Ayurveda Healing Arts Institute
Your
Californian
College
of
Clinical
Ayurvedic
Therapies
from
the
Buddhist -
Yogic -
Vedic
Tradition
Home Page -
www.Ayurveda-California.com
Visit our future site:
www.Ayurveda-Institute.org
2210 McKinley Avenue, Unit 4 (1 minute walk from Downtown Berkeley BART 1 block west of Martin Luther King, between Allston and Bancroft across from Bank of America Public Parking Lot - Click
here for directions), Berkeley, California, 94703
USA
(1) 510-292-6696
-
Please CALL US,
no e-mail available
(Namo AT Shurangama.com).
"Om Namo Aryavalokiteshvaraya Bodhisattvaya Mahasattvaya Maha Karunikaya Om Sarva Abhaya!"
Detailed Course Descriptions and Prerequisites for our Clinical Ayurveda Therapist (C.A.T.) Diploma Program – 225 hours, 15 trimester units
(Click here to listen to the audio of this page)
Auditing versus Certificate Program: Although the detailed course descriptions and syllabi of the 17 courses below that make up the C.A.T. Certificate Program may seem daunting and too intense for for some students, please realize that it is possible to "audit" the courses (in person or via distance learning CD-ROM audio/video option) and hence for such auditing students it is not necessary to write the term papers, or listen to all of the audios, or do homework or pass the oral exams at the end of the program.
It is possible for students to audit the four levels of programs offered. There is no reduction in tuition or fees for this, but there is no requirement for specific attendance or completion of exams.
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|
Course Titles |
Course Code |
Total Units |
Total Class Hours |
Pre-Reqs |
|
HUM108 |
2.00 |
30 |
Free to All Beings | |
|
History of Medicine and Religion – Medicines of World Cultures |
HIS108 |
0.50 |
7.5 |
Free to All Beings |
|
AYR108 |
0.50 |
7.5 |
High School Diploma | |
|
AYR220 |
0.50 |
7.5 |
AYR108 | |
|
AYR230 |
0.50 |
7.5 |
AYR220 | |
|
AYR240 |
0.50 |
7.5 |
AYR230 | |
|
Dhatus (Bodily Tissues) - II: Meda, Asthi, Majja & Shukra/Artava Dhatus |
AYR241 |
0.50 |
7.5 |
AYR230 |
|
AYR250 |
0.50 |
7.5 |
AYR241 | |
|
AYR260 |
0.25 |
3.75 |
AYR250 | |
|
NUT108 |
0.50 |
7.5 |
AYR240 | |
|
HRB108 |
4.00 |
60 |
High School Diploma | |
|
AYR190 |
0.25 |
3.75 |
HRB108 | |
|
Sanskrit Level I: Devanagari Alphabet, Transliteration, Mantras |
SKT108 |
0.5 |
7.5 |
Free to All Beings |
|
Sanskrit Level II: Ayurvedic Gunas-Dhatus-Agni-Ojas-Tejas-Prana-Srotas |
SKT210 |
0.5 |
7.5 |
SKT108, AYR241 |
|
Sanskrit Level III: Ayurvedic-Buddhist-Yogic-Hindu Words and Definitions |
SKT220 |
1.0 |
15 |
SKT108, AYR241 |
|
YOG108 |
0.50 |
7.5 |
Free to All Beings | |
|
English Composition I: Ayurvedic, Shad Darshan Philosophy / History |
ENG108 |
2.00 |
30 |
High School Diploma |
|
Clinical Ayurveda Therapist (C.A.T.) Diploma |
15.0 |
225 |
Hours Total |
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| 15.00 | 225.00 | Class Hours | |
| Upon Graduation from Level I: C.A.T. you will have achieved: | Trimester | in C.A.T. | Phase of Study |
| Units |
NOTE: The 225 hours / 15 units of study in the Clinical Ayurvedic Therapist (C.A.T.) Certificate Program involve actually listening to approximately 225 hours of actual recorded audio lectures of Ven. Losang Jinpa, D.Ayur, and several other teachers.
C.A.T. can be completed as rapidly as you are able to listen to the 225 hours of classes, take notes, read, do the outside homework and self-study. This homework is beyond the actual 225 hours of "virtual" (distance learning) classroom time.
Expect to spend 30 minutes of self-study for every hour of audio lecture.
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Time to Complete the Clinical Ayurveda Therapist (C.A.T.) Diploma Program – 225 hours, 15 trimester units
| Hours per Week | Weeks to Completion | |||
|
Intense Full-Time Study (20 hours per week of listening to class audios)
|
20
|
11
|
Comparable to "One Trimester" of college classroom study in the U.S.
|
|
|
Regular Full-Time Study (12 hours per week of listening to class audios)
|
12
|
19
|
12 hours per week of class is the minimum "load" that is considered
full-time by U.S. colleges.
|
|
|
Part-Time Study (~4.5 hours per week of listening to class audios)
|
4.5
|
50
|
weeks of 4.5 hours per week of audio listening means you can complete the program in 1 year. | |
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What is the Definition Clinical Ayurveda Therapist?
What does the word Clinical mean and imply?
What are the Conduct and Practice Requirements of the Students, Teachers and Graduates of the Clinical Ayurveda Therapist Programs?
Our Level IV Master Ayurvedic Herbalist Program corresponds completely with the American Herbalists Guild's educational guidelines. For complete course-by-course details correlating our distance learning and in-person courses with the educational guidelines of the Guild, click here to download a detailed Excel spreadsheet. The spreadsheet also provides course prices, descriptions, course codes, units and hours, prerequisites, and textbook book requirements.
| Mastery Level | Diploma Certificate Program | Program Hours | Trimester Unit Credits | Tuition Donation |
| Level IV | Master Ayurvedic Herbalist (M.A.H.) Diploma |
1,800 class hours |
120 trimester units |
$16482 |
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NOTE: The suggested Tuition Donation above includes a combination of refundable Tuition donation and the non-refundable $108 application and registration fee donation ($54 each respectively). For more details on our refund policies, click here. For more info on our Application - Registration Fees and Exam Fees, click here.
