THE RATI RAHASYA: Cryptic Elaboration of Behavioural Algorithms

An ancient Indian poet named Kokkoka (known as Koka, or as Koka Pundit), wrote the Sanskrit text Rati Rahasya, also known as the Koka Śāstra, which is a handbook on practical erotica. The text was most likely written in the eleventh or in the twelfth century, although its precise date of composition is unknown. According to the legend, Ratirahasya may have been composed to appease Venudutta, a monarch. Siddha patiya pandita, or "an ingenious man among learned men," is how Kokkoka identifies himself in the book.

Before the Indian subcontinent was subjected to geographic and religious invasions, it was home to extensive exploration of manifold kinds of sensory indulgence. These explorations were of a precise, unbiased technical nature that lied beyond social structures, and highlighted the dangers and pleasures of such explorations.

The works emergent from these explorations hold extensive algorithms that elaborate on the development of physical and psychological discord in humans, as well as describe potent treatments on the lines of Āyurveda, psychiatry, and sound-breath modulations.

Rati Rahasya, though essentially a work on erotica, differs in its nature from Vātsyāyana’s Kāmāsūtra, which is considered to be the holy grail of erotica. Rati Rahasya cryptically informs us about many projections of sensory algorithms that contribute towards the purity of the Eight Rasas.

Rasa here connotes the Tantra algorithm of complete expanse of emotional intelligence that we possess as humans through time. It may be corroborated to the complete neuro-hormonal cocktail that encompasses the emotional experience which we linearly express or emote through bhāva.

Pandit Kokka explains to us analytically and in the envelope of erotica personality traits, sensory projections acquired through linear programming of the brain, body language and methods of precise human interactions. This data, if applied in our modern world, expands beyond erotica and enlists expansive algorithms of personality development, lifestyle behaviour, subconscious programming and projections.

In a nutshell, Rati Rahasya cryptically elaborates on methods of neural programming that offer profound insights and tools which overcome stagnations in modern-day structures, which hover on a spectrum of personality or behavioural malfunctions. It builds on prior works and gives us a precise measure algorithm of Āyurveda and of the Anguli Pramāna, which are the foundational simulation of our brain towards sensory geometric data that subconsciously decides interactive compatibility within humans. It further expounds on methods to access brain pathways through spinal breathing patterns in the form of cryptic sounds or mantras which to the human eye may appear as gibberish. It additionally elaborates on alchemical formulations of the Rasa-śāstra, giving insights towards nanobots as medicines that could be used to program our neural patterns for behavioural development.

Most other works like the Pañcasāyaka (11th century), the Jayamaṅgalā (Yaśodhara's commentary on the Kāmasūtra from the 13th century), as well as the late Kāmaśāstra works - Smaradīpikā and Anaṅgaraṅga (16th century), and the 7th century non-Kāmaśāstra work Amaruśataka by poet Amaru build and elaborate on these very algorithms. With their text being either extant in part or redacted, it is significant to revisit this data in an algorithmic manner to access the expansiveness of data processing as acquired by our sense projections and their constantly changing dynamism with the surroundings. These algorithms, when imbibed in a non-linear way through breath, sound and through constant access by synchronising ourselves with circadian biorhythms, would most definitely grant access to the purest Rasa algorithm… which, as the texts describe, leads to a state of euphoria.

 

Spinal Breath. Sensory algorithms thermal.
                                                

 

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