Deciphering The Indus Script An Ideographic Approach to Deciphering the Indus Writing[ An Abstract.]
D Rajeev
Ideographs Ideographs are symbolic forms used by the human mind to capture the perceived nature of an object. As perception metamorphoses through the human psyche’s layers, its trans-formation is influenced by a variety of subjective factors. In the case of a culture's association of a form with meaning, these factors include their world-view, their paradigm of sciences -their collective psyche. The forms associated with the same concept can have a remarkable degree of resemblance, despite the transformations they may undergo as perception evolves through the layers of distinct subjective factors, in very separated cultures. For instance, if we take the Chinese symbol for Sun, and Egyptian symbol for the Sun, we find they share much similarity in both their visual forms and their sound forms.
Figure 1. The ancient Chinese character For the Sun, Pronounced rì [Left] and the ancient Egyptian written character for the Sun, Pronounced Ra [Right].
Similarity in sound forms, for instance, can exists between languages as culturally distinct and separated as Malayalam [a Figure 2. An Ancient Chinese symbol for language spoken in southernmost India] and Chinese. In both the moon compared to an ancient the languages, "de" indicates possession, "ni" is you, “nin-de” or Egyptian symbol for the moon “ni-de” conveys the meaning “yours”; "kan" means "to see" in Chinese, and the same sound suggests the meaning "eye" in Malayalam,