The Most Comprehensive Professional Ayurvedic Education in the U.S.A.
Inexpensive Community College Level Pricing
We have endeavored to offer the Most Comprehensive Ayurvedic education in the United States and have hence based the pricing for our Distance Learning (Correspondence Course) programs on the low-cost "Community College" model. State-supported Community Colleges in the United States, such as San Francisco’s City College or Oakland’s Laney College typically charge $26 to $75 per trimester unit for distance learning. In this spirit we are offering our distance learning programs at the affordable suggested donation rate of $60 per trimester unit (66 cents per hour).
Remember, no student is EVER turned away due to lack of funds. So, if you cannot afford $3350 up-front, then please sign up for the course by making the donation that is within your budget. Or alternatively, sign up for classes "à la carte" -- meaning you "pay-as-you-go". In order to keep the donations (artha and dana) flowing to support our non-profit Ayurvedic work, we encourage students to sign up for the entire $3350 (225 hour) program all at once.
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Make an Offering for your Ayurvedic Courses
| Distance Learning: | $ 150 | Total Tuition Donation for Level I | $ 1,800 |
in-Person Learning |
|||
| “Clinical Ayurveda Therapist” (“C.A.T.”) 225 hours / 15 units | |||||||
| $ 108 | Non Refundable Application and Registration Fee | $ 108 | |||||
| $ 50 | Herbal Sample Packets (25 herbs) | $ 50 | |||||
| $ 45 | Michael Dick's Ayurvedic Herbal Handbook | $ 45 | |||||
| $ 3350 | Grand Total Donation Requested for C.A.T. | $ 1,823 | |||||
| --------------- | --------------- | ||||||
| $ 174 | Required Books (Not sold by the Institute) | $ 174 | |||||
| ======== | ======== | ||||||
| $ 527 | Total Tuition Donation and Books Cost | $ 1,997 | |||||
NOTE: The suggested cost descriptions above include a combination of refundable $150 Tuition donation (based on the per trimester unit rate) and the non-refundable $108 application and registration fee donation ($54 each respectively). For more details on our refund policies, click here. For more info on our Application - Registration Fees and Exam Fees, click here. The $45 Ayurvedic Herbal Handbook and the $50 Herbal Sample Packets are not refundable.
For our In-Person Class Tuition details and information on the cost per trimester unit (per 15 hours of learning), click here.
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Our core required textbook for all courses is:
Lad, Vasant, Dr., B.A.M.S., M.A.Sc.,
Textbook of Ayurveda –
Fundamental Principles of Ayurveda, Volume One, Albuquerque, New
Mexico: The
Ayurvedic Press, 2002. ISBN 1-883725-07-0
Cost: $40.00 U.S.
Required for Ayurvedic, Nutrition, Sanskrit and English Courses HUM108, AYR108, AYR220, AYR230, AYR240, AYR241, AYR250, AYR260, NUT108, AYR190, SKT108, SKT210, SKT220, ENG108
Please support Dr. Lad's Ayurvedic Institute
www.Ayurveda.com by purchasing directly from them.
Also available from
Amazon.com
The Most Comprehensive and Low-Cost Distance
Learning:
East Indian Ayurvedic Medicine and Tibetan Medicine Online
Correspondence Courses
Himalayan Medicine
in the Buddhist - Yogic - Vedic
Tradition of
India, Tibet & China
Want to study Ayurvedic Medicine or Tibetan Medicine, but don't like to travel? Hate to sit in class? Can't afford to take time off from your work? If your answer is yes to any of these questions, Medicine Buddha Healing Center's Ayurveda Healing Arts Institute has the perfect solution for your needs. We have Distance Learning Programs on a wide variety of Himalayan Healing Arts topics.
Study what you want to learn, when you want to learn it, wherever you learn best.
Learn at your own pace using the latest multimedia audio-visual learning aids.
Study with exceptional instructors - Losang Jinpa, D.Ayur, past faculty member at the Ayurvedic Institute and Dr. Kelsang Dorjee of the H.H. Dalai Lama's Tibetan Medical and Astro. Institute in Dharamsala, India
Avoid the cost and hassle of travel and time away from your home.
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Course #1 of 17 –– Shad Darshan: The Six Philosophies of Indian Medicine (HUM108)
2 trimester units / 30 course hours
Prerequisites: High School Diploma or General Equivalency Diploma (G.E.D.)
An in-depth course of the major philosophies that are inseparably part of Ayurveda. Introduction; Shad Darshan (Six Philosophies of Life); Sankhya (Purusha and Prakruti, Mahad or Creative Intelligence, Ahamkara or Ego, Sattva or Purity, Rajas or Movement, Tamas or Inertia); Nyaya and Vaisheshika (The Four Pramana - Sources of Valid Knowledge, The Elements, Soul or Atman, Mind or Manas, Time or Kala, Direction or Dig); Mimamsa; Yoga; Vedanta; and Buddhism.
