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The Power Of Ganoderma In Oriental Medicine ... Ganoderma, a rare variety of Mushroom credited with the highest medicinal qualities by the classic Chinese 'Seng Nong’ is indeed a subject of much research from the ancient china of 100 B. C. or earlier to the modern times by various universities and research organizations...

Ayurvedic Indian Medicine - Triphala ... Triphala, the internal cleanser that purifies and strengthens Are you persistently irregular? Yes, you're uncomfortable, but if you're about to reach for the laxatives, stop!. ...

Cialis – The Latest In ED Medicine ... Erectile Dysfunction is defined as the consistent inability to attain and maintain an erection sufficient for sexual intercourse. ED affects an estimated 189 million men worldwide...

Vibrational Medicine ... The influence of alternative medical systems such as Chinese, Ayervedic or Tibetan medicine have led in part to the development of machines that can 'image energy'... Very few of us have experienced this for ourselves and there is apparently no sensory backup to tell us it is there. Experiments in 'electro-acupuncture' and Kirlian photography have led to an energy map of the body identical to that shown in traditional Chinese medicine... Western medicine in its reductionist stance, ignores these aspects because they can't be studied under a microscope...

Medicine From Recommended Pharmacies ... If you have health care coverage, what percentage do you have to pay? Once you decide what category you fall under, you need to decide which medicine is right for you...

The entire construct of the “medical model” of “mental illness”Mwhat is it but an analogy? Between physical medicine and psychiatry: the mind is said to be subject to disease in the same manner as the body. But whereas in physical medicine there are verifiable physiological proofs—in damaged or affected tissue, bacteria, inflammation, cellular irregularity—in mental illness alleged socially unacceptable behavior is taken as a symptom, even as proof, of pathology.
—Kate Millett (b. 1934)

After you eat always take a walk, and you’ll never have to go to a medicine shop.
—Chinese proverb.

Rhyme.

For this invention of yours will produce forgetfulness in the minds of those who learn it, by causing them to neglect their memory, inasmuch as, from their confidence in writing, they will recollect by the external aid of foreign symbols, and not by the internal use of their own faculties. Your discovery, therefore, is a medicine not for memory, but for recollection,—for recalling to, not for keeping in mind.
—Plato (c. 427–347 B.C.)