Vaiśeṣika Darśana-A Physics and Metaphysics of Universe (IFVS) course

Vaiśeṣika Darśana — A Physics and Metaphysics of the Universe is an immersive, interdisciplinary course that explores one of the world’s earliest and most sophisticated attempts to understand reality through both scientific and spiritual lenses. Rooted in the teachings of Kaṇāda and expanded by Praśastapāda, this course reveals how ancient Indian thinkers developed a complete framework of matter, motion, causation, perception, and cosmic order long before the rise of modern science. Students will journey through the seven padārthas—dravya (substance), guṇa (quality), karma (motion), sāmānya (generality), viśeṣa (particularity), samavāya (inherence), and abhāva (absence)—and discover how these categories form a unified ontology capable of explaining everything from atomic structure to consciousness, from physical laws to ethical action. The course highlights Vaiśeṣika’s remarkable contributions to proto‑physics, including its theories of atoms (paramāṇu), molecular combination, heat, light, sound, and motion—culminating in Praśastapāda’s formulation of laws strikingly similar to Newton’s. At the same time, students will explore the system’s profound metaphysical insights: the nature of soul, mind, karma, liberation, and the extraordinary concept of ṛtambharā‑prajñā, or truth‑bearing intuition. By the end of the course, students will understand how Vaiśeṣika integrates empirical observation, logical analysis, and spiritual realization into a single coherent worldview. They will see why this darśana is not merely a philosophical system but a science of reality, offering timeless insights into the structure of the universe and humanity’s place within it. This course is ideal for students of philosophy, physics, Indology, comparative religion, and anyone interested in how ancient civilizations approached the deepest questions of existence with intellectual rigor and scientific curiosity.

Suggested Study Plan · 75 hrs total · 3 hrs/week
Week 1 25 topics (~75 hrs)
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25 Lectures
1 Introduction to the Six Ṣaḍ–darśanas and the Place of Vaiśeṣika in Vedic Knowledge Trial 2 Dharma, Padārthas, and the Foundational Ontology of Vaiśeṣika 3 Causality, Generality, Individuality, and the Ontology of Existence 4 The Five Bhūtas, Their Sensory Foundations, and the Physics of Matter in Vaiśeṣika 5 Inherent and Non Inherent Properties of the Bhūtas, Time, Space, Directions, Doubt, and Śabda 6 Ātmā as the Inner Dravya and the Foundations of Sensory Cognition 7 The Existence of Manas (Mind), the Proof of Ātmā, and the Multiplicity of Souls 8 Nityatva (Eternality), Universal Causality, and the Conditions of Perception 9 The Three Classes of Effected Dravyas, the Constitution of Bodies, and the Origin of Yonija & Ayonij 10 Karma (Motion) in Living and Non Living Entities: Effort, Reaction, Gravity, Force, and Natural Moti 11 Motions in Solids, Liquids, Fire, Air, Mind, and Soul: The Full Spectrum of Karma in Vaiśeṣika 12 Praśastapāda’s Three Laws of Motion in the Vaiśeṣika Tradition 13 Sāmānya Dharma: Vedic Authority, Social Ethics, Merit, Wickedness, and National Order 14 Visible and Invisible Motives, Purity of Livelihood, Causes of Attachment, and the Moral Path to Mok 15 The Examination of Guṇa, Parimāṇa, Aṇutva–Mahattva, and the Logic of Relativity in Vaiśeṣika 16 Ekatva, Pṛthaktva, Number, Contact–Separation, Word–Meaning, and the Doctrine of Samavāya 17 Cognition (Jñāna), Imperceptibility of Soul and Mind, and the Mechanism of Knowledge 18 Information, Memory, Meaning, and the Material Basis of Sense Organs 19 The Four Types of Absence (Abhāva) and the Perception of Non Existence 20 Inference (Anumāna), Verbal Testimony, Memory, Dreams, Avidyā, and Ṛṣi Knowledge 21 Pleasure, Pain, Their Causes, and Their Distinction from Knowledge 22 The Three Causes: Inherent, Non Inherent, and Efficient (Samavāyī, Asamavāyī, Nimitta) 23 Comparative Atomism: Vaiśeṣika, Greek, and Modern Physics 24 National Advancement Through Understanding Dravya–Guṇas 25 Ṛtambharā Prajñā: Truth Bearing Intuition Beyond Perception and Inference
Suggested Study Plan · 75 hrs total · 3 hrs/week
Week 1 25 topics (~75 hrs)
Prof. Ravi Prakash Arya
Indian Foundation of Vedic Science
@IFVS
Verified educator

Vaisheshika Darshana: A Physics and Metaphysics of the Existing Universe , by Prof. Ravi Prakash Arya, Pub. Amazon Books USA & Indian Foundation for Vedic Science.

