I wish our team in the U.S could claim credit for this clip & say they had paid this farm influencer…
Because it would rank as one of our cleverest ads/promotions…
🙂
@ShwetaSoni2510@virsanghvi You are as stupid as these shirtless men. Your hate for Modi has even made you anti- national. Has Modi policies prevented your family from earning corruption wealth.
🚨: The most important sky events of this decade is occurring on February 28th. 🌌 ✨
Six planets will align and put on a show of our lifetime. Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn will be visible to the naked eye from almost anywhere.
Uranus and Neptune will be visible to naked eye if seen from dark places.
MARK YOUR CALENDERS; February 28th. 📅✨
I don’t know her name, but amazed by how she took apart the sickening duplicity of India’s self-proclaimed liberals.
Two-and-a-half minutes of utterly satisfying demolition.
Before Newton. Before Leibniz. There Was Madhava.
~1350 CE | Sangamagrama, Kerala
Before calculus had a name,
before limits were formalized,
before West knew infinity could be tamed
Bharat was already computing it.
His name was Madhava of Sangamagrama.
Not a legend.
Not a poet.
A mathematician of terrifying precision.
What Madhava Actually Did
Madhava founded the Kerala School of Mathematics, nearly 300 years before modern calculus appeared elsewhere.
He discovered:
• Infinite series for π
• Infinite series for sine and cosine
• Power series expansions
• Techniques equivalent to differentiation and integration
• Error correction methods for infinite processes
This is not numerology.
This is analysis.
The Pi Series:
Madhava computed π correct to 11 decimal places.
Not by guesswork.
Not by geometry alone.
But by infinite series:
π = 4 − 4/3 + 4/5 − 4/7 + …
And then improved it with correction terms to accelerate convergence.
This is the backbone of modern calculus.
Trigonometry Rewritten
Madhava derived infinite series for:
• sin x
• cos x
• arctangent
Exactly the forms later written in textbooks.
Exactly the same structure.
Centuries earlier.
This Was a School, Not a One-Man Accident
Madhava’s work didn’t vanish.
It continued through:
• Nilakantha Somayaji
• Jyesthadeva
• Achyuta Pisharati
Jyesthadeva’s Yuktibhāṣā (c. 1530 CE) didn’t just list results.
It proved them.
Step by step.
In prose.
With logic.
This is rare even by modern standards.
No Printing Press. No Patronage. No Empire.
The knowledge stayed in manuscripts.
Palm leaves.
Regional language.
Teacher to student.
It wasn’t marketed.
It wasn’t exported.
It wasn’t named after its authors.
It simply worked.
Later, the Same Mathematics Appeared Elsewhere
Centuries later, the same series, same limits, same ideas resurfaced:
• Calculus
• Power series
• Trigonometric expansions
New names.
New notation.
Same mathematics.
History remembered the formalizers.
It forgot the originators.
Remember This
Madhava didn’t “anticipate” calculus.
He did it.
He didn’t speculate.
He calculated infinity and controlled it.
This civilization didn’t just philosophize about the infinite.
It computed it.
That is history.
Not myth.