Talk
A surprising proportion of mathematicians are accomplished musicians. Is it because music and mathematics share beautiful patterns?
CMIT is back with a talk, and this time it will take us on a journey of exploring these patterns.
Date and Time- 11th April 2023 | 9:00 PM
Venue- CSB Seminar Hall
Speaker- Mr. Ganesh Dharmadhikari, IIT Gandhinagar
Topic- Decoding the Mysteries of Binary Computations and Musical Harmony in Ancient India
Abstract- Piṅgala is credited with the first use of the binary system, using light (laghu) and
heavy (guru) syllables to describe the combinatorics of the Sanskrit meter. Piṅgala
is also sometimes credited with the first use of zero, as he used the Sanskrit word
śūnya to explicitly denote a number. Chandaḥ Sutra is also known as
Chandaḥśāstra or Piṅgala Sūtra after its author Piṅgala. It is the earliest Hindu
treatise on prosody to survive into the modern era. It is a collection of aphorisms
focused mainly on the art of poetic meters and presents some mathematics specifically
binary systems in music service. We naturally discuss some exciting examples of conversion of binary to decimal and decimal to
binary numbers with the help of pratyayas in Piṅgala’s Chandaḥśāstra and some
poetic examples and naturally move into combinatorial methods in Indian music
and later discuss a few ancient Indian examples on combinatorics from Līlavatī and
Sangitaratnakarah.
Please find the pdf of the talk here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1FDDQZOkXK_Fd2VJ0pef64iW-Y8mQuHBo/view