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  1. pingala.iitk.ac.inIIT Kanpur

    Active Sess.: 3 | App Ver.: 9 | Server Ver.: Contact Details. CC-202, Computer Centre, IIT Kanpur-208016 Email:pingala@iitk.ac.in Contact Only For Technical Issues:+91-0512-259-6803/6805 +91-0512-259-6803/6805

  2. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › PingalaPingala - Wikipedia

    Acharya Pingala (Sanskrit: पिङ्गल, romanized: Piṅgala; c. 3rd–2nd century BCE) was an ancient Indian poet and mathematician, and the author of the Chhandaḥśāstra (Sanskrit: छन्दःशास्त्र, lit.

  3. Sep 17, 2020 · Who is Pingala? Acharya Pingala discovered the immense possibilities of Binary numbers quite by accident. He was working on the meter or Chandah of Vedas. Our Vedas were composed in meters or Chandah. Most Indian Languages have the dheerga or long swar and the laghu or short swar.

  4. Pingala (Devanagari: पिङ्गल) is the author of Chandaḥśāstra (Chandaḥsūtra), the earliest known Sanskrit treatise on prosody. Very less historical knowledge is available about Pingala, though his works are retained till date.

  5. Oct 31, 2023 · Pingala, a revered figure in the realm of ancient Indian mathematics and linguistics, stands as a beacon of intellectual curiosity and innovation that has left an enduring mark on the foundations of these disciplines.

  6. Who was Acharya Pingala? Acharya Pingala was the earliest author and influential scholar of the “Chandaḥśāstra” also known as (the Pingala-Sutras). Pingala is also known as the early disquisition of prosody. His work has been appreciated to date but the historical knowledge about him isn’t known much as he belonged from the 2nd ...

  7. Dec 21, 2023 · Pingala is one of the three most important nadis of the astral body. Anatomically, it runs from the right nostril to the root chakra, along the central axis of the body, just right of the spinal cord and sushumna nadi. Pingala has rational, analytical, objective and sometimes aggressive tendencies.

  8. Pingala (पिङ्गल) was an ancient Indian poet and mathematician who lived around 300 BCE, but very little is known about his life. He wrote the Chandaḥśāstra, where he analysed Sanskrit poetry mathematically.

  9. May 6, 2013 · The 72,000 nadis spring from three basic nadis – the left, the right and the central – the Ida, Pingala, and Sushumna. The word “nadi” does not mean nerve. Nadis are pathways or channels of prana in the system. These 72,000 nadis don’t have a physical manifestation.

  10. Ida Nadi & Pingala Nadi. On either side of Sushumna Nadi, there are two channels of energy that support a balanced physical and mental energy: Ida and Pingala. Running from the tailbone to the third eye or Ajna Chakra, these channels carry masculine and feminine energy, and are most often stimulated through pranayama practices. The nostrils are ...

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