Guest guest Posted September 16, 2005 Report Share Posted September 16, 2005 Okay, here goes, I am going to attempt to explain some stuff with the assistance of _Ayurveda, Textbook of Fundamental Principles_ by Vasant Lad, from which I am--heavily--paraphrasing. This is an offering to Deanna, because it was in reading certain of her posts that I got the jam to take this thing on and see how/if it passes scrutiny. Ayurveda, a medical science, incorporates six systems of Indian philosophy, representing six visions of life. They are ways of orienting with reality. Three of the systems predominantly deal with the material world. Of these three, one, Nyaya, focuses on logical reasoning, understanding cause and effect, or experiences one can reduce to cause and effect, and one, Vaisheshika, is focused on the level of the physical world without concern for what created it, where it came from. It is more a model of physics, particle interactions, than a philosophy of speculative thought. Nyaya means logic and Vaisheshika means to specify the important aspects of concrete reality. Their proponents believed in obtaining knowledge through observation and critical logic. Vaisheshika speaks of nine causative substances of the universe--Ether, Air, Fire, Water and Earth; the soul, which is the spirit or self; mind; time; and direction--while Nyaya deals with how to think/reason about them. Vaisheshika holds the atomic theory of existence, believing the union and separation of atoms is guided/directed by the will of the Supreme Being. Ether, Air, Fire, Water and Earth are eternal atoms. Unions of atoms created universal elements at the time of creation and these will separate at the time of disintegration/annihilation. So, according to Nyaya, there are three sources of non-valid knowledge: doubt, faulty cognition and hypothetical argument, and four sources of valid knowledge: peception, inference, comparison and testimony. Nyaya states that any reality can be understood by these four methods. The first proof, perception, is knowledge produced through contact of the senses with objects of the world. This contact must be clear. Next is inference, and cognition, based on some previous knowledge or experience. Comparison comes from perceiving the similarity between a known and unfamiliar object. The last proof is verbal testimony, that which is authentic and truthful. Okay, now for the five elements, which here are composed of *atoms* of the first five of the nine causative substances mentioned earlier. Ether: all pervading field upon which all the objects of the universe play. Ayurveda says within Ether is a pure presence of spiritual energy which manifests as nuclear energy. Air: Ether, when it moves in a particular direction, becomes air. (Well, " air " is an insufficient word to convey the deeper meaning of the original word, " vayu " .) Air is a principle of movement necessary to keep the body in motion and manifests as electrical energy. Now " prana " is a basic principle of the air element, being the flow of Consciousness from one cell to another cell in the form of intelligence. It is the vital life force and needed for all the subtle and gross movements within the cell, within the system, and within the physical body. IOW sensory stimuli and motor responses are subtle movements of prana. The movements of the heart, respiration, peristalsis and other involuntary movements are governed by this principle, this Air/prana. Movement creates friction, and where there is friction is Fire, the next manifestation of Awareness. Fire element governs all transformative processes: the metabolic processes regulating the transformation of food into energy, body tempurature, digestion, absorption and assimilation of foodstuffs. Fire is caried throughout the body in the blood and plasma as heat. If the blood supply is cut off, that pat of the body will be cold. Fire regulates understanding, comprehension and selectivity. The Fire element is radiant energy and its presence in the body is the flame of attention. Water is associated with chemical energy. Water is the universal chemical solvent and governs all biochemical functions. Its presence in the body is the plasma and lymph. Earth: solid, dense and hard, the firm ground for global life. All solid structures, hard, fim and compact tissues are derived from Earth element (e.g. bones, cartilage, nails, hair, teeth and skin) Earth is associated with mechanical energy. Soul: eternal; universal and of two kinds, individual and supreme; inferred and indivisible, a substratum or phenomenon of Consciousness. Sure, modern science takes seriously only what can be seen, measured or put upon an observation table but ancient Vedic philosophy speaks--a lot--about the soul as one's true identity/true Self. Without that Self, consciousness is *unpossible*. Soul/Self cannot be seen but it can be experienced; can't be measured but one can merge into it. Vaisheshika defines it as a material, causative factor of creation. Mind: is universal, atomic/indivisible. It directs experience. There is no line of demarcation between the conscious/subconscious mind, only levels, the division has been created by us as a matter of convenience. Meditation is probing into the subconscious. When meditating, our cells become aware/conscious of thoughts, of stress being released. We can in this way begin to communicate with each cell. Time: a force that can produce change and be used as a marker for change. Time can also be measured in terms of " prana " . One prana is one breath, thus, the faster the rate of respiration, the shorter the span of life. There is chronological time and psychological time, which is the movement of thought. If one enters an inner space beyond thought, one goes beyond psychological time. Direction: up, down, and lateral movements, also internal/external movements give a sense of direction. Ayurveda also uses east, west, north and south as directions. East is hot, sharp, bright, with more solar energy. West is cool and has more lunar energy. The further north, the colder, the further south, the hotter. These directions can also be used for healing purposes. Southeast is the direction of Fire, southwest, Earth, northwest the direction of Air, northeast, Earth. Ether is in the center. This is the natural order of direction and the elements and can also be used to encourage harmony in, say, the living space. Any questions? B. