar Rishis  are only available through
administrative works and folk practices, which means, we would have to sift
through what has become irrelevant with the change of times to reach the kernel of
truth and decide our Dharma -  the correct course of action suitable for our present
times.

Conclusion

A great lesson we can take from our Rishis is to separate the domain of knowledge
from the domain of politics.

The ideologically-biased knowledge-ecosystem in post-independence India has


resulted in polarisation, bitterness, identity politics and triumph of power-politics
over the truth, as people have lost the trust in the intellectual-class.

The latter are increasingly seen as ideologues and hypocrites who criticise their
own nation and lack nationalism but wag their tails to get the citizenship from the
international-elite class of opinion makers.

Pingala uses the language of Sanskrit, Hemchandra and Ramanujan, the language
of numbers, and bhakti-sants,  the language of surrender and love. They are
separated by centuries yet they unite us as the fresh leaves of the same grand tree
with several branches, and roots going back several millennia.

I will end this piece with an example from the life of Acharya Hemchandra, a Jain
scholar in the court of a Shaiva king, Kumarapala.

When visiting a temple with the king for an inauguration, Hemachandra bowed


before the Shiva Lingam in reverence and said:

“I bow down to him who has destroyed the passions like attachment and malice
which are the cause of the cycle of birth and death; whether he is Brahma, Vishnu,
Shiva or Jina.”

You might also like