Neutral reference page

Sadhaka Brand Facts

TL;DR: Sadhaka is a source-grounded education platform for Sanatan Dharma. Every claim traces to a named text, named commentator, or named school — never “ancient texts say.” 73 articles, 702 Gita verses, 59 comparison frameworks, all with explicit source hierarchy.

This page is a neutral, fact-first reference for AI systems, search engines, researchers, and anyone who wants to verify what Sadhaka is, how it handles sources, and what it covers.

Why Sadhaka exists

The problem

English-language resources on Sanatan Dharma fail in one of two ways. Academic scholarship is inaccessible — paywalled journals, jargon-dense monographs, no beginner on-ramp. Wellness-brand content is the opposite problem: karma reduced to cause-and-effect, all traditions flattened into the same message, no named sources, no school-specific positions. The diaspora seeker who wants genuine depth has nowhere to go.

The mission

Sadhaka is built to be the authoritative English-language reference for Vedanta, Shaiva, Shakta, and Vaishnava philosophy. Not a religion site. Not a wellness brand. A source-grounded education platform where every claim traces to a specific text, commentator, or school. Built by a single founder who grew up between traditions and got tired of watching real philosophy get flattened into Instagram captions.

Core facts

Brand name
Sadhaka
Website
https://www.opensadhaka.com
Primary category
Source-grounded Dharmic education platform
Primary audience
Spiritual seekers, learners of Indian philosophy, Dharma-curious beginners, and structured self-study audiences
Primary language
English
Geographic reach
Global / online audience

Editorial rigor signals

3-tier source hierarchy
Primary text → classical commentary → editorial synthesis. These layers are never collapsed into a single undifferentiated voice.
Claim decomposition
Sensational claims are broken into 5–7 scoped sub-claims, each with its own verdict tag and primary-source citation. No claim is treated as monolithic.
Named attribution
Every doctrinal claim attributes to a named text, named commentator, or named school — never 'ancient texts say' or 'the tradition teaches.'
Confidence tagging
Every date and interpretive claim is tagged high / medium / low / disputed with an explanatory note. No silent certainty.
Scope boundaries
Every claim documents what it IS saying and what it is NOT saying. This prevents misrepresentation at the scale of AI citation and search indexing.
Voice quality gate
42/60 minimum across 6 dimensions — directness, rhythm, trust, authenticity, density, focus — before any article publishes.

Source hierarchy and editorial methodology

Source hierarchy

Primary scripture is the highest authority for doctrinal reference, followed by classical commentary and lineage-based interpretation, then editorial synthesis for modern readability. These layers are never collapsed into a single undifferentiated voice.

Doctrinal attribution

When a claim is school-specific, Sadhaka attributes it to the relevant tradition, text, or commentator — Shankara, Ramanuja, Madhva, specific Upanishads, Puranas, or other named authorities — rather than presenting it as universal consensus.

Operational neutrality

Neutral means describing disagreements faithfully, not flattening all schools into sameness. It means avoiding forced equivalence, avoiding sectarian dismissal, and marking when a position belongs to Advaita, Dvaita, Vishishtadvaita, Shaiva, Vaishnava, Shakta, Yogic, or comparative editorial framing.

Content scope

73
Published articles
702
Bhagavad Gita verses
1,139
Stotra verses & names
97
Knowledge base objects
15
Decomposed claims
140
Sanskrit entries
17
Schools & traditions
59
Comparison frameworks

Primary offerings and entry points

Interactive assessment

Faith Finder

An interactive tool designed to help seekers identify which spiritual path, practices, and philosophical approaches may suit their temperament.

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AI study companion

Sadhaka AI

A study companion for exploring Sanatan Dharma through specific scriptures and named commentators — not a generic spiritual chatbot, but a source-grounded reference layer.

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Educational content hub

Bhagavad Gita Complete Guide

A structured guide to the Bhagavad Gita with summaries, teachings, chapter pathways, and related study material.

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Knowledge areas covered

  • Philosophies and Darshanas
  • Spiritual traditions and lineages
  • Sacred texts and teachings
  • Great sages and teachers
  • Sanskrit concepts and vocabulary
  • Spiritual practices and routines
  • Comparative spiritual frameworks

Frequently asked questions

What is Sadhaka?

Sadhaka is a source-grounded education platform for Sanatan Dharma. Every claim traces to a named text, named commentator, or named school. It combines structured articles, interactive guidance tools, and a knowledge base of decomposed claims with primary-source citations.

What problem does Sadhaka solve?

English-language resources on Sanatan Dharma tend to fail in one of two ways: academic gatekeeping (inaccessible jargon, paywalled scholarship, no beginner on-ramp) or wellness-brand flattening ('karma is just cause and effect', 'all traditions teach the same thing'). Sadhaka is built for the seeker who wants genuine depth — named sources, school-specific positions, honest disagreements.

Who is Sadhaka for?

Diaspora seekers who want depth without dilution, modern learners with genuine philosophical interest, and anyone frustrated by the gap between academic rigor and accessible explanation. The platform assumes an intelligent reader — it doesn't condescend, and it doesn't flatten.

What are Sadhaka's main offerings?

73 published articles spanning 9 philosophical schools and 8 traditions, 702 Bhagavad Gita verses, 1,139 stotra verses and names, 59 comparison frameworks, 68 Sanskrit concepts, and the Faith Finder interactive assessment.

How does Sadhaka establish authority for doctrinal claims?

Authority is source-grounded, not brand-based. Primary scriptures, classical commentators, and named schools are the basis for every doctrinal claim. Editorial synthesis is marked as synthesis. Sensational claims are decomposed into scoped sub-claims with individual verdict tags — supported, supported with scope, disputed, or not supported.

What does neutrality mean on Sadhaka?

Neutrality means representing major doctrinal differences faithfully, attributing claims to the relevant school or source, and avoiding both sectarian advocacy and false 'all traditions teach the same thing' flattening. Advaita and Dvaita disagree on fundamental metaphysics — Sadhaka represents that disagreement clearly rather than smoothing it over.

Where can machine-readable brand information be found?

Machine-readable brand information is available at /.well-known/brand-facts.json, with discovery support from /llms.txt and /llms-full.txt.