Note: Participants of the course are free to join Live Zoom Sunday Discussion Sessions starting every Sunday at 9:30 AM  (New York time) to Ask Questions related to the Course or any question on Hinduism from an Expert. This is free of cost.

Zoom Link: join Live Zoom Sunday Discussion Session

Zoom Meeting ID: 813 3077 7352

Zoom Passcode: shantihi

  1. Assessment is optional for those wishing to receive a Completion Certificate (about half our participants go for it). Assessment is based on quiz or an essay.
  2. Quiz or Essays are usually due one week after the course ends. We encourage our tutors to assist where possible with extensions when needed.
  3. Completion Certificates are awarded by Vedic Science Virtual University, A Project of Indian Foundation for Vedic Science, India on successful assessment Please note that these are informal non-accredited courses to enhance efficiency in Vedic Studies. Some students have used them towards degree courses, yoga training, and even Masters degrees, but that was by individual arrangement.
Course

Vaiśeṣika Darśana-A Physics and Metaphysics of Universe

Vaiśeṣika Darśana - — A Physics and Metaphysics of the Universe is an interdisciplinary course exploring ancient Indian philosophy and science. Stude…

3 hrs/week 1 week access ~75 hrs total

Vaiśeṣika Darśana — A Physics and Metaphysics of the Universe is an immersive, interdisciplinary course that explores one of the world’s earliest and most sophisticated attempts to understand reality through both scientific and spiritual lenses. Rooted in the teachings of Kaṇāda and expanded by Praśastapāda, this course reveals how ancient Indian thinkers developed a complete framework of matter, motion, causation, perception, and cosmic order long before the rise of modern science. Students will journey through the seven padārthas—dravya (substance), guṇa (quality), karma (motion), sāmānya (generality), viśeṣa (particularity), samavāya (inherence), and abhāva (absence)—and discover how these categories form a unified ontology capable of explaining everything from atomic structure to consciousness, from physical laws to ethical action. The course highlights Vaiśeṣika’s remarkable contributions to proto‑physics, including its theories of atoms (paramāṇu), molecular combination, heat, light, sound, and motion—culminating in Praśastapāda’s formulation of laws strikingly similar to Newton’s. At the same time, students will explore the system’s profound metaphysical insights: the nature of soul, mind, karma, liberation, and the extraordinary concept of ṛtambharā‑prajñā, or truth‑bearing intuition. By the end of the course, students will understand how Vaiśeṣika integrates empirical observation, logical analysis, and spiritual realization into a single coherent worldview. They will see why this darśana is not merely a philosophical system but a science of reality, offering timeless insights into the structure of the universe and humanity’s place within it. This course is ideal for students of philosophy, physics, Indology, comparative religion, and anyone interested in how ancient civilizations approached the deepest questions of existence with intellectual rigor and scientific curiosity.

Suggested Study Plan · 75 hrs total · 3 hrs/week
Week 1 25 topics (~75 hrs)
25 Lectures
1 Introduction to the Six Ṣaḍ–darśanas and the Place of Vaiśeṣika in Vedic Knowledge Trial 2 Dharma, Padārthas, and the Foundational Ontology of Vaiśeṣika 3 Causality, Generality, Individuality, and the Ontology of Existence 4 The Five Bhūtas, Their Sensory Foundations, and the Physics of Matter in Vaiśeṣika 5 Inherent and Non Inherent Properties of the Bhūtas, Time, Space, Directions, Doubt, and Śabda 6 Ātmā as the Inner Dravya and the Foundations of Sensory Cognition 7 The Existence of Manas (Mind), the Proof of Ātmā, and the Multiplicity of Souls 8 Nityatva (Eternality), Universal Causality, and the Conditions of Perception 9 The Three Classes of Effected Dravyas, the Constitution of Bodies, and the Origin of Yonija & Ayonij 10 Karma (Motion) in Living and Non Living Entities: Effort, Reaction, Gravity, Force, and Natural Moti 11 Motions in Solids, Liquids, Fire, Air, Mind, and Soul: The Full Spectrum of Karma in Vaiśeṣika 12 Praśastapāda’s Three Laws of Motion in the Vaiśeṣika Tradition 13 Sāmānya Dharma: Vedic Authority, Social Ethics, Merit, Wickedness, and National Order 14 Visible and Invisible Motives, Purity of Livelihood, Causes of Attachment, and the Moral Path to Mok 15 The Examination of Guṇa, Parimāṇa, Aṇutva–Mahattva, and the Logic of Relativity in Vaiśeṣika 16 Ekatva, Pṛthaktva, Number, Contact–Separation, Word–Meaning, and the Doctrine of Samavāya 17 Cognition (Jñāna), Imperceptibility of Soul and Mind, and the Mechanism of Knowledge 18 Information, Memory, Meaning, and the Material Basis of Sense Organs 19 The Four Types of Absence (Abhāva) and the Perception of Non Existence 20 Inference (Anumāna), Verbal Testimony, Memory, Dreams, Avidyā, and Ṛṣi Knowledge 21 Pleasure, Pain, Their Causes, and Their Distinction from Knowledge 22 The Three Causes: Inherent, Non Inherent, and Efficient (Samavāyī, Asamavāyī, Nimitta) 23 Comparative Atomism: Vaiśeṣika, Greek, and Modern Physics 24 National Advancement Through Understanding Dravya–Guṇas 25 Ṛtambharā Prajñā: Truth Bearing Intuition Beyond Perception and Inference
Suggested Study Plan · 75 hrs total · 3 hrs/week
Week 1 25 topics (~75 hrs)
Prof. Ravi Prakash Arya
Indian Foundation of Vedic Science
@IFVS
Verified educator

