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The
Elements and Attributes of the Three Doshas
from Vasant Lad, B.M.A.S., M.A.Sc. |
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Elements of the
Three Doshas
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Vata
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Pitta
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Kapha
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Air + Ether
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Fire + Water
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Earth + Water
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Attributes of the Three Doshas
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Vata
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Pitta
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Kapha
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Dry
Light
Cold
Rough
Subtle
Mobile
Clear
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Oily
Sharp (penetrating)
Hot
Light
Mobile
Liquid
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Heavy
Slow
Cold
Oily
Slimy (smooth)
Dense
Soft
Static (stable)
Cloudy (sticky)
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Dispersing
(attribute, not a guna)
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Fleshy
(attribute, not a guna)
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Hard, Gross
(guna but not a classical attribute)
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Astringent
(taste)
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Sour, Pungent, Bitter
(tastes)
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Sweet, Salty
(tastes)
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Commentary by Michael Dick
What are elements and attributes and what do
they have to do with the doshas?
The ancient seers asserted that only substance or matter can produce
an effect. If you can experience something then this experience
occurs because you have come in contact with substance or matter.
These seers conceived of substance or matter as having five forms.
Today we say these are the continuum between energy and mass. Ultimately
everything is a form of energy; conversely, all states of mass have
some form of energy. This is some of what is meant by the famous
equation E = mC2 --that mass and energy are interchangeable.
The seers felt that there are five states they called Space or
Ether, Air, Fire, Water, and Earth. These represent the five possible
states of matter. We understand them as unique by the way we experience
them; we use the terms "attribute" or "quality"
to describe these states of matter. We know that fire is hot and
that water and earth are cold. These attributes--hot, cold, etc.--describe
the way we experience each of the pure types of elements. There
is a set of attributes for each element. This is shown in the tables
above.
The seers also declared that certain combinations of elements have
unique physiological properties and functions in nature. Substances
that are predominantly composed of Ether and Air have very dynamic
properties and effects. These have come to be called "vata
substances." Some substances perform digesting, metabolizing,
and transforming functions and are called "pitta substances."
Similarly, kapha substances are composed of water and earth elements
that have the functions to support, lubricate, secrete, etc. Knowing
what elements a substance is made of is important to understanding
the kinds of effects it produces. These effects are sometimes described
in terms of the attributes. Thus, the elements and their attributes
can help you to understand why a certain effect is produced. You
can use this same logic to counteract an effect with substances
or activities that contain its opposite attributes, bringing balance
and health. Using the elements and their attributes in this way,
we have clearer understanding of the realm of cause and effect,
anatomy and physiology, structure and function.
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