Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access

Brajendra Nath Seal - a Sesquicentenary Birth Anniversary Tribute


Affiliations
1 Management Department, IHRM, Sonargaon Park, Kolkata 700 150, India
2 Department of Polymer Science and Technology, University of Calcutta, Kolkata 700 009, India
3 Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, MVJ College of Engineering, Bangalore 560 067, India
 

Rajatantrapravina Acharya Brajendra Nath Seal was the greatest savant and polymath of the 20th century. As the whole body of human knowledge was known to him, he could approach a subject matter from the standpoint of totality and examine its relation to other subjects to get a fuller understanding of its place in the world's widest canvas. He was a seeker of truth and believer in universal humanism. This essay embraces a brief account of this forgotten genius - a scholar who elevated and exposed brilliantly the cultural heritage of India, its philosophy, science, history, religion and civilization. His magnum opus 'Positive Sciences of the Ancient Hindus', epic 'The Quest Eternal', and other works remain yet to be critically analysed and studied, and so is the man.
User
Notifications
Font Size

Abstract Views: 367

PDF Views: 164




  • Brajendra Nath Seal - a Sesquicentenary Birth Anniversary Tribute

Abstract Views: 367  |  PDF Views: 164

Authors

Sujata Gupta
Management Department, IHRM, Sonargaon Park, Kolkata 700 150, India
Prabir K. Gupta
Department of Polymer Science and Technology, University of Calcutta, Kolkata 700 009, India
Supratim Gupta
Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, MVJ College of Engineering, Bangalore 560 067, India

Abstract


Rajatantrapravina Acharya Brajendra Nath Seal was the greatest savant and polymath of the 20th century. As the whole body of human knowledge was known to him, he could approach a subject matter from the standpoint of totality and examine its relation to other subjects to get a fuller understanding of its place in the world's widest canvas. He was a seeker of truth and believer in universal humanism. This essay embraces a brief account of this forgotten genius - a scholar who elevated and exposed brilliantly the cultural heritage of India, its philosophy, science, history, religion and civilization. His magnum opus 'Positive Sciences of the Ancient Hindus', epic 'The Quest Eternal', and other works remain yet to be critically analysed and studied, and so is the man.


DOI: https://doi.org/10.18520/cs%2Fv106%2Fi5%2F760-762