دسترسی نامحدود
برای کاربرانی که ثبت نام کرده اند
برای ارتباط با ما می توانید از طریق شماره موبایل زیر از طریق تماس و پیامک با ما در ارتباط باشید
در صورت عدم پاسخ گویی از طریق پیامک با پشتیبان در ارتباط باشید
برای کاربرانی که ثبت نام کرده اند
درصورت عدم همخوانی توضیحات با کتاب
از ساعت 7 صبح تا 10 شب
دسته بندی: تاریخ ویرایش: نویسندگان: Boying Ma سری: ISBN (شابک) : 9813237961, 9789813237964 ناشر: World Scientific Publishing Company سال نشر: 2020 تعداد صفحات: 1321 زبان: English فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) حجم فایل: 12 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب A History of Medicine in Chinese Culture به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب تاریخچه پزشکی در فرهنگ چینی نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
VOLUME 1 Contents Part One The Cultural Background to the Origins of Chinese Medicine Chapter 1 Primitive Human Beings, Their Health, Culture and Ecological Environment in China A. Primitive Culture and Ecological Environment 1. The Origin of Human Beings in China 2. Chinese Culture and Its Natural Ecological Distribution During the Paleolithic Period 3. Neolithic Culture and Its Natural Environment in China B. The Physique and Diseases of Primitive Human Beings in China 4. The Evolution of the Physical Constitution of the Ancient Chinese 5. Discoveries of Archaeological Pathology C. The Culture and Conditions of Hygiene Among Primitive Humans in China 6. The Residential Culture of “Nest-Living & Cave-Dwelling” and Its Significance for Health 7. Striking Flints or Drilling a Log to Get Fire & the Significance of Cooked Food to Health 8. The Culture of Dietary Hygiene and Its Influence on Other Things 9. The Culture of Hygiene in Clothing 10. Primitive Dance, Music and Sports 11. “Cannibalism” and Funeral Sanitation Chapter 2 Primitive Thought, Worship and Medical Culture A. Primitive Thought and Medical Culture 12. The “Collective Unconsciousness” and Mysterious Feelings 13. The Concept of “Soul” 14. The Experience of Using Objects as Tools and Cumulative Thinking B. Primitive Worship and Its Association with Medicine 15. The Worship of Nature 16. The Worship of Totems 17. The Worship of Reproduction 18. Ancestor Worship 19. The Worship of Ghosts and Gods Chapter 3 The Primitive View of Life, Getting Old, Illness and Death: The Pursuit of Longevity A. The Earliest View of Life and Death 20. The Original Understanding of Human Life 21. The Origins of Birth 22. The Meaning of Death 23. Primitive Knowledge of the Human Body and Its Anatomy B. The Earliest View of Illness and Etiology 24. What Is Illness? 25. Diseases Involving Gods, Spirits, and Others C. The Pursuit of Immortality 26. Longevity Involving Gods and Spirits 27. The Immortal Regions and Their Medicines Chapter 4 Treatment in a World of Wizardry A. The World of Wizardry 28. The “Blocked Way Between Heaven and Earth” and the Wizard 29. The Behavioral Characteristics of Sorcery and Its Psychological Foundations 30. Sorcery, Religion and Science B. Sorcerous Doctors and Sorcerous Medicine 31. Sorcerous Doctors in Ancient Times 32. Zhu Taboo, Divination and Medicine 33. Horoscopes, Divination by Dreams and the Yarrow Stalks 34. The Great Exorcism and Fu Xi Sacrifice 35. Massage? Moxibustion? Herbal Medicine? 36. The Medicine of Witchcraft in the Mountain and Seas Classic Chapter 5 The Origin of Medicine A. A Definition of the Origin of Medicine and Other Relative Factors 37. To Identify the Conception of Medicine’s Origin 38. Animal Instinct and Human Love 39. Primitive Thinking and the Functions of the Witch 40. The Relationship of Life and Labour to the Origins of Medicine B. The Beginnings of Early Medicine and Health Care 41. Massage, Daoyin, Hot Compresses, Moxibustion and the Discovery of the Meridian 42. From Stone Needling to Acupuncture 43. The Growth of Medical Knowledge 44. The Bud of Prevention 45. The Famous Doctor Bianque: A Step Up from Witch-Doctoring Conclusion of Part One Part Two Chinese Medicine Under the Influence and Permeation of Philosophy, Religion and Politics Chapter 6 The Heavenly Law (Tao) of Nature and Medicine in Deference to Nature A. “Tao Qi” Theory and Medicine 46. From Ji Zi to Lao Zi, Zhuang Zi and the Jixia 47. Qi as the Root of Medical Theoretics B. The Medical Theories of the Yin–Yang and Five Elements 48. The Formation of the Yin–Yang and Five-Element Theories 49. The Golden Mean, the Three Talents, Image and Number, and the Correspondence Between the Human and Natural 50. From the Mawangdui Medical Books to Huangdi’s Inner Classic (黄帝内经) Chapter 7 Occultist Culture and Medicine Under the Impact of the Confucian Classics and Chenwei Philosophy A. The Fangshi2 Culture and Some Secret Medical Groups 51. Research on the Date of the Composition of Huangdi Neijing (黄帝内经) 52. Medical Schools, Lord Cang, His Masters and Apprentices 53. The Huangdi Neijing (黄帝内经) and Secret Medical Schools B. Another Side to Taoist Medical Science 54. The Occultist’s Art of Well-Being 55. Occultists in Search of Elixirs and the Immortal Alchemy of the Yellow (Gold) and White (Silver) 56. The Compositional Background to Shen Nong’s