Also includes brief readings from the Ayurvedic Sutras (The Big Three: 1. Charaka Samhita, 2. Nagarjuna Bodhisattva’s Sushruta Samhita, 3. Vabhata’s Astanga Samgraha and Astanga Hridayam; The Lesser Four: 1. Sharngadhara Samhita, 2. Madhava Nidanam Samhita, 3. Bhavaprakasha of Bhava Mishra Samhita and 4. Kashyapa Samhita); the Buddhist Sutras with commentary by the Venerable Buddhist Master Hsuan Hua (1. Medicine Master Buddha Bhaisajya Guru Sutra, 2. Sutra Spoken by the Buddha on the Contemplation of the Two Bodhisattvas King of Healing and Supreme Healer, 3. Amitabha Sutra, 4. Dharma Flower Lotus Sutra, 5. Flower Adornment Avatamsaka Sutra, 6. Prajna Paramita Heart Sutra, 7. Shurangama Sutra, 8. Sixth Patriarch’s Sutra, 9. Sutra in 42 Sections, 10. Sutra on the Past Vows of Earth Store Kshitigarbha Bodhisattva, 11. Vajra Prajna Paramita Diamond Sutra, and 12. Shantideva’s Guide to the Bodhisattva’s Way of Life – Bodhisattvacharyavatara Shastra), the Tibetan Medicine Sutra (Rgyud bzi – Amrita-Hridaya-Astanga-Guhyopadesha-Tantra Sutra); the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali and from diverse Hindu Sutras (1. Rigveda, 2. Yajurveda, 3. Atharvaveda, 4. Samaveda, 5. Bhagavad Gita, 6. Upanishads). Based in part on Losang Jinpa’s research paper Buddhism’s Influence on Ayurveda.
Organized primarily around Chapter 1 of world-renowned Ayurvedic Physician Dr. Vasant Lad’s Textbook of Ayurveda Volume I, and around the materials of several distinguished Indo-Tibetan Ayurvedic and Chinese physicians and healers such as the Venerable Buddhist Master Hsuan Hua, Dr. Ron Epstein, Shantideva’s Guide to the Bodhisattva’s Way of Life – Bodhisattvacharyavatara Shastra Dr. Raoul Birnbaum, Dharma Master Heng Sure, J. Krishnamurti, David Crow, Dr. Partap Chauhan, Dr. P.H. Kulkarni, Dr. K.N. Udupa, Dr. R.H. Singh, Dr. Robert Svoboda, Dr. Baghwan Dash, Dr. Sunil Joshi, Dr. Lapsang Rapgay, Dr. Yeshe Donden, Dr. Bill Celentano, Dr. Kelsang Dorje, Dr. David Frawley, Michael Dick, Bri Maya Tiwari, Robert Sachs, Dr. Bob Flaws, Dr. Giovanni Maciocia, Dr. Barry Clark, Swami Sada Shiva Tirtha, Losang Jinpa and others and around the Ayurvedic Classic Texts (Sutras) combined with additional book readings, lectures, handouts and audio-visuals.
Sample lecture:
Requires medium length written term paper or telephone or in-person oral or written exam
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Course #2 of 17 –– History of Medicine and Religion - Medicines of World Cultures (HIS108)
0.50 trimester unit / 7.5 course hours
Prerequisites: High School Diploma or General Equivalency Diploma (G.E.D.)
An survey course of the development of the world’s major philosophies / sciences of medicine (Ayurvedic, Chinese, Tibetan, Persian-Unani, Egyptian, Greek – Galenic, Roman, the Wise Women / Witches, Western, the AMA, the Eclectics, the Heroics/Regulars/Thomsonians, the Neo-Thomsonians, Homeopathy, Chiropractic, Massage Therapy, Osteopathy, Modern Allopathic Pharmaceutical Medicine, Medicine as Big Business, Dr. Albert Schweitzer, Patch Adams, M.D., Dr. Depak Chopra, Dr. Andrew Weil, Dr. Vasant Lad, other visionaries; NAMA, CAAM, licensing, the future of Ayurveda. A look at the development of medicine within the religions of many cultures and their inter-relatedness throughout the ages. Religion and its history in India, Nepal, Tibet and China is inextricably linked with Ayurveda. Review of the Shad Darshan (Six Philosophies of Life – Sankhya, Nyaya, Vaisheshika, Mimamsa, Yoga, Vedanta, and Buddhism). Vastu Shastra – the science / history of Vedic architecture (Indian "feng shui").
Using quotations and passage not covered in the humanities course HUM108: Shad Darshan: The Six Philosophies of Indian Medicine, we include brief readings from the Chinese Medicine Sutras (The Yellow Emperor’s Canon – Huang Di Nei Jing, The Secret Treatise of the Spiritual Orchid – Neijing Suwen, Chang Chung-Ching’ 142 A.D. Wellspring of Chinese Medicine Materia Medica – Shang Han Lun, Wang Shu-he’s Pulse Diagnosis Classic – Mai Jing, The Divine Husbandman’s Herbal, Synopsis of Prescriptions of the Golden Chamber, The Spiritual Pivot – Ling Shu, Shen Nong Ben Cao, Master Hua’s Classic of the Central Viscera – Hua Tuo’s Zhong Zang Jing, I-hsueh Yuan Liu Lun of 1757 by Hsu Ta-ch’un, the Barefoot Doctor’s Guide); Ayurvedic Sutras (The Big Three: 1. Charaka Samhita, 2. Nagarjuna Bodhisattva’s Sushruta Samhita, 3. Vabhata’s Astanga Samgraha and Astanga Hridayam; The Lesser Four: 1. Sharngadhara Samhita, 2. Madhava Nidanam Samhita, 3. Bhavaprakasha of Bhava Mishra Samhita and 4. Kashyapa Samhita); some Buddhist Sutras with commentary by the Venerable Buddhist Master Hsuan Hua (1. Medicine Master Buddha Bhaisajya Guru Sutra, 2. Sutra Spoken by the Buddha on the Contemplation of the Two Bodhisattvas King of Healing and Supreme Healer, 3. Amitabha Sutra, 4. Dharma Flower Lotus Sutra, 5. Flower Adornment Avatamsaka Sutra, 6. Prajna Paramita Heart Sutra, 7. Shurangama Sutra, 8. Sixth Patriarch’s Sutra, 9. Sutra in 42 Sections, 10. Sutra on the Past Vows of Earth Store Kshitigarbha Bodhisattva, 11. Vajra Prajna Paramita Diamond Sutra, and 12. Shantideva’s Guide to the Bodhisattva’s Way of Life – Bodhisattvacharyavatara Shastra), the Tibetan Medicine Sutra (Rgyud bzi – Amrita-Hridaya-Astanga-Guhyopadesha-Tantra Sutra); the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali and from diverse Hindu Sutras (1. Rigveda, 2. Yajurveda, 3. Atharvaveda, 4. Samaveda, 5. Bhagavad Gita, 6. Upanishads). Based in part on Losang Jinpa’s research paper Buddhism’s Influence on Ayurveda.
