Rasachandamshu or Rasaratna Sangraha
author: M. S. Krishnamurthy
edition: 2013, Chaukhambha Visvabharati
pages: 512
ISBN-10: 9381301263
ISBN-13: 9789381301265
Topic: Rasashastra
Qualities and uses of Lead oxide
This page describes Qualities and uses of Lead oxide which is part of the Purva-khanda located on page 70 in the book Rasachandamshu (Rasaratna Sangraha) translated into English by M. S. Krishnamurthy. This 19th century book deals with Ayurvedic therapeutics and alchemical processes, belonging the branch of science known as Rasashastra (medicinal alchemy). This page contains an online preview of the full text and summarizes technical terms, as well as information if you want to buy this book.
Full contents not available online!
To read the full text of Rasachandamshu or Rasaratna Sangraha, you can buy M. S. Krishnamurthy’s book from Exotic India
You can look up the meaning of the phrase “Qualities and uses of Lead oxide” according to 249 books dealing with Hinduism. The following list shows a short preview of potential definitions.
Sahitya-kaumudi by Baladeva Vidyabhushana [by Gaurapada Dasa]
In Vedanta philosophy, the understanding is that a material quality belongs to the subtle body and a transcendental quality belongs to the soul. Ahead, Mammata uses the word atma (soul) in the sense of mind (8. 9)....
Read full contents: Text 8.1
The Agni Purana [by N. Gangadharan]
(One who uses) one pala, half a pala or a karsha (a measure of weight) (would enjoy) the full span (of life). One who uses the oil of bilva as sternutatory for a month (would live) for five hundred years and (would become) a poet. 3-4. (The use of) sesamum and bhallataka would overcome disease, premature death and senility. One would overcome leprosy by (using) a decoction of five parts of powdered vakuci with the waters of khadira for six months....
Read full contents: Chapter 286 - Collection of medical recipes (kalpa-sagara)
Nyaya-Vaisheshika categories (Study) [by Diptimani Goswami]
The Vedanta system uses the term guna in the sense of the dharma. Kanada defines a quality as an entity which exists in a substance, which has no quality and is not a cause of conjunction and disjunction. Hence, a quality must reside in one or other substance, it cannot exist independently. But quality itself is qualityless as quality resides only in substance. Hence, by the term agunavan in the definition over pervasion to substance is avoided....
Read full contents: The Nature of Quality (Guna)
Total 249 books found: See all results here.
Summary:
You can return to the book Index to buy or shop for other books, or you can read the available online pages below: