

The Practice of Traditional Western Herbalism: Basic Doctrine, Energetics, and Classification [Wood, Matthew] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. The Practice of Traditional Western Herbalism: Basic Doctrine, Energetics, and Classification Review: I had the great fortune to study herbs with Matthew Wood - I had the great fortune to study herbs with Matthew Wood, and the unpublished, unedited manuscript of this book was the class book for one of his classes. I still have the spiral bound book from class, and I have also purchased this book for my library. The published version has been truncated from the manuscript, but the main essence of the book remained and herbal information intact. Matthew Wood has a vast knowledge of herbs coupled with his knowledge of the body's systems. He is intuitive with his approach and combines that with his knowledge of herbs. He also works homeopathically with herbal tinctures. This book is the book that I refer to the most for this knowledge and remedies. Note that I was a book seller, and my personal library has about 400 volumes of various herbal books, including old herbalist volumes out of print and not available. This book is succinct for remedies and cross-referencing is easy. This is a must for every herbalist whether seasoned or beginner. Review: The key to Western Herbalism - This is the single most useful book on Western Herbalism I've ever seen, the key that lets you figure out how a condition will interact with a plant. Without this system of energetics, choosing a remedy is reduced to picking one of many plants that may or may not help a condition, among long lists of properties. It gives us a vocabulary to treat the whole person, rather than just battling their symptoms as allopathic medicine does. When you battle symptoms, you ignore the body they're in and often weaken it. You may win the battle but lose the war. This is the overall strategy for restoring harmony, and goes beyond the three categories of building, eliminating and maintaining -- which are about as much theory as other authors go into. Imagine having to consult a book just to add 2 + 4, and not even being able to recognize that 4 + 2 gives the same result. Knowing this system is akin to learning simple addition: whereas everyone else is stuck memorizing addition tables or looking them up each time, you just know the answer. You don't have to memorize tons of information for a plant, just the keys to its energetic action.
| Best Sellers Rank | #99,694 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #190 in Herbal Remedies (Books) #5,448 in Medical Books (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (325) |
| Dimensions | 5.98 x 0.78 x 8.95 inches |
| ISBN-10 | 1556435037 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1556435034 |
| Item Weight | 1.04 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 300 pages |
| Publication date | May 10, 2004 |
| Publisher | North Atlantic Books |
S**N
I had the great fortune to study herbs with Matthew Wood
I had the great fortune to study herbs with Matthew Wood, and the unpublished, unedited manuscript of this book was the class book for one of his classes. I still have the spiral bound book from class, and I have also purchased this book for my library. The published version has been truncated from the manuscript, but the main essence of the book remained and herbal information intact. Matthew Wood has a vast knowledge of herbs coupled with his knowledge of the body's systems. He is intuitive with his approach and combines that with his knowledge of herbs. He also works homeopathically with herbal tinctures. This book is the book that I refer to the most for this knowledge and remedies. Note that I was a book seller, and my personal library has about 400 volumes of various herbal books, including old herbalist volumes out of print and not available. This book is succinct for remedies and cross-referencing is easy. This is a must for every herbalist whether seasoned or beginner.
L**Y
The key to Western Herbalism
This is the single most useful book on Western Herbalism I've ever seen, the key that lets you figure out how a condition will interact with a plant. Without this system of energetics, choosing a remedy is reduced to picking one of many plants that may or may not help a condition, among long lists of properties. It gives us a vocabulary to treat the whole person, rather than just battling their symptoms as allopathic medicine does. When you battle symptoms, you ignore the body they're in and often weaken it. You may win the battle but lose the war. This is the overall strategy for restoring harmony, and goes beyond the three categories of building, eliminating and maintaining -- which are about as much theory as other authors go into. Imagine having to consult a book just to add 2 + 4, and not even being able to recognize that 4 + 2 gives the same result. Knowing this system is akin to learning simple addition: whereas everyone else is stuck memorizing addition tables or looking them up each time, you just know the answer. You don't have to memorize tons of information for a plant, just the keys to its energetic action.