Organized primarily around Chapter 1 of world-renowned Ayurvedic Physician Dr. Vasant Lad’s Textbook of Ayurveda Volume I, and around Dr. S.K. Ramachandra Rao’s Encyclopaedia of Indian Medicine (Volumes I Historical Perspective).
Additionally material comes from the work of several distinguished Indo-Tibetan Ayurvedic and Chinese physicians and healers such as the Venerable Buddhist Master Hsuan Hua, Dr. Ron Epstein, Shantideva’s Guide to the Bodhisattva’s Way of Life – Bodhisattvacharyavatara Shastra Dr. Raoul Birnbaum, Dharma Master Heng Sure, Patch Adams, M.D., J. Krishnamurti, David Crow, Dr. Partap Chauhan, Dr. P.H. Kulkarni, Dr. K.N. Udupa, Dr. R.H. Singh, Dr. Robert Svoboda, Dr. Baghwan Dash, Dr. Sunil Joshi, Dr. Lapsang Rapgay, Dr. Yeshe Donden, Dr. Bill Celentano, Dr. Kelsang Dorje, Dr. David Frawley, Michael Dick, Bri Maya Tiwari, Robert Sachs, Dr. Bob Flaws, Dr. Giovanni Maciocia, Dr. Lonny S. Jarret, Claude Larre, S.J. & Elisabeth Rochat de la Valleé, Dr. Barry Clark, Swami Sada Shiva Tirtha, Losang Jinpa and others and around the Ayurvedic Classic Texts (Sutras) combined with additional book readings, lectures, handouts and audio-visuals.
Requires short length written term paper or telephone or in-person oral or written exam.
"Practical Outrageousness - Bringing Humor and Joy into Your Clinical Practice" Course at University of California San Francisco (UCSF).
patch_adams_large_1_gesundheit!_institute.wma
Listen
to an amazing 2 hour long lecture by world-renowned Clown Bodhisattva Dr. Patch
Adams at UCSF's
Practical
Outrageousness Seminar which our primary faculty member
Losang Jinpa attended in April 2002.
(19 MB)
Patch's philosophy on life which has been the model for the Ayurvedic Healing Arts Institute and its parent the Medicine Buddha Healing Center. The actual prerecorded audio lectures for this course involve approximately 7 hours and 30 minutes of lectures by Losang Jinpa, Patch Adams, and other diverse teachers.
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Course # 3 of 17 –– The Five Elements and Their Attributes (AYR108)
0.50 trimester unit / 7.5 course hours
$27 for Audit or Stand-Alone Seminar
Price
(Price does NOT include the
required
textbook listed here:
Dr. Lad's Textbook of Ayurveda Volume I)
Prerequisites: High School Diploma or General Equivalency Diploma (G.E.D.)
A survey course of the most important elements of Ayurveda: The Five Elements and Tanmatra; The Basic Attributes of Tridosha—Vata, Pitta and Kapha; Attributes (Gunas) and Their Effects on Doshas; Prakruti: Your Unique Body Type (Characteristics of the Vata Individual, Characteristics of the Pitta Individual, Characteristics of the Kapha Individual).
Organized around Chapter 2 of world-renowned Ayurvedic Physician Dr. Vasant Lad’s Textbook of Ayurveda Volume I. Also around the Ayurvedic 20 Guna Chart of the appendix of Dr. Lad's Textbook of Ayurveda.
Also around the materials of several distinguished Indo-Tibetan Ayurvedic and Chinese physicians and healers such as Dr. Partap Chauhan, Dr. P.H. Kulkarni, Dr. K.N. Udupa, Dr. R.H. Singh, Dr. Robert Svoboda, Dr. Baghwan Dash, Dr. Sunil Joshi, Dr. Lapsang Rapgay, Dr. Yeshe Donden, Dr. Bill Celentano, Dr. Kelsang Dorje, Dr. David Frawley, Michael Dick, Bri Maya Tiwari, Robert Sachs, Dr. Bob Flaws, Dr. Giovanni Maciocia, Dr. Barry Clark, Swami Sada Shiva Tirtha, Losang Jinpa and others and around the Ayurvedic Classic Texts (Sutras) combined with additional book readings, lectures, handouts and audio-visuals.
Requires short written term paper or telephone or in-person oral or written exam.
"Introduction to
Ayurveda" Course at University of California Berkeley
(Cal Students
Integrative Medicine Program lecture)
Click
here
to listen to this 2 hour sample introductory class audio lecture by
Losang Jinpa, D.Ayur at UC Berkeley on March 12. (14 MB download)
The actual
prerecorded audio lectures for this course involve approximately 7 hours and
30 minutes of lectures and prerecorded audio of actual client consultation case
study sessions.
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Course # 4 of 17 – The Doshas and Their Subtypes (AYR220)
0.50 trimester unit / 7.5 course hours
Prerequisites: AYR108
A survey course of the key anatomical / physiological processes of the Tri-Dosha: Vata and Its Subtypes: Prana Vayu, Udana Vayu, Vyana Vayu, Samana Vayu, Apana Vayu; Pitta and Its Subtypes: Pachaka Pitta, Ranjaka Pitta, Alochaka Pitta, Sadhaka Pitta, Bhrajaka Pitta; Kapha and Its Subtypes: Kledaka Kapha, Avalambaka Kapha, Bodhaka Kapha, Tarpaka Kapha, Shleshaka Kapha.