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2005 Report Share Posted September 17, 2005 - >Vaisheshika speaks of nine causative substances of the >universe--Ether, Air, Fire, Water and Earth; the soul, which is the >spirit or self; mind; time; and direction--while Nyaya deals with how >to think/reason about them. Many ancient takes on the world divided it into elements -- earth, water, air, and fire being a taxonomy many people are probably familiar with from school. But what evidence is there for the proposition that any such taxonomy is correct? As science progressed, taxonomies progressed too. People learned what fire really is, the " earth " is actually all sorts of different elements and molecules, etc. etc. etc. >Vaisheshika holds the atomic theory of existence, believing the union >and separation of atoms is guided/directed by the will of the Supreme >Being. So ayurveda is actually a religion? >Ether, Air, Fire, Water and Earth are eternal atoms. Unions >of atoms created universal elements at the time of creation and these >will separate at the time of disintegration/annihilation. I'm trying to figure out what this has to do with actual physical reality and physical science and I'm failing. >So, according to Nyaya, there are three sources of non-valid >knowledge: doubt, faulty cognition and hypothetical argument, and >four sources of valid knowledge: peception, inference, comparison and >testimony. Nyaya states that any reality can be understood by these >four methods. This also sounds like a fairly primitive and outdated philosophy, in this case of knowledge and logic. >Ether: all pervading field upon which all the objects of the universe >play. Ayurveda says within Ether is a pure presence of spiritual >energy which manifests as nuclear energy. What is nuclear energy supposed to be in this context? And why was the word 'atom' used -- or misused, as far as I can tell -- previously? Many cultures believed in ether or something like that because it was hard to believe that existence itself didn't have a medium. Even physicists used to believe there had to be an ether -- that light waves had to be " waving " something. But then experiments proved that there's no such thing. >Air: Ether, when it moves in a particular direction, becomes air. >(Well, " air " is an insufficient word to convey the deeper meaning of >the original word, " vayu " .) Air is a principle of movement necessary >to keep the body in motion and manifests as electrical energy. If " air " doesn't mean the stuff we're breathing, then why use that word at all? And again, all of this sounds like religious mythology. It's definitely not science. >Any questions? Yes: why do you think any of this is in any way scientific? I'm not saying that ayurveda has no functionally useful medical advice to offer. It may even be that its diagnostic prowess is as great as you say. But its underlying explanations of those diagnoses, and its underlying explanations of the world, are religious and also do not correspond to physical reality. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2005 Report Share Posted September 17, 2005 --- In , Idol <Idol@c...> wrote: > - > > >Vaisheshika speaks of nine causative substances of the > >universe--Ether, Air, Fire, Water and Earth; the soul, which is the > >spirit or self; mind; time; and direction--while Nyaya deals with how > >to think/reason about them. > > Many ancient takes on the world divided it into elements -- earth, water, > air, and fire being a taxonomy many people are probably familiar with from > school. But what evidence is there for the proposition that any such > taxonomy is correct? As science progressed, taxonomies progressed > too. People learned what fire really is, the " earth " is actually all sorts > of different elements and molecules, etc. etc. etc. > > >Vaisheshika holds the atomic theory of existence, believing the union > >and separation of atoms is guided/directed by the will of the Supreme > >Being. > > So ayurveda is actually a religion? > <snip> From what I can tell (and I haven't given ayurveda any significant amount of in-depth study), the terminology and taxonomy used in ayurveda are fairly simple, which makes it less intimidating for the vast mass of its adherents to grasp and practice. Those ancient cosmologies and medical philosophies seem to me to have restricted themselves to breaking down the universe into numbers of things that can be counted on one's fingers and toes. You know, like when they always seem to find only 5 to 7 categories of things like flavors, elements, bodily systems, illnesses, etc. And they seem to restrict their labels to things that practically every individual has had experience with, or can experince, if they chose to. I mean, who hasn't had experience with air...and known it. Or had experience with water...and known it? Or had experience with earth (soil) and known it? And, with only a handful or two of labels for things, it appears that they have to " force " everything they see into one of those categories, or a combination of them. It's