LOOKING BACK AT HISTORYPart 2 – The Glory of Ancient Persia. History sometimes survives not only in books but also in stone. One such silent witness to the grandeur of ancient Persia is Persepolis, the magnificent ceremonial capital of the Persian ...
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"SURiMOUNT" - 5 new articles

  1. LOOKING BACK AT HISTORY.l: Glory of Ancient Persia-Part 2
  2. SELF-IMPROVEMENT
  3. HAPPY SUNDAY
  4. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY
  5. SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY: UNIFIED FIELD
  6. More Recent Articles

LOOKING BACK AT HISTORY.l: Glory of Ancient Persia-Part 2


LOOKING BACK AT HISTORY
Part 2 – The Glory of Ancient Persia

History sometimes survives not only in books but also in stone.

One such silent witness to the grandeur of ancient Persia is Persepolis, the magnificent ceremonial capital of the Persian Empire.

Even today, the ruins stand proudly on the Iranian plateau, reminding us of a civilization that flourished more than 2,500 years ago.

The Vision of Darius the Great

Persepolis was founded around 518 BCE by Darius I, one of the greatest rulers of the Achaemenid Empire.

Darius ruled an empire that stretched from:
the Indus Valley in the east
to Egypt in the west
and from Central Asia down to the Persian Gulf

Administering such a vast empire required remarkable organization, diplomacy, and vision.
Persepolis was not merely a capital city.

It was meant to symbolize the unity and diversity of the empire.

A City Built for Celebration

Unlike ordinary capitals, Persepolis functioned largely as a ceremonial center.

Delegations from across the empire would gather here during great festivals, especially the Persian New Year Nowruz.

Envoys and representatives from many nations brought gifts and tribute to the Persian king.
Stone reliefs carved into the palace walls beautifully depict these delegations — each dressed in their traditional clothing, carrying offerings from their homeland.

These carvings are among the most valuable visual records of the ancient world.

Architecture that Defied Time

Persepolis was constructed on a vast stone terrace with grand staircases, palaces, and audience halls.

Among the most impressive structures was the Apadana Palace, where the king received dignitaries and ambassadors.

Massive columns, finely carved sculptures, and intricate bas-reliefs reflected the extraordinary craftsmanship of Persian artisans.

The city combined artistic influences from many cultures within the empire — Egyptian, Mesopotamian, and Greek — creating a unique Persian style.

A Tragic End

The glory of Persepolis did not last forever.

In 330 BCE, the Macedonian conqueror Alexander the Great captured the city during his campaign against Persia.

Shortly afterwards, Persepolis was set on fire — whether deliberately or accidentally remains a subject of historical debate.

Much of the magnificent city was destroyed.
Yet the ruins survived.

The Silent Witness of History

Today, the broken columns and stone carvings of Persepolis still stand beneath the open sky.
They remind us that empires may rise and fall, but human creativity and cultural achievement endure.

Ancient Persia was not merely a military power; it was a civilization that valued administration, art, architecture, and cultural diversity.

And in the silent stones of Persepolis, the glory of that civilization continues to speak across the centuries.

Image 

Persepolis, ceremonial capital of the Achaemenid Persian Empire, founded by Darius the Great around 518 BCE.

Grateful thanks to ChatGPT for its great help and support in creating this blogpost!🙏

   

SELF-IMPROVEMENT

HAPPY SUNDAY


A THOUGHT FOR TODAY

SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY: UNIFIED FIELD

SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY: UNIFIED FIELD 

The Ancient Lab: How the Bhagavad Gita Mapped the Unified Field 5,000 Years Ago

​In the modern era, we often view science and spirituality as two parallel lines—destined to run alongside each other but never truly meet. Science is the realm of the "how," governed by rigorous mathematics and observable data; spirituality is the realm of the "why," governed by faith and introspection.

​However, if we peel back the layers of ancient wisdom, specifically the 5,000-year-old dialogue of the Bhagavad Gita, we find that the "lines" weren't just touching—they were intertwined. Long before the birth of quantum mechanics, the Gita provided a poetic yet precise description of what modern physicists now call the Unified Field.

​The Universal Form: More Than a Vision

​In Chapter 11 of the Gita, the warrior Arjuna is granted "divine sight" to witness Krishna’s Vishwarupa—the Universal Form. For centuries, this was interpreted as religious mythology. But through the lens of modern physics, it reads like a qualitative description of the quantum substrate of reality.

​Arjuna describes seeing "countless forms, eyes, and mouths" and "all the universes gathered in one place." This mirrors Quantum Field Theory (QFT), which suggests that particles—the building blocks of our bodies and stars—are not separate "things." Instead, they are localized excitations or "vibrations" of an underlying field. Just as waves are not separate from the ocean, Arjuna saw that all beings are merely fluctuations of one single, infinite field of energy and information.

​Beyond the Arrow of Time

​One of the most striking parallels lies in the concept of time. During the vision, Arjuna sees the future collapse into the present—viewing the end of the Great War before the first arrow is even shot.

​Modern physics, specifically Einstein’s General Relativity, leads us to the "Block Universe" theory. This suggests that past, present, and future exist simultaneously in a four-dimensional spacetime fabric. Our perception of time "flowing" is merely a limitation of human consciousness. When Krishna tells Arjuna, "I am Time, the destroyer of worlds," he is describing reality from a perspective outside the linear "arrow" of time—a perspective that science is only now beginning to model.

​Consciousness: The Missing Link

​Perhaps the most profound intersection is the role of the Observer. In the Gita, Krishna identifies himself as the "Self seated in the hearts of all beings." He isn't a separate entity watching from above; he is the consciousness through which the entire field is experienced.
​This echoes the Copenhagen Interpretation of quantum mechanics, which posits that the act of observation is what collapses a "wave of probability" into a "particle of reality." As Max Planck, the father of quantum theory, famously stated: "I regard consciousness as fundamental. I regard matter as derivative from consciousness." The Gita proposed this thousands of years ago: that the universe is not a collection of dead matter, but a living field of consciousness observing itself.

​The Synthesis

​When we bridge these two worlds, we realize that the ancient sages and modern scientists are climbing the same mountain from different sides.

​Science uses the language of mathematics to describe the external mechanics of the field.
​Spirituality uses the language of experience to describe the internal reality of that same field.
​For those of us exploring the intersection of Science and Spirituality, the message is clear: the separation between "me" and "the universe" is a persistent illusion. Whether we call it the Unified Field, the Quantum Vacuum, or the Brahman, we are all temporary ripples in an eternal, infinite ocean.

​5,000 years later, we aren't just discovering the truth of the universe—we are finally remembering it.

​Reflection for the Week: 

If everything in your life—your challenges, your triumphs, and your very body—is part of one single, unified field, how does that change the way you treat the person standing next to you today?

Grateful thanks to GOOGLE GEMINI for its great help and support in creating this blogpost!🙏





   

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