Organized around Chapter 3 of world-renowned Ayurvedic Physician Dr. Vasant Lad’s Textbook of Ayurveda Volume I, and around the materials of several distinguished Indo-Tibetan Ayurvedic and Chinese physicians and healers such as Dr. Partap Chauhan, Dr. P.H. Kulkarni, Dr. K.N. Udupa, Dr. R.H. Singh, Dr. Robert Svoboda, Dr. Baghwan Dash, Dr. Sunil Joshi, Dr. Lapsang Rapgay, Dr. Yeshe Donden, Dr. Bill Celentano, Dr. Kelsang Dorje, Dr. David Frawley, Michael Dick, Bri Maya Tiwari, Robert Sachs, Dr. Bob Flaws, Dr. Giovanni Maciocia, Dr. Barry Clark, Swami Sada Shiva Tirtha, Losang Jinpa and others and around the Ayurvedic Classic Texts (Sutras) combined with additional book readings, lectures, handouts and audio-visuals.
Requires short written term paper or telephone or in-person oral or written exam.
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Course # 5 of 17 - Agni the Digestive Fire in Ayurveda (AYR230)
0.50 trimester unit / 7.5 course hours
Prerequisites: AYR220
An in-depth survey course of the key anatomical / physiological metabolic processes. Introduction to Agni; Agni: the Digestive Fire (Agni and the Five Elements, The Role of Agni in Digestion); Normal Functions of Agni; The Doshas and Agni; The Four Varieties of Agni (Sama – balanced metabolism, Vishama – irregular metabolism, Tikshna – sharp or hypermetabolism, Manda – dull or hypometabolism); The Main Types of Agni; The 40 Subtypes of Agni (Jathara agni or central fire, Kloma agni or pancreatic fire, Bhuta agni or 5 element liver enzymes, Jatru agni or thyroid and thymus agni, Dhatu agni or metabolic energy of the lymph-plasma tissue – blood tissue – muscle tissue – fat tissue – bone tissue – nervous system tissue – reproductive system tissue, Pilu and Pithara agni or cellular digestion, Indriya agni or fire of the five senses, Dosha agni or fire of the subtypes of vata-pitta-kapha, Mala agni or metabolic fire of the urine, feces and sweat); Mantras for improving Agni.
Organized around Chapter 4 of world-renowned Ayurvedic Physician Dr. Vasant Lad’s Textbook of Ayurveda Volume I. Also around the Ayurvedic Agni Chart of the appendix of Dr. Lad's Textbook of Ayurveda and around the materials of several distinguished Indo-Tibetan Ayurvedic and Chinese physicians and healers such as Dr. Partap Chauhan, Dr. P.H. Kulkarni, Dr. K.N. Udupa, Dr. R.H. Singh, Dr. Robert Svoboda, Dr. Baghwan Dash, Dr. Sunil Joshi, Dr. Lapsang Rapgay, Dr. Yeshe Donden, Dr. Bill Celentano, Dr. Kelsang Dorje, Dr. David Frawley, Michael Dick, Bri Maya Tiwari, Robert Sachs, Dr. Bob Flaws, Dr. Giovanni Maciocia, Dr. Barry Clark, Swami Sada Shiva Tirtha, Losang Jinpa and others and around the Ayurvedic Classic Texts (Sutras) combined with additional book readings, lectures, handouts and audio-visuals.
Requires short written term paper or telephone or in-person oral or written exam.
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Course # 6 of 17 - Dhatus (Bodily Tissues) - I: Rasa, Rakta and Mamsa Dhatus (AYR240)
0.50 trimester unit / 7.5 course hours
Prerequisites: AYR230
A survey course of the key Dhatus (Bodily Tissues) — I: Rasa, Rakta and Mamsa Dhatus: Introduction (Nutrition and Structure of the Dhatus, Dhatu Byproducts or Malas, Disorders of the Dhatus); Rasa Dhatu: the Lymph and Blood Plasma Tissue (Byproducts of Rasa Dhatu, Disorders of Rasa Dhatu, Fever, Decreased and Increased Rasa Dhatu); Rakta Dhatu: the Blood Tissue (Red Blood Cells, Byproducts of Rakta Dhatu, Disorders of Rakta Dhatu, The Health of the Blood Vessels); Mamsa Dhatu: the Muscle Tissue (Types of Muscles and Their Functions, Byproducts of Mamsa Dhatu, Disorders of Mamsa Dhatu); The Role of Mamsa Dhatu in Emotional Well Being (Meditation and Mamsa Dhatu).
Organized around Chapter 5 of world-renowned Ayurvedic Physician Dr. Vasant Lad’s Textbook of Ayurveda Volume I. Also around the Ayurvedic Dhatu Chart of the appendix of Dr. Lad's Textbook of Ayurveda and around the materials of several distinguished Indo-Tibetan Ayurvedic and Chinese physicians and healers such as Dr. Partap Chauhan, Dr. P.H. Kulkarni, Dr. K.N. Udupa, Dr. R.H. Singh, Dr. Robert Svoboda, Dr. Baghwan Dash, Dr. Sunil Joshi, Dr. Lapsang Rapgay, Dr. Yeshe Donden, Dr. Bill Celentano, Dr. Kelsang Dorje, Dr. David Frawley, Michael Dick, Bri Maya Tiwari, Robert Sachs, Dr. Bob Flaws, Dr. Giovanni Maciocia, Dr. Barry Clark, Swami Sada Shiva Tirtha, Losang Jinpa and others and around the Ayurvedic Classic Texts (Sutras) combined with additional book readings, lectures, handouts and audio-visuals.
Requires short written term paper or telephone or in-person oral or written exam.
"Introduction to 7 Dhatus" Course at Medicine Buddha Healing Center
Click
here
to listen to this 2 hour 45 minute advanced class audio lecture at Medicine
Buddha Healing Center with
Losang Jinpa, D.Ayur commenting on and explaining Dr. Vasant Lad's lecture on the 7 tissues (dhatus).
