You accept aryan invasion but is denial about racial caste system despite scientific proof, where is logic in that.
I already said there can be difference of few centuries here and there in my estimates but there is no proof of 1500BC indo-aryans being in gangetic plains. By the time IA moved to gangetic plains huge population is one reason large section of population didn't integrate with IA.
I grant that for that period, that is the subject matter not of history but of proto-history, there are many possibilities. For that precise reason, it is easy to formulate one's own set of rules for social growth or collapse, and for intra-societal development, and put it beyond argument by saying that these are the rules (the "assumptions") and without taking those into account, further discussion is illegitimate.
This is bad enough. The situation deteriorates rapidly if a chain of events is considered, each, apparently, with its own nimbus of rules and conditions. What is left is a chain that is completely undecipherable without knowledge of the special rules that have been set up, and very often not made plain.
The difference between this kind of conjecture and a work of historical fiction is so thin as to be almost non-existent.
One reason why I get impatient and restless at having to deal with various 'my impression' or 'my estimate' situations; at 69, I really have no time for this.
I was actually hoping to get your insight on the thread topic that is the situation in India during the Turkic invasions especially after decline of the gurjara pratihara empire etc. Which led to success of these invasions.
Before going further, could you summarise, without colouring the account, the discussion so far? I would like to use such a summary to address specific queries and implicit positions that may or may not be apparent on simply reading through the thread.
You accept aryan invasion but is denial about racial caste system despite scientific proof, where is logic in that.
Let us summarise the situation as far as genetic analysis goes: please feel free to correct my account with citations of published data, except two tainted sources, that will be identified elsewhere.
Genetic analysis indicates that
- The Brahmin community taken as a distinct category (there are arguments against doing so) carries clear indications of steppe ancestry, and of a chain of descent from those early immigrants.
- The genetic profile of this community also displays great resemblance to the genetic profiles of the population at large; there is simply nothing to justify a 'racial' distinction.
- There are therefore those who are clearly descended from the immigrants, and those who are not. Both sets of people are almost identical, except for this one thread of descent from the immigrants.
- Genetic analysis also reveals that the hardening of caste boundaries in north India (nothing similar has been researched about south India, and that region is a different case, due to the completely different social development that it may have followed, in terms of the latest research, archaeological as well as genetic) may have started as late as 600 to 800 AD. Please note the very late date, and the social conditions in north India, under the Gupta Empire, that may have encouraged this.
These findings unfortunately do not support a racist foundation for caste. They support a model of some of the original immigrants (themselves multi-ethnic) having managed to maintain a continuity through some 2,000 to 2,500 years, without in any way abstaining from intermarriage with those who were not of immigrant stock.
Similar continuity can be found in other genetic profiles. The Brahmins display this to a larger extent, and that is all. Other castes are also postulated, by some references, that are usually disregarded because of their prescriptive rather than descriptive character, and their origins as sacerdotal texts, to have been created by explicit intermarriage between named groups. We may or may not accept such definitions; for myself, I do not accept the prescriptions, but I do take them as a hint as to the underlying reality, not going so far as to accept them as descriptive.
My difficulty in entering into discussions on these issues is due to the common origin of interlocutors in one of two major categories: Hindu revisionists trying to make everything fit into some bizarre model of world-domination by themselves or their ancestors, and Hindu-hating elements that grub around and proudly display widely disconnected contextually divorced information that prove some deprecatory mind-set or the other.
It is difficult for us to engage with either group without considerable mental and intellectual erosion. In this thread,
@Srinivas represents the first category, and
@Kabira the second. It is alright for both or either set of fanatics to indulge in this relatively harmless self-indulgence (other more earthy metaphors exist); personally, I see no fruitful gain in exchanging views with the mentally and intellectually committed.
I already said there can be difference of few centuries here and there in my estimates but there is no proof of 1500BC indo-aryans being in gangetic plains. By the time IA moved to gangetic plains huge population is one reason large section of population didn't integrate with IA.[/QUOTE]