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Ayurvedic Medicine
Hi Everyone,
Is anyone familiar with this type of medicine? I have been reading a bit about it. Any wisdom on this or opinions is appreciated. Hugs to Everyone, Roz |
I've heard of this but I am still in the "trying to figure it out" stage. :Scratch-Head: :Scratch-Head: It sounds very interesting to me. I am going to speak to one of my doctors who is very very accepting of alternative medicine and see what he has to say or what he may know about it. I will pass on to you what I find out.
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Dear Roz -
Prompted by your thread, I ran the customary Google search for "Ayurvedic Medicine" [Anyone know why Google is running today - 12.12.06 - with a front page adapted from Edvard Munch's "The Scream"?] and came back, naturally enough, with a Wikipedia article at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayurveda. Two things immediately stood out for me in the first paragraph: Ayurveda was practiced during the time of Buddha (around 520 BC) , and in this period the Ayurvedic practitioners were commonly using Mercuric-sulphur combination based medicines.[7] In this period Mercury, sulphur and other metals were used in conjunction with herbs to prepare the different medications.[citation needed] An important Ayurvedic practitioner of this period was Nagarjuna, a Buddhist herbologist, famous for inventing various new drugs for the treatment of ailments. [citation needed] Nagarjuna was accompanied by Surananda, Nagbodhi, Yashodhana, Nityanatha, Govinda, Anantdev, Vagbhatta etc. The knowledge of Ayurveda progressed a lot during this period; and is therefore termed as the Golden Period of Ayurveda.[citation needed]The first was the role of mercuric-sulphur combination medicines and the second was the linking of the treatment to Nargarjuna, this amazing Buddhist philosopher of the Second Century C.E., to whom I already knew that more things had been given attribution than any one man could have possibly done on his own, to the point that it is widely believed that somewhere between 4 and 5 monks worked together, writing under that name. The funny thing is that not less than a month ago, I gave a short presentation to my meditation group on the on the teachings of Arya Nagarjuna. Very briefly: In the Commentary on the Awakened Mind, Nagarjuna sets out two major dichotomies. The first is the “Two Truths” of nominal or conventional truth on the one hand, and “ultimate reality” on the other. Then, after explicating this dichotomy to the point of an identity, he identifies this identity with the “wisdom function” from which true compassion - and indeed the compassion of the bhodisatva - must necessarily flow.But put off by the mercuric-sulphur combination therapies, I clicked on another Wikipedia link to another article which approached the "Teachings of Ayurveda" in much greater detail, at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teachings_of_Ayurveda I recommend the second Wikipedia article for anyone with a deeper interest in the theory of Ayurvedic Medicine. That said, I don't offer any pretense of really understanding the basic concepts. Dependant Designation was hard enough. Mike |
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