Friday, October 23, 2009

[ Hinduism ]

The opinions of the Six Wise Men and the Indian Elephant come to mind.
Cannot one truthfully say that "Hinduism", or the entirety of Sanathana Dharmam, is:-
1. A Religion, the most majestic and comprehensive that ever Man was blessed with;
2. A system of and for community and for individual living, again so extensive in its scope, and so eminent in its practicability, that it has no compeititor, much an equal;
3. A catalogue of life values, unmatched by the best conceived by other civilisations;
4. A compendium of philosophy, reaching into the innermost recesses of the human soul, with apt and valid answers to the most esoteric questions that the human mind can conceive;
5. A inexhaustible library of textbooks (and other materials) on essential education for this world and the next;
6. The distillation of all the sciences, shrewedly concealed in enigmatic formulae that only the initiated can unravel and utilise;
7. A tantalising mirror to the historic continuity of the very existence of Divinity and Humanity, of Mortals and the Immortals, and of the inter-changeability of these apparent sets of antitheses.
8. The Original Divine Path, from which have descended, torn and tattered, imitative and sometimes contradictory debased tenets such as Judaism (who have a kosher kitchen of three sets of cooking utensils, one each for vegetarian, for fish, and for meat), Christianity (who have adopted our abhishegam as an essential rite for purification and initiation), and Islam (who wash their feet before entering homes and places of worship, who wear two unsewn pieces of white cloth for religious purposes including visiting the Kaaba, who circumambulate the and venerate the Shiva Lingam, of "Black Stone" embedded in the East Corner of Kaaba, as an esential rite in the Haj Pilgrimmage).

Sunday, October 18, 2009

The Appendix: Useful and in Fact Promising

The Appendix: Useful and in Fact Promising

http://www.livescience.com/health/090824-appendix-evolution.html

By Charles Q. Choi, Special to LiveScience
24 August 2009

Once thought to be useless, the appendix could be used to help battle diseases.

The body's appendix has long been thought of as nothing more than a worthless evolutionary artifact, good for nothing save a potentially lethal case of inflammation.

Now researchers suggest the appendix is a lot more than a useless remnant. Not only was it recently proposed to actually possess a critical function, but scientists now find it appears in nature a lot more often than before thought. And it's possible some of this organ's ancient uses could be recruited by physicians to help the human body fight disease more effectively.

In a way, the idea that the appendix is an organ whose time has passed has itself become a concept whose time is over.

"Maybe it's time to correct the textbooks," said researcher William Parker, an immunologist at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C. "Many biology texts today still refer to the appendix as a 'vestigial organ.'"

Slimy sac

The vermiform appendix is a slimy dead-end sac that hangs between the small and large intestines. No less than Charles Darwin first suggested that the appendix was a vestigial organ from an ancestor that ate leaves, theorizing that it was the evolutionary remains of a larger structure, called a cecum, which once was used by now-extinct predecessors for digesting food.

"Everybody likely knows at least one person who had to get their appendix taken out — slightly more than 1 in 20 people do — and they see there are no ill effects, and this suggests that you don't need it," Parker said.

However, Parker and his colleagues recently suggested that the appendix still served as a vital safehouse where good bacteria could lie in wait until they were needed to repopulate the gut after a nasty case of diarrhea. Past studies had also found the appendix can help make, direct and train white blood cells.

Now, in the first investigation of the appendix over the ages, Parker explained they discovered that it has been around much longer than anyone had suspected, hinting that it plays a critical function.

"The appendix has been around for at least 80 million years, much longer than we would estimate if Darwin's ideas about the appendix were correct," Parker said.

Moreover, the appendix appears in nature much more often than previously acknowledged. It has evolved at least twice, once among Australian marsupials such as the wombat and another time among rats, lemmings, meadow voles, Cape dune mole-rats and other rodents, as well as humans and certain primates.

"When species are divided into groups called 'families,' we find that more than 70 percent of all primate and rodent groups contain species with an appendix," Parker said.

Several living species, including several lemurs, certain rodents and the scaly-tailed flying squirrel, still have an appendix attached to a large cecum, which is used in digestion. Darwin had thought appendices appeared in only a small handful of animals.

"We're not saying that Darwin's idea of evolution is wrong — that would be absurd, as we're using his ideas on evolution to do this work," Parker told LiveScience. "It's just that Darwin simply didn't have the information we have now."

