When Did the Mahabharata War Happen? by Nilesh Nilkanth Oak
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 26 พ.ย. 2024
- The date of the Mahabharata War (also known as the Kurukshetra War), if it was a factual event, is not known. Various proposals have been made as to when this famous conflict of ancient India took place. In this review, Dr. Miano looks at a theory offered by Nilesh Oak and evaluates its merits.
CORRECTION: In the video, it is said that Nilesh Oak posits 5651 BCE as the date of the Mahabharata War, when he actually says 5561 BCE.
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Mr. David Miano,
I have tried to answer few of your questions about your assumptions made by Nilesh Oak, and I also have few questions which I expect an answer from you if possible.
Few comments about the stuff you mentioned as assumptions by Mr. Nilesh Oak.
Q1. Why did the people in antient time mentioned the astronomical observations?
- It is the tradition followed even today in India that every major event will be recorded based on planatary positions, it is called kundali.
Almost every practicing hindu will have the kundali of his birth, marriage etc.,
- Every major event is performed after finding an muhurtha (auspicious time) based on planetary positions, even all 100+ rocket launch for space mission in India happened on a muhurtha.
- the same way of finding auspicious time for all important events is mentioned in all the Hindu texts of Ramayana, Mahabharata and other stories.
Q2. Astronomy was invented is much later, how they were able to mention the astronomical observations in antient period?
- Please read the books called Surya Siddantha, Shata patha Brahmana.
Which speaks about the astronomical knowledge of antient Indian's, which also speaks about the pole star which changed with the change in inclination of earth's axis (which happens once in 26000 years) and also a detailed chapter on how to make astronomical instruments/devices for accurate readings of planetary positions. The antiquity of the book is said to be about 3000 years old as per Wikipedia, but it is debated to much older as the last pole start change happened about 5000 years ago which is mentioned in the book.
Q3. Why is Mahabharatha assumed as History and not a mythological story?
- Vedas are said to be the oldest extant texts/documents available in the world so far, among which Rigveda is said to be the written around 2000-4500 years ago, the section which contains the Mahabharata section called "Itihasa" which means History in Sanscrit.
If you are aware, the position based number system using Zero which is being used world wide was invented in India, even before that there was base 10 number system with concept of zero was in use as per bakshali manuscript found.
Oldest extant text of the world is from India.
So about 5000 years ago Indian had the knowledge of planetary knowledge(Surya Siddantha), they had the tradition of documenting events(Vedas).
They had knowledge about medicine and Surgery (Ayurveda).
My questions to you.
1. Do you think all these knowledge of astronomy, mathematics, scripting develops overnight? If it can be done 5000 years ago, what makes you think it cannot happen 7000 years ago?
2. Why do you want to think that everyone like to make a fake claim like the Western people made while spreading their religion using fairytale like genesis etc., ?
3. Did you find any of the astronomical observations mentioned in the book as false?
4. Did you find any of the supporting evidence mentioned in the book is baseless or non conclusive?
5. Why do you think a Chemical engineer cannot become a historian based on his interst?
If you really think you are happy to debate and analyse the facts in his book, we can try and arrange for a live meet between you and Mr. Nilesh Oak, please let me know if you are happy with it.
Thank you for your comment. In answer to your questions:
*1. Do you think all these knowledge of astronomy, mathematics, scripting develops overnight? If it can be done 5000 years ago, what makes you think it cannot happen 7000 years ago?*
It doesn't matter whether something CAN happen. It matters whether it DID happen. And the only way to know if something did happen is if there is evidence for it. There are many possibilities for what could happen, but we do not know which possibility is correct until we can verify it.
*2. Why do you want to think that everyone like to make a fake claim like the Western people made while spreading their religion using fairytale like genesis etc., ?*
I don't think everyone likes to make a fake claim. But people are wrong more often than they are right. They could be wrong because they are trying to deceive, but usually it's because they simply don't know.
*3. Did you find any of the astronomical observations mentioned in the book as false?*
I am not sure what you mean by "false," but I found a lot of them not to be observations of natural phenomena.
*4. Did you find any of the supporting evidence mentioned in the book is baseless or non conclusive?*
Yes.
*5. Why do you think a Chemical engineer cannot become a historian based on his interst?*
He can become a historian, if he studies to become a historian. But Mr. Oak has not studied to become a historian.
P.S. What is your evidence for the age of the Surya Siddhanta? Sanskrit scholars say it was written in the 4th or 5th century CE.
@@WorldofAntiquity So are you fine for a debate with Nilesh Oak on the stuffs that you are not convinced and the topics on which you want to challenge him?
It is always good to get clarity, that make things more clear to the world.
@@umeshshankara Sure, he can invite me onto his channel to debate him at any time.
@@WorldofAntiquity Do accept the invite when he does invite you. Make sure some "unforeseen work" does not occupy your schedule. 😃😃
Also to add … you are discarding many of Mr.Oak’s points stating that these assumptions(archeological evidences) are not proven or available. I would ask you to compare the funds allocated to Egypt’s archeology and compare it to India’s archeological funds. The absence of evidence means .. someone tried to find evidence and did not find anything. Here the case is a bit different…. No one has every tried to dig out all the sites mentioned maybe due to political or economic history of India. If in future such a project is undertaken and the results of that are negative only then one can claim that there is no evidence. Here no investigation was done .. then how can you conclude that there is no evidence.
Each and every place mentioned in the Mahabharata exists today. Lakshagraha, kurukshetra, gurugram, indraprasta…. and many more. And they are located as described in the text… time taken to travel between them match up to the time taken today…
You keep on saying that non of these advances in science and technology are possible so far back… why not?
I looked up zero in Wikipedia … and the fact that zero came from india first is mentioned after scrolling down 200 times… first things mentioned are how it came to English .. from French etc etc … how is that relevant and why is that always the way things are looked at…. Some centuries later someone will look up current “evidences” and this fact will also be lost in antiquity or retold with so many layers that the truth will simply be lost …
I have been a physicist for over 45 years, and the one major rule I have found for scientific research is that one has to value being correct above getting any particular result. To go a step farther, if one has a desired outcome in a research program, this creates a real moral hazard for the scientist. Science is about understanding the world, not validating your world view.
Prove it.
Can you prove it scientifically? 45 years of hunch is no good in your own words.
Very true.
“Science cannot solve the ultimate mystery of nature. And that is because, in the last analysis, we ourselves are a part of the mystery that we are trying to solve.”
-Max Planck
If someone is trying to do science to validate their a priori presuppositions, then they should probably go do something else. 🙃😅
Please read the book before presenting your view (word salad). You will learn who is enforcing their word view.
Are you a postmodernist Physicist?
I could not make a head or tail out of what is your point!
Apparently, Dr. Miano did. Maybe he can explain what you are trying to say.
Archeologist throwing tantrums the moment they see something that doesn't fit their narrative 😂😂😂
Do you know Nakshatra meaning?
Answer: No I don't know, I don't need to know but I'm sure this book is based on assumptions.
Nakshatra means constellations
🎉😂
This flows from abrahamic stubborn obstinacy....
@@manojsatapathy4122 what does that mean
Truth seeker? What is the truth? My religion is greatest on human history? 😢😢 That is arrogance.
Mr. Oak has some assumptions, sure, but your rejection to his statements are also based on your assumptions that there were no nakshatra study during 5k BCE. Whereas Indians believe that it was there much before Mahabharata times - during Ramayana times ~ 10k BCE.
I didn't say that there was no nakshatra. I said his theory is based on the assumption that there was.
@@WorldofAntiquity There is no scientific proof that Jesus existed ?
@@WorldofAntiquity There's written text transferred throughout ages. It was not written to prove anything to anyone about its occurrence neither Mahabharata tries to prove its genuinity.
Then go with what the text has to teach.
Also there is no scientific evidence that Moses, Jesus or Mohammed existed, because their stories were written much later for religious politics?
@@WorldofAntiquity we all heard what u said maybe u should keep urself updated or only if u r doing what britishers did down playing us like saying primitive n all those ,bringing stupid aryan invasion theory which has been proved wrong now cause west can't take it that there was a civilization which was much ahead of there time n west was no were close to them . Get more informed it's not 1700 hundreds or 20 th C.E
Good grief…
Wow Nilesh Oak wants you to have a discussion in which you asked him first in comment section, go on if you're not biased towards Mahabharata
th-cam.com/video/vT8WTClwOqY/w-d-xo.html
These archeological things th-cam.com/video/vit-i7WI75E/w-d-xo.html
did that debate happen?
@@VIJAYzk still waiting , WoA is a confirmed stooge of Thapar LMAO
@@buddha9715not just thappar there’s levels to this beyond our imagination. Unless we all try to protect ourselves we’re doomed
The issue is that you come at it with a bias and it’s clear in your voice and tone at the start of the video.
I already read the book before I started the video.
Bro listen to the argument not to the tone. It makes no sense.
@@WorldofAntiquityyes and you showed your complete bias.
@@danthal2996I can’t. His tone reflects his bias and it’s a gotcha type of video response.
@@colorguppies Naah bro that's a subjective matter I see frustration in his tone. The frustation for how ridiculous someone can be. You just ignoring the arguments bro. That's another sign of stupidity.
I don't know whether the astronomical things can be taken into account! But the geographical descriptions are good. Especially of Central Asia.
Geographical descriptions of central Asia?
Dating Estimates for the Four Legendary Figures:
Rama: Around 1500 BCE to 1000 BCE (based on astronomical and archaeological evidence).
Krishna: Around 900 BCE to 850 BCE (based on celestial events and textual analysis from the Mahabharata).
Moses: Around 1300 BCE to 1200 BCE (based on traditional dating and archaeological context).
Abraham: Around 2000 BCE (based on religious tradition and archaeological references).
These are the best scholarly estimates, combining traditional religious dates, astronomical calculations, and archaeological findings, although they remain speculative and should be seen as approximations rather than definitive historical facts.
Sir, can you please let us know when tthe Nakshatra system was founded? Is there any reference you can provide?
The Nakshatra system is very old it is mentioned in the rigveda which can be said undisputedly said to be older than 5000 years. So it is not far-fetched to presume that the Nakshatra system was known during the Mahabharata period.
@@ecneicsPhD4554 in the interest of knowing the truth about antequity of Mahabharata events,, I would urge you to have a conversation face to face with Nilesh Oak. May be on your channel itself.
I think u can get answers to your questions in a video of - is surya sidhanta 12,000year old like TEDx video maybe i forgotten go check it out on yt bro👍 by Mr Nilesh oak
They will never understand it becsuse why would they want to? All the wrong that has been done by some of your folks "elite liberals" to hide the real truth behind the true world history so you can walk around preaching rest if the world with your assumptions and lie.
Watch nilesh oak sir
Continuing with my earlier comments on your conclusions there is a very fresh presentation by Dr.Raj Vedam even disputing the PIE.
This presentation is on a topic titled Ancient India and the vedas.This is presented as recently as 11th Mar. 2022[Dr.Raj Vedam RTF lecture]
@Rupendra Sharma about what?
my first reply is very clear.AIT/AMT is a fraud pereptrated by the british through max muller is very clear
@Rupendra Sharma The proof is in the life works of so many people,one of them being Dr.Raj Vedam who has done phenomenal amount of work using so many of the modern dating methodologies.You can go through all of them or even one of them.
Still you are convinced with Dr.Miano as of now i have not done any specific work.Once i do that i can hammer you with my personal work.
Till that time Dr.Raj Vedam's works are one of the proofs.
Thousands are available.
5 years ago Mr.Rajiv alhotra has talked in the presence of British parliamentarians asking them to officially say that this theory is a blatant lie perpetrsted by them for obvious reasons of proving Christianity is the ultimate.
There are more and more.
@rupendrasharma6291 the river Saraswati is the proof.
@Rupendra Sharma bro its obvious if you see vedas our culture knows yoga the way of body and mind (its very deep even todays doctor and scientist can understand that compeletly), we can calculate in more than light years in those time th-cam.com/video/zH6TldQHzX4/w-d-xo.html complete age of whole universe, we had ayurveda acient medicine which is more than 3000 years, surgery...etc.
@@keshavchauhan6616These priests (the Druids), Brahmins of India spread themselves widely through the northern regions of Asia even to Siberia itself, and gradually mingling with the great body of Celtic tribes (Kalatoya people to the south of Kashmir) pursued their journey to the extremity of Europe and finally established the Druid i.e. the Brahmin system of superstition in ancient Britain. This I contend was the first Oriental colony settled in these (British) islands”. (pp 246, Part 1, Vol. VI, 'Antiquities of India’).
