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Subsequently, the Ayurvedic system was written down and was believed to be divinely inspired. The principal text, known as the Charaka Samhita and regarded as sacred, opens with a description of the Rishis' meditations and forms part of what is the oldest and most complete system of medicine and healing known. When the Ayurvedic texts were being written, disease was regarded as an evil visitation which prevented the individual from attaining self-realisation. To free someone from disease was to enable that person to follow a truly spiritual path, liberated from the constraints of the physical body. A body afflicted by disease resulted in a spirit tied down by worldly concerns and unable to soar. Enlightenment could only be attained by those who enjoyed both good physical and mental health.
According to the Charaka Samhita, the Rishis elected one of their number, Bhardwaja, to entreat Indra (the Hindu warrior-king of the heavens and a god wise in the treatment of disease) to impart the secrets of health and longevity. Indra was believed to have acquired his knowledge from the heavenly physicians, who in turn has acquired theirs from the supreme god, Brahma. The knowledge acquired by the Rishis had three aspects - etiology (the science of the causes of disease), symptomatology (the study and interpretation of symptoms) and medication. These three components are known as the Tri-Sutra Ayurveda.
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