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Centre for the Study of Indian Languages (CSIL)
Bhāratīya Bhāṣā Adhyayana Kendra
The Centre for the Study of Indian Languages (CSIL) is an initiative to discover the unity of Indian languages at the cultural and philosophical levels. The centre supports multifaceted research projects, and the data corpora needed for this. It also recognises high quality research on Indian languages by instituting global awards and fellowships.
Vision
Fostering research and applied initiatives to explore the unity of Indian languages at the cultural and philosophical levels
Objectives
- Developing and supporting research in Indian languages to explore and understand their functioning at the cultural and philosophical levels
- Instituting global fellowships and awards to recognize and promote high-quality work on Indian languages
- Building digital repositories, datasets and tools of Indian language texts that aid new research
Philosophy
Indian languages, despite their diverse linguistic origins, serve as vehicles of a shared conceptual lifeworld. It is a heritage that transcends grammatical and syntactic differences. But Indian languages are faced with a twofold challenge: Indian languages are becoming increasingly “relay languages” that are parasitic on Western conceptual frameworks and as a result there is a fundamental gap where subtle indigenous distinctions that structure our experience become inexpressible within formal discourse.
An important intangible cultural heritage is our life with concepts. Such a concept-world can become distorted and inaccessible due to various historical reasons. Concept loss is every bit like livelihood loss, language loss, or biodiversity loss. However, very little attention is paid to this resource which is the very basis for a flourishing and self-sustaining cultural life, consisting of a rich matrix of actions. Lexical solutions alone cannot restore lost concepts. What’s needed is reconstructing the predicates that constitute Indian cultural knowledge. These predicates, shaped over generations, resist rapid change despite our linguistic registers getting constantly remixed. This creates an opportunity for a conceptual enquiry which can replenish lost concepts and make them available for reflection.
Initiatives

Awards and Fellowships
International Fellowship for book-length research monographs
This initiative is intended to support mid-career scholars to engage with classical language related materials like literature, inscriptions etc. The aim is to engage the best in the domain to work on and contribute to multi-disciplinary research relevant to understand classical civilizations.
International Theses Award
This initiative is intended to support high-quality multi-disciplinary research in the sphere of Indian languages and literature. This initiative proposes ‘best theses award’ for outstanding Ph.D. dissertations related to Indian languages and literature across the globe.
Digitization of Classical Corpora
Comprehensive website for classical literature across Indian languages with multi-layered texts: This project aims at bringing all classical texts related to Indian languages at one place for ease of access and make them available in open source for catering further research. The website collates the existing digitized texts of classical languages by collaborating with multiple institutions and hosts new materials by creating large scale digitization projects.
Predicates Project
Understanding the lifeworld of a culture is to understand how experience is factorized into specific domains in that culture. To do that we study concepts and their operations in specific domains of experience. This research also tracks the historical development of conceptual structures and logical relations between concepts within specific domains. The Predicates Project aims to open new fields of study based on the data and insights created by the project.
Advisory Board
Honorary Professor

Prof. K S Kannan
Eminent scholar and Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj Chair Professor (Retd), Indian Institute of Technology, Madras
Mentor

Prof. B Narahari Rao
Honorary Professor, Chanakya University and Retd Professor, Institute of Philosophy, Saarland University, Saarbrucken, Germany
Associate Faculty
Project Fellows
Publications

Representation of the Midnight Sun in Greek and Indian Astronomical Texts

Representation of the Midnight Sun in Greek and Indian Astronomical Texts
Resources

Representation of the Midnight Sun in Greek and Indian Astronomical Texts