Vaisheshika Darshana: A Physics and Metaphysics of the Existing Universe , by Prof. Ravi Prakash Arya, Pub. Amazon Books USA & Indian Foundation for Vedic Science.

Note: Participants of the course are free to join Live Zoom Sunday Discussion Sessions starting every Sunday at 9:30 AM  (New York time) to Ask Questions related to the Course or any question on Hinduism from an Expert. This is free of cost.

Zoom Link: join Live Zoom Sunday Discussion Session

Zoom Meeting ID: 813 3077 7352

Zoom Passcode: shantihi

  1. Assessment is optional for those wishing to receive a Completion Certificate (about half our participants go for it). Assessment is based on quiz or an essay.
  2. Quiz or Essays are usually due one week after the course ends. We encourage our tutors to assist where possible with extensions when needed.
  3. Completion Certificates are awarded by Vedic Science Virtual University, A Project of Indian Foundation for Vedic Science, India on successful assessment Please note that these are informal non-accredited courses to enhance efficiency in Vedic Studies. Some students have used them towards degree courses, yoga training, and even Masters degrees, but that was by individual arrangement.
Sign in to join the discussion.
Recent posts
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Lectures
25
1
Introduction to the Six Ṣaḍ–darśanas and the Place of Vaiśeṣika in Vedic Knowledge Trial This lecture positions Vaiśeṣika within the broader Vedic tradition, outlines its unique contributions, and prepares students for a deep exploration of its categories, dravyas, and metaphysical insights.
2
Dharma, Padārthas, and the Foundational Ontology of Vaiśeṣika This lecture covered: • Vaiśeṣika definition of dharma • Vedic authority • Knowledge as the path to liberation • Six categories of padārthas • Nine dravyas • Twenty four guṇas • Five karmas • Laws of causation • Early formulation of the third law of motion
3
Causality, Generality, Individuality, and the Ontology of Existence This lecture covers: • The Causality Principle • The distinction between cause without effect and effect without cause • The role of the observer in determining generality and individuality • The hierarchy of sāmānya • The uniqueness of paramāṇu as viśeṣa • The ontology of sattā (existence) • The distinction between dravyatva, guṇatva, karmatva and their respective entities
4
The Five Bhūtas, Their Sensory Foundations, and the Physics of Matter in Vaiśeṣika This lecture covers: • Meaning of bhūta as “evolute” • Tanmātrā–sense–bhūta correspondence • Definitions of pṛthivī, āpaḥ, tejas, vāyu, ākāśa • Phase transitions known to ancient Indians • Identification through liṅga • Vāyu’s unique property of touch • Scriptural basis for identifying invisible dravyas • Proof of God through nomenclature and function • Refutation of space being known through motion
5
Inherent and Non Inherent Properties of the Bhūtas, Time, Space, Directions, Doubt, and Śabda This lecture covers: • How contact produces non inherent properties • Inherent guṇas of pṛthivī, āpaḥ, tejas • Nature of time and its causal role • Dimensions of space and the derivation of directions • The psychology of doubt • The ontology of śabda and its non eternality • The three causes of sound
6
Ātmā as the Inner Dravya and the Foundations of Sensory Cognition This lecture covers: • Transition from external to internal dravya • Sensory objects and their domains • The soul as the true knower • Refutation of the body as the cause of knowledge • Four types of causal relationships • Opposing and non opposing factors • Fallacies of inference • True knowledge as arising from soul–sense–object conjunction • Inference of the soul in other beings
7
The Existence of Manas (Mind), the Proof of Ātmā, and the Multiplicity of Souls This lecture covers • Perception requires four factors: ātmā, indriya, artha, and manas. • The mind exists because knowledge sometimes fails despite sense contact. • Mind is one, atomic, material, and eternal. • The soul is established through signs such as life, desire, aversion, and effort. • The soul is eternal, spiritual, and distinct from the body. • The word “I” refers directly to the soul, not the body. • Knowledge cannot belong to the body; therefore, the soul is the knower. • Souls are many, not one, because experiences are not shared across bodies. • Vedic texts confirm the plurality of souls.
8
Nityatva (Eternality), Universal Causality, and the Conditions of Perception The lecture explores the Vaiśeṣika doctrine of nityatva, or eternality, which posits that certain entities like prakṛti, kāla, and ātmā are eternal and without material cause. These eternal entities are inferred from their effects, aligning with the Vedic principle that sat (eternal) cannot be created or destroyed. The lecture also examines the conditions for perception, emphasizing that objects must possess magnitude, multiplicity, form, and touchability to be visible.
9
The Three Classes of Effected Dravyas, the Constitution of Bodies, and the Origin of Yonija & Ayonij The Vaiśeṣika system categorizes effected dravyas into bodies, sense organs, and sensory objects. The human body is primarily composed of pṛthivī atoms, with other bhūta atoms present. Ayonija beings, not born from a womb, exist and are confirmed by nomenclature, logic, and Vedic testimony.
10
Karma (Motion) in Living and Non Living Entities: Effort, Reaction, Gravity, Force, and Natural Moti Kaṇāda’s Vaiśeṣika Darśana prioritizes karma (motion) over guṇas, highlighting its centrality in Vedic physics. The text explores various aspects of motion, including its causes in living beings and material objects, the role of gravity, and the propagation of motion through connected bodies. It also anticipates Newton’s laws, recognizing the proportionality between force and effort, and force and acceleration.
11
Motions in Solids, Liquids, Fire, Air, Mind, and Soul: The Full Spectrum of Karma in Vaiśeṣika The lecture concludes the Vaiśeṣika treatment of motion, integrating physics, psychology, cosmology, and soteriology into a unified theory of karma. It covers various aspects of motion, including solids, liquids, gases, and the soul, as well as the nature of darkness, space, time, and the motionless nature of guṇas and karmas. The lecture also highlights Praśastapāda’s four laws of motion, which anticipate Newton’s laws.
12
Praśastapāda’s Three Laws of Motion in the Vaiśeṣika Tradition Praśastapāda’s laws of motion, articulated in the Vaiśeṣika tradition, predate Newton’s laws and describe principles of force, directionality, proportionality, and reaction forces. His laws include the necessity of an impressed force for motion, proportionality of motion to force and direction, and equal and opposite reactions. Additionally, Praśastapāda provides a molecular explanation for fluid motion, highlighting the advanced understanding of physics in classical Indian philosophy.
13
Sāmānya Dharma: Vedic Authority, Social Ethics, Merit, Wickedness, and National Order Kaṇāda shifts from physics to ethics in Vaiśeṣika Darśana, applying scientific clarity to dharma. The Veda, authored by the creator, is the foundation of cosmic law, prescribing charity for ecological welfare and emphasizing individual karma. Society should prioritize distinguished scholars while supporting all, boycott anti-social elements, and exempt those at or below per capita income from taxes.
14
Visible and Invisible Motives, Purity of Livelihood, Causes of Attachment, and the Moral Path to Mok Kaṇāda’s analysis of Vaiśeṣika Darśana explores the motives behind human actions, distinguishing between visible and invisible motives. He emphasizes the importance of intention in determining the purity of actions, highlighting the role of dharma in achieving mokṣa. Kaṇāda also delves into the psychology of attachment, explaining how it influences adherence to dharma and ultimately determines one’s path to liberation or rebirth.
15
The Examination of Guṇa, Parimāṇa, Aṇutva–Mahattva, and the Logic of Relativity in Vaiśeṣika Kaṇāda examines the behavior of guṇas, attributes that reside in dravyas. Guṇas inherit the eternality of their dravya, being eternal in eternal dravyas like paramāṇus and non-eternal in non-eternal dravyas like earth, water, fire, and air. The lecture also explores the relativity of perception, the existence of God, and the nature of mind, space, and time.
16
Ekatva, Pṛthaktva, Number, Contact–Separation, Word–Meaning, and the Doctrine of Samavāya This lecture explores the qualities of singleness (ekatva) and discreteness (pṛthaktva) in Vaiśeṣika Darśana, emphasizing their logical nature and application to non-eternal objects. It examines the relationship between cause and effect, highlighting their inherence (samavāya) and the impossibility of contact between them. The lecture also delves into the nature of words and meanings, asserting their conventionality and lack of physical relation.
