Sunday May 17, 2026

Episode 56 - Pingala - Beats us up

Episode 42: Pingala – The Poet of Binary

Why is a 2nd-century BCE Indian grammarian being featured on a mathematics podcast? Because centuries before the "Founding Fathers" of Western mathematics were born, Pingala was already encoding the universe.

In this special rhythmic episode, I step out of the traditional lecture hall and into the world of spoken word. After a transformative experience at the 'Beat up the Poets' conference, I will explore the Chandaḥśāstra; Pingala’s ancient treatise on prosody.

We look into how the study of Sanskrit poetic meters led to the earliest known descriptions of:

  • Binary Number Systems: How stressed and unstressed syllables created a mathematical logic long before Turing.

  • The Concept of Zero (Shunya): The "original gap" in the poetic flow.

  • The Fibonacci Sequence: Why the "Man from Pisa" was actually a few centuries late to the party.

  • Pascal’s Triangle: Uncovering the "Meru Prastāra" hidden in ancient Vedic verses.

From "off-by-one" errors to the combinatorics of rhythmic beats, this episode is a lyrical journey into the seismic foundations of ancient Indian mathematics.

Note from me:
This is my final pre-recorded episode before I head off on paternity leave! Thank you all for your incredible support. I’ll be taking a short writing break to welcome the new addition to the family, but the podcast will return soon.


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Keywords:

Pingala, History of Maths, Chandaḥśāstra, Sanskrit Prosody, Binary Code, Fibonacci Sequence, Pascal’s Triangle, Combinatorics, Vedic Mathematics, Ancient India, Zero, Shunya, Benjamin Cornish.

Hashtags:

#maths #historyofmaths #pingala #mathematicians #podcast #binary #poetry #fibonacci #ancientindia #stem #mathematics

 

The music was-
"Danse Macabre - Finale"
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

 

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