Rigvedadi Bhashya Bhumika

Rigvedadi Bhashya Bhumika (also known as Introduction To Vedas) is a book written originally in Hindi by Maharishi Dayanand Saraswati, a nineteenth-century social reformer and religious leader in India. His other notable book was Satyarth Prakash.[1][2]

Purpose Of The Book

The book was written with the purpose of introducing teachings of the Vedas (an ancient scripture related to Hinduism) to general people. Swami Dayananda believed that various misconceptions had been created by the interpretations of the Vedas propagated by various scholars like Sayana, Mahidhara, Wilson, Ralph T.H. Griffith, Max Muller.[3]

gollark: Well, I decided to not have ROM and to dump program code into memory starting from location `0` because WHY NOT.
gollark: Maybe a general "flags" register, yes.
gollark: Hmm, what registers do I need other than general ones and the program counter?
gollark: Oh, and the assembly language can be based on S-expressions, like WASM, to be annoying.
gollark: This "belt machine" thing looks like an interesting variation on stacks.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.