This is just one of more than 12 hours on Ayurvedic Concept of the Seven Body
Tissues taught that weekend by Losang.
(19 MB download)
The actual
prerecorded audio lectures for this course involve approximately 7 hours and
30 minutes of lectures and prerecorded audio of actual client consultation case
study sessions.
All copyrighted material available via this site or its distance learning correspondence courses is reprinted either with permission as noted or is quoted, paraphrased, or excerpted and made available under the "fair use" provision (17 USC §107) of the United States Copyright Act for research and non-profit educational and religious purposes only.
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0.50 trimester unit / 7.5 course hours
Prerequisites: AYR230
A survey course of the key Dhatus (Bodily Tissues) - II: Meda, Asthi, Majja and Shukra/Artava Dhatus. Review of previous dhatus; Meda Dhatu: the Fat or Adipose Tissue (Byproducts of Meda Dhatu, Disorders of Meda Dhatu, Awareness and Meda); Asthi Dhatu: the Bone or Osseous Tissue (Byproducts of Asthi Dhatu, Disorders of Asthi Dhatu); Majja Dhatu: the Nerve Tissue and Bone Marrow (Majja and the Prenatal Development Stage, The Functions of Majja Dhatu, Byproducts of Majja Dhatu, Dreams, Disorders of Majja Dhatu); Shukra and Artava Dhatus: Male and Female Reproductive Tissues (Byproducts of Shukra and Artava Dhatus); Shukra Dhatu; Artava Dhatu; Disorders of Shukra/Artava Dhatus; Conclusion.
Organized around Chapter 6 of world-renowned Ayurvedic Physician Dr. Vasant Lad’s Textbook of Ayurveda Volume I. Also around the Ayurvedic Dhatu Chart of the appendix of Dr. Lad's Textbook of Ayurveda and around the materials of several distinguished Indo-Tibetan Ayurvedic and Chinese physicians and healers such as Dr. Partap Chauhan, Dr. P.H. Kulkarni, Dr. K.N. Udupa, Dr. R.H. Singh, Dr. Robert Svoboda, Dr. Baghwan Dash, Dr. Sunil Joshi, Dr. Lapsang Rapgay, Dr. Yeshe Donden, Dr. Bill Celentano, Dr. Kelsang Dorje, Dr. David Frawley, Michael Dick, Bri Maya Tiwari, Robert Sachs, Dr. Bob Flaws, Dr. Giovanni Maciocia, Dr. Barry Clark, Swami Sada Shiva Tirtha, Losang Jinpa and others and around the Ayurvedic Classic Texts (Sutras) combined with additional book readings, lectures, handouts and audio-visuals.
Requires short written term paper or telephone or in-person oral or written exam.
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Course # 8 of 17 - Srotamsi (Bodily Channels and Systems) (AYR250)
0.50 trimester unit / 7.5 course hours
Prerequisites: AYR241
A survey course of the key Srotamsi (Bodily Channels, Meridians and Systems); The Channels to Receive: Food, Prana, and Water (Anna Vaha Srotas, Prana Vaha Srotas, Udaka Vaha Srotas or Ambu Vaha Srotas); The Channels to Nourish and Maintain the Body - The Dhatu Srotamsi (Rasa Vaha Srotas, Rakta Vaha Srotas, Mamsa Vaha Srotas, Meda Vaha Srotas, Asthi Vaha Srotas, Majja Vaha Srotas, Shukra/Artava Vaha Srotas; Stanya Vaha Srotas); Channels of Elimination: Feces, Urine, Sweat (Purisha Vaha Srotas or Mala Vaha Srotas, Mutra Vaha Srotas, Sweda Vaha Srotas); Mano Vaha Srotas (The Channel of the Mind); State of Awareness.
Organized around Chapter 7 of world-renowned Ayurvedic Physician Dr. Vasant Lad’s Textbook of Ayurveda Volume I. Also around the Ayurvedic Srotamsi and Dhatu Chart of the appendix of Dr. Lad's Textbook of Ayurveda and around the materials of several distinguished Indo-Tibetan Ayurvedic and Chinese physicians and healers such as Dr. Partap Chauhan, Dr. P.H. Kulkarni, Dr. K.N. Udupa, Dr. R.H. Singh, Dr. Robert Svoboda, Dr. Baghwan Dash, Dr. Sunil Joshi, Dr. Lapsang Rapgay, Dr. Yeshe Donden, Dr. Bill Celentano, Dr. Kelsang Dorje, Dr. David Frawley, Michael Dick, Bri Maya Tiwari, Robert Sachs, Dr. Bob Flaws, Dr. Giovanni Maciocia, Dr. Barry Clark, Swami Sada Shiva Tirtha, Losang Jinpa and others and around the Ayurvedic Classic Texts (Sutras) combined with additional book readings, lectures, handouts and audio-visuals.
Requires short written term paper or telephone or in-person oral or written exam.
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Course # 9 of 17 - Ojas, Tejas and Prana (AYR260)
0.25 trimester unit / 3.75 course hours
Prerequisites: AYR250
A survey course of the key Ayurvedic concepts of Ojas, Tejas, Prana. Ojas (immunity, compassion, anabolism and more); Tejas (digestion, metabolism, discernment, wisdom and more); Prana (Qi, breath, neurotransmitters, electrical energy, catabolism and more); Ojas (Inferior and Superior Ojas, Disorders of Ojas, Causes of Disorders of Ojas); Tejas (Qualities of Tejas, Manifestations of Tejas, Tejas and Karma, Tejas and Kundalini); Prana; The Functional Integrity of Prana, Tejas, and Ojas; Soma; Awareness.
