Chromotherapy
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Chromotherapy, sometimes called color therapy, colorology or cromatherapy, is an alternative medicine method. It is claimed that a therapist trained in chromotherapy can use color and light to balance "energy" wherever a person's body be lacking, be it physical, emotional, spiritual, or mental. The practice has been labelled pseudoscientific by its critics.
Color therapy is unrelated to light therapy, a valid and proven form of medical treatment for seasonal affective disorder and a small number of other conditions.
History
Avicenna (980-1037), who viewed color to be of vital importance in diagnosis and treatment, discussed chromotherapy in The Canon of Medicine. He wrote that "Color is an observable symptom of disease" and also developed a chart that related color to the temperature and physical condition of the body. His view was that red moved the blood, blue or white cooled it, and yellow reduced muscular pain and inflammation. He further discussed the properties of colors for healing and was "the first to establish that the wrong color suggested for therapy would elicit no response in specific diseases." As an example, "he observed that a person with a nosebleed should not gaze at things of a brilliant red color and should not be exposed to red light because this would stimulate the sanguineous humor, whereas blue would soothe it and reduce blood flow."[1] American Civil War General Augustus Pleasonton conducted his own experiments and published his book The Influence Of The Blue Ray Of The Sunlight And Of The Blue Color Of The Sky, published in 1876 about how the color blue can improve the growth of crops and livestock and can help heal diseases in humans. This led to a birth of modern chromotherapy, influencing scientist Dr. S. Pancoast and Edwin Dwight Babbitt to conduct experiments and publish books about chromotherapy. After this, throughout the 19th century, healers claimed colored glass filters could treat many diseases including constipation and meningitis. Photobiology, the term for the contemporary scientific study of the effects of light on humans, has replaced the term chromotherapy in an effort to separate it from its roots in Victorian mysticism and to strip it of its associations with symbolism and magic.[2]
Light therapy is a specific treatment approach using high intensity light to treat specific sleep, skin and mood disorders.
Alleged meaning of colors
Ayurvedic medicine describes the body as having seven main chakras, which are spiritual centers located along the spine that are associated with a color, function and organ or bodily system. According to this explanation, these colors can become imbalanced and result in physical diseases but these imbalances can be corrected through using the appropriate color as a treatment.[3] The purported colors and their associations are described as:[4]
Color | Chakra | Chakra location | Alleged function | Associated system |
---|---|---|---|---|
Red | First | Base of the spine | Grounding and Survival | gonads, kidneys, spine, sense of smell |
Orange | Second | Lower abdomen, genitals | Emotions, sexuality | Urinary tract, circulation, reproduction |
Yellow | Third | Solar plexus | Power, ego | stomach, liver, gall bladder, pancreas |
Green | Fourth | Heart | Love, sense of responsibility | Heart, lungs, thymus |
Blue | Fifth | Throat | Physical and spiritual communication | Throat, ears, mouth, hands |
Indigo | Sixth | Just above the centre of the brow, middle of forehead | Forgiveness, compassion, understanding | Eye, pineal glands |
Violet | Seventh | Crown of the head | Connection with universal energies, transmission of ideas and information | pituitary gland, the central nervous system and the cerebral cortex |
Criticism
Chromotherapy has been deemed pseudoscience by its critics, who state that the falsifiability and verifiability conditions necessary to deem an experiment valid are not being met, and therefore that it has not been proven that introducing colors is the key element in the healing process which is healing its patients. Chromotherapy has also been criticized for selection bias in statistics of success for the treatment. It has also been suggested that the placebo effect may be a key factor in the healing of some patients, which could be tested for by a chromotherapy control group.[6]
See also
References
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External links
ca:Cromoteràpiade:Farbtherapie et:Värviteraapia es:Cromoterapia eo:Kolorterapio fr:Chromathérapie it:Cromoterapia lv:Krāsu terapija nl:Kleurentherapie pt:Cromoterapia ru:Цветотерапия sl:Kromoterapija
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- ↑ Gruson, L (1982-10-19). "Color has a powerful effect on behavior, researchers assert". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-09-18.
- ↑ Parker, D (2001). Color Decoder. Barron's. ISBN 0764118870.
- ↑ van Wagner, K. "Color Psychology: How Colors Impact Moods, Feelings, and Behaviors". About.com. Retrieved 2009-09-18.
- ↑ http://www.waterfalloflight.com/gpage.html
- ↑ Carey, SS (2004). A Beginner's Guide to Scientific Method. Wadsworth Publishing. ISBN 0534584500.