Healing arts: Difference between revisions
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== Scope of the Healing Arts == | == Scope of the Healing Arts == | ||
Practices that are aimed to heal include non-invasive physical manipulations such as [[massage]], the adjustments of the [[chiropracter]]. | Practices that are aimed to heal include non-invasive physical manipulations such as [[massage]], the adjustments of the [[chiropracter]], and the talk therapy of the [[Freudian]] [[psychiatrist]], [[Behavioral]] [[psychologist]] and [[clergy]]. | ||
Ingestion of foods and herbs, and the ingestion of medicines are healing modalities used by many diverse disciplines within the healing arts. | Ingestion of foods and herbs, and the ingestion of medicines are healing modalities used by many diverse disciplines within the healing arts. |
Revision as of 17:24, 24 November 2006
The Healing Arts include all of the Health Sciences and Alternative Medicine, as well as a host of traditional practices aimed to cure disease, heal injury and promote wellness.
Scope of the Healing Arts
Practices that are aimed to heal include non-invasive physical manipulations such as massage, the adjustments of the chiropracter, and the talk therapy of the Freudian psychiatrist, Behavioral psychologist and clergy.
Ingestion of foods and herbs, and the ingestion of medicines are healing modalities used by many diverse disciplines within the healing arts.
Invasive practices in the healing arts includes surgery as practiced by physicians licensed in Medicine, but are not limited to these operations. Traditional healers in West Africa who follow juju routinely use scarification and injections as part of their practice.