V**R
Comprehensive and Then Some
Excellent book on western herbalism! This book is chock full of detailed factual information about each plant. In addition to the drawings and facts the author has included information he has intuited, personal observations and some snippets of case histories from his practice as an herbalist. I particularly appreciated his clear reverence for Nature and Earth. Many books on herbalism are best as reference sources. You pick them up to research a particular symptom or to look up a plant and its attributes. Matthew Wood's books are unique in this genre as they make a good read. I read this book from cover to cover and it is both interesting and enjoyable. It is also a valuable reference - one to which I will frequently refer.
S**Y
Herbal Remedies from the Old Ways
Matthew Fox has brought the Old Ways of Herbal Medicine to our modern world. This book speaks in a language I can understand. His descriptions of the underlying imbalances within the tissue that results in symptoms made such an impression on me. He lists signs which we all can identify in our illness. The book gives a description of the plants that can favorably affect these tissue states. Once the underlying cause of an illness is brought back to normal, a balanced state, then the disease goes away. Makes sense to me!!! Clear and to the point, but also has such a warm, personal touch. Buy this book, you won't be disappointed.
C**M
Love Wood's books
Like Wood's other books on herbalism, this one is easy to read and integrates specific herbs and specific conditions into a larger theory of energetics. Western herbalism is often criticized for not having a theory of energetics (in contrast to Ayurveda and traditional Chinese medicine). In reality, as Wood demonstrates, the western system was simply forgotten and has been waiting to be re-discovered. This framework then makes it easier to choose the right herb for a person. The reader will also get an introduction to American herbal medicine of the 1800s and how it has shaped modern views.
D**N
Better than others
This book is written by an author who is so full of knowledge and love of Herbalism that he can tend to run on and on, but I try to bear with him because eventually he gets to the point you want to hear. He is just so passionate about Herbalism and his work that other books he has written I struggled to stay interested. This one has not been that way. I was pleased to see him stay on track with focus on the information versus his phylosophy. Interesting theroy and one that most all can agree on. You either will relate or it'll be over your head. But the information is good.
S**N
great book
great description of tissue states and the herbs included. you can trust Matthew Wood to pull together and synthesize a vast range of information, making it fun, memorable and interesting. If you have any of his other books, you will want this one for sure. If you are new to herbalism, it's a fascinating read that may be partially over your head at first, but understandable enough to be instantly useful, and it will grow with you as you learn. If you are somewhat experienced, it's great, and if you are super duper experienced you'd probably still like it, because M.W. is pretty fantastic.
L**A
Matthew Wood is a real master herbalist. He managed to place in this short book a lot of precious information regarding the energetics of herbs, both from the native American tradition as from other perspectives. A must have for herbalists.
O**N
Great book for both budding and qualified herbalist, quite concise which is a difficult thing to be about Western Herbalism
T**E
Mathew Wood's draws on the roots of Western medicine to support and clearly describe a holistic style of medicine that is an alchemical marriage of right and left brain thinking. His style of writing is deeply perceptive, intelligent and uncannily nuanced. The amateur and the expert are equally informed. I found The Practice of Western Herbalism to be very rich and completely engrossing. In this book Mathew Wood's introduces and describes the 6 tissue states as invaluable diagnostic tool and describes in detail, many herbs in relation to the tissue states. The guiding principal in this practice is the innate intelligence and self regulation of Nature. Plants often become teacher's for what the body has forgotten and can guide the organism towards a balanced state. Fascinating, practical and highly recommended.
ぽ**ん
植物療法のことを調べ始めると、極端に古い歴史の話と最新の医療に用いられている話と、両極端の内容が書かれている資料は比較的たくさんあるようなのですが、この本はその間を少し埋めてくれるような、18世紀〜19世紀のアメリカのエクレクティック派についてもたくさん触れています。机上の勉強だけではなく、まず自分の体で、生活の中で確かめていくことが大切だと、先人の言葉。コツコツと調べ、使い続けようと改めて思いました。
D**H
Un libro molto interessante sul tema della medicina tradizionale, con molte informazioni sulla medicina Tradizionale mediterranea, ahimé poca conosciuta persino in Italia dove si dovrebbe conoscere meglio Vivamente consigliato. Sono erborista da 26 anni.
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