This article examines six ancient Indian nutritional principles as documented in the Charaka Samhita, Taittiriya Upanishad, Bhagavad Gita, and Ashtanga Hridaya, and evaluates the modern scientific evidence confirming each principle's validity. The six principles are: Annam Brahma — the identification of food as the material basis of the body from the Taittiriya Upanishad; Ritu Bhoga, Hita Bhoga, Mita Bhoga — the Ayurvedic sequential prescription to eat locally available seasonal food, of what is individually beneficial, in moderation; Ahara Vidhi Visheshayatana — Charaka's eight principles of intelligent eating; Agni — the digestive fire principle examined against modern gut microbiome and digestive enzyme research; Prakriti-based personalised nutrition examined against CSIR genomics research confirming distinct microbiome signatures for each Prakriti phenotype; and the Triguna food classification (Sattvic, Rajasic, Tamasic) examined against modern nutritional psychiatry and ultra-processed food research. Modern confirmations drawn on include: chrono-nutrition confirming Ritu Bhoga; CSIR-IGIB AyurGenomics confirming Prakriti-based personalised nutrition; the Journal of Ethnic Foods Ayurvedic dietetics review; PMC research confirming Agni-microbiome parallels; and the 2025 International Journal of Home Science meta-analysis of Sattvic diet and mental health. The article argues that India did not merely have food traditions — it built a nutritional science whose validity is being confirmed by modern research 2,000 years later.
Narayan Rout (Sat,) studied this question.
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