176 points by cvrajeesh 5 days ago | 45 comments | View on ycombinator
stinger 5 days ago |
never_inline 4 days ago |
Eg: Indra would have a much larger role in original versions of mahābhārata and rāmāyana compared to Hindu popular conscience. In Ramayana he defeated kabandha, lent weapons to Rāma, and the hero is frequently compared to him as "Indra among men" - making him technically the most mentioned God in Valmiki's text (https://manasataramgini.wordpress.com/2017/02/12/the-ramaya%...).
In Mahabharata he fights equally with the krishna-arjuna in the burning of khandava episode until a truce is reached (and for reasons beyond the present redactions of the epic and owing to his prominence as ārya national god, the new capital of pāndavas is named.... Indraprastha!).
This kind of stuff is virtually unknown to AI, which reinforces the present pop understanding of the epics, which is to say super shallow and not very interesting.
danish00111 5 days ago |
FrancisGerard 5 days ago |
I’ve been working on a similar project for biblical texts. For example, here’s a character detail page for David: https://hypr.bible/en/entities/person/david/
I’m finding that character dictionaries like this are useful to people who want to engage with ancient texts but are not very familiar with them, but even if one is familiar, they are still quite helpful.
sparin9 4 days ago |
The Crimson Dusk theme is a nice touch too. Looking forward to seeing how the data coverage grows over time!
ashtavakra 5 days ago |
aanet 5 days ago |
- The default vis has very low contrast (despite changing theme colors).. perhaps make the contrast stronger. I find this is the case with most AI-driven websites :-/ Same for some of the standard text ("family lineage", "group connections, etc)
- Pls cite the sources. That would be useful / important
- The dynasty tree looks useful... But is it incomplete? Or is only the visualization capped at some limit?
- Wasn't sure what the "Sections" dropdown on the left does
The challenge for sure is about the sheer number of characters, the number of years/decades in these epics, the complexity.
Would love to see some references, perhaps with quotes in Sankskrit / transliterated to English, at key points. [yes, this is challenging, no doubt]
Hope this is useful
yalogin 4 days ago |
PradeetPatel 5 days ago |
Keep up the good work!
undefined 5 days ago |
quadrifoliate 4 days ago |
That's a view you get in every single book, and it looks really weird here. I feel like it's important to get this really basic stuff right before doing the cool-looking graph visuals.
ultrasounder 4 days ago |
inveflo 4 days ago |
dhruvmittal 5 days ago |
alephnerd 4 days ago |
This with Amar Chitra Katha would be great.
deepikaa_s 4 days ago |
avrionov 5 days ago |
atulvi 4 days ago |
anilgulecha 4 days ago |
lateforwork 4 days ago |
undefined 4 days ago |
the_arun 4 days ago |
ksdme9 5 days ago |
rockstar2001 2 days ago |
r0b05 4 days ago |
phyzix5761 5 days ago |
connectsnk 4 days ago |
swaminarayan 4 days ago |
random_walker 5 days ago |
ms7892 4 days ago |
shantnutiwari 4 days ago |
> Draupadi-- strength 6, wisdom 8
Are you creating RPG characters?
Its clear you used AI to create the whole thing, but did you stop to think if it makes sense?
aos_architect 3 days ago |
Riany 2 days ago |
cleverdash 4 days ago |
qwertyuiop_ 4 days ago |