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Chinese
Medicine --- 1,
2, 3, 4, 5,
6, 7, 8
Historical Roots
Traditional
Chinese medicine, as practiced today and in past centuries, is based upon
an array of theories and practices from both foreign and native sources.
The history of Chinese medicine is said to go back as far as 5,000 years
to the time of Shennong, a divine husbandman credited with the discovery
of medicinal herbs.
According to Chinese legend, Shen Nung, the
Chinese father of agriculture and leader of an ancient clan, took it upon
himself to test, one by one, hundreds of different plants to discover
their nutritional and medicinal properties. Many of these turned out to
be poisonous to humans. Over the millennia, Chinese have used themselves
as guinea pigs in this same way to continue testing plants for their properties
of inducing cold(han), heat(jeh), warmth(wen), and coolness(liang). They
classified the medicinal effects of the plants on the various parts of
the body, then tested them to determine their toxicity, what dosages would
be lethal and so forth.
Historical writer Liu Shu reported that " Shennong
tasted hundreds of herbs himself; at times, as many as 70 poisonous herbs
in one day? The validity of that statement is surely one to be debated
but Shennong Bencaojing (Shennong's Classic on material Medical) describes
the medicinal effects of some 365 herbs and is the earliest known text
of its kind. Another early text, which continues to be a cornerstone in
the Chinese medical canon, is Huang Dineijing (The Yellow Emperor's Canon
of Interior Medicine). While authorship is unknown, its present-day version
is believed to have been compiled between second century BC and eighth
century AD and later revised during the Song Dynasty (960 -1279). Over
the centuries, volumes upon volumes of commentary have been written about
this ancient text. Its influence remains important as the main principles
of Chinese medicine are still based on theories first set forth by it.
The stem of Chinese ephedra is a sudorific
but its roots, to the contrary, can check perspiration. Cassia bark is
warming in nature and is useful in treating colds. Mint is cooling in
nature and is used to relieve the symptoms of illness resulting from heat
factors. This accumulation of experience strengthened the Chinese understanding
of natural phenomena and increased the applications of natural principles
in Chinese medicine. The same principles described in the preceding are
also applied to assess the patient's living environment, his life rhythms,
the foods he prefers or avoids, his personal relationships and his language
and gestures as a tool in better understanding his illness and suggesting
improvements in various areas. Once the excesses or imbalances are pinpointed,
they can be adjusted and physical and mental health and balance restored.
This attainment of equilibrium in the body's flow of energy is the ultimate
guiding principle of Chinese medical treatment.
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