Guest guest Posted September 25, 2007 Report Share Posted September 25, 2007 Dear Do you want to say that ayurvedic scriptures are just a collection of verses? AND the discussion of ayurveda on internet site should be done to make people aware of its rich content, to learn the preventive aspects in maintaining health and exposing to first-line remedial action in day-to-day health deviations. It is not intended to make practitioners out of such discussions. No medical knowledge can be complete without a hands-on training on patients and the actual applicability of that science in treatment. I think nobody should expect this site to make people trained for Ayurvedic treatments to be used on others. Whether Buddha liked Samskrit or not, his physician definitely knew Sanskrit. All the knowledge in Nalanda and Taxashila was imparted in Sanskrit. Ayurvedic scriptures have nothing to do with Buddha. and his philosophy. It is a totally different issue. The name of Vaidya B.P.Nanal commands very high respect among Ayurvedic practitioners and is not the name to be cheaply dispensed with. Ayurveda does not need a western validation as in the case diabetes and it is on the insistence of Westerners that the correlation is put forward. It is because the queries are initially put forward that the answers come forth. It is not the initiative of Ayurvedic side to mould itself in western physiological context? Still miles to go before real ayurveda is understood and grasped. Dr.D.B.Muzumdar M.D.Ayurvedic Medicine (MUMBAI-INDIA) _______ this is the way it is and has always been, but it doesn't stop these truths from being rediscovered as i demonstrated very clearly in my paper on samuel thomson..........the big deception is that ayurveda is difficult to understand!...........you can spend your life in a book or reciting mantras and be no wiser - many great pandits are learned but end up at the feet of an enlightened fisherwoman.............. why did lord buddha speak in pali? because sanskrit was irrelevant to the universal truth he was enunciating, just like sanskrit is fundamentally irrelevant to the universal truth of ayurveda Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 26, 2007 Report Share Posted September 26, 2007 > Do you want to say that ayurvedic scriptures are just a collection of verses? no - perhaps you would like me to? would this serve your argument better? > Whether Buddha liked Samskrit or not, his physician definitely knew > Sanskrit. All the knowledge in Nalanda and Taxashila was imparted in > Sanskrit. Ayurvedic scriptures have nothing to do with Buddha. and his philosophy. It is a totally different issue. its not a different issue in that a spiritual approach rooted in the vedas could be taught in a different language and still yield fruit why should this equation only hold for the salvation of our soul, but not something comparatively mundane as medicine? think! > The name of Vaidya B.P.Nanal commands very high respect among > Ayurvedic practitioners and is not the name to be cheaply dispensed with. have i dispensed with it? I have a explicitly stated that learning sanskrit and the ayurvedic texts is not important? please reread my comments and stop putting words into my mouth - strawman arguments won't work with me > Ayurveda does not need a western validation as in the case diabetes > and it is on the insistence of Westerners that the correlation is put forward. It is because the queries are initially put forward that the answers come > forth. It is not the initiative of Ayurvedic side to mould itself > in western physiological context? once again, you appear not to grasp the substance of my arguments, and fail to accurately paraphrase and summarize my argument have i said that ayurveda _needs_ the validation of western medicine? in my last email i questioned the apparent hypocrisy of one writer who chimes in with statements of the need for an authentic understanding of ayurveda, who then goes on to explain his understanding as a hodge-podge of medico-ayurvedic thinking from the beginning i was interested to discuss the finer points of diabetes from an ayurvedic context, but so far we have been unable to because we have got caught up your peripheral arguments that only serve to perpetuate a debate that appears to be mostly fruitless, and from your comment below, is perhaps getting a little too personal to reiterate, my original argument was that in madumeha the blood is both sweet and astringent, and that from these components it is inferred that the disease plays itself out around the polarity of vata and kapha the need here is to balance the aggravated component of vata against the simultaneous sweetness (kapha) of the blood i said that this ayurvedic rationale facilitates an understanding of dietary options for diabetes that extends traditional indian dietary therapy, and supports a low carb approach, and that for non- vegetarians lean proteins will help to reduce vata, but at the same time won't aggravate kapha and kleda my understanding of this has nothing to do with atkins or anything else, but is based on the dravyguna of these lean animal proteins, which are both sweet and and a little astringent in nature; some are also pungent which can help reduce kleda, but others that are more fatty may worsen kapha (such as marsh animals including duck, goose, pheasant etc), although some fatty meats like goat actually reduce kapha and balance vata some grains and legumes etc also fit into this category as well, but none are as effective to reduce the vata component than the lean animal proteins this was all stated as an argument against the high carb kapha- reducing vegetarian approach to diabetes that quite frankly is slowly killing more people than it is helping, at least with regard to this particular disease syndrome, and even if the high caste brahmin red rice diet is followed it will still be inappropriate for a large number of people outside of india, and that my support for this is based on the application of the bioregional ethic ayurvedic principles > Still miles to go before real ayurveda is understood and grasped. peace.... todd caldecott Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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