~
"The Druids of the ancient Celtic world have a startling kinship with the brahmins of the Hindu religion and were, indeed, a parallel development from their common Indo-European cultural root which began to branch out probably five thousand years ago. It has been only in recent decades that Celtic scholars have begun to reveal the full extent of the parallels and cognates between ancient Celtic society and Vedic culture The very name Druid is composed of two Celtic word roots which have parallels in Sanskrit. Indeed, the root vid for knowledge, which also emerges in the Sanskrit word Veda, demonstrates the similarity. The Celtic root dru which means "immersion" also appears in Sanskrit. So a Druid was one immersed in knowledge." Peter Beresford Ellis - Historian and novelist.
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The Greeks were always speaking of India as the sacred territory of Dionysus and historians working under Alexander the Greek clearly mentions chronicles of the Puranas as sources of the myth of Dionysus." Alain Danielou - 1907-1994.
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“Is it not probable that the Brahmins were the first legislators of the earth, the first philosophers, the first theologians ? The Greeks, before the time of Pythagoras, travelled into India for instruction.”
~ Voltaire.
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Nearly all the philosophical and mathematical doctrines attributed to Pythagoras are derived from India. ~ Ludwig von Shroeder
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It is true that even across the Himalayan barrier India has sent to the West, such gifts as grammar and logic, philosophy, fables, hypnotism and chess, and above all numerals and the decimal system.” Will Durant - American Historian.
~
The history of how Indian fairy tales and fables migrated from one country to another to nearly all the people of Europe and Asia and even to African tribes from their original home in India borders on the marvellous. It is not a case of single stories finding their way by way of mouth ..... from India to other countries but of whole Indian books becoming through the medium of translations the common property of the world .... many fairy tales current among the most various people can be traced to their original home in India - A.A.Macdonell".
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The oldest Greek writers, observes Sir William Jones, allow that their mythologies were not their own invention (As. Res. III. 467) ; and it is now certain that the early divinities and legends of Greece were the same that were possessed by their brethren in India. If Hegel calls the discovery of the common origin of Greek and Sanskrit the discovery of a new world, the same may be said with regard to the common origin of Greek and Sanskrit mythology “ The legends of the Old Testament - Thomas Lumisden Strange.
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Mark Twain, American author: "India is, the cradle of the human race, the birthplace of human speech, the mother of history, the grandmother of legend, and the great grand mother of tradition. our most valuable and most instructive materials in the history of man are treasured up in India only."
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Will Durant, American historian: "India was the motherland of our race, and Sanskrit the mother of Europe's languages: she was the mother of our philosophy; mother, through the Arabs, of much of our mathematics; mother, through the Buddha, of the ideals embodied in Christianity; mother, through the village community, of self-government and democracy. Mother India is in many ways the mother of us all".
~
In the Vedic language we have the foundation, not only of the glowing legends of Hellas (Greece), but of the dark and sombre mythology of the Scandinavian and the Teuton" (Cox, Mythology of the Aryan Nations, I., 52, 53).
~
Takshashila University
Taxila as it is called today, Takshashila University established around 2700 years ago was home to over 10500 students where the students from all across the world used to come to attain specialization in over 64 different fields of study like vedas, grammar, philosophy, ayurveda, agriculture, surgery, politics, archery, warfare, astronomy, commerce, futurology, music, dance, etc. Famous graduates of this university include the ones like Chanakya, Panini, Charaka, Vishnu Sharma, Jivaka, etc. This is the world’s oldest university.
~
India - the land of Vedas, the remarkable works contain not only religious ideas for a perfect life, but also facts which science has proved true. Electricity, radium, electronics, airship, all were known to the seers who founded the Vedas.
~ Wheeler Wilcox.
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Gravitation was known to the Indians before the birth of Newton. The system of blood circulation was discovered by them centuries before Harvey was heard of.
~ P. Johnstone
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"This is an attempt to show that the Druids were the priests of Oriental colonies who emigrated from India and were the introducers of the first or Cadmean system of letters and the builders of Stonehenge, of Carnac, and of other Cyclopean works in Asia and Europe”. Godfrey Higgins "The Celtic Druids”
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Grant Duff 1789 - 1858:
"Many of the advances in the sciences that we consider today to have been made in Europe, were in fact made in India centuries ago."
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“The affinity between the Greek language and the old Parsee and Sanskrit is certain and essential. The use of cognate idioms prove that the nations who used them to have descended from the same stock. That the religion of the Greeks emanated from an Eastern shore no-one will deny. We must therefore suppose the religion, as well as the language of Greece to have been derived, in great part, largely from the east”. Dr Prichard - Physical History Of Man.
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“I take issue with the old school of thought that the cultural and civic life we Westerners enjoy originated in the works of Greek and Roman philosophers. Instead the mind and soul that inspired our words sprang from neither Greece nor Rome, but from an Indo/euro homeland located much further north. In truth according to my studies the history of we Westerners does not begin with the Greeks, we were invented along with the Greeks by Vedic poet seers through their mother tongue, Sanskrit, which evolved into Greek and Latin, which are simple phonetic variants of it.“ Franco Rendich - Indo/European etymology
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Each of the fifty letters in the Sanskrit alphabet corresponds to one of the fifty petals on chakras one through six, from the base of the spine to the brow. The sacred Vedic texts known as the Upanishads describe the ability of advanced spiritual adepts to actually ‘see’ the letters on the petals of the chakras. When a Sanskrit mantra is uttered, the petals corresponding to the letters in the words of the mantra vibrate in spiritual resonance” Author - Thomas Ashley Farrand
I have always wondered about the name "Minoan." I understand we don't really know what they called themselves, I understand how Evans called them Minoans and the name stuck; however, I don't understand how historians and archaeologists never seriously challenged this name at the time...or since really...when even in Evan's time we might have had potential place names for the island from other cultures who had some contact with them. For example Egyptians called the island Keftiu and the Akkadians called the island Kaptara. Since both languages have a similar word for the place name, wouldn't the "K + vowel + F/P + T" name construction seem like a good place to start searching for what they may have called themselves? I been looking for current projects or specialists for this topic and I just can't seem to find any serious work being down to locate what they called themselves. Do you know, or could you recommend, any works, names, or projects?
I would have to look it up, but your construction seems reasonable.
Without physical written evidence from the culture itself about how they named themselves then all we can do is assume. Take for example the ancient "Thiuda" who was named "German" by the Romans and all cultures that speak English today still call them German today. They were named "Alleman" by the Kelts and are still today in French and Spanish. The Fins named them "Saksa" and still do today. Other Scandinavians named them "Tysk" as of today. The Italians name them "Tedesco" today and the Polish and Russian (other Slavic) named them "Niemiecki". The Dutch or people from the Netherlands and Flemish-speaking from Belgium name them "Duits" which comes closest to what they call themselves today and that is "Deutsch".
That is 7 different names for the very same culture all from neighbouring countries. :) Which one would you pick if there was 0 archaeological evidence to find in Germany how they named themselves? :)
@@DunkelblauerMB Not exactly....in your example you are speaking about when we have situations with multiple native words being used by different cultures and languages in order to describe the same thing. In that situation, I understand and agree with the point you are making there.
However, this is a different situation. What I am talking about in this theory is that we have multiple examples of different cultures and languages with limited language influences on each other....all using very similar non-native words to describe the same thing.
If they made up their own words and they were drastically different I would agree with you. But what we have are them similar words, which have no other occurrence or connection to their language, except for referencing the people we know as the Minoans.
The question then becomes...why? Why are these different languages and cultures all using similar non-native words to describe the same thing? Why are they similar? How could they all have adopted these similar words when referencing a specific region and group of people?
While I doubt there is ever going to be the proverbial 'smoking gun' that says, "We encountered a group of people (Minoans) who call themselves......," I challenge that we do not have to. There is a measure of universal human nature and experience that we can use to create an educated guess here.
What if the reason they are all learning, adopting, and using similar words to describe a specific group and region....is simply that's what those people are calling or using themselves? We do this in the modern world, why would the ancient world be any different?
@@unarealtaragionevole I understand absolutely what you mean. 'Thiuda' means something like 'People' or 'Folk' and this is how they named themself when tribes were working together. All though introducing themself separately to their neighbours they used their tribal names. The Fins were in constant quarrelling with the Thiuda tribe with the given name 'Saksa' The French the Thiuda tribe with the given name 'Allemani'
And as of today, it is this tribal name that got stuck for millennia and is still used to name the entire modern nation.
I understand the educated guess from a geographical viewpoint, with Tysk from the north, Duits from the west and, Tedesco from the south. One can come to the conclusion they likely would have called themself something similar to this.
'Niemiecki' is a word from the Slavic language that could be translated as 'Incomprehensible' That one is off the book, no people would name themselves like this.
Now Crete is a lot smaller than Ancient Tribal Germania, but still large enough to house tribal settlements with their own given name. It likely was the seafaring tribes of Crete having contact with the outside world and also introducing themself with their tribal name.
I guess you would need quite some historical evidence that points to a similar name to get to a properly educated guess.
Maybe they called themselves "Aigaîos"?
@@DunkelblauerMB Well that's the thing...we actually do have historical evidence from multiple reliable sources. We have several papyri and tablets from both the Egyptians and the Akkadians who coexisted and had regular contact with the Minoans for several hundred years. And they always use the same words to describe these people. They knew who they were and where they were from.
That's why I originally asked if there is any serious research that is trying to work the problem backwards? While we are waiting for Linear A to be deciphered, we know the languages of the cultures around them and who had contact and business with them....but I can't find any type of research that approaches the problem from this direction.
Also we cannot confuse the Minoans with other cultures. For example, a lot of people confuse the Minoans for the Mycenaeans, and while it's true their cultures overlapped at the end, and Mycenaean culture adopted many Minoan aspects; they were not the same cultures. Most evidence to date indicates that the Minoans had a pretty centralized government, and acted as a single unit with their global economics and geopolitics. It's not like in later Mycenae, the Dark Ages, or the birth of early Greece were there are smaller city-states or kingdoms acting independently. Now I want to put a very big asterisk here, cause I know there are a few historians who believe they did have an early form of city-state with king controlled palaces. But there is equally if not more evidence that indicates these palaces were just palaces of the authority and they had a centralized governmental system. This is one of those very controversial debates for some people. The truth is we don't know, and unless we translate Linear A and the Minoans tell us themselves, we are forced to speculate and debate.
And while all things are possible...I just know. I mean, when I try to put myself in the shoes of the Egyptians and Akkadians, I wonder if the risk would be worth it. Why would Egypt and Akkad risk problems with the Minoans by doing business with a small independent tribe and not one of the most powerful groups in the region. And more to the point, why would the Minoans who dominated all of the island this tribe would have come from, not to mention dominated the majority of the sea and the trade routes at this time...allow any small kingdom to exist and profit like that? Is it possible? Yes. Is it probable? Eh.........LOL
Thank you, Professor, for a candid review of Dr. Oak's book. I haven't read this book but have gone through similar information available on his blog. Your logic is flawless.
In this context I have a few questions.
1. What is your definition of Ancient History? The time period. And the supporting evidence about it.
2. Do you use the same yardstick while assessing veracity of other books like the Bible or the Quran?
3. What is your source of the stated information about the current date of Mahabharata war? How reliable the source and the date are?
point wise questions to point wise answers, his assumptions
1. ancient has a simple definition, anything which occured before the fall of western rome.
2. why does it matter?
there, answered two of your questions for ya.
@@craniumtea5137 Thank you very much for your reply. The key expression in this reply is 'of western rome'.
I am waiting for the channel owner to confirm.
@@craniumtea5137 As for (2), obviously it matters if you know anything about Indology/Sanskrit Studies and how its dating was done on the basis of biblical timeline and related assumptions about a Young Earth theory that is Christian in nature. Max Muller and others were more honest about their interpolation of Indian history than current scholars who hide behind their assumed scholarship because they have a doctorate in history or linguistics but who don't even know how to pronounce Sanskrit much less anything else about Sanskrit...meaning, they foist a western worldview onto Indian history and form fit their assumptions onto India.
I recommend you to read Shrikant talageri's books and also read his blogs or watch TH-cam videos with him. I think his argument is pretty solid and if you find a problem with it, he'd be the first to be delighted. He's that kind of person after all
But unfortunately this "eminent historian" David is so adamant to accept alternative ideas
@@paganwarriors5340 extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence my guy
@@froggystyle642 so to accept extraordinary claims with evidence required extraordinary people (minds)😂😂
@@aamod7696 Only extraordinary people can believe this, in a way, yes.