like the old saying, " To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail " . This is in contrast to our modern allopathic medical philosophy which has so many categories and names for things, and uses a language for labeling that the common man/woman does not use every day (i.e., Latin), and expresses concepts that the common man/woman cannot experience firsthand unless they have access to, say, a CT scan machine, an electron microscope, a brix meter, or at least a good medical dictionary. Our modern way of labeling the " elements " and health issues requires so much specialized knowledge (at least of the Latin terms used!) that at least 80% of the common people make NEXT TO NO EFFORT to actually understand their doctor's comments or the fine print on the patient education documents they receive, let alone actually seek our and study medical research. (I'm assuming the 80/20 rule applies here!) All they care about is whether their doctor seems " nice " or not, and whether or not their health insurance will cover the treatment they expect to receive. They make no attempt to figure out whether or not what they're being led to do (especially in the case of things like cancer screenings and such) is really necessary, let alone whether it's a good health strategy or not. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 19, 2005 Report Share Posted September 19, 2005 Hi , On 9/17/05, Idol <Idol@...> wrote: > - > >Vaisheshika holds the atomic theory of existence, believing the union > >and separation of atoms is guided/directed by the will of the Supreme > >Being. > > So ayurveda is actually a religion? No, those were just the terms employed at the time to explain the things that were beyond investigation. Just like many earlier Western scientists talked a lot about God being responsible for different forces or properties. Even Einstein invoked the " God doesn't play dice " argument. Questions about ultimate cause still come down to belief, don't they? We have yet to prove or understand or observe what's truly at the bottom of the universe. Replace " Supreme Being " with something like " the total of all forces in the universe " or something like that, and it's perfectly secular. > > >Ether, Air, Fire, Water and Earth are eternal atoms. Unions > >of atoms created universal elements at the time of creation and these > >will separate at the time of disintegration/annihilation. > > I'm trying to figure out what this has to do with actual physical reality > and physical science and I'm failing. See below. <snip> > >Any questions? > > Yes: why do you think any of this is in any way scientific? > > I'm not saying that ayurveda has no functionally useful medical advice to > offer. It may even be that its diagnostic prowess is as great as you > say. But its underlying explanations of those diagnoses, and its > underlying explanations of the world, are religious and also do not > correspond to physical reality. I'm not understanding the equation of truth or " physical reality " with science. They didn't have the methods of microscopic observation etc that we do now. Ayurveda, though not privy to those tools, nonetheless relied on observation, hypothesis, experiment, etc, just like modern sciences do. Our technologies have progressed immensely and disproven or reconfirmed millions of previous findings/beliefs. I'm sure the effort is already underway to reconcile Ayurveda's systems with current ones and to update the language to something more comfortable to the modern. But to say that they were just woo-wooing around with no eye to the efficacy of their treatments is, I think, just wrong. Saying that would be the same as rejecting all cultural traditions and undercutting the core of Price's work. The argument that their metaphysical beliefs (i.e. the Supreme Being) invalidate the " science " of the discipline, zero-sum, to me holds no water. Many modern scientists would attribute the final source of the universe to God. Many wouldn't. That's a *philosophical* judgement about things they recognize to be beyond observation, i.e. beyond science in its current state. Are those who don't employ a principled refusal to believe not allowed to be scientists? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 19, 2005 Report Share Posted September 19, 2005 Reality is relative to whatever it is being observed with. If you read Eintstein's work you should know this. Scientists observe it with complex tools used to measure different aspects of it. Ayurveda and many other belief systems used an infinitely more complex tool, which is the human mind. Science can be said to be a religion as well, as nothing can even be absolutely proven, thats what theories are for. A theory isn't proof, its a model of an aspect of reality that hasn't been disproven yet. God could also be said to be a theory, but some things you just can't disprove so we will have to settle for what we believe in. > > - > > >Vaisheshika holds the atomic theory of existence, believing the union > > >and separation of atoms is guided/directed by the will of the Supreme > > >Being. > > > > So ayurveda is actually a religion? > > No, those were just the terms employed at the time to explain the > things that were beyond investigation. Just like many earlier Western > scientists talked a lot about God being responsible for different > forces or properties. Even Einstein invoked the " God doesn't play > dice " argument. Questions about ultimate cause still come down to > belief, don't they? We have yet to prove or understand or observe > what's truly at the bottom of the universe. > > Replace " Supreme Being " with something like " the total of all forces > in the universe " or something like that, and it's perfectly