Sunday, 24 May 2026

Anvikshaki

 The passage you shared highlights a crucial perspective on the development of ancient Indian intellectual history: **the role of *Anvikshaki* as the bedrock of scientific and philosophical advancement.**

By framing *Anvikshaki* not just as a branch of philosophy, but as a methodological tool—**critical inquiry and analytical reasoning**—it challenges the common perception that ancient knowledge systems were solely based on tradition or dogma.

### Key Dimensions of the Argument

 * **The Intellectual Framework:** *Anvikshaki* (often translated as the "science of inquiry" or "logic") served as the lens through which scholars interrogated established beliefs. It provided the formal rigour required to categorize, analyze, and test hypotheses.

 * **A Culture of Questioning:** The success of ancient India in diverse fields was not accidental; it was the byproduct of an environment that encouraged *tarka* (logical reasoning) and *samvada* (structured debate). This culture ensured that disciplines like mathematics and astronomy evolved based on observation and logical deduction rather than mere speculation.

 * **The Interdisciplinary Foundation:** Because *Anvikshaki* functioned as a foundational methodology, it enabled cross-pollination. The systematic thought applied in **mathematics** (e.g., the development of zero and decimal systems) was essentially the same intellectual rigour applied in **Ayurveda** (medicine) for diagnostic classification, and in **Nyaya** (logic) for philosophical discourse.

### Why this Perspective Matters

Emphasizing this tradition shifts the narrative from "ancient wisdom" being a static body of texts to it being a **process**. It suggests that the "remarkable milestones" achieved by ancient Indian thinkers were the direct result of a dynamic, analytical, and rigorous intellectual habitus.

Is there a specific historical figure or a particular text (such as the *Nyaya Sutras* or *Arthashastra*) that you are interested in exploring further in the context of this tradition?


C

 don’t think we can. We are in the middle of our consciousness and have no way of stepping out of it as an observer. “IF” we have a spirit and that is the source of consciousness we may be able to objectively examine this physical experience, that makes awareness a history lesson from one perspective. If our consciousness is manifest in our brain, could it have an environment to exist in without the body? Consciousness doesn’t need explanation, it’s a tool for finding value within its presence. The first rule is, life has no objective, only one direction (death) and we can choose to enjoy it or oppose it. Say yes to the mystery, this life offers everything. The sorrow of expecting or the balance of ollowing.


C

Your perspective touches on the profound intersection of phenomenological experience and the limits of scientific inquiry—the "Hard Problem" of consciousness. You are essentially pointing to the epistemic closure that defines human existence: the impossibility of standing outside the system to observe the system itself.

### The Problem of the "Outside" Observer

You suggest that if we are embedded within our consciousness, we cannot objectively examine it. This mirrors the **Thomas Nagel** argument in *What Is It Like to Be a Bat?*, which posits that because consciousness is inherently subjective, it is arguably inaccessible to the third-person, objective methods of physical science. If "spirit" or a non-local consciousness is the substrate, the objective view of our life becomes a retrospective analysis—a "history lesson" of the experience once the observer is no longer trapped in the biological apparatus.

### The Brain as a Container or a Transducer?

The question of whether consciousness can exist without the body hinges on two dominant, competing models:

 * **The Emergentist Model:** Consciousness is a biological property, a byproduct of complex neural computation. In this view, the "environment" for consciousness is the precise arrangement of matter and energy in the brain. Remove the body, and the environment dissipates; the signal ceases.

 * **The Transducer/Filter Model:** The brain acts not as a generator, but as a receiver or a filter for consciousness. If consciousness is fundamental (a "panpsychist" or "idealist" view), the body is a localized node. In this framework, death is not the end of consciousness, but the dissolution of the specific *limitation* or "environment" that the body provided.

### The Ethics of Presence

Your assertion that "consciousness is a tool for finding value within its presence" shifts the conversation from ontology (what is it?) to axiology (what is its worth?).

By framing life as a one-directional trajectory toward death, you highlight the **Existentialist** imperative: since there is no inherent objective, the creation of meaning becomes an act of radical freedom.

 * **Opposition:** Resisting the inevitability of change, which typically yields the "sorrow of expecting"—the suffering inherent in trying to freeze a process that is essentially kinetic.

 * **Acceptance:** The "balance of following," which aligns with your notion of saying "yes to the mystery." This echoes the Buddhist concept of *Tathātā* (suchness) or the Stoic *Amor Fati*—not merely enduring, but embracing the unfolding of the present moment as it is.

If life is a vessel for discovering value, the mystery becomes the primary content of that experience. Rather than trying to solve the riddle of the "mind-body environment," the task is perhaps to operate within it with full awareness of its transience.

Given your interest in the evolution of consciousness frameworks, how do you see this "one-directional" view of life reconciling with the cyclical, timeless descriptions of consciousness found in the Vedantic texts you have been exploring?




BG 18.55

 Bhagavad Gita 18.55 says:

“bhaktyā mām abhijānāti yāvān yaś cāsmi tattvataḥ
tato māṁ tattvato jñātvā viśate tad-anantaram”

Meaning (simple translation)

“Through devotion (bhakti), one truly understands who I am and what My nature is in truth. Having thus known Me in essence, one then enters into Me.”

