1. A View Never Offered Before.
Throughout history, humanity has consistently sought to draw boundaries between what is known and what remains unknown, distinguishing direct experience from inference. Religion has often attributed the mysteries of the unknown to the divine, naming it as God. Science, on the other hand, has referred to these mysteries as Force, seeking to explain the unknown through laws and phenomena. Philosophy has chosen yet another approach, abstracting the unknown into the concept of Being, contemplating existence itself.
However, one must consider the possibility that these distinctions are not as clear-cut as they seem. What if the known and the unknown were never truly separate, but rather two facets of a single reality?
This work emerges from a radical collaboration not merely among different disciplines, but among entirely distinct ways of perceiving the world. It unites the rigorous methodologies of physics with the profound metaphysical insights found in the Upanişads. In doing so, it honours the strengths of both traditions while remaining independent of their limitations, offering a fresh perspective that transcends traditional boundaries.
This work does not promise salvation, divine revelation, or even absolute certainty. Instead, it presents a plausible and comprehensive system for understanding all that moves- an approach rooted in observation and reason rather than dogma or blind faith. Here, the cosmos is not portrayed as the product of a creator or a singular act of creation, but as an endless cycle, devoid of beginnings and endings, and defined by perpetual recurrence.
At its core, this perspective offers a metaphysics that is not abstract or divorced from reality but rather anchored in the tangible reality of particles. It envisions a physics that does not submit to the tyranny of time or the dictates of a cosmic clock. Instead, it recognises adjustment - the principle of transformation and change - as the ultimate law to which everything must yield.
The exploration begins with Brahman, the foundational reality posited by Vedanta. It follows the movement of Isa, the omnipresent force, and concludes, not with silence or a final answer, but with the recognition of recurrence a cycle that endlessly renews itself.
This book does not claim to unveil a new theory of the universe. Rather, it assembles a perspective that has always been possible, though never quite organised in this manner. The essential elements have always existed:
Vedas (1199)
Upanishads (501)
Puranas (633)
Ramayana (747)
Mahabharata (363)
Dharmasastras (167)
Goddess (504)
Bhakti (244)
Saints (1514)
Gods (1295)
Shiva (380)
Journal (184)
Fiction (61)
Vedanta (367)
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