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Showing posts from May, 2026

Allopathy is a child of Ayurveda

The Molecular Family Tree: How Modern Science Evolved from Ancient Medicine For thousands of years, humanity’s survival depended entirely on the natural world. Long before the invention of sterile laboratories, white lab coats, or synthetic chemicals, ancient civilizations developed complex medical systems through centuries of trial, error, and deep observation. Today, a fierce cultural war dominates headlines and social media: Modern Medicine (Allopathy) is pitted against Traditional Medicine (Ayurveda) and Alternative Systems (Homeopathy). Modern critics often dismiss ancient systems as unscientific, while traditionalists view modern pharmaceuticals as corrupt corporate entities. However, a closer look at history and biochemistry reveals a surprising truth: modern medicine is not the enemy of ancient medicine. It is its direct, highly refined descendant. Part 1: The Parent of Pharmacology — The Ayurvedic Foundation Ancient traditional medicine, particularly Ayurveda in India, functio...

Is Nano Creatine the New "Gold Standard" or Just a High-Price Gimmick

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In the video, Gaurav Taneja (FitMuscle TV) defends his "Nano 400" creatine against claims that it doesn't mix as well as competitors like Wellcore. While he uses a lot of math and "science-sounding" logic to justify the product, but the differences might be manipulated or functionally minute is supported by several scientific realities. ​Here is a breakdown of the "manipulation" vs. the reality: ​1. The "Mixing" Illusion (Translucency) ​Gaurav shows that his Nano creatine makes the water completely clear [ 02:26 ], whereas micronized creatine looks "milky." ​ The Reality: Clear water does not mean better absorption; it only means the particles are so small that they don't scatter light (the Tyndall effect). ​ Why it's a "Minute" Difference: Even if standard creatine makes the water look slightly cloudy, it still dissolves and reaches ~99% absorption once it hits your stomach acid and moves to the small int...
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