@paganwarriors5340 I presented to him evidence of Hindus ruling Egypt with ancient Greek references & he didn't want to accept it but said we have to look in today's light! 😂
Dr David Miano, you are a hard core science based historian who keeps his opinion on evidence and not on mere assumptions else these are just myths. I appreciate your courageous stand and the way maintain your point at the same time still ready to accept and rectify if given proper proofs. It's tough to digest this for the higher caste Indians who become higher caste by virtue of their birth. Casteism is worse than racism which these people follow in their homeland for more than a thousand years. You are taking away their pride which they boast as the world's first culture of learned and cultured people (yet still practice casteism when they get a chance). I liked the way you replied the comments as best as you could. I hope you may help our rational minded oppressed people in their journey to find their truth. Thanks and all the best to your work. Do keep doing what you find is proper.🙏
Thank you!
If you believe that Vashishth was just a sage then can you explain us whether Vashishth and Arundhati were characters of Mahabharata or not?Why you are believing that Nakshatra system were not developed at the time he is referring to? Are you just taking it for granted that Nakshatra in Indian astronomy were not developed till that time? You said that you found hard to match and understand the reference he gave you for claims he made. If you were not able to understand and match the observations then how you were able to conclude that whatever he claimed was totally wrong?
Because lack of clarity is also taken in lieu of evidence
I put in the work to find the references. Just because it was made more difficult, that didn't stop me from doing it.
On the Nakshatra system, historians base their conclusions on evidence. There is no evidence for a fully-developed Nakshatra system at that time. This doesn't mean it didn't exist. It just means Mr. Oak made that assumption without evidence.
@@WorldofAntiquity It would jaVe been better if you would have shared the references shared by him which you felt were wrong based on the facts you know. It will help people in understanding your perspective better. You said that no where it's mentioned that Nakshatra system didn't exist at that time doesn't mean it was not there. I agree with your point - "Mr. Oak assumed that the discussion was about Nakshatra" is true and nothing else should be supported by proper reasoning. But in that case you should have also explained why you factually believe that Arundhati and Vashistha event is not an astronomical event. Because if you will try to know about Vashistha then he as a person predates Mahabharata time. So without proper factual explanation many people will feel that you are also giving your perspective by making an assumption. I believe that you really are seeker of true history and you will surely provide facts and details to prove your point. Thanks
@@HaritDoshi *It would jaVe been better if you would have shared the references shared by him which you felt were wrong based on the facts you know.*
I didn't say his references were wrong.
*"Mr. Oak assumed that the discussion was about Nakshatra" is true and nothing else should be supported by proper reasoning. But in that case you should have also explained why you factually believe that Arundhati and Vashistha event is not an astronomical event.*
I brought up Arundhati and Vashishtha as an example of Mr. Oak using similes as astronomical events. I did not bring it up to show there was no Nakshatra system.
*Because if you will try to know about Vashistha then he as a person predates Mahabharata time. So without proper factual explanation many people will feel that you are also giving your perspective by making an assumption.*
I don't understand what point you are trying to make. I did not comment on the historicity of Vashishtha. I said only that he appeared as a character in the Mahabharata. That is common knowledge.
@@WorldofAntiquity If you say that references were not wrong then how you can prove that what he said was wrong. I border prove the claims made by Mr. Oak is wrong you should prove that his references are wrong or wrongly interpreted.
Nakshatra system of time was there even in Ramayana
He ( Miano) does not know Ramayana.
Did that really happen?
@@ancientminds199 yup it really happened hundreds of archaeological excavations and findings have proved Ramayana and Mahabharata happened
@@ancientminds199yes, even my birth is recorded in nakshtra also known as kundali + many things.
@@ancientminds199most Indians's birth is recorded in nakshtra they are born &, have kundali made out of it
I was hoping for better argument against the book.
I think he's aware of these basic things and yet provides available evidence.
It's yet a reasonable book. Of course more research is required, the assumptions should be validated independently. That will hopefully(or not) over a period of time, just like any new field.
Thanks for the review.
But the assumptions he mentioned cannot really be verified and hence they are assumptions. If they could be verified, why would they be assumptions in the first place? What is wrong with assumptions that the Mahabharata happened, or that the Astronomers were correct in their validation, if you don't assume these, then how would you proceed to find the timeline? What this guy is saying is that just don't do it.
Simple
Because its And assumption
I would like to know morw supporting atchaeological evidences about Mahabharata war either
You seem very knowledgeable on this matter would you explain the gotra system found in Hinduism and how far it dates back to. I am a suryavanshi ksatriya belonging to the kasyapa gotra, lord Ram of the famous Iksawaku dynasty belonged to the same gotra.
You should set up a debate with Mr. Oak and see if you can "prove" to him in real time why he's wrong and you are right. These types of video reviews have limited value because the author does not have a chance to respond. Will you accept a challenge to debate? Side note: you say Oak claims 5651 BCE as the year of the MB War. No, he claims 5561 BCE. I won't hold it against you, however, and will just attribute it to lack of attention to detail.
Mr. Oak has already agreed to respond in a video. And I will be happy to reply.
Usual suspect How old is the universe? No archaeological proof and no Miami. Two completely worlds talking on different issues
@@WorldofAntiquity As we wait for Mr. Oak to respond , as someone who has been following Oak's works, here are my very quick thoughts on your video:
1. On the "ifs" /assumptions: I think we should be knowing that every single scientific theory has assumptions ; How many of us question the preposterous assumption of " objective materiality'' that forms the basis of each scientific paper? Mr. Oak's assumptions are much more rational!
2. The basis of your disagreement appears to stem from a massive underestimation of the ancient civilizations and a strong confirmation bias to the timelines suggested by the Eurocentric - Christian "missionary" Historians of yore; the ones who have tried hard (and lost) to squeeze in old civilizations to post the Biblical creation date of 4000 BCE! Come on, we now know Homo sapiens started settling and building civilizations north of Africa around 75000 BCE! We even have proof of man-made fire and tools from around 15000 BCE in the Indian subcontinent itself! We know the Hindus have been observing the sky from at least 10000 BCE (Referring works on Surya Sidhanta by Raj Vedam , Nilesh Oak etc.) .
3. On why the Ancient Greeks and Hindus wrote stories on astronomical events, please refer Raj Vedam's TEDx talk on Ancient Star gazers.
@@SJ-zo3lz *On the "ifs" /assumptions: I think we should be knowing that every single scientific theory has assumptions;*
Not like that. No scientific theory based on unfounded assumptions can hold up.
*How many of us question the preposterous assumption of "objective materiality'' that forms the basis of each scientific paper?*
I don't know what you mean by "objective materiality." When I Google it, nothing comes up.
*The basis of your disagreement appears to stem from a massive underestimation of the ancient civilizations and a strong confirmation bias to the timelines suggested by the Eurocentric - Christian "missionary" Historians of yore; the ones who have tried hard (and lost) to squeeze in old civilizations to post the Biblical creation date of 4000 BCE!*
The basis of my negative assessment of the book stems from Mr. Oak's failure to provide evidence for the assumptions underlying his thesis. I don't follow any timelines created by "Eurocentric - Christian 'missionary' Historians of yore." History is based on the research and interchange of a global community of experts in various fields. They consist of scholars from various ethnicities and cultural backgrounds, who have agreed on universal and consistent methods of study that everyone can agree with.
*Come on, we now know Homo sapiens started settling and building civilizations north of Africa around 75000 BCE! We even have proof of man-made fire and tools from around 15000 BCE in the Indian subcontinent itself!*
I don't know where you are getting your information from, but the world's oldest known settlements are from the Natufian culture, and they don't go back to 75000 BCE. Anyway, what does that have to do with the book?
*We know the Hindus have been observing the sky from at least 10000 BCE*
People have been observing the sky since the beginning. What does that have to do with the book? The assumption that Mr. Oak makes is that a SPECIFIC astronomical system was used in the Mahabharata. He doesn't back up that claim with independent evidence.
*On why the Ancient Greeks and Hindus wrote stories on astronomical events, please refer Raj Vedam's TEDx talk on Ancient Star gazers*
Raj Vedam is not an expert on ancient Indian astronomy. I suggest you read someone like B. V. Subbarayappa.
@@WorldofAntiquity This is a bit of a tangent but I think it’s relevant, you say science doesn’t back assumptions that can’t be proven the Big Bang can’t be proven though you can’t replicate that in a lab we don’t even fully understand our own Earth and that’s a problem with science it claims objectivity but people “believe” in science the same way they do religion.
5:12 sorry, I didn't understood what you mean (Or your statement is saying MB might have happened way before and 5K BCE is referring to when it was written?)
What he means to say by telling even after 18 years gap between the war and writing he knows the star and cosmology of every event exactly because when the event occurred for example birth, marriage, or death the star and the planet alignment were noted at that time cause astrology played a huge role in ancient India
and what he means by people had greater power and knowledge is because God Krishna appears in this battle and many powerful saints battled throughout , so I guess he's referring to that
He is simply pointing out evidence s from the epic Mahabharata that are celestial and when using modern software what that comes to for dating the events. Anybody who really read and understood would not point out such things. Seeking knowledge and search for truth should not be agenda driven🙏 it’s human history.
There's written text transferred throughout ages. It was not written to prove anything to anyone about its occurrence neither Mahabharata tries to prove its genuinity.
Then go with what the text has to teach.
Also there is no scientific evidence that Moses, Jesus or Mohammed existed, because their stories were written much later for religious politics?
"Jyotishya" =/= "Astrology"
"Jyotisha" = "Time Keeping" (Deals with astronomy)
This is a huge misconception that puts all the ancient work under "Superstition". The word is coined from "Jyoti", which means "a fire lamp". The night sky looks like thousands of fire lamps. Astronomy is useful for Timekeeping (Calander) like the "Panchanga", the Hindu Calander used in households that uses a Luni-Solar Calander, information derived from "Vedanga Jotishya"
@@ShekaranJagadeesan I would like to clarify as follows. Jyotisha Shastra is Astronomy, time keeping and stating of the Muhurata (proper time) for rituals. It is one of the six Vedanga.
Hora Shastra is Astrology.
Indians still do that
Position of stars is recorded the day baby is born
This comment section is pretty bad. Although, sure props to the people who are open to the different ideas in this video.
I’ve always found arguing history with strong nationalists a losing game anyways, and there are a lot of Hindu nationalists out there.
You are not presenting any proof that refute the assumptions of Oak. His calculations are based on the astronomical charts presented in the book Mahabharata. How can you refute those charts?
He is the one with the theory, not me. So he is the one that needs to present the proofs.
@@WorldofAntiquity You have no evidence to disprove the calculations of Oak and he was not alone. Other astronomers also examined this issue. it is not a theory. You do not know Sanskrit or astronomy. You are only talking and talking. In this way you can not refute the arguments of Oak.
@@dipakbose2677 You didn't read what I wrote.
@@WorldofAntiquity In which book of yours I can find out what you wrote about refutation of Oak’s calculation?
@@WorldofAntiquity typical abrahamic mind
Now I understand how did Maxmuller look at ancient Indian knowledge. Carry on!
Hi David! This has me curious, in common belief, the 15th century poet Tulsidas makes a note of the distance deity Hanuman travels to get to the sun. This number is is fairly close to the AU, before the value was calculated and proven by an Italian mathematician. Is this also a case of putting meaning to things or could it have been something else?
I’d have to see the wording of the text.
@@WorldofAntiquity There is lot of such texts and I have seen few evidences myself. We cannot falsify or call vague of such humongous knowledge written for centuries on body and soul, astronomical data, geological references, lunar calenders. There may be gaps it's hard to establish such ancient histories. I have listened to his talks.
@@Sush1111 i can still prove you wrong
Verma watch science journey for the proof
@gamer could you link it?
"retrojecting"....good word. Here's another word for you, "imagineering"
Here's another one.. Confabulating
@@motopanza I'm anaspeptic, frasmotic, even compunctuous to have caused you such pericombobulation.
I bet you this glass of wine you don't get the reference. :)
@@davidmurphy563 You're a cunning linguist with pencils stuck up your nostrils!
Joker playing around with words without a clue in astronomy. How old is the universe?? Ask Miano
I don’t know what you mean, these are all perfectly cromulent words
Hello Sir.
I want you to do a review of book by Vedveer Arya on the chronological of Indian History. As I'm sure you know that biblical timeline is limited in nature that is from 4000-6000 years.
His three books are -
1. Chronology of India : From Manu to Mahabharat
2. Chronology of India : From Mahabharat to Medieval Volume I
3. Chronology of India : From Mahabharat to Medieval Volume II
DO NOT ask him to review Hindu content. He is anti-Hindu. He is not the right person to do so. He will simply belittle it.
