Guest guest Posted January 30, 2007 Report Share Posted January 30, 2007 Hello Friends, I am please to forward you some recent reviews of my book, "Ayurveda: The Divine Science of Life". Enjoy! Caldecott, T., Ayurveda, Science of Life, Mosby, St. Louis, 2006, 376 pp., hardcover I find most of the books from India on the topic of Ayurveda confusing, disappointing, or both. I spoke to my friend Alan Tillotson, PhD, RH (AHG) who is an Ayurvedic scholar about my impressions and he agreed. According to Alan, the practice of Ayurveda in India was severely suppressed during British rule (1776-1947) and most of what is practiced today is a reconstituted and simpler form of the once complex and ancient system of medicine. Since Alan was trained in Nepal where the traditional practice of medicine was never intercepted or suppressed, I suspect he knows what he is talking about! There have been several good introductions to Ayurveda by American practitioners (David Frawley, Robert Svoboda), but it has been left to a Canadian clinical herbalist, Todd Caldecott, RH (AHG) to pen the most comprehensive and authoritative text to date on the practice of Ayurveda. Todd starts with an in- depth introduction to the theory and practice of Ayurveda, including the use of diet, yoga, herbs, meditation, exercise, and massage as therapies. He discusses the treatment of disease, diagnosis, pathology, Ayurvedic pharmacy, common formulas, and includes monographs of 50 essential Indian herbs. Todd has spent many years learning, practicing, and mastering what many scholars believe is the oldest system of medicine in the world. When he mentions the uses for an herb it is not the usual list of 30 diseases it cures. Here one finds a combination of traditional use, along with clinical experience that makes this book both unique and a treasure. David Winston, Herbalist and Ethnobotanist President, Herbalist & Alchemist, Inc. http://www.herbaltherapeutics.net Ayurveda: The Divine Science of Life. Todd Caldecott Cl.H., RH(AHG). New York: Elsevier, 2006. ISBN. Hardcover. ISBN-13 978-0-7234-3410-8 Ayurveda and its principles have been gradually becoming more accessible to Westerners over the last thirty years. During this time, a few books have appeared by Westerners on the topic offering an overview of the field, a few have described materia medica in Ayurvedic terms, and a few texts from India may be available. To date, however, there has not been a single comprehensive textbook on the topic written for the Westerner, by a Western clinical practitioner. Todd Caldecott's book now fills that gap, and also corrects some common misconceptions about Ayurveda. Ayurveda was a dying medical system in India by the turn of the twentieth century, preserved in a few family lineages in South Asia, but largely supplanted by British colonial medicine and, in parts of India, by Unani Tibb. After Indian independence in 1948, there was a resurgence of interest in this traditional national system. The resurgence unfortunately was not based on the extant thin lineages of clinical practice, but on books, and filtered through the lens of a sometimes- fundamentalist approach of twentieth-century Hinduism. Two aspects of the resurrected Ayurveda as taught in North America are at odds with the authentic tradition. First, original Ayurveda was not a vegetarian system, contrary to common contemporary practice in North America. Second, the pulse diagnosis system in Ayurveda does not differ essentially from the Chinese system. Caldecott, who practices in Canada, and supervised a teaching clinic there for some years at the Wild Rose College in Calgary, has corrected these distortions. This is not just a philosophical consideration. Fewer than 3% of the North American population adhere to a strict vegetarian diet, and insisting on this as the ideal diet, besides contradicting core Ayurvedic literature, essentially rules out any benefit to much of the other 97%. Caldecott's text shows how the broad principles of Ayurveda can be applied in the social and dietary realities of 21st century North America. The book has everything you would expect in a textbook of humoral medicine: theory, constitutional considerations, dietary and lifestyle considerations, pharmacology and pharmacy, pathology and disease, clinical methodology for assessment, therapeutic methods, a materia medica of the fifty most important Ayurvedic herbs, and a formulary. Paul Bergner North American Institute of Medical Herbalism http://naimh.com Medical Herbalism Journal http://medherb.com Caldecott, Dip. Cl.H, RH(AHG) Ayurvedic practitioner, Clinical Herbalist 203 - 1750 East 10th Ave Vancouver, BC CANADA web: http//:www.toddcaldecott.com email: todd (AT) toddcaldecott (DOT) com tel: 778.896.8894 fax: 415-376-6736 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2007 Report Share Posted January 31, 2007 I would like to add that it is very readable and user friendly (not a small consideration, as my time is limited). I liked all the different names you gave for the herbs not just the Western or Eastern names. Also, I thought it filled that what to read after one has read a lot of beginner stuff but not ready for the all out Sanskrit texts niche very well. I liked its clarity. I am an English teacher who reads constantly and am very picky about quality, and I liked your book very well. Also I like that it is complex enough that I can pick it up again and again and find things I didn't necessarily notice the first time I read it, yet simple enough that amateurs like me can understand the concepts. It was worth every penny. Darla On 1/30/07, Todd Caldecott <todd (AT) toddcaldecott (DOT) com> wrote: "Ayurveda: > The Divine Science of Life". Enjoy! > > Caldecott, T., Ayurveda, Science of Life, Mosby, St. Louis, 2006, 376 > pp., hardcover Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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