Change and Creativity in Early Modern Indian Medical Thought (original) (raw)

. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2009 Feb 2.

Published in final edited form as: J Indian Philos. 2005;33(1):95–118. doi: 10.1007/s10781-004-9056-0


This paper begins with a frame story, the reports on Indian medicine recorded in the seventeenth century travelogue of the British traveller John Fryer. Fryer's observations as an outsider are contrasted with an internal view of the works of three quite different Sanskrit medical authors who were working at about the time of his visit: the_Vaidyajīvana_ of Lolimbarāja, the_Rogārogavāda_ of Vīreśvara, and the Āyurvedasaukhya ascribed to Inline graphic. Questions are posed concerning the purposes of these works, their relative popularity, and their reception. Finally, Fryer's failure to penetrate the culture of Sanskritic medicine is highlighted.