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yurvedic Medicine
 

The Ancient Ayurvedic Writings

© Dr. Vasant Lad

The Great Three Caraka Samhita
Susruta Samhita
Astanga Hrdayam Samhita
The Minor Three Sarngadhara Samhita
Bhava Prakasa Samhita
Madhava Nidanam Samhita

The Caraka Samhita is believed to date two to four centuries before Christ. It is felt to be the oldest and the most important ancient authoritative writing on Ayurveda. It is not known who this person was or, if indeed, this represents the work of a "school of thought"-- of scholars or followers of a man known as Caraka. This work is often considered a redaction of an even more ancient oral tradition, not an original composition of a single person, and the redactor is said to be Caraka. Drdhabala, living about 400 A.D., is believed to have filled in many verses of missing text in the cikitsasthana which arose over time.

The language of Caraka is Samskrt and its style is poetry--with meter and melody. Poetry was known to serve as a memory aid. For example, Caraka contains over 8,400 metrical verses which are regularly committed to memory, in toto, by modern medical students of Ayurveda.

It presents most of the theoretical edifice of Ayurveda and concentrates on the branch of Ayurveda called kayacikitsa. This is the theory of the internal fire--of digestion--or in modern terms internal medicine. Seen from a greater perspective this work seems to represent a certain value of Consciousness different from other works. It gives more discussion about the notion that life is fundamentally a field of Intelligence and Pure Knowledge. This field is self-aware--it is the knower as well as the object of perception. And for Caraka this is part of what is to be treated by the physician. Caraka never discusses the sub-types of pitta and kapha, but it does list and describe the 5 sub-types of vata.

The P.V. Sharma translation comes in four volumes--two of original text and two of commentary about the original work. Sharma's English version is said to be a scholarly and relatively faithful work. It has numerous appendices and an extensive index. The B. Dash version lacks these features but does have extensive commentary incorporated in with the original text. Both translators have excellent academic credentials supporting their works.

The Susruta Samhita presents the field of Ayurvedic surgery called salakya--meaning foreign body. This branch of medicine arose in part from the exigencies of dealing with the effects of war. This work, also, is said to be a redaction of oral material passed down verbally from generation to generation. It is thought to have arisen about the same time period as the Caraka Samhita but slightly after it. Its style is both prose and poetry with poetry being the greater portion. The Susruta Samhita, while dealing with the practice and theory of surgery, is an important source of Ayurvedic aphorisms. For example, the most commonly quoted definition of health is from Susruta. This work is unique in that it discusses blood in terms of the fourth dosic principle. This work is the first to enumerate and discuss the pitta sub-dosas. With its emphasis on pitta, surgery, and blood this work best represents the transformational value of life. This work, also originally written in Samskrt, is available in English only without Devanagari or transliteration. Bhishagratna's translation is the only English version extant.

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About The Author
Vasant Lad is an Ayurvedic Physician and Executive Director of the Ayurvedic Institute. Dr. Lad brings a wealth of classroom and practical experience to the United States. A native of India, he served for three years as Medical Director of the Ayurveda Hospital in Pune, India. He was Professor of Clinical Medicine at the Pune University College of Ayurvedic Medicine for 15 years. He......more
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