In the secluded Gurez Valley of Kashmir, a cache of 7th-century birch-bark fragments containing the 'Brahma-Vidya' (Science of the Absolute) has been recovered from a hollowed-out stone altar. The fragments contain a lost commentary on the nature of the 'Inner Witness,' emphasizing a radical form of non-dualism that pre-dates the works of Adi Shankara.
The text is unique for its use of mathematical metaphors to explain the relationship between the individual and the universal. By treating consciousness as a 'point of infinite radius,' the manuscript offers a geometric approach to Advaita philosophy that has not been seen in other contemporary sources.