@@G-Man01niqa called all the things assumptions I have no prblm with him but History is basically Assumptions. Also Rig and Yajur Veda extensively mentions Jyotisha Shastra which deals with nakshatras so yeah and Mahabharata clearly happened post Composition of Rig Veda. Moreover Jyotish Shastra was one of the 6 prerequisites/vedangas to understand and learn the vedas
@@parameshwar3345 dumbooo jyotish shastra came from Greeks not from yajurveda or atharva veda. Read IAS history classes. Dumbooooo😂😂😂😂 na aand ka pata na gaamd ka, gyan khodega pure bramhand ka 😂😂😂
@@G-Man01"Everyone who doesn't agree with all aspects of our beliefs is anti-Hindu."
@@MrPeaceGuy54 nope just the guy that belittles it, this guy clearly set out to insult the author and the book and in doing so he appears highly biased. I am taking what this guy said with a grain of salt not because he's arguements are invalid but because he has a clear agenda.
Sir, between astronomical evidences and on ground archeological evidences, what would you weigh more on for dating ancient events? Numerous times the archeological evidences used for dating ex. Carbon dating is based on a very minute little sample. Or DNA. How reliable would it be? Do you believe that Mahabharata references to various planets like Saturn, Mars, etc. are actually astronomical evidences?
Astronomical evidences of what?
@@WorldofAntiquityhistoric references as artifact that these astonomical alignments / events actually happened.pointing to a period in history. Irrespective of what happened on the ground
@@mandarbhome Your English is hard to follow. I am not seeing the answer to my question. Can you please rephrase your question to me in clear words that I can understand?
@@WorldofAntiquity my apologies if I was not clear, let me try again...can astronomical references (in any historical documentation) be considered as an evidence of a period in history at all. How much importance would you give to such references vis-a-vis identifying a period based on hard archeological artifacts found on the ground with all the modern methods of dating.
@@mandarbhome Yes, that can if (1) they are truly astronomical references, (2) the references are clear and not open to interpretation, (3) no mistakes were made in the recording of the info or its copying over the centuries, (4) sufficient information is provided to narrow down a date, (5) the observations are contemporary with the events described, and (6) the work is non-fiction. Once all these criteria are satisfied, then dating by such references would have equal or greater weight to archaeological evidence.
I think you should check on "Astronomical Dating of the Mahabharata War by E. Vedavyas" it was written by a senior Retired IAS official as his PhD thesis. I had a copy in 90s now I don't have it, I think you can check on that...
People who are interested in knowing when did "the war" took place are missing the bigger picture that "this war" has been happening in the life of every individual since the beginning of human civilization.
Nilesh Oak is doing a fantastic work by actually creating a interest of current generation in these topics. His videos and his theoretical explanations with references are just mind blowing.
As per you, there might be glitches as we are humans are tend to learn and improve our subjects.
But still his theory is far better than what we read and learn from other religious books.
I have nothing against historical fiction, as long as it is marketed as such.
@@WorldofAntiquity I think, it is not fiction.
It is real history.
His study with the reference documents is very good and knowledge that Nilesh Oak is concluding is something that was lost or hidden.
@@WorldofAntiquity In that case you are talking about Bible.
@@jasonenglish8259 Bruh, I don't think you went through the video or understood the speaker if you did. David here just debunked all of the reasoning within the book. Whether Nilesh's work is creating interest in the Mahabharata is irrelevant as the subject here is that of historical accuracy or Truth. Comparing one false theory to another doesn't change the fact that it is still false. Only truth matters and that is what David here was going on.
@@151taj I am understanding both.. nilesh and as well as david. Hence concluded my personal opinion.
Its good to educate people on how to think about things. It is evident that in opening up to learning, you become vulnerable to misinformation. So be careful on how you think before thinking about stuff.
I would like to hear your opinion about the Serbian calendar, which now counts 7533 years
Sure, and the Sumerian king lists go back 240,000 years.
Interesting video. What do you think about the age of the book "Mahabharta " as per most accepted modern historians / archeologists (if applicable)?. From childhood I have been fining multiple dates like 5000 years old, 7000 😅, I don't know what's the actual age it would be great if you can answer that.
th-cam.com/video/F-nNTGK0wFw/w-d-xo.html
He already answered it in the video : 2:31
1500-1200 BCE
5561 BCE is a massive stretch, yes?
Answer is here: Please watch the whole series; Mahabarath happened in TamilNadu: th-cam.com/play/PLZsrZkjp4835xjnMtsndM7MY34eoRcHyX.html
@@mrgyani definitely not 1500BC lol
It predates atleast 1000 years to that number
Oak verified is theory on the basis of Mahabharat astronomical data and planetarium software. But the same was done more than 1500 years by Aryabhat as mentioned in his book Aryabhatiy. that's true, writing system may not be evolved at that time or is unavailable but there was oral tradition in India, cryptic and prose form of Mahabharat,it's quite possible. Coherancy from multiple sources is not in disagreement too
So this reviewer who thinks of himself as expert is rejecting most important thing here. Existence of planetary positions mentioned in the Mahabharata actually existed in 5561. Let’s assume that the Mahabharata war was a fiction and written later like he thinks. But how come a book written in different era have 200+ astronomical combinations which could exists only in year 5561? Doesn’t matter Mahabharata actually happened or not, doesn’t matter whether the people at that time had knowledge of advanced history or not.
But about observations of 200+ astronomical observations? And the truth that those could occur only during the mentioned period? No evidence of archeological doesn’t mean that something didn’t happen. For example we fail to find any archaeological proof that a human lived in any particular part doesn’t mean that no human lived there.
It is really funny that this “exfart” is rejecting existence of 200+ astronomical observations even though back testing proves that these observations could happen only in 5600 BC to 5500 BC.
When he says the The book was written later he doesn't mean that the original manuscript was written in the that time.
The version of mahabharata we have at the moment are from the gupta period.
We do not have the original copies of the text.
As for the astrological signs
We know for a fact that ancient Indians had knowledge of astronomy and the author of the later version could have simply calculated the position of star signs 5500 bce.
@@Red_Neck If somebody did so much effort, why he did not mention exact dates also while writing
@@vikasjain1548
Because it's not easy to determine the exact dates.
Even with newer methods such as carbon dating we have to deal with increasing uncertainty( margin for error)the farther back in the past we look
Specifically for astronomical observations, they can stay visible for an entire season.
So it's not possible to determine the exact dates with the methods available to them.
@@Red_Neck I think, many astronomical observations mentioned in Mahabharata were not seasonal but can not last more than a day or few hours, like solar eclipse in region of kurukshetra, particular sun rise degree of utarayana or change of retrograde motion of star. Why writer did not mention dates if he is trying to forge the incident in later written text. Do you think that this so called exceptional mathematical Marvel forgery, which would have taken years of manual calculations, was done with expectations that we have to wait 1000's of year till the invention of digital computers to understand and appreciate this forgery.
@@vikasjain1548
No one's saying anyone forged any anything or lied on purpose.
It has been understood that the epic of mahabharata was passed down orally for many generations. In this case alot of information may have gotten distorted overtime.
It was not an purposeful act of spreading misinformation or forgery. The scribes wanted to add additional information and they had to work with the information they had.
If you were told a set of events happened 10000 years ago ( even if it did not in actuality) and you had the the means to calculate the astronomical phenomena of that time you would the information in the context provided you wouldn't question the authenticity of what is believed to be a commonly known fact.
Shows the frustration of the man criticising Nilesh Oak. No point by point critisism. Only peripheral denial of facts shown by Oak.
The critique is sound and review left me with no doubt to whether to buy this book, but ane thing is missing and it will haunt me to no end: how did the author come up with such a date, both ancient and precise? Could you elaborat on that? Or at least take such things into account in further reviews?
have a watch - th-cam.com/video/BxPBsTf-x_c/w-d-xo.html
Don't be swayed by this idiot. Read the effing book and make your own opinion.
You know, Nilesh Oak has a YT channel. And a playlist on the ancient Hindu calendar. That's free. And he does have much longer talks on the epics online. (Haven't seen them, don't ask.)
@@that_dam_baka : that is not the point. I can get what I need to know in other ways. I can read, listen or watch on the topic. Others probably could find the information too.
The point is: it js presented as a valid criticism and not elaborated enough. In further reviews there could be similar cases and it would be great if such topics will be closer examined then.
It would be nice if dr Miano make a material on this, as I like his analysis, but the general tendency is more important than a singular case.
The assumptions that this man questions seems to be based on presumptions.
What do you mean ?
@@sid_eats_and_moves bakwas kr raha h, jawab nhi h iske pas
It is not a presumption to say that someone does not have adaquate evidence. That is simply a fact.
Are you speaking about the TH-camr or the person who wrote the book?
Have you read the original books of Mahabharata and Ramayana written in Sankrit? What is your level of sanskrit knowledge?
Great Indian scientist JC Bose was a physicist. Father of wireless telecommunications as well as father of botany also. He was the first person to state that plants have life based on all the scientific criteria exhibited by living organisms. This was severely criticised and denied by Western scientists. So he invented crescograph to prove the fact. Only then his work was recognised. So he is a physicist, a biologist and a botanist too. But it feels so strange to know that in all indian ancient texts plants are always considered living yet the western world came to know and recognise the fact so so late, that too from a man of physics !!! The entire field of botany had no existence !!!Had he not been a man of physics he would not have been able to make the crescograph to prove that fact.
*Have you read the original books of Mahabharata and Ramayana written in Sankrit? What is your level of sanskrit knowledge?*
Sanskrit is not one of the ancient languages I can read. Why do you ask?
*Great Indian scientist JC Bose was a physicist...*
India has had many great scientists. I don't know what bearing that has on how good Nilesh Oak's book is.
@@WorldofAntiquity this means you haven't read the original Sanskrit texts, so don't have any ideas about the details of astrological astronomical and geographical data described in the shlokas based on which Mr Oak draws the timelines.....
@@SnlkSk Yes, but that has no bearing on my criticisms whatsoever. Anyway, I know people who know Sanskrit quite well, who disagree with Mr. Oak.
@@WorldofAntiquity i know people who fought Mahabharata 😊
In India there is a temple of 800 years old in which they found a carved person looking through telescope.but the actual invention of telescope was happened in 16th century which is later the building of the temple.
That depends if it was a telescope or not. It could have been an isolation cone for studying an area of sky over a fixed period of time. That would look like a telescope but wouldn't have the lenses.
Now you are saying it's a Telescope but did people say it was Telescope (or something similar to it) before the discovery of the telescope.
Now you can point at anything and it looks like this/that etc and make all kinds superstitious assumptions.
@@kasimshaikh3750 really ? In our temple we have Navagraha means 9 planets. From thousand year old temples to new temple you can see this. Do you know what? Even our scripts which is thousand of years old says about it and never stop with it and also even says what is colour of those planet. Mars as red, ( we call it as sevai mean red) Saturn as black ( Sani), etc...( Even today the God idols of Mars, Saturn etc have those respective colours in it). I just gave only one example. Another thing I will give too Ram's bridge which is dated nearly 7000 to 8000 year. This data is not only given by Indian. This is given by many foreigner geological survey and others too. It even perfectly fit with our scripts saying Ramayan ( where ram built bridge to srilanka ) is dated as same 8000 year. And Mahabharata which explained here is dated 5000 year before and 3000 year after Ramayana. Even Today you can see these stories all over world from Thailand, Indonesia, Japan, china to even Greek or middle East. Everything tells about these stories. Now say Do you think human had been civilized only before 4000 to 5000 years??😂. For information i just given very little example. There is many things to prove India had civilization way before.
@@santhoshv3028 but saturn is not black, its rings are actually pretty bright. and do the god of saturn has rings around him? if not then , well, its probabaly means something else, that we humans, in order to make some sense out of it, used the word "god" in it
@@shantanu556 dumbo you will never understand what i tried to explain 😂.
I enjoy how you critique others’ work in the same way a professor marks a university paper; you want evidence, a bibliography, and sources!
There is a glaring mistake upfront in the above 'review'.
The year proposed by Mr. Oak is 5561 BCE and not 5651 BCE, as mentioned repeatedly.
Yes, I am aware. See the thumbnail. It doesn't really make a difference overall.
Pradeep. How is that a material detail when there is not enough evidence to say this happened 7,000 years ago or anything near that?
@@jamisojo
If one does not see the tonnes of Astronomical Evidence, internal to Mahabharata, or chooses to ignore it -so as to continue to be dogmatic - no evidence (primary or corroborative) will satisfy him/her.
When bhagwan ram’s birth was recorded as per nakshatra. And mahabharat happen way after that
All I can say is Nilesh Nilkanth Oak is for too knowledgeable and put forward the mind blowing astronomical evidences which no historian can think of (as astronomy is not their expertise) and Astronomers won't study history to make a co-relation of historical events and respective time-line. In this regard he is a rare genius and to understand what he is saying, one must have some scientific acumen and logical reasoning skills beside the knowledge of the subject- in this case the Mahabharat as written in Sanskrit.
