Smášti (Sanskrit: सŕĽŕ¤ŽŕĽŕ¤¤ŕ¤ż, IAST: smášti, transl.â'what is remembered'), also spelled smriti or smruti, is a body of Hindu texts representing the remembered, written tradition in Hinduism, rooted in or inspired by the Vedas. Smášti works are generally attributed to a named author and were transmitted through manuscripts, in contrast to Vedic or Ĺruti literature, which is based on a fixed text with no specific author, and preserved through oral transmission. Smášti are derivative, secondary works and considered less authoritative than Ĺruti in Hinduism, except in the MÄŤmÄmsa school of Hindu philosophy. The authority of smášti accepted by orthodox schools is derived from that of Ĺruti, on which it is based.
The smášti literature is a corpus of varied texts that includes: the six VedÄáš
gas (the auxiliary sciences in the Vedas), the epics (the MahÄbhÄrata and RÄmÄyaáša), the DharmasĹŤtras and DharmaĹÄstras (or SmritiĹÄstras), the ArthasaĹÄstras, the PurÄášas, the kÄvya or poetical literature, extensive Bhashyas (reviews and commentaries on Ĺruti and non-Ĺruti texts), and numerous nibandhas (digests) covering politics, ethics (nÄŤtiĹÄstras), culture, arts and society.