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Ayurveda,
the science of life, prevention and longevity
is the oldest and most holistic medical system available on
the planet today. It was placed in written form over 5,000 years
ago in India, it was said to be a world medicine dealing with
both body and the spirit. Before the advent of writing, the
ancient wisdom of this healing system was a part of the spiritual
tradition of the Sanatana Dharma (Universal Religion), or Vedic
Religion. VedaVyasa, the famous sage, shaktavesha avatar of
Vishnu, put into writing the complete knowledge of Ayurveda,
along with the more directly spiritual insights of self realization
into a body of scriptural literature called the Vedas and the
Vedic literatures.
There were originally four main books
of spirituality, which included among other topics, health,
astrology, spiritual business, government, army, poetry and
spiritual living and behavior. These books are known as the
four Vedas; Rik, Sama, Yajur and Atharva. The Rik Veda, a
compilation of verse on the nature of existence, is the oldest
surviving book of any Indo-European language (3000 B.C.).
The Rik Veda (also known as Rig Veda) refers to the cosmology
known as Sankhya which lies at the base of both Ayurveda and
Yoga, contains verses on the nature of health and disease,
pathogenesis and principles of treatment. Among the Rik Veda
are found discussions of the three dosas, Vayu. Pitta and
Kapha, and the use of herbs to heal the diseases of the mind
and body and to foster longevity. The Atharva Veda lists the
eight divisions of Ayurveda: Internal Medicine, Surgery of
Head and Neck, Opthamology and Otorinolaryngology, Surgery,
Toxicology, Psychiatry, Pediatrics, Gerontology or Science
of Rejuvenation, and the Science of Fertility. The Vedic Sages
took the passages from the Vedic Scriptures relating to Ayurveda
and compiled separate books dealing only with Ayurveda. One
of these books, called the Atreya Samhita is the oldest medical
book in the world! The Vedic Brahmanas were not only priests
performing religious rites and ceremonies, they also became
Vaidyas (physicians of Ayurveda). The sage-physician-surgeons
of the time were the same sages or seers, deeply devoted holy
people, who saw health as an integral part of spiritual life.
It is said that they received their training of Ayurveda through
direct cognition during meditation. In other words, the knowledge
of the use of various methods of healing, prevention, longevity
and surgery came through Divine revelation; there was no guessing
or testing and harming animals. These revelations were transcribed
from the oral tradition into book form, interspersed with
the other aspects of life and spirituality. What is fascinating
is Ayurveda's use of herbs, foods, aromas, gems, colors, yoga,
mantras, lifestyle and surgery. Consequently Ayurveda grew
into a respected and widely used system of healing in India.
Around 1500 B.C., Ayurveda was delineated into eight specific
branches of medicine. There were two main schools of Ayurveda
at that time. Atreya- the school of physicians, and Dhanvantari
- the school of surgeons. These two schools made Ayurveda
a more scientifically verifiable and classifiable medical
system
People from numerous countries came to Indian Ayurvedic schools
to learn about this world medicine and the religious scriptures
it sprang from. Learned men from China, Tibet, the Greeks,
Romans, Egyptians, Afghanistanis, Persians, and more traveled
to learn the complete wisdom and bring it back to their own
countries. Ayurvedic texts were translated in Arabic and under
physicians such as Avicenna and Razi Sempion, both of whom
quoted Indian Ayurvedic texts, established Islamic medicine.
This style became popular in Europe, and helped to form the
foundation of the European tradition in medicine.
In 16th Century Europe, Paracelsus, who is known as the father
of modem Western medicine, practiced and propagated a system
of medicine which borrowed heavily from Ayurveda.
There are two main re-organizers of Ayurveda whose works
are still existing in tact today - Charak and Sushrut. The
third major treatise is called the Ashtanga Hridaya, which
is a concise version of the works of Charak and Sushrut. Thus
the three main Ayurvedic texts that are still used today are
the Charak Samhita (compilation of the oldest book Atreya
Samhita), Sushrut Samhita and the Ashtangha Hridaya Samhita.
These books are believed to be over 1,200 years old. It is
because these texts still contain the original and complete
knowledge of this Ayurvedic world medicine, that Ayurveda
is known today as the only complete medical system still in
existence. Other forms of medicine from various cultures,
although parallel are missing parts of the original information.
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