16 years back when I visited my ancestral village in UP, India, people use the same astronomy as day today language, birth, events in life and death... all in terms coinciding Nakshatra and planetary positions that time.
Same time I understand it is hard for any one to understand these references, if they are not familiar with the same. Thanks to the channel World of Antiquity and everyone here to explore their part of truth as per their understanding.
Historians and astronomers work together all the time. That’s what experts do when investigating a hypothesis, invite experts of a different field relevant to the subject for accuracy and truth.
Do an hours worth of research on archaeology and human history. You won’t believe him anymore. Maybe he should do the same….
@@russelledwards001 What kind of research? A quick google search? Lol
To add more, there are almost 1000 year old temples in India. Those temples are still standing. Do you know how much scientific aptitude is needed to build such a temple. It just doesn’t come overnight. It takes thousands of years to reach such heights of creativity.
There are almost no standing temples that are older than 2000 years, moreover, they are not anything more substantial than architecture in other civilizations found around the same time.
@@tejasmisra9115 they are not anything substantial because your white western media said so?
@@ravigohil999 Read what I wrote again, and this time read with comprehension. I didn't say they were not substantial, but not anything MORE substantial, then say, the Pyramids, the Colloseum, the Great Wall of China etc.
@@tejasmisra9115 he said 1000 ya dimwit.
@@tejasmisra9115 given a 1000 years of conflict where most of the temples in India have some or other form of damage inflicted on them, there is much less likeliness of a temple existing which might be older than 2000 years, many have tales of being reconstructed after being intentionally destroyed. On the other hand if you look at Angkor Wat , which was initially a Vaishnav temple , it’s in a really good state. If humans continue to preserve that for another 1000 years , it will stand. It’s inherently designed to last. The attacks on western ancient artefacts have not been so persistent, that’s why you can see them standing as of now. The Buddha statue in Afghanistan was recently destroyed which if it was not , would have lasted another millennia. You cannot judge designing capabilities just based on whether they’ve lasted or not , there are many factors involved.
Temples in Bharat (India) has carving of nakshtra and star alignments with tithi (particular event of time) way back than dates you come up with. Remember our absence of knowledge also makes us blind, like in darkness you cant see whats in front of you doesn't mean there is nothing in front. Think yourself.
No temples from Mahabharata times have ever been found.
@@WorldofAntiquity From the Kurukshetra, the place where the great war happened, archaeologists have uncovered some iron arrows and spearheads with the use of thermoluminescence that dates back to 2,800 B.C.E., which is approximately the time when Mahabharata happened.
Dwarka structure found under ocean carbon dating back to the mahabharat time by archeologist.
@@Krishna-vp8mf Do you think iron arrows and spearheads were used only during the Mahabharata War and at no other time before?
See my video on Dwarka.
@@WorldofAntiquity wtf? Typically european hypocrisy, there is quote written in somnath that land aftwr sea ending have no human settlment and it about 2000 to 3000 year old, just see where is somnath and where its written
@@WorldofAntiquity I can only smile on ignorance. You are denying even scientific proofs and finding of dwarka inside water. My Friend you are free to believe whatever you want. There are many flat earther and fake moon landing people are still there in 2022, We shouldn't be mad at them because there lack of knowledge comes from ignorance.
As someone who has been following Oak's works, here are my very quick thoughts on this review video:
1. One of your key contentions is that the book could be fictional; I find that the fictional element is very low in the narrative of the original Mahabharata, especially considering that no script was in use in 5561BCE and considering the still-oral tradition of narrating the Vedas and Itihasas (i.e Ramayana and Mahabharata) Canto to Canto accurately. Besides, the well-spun story and its strong character - mesh (viz-a - viz other texts and geographies of same era) is too real to be fictional. Moreover, how can over 300 astronomical references point to a single period?! That itself shows that the author(s) of this ancient text was not fooling around ! We tend to doubt something's sanity just because it's tagged "religious" !!
2. Your intro that Nilesh Oak does not know much Indian history is to say the least, laughable. You would have meant " Nilesh Oak does not swallow ( like me?) history spun by Bible-slave or Marxist historians"
3.On the "ifs" /assumptions: I think we should be knowing that every single scientific theory has assumptions ; How many of us question the preposterous assumption of " objective materiality'' that forms the basis of each scientific paper? Mr. Oak's assumptions are much more rational!
4. The basis of the disagreement appears to stem from a massive underestimation of the ancient civilizations and a strong confirmation bias to the timelines suggested by the Eurocentric - Christian "missionary" Historians of yore; the ones who have tried hard (and lost) to squeeze in old civilizations to post the Biblical creation date of 4000 BCE! Come on, we now know Homo sapiens started settling and building civilizations north of Africa around 75000 BCE! We even have proof of man-made fire and tools from around 15000 BCE in the Indian subcontinent itself! We know the Hindus have been observing the sky from at least 10000 BCE (Referring works on Surya Sidhanta by Raj Vedam , Nilesh Oak etc.) .
5. On why the Ancient Greeks and Hindus wrote stories on astronomical events, please refer Raj Vedam's TEDx talk on Ancient Star gazers.
It looks like you edited your comment after I replied to it, so my comment got deleted. So here I go again...
*One of your key contentions is that the book could be fictional;*
In my video, I state quite clearly that, for the purposes of the discussion, I am willing to assume the war happened.
*I find that the fictional element is very low in the narrative of the original Mahabharata, especially considering that no script was in use in 5561BCE and considering the still-oral tradition of narrating the Vedas and Itihasas (i.e Ramayana and Mahabharata) Canto to Canto accurately.*
You believe that oral tradition preserves information better than writing? Then why does the Mahabharata show evidence that it was added to over the centuries?
*Moreover, how can over 300 astronomical references point to a single period?! That itself shows that the author(s) of this ancient text was not fooling around!*
Mr. Oak doesn't discuss over 300 astronomical references. And I challenge your statement.
*Your intro that Nilesh Oak does not know much Indian history is to say the least, laughable. You would have meant " Nilesh Oak does not swallow ( like me?) history spun by Bible-slave or Marxist historians*
I follow worldwide scholarship, completely unrelated to any religion or economic system. Mr. Oak does not.
*On the "ifs" /assumptions: I think we should be knowing that every single scientific theory has assumptions;*
Not like that. No scientific theory based on unfounded assumptions can hold up.
*How many of us question the preposterous assumption of "objective materiality'' that forms the basis of each scientific paper?*
I don't know what you mean by "objective materiality." When I Google it, nothing comes up.
*The basis of your disagreement appears to stem from a massive underestimation of the ancient civilizations and a strong confirmation bias to the timelines suggested by the Eurocentric - Christian "missionary" Historians of yore; the ones who have tried hard (and lost) to squeeze in old civilizations to post the Biblical creation date of 4000 BCE!*
The basis of my negative assessment of the book stems from Mr. Oak's failure to provide evidence for the assumptions underlying his thesis. I don't follow any timelines created by "Eurocentric - Christian 'missionary' Historians of yore." History is based on the research and interchange of a global community of experts in various fields. They consist of scholars from various ethnicities and cultural backgrounds, who have agreed on universal and consistent methods of study that everyone can agree with.
*Come on, we now know Homo sapiens started settling and building civilizations north of Africa around 75000 BCE! We even have proof of man-made fire and tools from around 15000 BCE in the Indian subcontinent itself!*
I don't know where you are getting your information from, but the world's oldest known settlements are from the Natufian culture, and they don't go back to 75000 BCE. Anyway, what does that have to do with the book?
*We know the Hindus have been observing the sky from at least 10000 BCE People have been observing the sky since the beginning. What does that have to do with the book?*
The assumption that Mr. Oak makes is that a SPECIFIC astronomical system was used in the Mahabharata. He doesn't back up that claim with independent evidence.
*On why the Ancient Greeks and Hindus wrote stories on astronomical events, please refer Raj Vedam's TEDx talk on Ancient Star gazers*
Raj Vedam is not an expert on ancient Indian astronomy. I suggest you read someone like B. V. Subbarayappa.
Oak claims 572 evidences in his book which he neither actually presented in the book nor he provided in anywhere else. Secondly, no archaeological evidences of anything to backup his claims.
Saying that western system is not Religious Christian Centric is again a joke. Tell me why do you say we are in the year 2021, did any scientific or astrological thing happened ? No as far as the story goes it related to the Jesus. Having a day off on Sunday, must be something scientific, nope it's is due to the Church, oh wow, so trying to burry every civilization that existed before Christianity, isn't religious oh it's scientific. Western critics can never be taken seriously as they mostly come from a superiority complex and have no curiosity in knowing, they are busy dismissing everything just so their narattives are not broken, all this critic do not have one iota of honest seeking, just constant intention of dismissing
We're not talking about what years were called. We're talking about when things happened, no matter what you call it.
We live in the world of alternative facts made up on social media, where what we feel and believe trumps rational thought and facts.
There are a vast majority who will agree with all and any assumptions if it lines up with what they believe (or want to).
Absolutely it is all a matter of Sentiments only Unfortunately.
If you think,ancient civilisations didn't knew anything...please explain how they constructed pyramids.
He didn't got reply for the MR so called studied Historian.
Great video, only question I have is, how is ~5600BCE before the development of cities when Golbekli Tepe is dated around ~10,000BCE.
Gobekli Tepe was not a city.
@@WorldofAntiquity not trying to be a dick here, just genuinely curious. So it seemed to be like a religious pilgrimage site, where people would gather around and live for a little bit. I'm assuming it was meant to be somewhat permanent due to its construction, until they buried it for whatever reason.
So is the only difference between a place like this and a city, permanent residence? Also, besides more trash, what evidence distinguishes between permanent settlements and semi permanent settlements?
@@qurn I have a video on what makes a city coming soon.
This videographer is highly prejudiced. He only read established western writings and ignore all other
@@WorldofAntiquity The people that built that complex had to live somewhere. Hunter gatherers are not likely to stop surviving off the land to suddenly build a complex as vast as that is and then go back to hunter gathering after that for 3 to 4000 years until the supposedly sudden rise of nearby cultures. Only a portion of the area is excavated so to say it was not a city without seeing the rest of the excavation completed is stupid. In the future if a lost modern city is once again discovered and they start uncovering it and start at a shrine or some other random edifice not used for living in it wont mean that in the surrounds around that complex does not indeed contain a city. It just means they haven't got to the city part yet.
sir please reply, i have a lot of intrest in ancient indian history , archaerologists dated dwaraka it came out to be roughly 8k bce , which fits with his dates , and the sunken city of dwaraka is exactly at the place where mahabharata text mentions , so what is your opinion about this , and one more thing this is not related to this video , but i think indus valley may be a vedic civilixation , many people argue that there is no palace or any higher status buildings , but as i looked upon this ancient indians ( i mean befor turks even before shakas and scythians ) didnt build palaces , there are temples built by raja raja chola which even stand today but there is no evidence of fort or palace of him and chandragupta also didnt have , artha shastra a religious text says that the main duty of a king is to make his kingdom prosper and rich , but the kings shouldnt spend money on himself , even in ithasas there is no such great mention of palaces , so i dont this is a coincidence or what , but this fits exactly and even indus had swords daggers and spears , sir what do you think about this
Why don't you bring the real Mahabharat from Geeta press
Where is the archeological evidence?
@@TingTong2568 in sinauli
I love Gita Press.
@@Beegeezy144 how and why
@@anushaiyer2487 Many languages, solid translations, large catalogue, good prices. It's amazing how many books they distribute. I think I saw President Modi praising them as well. I do not know anything about the controversy except that there is a controversy. I do not know any of the details. You can tell me about it if you want. I am always open to learn.
I think issue with History based only on proofs is absence of evidence is evidence of absence. One example is custard apple depicted in India art. Nobody believed it because it is south American fruit. But Archeological evidence found now suggests it was cultivated e in India since 1600BCE. You may search the paper on academia.
Ah, but as you noted, when the evidence appeared, opinions changed. That is good.
Yet, some folks will not change their views/opinions, because they neither understand custard apple/archaeology nor scientific acumen and logical reasoning.
They will continue believing what is written in books, academic authority, and expert consensus.
@@WorldofAntiquity There's written text transferred throughout ages. It was not written to prove anything to anyone about its occurrence neither Mahabharata tries to prove its genuinity.
Then go with what the text has to teach.
Also there is no scientific evidence that Moses, Jesus or Mohammed existed, because their stories were written much later for religious politics?
