Ayurveda Basic

Category

5,400.00 (+ 3.5% online fee)

General Information about the curriculum

This curriculum offers immersive learning of Ayurveda discipline. It explicitly deals with Ashtangahrudaya. This course has been designed keeping in mind the needs of Masters students and their future needs. All the modules discussed in the curriculum are highly essential and help to understand philosophy. Thorough research has gone into the design of the curriculum.

Course Objectives 

To introduce the participants to wellness concepts of Ayurveda, the Indic knowledge system that propagates holistic healing, and its scientific thought.

Course outcomes

At the end of the course the learner will be able to – 

  • Explain the distinctions between Ayurveda and other medical systems
  • Describe the rationale behind Indian medical system of Ayurveda
  • Identify the application of Sankhya and Nyaya-Vaisheshika concepts in Ayurveda
  • Demonstrate the preventive actions possible according to Ayurveda

Curriculum

Module I
Basic Principles of Ayurveda – Fundamentals of Ayurveda
* Tradition, Definition, Aim of Ayurveda
* Ayu and its components as described in Samhita.
* Principles of Karana-Karyavada, its utility in advancement of research in Ayurveda.
* Importance and utility of Triskandha (Hetu, Linga, Aushadha-jnanam) and their need in teaching, research and clinical practice.
* Importance of knowledge of Sharir Prakriti and Manas Prakriti.
* Ashtanga Ayurveda (Bird’s eye view)
* Concept of Vyadhi
* Concept of Nidana Panchakam
* Anatomy and physiology in Ayurveda
Module II
Swasthavritta, Sadvritta and Acararasayana (Preventive aspects of Ayurveda)
* Importance and relevance of Swasthavritta and Community Medicine. History of community medicine.
* Concept of health and disease as per Ayurveda and Modern Medicine. Various definitions and dimensions of health as per Ayurveda.
* Relevance of Dinacharya, Ratricharya and Ritucharya in Health Promotion.
* Basic concept of Vega. Concept of Adharaniya and Dharaniya Vega in health promotion and prevention of diseases with examples.
* Concept of Trayopastambha in health promotion and prevention of diseases.
* Concept of nutrition as per Ayurveda.
* Concept of Vyadhikshamatva. Concept of Bala and Ojas in relation to health.
* Role of Panchakarma in preventive medicine.
* Role of Rasayana in promotion of health and prevention of diseases. Scope of Rasayana in Geriatrics and Reproductive & Child Health.

Module III
Introduction to dravyaguna of Ayurveda (Materia Medica & Pharmacology)
* Panchamahabhuta siddhanta, Samanya Vishesha siddhanta, classifications of Dravya as described in Brihattrayi.
* Applied aspects of Rasa, Guna, Virya, Vipaka and Prabhava
* Applied aspects of Aushdha karma with reference to Sharngadhara and   Bhavaprakasha
* Importance of Namarupa vigyan and concept of basonyms and synonyms of Dravyas

Practical structural setup
Sr. No. Title of Practical activity No. of Activities
1 Reading Comprehension: Reading commentaries on Ayurveda texts 2
2 Listening skills: listening to shastric talks, speeches and lectures 1
3 PowerPoint Presentation – Practice and Sample Analysis 2
4 Individual and Group presentation, features of oral presentation 1
5 Group discussion 1
6 Self-study and understanding of simple Shastra texts with their commentaries 1
Total8

Evaluation & Assessment Methods Used

Formative Assessment

  • Continuous Evaluation (Continuous Assessment)
  • 40% weightage: 40 marks
  • Formative Assessment will be based on a continuous comprehensive pattern
  • There shall be assignments and quizzes

Summative Assessment

  • End Term Examination
  • 60% weightage: 60 marks
  • There shall be an End-term examination of 60 marks Question paper Pattern
    Formative Evaluation-The answer sheet of the formative examination will be shown to individual students, and the student will be guided on how to improve upon the performance.
    Summative Evaluation – The end term examination shall be conducted as per the university examination schedule. The paper, for Theory, shall be assessed by the teacher who teaches the course.

References

1. Atridev Vidyalankar, Ayurved kaa brihad itihaas
2. V. Narayanaswami, Origin and Development of Ayurveda (a brief history), Ancient Indian Science of Life, Vol. 1, No. 1, July 1981, pages 1-7
3. K.S. Kannan, Theoretical Foundations of Ayurveda, I-AIM.

Indic Knowledge Landscape

Credits 2 (L-T-P 2-0-0, Lecture 30 hours)

Why should you attend?

If you are curious to know whether there is an indigenous knowledge in India and its diversity and spread of coverage, this course is for you. It will demystify the various sources from vedas to folklore encompassing Indian culture in just 30 hours. You will get to know what is the subject matter of the Vedas, Upanishads, Shastras, Puranas etc., in a way you can relate to modern knowledge.