secular. > > > > > >Ether, Air, Fire, Water and Earth are eternal atoms. Unions > > >of atoms created universal elements at the time of creation and these > > >will separate at the time of disintegration/annihilation. > > > > I'm trying to figure out what this has to do with actual physical reality > > and physical science and I'm failing. > > See below. > > <snip> > > > >Any questions? > > > > Yes: why do you think any of this is in any way scientific? > > > > I'm not saying that ayurveda has no functionally useful medical advice to > > offer. It may even be that its diagnostic prowess is as great as you > > say. But its underlying explanations of those diagnoses, and its > > underlying explanations of the world, are religious and also do not > > correspond to physical reality. > > I'm not understanding the equation of truth or " physical reality " with > science. They didn't have the methods of microscopic observation etc > that we do now. Ayurveda, though not privy to those tools, > nonetheless relied on observation, hypothesis, experiment, etc, just > like modern sciences do. Our technologies have progressed immensely > and disproven or reconfirmed millions of previous findings/beliefs. > I'm sure the effort is already underway to reconcile Ayurveda's > systems with current ones and to update the language to something more > comfortable to the modern. But to say that they were just woo-wooing > around with no eye to the efficacy of their treatments is, I think, > just wrong. Saying that would be the same as rejecting all cultural > traditions and undercutting the core of Price's work. > > The argument that their metaphysical beliefs (i.e. the Supreme Being) > invalidate the " science " of the discipline, zero-sum, to me holds no > water. Many modern scientists would attribute the final source of the > universe to God. Many wouldn't. That's a *philosophical* judgement > about things they recognize to be beyond observation, i.e. beyond > science in its current state. Are those who don't employ a principled > refusal to believe not allowed to be scientists? > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 19, 2005 Report Share Posted September 19, 2005 On 9/19/05, gdawson6 <gdawson6@...> wrote: > Reality is relative to whatever it is being observed with. If you read > Eintstein's work you should know this. Scientists observe it with > complex tools used to measure different aspects of it. Ayurveda and > many other belief systems used an infinitely more complex tool, which > is the human mind. Yes, definitely. And as and others have pointed out before, scientists are still human with all the same biases and predispositions to which we're all subject. > Science can be said to be a religion as well, as nothing can even be > absolutely proven, thats what theories are for. A theory isn't proof, > its a model of an aspect of reality that hasn't been disproven yet. I think this is an important point. I've noticed it a lot with really die-hard advocates (including one of my former selves) of pure-objective-science-and-nothing-else: Science (with a capital S) begins to take on the roles formerly in religion's domain. It becomes a rigorous dogma to be deployed against anything with a hint of the mystical. It can force thought into such a narrow tunnel (the unknown is off limits because we don't know it) that it becomes, in a way, a new kind of puritanism. : Please don't take that as directed toward you. It's a general observation after significant contact with, and after being one of, the people of which I'm speaking. I certainly don't know you well enough to make any such judgements and wouldn't presume to do so. > God could also be said to be a theory, but some things you just can't > disprove so we will have to settle for what we believe in. Exactly. So I'm not arguing that Ayurveda or the philosophy of Yoga etc are *right* or are to be believed etc. I'm trying to make a strenuous argument against the restraint of thoughts and capacities (mystical, irrational, whatever) that are and always have been a huge part of a full human life. This mode of thought doesn't trump the other - they both have value. In fact, this is exactly what many of the greatest scientific minds of any time have done. brought up the example of Einstein, maybe in another thread. His reliance was primarily on the intuitive, instinctive and unreasoned. The ideas could later be massaged and made coherent and structured, but the true advance was neither structured nor coherent. This is a real and important part of our sentience, and one that should not be lost completely to the analytic. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 19, 2005 Report Share Posted September 19, 2005 On 9/19/05, Furbish <efurbish@...> wrote: <snip> > Exactly. So I'm not arguing that Ayurveda or the philosophy of Yoga > etc are *right* or are to be believed etc. I'm trying to make a > strenuous argument against the restraint of thoughts and capacities > (mystical, irrational, whatever) that are and always have been a huge > part of a full human life. This mode of thought doesn't trump the > other - they both have value. <snip> PS: Olson had the most wonderful phrase for this: " a secularism which loses nothing of the divine " (from Proprioception). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 20, 2005 Report Share Posted September 20, 2005 >Reality is relative to whatever it is being observed with. If you read >Eintstein's work you should know this. Scientists observe it with >complex tools used to measure different aspects of it. Ayurveda and >many other belief systems used an infinitely more complex tool, which >is the human mind. I don't have time to get into a detailed discussion of relativity, but there's a vast difference between Einstein's frame of reference and the idea that reality is whatever you see or believe or use to observe it, if I'm correctly understanding your point. As to ayurveda and other belief systems, the complexity of the tool is beside the point. >Science can be said to be a religion as well, as nothing can even be >absolutely proven, thats what theories are for. A theory isn't proof, >its a model of an aspect of reality that hasn't been disproven yet. Religions take things on faith. Science understands that there's no such thing as absolute certainty, but seeks verification for everything. To conflate the two is to misunderstand both. >God could also be said to be a theory, but some things you just can't >disprove so we will have to settle for what we believe in. Yes, that's true enough. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 20, 2005 Report Share Posted September 20, 2005 - >So I'm not arguing that Ayurveda or the philosophy of Yoga >etc are *right* or are to be believed etc. I'm trying to make a >strenuous argument against the restraint of thoughts and capacities >(mystical, irrational, whatever) that are and always have been a huge >part of a full human life. This mode of thought doesn't trump the >other - they both have value. If the goal is to become health or to understand the natural world, though, what's the value of a mystical belief system? Is there more value in a rain dance or in meteorology? (And please understand that I'm not talking about cultural or anthropological value, just value in terms of defined goals and results, with the example goal here being in understanding and predicting and eventually manipulating the weather.) I'm sure there's plenty of diagnostic and prescriptive utility in systems like ayurveda. I'm just objecting to the idea that their metaphoric explanations of reality are just as useful and accurate as their specific recommendations. > brought up the example of Einstein, maybe >in another thread. His reliance was primarily on the intuitive, >instinctive and unreasoned. The ideas could later be massaged and >made coherent and structured, but the true advance was neither >structured nor coherent. This is a real and important part of our >sentience, and one that should not be lost completely to the analytic. This is a classic lay misunderstanding -- the idea that in science, all thought is supposed to be algorithmic and computer-like. Intuition is a type of thought process -- an immensely important and valuable type of thought process. That doesn't make it unscientific, and the idea that it would is actually kind of strange. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 20, 2005 Report Share Posted September 20, 2005 On 9/20/05, Idol <Idol@...> wrote: > - > > >So I'm not arguing that Ayurveda or the philosophy of Yoga > >etc are *right* or are to be believed etc. I'm trying to make a > >strenuous argument against the restraint of thoughts and capacities > >(mystical, irrational, whatever) that are and always have been a huge > >part of a full human life. This mode of thought doesn't trump the > >other - they both have value. > > If the goal is to become health or to understand the natural world, though, > what's the value of a mystical belief system? Is there more value in a > rain dance or in meteorology? (And please understand that I'm not talking > about cultural or anthropological value, just value in terms of defined > goals and results, with the example goal here being in understanding and > predicting and eventually manipulating the weather.) I'm sure there's > plenty of diagnostic and prescriptive utility in systems like > ayurveda. I'm just objecting to the idea that their metaphoric > explanations of reality are just as useful and accurate as their specific > recommendations. Right - the times *have* changed. Of course the answer is not to decide " I will now be mystical in my nutritional decisions, " to drop the extensive gains of the modern West and to unthinkingly take up something that isn't, in some sense, " yours " (Jung cautioned forcefully against this, especially WRT Yoga, though I think he fundamentally misunderstood the philosophy). With respect to Ayurveda and similar systems, I'm saying that to dismiss them because of their mystical language would be a huge mistake. Massive amounts of important knowledge were encoded in that language, and its dismissal would mean a huge loss to humanity. The mode of thinking required for their understanding, I'd argue, has lots of other important benefits about which we might disagree. So yes, we should never accept these doctrines without significant historical context and a strict eye to detail, but nor should we allow our sight to be obscured by changes in the dominant mode of thought/investigation. > > brought up the example of Einstein, maybe > >in another thread. His reliance was primarily on the intuitive, > >instinctive and unreasoned. The ideas could later be massaged and > >made coherent and structured, but the true advance was neither > >structured nor coherent. This is a real and important part of our > >sentience, and one that should not be lost completely to the analytic. > > This is a classic lay misunderstanding -- the idea that in science, all > thought is supposed to be algorithmic and computer-like. Intuition is a > type of thought process -- an immensely important and valuable type of > thought process. That doesn't make it unscientific, and the idea that it > would is actually kind of strange. I think we've beaten this horse to death, so I'll pass here. My ego, though, wants badly to object to my inclusion in the scientific laity... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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