@@WorldofAntiquity India had a lot of books now labled as religious even though only parts are. Books on Indian astrology has astronomy in them and not to mention the books with math and basic theories in them. Can you fact check Project Shivom btw.
So who took it to South America?
In your thumbnail, you have the digits of the date mixed up. Instead of 5651 BCE, you have 5561 shown... 😊
Yes. See the note under the video.
@@WorldofAntiquity oops sorry! Ah well, just 90 years, no big difference it seems to me 😄
It's not 5651 BC , it's 5561 BCE.
He couldn't even get that right.
Nah it happened 5k year ago around 3k bce
Bce is the correct term to use for bc. Dude just google before posting. Indians these days have bhakt disease for which there is no cure
bce and bc are almost same, bce is just politically correct way of saying bc
Nope.
You showed your card when you said he (NNO) is an chemical engineer and have no knowledge of ancient history and archaeology.... 😂 well well well.... by this logic all the western (non indian and indian who can't read or write sanskrit) shouldn't comment on the Indian history. History doesn't follow a. person who hold a certificate of some University it's a western notion which sometimes we indian proud of. We indians often witnessed this, some one from west come and tell us.... look I'm the historian i have a degree I tell you about your history 😂 you can't because you don't have any degree. West is in it's kind very funny go arround the world invade lands, exploits them and with that try to convert even their history..... scratch earth policy.
Are you even hearing yourself?
First of all, Most of the Indians can't read or use sanskrit.
Meanwhile, not all historians or archeologists study the same part of history or geological location meaning not anyone can study anything unless they have an expertise in that perticular topic. Still an average archeologist might know the steps of the work or finding out facts or simply crosscheck some theories that are put on.
To sum up, It's about expertise and not about language, just like any medical professional would have more knowledge of diagnosing or treating someone than that of an unprofessional fuck.
P.S.- I'm a Hindu and an Indian who believes that it's not hindu mythology but Indian History but the creators argument here is simply logical and yours is simply not.
@@donblake3402 I can't hear as I wrote it so I can see ..... second you claim to be a hindu and still call it mythology is the proof what you doing. Most Indian can't write read sanskrit is your another claim which is like world happiness index. Carry on your support for different agenda. 🙏 Mr.Don we already have many ground sepoys of West certification program of history and other stuff now... no more vacancies for anyone. So, keep certificate thing in pocket and take return ticket of West. Happy journey 👍
@@mukulpurigoswami7618 Sanskirt uses devnagari today
A few can't read devnagari. But most of us still can't understand it . Reading isn't enough. And even though you claim Indians to know sanskrit, the old language can be read and understood by experts and professionals.
And also it's not about my trust in Hinduism its about your trash argument.
@@mukulpurigoswami7618 and what's this new logic of *Get your ticket to West*
Some bastards and andhbhakts can't stand critisism even if it's logical and fair
That's why the nation is ruled by a Right leaned extremist party with a dictator as its prime
@@donblake3402 what he is and you doing isn't criticism it's called certification program which Bharat stopped to purchase it anymore. Tickets nhi smj aaya neo british ko 😳 koi ni smjha dete : no more import from west 😂
I have never heard of this guy that wrote the book, but am disappointed you did not cite specific data from the book. I remember Dr Sagan covered a similar topic about ancient Indian astronomy in the highly acclaimed PBS Cosmos series. In theory it should be possible to date events from astronomical observations. I suppose I will have to read this book to know what the errors were in the calculations
The "observations" are invented.
@@WorldofAntiquity Thank you, not that I dont trust you but I want to see the evidence. Some guy said the moon, Mars and Jupiter coincide with such date and you want to say that they dont. I would rather look it up myself. I am going to check this guys book out. As I was saying in a debunking video the debunker provides examples of empirical data the other guy presents and counters it with empirical data. If the other guy does not have empirical data it would make your job all the more easier. Watch videos by Thunderfoot on TH-cam on how to present empirical data to counter an argument. I really cant say much till I do some research of my own. Thanks
@@silentvoiceinthedark5665 Keep in mind that this is a book review, not a debunking video.
@@WorldofAntiquity Yes, you are right. I forget that everything is not a scientific review because of my line of work and the stress associated with it. I need to just enjoy the recreational time here on YT as that and only that. I tend to gravitate towards scientific review on YT. I do realize that maybe I need to watch ballet or something else. I have not watch TV in years nor do I intend to.
@@silentvoiceinthedark5665 th-cam.com/video/Oe6QyiXj2bk/w-d-xo.html
For your information, since ancient times every child's birth is recorded by "Nakshatra" commonly known as Janam kundali + many things. Even my birth was recorded through nakshatra & converted it in kundali.
"Since ancient times" - Can you be more specific? When?
A minimum of 24000 years. Based on proofs, but we still have to think, how much time it would have been taken for humans to reach on this level of civilized society. With such a great knowledge of nature and science.
@@WorldofAntiquity I am also Indian my Brith also recorded by nakshatra
My rashi is Singh means Leo
If you come india you see commlony nakshatra
@@pravinupadhyay2046 Most civs took a lot less time. Why do you assume the Indians were so slow?
@@WorldofAntiquity In Nakshatra study everything will be calculated very specific and even few hours of time can change ones zodiac and as a historian one should understand that a person has no right to comment on any knowledge or study that he didn't have knowledge On.
Say hey David, Your patience in answering some of these challenging comments is *commendable. And I think you do it effectively. Your command of complex, and often obscure, material is really terrific.
The history of India just overwhelms me. It's an immense subject. Thanks for shedding some light on this slice of it.
You're praising an idiot, actually, he's a charlatan.
OMG!! When it comes to understanding some are in elementary levels and pat each other in the back. Shun your agenda and gather knowledge. Be open minded in seeking truth 🙏
There's written text transferred throughout ages. It was not written to prove anything to anyone about its occurrence neither Mahabharata tries to prove its genuinity.
Then go with what the text has to teach.
Also there is no scientific evidence that Moses, Jesus or Mohammed existed, because their stories were written much later for religious politics?
Well he thinks he understood all of it through the internet.. never hated anyone on youtube,,, but this guy deserves the spot !
Hi. Indian here. We have a belief these days that if anything does not fit our exact narrative, (and that narrative is created by right wing nationalists and Hindu supremacist groups), then that opinion is colonial, hates Hindus, or some kind of propaganda to destroy India.
This means that any and all evidence has to conform to their standards or be thrown out.
Mr Oak is from the highest, aka Brahmin caste, to be exact. He's used to not having anyone correcting him or challenging him. Unfortunately not many people do, and those who do often run afoul of the nutjobs. David's work in speaking truth to power is commendable.
So sir you want to tell us that one day a people of India come to know ooo there is telescope invented in europe and 8 planets are discovered and they told to all indian population pretend like we know about all this planets earlier than europians and whole india started doing that.
2. Nakshtra system is developed in India several years ago than Maharashtra and in books of ramayana and Mahabharata the positions of planets are well mentioned at the time of birth and death and any major events.
3. Indians are worshiping planets thousands of years before invention of telescope.
4. You are talking about writting methods please tell me where is the origin of literature.
Sir if you are reading this comment please reply to my questions or make specific video on it and video is nice👍👍
Thank you for your comment. Here are my thoughts:
*So sir you want to tell us that one day a people of India come to know ooo there is telescope invented in europe and 8 planets are discovered and they told to all indian population pretend like we know about all this planets earlier than europians and whole india started doing that.*
The question is NOT whether India knew of the outer planets before Europe. The question is whether they new of the outer planets in ancient times.
*2. Nakshtra system is developed in India several years ago than Maharashtra and in books of ramayana and Mahabharata the positions of planets are well mentioned at the time of birth and death and any major events.*
But the fully-developed Nakshatra system is not evident in those texts.
*3. Indians are worshiping planets thousands of years before invention of telescope.*
Only the planets visible to the human eye.
*4. You are talking about writting methods please tell me where is the origin of literature.*
Literature didn't come from one place.
I totally agree with what you are saying, there are multiple stories and practices in day today life, which has direct connection with planets.
Check Warah Avatar's imagery, we can understand how much astrology was developed in ancient india, they knew earth is circle way before these so called modern science evolved.
Also please check his another book on "When did Ramayana Happened"
Look into Raj Vedam's Lectures on similar subjects, he gives many different evidences.
No mention of Neptune in any scripture.
Ancient Greeks knew the Earth was a globe, not a circle, "before these so called modern science evolved." Any mariner who ventured out of sight of land figured that out quickly. It's the Victorians who invented the idea that early people thought the Earth was flat.
Namaskar.
Thank you for the review. Just a small correction. My claim is for 5561 BCE and not 5651 BCE.
Thank you for this superficial review. This is because while to you 5561 BCE vs 5651 BCE may not make a difference, all the evidence of Mahabharata points to a single year - 5561 BCE and no other.
Warm regards,
Nilesh Oak
Well lets not let people peddle pseudoscience in any nation! All it does is cause damage by misinforming young people and idiots.
Then we have sports writers, television producers, chemists and others Whom pretend at being ancient historians and archeologists while having no experience and training.
Which is a disrespect to the actual professionals who try and figure out what they can using evidence & logic, not wishful thinking assumptions over religious propaganda & mythology.
Reading stuff off the internet along with old religious texts is not training or education nor does it make any one an expert.
@@jaymevosburgh3660 Om!
I agree with you 100%. Original research takes deep study and a lot of Tapasya, with no guarantee of success.
@@AnarchistDoc Now, today's research papers, R&D is becoming a pseudoscience. The author has proved his work through the evidences which are objectively tested .
th-cam.com/video/g6p1ddanSXI/w-d-xo.html
My apologies. I must have written it down wrong in my script. It's too late for me to change the video, but I will at least fix it in the thumbnail. If you would like to comment on any other part of the review, feel free.
@@WorldofAntiquity Thank you.
I understand (a slip of tongue). I do this all the time in my lectures. When I listen to them, I wonder how did I say that (yet the evidence is in the form of recording).
I can comment a lot, but I will let viewers do the job. I thank you for reviewing it. If you would like to, I have written two more books 2. The Historic Rama and 3. Bhishma Nirvana. The Historic Rama establishes the timing of Rama-Ravana yuddha to the year 12209 BCE and Bhishma Nirvana discusses additional 100+ evidence from Mahabharata which also points to 5561 BCE as the year of the Mahabharata War.
Feel free to review them, if you like.
--
If you are a game, I would be happy to do a joint program with you (via Zoom and we can record it) where you can repeat all the objections you had stated in this video and more and I will be happy to respond to them.
Let me know.
Best Wishes
Nilesh Oak
Link to my works, blogs, videos, and specific accomplishments.
subbupublications.com/nilesh-oak/
The algorithms got an hour and half video on that book up next, it's headlined: 17000+years of unbroken Indian history. Looks like a helluva lot of stuff was happening before 5651 BC.
Indeed. Before 5561 BCE (5651 BC is an error on the part of the reviewer in this video).
@@NileshOak Ah, the author himself. I'm sure Dr Miano will be happy to make the correction from one absurd date to another equally so. Amour in the stone age... A written record 2 millennia before the dawn of writing... What were you thinking?! Or was this only ever meant to mislead the layman and sell books?
Are you going to address Dr Miano's damning criticism of your work, you do claim intellectual rigour after all - because right now your arguments are in tatters - or don't you care?
Yes. "Timeline of 17,000 years...." also showed up in my feed. I got through about half an hour.
Here's a few actual quotes from this presentation.
Regarding the Aryan Invasion Theory-
"_You can show with evidence that all of them are decisively false, but I'll not go into that here_."
Blunt assertion + appeal to nebulous it-exists-uh-huh evidence is all that's required apparently
While discussing the astronomy in Vedas.....
"_We tested objectively. I'm not going to get into it, but I would encourage you to go back, check your TH-cam...... more than 200 specific observations. I objectively tested them. Sometimes individually. Sometimes in groups.... In the case of Ramayan, more than 500 specific observations. Again objectively tested them_"
No need to explain these objectively tests. Are you going to accuse him of not objectively testing or something? He objectively tested more than 700 times!
The more exposure I get to these guys, the less sceptical I'm becoming about their theories of cultural differences in thought processes being at the root of these disagreements. It seems as though Plato, Bacon, David Hume, Mendel, Augstine, etc haven't made their way to the Indian subcontinent. Objective truth existing outside of these guru-acolyte relationships seems like an iffy and radical concept.
@@LVSJT Half an hour! Guess you win.
@@Joe-King Did the final hour of thatbdebacle make a 180 degree turn and employ reason?
I'm still a little blown away that anyone could tolerate that much drivel. He spent 98% of the time prattling clumsily about evidence theory while presenting hardly any, save for his personal objectively tested conclusions that he won't share.. . Or maybe you get to see those after a patreon donation.
