Posts Tagged ‘History of Iridology’

History of Iridology

Ignatz von Peczely (1826 – 1911) His experience with iridology began with the breaking of the leg of an owl trying to free it from a bush. When caring, observed the emergence of a black mark on your iris, at six o’clock. Then, during his recovery, he noted that the signal is cleared. On this thin evidence, was then studying Decic eyes of their patients, while working as a homeopath and, later, to graduate as a doctor. His profession would have given him the opportunity to relate their findings in patients studied before and after surgery, in addition to the many who performed autopsies.

Von Peczely produced one of the first European iris image linked to modern revival of this technique.


Iridology

iridology

The Iridology is a diagnostic method that shows the pathological and functional imbalances in the body through patches, lines and discolorations in the colored part of the eye called the iris.

History of Iridology
Iridology is a relatively old science updated scientific and medical research in Russia, Germany and the United States.

In Babylon in the year 1,000 BC C., Chaldeans iris representations carved on stone slabs, supported by its relationship with the rest of the body.

Hippocrates and Philostratus, the medical school of Salerno practiced Iridology and more recently, in 1670, the doctor published his book Phlippus Meyens Medica Chiromatica in Dresden, which described the neurological reflex reactions of the iris as follows: “The right side Eye shows the liver, right chest and blood vessels. The left eye shows all organs located on the left and therefore the heart, the left chest, spleen and the tiny blood vessels.
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