RajeshA wrote:No need to search! Everything is in the Anukramaṇīs. How much does one know about Euclid or even about Alexander?!
Some can claim that the ṛṣis, mentioned in the Anukramaṇīs were the composers of the Vedas. Others can say that they were the first humans who received the Vedas from the non-human agency. Still others can say, that our knowledge about the maintainers of Vedas goes only as far back as these ṛṣis.
It is important that we do not reject the Anukramaṇīs or try to play them down!
RajeshA ji, to say that "everything" is in the Anukramanis could be an exaggeration? You are right, though, that there's no need to "reject" it. IIRC, Dubey ji had linked a paper here discussing the gotra-pravara system and the Anukramanis that did justice to them while admitting that they were a socio-political construct for corporate preservation and perpetuation that was conceived at some point in time when the Vedas were already considered ancient.
This is the balanced viewpoint.
In Indian systems we see that from time to time there is a re-corporatization of tradition for the sake of dissemination or preservation. So the Anukramanis give us valuable memetic material for a particular iteration of this phenomenon.
But the actual "first" reciter or seer in time still seems impossible to find. If you like, we could speak of the "first known" seer in "known history" --
while simultaneously admitting that the Vedas were already extant and ancient at the time this "first known" seer cognized the meaning of a sukta.
The very second mantra of the RgVeda points to this beginningless and unending succession -
अग्निः पूर्वेभिर्ऋषिभिरीड्यो नूतनैरुत । स देवाँ एह वक्षति ॥ [RgVeda 1.1.2]
"Worthy is Agni to be praised by living as by ancient seers. He shall bring hitherward the Gods."
But there is no mantra in the Vedas that point to anyone as the "first" to receive any part. Whereas other "religious scriptures" all have some chosen person who is credited with having received an eternal truth. They are credited within the test itself, copiously, reading like a biography -- not in a separate index. I'm glad if that sounds more logical to many, but unfortunately or fortunately the Veda does not seem to entertain that scope of logic.
So, historians can certainly use Anukramanis and anything else to trace the recent traversal of the preservers and students of Veda...but to equate that with a search for the "origin" of Veda is a little ambitious -- given their methods.
I feel far more comfortable if Westerners or anyone else derides the Vedas as being the illogical, founder-less, intoxicated bumblings of barbarous tribals who probably had too much to drink and with absolutely no sense of history. This need not create too much khujli. As we can see here, Vedic adherents' reaction is different from Quran Rage. More like Vedic Laugh Riot.
Having reached this conclusion, they must cease to further trouble the subject -- and we need not keep feeding their arguments with responses at their own level. Meanwhile, a rising India must devotes more of her best minds and hearts to dive deeper into Veda and sport in it. That will do far more to showcase its merit and serve its original purpose. I prefer this to the dangerous entanglement in false "logic" that struggles to find a loophole for its hooks within the Veda itself. The former case seems quite preferable as long as Indians themselves don't get taken in by their nonsense -- which will happen less and less as the colonial shadow recedes.
If they want to speculate that in known history the preservers of the Vedas came into India from outside, that's fine too. After all we have plenty of cases of scatter-gather happening in every millennium. Jews were in place A the day before yesterday and dispersed to BCD yesterday, and they're back here at A today with a completely changed racial profile including a generous genetic infusion from Khazars. Still no one doubts their claim on Hebrew tradition.
The concept of Vedic "origin" has to be kept aloof at all cost. Anyone is welcome to join, or leave. But to allow the Vedic narrative to be tied to tribal migrations in or out is bizarre. Rather, the most we can say is that some psychological archetypes for states of mind and movement of universal processes can be discerned from the Veda, and umpteen instances of the human drama can be correlated to those archetypes. So also for the scatter-gather of human migrations.
Therefore, instead of OIT Rage against Dubey ji, we can use the thread to make a course correction about the exact objectives of the thread.
1. Shri Talageri and Co's work can be useful to expose the flawed and tendentious assumptions of the AIT-nazis, and turn their logic against them.
2. Then we must also give ample exposure to the fact that the question of the "origin" of Veda is impossible to ascertain by the given methods.
3. Then we must make everyone admit that the Veda's own voice talks of beginningless and endless transmission, rather than a history punctuated by prophets whose words are immortalized.
4. We can also admit that - to ordinary material logic - this sounds absurd...
5. But that there are other scopes of logic that are used in the advanced
sciences where this logic is very current.