The Origin and Growth of the Healing Art by Edward Berdoe
CHAPTER IV.
596 words | Chapter 33
THE MEDICINE OF THE HINDUS.
The Aryans.—Hindu Philosophy.—The Vedas.—The Shastres of Charaka and
Susruta.—Code of Menu.—The Brahmans.—Medical Practitioners.—Strabo
on the Hindu Philosophers.—Charms.—Buddhism and Medicine.—Jíwaka,
Buddha’s Physician.—The Pulse.—Knowledge of Anatomy and Surgery in
Ancient Times.—Surgical Instruments.—Decadence of Hindu Medical
Science.—Goddesses of Disease.—Origin of Hospitals in India.
The Hindus are considered by Max Müller to be much older even as
regards their civilization than the Egyptians. This belief is based on
his study of their language, which he says existed “before there was
a single Greek statue, a single Babylonian bull, or a single Egyptian
sphinx.” According to him, the noble Indo-Germanic or Aryan people,
from whom have descended the Brahman, the Rájput, and the Englishman,
had their earliest home, not in Hindustan, but in Central Asia. (Max
Müller’s theory is now superseded by anthropological researches so far
as the Europeans are concerned.) This splendid race drove before them
into the mountains or reduced to slavery the _Dasyus_, the obscure
aborigines, the non-Aryan primæval peoples. The earliest Aryan poets
composed the _Rig-Veda_ at least three thousand, perhaps even four
thousand years ago. The handsome Aryan fair-complexioned conquerors
spoke with the utmost contempt of “the noseless” or “flat-nosed”
Mongolian aborigines, who, in the Vedic poems, from being “gross
feeders on flesh,” “lawless,” “non-sacrificing” tribes, were afterwards
described as “monsters” and “demons.”[224]
It is necessary, if we wish to understand the principles of Hindu
medicine, to glance at the philosophy and religion of the Brahmans and
Buddhists. The Aryan conquerors descending through the Himalayas were a
sober, industrious, courageous people, who lived a pastoral life, and
knowing nothing of the enervating attractions of great cities, required
no other medical treatment than simple folk medicine everywhere
affords. Their earliest literature is found in the “Vedic Hymns,” the
“Sacred Books of the Hindus,” which were composed by the wisest and
best of the men, who were warriors and husbandmen, and the priests and
physicians of their own households. They gradually acquired priestly
supremacy over a wider range. Thus arose the Brahmans, the “Offerers of
Potent Prayer.” The _Rig-Veda_ refers to physicians, and speaks of the
healing power of medicinal herbs; and the _Atharva-Veda_ contains an
invocation against the fever-demon, so that medical matters began very
early to receive attention after the conquest of India by the Aryans.
“Hinduism,” says Professor Monier Williams, “is a creed which may be
expressed by the two words, spiritual pantheism.”[225] Of all beliefs
this is the simplest. Nothing really exists but the One Universal
Spirit; man’s soul is identical with that Spirit. Separate existence
apart from the Supreme is mere illusion; consequently every man’s
highest aim should be to get rid for ever of doing, having, and being,
and strive to consider himself a part of the One Spirit. This in a
few words is esoteric Hinduism. When we attempt to study the endless
ramifications of the exoteric, or popular belief, the system, so far
from being simple, is infinitely complicated. God may amuse Himself by
illusory appearances. Light in the rainbow is one, but it manifests
itself variously. All material objects, and the gods, demons, good and
evil spirits, men, and animals are emanations from the One Universal
Spirit; though temporarily they exist apart from him, they will all
ultimately be reabsorbed into their source. In the Sanskrit language,
which is the repository of _Veda_, or “knowledge,” we have the vehicle
of Hindu philosophy. The systems of Hindu philosophy which grew out of
the third division of the _Vedas_, called the _Upanishads_, are six,
and are given in Professor Monier Williams’ work already referred to as—
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