Determination of pharmacological properties plants by their "energy" characteristics
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.37555/2707-3114.21.2025.346436Keywords:
oriental phytotherapy, biolocation method (radioesthesia dowsing), plant energetics, pharmacological properties of plants.Abstract
Aims. To establish the relationships between the pharmacological properties of plants and their "energy" characteristics. The search for new ways to preserve and restore health is always relevant. A promising direction here may be the synthesis of traditional and modern approaches. Today, there is a significant increase in interest in such a direction as phytotherapy, in particular the use of medicinal plants in Eastern medical practices. According to traditional worldview systems of the East, a person's health condition corresponds to the level of universal energy, known as Qi (China, Japan) or Prana (India), the balance between its types and circulation in the body. The use of medicinal plants with the appropriate characteristics of this energy allows you to achieve the necessary therapeutic effect. Methods. To determine these parameters, it is proposed to use the biolocation method (radiaesthesia, dowsing). This method allows you to determine the intensity (potential), polarity, and frequency parameters of plant radiation. Results. According to the traditions of Eastern phytotherapy, the therapeutic effect is achieved by restoring the level of vital energy, its circulation in the body and the balance between its types. Examples of correspondence between the "energy" parameters and pharmacological properties of both already known medicinal plants and those that can potentially be used in phytotherapy are given. Conclusions. It has been established that the medicinal properties of plants, according to the traditions of Eastern phytotherapy, are largely determined by their "energy" features. The use of the biolocation method allows us to establish the "energy" features of plants that determine their pharmacological properties. Knowledge of these characteristics can explain the mechanism of therapeutic action of known medicinal plants and expand the range of other plants that have not yet been used in phytotherapy.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
The names and email addresses entered in this journal site will be used exclusively for the stated purposes of this journal and will not be made available for any other purpose or to any other party.
Responsibility for technical content and for protection of proprietary material rests solely with the author(s) and their organizations and is not the responsibility of the publisher, journal or its Editorial Staff.
The main author is responsible for ensuring that the article has been seen and approved by all the other authors.
It is the responsibility of the author to obtain all necessary copyright release permissions for the use of any copyrighted materials in the manuscript prior to the submission.