I will add a bit more context to the word "Samudrartha", When the buddha was discussing the prajnaparamita texts (also known as the great text of enlightment, contains more than 50000 pages, and was originally compiled in pali and later in sanskrit), shubhuti asked the buddha about the very essence of these texts, since learning more than 50k+ pages and retaining them in memory seemed quite difficult, so the buddha answered, "Thus shubhuti, the samudrartha (meaning of this ocean) is the very first and the core page, the prajna paramita hridaya sutra (also known as the heart sutra), and even today, in all the buddhist schools the very fundamental text they first learn is the heart sutra, which can be easily written in a single leaf."
actually, we could also get the meaning for samudrartha by breaking it into samudra and artha, which mean ocean and meaning respectively in hindi and kannada. I wasn't sure if it was a co-incidence tho
There can be different meanings, it's not really clear. Samudra means "gathering of the waters" which is ocean/sea. Second part of the word can be "Ardh" meaning "to divide in half" since DH literally split the sea. Or just taken from Samudra Manthana (churning of the ocean, fight of good/evil) from the Vishnu Puran epic.
@@popcorn.menace it's "arTha" not "arDha "adDha" means division in half, and "arTha" means "meaning" so samudrartha means "meaning of the ocean." im indian, and i know sanskrit and other of its derivative languages... edit: I will add a bit more context, When the buddha was discussing the prajnaparamita texts (also known as the great text of enlightment, contains more than 50000 pages, and was originally compiled in pali and later in sanskrit), shubhuti asked the buddha about the very essence of these texts, since learning more than 50k+ pages and retaining them in memory seemed quite difficult, so the buddha answered, "Thus shubhuti, the samudrartha (meaning of this ocean) is the very first and the core page, the prajna paramita hridaya sutra (also known as the heart sutra), and even today, in all the buddhist schools the very fundamental text they first learn is the heart sutra, which can be easily written in a single leaf."
@@shabreenbakthur7906 Namaskaram fellow sanskrit enthusiast :) That word is polysemous, it can have different meanings based on context. "Artha" can mean value too. (Value of the sea?) Or maybe "way" like used in "arthashastra"so it could be "way of the ocean." There's probably no particular clear meaning. I'm just enjoying the song :D
I will add a bit more context to the word "Samudrartha", When the buddha was discussing the prajnaparamita texts (also known as the great text of enlightment, contains more than 50000 pages, and was originally compiled in pali and later in sanskrit), shubhuti asked the buddha about the very essence of these texts, since learning more than 50k+ pages and retaining them in memory seemed quite difficult, so the buddha answered, "Thus shubhuti, the samudrartha (meaning of this ocean) is the very first and the core page, the prajna paramita hridaya sutra (also known as the heart sutra), and even today, in all the buddhist schools the very fundamental text they first learn is the heart sutra, which can be easily written in a single leaf."
actually, we could also get the meaning for samudrartha by breaking it into samudra and artha, which mean ocean and meaning respectively in hindi and kannada. I wasn't sure if it was a co-incidence tho
Thank you for adding a bit more context to the word and song.
This massive sword in the background seems to be the trademark of the artist
stunning artwork
It's such a beautiful piece. But aside all, it kinda gives the Indian vibes too ❤
So magical and serene 🤎 loving this piece too . the tune changes briefly then back again and the photo is so dreamy as well.
Always wonderful to see an upload from this channel!
A new upload from this channel is always a blessing 🙏 thank you so much
Dan Feng and Dan Heng approve ❤
Incredible sound, I’m mesmerized!
Amazing music 🎶
Now waiting for amazing story ✍🏼
Xin Tan..where are you?!
I love this...taigektou music and xintan stories❤💫
Still waiting for xintan stories!
Taigektou 정말 최고
700th like! So glad TaiGekTou posted this song.
like discovery and so whimsical ~ 💓
Peaceful 😊
Gracias por el vídeo ❤❤
Samudra means ocean in Sanskrit
❤you deserve more❤
Nice. 🙌 Beautiful artwork.
Beautiful and peaceful flute❤
漂亮的伞娘❤
❤
❤❤❤
❤❤
👍👍
星铁的“水龙吟”
Samudrartha = Meaning of the sea?
If you search the title + honkai star rail you might get the clip with the text and subtitles 😅
There can be different meanings, it's not really clear. Samudra means "gathering of the waters" which is ocean/sea. Second part of the word can be "Ardh" meaning "to divide in half" since DH literally split the sea. Or just taken from Samudra Manthana (churning of the ocean, fight of good/evil) from the Vishnu Puran epic.
@@popcorn.menace nice 😃
@@popcorn.menace it's "arTha" not "arDha "adDha" means division in half, and "arTha" means "meaning" so samudrartha means "meaning of the ocean." im indian, and i know sanskrit and other of its derivative languages...
edit: I will add a bit more context, When the buddha was discussing the prajnaparamita texts (also known as the great text of enlightment, contains more than 50000 pages, and was originally compiled in pali and later in sanskrit), shubhuti asked the buddha about the very essence of these texts, since learning more than 50k+ pages and retaining them in memory seemed quite difficult, so the buddha answered, "Thus shubhuti, the samudrartha (meaning of this ocean) is the very first and the core page, the prajna paramita hridaya sutra (also known as the heart sutra), and even today, in all the buddhist schools the very fundamental text they first learn is the heart sutra, which can be easily written in a single leaf."
@@shabreenbakthur7906 Namaskaram fellow sanskrit enthusiast :)
That word is polysemous, it can have different meanings based on context. "Artha" can mean value too. (Value of the sea?) Or maybe "way" like used in "arthashastra"so it could be "way of the ocean." There's probably no particular clear meaning. I'm just enjoying the song :D
Is there sheet music for this?
But what specific bamboo flute is it ?