Across the ancient civilizations of India and Persia emerged a remarkable shared intuition: that the universe is governed not by chaos, but by an underlying principle of truth, order, harmony, and moral balance. In the Vedic traditions of India this principle became known as Ṛta (Rta), while in ancient Iranian and Zoroastrian traditions a closely related concept appeared as Asha/Arta. Though separated by geography and later religious development, these traditions preserved echoes of a common Indo-Iranian intellectual heritage in which cosmic order and ethical life were inseparable.
In the Vedic worldview, Ṛta represented the foundational order of existence itself — the lawful rhythm governing nature, the stars, seasons, sacrifice, truth, and morality. The universe remained intelligible and stable because Ṛta sustained coherence between the cosmic and the human realms. Likewise, in ancient Persian traditions, particularly within Zoroastrian thought, Asha or Arta referred to truth, right order, justice, and the proper alignment of existence against falsehood and disorder. The famous Persian royal inscriptions invoking “Arta” were not merely political slogans; they reflected the belief that legitimate governance required alignment with a deeper cosmic and moral reality.
These parallel concepts reveal more than linguistic similarity. They point toward an ancient civilizational worldview shared across the Indo-Iranian sphere: that ethical conduct, political legitimacy, and cosmic harmony were fundamentally connected. Human beings were not separate from the order of the universe; they were participants within it. Civilization itself was understood as an effort to sustain equilibrium between power, morality, nature, and truth.
From the Indic concept of Ṛta later emerged Dharma and Nīti. Dharma became the moral obligation to live in accordance with cosmic order, while Nīti evolved into the practical dimension of wise conduct, governance, and ethical statecraft. In this sense, Nīti represented applied civilizational wisdom — the art of organizing society in harmony with deeper principles rather than mere force or expediency.
These themes are especially relevant in the context of contemporary planetary crises. In the book Planetary Foresight and Ethics, the future of civilization cannot rely solely on technological advancement or economic growth detached from ethical and planetary awareness. The work emphasizes the necessity of long-term foresight rooted in civilizational wisdom, ecological balance, and ethical responsibility. In many ways, this perspective resonates with the ancient Indo-Persian understanding that societies flourish only when human systems remain aligned with larger patterns of truth and order.
The convergence between Ṛta and Arta/Asha therefore carries significance beyond historical scholarship. It offers a philosophical bridge between Persian and Indian intellectual traditions and suggests the possibility of recovering a deeper planetary ethic for the modern age. At a time of ecological instability, geopolitical fragmentation, and accelerating technological transformation, these ancient ideas remind humanity that survival may depend not merely on innovation, but on restoring harmony between civilization and the larger order of existence itself.
Seen through this lens, the ancient concepts of Ṛta and Arta are not relics of the past. They are enduring civilizational insights — reminders that truth, justice, foresight, and ethical balance are woven into the very structure of a sustainable future.
