A rare birch-bark manuscript titled Vak-Prasada has been recovered from a family-held collection in a remote village in the Mewar region of Rajasthan. Preliminary analysis suggests the text was composed in the 11th century and offers a unique synthesis of Mimamsa linguistics and Advaita metaphysics. The treatise argues that the 'grace' (prasada) of language is the primary bridge between the finite human intellect and the infinite reality of Brahman.
Unlike other linguistic texts of the era that focus on formal logic, the 'Vak-Prasada' emphasizes the aesthetic and emotive qualities of Sanskrit phonetics. It posits that the clarity of a speaker's intention serves as a purifying agent for the listener, effectively removing cognitive obstacles to enlightenment. This discovery is expected to shift scholarly understanding of medieval Indian epistemology toward a more integrated model of logic and aesthetics.