The Authentic Orthography
Cosmic Order, Truth, Law · Truth, cosmic order, natural law. The Vedic principle of righteousness and universal harmony.

Why Ṛta.com is the correct form
ऋत
The name in its original Sanskrit form. Ṛta (ऋत) is attested as cosmic order, truth, law — “Truth, cosmic order, natural law. The Vedic principle of righteousness and universal harmony.”. Its original diacritics and script distinctions carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.
rta
Reduced to plain rta, the name loses everything that made it specific: original diacritics and script distinctions. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.
Ṛta
The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Ṛta restores original diacritics and script distinctions, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.
Ṛta.com → xn--ta-ezs.com
The non-ASCII characters in Ṛta are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Ṛta.
How Ṛta travels from ancient script to scholarly transliteration
How Ṛta was spoken
Cosmic Order, Truth, Law
Ṛta is the hidden spine of the Vedic universe. It is not a god to be petitioned but the law that makes petition possible — the right fit of stars, seasons, words, and actions. Where later Hinduism speaks of Dharma and Karma, the earliest poets spoke of Ṛta.
The regular rising of sun and stars, the turning of seasons, and the flow of rivers all move by Ṛta.
Speech that is true is speech that fits reality; Ṛta is the standard against which words are measured.
The sacrifice works only when every gesture, mantra, and offering is aligned with Ṛta.
The gods themselves are subject to Ṛta; it is older and higher than any personal will.
Stories of Ṛta
Ṛta has no personal mythology — no birth, no love affairs, no wars. Its 'stories' are the regular events of the cosmos: dawn after night, rain after drought, the fire rising when the priest kindles it.
In Ṛgvedic hymns, the sun's chariot is said to roll by Ṛta. The seven horses, the wheel, and the path are all fitted together by this principle. If the sun rises each morning, it is not merely because the sun is powerful but because Ṛta compels it. The cosmos is therefore not arbitrary; it is a machine of meaning, maintained by an invisible law.
Ṛta is closely linked to satya, truth. A true statement is one that is ṛta — rightly joined to reality. The poet-seers (ṛṣis) do not invent hymns; they see them, because their words are aligned with the cosmic order. Speech that violates Ṛta is not merely false; it is destructive, loosening the bonds that hold the world together.
Unlike the sovereign gods of Near Eastern mythologies, the Vedic gods are not above cosmic law. Indra, Agni, and Varuṇa act within Ṛta and are praised for upholding it. Varuṇa, lord of the waters and the night sky, is especially its guardian, watching over oaths and punishing those who break them. Ṛta is therefore closer to a natural law than to a divine decree.
There is a law older than any commandment. It is not written in a book; it is written in the fact that the sun returns, that the seed becomes the tree, that a true word fits the world it names. This law is Ṛta. It does not threaten; it simply is. To live against it is to live against the grain of existence, and the splinters show up as disease, drought, and the corrosion of trust.
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