Organized around Chapter 8 of world-renowned Ayurvedic Physician Dr. Vasant Lad’s Textbook of Ayurveda Volume I. Also around the Ayurvedic Ojas Chart of the appendix of Dr. Lad's Textbook of Ayurveda and around the materials of several distinguished Indo-Tibetan Ayurvedic and Chinese physicians and healers such as Dr. Partap Chauhan, Dr. P.H. Kulkarni, Dr. K.N. Udupa, Dr. R.H. Singh, Dr. Robert Svoboda, Dr. Baghwan Dash, Dr. Sunil Joshi, Dr. Lapsang Rapgay, Dr. Yeshe Donden, Dr. Bill Celentano, Dr. Kelsang Dorje, Dr. David Frawley, Michael Dick, Bri Maya Tiwari, Robert Sachs, Dr. Bob Flaws, Dr. Giovanni Maciocia, Dr. Barry Clark, Swami Sada Shiva Tirtha, Losang Jinpa and others and around the Ayurvedic Classic Texts (Sutras) combined with additional book readings, lectures, handouts and audio-visuals.
Requires short written term paper or telephone or in-person oral or written exam.
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Course # 10 of 17 - Ayurvedic Digestion and Nutrition Therapeutics (NUT108)
0.50 trimester unit / 7.5 course hours
Prerequisites: AYR240
An in-depth course on the key concepts of Ayurvedic Digestion and Nutrition Therapies. Rasa or Taste (How Taste Relates to the Elements, Relation of Rasa to Tongue and Organs); Pharmacological and Psychological Actions of the Six Tastes (Sweet or Madhura, Sour or Amla, Salty or Lavana, Pungent or Katu, Bitter or Tikta, Astringent or Kashaya), Cravings; Virya (Potent Energy or Heating or Cooling Nature); Vipaka (Post-Digestive Effects of Sweet / Anabolic action, Sour / Metabolic action, and Pungent / Catabolic action); Prabhava (Unique, Specific Action), Actions of Rasa, Virya, Vipaka, and Prabhava; Digestion (The Stages of Digestion); How to Eat a Balanced Diet (Nutritional Disorders); Food Combining; The Three Laws of Nutrition (Irrigation is Governed by Prana, Selectivity is Governed by Tejas, Transformation is Governed by Ojas, Asthayi to Sthayi Dhatu, Nutrition Begins at Conception); Cellular Metabolism or Pilu Paka, (Pilu Paka and Pithara Paka, Desire, Thoughts, Feelings, and Emotions); Conclusion.
Organized around Chapter 9 of world-renowned Ayurvedic Physician Dr. Vasant Lad’s Textbook of Ayurveda Volume I. Also around the Ayurvedic Food Chart and Sattvic Foods Chart of the appendix of Dr. Lad's Textbook of Ayurveda. Also based on Usha Lad and Dr. Lad’s Ayurvedic Cooking for Self Healing Second Edition: Ayurvedic Food Combining; Setting Up and Ayurvedic Kitchen and Pantry; Ayurvedic Menu Planning; Recipes (Helpful Hints about Ayurvedic Cooking, Soups, Kitcharis or Porridges or Congees, Mainly Rice Dishes, Vegetables, Raitas, Pickles and Chutneys, Breads, Sweets, Beverages, Extras); Foods for Healing (Fruits, Vegetables, Household Herbs); Food Guidelines for Basic Constitutional Types (Vata, Pitta, Kapha); Qualities of Food Substances; Sattvic – Rajasic – Tamasic Foods; Food Glossary of Sanskrit Terms. Also based on Amadea Morningstar’s Ayurvedic Cooking for Westerners: Familiar Western Food Prepared with Ayurvedic Principles and The Ayurvedic Cookbook; on Bri Maya Tiwari’s Ayurveda Secrets of Healing; on Dr. P.H. Kulkarni’s Ayurveda Ahar (Food/Diet); and on Dr. S.N. Sharma’s Concept of Jathragni in Ayurveda: A Pathophysiological Study. Additional material covers Scott Gearson, M.D.’s Ayurvedic Guide to Diet and Weight Loss: Digestion and Toxicity (Jathara Agni and Ama), Pathogenesis of Obesity: The Six Stages of Any Disease, Diets Don’t Work, Complex and Simple Carbohydrates, Carbohydrates and Insulin: Modern Science Meets Ancient Wisdom; The Ten Principles of Proper Food Intake, The Ten Features of Healthy Foods, Dietary Fiber, ATP: The "Energy Currency" of the Human Physiology, Learning Your Caloric Requirements. Also based in part on Paul Pitchford’s Healing With Whole Foods: Oriental Traditions and Modern Nutrition and around the materials of several distinguished Indo-Tibetan Ayurvedic and Chinese physicians and healers such as the Venerable Buddhist Master Hsuan Hua, Dr. Ron Epstein, Dr. Partap Chauhan, Dr. P.H. Kulkarni, Dr. K.N. Udupa, Dr. R.H. Singh, Dr. Robert Svoboda, Dr. Baghwan Dash, Dr. Sunil Joshi, Dr. Lapsang Rapgay, Dr. Yeshe Donden, Dr. Bill Celentano, Dr. Kelsang Dorje, Dr. David Frawley, Michael Dick, Bri Maya Tiwari, Robert Sachs, Dr. Bob Flaws, Dr. Giovanni Maciocia, Dr. Barry Clark, Swami Sada Shiva Tirtha, Losang Jinpa and others and around the Ayurvedic Classic Texts (Sutras) combined with additional book readings, lectures, handouts and audio-visuals.
Requires medium length written term paper or telephone or in-person oral or written exam.
