The life and words of Dr. Subbarayappa attest to his vast range of scholarship: from science to philosophy of science, from history to history of science, and across other, related branches of knowledge. His numerous publications make it abundantly clear that he is a serious researcher and meticulous writer. Many offices have been offered to him, and many honours bestowed upon him, in recognition of his scholarship.
As an admirer and colleague of Dr. Subbarayappa, I am deeply impressed by the number and quality of contributions received by the editors from eminent scholars, Indian and foreign, who have gladly agreed to write in recognition of the scholarly eminence of Dr. Subbarayappa. I am sure this science, by historians of science and by scientists themselves. I wish Dr. Subbarayappa a long life in his tireless pursuit of scientific knowledge of the most excellent quality.
In this context, leading scientific and theological organizations have made enormous contributions through their seminars and symposia, dialogues and workshops in bringing diverse thinkers on one platform for this interactive explorations. Sir John Templeton Foundation, based in Philadelphia, USA, is one such international organization instrumental in convening such seminars, and sponsoring related projects worldwide.
Several individuals out of sheer academic interests if not curiosity have pursued research in these two areas thereby contributing to the growth of this exploratory knowledge and generating this new genre of literature where the horizons of science meets the sea of traditions. Prof B.V. Subbarayappa is one such eminent individual who has relentlessly pursued and in his quiet way stimulated the fusion of disparate minds in this area. He is hailed as a pioneer in the History of Science movement in India and abroad, and his contributions in this field are without match and have earned him a name among scientists, science historians, philosophers and intellectuals all over the world. We are inspired by Prof Subbarayappa’s monumental work and sheer humanity to find a way of honouring him. The present volume is a small token in that direction.
It is now our duty also to acknowledge those who have helped with this project at various stages and contributed to its fruition from its inception. Our first gratitude goes to the scholars from around the world who amidst their busy academic schedules were kind enough to send essays from their current research work and patiently going through edited galleys and persevering with inadvertent delays in bringing out the publication in the anticipated time.
We are beholden to Prof D.P. Chattopadhyaya, Chairman, Center for Studies in Civilizations, New Delhi, for his Foreword to the Volume, and to Prof. J.N. Mohanty of USA, for a highly reflective Open Word.
Our special thanks are also due to Ms Sally Percival Wood (of Sophia, Australia), Dr Andrew Irvine and Chris John Zvokel (of New York, USA), for lending a hand with desk-editing tasks at various stages. Ms Rinea (Goa), Mr. Srinivasamurthy, Mr. C. Gangadhara also helped at various stages of the preparation of the manuscript from its raw form to the publication phase.
We thank the Sir John Templeton Foundation, USA for co-sponsoring the publication, and also the Trustees of The Indological Research Foundation, Science and Spirituality Research in India Trust (SSRT), Prof Suryanatha U.Kamath, Hon Chairman, Prof B.V. Subbarayappa Felicitation Committee, Bangalore, for providing other kinds of infrastructure support.
We also thank Mr. Ashok Jain of Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers, New Delhi, for undertaking to publish this volume.
We hope that readers will gain a deeper understanding of the relationship between Science and Religion, love and respect for the traditions in these two frontiers and would find endless opportunities for pursuing such studies resulting in stimulating intellectual dialogues and research thus enhancing resulting in stimulating intellectual dialogues and research thus enhancing the quality of life and the world they live in. As an old Sanskrit adage says: “The understanding of knowledge or philosophy becomes crystal clear only by way of arguments, counter-arguments and dialogues.”
This work on the growth of knowledge and critical appraisal of traditional sciences in India earned the recognition of the world community of historians of science. And the deserved recognition in part culminated in his election as the General President of the Science Division of the UNESCO related International union of the History and philosophy of Science, by its general assembly at Liege, Belgium on July 25, 1997. But more than such institutional and bestowed laurels, the man himself is rather more intriguing, or something of a living institution in his own right, particularly with his astute philosophic perceptiveness and a gentle intellectual disposition, as well as his deep spiritual openness from his own Brahmanic scholarly pedigree. These qualities make any subject he writes or speaks on quite more interesting than one might have otherwise thought possible: it is as though the subject-master itself comes fully endowed, thought not yet manifest, with a depth, a fascination of its own, and an elevating smile! With his singular effort in the field, the scene had become quite different and something to be celebrated, as it indeed was, on the eve of the golden jubilee of the birth and freedom of celebration through the studious contribution of Dr. Subbarayappa who, on the margins of the nascent nationalist movement, both stimulated the retrieval of the glories of ancient India and nurtured its embrace of the modern sciences. True to his quasi-Gandhian spirit. Subbarayappa has written on science’s grand phases and, more importantly, attempted to forge a conduit, a bridge, a continuum between traditional and modern sciences. He has always emphasized that in the Indian context, traditional astronomy, medicine and technology coexisted with their modern counterparts, which is an observation of considerable significance. Several essays in this commemorative volume attest to the lotus-like steps he chalk-marked quietly to demonstrate this observation from, and in his own long-ranging studies. Had Galileo lived in India, for instance, he would not have suffered as much as he did under the Catholic church of Europe: he would have been celebrated for his advancements into heliocentric theories (which had heuristic counterparts in navigational calculus) and for the impact his early discoveries had on astrology. Classical Indian astronomers were not only supported in such pursuits, their “old” endeavours were never quite abandoned in India.
As a science historian of both the ancient and Raj periods in India, and a veritable witness to the development of science in the postcolonial era, Dr. Subbarayappa posits that the socio-political environment that marked the pre-independence freedom struggle was a key source of inspiration to Indian scientists. Indeed, it was a primary force behind scientific pioneers such as J.C. Bose and P.C. Roy. Post-independence a socio-political climate favouriong a public/institutional focus has veered more towards technological developments – from nuclear capability to the industrious IT revolution. Nevertheless, pure research continues to be supported and encouraged in large measure by private institutes and collective, and is carried out by Indian scientists working abroad, such as Chandrasekhar and Ramanuja.
Bidare Venkatasubbaiah Subbarayappa was born in 1925 in the town of Bidare in the erstwhile princely state of Mysore. His early High School education was at Madhugiri, after which he attended known, then Intermediate College at Tumkur. The youthful subbu, as he was popularly known, then entered Central College, a constituent of Mysore University, where he majored in chemistry with physics as a subsidiary and was subsequently awarded a subject scholarship for chemistry during his honours year. In the year of India’s Independence and soon after his graduation in 1947, Dr Subbarayappa began his career as a lecturer in chemistry in Vijaya College, Bangalore. In 1955 he joined the Central Foundation Technological Research Institute there that he developed a keen interest in the scientific manuscripts, and other primary and secondary sources, that he discovered as he scoured the library shelves. In 1962, his paper on “Indian Atomism” was specially noticed in the British Journal Nature. Two years later Subbarayappa obtained his doctorate degree from Mysore University for his thesis Studies in Indian Concepts in Physical Sciences.
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