At the outset, Mr. Oak actually encouraged his audience to make anonymous accounts and claimed that he had several.
To verify his astronomical 200-300 observations Oak has used voyager software . Isn’t that independent verification enough ?!?
The problem is with his interpretation of the text.
@@WorldofAntiquityhey you
@@WorldofAntiquity interpret it then and prove it. You cannot say something is wrong without interpreting it Plus you don't know anything about sanskrit and ur saying he interpreted it wrong. The positions of stars in the sky is clearly mentioned in the text of Mahabharata when the kurushkhetra war happened. What do u want to prove actually?? your justifications doesn't actually make sense. please make some sense to it.
@@sounavapandit7888 You don't seem to understand that whoever has a thesis is responsible for supporting it with evidence. It is not the responsibility of others to disprove it.
The Mahabharata clearly describes these heavenly phenomena as omens, and Oak ignores this.
1. Krishna was born 3228 BCE
2. Month: Bhadrapada
3. Day: Ashtami
4. Nakshatra: Rohini
5. Biological Father: Vasudeva
6. Biological Mother: Devaki
7. Adopted Father: Nanda
8. Adopted Mother: Yashoda
9. Elder Brother: Balaram
10. Sister: Subhadra
11. Birth Place: Mathura
12. Kansa: his maternal uncle
13. Shishupaala and Dantavakra: his cousins
14. Shri Krishna lived 125 years, 08 months, 07 days
15. Date of Death: 18th February, 3102 BCE
16. When Krishna was 89 years old; the mega war (Kurukshetra) took place
17. He died 36 years after the Kurukshetra war
18. Kurukshetra war started on Mrigashira Shukla Ekadashi, 3139 BCE
19. Bhishma died on first Ekadasi of the Uttarayana, 3138 BCE
*Jai Shri Krishna*
🙏
Krishna was a bad bad boy.
@@NativeVsColonial krishna ki gaand mei ghus jaa
Least delusional Hindu
These figures just dont jive with archeological evidence
@@gurtr Go educate yourself about the sunken city of Dwarka
Dr. Nilesh Oak is open for open video recorded debate. Please contact him for a debate and prove him false.
But if you are out of your depths trying to understand astronomy, do not provide opinions or assessments.
Nilesh Oak (he is not a Dr.) has posted several times here in the comments section. He claims he will respond to this video but so far has not.
@@WorldofAntiquity *Dr.Nilesh Oak. Even goign as far as rejecting his phD. So petty
@@buddha9715 www.linkedin.com/in/nileshoak/ Where is his doctorate?
@@WorldofAntiquityBeing a 'Dr.' doesn't make you a sage. Look at yourself, you may have done tones of Phd , yet you smell like a colonialist.
@@WorldofAntiquityHe hasn't responsed because people like you are bigoted against India from micro-level. You always judge India and its history with a damn colonial lens. Jesus is myth, Krishna is reality.
Sir what makes you to think that the astronomical event narrated in Mahabharat were invented.
Nilesh Oak invented it as a natural phenomenon, when the Mahabharat says it was a supernatural phenomenon.
@@WorldofAntiquitywhat a stupid response! Find a guru and learn the meaning of Nitya and how and why it becomes Nimitta.
There is nothing supernatural in the astronomy observations of Mahabharata, all 300+ of them.
@@NileshOak You are not only wrong, you are disrespectful of the text.
@@WorldofAntiquity This charge is bizzare.
In what way I am wrong and what makes you say that I am disrespectful to the text.
Happy to be enlightened.
@@NileshOak Anyone who ignores the author's intention and prefers to read information INTO the text (eisegesis), instead of reading information OUT of the text (exegesis), is disrespecting the text.
Must be true, or they would not have named Oak Island after him.
The "war" in question likely happened, just very much not the way it does in the Mahabharata as I'm fairly certain it started as a epic poem much like the Iliad and like the Iliad wasn't written down until a very long time after it was first performed.
Indeed Maharashtra was written 18yrs after incident of war. Written by Sage vyasa. And all these events happened during his lifetime. 🙏🏼
@@aamod7696 he probably came and whispered this in your ear
@@RakhiSingh-kj5ok yahh... Indeed.. and told me that tell Rakhi singh ji to read Mahabharata and other literature to get all answers. ✌🏻
@MWhaleK:
That's a sensible stand but I find that the fictional element is very low in the narrative of the original Mahabharata, especially considering that script was not discovered in 5561BCE and considering the still-oral tradition of narrating the Vedas and Itihasas Canto to Canto accurately. Besides, the well-spun story and its strong character - mesh (viz-a - viz other texts and geographies of same era) is too real to be fictional. Moreover, how can over 300 astronomical references point to a single period?! That itself shows that the author(s) of this ancient text was not fooling around ! We tend to doubt something's sanity just because it's tagged "religious" !!
As someone who has been following Oak's works, here are my very quick thoughts on this review video:
1. On the "ifs" /assumptions: I think we should be knowing that every single scientific theory has assumptions ; How many of us question the preposterous assumption of " objective materiality'' that forms the basis of each scientific paper? Mr. Oak's assumptions are much more rational!
2. The basis of the disagreement appears to stem from a massive underestimation of the ancient civilizations and a strong confirmation bias to the timelines suggested by the Eurocentric - Christian "missionary" Historians of yore; the ones who have tried hard (and lost) to squeeze in old civilizations to post the Biblical creation date of 4000 BCE! Come on, we now know Homo sapiens started settling and building civilizations north of Africa around 75000 BCE! We even have proof of man-made fire and tools from around 15000 BCE in the Indian subcontinent itself! We know the Hindus have been observing the sky from at least 10000 BCE (Referring works on Surya Sidhanta by Raj Vedam , Nilesh Oak etc.) .
3. On why the Ancient Greeks and Hindus wrote stories on astronomical events, please refer Raj Vedam's TEDx talk on Ancient Star gazers.
@@SJ-zo3lz ahh... Plz paste this under video comments directly 👍🏼
Why is it hard to see India becoming a superpower this century? This comment section showcases the best and the brightest India has to offer this and the next generation. And the even newer generation is being raised in an even regressive culture.
Disappointed, No technical review here. The reviewer makes lots of assumptions such as...
1. The author does not have deep knowledge of ancient history.
2. No civilizations / urbanization could have existed prior to a certain period.
3. A story could not have existed before it was written down.
4. This war is not factual (even though there is no proof that it did not happen)
5. Knowledge of Astronomy could not have existed then.
6. External experts on Indian civilization did not confuse updates to texts as the origin date of the text.
7. Indians, who have been studying this text for countless generations, did not have knowledge to catch mistakes.
I made none of those assumptions. #2-7 I do not believe, and #1 I do believe, but it is 100% not an assumption.
@@WorldofAntiquitysorry to say it seems like you were also running on assumptions.
@@VIJAYzk What assumptions?
@@WorldofAntiquitythey're not calling you a clown in the comments section for no reason 😂
@@GamerZone-ii5zt actually you all just look really desperate
Could you research the Bible and any evidence of Jesus ever existing all the miracles of veterans, giving birth or crucifixions ever happening, especially rising from the dead
What is the Nakshatra System? Perhaps you can do a video on that first. Anyway, I will try to look it up on my end to see if I can make any sense of it.
You need an open mind to look at Indian civilization because it has been mispresented and misinterpreted by british to divide India and introduce caste system so it would have been easy to rule. Sadly there has been no attempt by the Indian governments to question it as it fits their propaganda of divide and rule, which is really evident in todays politics. Your argument that 5600 BC is before urbanization is incorrect. We have found ancient city of rakhigarhi which was part of Indus valley civilization dated 7500 BCE and was an urban city. I'm glad you accepted the 1st assumption because you cannot date something that never happened. 2nd assumption that you disregarded with your colonial mind set indeed is a topic of debate however there are books like Vedang Jyotisham which were written around 1500 BC accurately talks about nakshatra dating system. This system originated from Vedas and has been practiced in India since the beginning of vedic civilization. For the 3rd argument I agree with you as we cannot say that The book was written within 18 years. 4th argument that all astronomical details were accurate and visual is indeed a fact, and goes back to the ancient science mentioned in Vedas that's still followed in india and has been followed for 1000s of years.
Rakhigarhi was a village at that time, not a city. The Vedanga Jyotishi goes back to 700 BCE at the earliest, according to scholars.
@@harrysahota_hh It was a city only after 3000 BCE. Before that it was a village.
@@WorldofAntiquity Source of this information?
@@harrysahota_hh It is well known that urbanization occurred in the Mature Harappan period (c. 2600 BCE and after). In the Early Harappan period, there were no cities yet. This is in ALL the archaeological literature. There is no dispute about this.
@@WorldofAntiquity it is debatable because we haven't discovered many indus valley sites yet and lastest discoveries like in Sinauli challenges all the theories. So yup whats established is not 100% and will change as we excavate more.
Looks like you're looking at everything Indian with biased western lens, yes those claims maybe false and some maybe true but judging everything on basis of so called established history which infact is western historians history is not correct atleast be ready to understand what other people think about their scriptures and dating there's definitely bias towards India by colonial historian's and Crediting everything to Roman Greece civilization as if they're only advanced civilisations is very common thing in most colonial historians because those barbarian English German historians feel as if they were roman and Greek lol
Let's Don't make arrogant faces let's try to understand others perspective no just white perspective
There's a Western bias against India, but there is definitely not an Indian bias. No no no.
@@tejasmisra9115 I won't say there is not. But we think that it is being dismissed without taking any serious look on it.
@@siddheshdeshpande7183 What he is saying is based on the collected understanding of the past few centuries of archaeological research.
@@tejasmisra9115 City of Dwarka that is said to have submerged mentioned in the texts is found under the ocean right next to present city of Dwarka. Now is that not a huge archeological evidence? modern studies do suggest that there had been rise in sea levels around that time.
@@siddheshdeshpande7183 Not really, underwater sites are found all the time. I don't see how the location around Dwarka being an old site, maybe even pre-Harappan, would change the fact that archaeological evidence doesn't support the Mahabharata in 5000 BC. During that time there were no major urban sites in the Ganga-Yamuna area, even Harappan sites were not urbanized and largely concentrated in the Eastern Iran - Indus Valley region, with only a few in Haryana and Punjab, but nothing east of that. This was also during the Chalcolithic (Copper) Age, that would mean the Mahabharata would've been fought with copper weapons and armour, rather unlikely.
We can understand that, that period of time, being a nomadic barbaric, it is hard to digest for you.
This is a childish review, examining a historical investigation as if it were a mathematical theorem. If we knew the exact circumstances, we would just anlayse those and not need any assumptions whatsoever. Oak has stated his assumptions and told us the implications. That's how even hard sciences proceed. For example, Newtonian physics or Big Bang Cosmology was based on certain assumptions. Those by definition could not be proved as "correct", which is why they are called assumptions. When further experimental knowledge brought them into question, we tweaked them, a little or a lot as needed, and went from there. And so on. Historical dating is similar, whether it is the age of the Universe, Homo Sapiens, pyramids, or an event like Mahabharata war. The estimate you seem to prefer (1500 BCE?) is also based on assumptions, albeit different ones, which too cannot be proved. Neither is exact and correct knowledge. Only new experimental knowledge, from new data or newly invented technology, will increase the precision.
You don't seem to understand the very basic principle that some arguments are better founded than other arguments. The more unproven assumptions that support an argument there are, the weaker the argument is. It is as simple as that.
I realize that a phrase like "unproven assumptions" must mean something to you, but it has no base in science. ALL ASSUMPTIONS ARE UNPROVEN, WHICH IS WHY THEY ARE CALLED ASSUMPTIONS. You clearly don't understand how real science functions. This is not mathematical logic. The subject is history. The only thing that matters are exact events and circumstances that actually happened or existed. We don't know those. Mr Oak doesn't and you don't. Mr Oak is making a clearly stated guess, or starting with something he deems reasonable in order to develop the methodology. If better information becomes available, we'll plug that in. What makes you think that those who advocate 1500 BCE had true data? If you want to be taken seriously, then at least put your own prejudices openly on the table. Just what information do you possess about Mahabharata war that makes you select one assumption and dismiss others?
@@AKTCHIAh, but it is mathematical logic. Just as if someone makes up a new system of math, where 1+1=3, and then they develop a whole theory around it, the theory is no good, so if someone invents certain "facts" and then build a theory around it, the theory is unsubstantiated. They can't just say, "All science begins with assumptions."