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Course # 11 of 17 - Ayurvedic Herbology I (HRB108)
4.00 trimester units / 60 course hours
Prerequisites: NUT108
An in-depth introductory course on the key concepts of Ayurvedic Herbology. This course is the longest single course in the Clinical Ayurveda Therapist (C.A.T.) Diploma Program and hence we provide here a detailed description of the course materials. Proficiency in Ayurvedic Herbology is essential when the student chooses to pursue advanced diploma certificate programs at the Ayurveda Healing Arts Institute such as the Level II "Clinical Ayurvedic Herbalist" (C.A.H.) diploma. The course will cover 20 chapters of material and the top 24 Ayurvedic herbs:
Amalaki - Emblica officinalis, Ashwagandha - Withania somnifera, Bala - Sida cordifolia, Bhringaraja - Eclipta alba, Bhibitaki - Terminalia belerica, Chandana - Santalum album, Chitrak - Plumbago zeylanica, Gokshura – Tribulis terrestris, Guduci - Tinospora cordifolia, Guggulu - Commiphora mukul, Haritaki - Terminalia chebula, Katuka / Kutki - Picrorrhiza kurroa, Jatamamsi - Nardostachys jatamamsi, Mandukaparni / Brahmi / Gotu Kola- Centella/Hydrocotyle asiatica, Manjishtha - Rubia cordifolia, Neem / Nimba - Azadirachta indica, Pippali - Piper longum, Punarnava - Boerrhavia diffusa, Shardunika - Gymnema sylvestra, Shatavari - Asparagus racemosus, Tagara - Valeriana wallachi, Vidanga - Embelia ribes, Vidari - Ipomoea digitata, Yashtimadhu / Licorice - Glycyrrhiza glabra.
1. History of Herbalism: India, China, Tibet, Roots in Greek – Galenic and Roman Medicine, The Wise Woman / Witches Tradition, The Eclectics, Heroics/Regulars/Thomsonians, Neo-Thomsonians, etc.
a. Definition of Herb
b. Herbalism - Three Historical Perspectives
c. Review Questions
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2. Disease - An Overview
a. The Ayurvedic Concept of a Healthy Individual - See Appendix #19
b. Signs and Symptoms Vata, Pitta, Kapha Balanced and Imbalanced
c. Ayurvedic Concept of Disease
d. Doshic Character of Pain
e. Ayurvedic Concept of Toxicity - Ama
f. Toxicity & Related Health Issues
g. Pitta Pushing Kapha
h. Review Questions
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3. Therapeutics - Treatment of Disease in Ayurveda.
a. Introduction and Discussion of Topic
b. Types of Treatment and Selection Criteria
c. Review Questions
Click here to view a sample of this Ayurvedic Therapeutics Concept section 3 in Microsoft Word format (269 KB)
4. Medicine - Overview (Cure, Maintenance, Prevention)
a. Qualities of the Physician
b. Ayurvedic Concept of Medicine
c. Dosing
d. Factors To Consider in Treatment and Dosing with Ayurvedic Medicines
e. Dosing Schemes According to Vaya - Age and Preparation Forms
f. Timing of Medications
g. Article - Gender May Be Critical in Prescription
h. Herb Limitation / Duration of Use - Commission E Report
i. Contraindications of Unapproved herbs - Commission E
j. Review Questions
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5. Dravya Guna Theory
a. Dravya Guna: Study of Substance, Qualities and Actions - Definitions
b. Dravya Guna - Rasa (Taste) and Theory of Action
c. Review Questions
6. Identification - Plant Features, Spectroscopy, Adulteration, etc.
a. Types of Identification Methods
b. Visual Identification of whole plant / plant parts (3 pages) (Source Unknown)
c. The Problem of Identity in the Ayurvedic Pharmacopeia
d. Some Controversial Drugs in Indian Medicine
e. Review Questions
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7. Classifications
a. Alphabetically, binomial classification, morphological, therapeutic, biochemical, biogenetic, geographical
b. Latin Botanical Classification Examples
c. Classification According to Action - See Appendix #4
d. Classification According to Constituent - See Appendix #6
e. Pronunciation Guide & Key
f. ICBN Overview
g. Classifications of Ayurvedic Medicines/Drugs
h. Glossary of Botanical Terms-See Appendix # 5
i. Review Questions
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8. Pharmacological Action - Study of Modes of Action - Ayurveda/Sanskrit and Modern equivalents
a. Ayurvedic Pharmacological Terms and Definitions
b. Useful Sanskrit Suffixes with Implied Therapeutic Aspects
c. Pharmacological Terms - Modern
d. Miscellaneous Related Terms of Interest
e. Review Questions
9. Pharmacognosy - Lignans, Saponins, Alkaloids, etc.
a. Definitions and examples of primary categories of plant chemicals
b. Reviews of Articles on Medicinal Herbs - Andrew Pengelly
c. Review Questions
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10. Interactions - Food/Food; Food/Drug; Supplements, Minerals/Drug; Herb/Drug
a. "Family Circle Bonus - Herbs and Drugs That Don't Mix" (Insert to Section)
b. Drug / Nutrient Interactions-Deadly Interactions, (Insert to Section)
11. Toxicity
a. Concept of Toxicity Discussed
b. Methods of Purification
c. Review Questions
12. Forms / Types of Preparations; Standardized Formulations
a. Miscellany of Preparations
b. Anupana - Media of Intake / After-drinks / Vehicles
c. Definitions of Ayurvedic Preparations
d. Review Questions
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13. Compounding Strategies - Western, Dr. Vasant Lad's, Ayurvedic, Chinese
a. Drug Formulation and Preparation - Nomenclature, Concepts, Miscellaneous
b. Formulations / Compounding
c. Miscellany
d. Review Questions
14. Handling, Processing, and Storage
a. Definitions, Descriptions, Discussion
b. Review Questions
15. Non-surgical Apparatus - Yantras
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16. Legal developments - Safe Food and Drug Act in its Various stages, Gras, etc. Herbs: Are They Drugs / Medicines or Food / Supplements?
a. Milestones in US Food and Drug Law History
b. Herbs – Drugs / Medicines or Foods?
c. 16 Steps Necessary for a Drug to Gain FDA Approval - See Appendix #18
d. DSHEA 1994 - See Appendix #8
e. FDA - Warnings and Safety Information (Insert to Section)
f. FDA - Listing of Botanical Ingredients of Concern (Insert to Section)
g. Legal Issues - Applied
h. Review Questions<