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Ayurveda - Historically |  | Ayurveda - Historically: Encyclopedia II - Ayurveda - Historically |  | At the closing of the initiation, the guru gave a solemn address to the students where the guru directed the students to a life of chastity, honesty, and vegetarianism. The student was to strive with all his being for the health of the sick. He was not to betray patients for his own advantage. He was to dress modestly and avoid strong drink. He was to be collected and self-controlled, measured in speech at all times. He was to constantly improve his knowledge and technical skill. In the home of the patient he was to be courteous and modest, ...
See also:Ayurveda, Ayurveda - Brhat Trayi The greater triad, Ayurveda - Basic concepts and methodology, Ayurveda - Qualities, Ayurveda - The Five Elements, Ayurveda - Doshas, Ayurveda - Vata, Ayurveda - Pitta, Ayurveda - Kapha, Ayurveda - Herbs and Minerals in Ayurvedic Medicine, Ayurveda - Historically, Ayurveda - Today, Ayurveda - Ayurvedic Herbs in Western Medicine, Ayurveda - Partial Bibliography |  | | Ayurveda, Ayurveda - Ayurvedic Herbs in Western Medicine, Ayurveda - Basic concepts and methodology, Ayurveda - Brhat Trayi The greater triad, Ayurveda - Doshas, Ayurveda - Herbs and Minerals in Ayurvedic Medicine, Ayurveda - Historically, Ayurveda - Kapha, Ayurveda - Partial Bibliography, Ayurveda - Pitta, Ayurveda - Qualities, Ayurveda - The Five Elements, Ayurveda - Today, Ayurveda - Vata |  | |
|  |  | Ayurveda: Encyclopedia II - Ayurveda - Historically
Ayurveda - Historically
At the closing of the initiation, the guru gave a solemn address to the students where the guru directed the students to a life of chastity, honesty, and vegetarianism. The student was to strive with all his being for the health of the sick. He was not to betray patients for his own advantage. He was to dress modestly and avoid strong drink. He was to be collected and self-controlled, measured in speech at all times. He was to constantly improve his knowledge and technical skill. In the home of the patient he was to be courteous and modest, directing all attention to the patient's welfare. He was not to divulge any knowledge about the patient and his family. If the patient was incurable, he was to keep this to himself if it was likely to harm the patient or others.
The normal length of the student's training appears to have been seven years. Before graduation, the student was to pass a test. But the physician was to continue to learn through texts, direct observation (pratyaksha), and through inference (anumāna). In addition, the vaidyas attended meetings where knowledge was exchanged. The doctors were also enjoined to gain knowledge of unusual remedies from hillsmen, herdsmen, and forest-dwellers.
In 2001, archaeologists studying the remains of two men from Mehrgarh, Pakistan, discovered that the people of Indus Valley Civilization, even from the early Harappan periods (circa 3300 BC), had knowledge of medicine and even dentistry. The physical anthropologist that carried out the examinations made the discovery when he was cleaning the teeth of one of the men.
Other related archives1st millennium AD, 2001, 2nd millennium BC, 3300 BC, 7th century AD, 8th century, Agni, Akasha, Ap, Bhumi, British rule in India, Charaka, Harappan, Hinduism, History of medicine, Illness, India, Indus Valley Civilization, Kapha, Mehrgarh, Nidāna, Pakistan, Panchamahabhuta, Pitta, Prithvi, Samhita, Sankhya, Sanskrit, Sind, Sushruta, Tejas, Vagbhata, Vata, Vayu, Vedic, Vāgbhata, aether, air, alchemical, alkalis, anatomy, classical element, constipation, cooking, cosmology, cramps, demonology, dentistry, disease, distillation, ear, earth, embryology, etiology, eye, fertility, fire, four humours, guru, holistic, horticulture, insomnia, internal medicine, medicine, metabolism, metallurgy, metals, minerals, nose, obstetrics, pathology, pediatrics, pharmacy, physiology, prakrti, psychiatry, rashes, scorpion, snake venom, spider, sugar, surgery, synthesis, throat, toxicology, veda, vegetarianism, water, wind
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Historically", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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