Excavations near the ancient sites of the Ghaggar-Hakra riverbed have yielded a series of terracotta tablets inscribed with early Brahmi-like characters. Titled Mana-Spandana-Niti, these artifacts are being hailed as one of the earliest systematic treatments of Vedic psychology. The tablets describe the soul's interaction with the material world not as direct contact, but as a series of resonant vibrations that define the quality of human perception.
The inscriptions detail a "discipline of the mind" aimed at aligning individual internal rhythms with the Rta, or cosmic order. This resonant metaphysics suggests that ancient thinkers in the Vedic period possessed a nuanced understanding of consciousness as a dynamic wave-like phenomenon, a discovery that challenges purely ritualistic interpretations of early Sanatan Dharma. Ongoing spectral analysis aims to reveal more hidden text on the weathered edges of the tablets.