In April 2009, “a team of Indian scientists reports in Friday’s issue of Science journal that the Indus script has a structured sign system showing features of a formal language.” One of the authors of that paper is giving a talk at IISc on June 9th at 10 am (e-mail from Ranjith).
NIAS LITERARY, ARTS AND HERITAGE FORUM
Cordially invites you to a lecture entitled
Indus People and their script
By
Prof. Mayank Vahia
Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai
On Tuesday, 9th June, 2009, at 10.00 am
in
J R D Tata Auditorium,
National Institute of Advanced Studies,
Indian Institute of Science Campus,
Bangalore 560 012Abstract
Indus Valley Civilisation was the first truly urban civilisation with several cities with population of 20,000 people or more at its peak. It flourished in the Western part of the Indian Subcontinent from around 7000 BC to 1900 BC with a peak period of 2500 BC to 1900 BC when it went into a decline. The hallmark of this civilisation is the miniature seals on which they produced truly magnificent art work and wrote in small cryptic notes. Their writing has been enigmatic and since their first discovery some 130 years ago, it is still not clear if it is linguistic writing or not. Our recent work has shown that not only is the writing similar to linguistic writing but detailed structure of writing can be clearly seen. We will discuss the issue of Indus writing in the context of the Civilisation and our recent work.
About the speaker
Prof. Mayank Vahia is an astronomer at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai. After having spent 3 decades in space astronomy instrumentation, his recent interests in growth of astronomy in India has taken him to study various aspects of India’s history and prehistory with special emphasis on astronomy and intellectual growth of the Indian civilisation.
Hope some of you will be able to attend this talk and blog about it.
JK, this is particularly interesting because pANini’s aShTAdhyAyi is well recognized to be a formal-language-ish definition for Sanskrit.
JK, there is good picture of the authors in recent edition of India Aboard which covered the issue (and also gave a big box to Witzel and his cohorts). Let me see if I can scan it decently so I can send it over to you…