He added, "If Darwin had been aware of the species that have an appendix attached to a large cecum, and if he had known about the widespread nature of the appendix, he probably would not have thought of the appendix as a vestige of evolution."

What causes appendicitis?

Darwin was also not aware that appendicitis, or a potentially deadly inflammation of the appendix, is not due to a faulty appendix, but rather to cultural changes associated with industrialized society and improved sanitation, Parker said.

"Those changes left our immune systems with too little work and too much time their hands — a recipe for trouble," he said. "Darwin had no way of knowing that the function of the appendix could be rendered obsolete by cultural changes that included widespread use of sewer systems and clean drinking water."

Now that scientists are uncovering the normal function of the appendix, Parker notes a critical question to ask is whether anything can be done to prevent appendicitis. He suggests it might be possible to devise ways to incite our immune systems today in much the same manner that they were challenged back in the Stone Age.

"If modern medicine could figure out a way to do that, we would see far fewer cases of allergies, autoimmune disease, and appendicitis," Parker said.

The scientists detailed their findings online August 12 in the Journal of Evolutionary Biology.

Monday, September 7, 2009

[Quick remedy for chikungunya]



-----Original Message-----
From: Mehta Lalit
Sent: Saturday, October 07, 2006 1:47 PM
To: ALL HO Users; ALL Ranjangaon Users; ALL HM BR ENGINEERS
Subject: Quick remedy for chikungunya




Subject: quick remedy for chikungunya

If you see that someone in your family or in your neighbourhood is
suffering from the rapid and contagious disease Chikungunya please
pass it on to them.

Also

Pass it on to as many people as you can. This medicine would be of
great help to people suffering from this disease. One dose and you
will ok in 2 days max.

Single-dose-cure for CHIKUN GUNYA disease

Go to any homoeopathic medical store and show the matter given below:
5 ml pills
POLYPORUS PINICOLA-200
(or)
POLYPORUS OFFICINALIS-200
Both the above names mean one and the same medicine. Dont ask orally.
Either he gets confused or he will confuse you.
WRITE DOWN on paper and ask.
5 ml pills contains about 250 pills. Give two pills (chewable) for a
dose;
just one dose (irrespective of age) any time, not necessarily
before/after food.
This one dose completely cures fever and body pain of Chikun Gunya.
No need to take repeatedly. Just one dose! Fever subsides,
so also joint pains. Myself and my students have so far cured
hundreds of cases of Chikun Gunya with
just one single dose of Polyporus Pinicola-200.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------
In rare cases (say one in 300), fever subsides but joint pain continues.
In that case only, just give one dose
(2 pills for a dose chewable, irrespective of age)
of another homoeopathic medicine called
Kali-Mur-1000. In the homoeo drug store ask as under:
5 ml pills
KALI MUR - 1000
[See Calvin B. Knerr's Repertory: Fever, sequelae: Kali-mur.]
Thousands of cases of Chikun Gunya are being cured by
my students with one dose of (2 pills)
POLYPORUS PINICOLA-200
(sometimes called POLYPORUS OFFICINALIS).

Friday, September 4, 2009

[TN's Herbal Viagra hits Market]

CHENNAI: TN's desi version of the magical dream drug is finding one too many takers. And packaged as it is in the form of 'halwa' its lure is too sweet to resist, or so it
seems.

A herbal rejuvenator manufactured by a state-owned corporation and commonly called herbal Viagra' is such a runaway hit in the city that stocks have run out, both of the product and the raw materials needed to make it.

As 16 tonnes of the herb-based aphrodisiac Laboob Sageer' has been sold out in two months from a single outlet and as enquiries are pouring in from everywhere, the Tamil Nadu Medical Plant, Farms and Herbal Medicine Corporation Ltd (Tampcol), the manufacturer, is left with no stocks now. It is now busy sourcing the raw material and working with 60 personnel day and night to ensure that fresh batches of the product hit the market soon. (more)

Monday, August 31, 2009

[ America - a Hindu Nation‏ ]

America is not a Christian nation. We are, it is true, a nation founded
by Christians, and according to a 2008 survey, 76 percent of us continue
to identify as Christian (still, that's the lowest percentage in American
history). Of course, we are not a Hindu—or Muslim, or Jewish, or
Wiccan—nation, either. A million-plus Hindus live in the United States,
a fraction of the billion who live on Earth. But recent poll data show that
conceptually, at least, we are slowly becoming more like Hindus and less
like traditional Christians in the ways we think about God, our selves,
each other, and eternity.More