(Redirected from Ṛtá)
Sanskrit '' (ऋत) as used in
Vedic Sanskrit literally means the "order or course of things", cognate to Avestan ''.
In the
Vedas, ''rta'' lays the
philosophical foundation for the
Hindu conception of ''
dharma''. In current usage, the use of the
term ''rta'' is eschewed for the more developed and now standard ''
dharma''. ''Rta'' became deified as the father of
justice and
righteousness, unyielding but eminently fair. It grew, as
Radhakrishnan states, "from physical divine" in its purvey. ''Rta'' was
morality, the equitable law of the
universe.
The Vedic deity most closely associated with ''rta'' is
Varuna.
Proto-dharma: rta in the Vedas
To assess a concept whose explication is bewildering in range, it is useful to trace its nascence and subsequent development in
Vedic culture. In the
Vedas, which span back to
2000 BCE (and much further in oral tradition), the first concept that is strikingly ''dharmic'' is that of
rta.
Rta literally means the "course of things". At first, the early
Hindus (or followers of the "Sanatan Dharma") were notably inquisitive as to the inscrutable order of nature, how the heavenly bodies, the rushing winds and flowing waters, the consistent cycling of the seasons, were regulated. Thenceforth sprang rta, whose all-purpose role it was to signify this order, the path that was always followed. Through all the metamorphoses and permutations of nature, of life in general, there was one unchangeable fact: rta.
Soon it transcended its passive role as a mere signifier and took on a greater one, that of an active imposition of order. Not only the natural principles, but the gods and goddesses themselves, were obliged to abide by rta. Rta became the father, the law of justice and righteousness, unyielding but eminently fair. It grew, as Radhakrishnan states, from "physical" to "divine" in its purview.
The world's seeming mess of altercating fortune, the caprice of the divinities, was now intelligible. Indeed, there was a single, unchanging harmony working 'behind the scenes.' A right path existed, ready to be taken by the righteous ones. Rta signifies the way life ought to be, shifting from physical to divine, from
natural to
moral order. Rta was morality, the equitable law of the universe. The conception of this all-transcending, supramental force that is, practically, the same concept as later understandings of dharma, is captured in this early
Vedic prayer, preempting the liturgical strains of classical
Hindu mantras involving ''dharma'':
:::::"''O Indra, lead us on the path of Rta, on the right path over all evils''."
:::::-- ('Rig Veda Book X, Chapter CXXXIII, Verse 6')
Thus we see the logical progression of an early 'course of things' into an all-encompassing moral order, a path and way of righteousness, a universal harmony, in the Vedic idea of Rta.
See also
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Upanishads
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Rtu
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Sat (Sanskrit)
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Asha
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Logos
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Ma'at
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Wyrd