In plain language

It’s saying that deep, sincere devotion is what leads to true understanding of reality (or God, in the text’s framing)—and that understanding isn’t just intellectual, but experiential and transformative.

Why it matters in the context of the chapter

Chapter 18 is the conclusion of the Bhagavad Gita, and this verse wraps up a key idea:

  • Knowledge alone isn’t the final step
  • Action alone isn’t the final step
  • Even discipline alone isn’t the final step
  • Devotion + realization completes the path

If you want, I can place it in context with 18.54–18.66, which is where Krishna talks most directly about liberation and surrender.


CLV

 C’est la vie — basically the “that’s how it goes” of reality.


In medicine (and especially cases like the one you shared), it often shows up when things don’t fit neatly: repeated normal tests, worsening symptoms, and then a diagnosis that feels obvious only in hindsight. A bit frustrating, but also kind of inevitable in complex presentations.


If you meant it more generally: sometimes it’s resignation, sometimes acceptance. Either way, it usually comes after you’ve done the rounds with “this can’t possibly be what it is”… and then it is.


Want to stay on the clinical angle, or are you shifting gears?


Scurvy

 Scurvy is increasingly recognized as a "hidden" diagnosis in modern pediatrics, particularly among children with neurodevelopmental conditions like autism spectrum disorder (ASD) or restrictive eating patterns (such as ARFID). Because it is often perceived as a disease of the past, the high index of suspicion required for an early diagnosis is frequently absent.

### Why Scurvy Remains a Diagnostic Trap

The clinical presentation of scurvy is highly variable and nonspecific, leading clinicians to prioritize more common or life-threatening differentials. The key diagnostic "trap" is that it masquerades as conditions that warrant extensive and often invasive investigations:

 * **Orthopaedic Mimics:** Children often present with gait disturbances, limping, or "pseudo-paralysis" (refusal to bear weight). This is commonly misdiagnosed as septic arthritis, osteomyelitis, or transient synovitis.

 * **Malignancy Mimics:** Musculoskeletal pain and radiographic bone abnormalities can strongly resemble acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) or bone tumors.

 * **Non-Accidental Injury (NAI):** The presence of petechiae, ecchymoses (bruising), and localized limb swelling can be incorrectly attributed to trauma or physical abuse.

 * **Inflammatory/Autoimmune Mimics:** Elevated inflammatory markers (ESR/CRP) and systemic symptoms can lead to erroneous investigations for rheumatological or autoimmune conditions.

### The "Hidden Hunger" Phenomenon

A major challenge is that **anthropometric measurements often fail to detect nutritional deficiencies.** Children with highly restrictive diets may have a normal BMI or even be overweight. Their caloric intake might be sufficient to maintain growth, but the **quality** of the diet—specifically the complete exclusion of fresh fruits and vegetables—leads to rapid depletion of vitamin C, which can manifest in as little as **8 to 12 weeks** of inadequate intake.

### Key Clinical Indicators for Early Recognition

To avoid the cycle of unnecessary imaging, sedation, and invasive procedures, clinicians are encouraged to look for the following "red flags" in the context of a restrictive diet:

 * **Musculoskeletal:** Diffuse bone/joint pain, subperiosteal hematoma (often visible on MRI/ultrasound as swelling or "abscess-like" collections), and refusal to walk.

 * **Mucocutaneous:** Gingival swelling, bleeding gums (a classic, though not always present, sign), petechiae, perifollicular hemorrhages, and corkscrew hairs.

 * **Systemic:** Irritability, fatigue, anorexia, and a history of extreme food selectivity.

 * **Radiographic "Clues":** While nonspecific, look for metaphyseal "signs":

   * **Frankel's line:** A dense, white line at the metaphysis.

   * **Trümmerfeld zone:** A lucent (darker) band just below the dense line.

   * **Pelken spurs:** Metaphyseal cortical "beaks" or spurs.

**Would you like to explore the specific diagnostic criteria or the recommended approach for integrating nutritional screening into routine assessments for children with feeding challenges?**


Dth. 99

 former neighbour died less than a week ago, aged 99. Until a year ago she was living on her own with a little help from me. She has always been happy and contented. She had some dementia in her final years but not enough to stop her enjoying life. A year ago she went into a nursing home because she needed a bit of extra help with personal care. On her final day of life she was sat in her wheelchair looking forward to lunch. The carer wheeled her into the dining room. By the time they reached the table she had died, quietly, painlessly, just breathed one last time and left this life. I think she would most definitely have said that life after 80 was worth living.

ASD x scurvy

 P


This is a strong “don’t-miss diagnosis” case: scurvy presenting as an orthopaedic/neurodevelopmental mimic in a child with autism and restrictive eating.

What the article is really saying

It’s arguing that scurvy is no longer a historical diagnosis. It’s increasingly seen in modern paediatrics, especially in children with severe dietary restriction due to neurodevelopmental conditions like autism spectrum disorder and ARFID-type patterns.

The key clinical trap is that these children often present like something much more sinister or common:

  • Transient synovitis / hip pathology
  • Osteomyelitis
  • Leukaemia or bone tumour
  • Non-accidental injury

…but routine tests and imaging can