Lokavibhaga Explained

Author:Sarvanandi
Language:Prakrit
Period:458 CE

The Lokavibhāga is a Jain cosmological text originally composed in Prakrit by a Digambara monk, Sarvanandi,[1] surviving in a later Sanskrit translation by one Siṃhasūri.[2] It the oldest known Indian source to use zero as number.[3] Surviving manuscripts of the Lokavibhāga are listed in v.26 of the New Catalogus Catalogorum.[4] Parts of the Bakhshali Manuscript on arithmetic, which does use a physically written symbol for zero, have been carbon-dated, but the results of this dating are puzzling and are still being debated.[5]

The printed edition of the Lokavibhāga states that the original Prakrit work was composed by Sarvanandin at Patalika in the Banarastra on a certain day the astronomical details of which are given. These correspond to 458 CE. The surviving text is a Sanskrit translation of Sarvanandin's work by one Simhasūri, made "some considerable time" after that date of Sarvanandin.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopaedia of Jainism By Nagendra Kr Singh, Indo-European Jain Research Foundation, Published by Anmol Publications PVT. LTD., 2001
  2. Book: Digital Library Of India. Lok Vibhag (1962) Ac 6785.
  3. Book: Ifrah, Georges . The Universal History of Numbers: From Prehistory to the Invention of the Computer . 416 . Wiley . 2000 . 0-471-39340-1 .
  4. Book: Dash, Siniruddha. New catalogus catalogorum: an alphabetical register of Sanskrit and allied works and authors Vol. 26 Vol. 26. 2013. Univ. of Madras. Madras. 931470378. en.
  5. Plofker. Kim. Keller. Agathe. Hayashi. Takao. Montelle. Clemency. Clemency Montelle . Wujastyk. Dominik. 2017-10-06. The Bakhshālī Manuscript: A Response to the Bodleian Library's Radiocarbon Dating. History of Science in South Asia. en. 5. 1. 134–150. 10.18732/h2xt07. 2369-775X. free.
  6. Book: Aiyangar, S. Krishnaswami. Some Contributions Of South India To Indian Culture. 1923.