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I don't think any Hindu will ever believe that the Vedas have been modified! I would be utterly surprised if that was the case!
Well, I don't believe that they were written all at once, and the same hymn can appear in different recessions with slight variations, so it's likely.
Riverwolf,
Please keep in mind that this is ancient India that we're referring to here. There were no cell phones, internet, television, or other forms of mass communication.
In order for someone to have added a verse to the Vedas, they would have had to go to all the ashramas where the Vedas were taught, told the teachers that a new verse had been added, and then told all the Brahmanas who had graduated from the ashramas about the new verse.
I don't think any Hindu will ever believe that the Vedas have been modified! I would be utterly surprised if that was the case!
The only thing that, IMHO, has been modified about the Vedas is the alphabet; from Brāhmī to Devanāgarī - and that's not a modification, as such. The content is still the same.
Just a different alphabet.can you give us an example ? for people don t speak hindi a little difficult to understand
thanks
The impetus for linguistic analysis and grammar in India originates in the need to be able to obtain a strict interpretation of the Vedic texts.
onkara
yes but vedas are message from God from the sky so if you change it do you think that the person that change need an autorisation from God or can he by his own brain change it?
that 's the problem of changing a divine message. no?
onkara
yes but vedas are message from God from the sky so if you change it do you think that the person that change need an autorisation from God or can he by his own brain change it?
that 's the problem of changing a divine message. no?
I believe that the Sages had experiences, and recorded them in the Vedas.
Isn't it true that the Vedas we have were all collected, collated and compiled by Vyasa? Has there been any substantial scholarship to testify that the Vedas have been tampered with subsequent to Vyasa's compilation? Probably no scripture in history has been so zealously guarded by its adherents over so long a period to maintain the purity of even its diction, let alone its verses. Also, the mark of excellence of the greatest of religious teachers used to be in their having written a commentary on the Vedas. When even writing a commentary on the Vedas was considered such an accomplishment, it is unlikely that it would have even crossed anyone's mind to tamper with the Vedas.
What exactly do you mean by the word 'recession' in this context?And yet we have several different recessions of the same Veda. How else, other than local modifications, can we account for this?