Text / Sourcestubschool: pan-indian· Frawley — Astrology of the Seers
Atharva Veda
अथर्ववेदAtharva Veda
also: atharvaveda
txt-atharva-vedaDefinition
The fourth Veda. Frawley quotes the Hymn to Time (XIX.23.1–4) for his 'science of time' — Time as a seven-rayed horse, mounted by the seers, whose wheels are all the worlds, who moves as the first of the Gods. CLASSICAL but verified:false; Frawley the conduit.
Classical
Prāṇa relevance
Prāṇa relation not yet traced — a complete, acceptable terminal state.
Connections (2)
derived-from · 2
- Frawley opens his 'science of time' with the Atharva Veda Hymn to Time (XIX.23.1-4): Time as a seven-rayed horse whom the seers mount, whose wheels are all the worlds, who moves as the first of the Gods. The Time-as-Divine-breath concept is anchored on this located root hymn, Frawley the conduit.
- ←The science of time (planets as the Gods/channels of time; karma as the quality of the moment)ClassicalFrawley's science-of-time doctrine is presented under, and grounded in, the Atharva Veda Hymn to Time (XIX.23.1-4) quoted as its epigraph at book p.23 — Time as a seven-rayed horse, the seers' mount, the first of the Gods. The doctrine derives its scriptural authority from this located root hymn, Frawley the conduit.
Sources
- txt-frawley-astrology-seersThe Science of Time (book p.23)Modern✓ verifiedFrawley quotes the Atharva Veda Hymn to Time XIX.23.1–4
Other attributes
- Text Class
- mula
- Approx Date
- Vedic (2nd–1st millennium B.C.)
- Attribution
- Vedic (Atharvan/Angiras lineage, anonymous)
- Key Chapters
- XIX.23.1–4 (the Vedic Hymn to Time / Kala-sukta)