Translated from Sanskrit Ayurveda literally means “science of life”. Its roots are in Hinduism and its homeland is the land of ancient India.
This is an extremely old science and evidence for it has been found for four centuries before Christ. The first written information about it is part of Bower’s manuscript, a collection of fragmented Sanskrit monuments.
On the other hand, homeopathy is a much newer discovery. It was introduced in the early 18th century by a German physician named S. Hahnemann. Since then, with a brief decline in the first half of the twentieth century, homeopathy has developed as an alternative and complementary type of medicine.
Although both are holistic sciences, Ayurveda is definitely a much more complex science than homeopathy.
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According to Ayurveda, our health depends on the balance between the three main types of life energy or dosha: wind (vata), bile (pitta), phlegm (kapha). It is believed that each person has a unique ratio of these three life forces and it must be maintained in order to be healthy.
In Ayurveda, healers diagnose by heart rate. It can be used to detect deviations from the characteristic constitution (typical balance of the doshas) for the specific organism. In homeopathic treatment, similar to Western conventional medical practice, the symptoms and signs of the disease are observed.
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The Central Council for Research in Ayurveda and Siddha (CCRAS) is a state-sponsored institution involved in research and promotion of clinical, literary and other aspects of Ayurveda.
The Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938 recognized homeopathic remedies as drugs.
Homeopathy was created by German physician Samuel Hahnemann in the late eighteenth century.
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