17
Cognition (Jñāna), Imperceptibility of Soul and Mind, and the Mechanism of Knowledge Chapter 8 of Vaiśeṣika philosophy explores the nature of cognition, asserting it as a real event with specific causes. Cognition arises from the conjunction of soul, sense organ, object, and mind, with dravya (substance) being the cause of cognition of its inherent qualities (guṇas) and actions (karmas). The chapter also examines the relationship between generality and particularity, the role of qualifiers in knowledge of dravya, and the sequential order of knowledge.
18
Information, Memory, Meaning, and the Material Basis of Sense Organs Knowledge sometimes requires stored information, as seen in statements like “this is that person” or “feed him,” which depend on prior knowledge. Recognition requires previous perception, and words refer to objects, qualities, and actions. The human body is primarily earth-based, and each sense organ is made from the material whose quality it perceives.
19
The Four Types of Absence (Abhāva) and the Perception of Non Existence Vaiśeṣika Darśana explores the doctrine of abhāva (absence), treating it as a real category with distinct types and causes. The lecture outlines four types of absence: prāgabhāva (pre-birth absence), dhvansābhāva (post-mortal absence), anyonyābhāva (mutual absence), and atyantābhāva (absolute non-existence). It also discusses how absence is perceived, emphasizing the role of memory and contrast, and highlights the extraordinary perceptual abilities of Yogīs.
20
Inference (Anumāna), Verbal Testimony, Memory, Dreams, Avidyā, and Ṛṣi Knowledge The lecture explores Vaiśeṣika’s epistemology, focusing on inference (anumāna) as a means of knowledge. It explains the five types of inferential relations and how inference relies on observation, memory, and universal relations. The lecture also touches on śābda (authoritative testimony), memory, dreams, and the distinction between vidyā (true knowledge) and avidyā (ignorance).
21
Pleasure, Pain, Their Causes, and Their Distinction from Knowledge Kaṇāda examines the guṇas of the soul, focusing on pleasure (sukha) and pain (duḥkha). He argues that pleasure and pain arise from different causes (favorable and unfavorable experiences) and are mutually exclusive, unlike knowledge which arises from perception and inference. Kaṇāda further distinguishes pleasure and pain from knowledge, asserting that they are not forms of cognition but arise from internal dispositions like rāga and dveṣa.
22
The Three Causes: Inherent, Non Inherent, and Efficient (Samavāyī, Asamavāyī, Nimitta) The threefold theory of causation in Vaiśeṣika Darśana includes samavāyī (inherent cause), asamavāyī (non-inherent cause), and nimitta (efficient cause). Samavāyī causes are inseparable, asamavāyī causes are qualities or actions inherent in the samavāyī cause, and nimitta causes are external forces initiating transformation. This theory is foundational for later Indian logic and metaphysics.
23
Comparative Atomism: Vaiśeṣika, Greek, and Modern Physics The lecture compares Vaiśeṣika atomism, Greek atomism, and modern physics, highlighting their differing motivations, structures, and purposes. Vaiśeṣika atomism is metaphysical and spiritual, Greek atomism is materialist and mechanistic, and modern physics is scientific and empirical. Despite their differences, all three traditions agree on the existence of fundamental units composing the world.
24
National Advancement Through Understanding Dravya–Guṇas Kaṇāda, a philosopher from over two thousand years ago, proposed that understanding the properties of substances (dravya) and their qualities (guṇa) leads to societal advancement. He argued that knowledge of the natural world should be applied to improve agriculture, medicine, engineering, and governance, ultimately leading to national prosperity. Kaṇāda’s vision anticipated the scientific method and emphasized the ethical application of science for human welfare and dharma.
25
Ṛtambharā Prajñā: Truth Bearing Intuition Beyond Perception and Inference Ṛtambharā prajñā, a concept in Indian epistemology, is a form of knowledge considered superior to perception and inference. It arises from a purified mind and reveals truths about the soul, cosmos, and ultimate reality. This knowledge, acknowledged in Yoga, Sāṅkhya, and Vaiśeṣika, is seen as self-evident and forms the basis of Ṛṣi knowledge and Vedic authority.