@@WorldofAntiquity To explore the analogy further, if someone had the courage to say that -1 does have a square root, or that parallel lines can meet, they would have discovered new and very useful mathematics. A peculiarity of history is that unlike physics, which is dominated by laws of nature which are the same everywhere and always, history is dominated by unique events which may or may not be ever repeated. So for example all electrons are alike and behave according to universal laws. However, whether Napolean did or did not visit a specific city on a specific date was his sovereign decision and cannot be known without specific information. This is why history is harder to research than science. (Subjects like Geology or Cosmology are a mixture, part science and part history of unique events.) It is also why the use of phrases like "mathematical logic" in your writing troubles me. I know mathematics, I know logic, and I have studied history, and the three do not mix well. Anyway, reminding you that you have not yet stated your own prejudices or ideology on the Mahabharata matter, I will leave the last word to you.
History is not a game of assumptions. and He has not expressed any negative bias against Mahabharat or India. He clearly just analysed Oaks book. No one is saying Mahabharat did not happen. or astronomical study was not there. The criticism is about the time period. The birth of language and writing and their spread are not assumptions. they have many archeological evidence. An epic like Mahavarat has to fit a time period where both language and writing system has reached a particular stage of development. How can one assume that during stone age there were great literary works being written??
Western way of looking science is different then. I have convinced about the Nilesh oak Work. He has whole series of evidence based approach. It is not only astronomical, it is archaeology, hydrology and many other. Your whole video is based on his astronomical evidence. I am sorry but instead of only on his books, please listen to all his video he puts.
Mr World of Antiquity you don't even have understanding of nakshra system, westerners were even copied the weekdays sequence. Don't think that you some westerner so people will taken only your stand. Nileshji has dedicated his whole life for this cause & youtube is not his livelihood & yours might be.
I feel pity sometimes & the whole knows that battles for narratives & believes of their civilization thinking. Indic mindset has been silent for years & due to social media we are getting our real finding to the world but that is not getting digested by Non Hindu sectors. You have right to put your point & so do i.
Thank you.
If you are in a continuous state of denial from the start, everything even a pullstop will make you angry 😂😂
Had to try really hard not to immediately answer "it did not".
And if course, as you say, IF ancient India had competent astronomers and the use of their unique calendar and an ancient highly literate civilization THEN Mr. Oak's analysis becomes very compelling. His corroboration with the geological evidence of the Saraswati river of post ice-age India and the well documented descriptions in Sanskrit of that river makes it all the more more compelling.
NO. If ancient India had INERRANT astronomers, and they used a unique astronomical system from later times, and the Mahabharata was written 18 years after the war, and the astronomical observations were actual visual observations of the sky, and the astronomers had the technology to see objects beyond the range of human sight, and the reason for recording the observations was to date the war, and Mr. Oak's interpretation of similes as astronomical observations is correct, THEN his analysis can even begin.
Nowhere in his book Oak gave proper archaeological evidences. Plus the software Voyager he uses itself clarified that it can not be trusted beyond 500BC
@@choudhurysaheb8326 your comment regarding Voyager, it is not true. The software claims to provide accurate motion of stars and planets back to dawn of humanity.
@@WorldofAntiquity There's written text transferred throughout ages. It was not written to prove anything to anyone about its occurrence neither Mahabharata tries to prove its genuinity.
Then go with what the text has to teach.
Also there is no scientific evidence that Moses, Jesus or Mohammed existed, because their stories were written much later for religious politics?
@@WorldofAntiquity You just agreed here that Mahabharat did occur in real. It was not historical fiction as you sometimes claim as per your convenience.
You hv no idea how important astronomy is in Indian culture... Even ceasarean section are done as per time after studying horoscope!
Still there are many indians who see rahu kaal every day in a panchang before undertaking auspicious works.
Neelesh Oak may be wrong. But the idea that asronomy cd be used to date ancient Indiantexts seems viable...
You shd visit haridwar and the brahmans there to get an idea of this... There are pandits who keep geneology data through registration of deaths passing hundreds of years.... Do a show on this aspect of indian book keeping
Can you do Vedveer Arya's date of Mahabharata
Will be interesting. 3162 BCE!
Thanks Dr Miano for this video. Had been waiting a long time for it.
Since you are an expert in Ancient History so I had requested you to review the claims of that person.
I never mentioned in my comment that his book had any scientific evidences, I have been suspicious of his claims from the beginning itself since it isn't backed up by any archaeological evidences.
BTW - Have you read Tom Holland's books - The Rubicon and the Persian Fire ?If yes, are they good enough ? If no, then can you please review them ?
I haven't read those books yet. But I will see if I can do so.
How did you come up with no archeological evidence. You want to see huge fields of dead bodies as proof?
@@indc8954 Evidence of complex societies in the specified date range, for example.
@@kmaher1424 Ok, what kind of evidence will prove complex societies to you.
@@indc8954 white flowing dressed people who can talk in a french accent and explain about the greeks or pity the arabs
So you haven’t actually read them Mahabharata, but someone else is opinion of it?
Mahabharat and Ramayana are the most morally and knowledge filled stories you will ever read.
Ancient Indians were smart and knowledgeable they have left us their knowledge in form of Vedas and everything has been explained in the form of stories which are easier to comprehend. But something different only is happening in the present world where people are busy arguing if those stories happened or didn't happen just to glorify their country and only countable amount of people are trying to understand it's true meaning.
It is a complete shame that the current India has declined and people easily gets influenced by the ones who wants to nail down their ideology for their own gain(political gain to be honest here).
Here science is thought as a way to score good marks and get ranks without even mentioning how a scientific method works once in the classroom. So it doesn't take much effort for a big beard preist to talk nicely and make everyone believe in pseudo-science.
Dr Miano, do you know what Nakshatra means? Do you know that you can check for planetary positions , years centuries back through astromomy ?
Typical western response when they come across advanced technologies from the east.
You ordinary westerners can't go beyond Jesus i. e. 2000 Years ago (a Myth) It's a well-known fact in India that Mahabharata Happened 5000 Years ago or may be little more than that
Are there any decent books worth reading on the Mahabharata, I've looked but always end up feeling uncomfortable over whether they are genuine works of history or not, any suggestions would be appreciated. We've tonnes of stuff on the Iliad and I've always wanted to read-up on this subject... ✌️
You might just want to start with the book itself. Penguin has an abridged edition with considerable commentary at the beginning.
Yea, I have a copy and it's on the (very long) list, thanks! 👍
Read the original work in its own language . Most of the translations are done by illiterates of the original language .
@@sreekanthravindran3618 So people who don't know Sanskrit should read the work in Sanskrit? And people who have spent years studying Sanskrit are not able to translate it, because they are illiterate? I'm confused.
@@WorldofAntiquity if you want to know . Most of translations available are translation of Sanskrut with a Hindi meaning , and most of the so called so called scholars who translated have sone basic language study only . You need at least 13-14 years to study that language . So people who just want to read can read anything that’s translation . But want to understand what it is , learn it . It’s like the differences in original Hebrew bible and the English version
3:04 Aryan Invasion/ migration is also based on only assumption and not based on any scientific proof
Based on genetic evidence, and linguistic evidence, and archaeological evidence :)
@@tejasmisra9115 😂🤣😂Aryan picnic theory
@@dalitnahipehlehinduhu6569 Good argument
@@tejasmisra9115 My ass. PLEASE UNDERSTAND THE BASIC DEFINITION OF THEORY FUCKWAD
@@tejasmisra9115hello there is strong factual evidence and rakhigarghi site burst myth on genetics ....😅
I disagree with one thing you mentioned. The target audience is not narrow. It is targeted towards gullible Indians (including my parents) who wouldn't know/accept the fallacy of circular reasoning and if you add all of them together, you'll get millions of people.
It is generally true that Indian scholars tend to be biased towards the texts belonging to their culture and hence their conclusions may be hinting towards a certain bias, but in my opinion the converse is also true for the western scholars. They tend to scoff at the mere idea of any sort of knowledge coming from India. The same was quite evident from your own mannerisms while speaking of the assumptions made by Oak. True objectivity seems to be lost on both ends.
Scholars treat texts from around the world consistently with the same methods, not favoring one country over another. This is what makes people with a vested interest angry.
A lot of ancient Sumarian texts corroborate the mahabharat story but from a different perspective
The Sumerians were nowhere near the place where the Mahabharata War occurred.
@@WorldofAntiquity Only someone who is not familiar with Mahabharata text can say such a thing. King Bhagadatta was from modern-day Iraq/Turkey/Syria and fought in the Mahabharata War from the Kaurava side.
What is termed as 'Sumerians' in today's terms, were indeed contemporary to Mahabharata times and King Bhagadatta was very much from this area. The genetics footprint also corroborates this.
@@NileshOak Your date for the Mahabharata War is long before the Sumerian culture appears.
@@WorldofAntiquity Multidisciplinary scientific evidence points to mid 6th millennium BCE for Mahabharata war.
Wikipedia lists sumerians during 6th and 5th millennium BCE. (I am not saying Wikipedia is right or wrong in this case).
What is your evidence for Sumerian civilization?
There were numerous out of India migrations post Mahabharata war (5561 BCE)
I’d love it if you wrote about the Quran, especially about Mohamed and his magic horse, I bet you any amount of money that you WONT.
I do ancient history.
@@WorldofAntiquity
Good excuse, pretty ancient to most people, I knew you would not have the courage.
Mention the Jewish holy book, I’m sure you would.
@@justincasey5975 Absolutely. I already have a few times and will more.
@@WorldofAntiquity I knew you would say that , write about the Quran and it’s history and origins linked to Judaism and mention texts and passages in the book, I bet you don’t, please try and grow a testicle or two.
@@justincasey5975 Hey Justin! I'm not a professional scholar like Professor Miano, but I majored in history & thought I could clear up some terminology for you.
At my university, when we said the term "ancient history", we often meant history from before the fall of the Western Roman empire. Some people use the term differently, however. They call that period of time, & stretching all the way back to roughly 500 BC the "classical" period of history, leaving true "ancient history" to be stuff even older than that.
So, regardless of which way professor Miano is using the word here, his area of expertise only encompasses a time before Islam existed, & so it would be irresponsible for him to talk with authority on a subject that he's not an expert in... But then again, I guess you probably knew that.
After all, why would you bring up Islam at all? Unless this is a political matter, & not a matter of scholarship in your mind...
The only thing I would say is that from 9:30ish, you are misunderstanding
the target audience of this book. This is not really meant to be an
academic work for ancient history enthusiasts. Oak and others like him
are just trying to churn out publications in an attempt to
cross-reference within alternate history echo-chambers.
In short, this can be seen as an Indian equivalent of something like the
"Museum of Creationism" in the United States. The point by point
takedown is not even necessary when you think of it like that.
@Madhukar Deshmukh those were colonial invaders and fascists that supported the aryan invasion theory or killed people dumbass..........historians today support aryan migration theory........read a book instead of whatsapp buddy
@@RakhiSingh-kj5ok you should read our Indian literature vedas epics and other scriptures and recent scientific studies which corroborated with our scriptures instead the colonial/leftist twisted Indian History. And their whatsapp/social media chats 😂😂😂😂
@Madhukar Deshmukh Aryan Migration Theory is Hindutva's pet strawman which no one is arguing for, hence the million dollar prize. I suppose you know what a strawman is, since you aren't "new to this" and "have been doing this for long."
Enlighten us, what did the genetics tell us about Migration? And stop whining about "intricacies of our culture". This is a historical argument. Meet it on its own terms instead of calling conspiracy on every argument.
@@aamod7696 i am pretty sure you have no knowledge of hindu philosophy..........thats why u reject an idea just because it does not fit your style of thinking........ If you did you would know how the religion and philosphy evolved in those times
@Madhukar Deshmukh you have been doing it for long.......what a dumb argument.
I give you a info. Panchang is the calander that based on astrology by Hindu scriptures. And Panchang is so precise that ISRO use for perfect time for launching rocket
🤣🤣🤣 u just an idiot 😂
Good summation. I always had similar issues with theories that are agenda based. The premises themselves don’t hold up and you encounter logical fallacies every few paragraphs. That makes these books difficult to take them seriously. Thanks for doing this. Fair warning, you will be inundated with negative comments from emotional Hindu Nationalists.
It's amazing how modern historian don't even bother to seriously study someone's work before dismissing it. You can't just claim foundation isn't sound so will not go through the evidence given in book.
Have found this channel to be agenda driven before also. This video confirms it.
That’s like complaining that I only talked about the crumbling foundation of a house and didn’t talk about the well-crafted decor.
He will throw more nonsensical words at you rather than answer your point. That's what this guy is expert at. He hasn't read the original Mahabharat. I doubt he has even read Nilesh's book.
Please find out what is the oldest text known to human and what’s in it? It is not a religious text as you may read in google results.