Rediscovering Bharat | Mathematics In Ancient India | Combo Of 4 Astonishing And Eye-Opening Books(Paperback, Kalyan Gullapalli) | Zipri.in
Rediscovering Bharat | Mathematics In Ancient India | Combo Of 4 Astonishing And Eye-Opening Books(Paperback, Kalyan Gullapalli)

Rediscovering Bharat | Mathematics In Ancient India | Combo Of 4 Astonishing And Eye-Opening Books(Paperback, Kalyan Gullapalli)

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About the Book:The underlying myths that most of us Indians have grown up with is that India was born in 1947! Before that, for centuries, we were a conquered land. And the period before that doesn't matter, because it is prehistory. Nothing is farther from the truth. It matters! It is said about Bharat – “Anything that can be done by man or god, has been done in this country!” Rediscovering Bharat is an attempt to reintroduce the reader to the glory of Bharat.Rediscovering Bharat is not just harping about our glorious past, though we have every right to harp about it! It is about recognizing that we have the most relevant model of progress and prosperity for humanity as a whole. It is called Sanatana Dharma, which is capable of bringing back the balance between humankind's urge for material success and its need for inner wellbeing.Rediscovering Bharat is an attempt to initiate the reader into a personal journey of rediscovering his/her own Bharat.Booklet 1: This is the story of the birth of the numeral system in Bharat and its journey through the Arabian peninsula to Europe and back to British India. It is the true story of the Hindu-Arabic numeral system.Booklet 2: This booklet introduces the reader to the geometry-saints of ancient India and their Sulva Sutras, and underlines the conception of the Pythagoras theorem in India, centuries prior to the birth of Pythagoras!Booklet 3: It is generally believed that π is a European conception. This fascinating story takes the reader through innumerable Indian mathematicians’ efforts to approximate the value of π, right from 800 BCE to 1900 CE.Booklet 4: This booklet is a compilation of four little-known facts about ancient Indian mathematics, in the form of short stories – The mathematics of the Jains, Schools of ancient Indian mathematics, The Indian roots of Algebra, Trigonometry & Calculus, & The Bakshali manuscripts