Course Objectives

To introduce learners to the landscape of Vedic literature with broad taxonomy of Indic knowledge systems.

Learning Outcomes

  • Knowledge of the sources of Vedic knowledge
  • Comprehension of the seamless nature of Vedic knowledge
  • Understand the purpose and utility of Vedic knowledge systems in enriching human life

Indic Reasoning and debating

Credits 2 (L-T-P 2-0-0, Lecture 30 hours)

Why should you attend?

Have you ever felt that something you read on social media does not make any logical sense but do not know why? Have you felt the need to win arguments with friends regardless of their motive of argument? Did you know that there are sixteen types of mistakes one can commit and you can counter any opponent in a debate by learning India’s celebrated science of debate? 

If so, this course is for you. It will make you appreciate why India was the capital of knowledge and debates for millennia and why people came from all over the world to study here. This course will introduce Tarka – The Indian logic system and methodology of structured debate.

After completing this course you can exactly pinpoint fallacies in social media arguments.

Course Objectives

  • Ability to make use of debate exchanges and definitions and classification systems drawn from Indic manuals, learners understand the systematic process to challenge and defend assertions made in the course of debate.

Learning Outcomes

Learner transforms into a persuasive communicator with ability to-

  • Defend statements using clear, logical reasons
  • Choose relevant statements to defend
  • Support the arguments with well-chosen evidence, which is explanatory and thoroughly analyzed

The structure and method of Indic shastras

Credits 2 (L-T-P 2-0-0, Lecture 30 hours)

Why should you attend?

Did you know that India is unique in having a science of how to do scientific enquiry? All Indian sciences follow a standard template that enables the systematic mining of Indic texts. If you know this template you can understand any shastra(Indic sciences) easily. It also helps in artificial intelligence where knowledge representation is crucial.

Course Objectives

To understand the exposition style common to all Indian Shaastras or scientific treatises. This throws light on Bhaaratiiya method of scientific discourse.

Learning Outcomes

  • Ability for independent study of Indic shaastra texts to explore contemporary relevance
  • Ability to navigate Indic texts for concept search and knowledge mining applications
  • Ability to paraphrase Indic shaastra content to novice mainstream-educated audience

Vedic human psychology

Credits 3 (L-T-P 3-0-0, Lecture 45 hours)

Why should you attend?

Who does not want to be happy all the time? But we are constantly surrounded by things that make us unhappy. What is in us that causes grief. Is it the outside circumstance or something in us that responds? Who am I? How Many Grades of Happiness exist? Why do I like some things and do not like others? How to help others in distress? 

The answer to all these questions was the central pursuit of India for millenia. India offers the most comprehensive understanding of human nature that is central to all aspects of human life. This course gives you the essence of this knowledge without overwhelming you with the details.

It unifies spirituality, religion, psychology, aesthetics by enunciating their common underlying principles. 

Course Objectives

To give a basic understanding of human psychology and the motives of human behavior. To serve as the foundation for all humanities disciplines. This course integrates several western models of psychology with a common taxonomy derived from Vedic perspective. It also introduces a novel Vedic model derived from several Vedic sources including Upanishads, Sankhya-Yoga, Tantra, Bhaagavatam, Jyotisha, Natyashaastra and Mimaamsa. 

Learning Outcomes

After completion of this course students will be able to 

  • Comprehend the basic meaning & nature of western psychology 
  • Compare and contrast various paradigms of western psychology 
  • Understand and evaluate various fundamental concepts of Vedic psychology 
  • Juxtapose western and Vedic understanding of human personality 
  • Diagnose various psychological issues and create an intervention plan by integrating western and Vedic principles

Scientific thinking

Credits 2 (L-T-P 2-0-0, Lecture 30 hours)

Why should you attend?

Modern-day parents want their children to imbibe scientific thinking and be innovators in whatever area they choose to pursue. However, today’s school education system focuses on informing the findings of science but not the method of scientific thinking and model-based reasoning in a formal way. This course hones three key skills of scientific thinking, namely, abstraction, classification and inference essential to become a creative scientist. 

This course introduces India’s science of building scientific models and analyzing the soundness of any theory. It helps one become a discerning scientist and appreciate scientific works better.

Course Objectives

To elucidate the fundamental aspects of knowledge, its creation, its process and the method of scientific inquiry. To introduce the Navya Nyaya approach of model building.

Learning Outcomes

After the completion of this course students will be able to 

  • Understand Model based reasoning as the method of all scientific inquiry
  • Assess the robustness of scientific models according to criteria laid out in Vedic scientific system
  • Build robust scientific models for use in simulating real world systems
  • Recontextualize Vedic shaastras as scientific models for a contemporary application.
X