Color and healing

Color and healing

Before the Enlightenment, the ‘Age of reason, in the eighteen century, when logic and proof became the linchpins of philosophy and scientific thinking, color had a parts to play both in healing and in some part of the world, the worship of deities. Even after the enlightenment, ideas about the healing powers of color persisted. Edwin Babbitt was an interesting proponent of these theories, which he published in his book. The Principles of light and color,, In 1878. Babbitt said that different colors affect different parts of human body. Yellow, he believed, stimulated the nervous system and helped to relieve constipation and bronchial congestion. While blue was calming and anti-inflammatory, useful in treating migraines, sunstroke and sciatica. Red was a stimulant for the blood and could be used to help those suffering from paralysis, exhaustion and stiff joints.
Ideas like these that link healing with color persist into the present age, to some extent because a number of people have found relief through color therapy. Though conventional clinical medicine
does not generally recognize color healing as valid, some forms of it are nonetheless used routinely.
Neonatal jaundice in babies, which as recently as the 1960s was treated with blood transfusions, is now treated by placing the baby (with eyes shielded) under bright blue light. Claims are also made that the same blue light helps sufferers of rheumatoid arthritis.

Article source : Brilliant at home

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