Classic of Materia Medica (神农本草经) 57. The Calamity Due to Witchcraft Gu, Chunyu Yan Killing the Queen and Their Involvement with Occult Physicians C. The Impact on Medicine of the Study of the Confucian Classics, Chenwei Theology and Anti-Chenwei Philosophy 58. Studies of Two Types of “Ancient” and “Present” Confucian Classics and Chenwei Theology 59. Anti-Chenwei Philosophy and Thoughts of a Primordial Qi D. The Background for the Medical Achievements of Zhang Zhongjing and Hua Tuo 60. The Confucian Tradition of Zhang Zhongjing, a Medical Sage 61. Hua Tuo, a Miraculous Doctor, His Occult Elements and Demeanour Chapter 8 Religious Taoism and Medical Culture A. The Inherited Relationship Between Religious Taoism and Medicine 62. The Role of Occult Medicine During the Establishment of Religious Taoism 63. The Origins of Alchemy and Medicine 64. The Development of Internal dan and Its Influence on Medicine B. A Taoist’s Magic and Medical Skills 65. The Taoists Holding Some Medical Skills 66. The Taoist’s Magical Arts of Forbidding or Incantation 67. The Art of Taoist Talismans 68. The Taoist’s Magic or “Supernatural Power” C. Taoist Doctors and Their Grand Contribution 69. How Ge Hong Dabbled in Medicine 70. The Taoist Naturalist and Leader Tao Hongjing 71. The Great Sun Simiao in Medicine and Taoism 72. Contributions from Other Taoist Doctors Chapter 9 Neo-Taoism and Medicine During the Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties A. Neo-Taoist “Idle Talk” and the Fashion of Taking Stone Powders 73. Neo-Taoist Idle Talk and a Comprehensive View of an Undisciplined Life 74. The Prevailing Fashion of Taking Medicines such as Wushi San B. The Prospering of the Medicine During the Wei and Jin Dynasties 75. Huangfu Mi and The Classic ABC of Acupuncture and Moxibustion (针灸甲乙经) 76. On Material Things (物理论), The Theory of Spiritual Perishability (神灭论) and Views on Life and Death 77. Medicine Prospers in the Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties Chapter 10 Confucianism and Medicine A. A Medicine Dominated by Feudal Ethics 78. From Licking Piles and Sucking Carbuncles to “Cutting the Flesh of His Thigh to Cure His Parents” 79. The Monarch’s Medicine Tasted by Officials, Understanding Medicine as Filial Piety and Feeling the Woman’s Pulse Through a Gauze B. Neo-Confucianism, “Down-to-Earth” Learning and Medicine 80. From the Taiji Diagram to the Innate Root — The “Kidney’s Life-Gate” 81. Zhang Jiebin’s Taoist Medical Theories 82. Medical Reflections on Acquiring Knowledge by Probing into Things 83. The Medical Tradition of Abiding in the Classics C. The Rise of the Confucian Doctors 84. To Be a Good Prime Minister or Excellent Doctor 85. Various Yongyi (Quacks) 86. Kindness in Medicine Chapter 11 The Emperors, Their Government and Medicine A. The Emperors and Their Medicine 88. The Emperors of the Han and Tang Dynasties and Their Dealings with Medicine 89. Emperors and Medicine During the Song Dynasty 90. Emperor Kangxi and Medicine B. The Governmental System and Organization of Medicine and Health 91. The Governmental Medical Organizations and a Doctor’s Social Position 92. Supporting the Disabled, Visiting the Sick and Policies of Medicine and Health 93. The Imperial Medical Agency and Official Medical Education C. Governmental Materia Medica, Medical Books and Bronze Acupuncture Figures 94. National Pharmacopoeias Issued by the Government 95. Officials Emending Medical Books 96. Casting Acupuncture Figures in Bronze D. The Formulation of Medical Law and Progress in Forensic Medicine 97. The General Situation of Medical Law 98. Medical Jurisprudence and Legal Forensic Examination Conclusion of Part Two VOLUME 2 Content Part Three Medicine in Social Life, Epidemics and the Invention of Variolation Chapter 12 Medicine in Different Social Environments A. Medicine in War and Turmoil 99. Medical Conditions During War and Periods of Historical Turmoil 100. Health Organization in the Army 101. Surgery in the Army B. Medicine in the Heyday of Peace 102. Peaceful Eras and the Conservation of Medicine 103. Concerning the Books: Treatise on the Causes and Origins, and Manifestations of Various Diseases, Important Prescriptions Worth a Thousand Gold Pieces and Arcane Essentials from the Imperial Library 104. Compilations, Compendia, Medical Cases and Rudimentary Verses C. The Relationship Between Population Statistics, Natural Ecology and Diseases in History 105. Geography and Diseases of the Five Directions 106. The Theory of the Five Circuits and Six Qi 107. The Relationship Between Population Statistics and Diseases in Ancient China 108. Diseases in Relation to Social Ecology Chapter 13 Epidemics and the Triggering Mechanism of Disaster A. Ancient Epidemic Diseases and Epidemiological Factors 109. The Historical Background to Epidemics 110. Major Epidemics During the Zhou and Qin Dynasties, and at the Beginning of the Han 111. The Main Epidemics of the Han, Wei, Jin, Northern and Southern Dynasties 112. Epidemics During and After the Sui and Tang Dynasties 113. Conducting Textual Research on the Epidemicity of the Plague and Cholera B. The Evolution of a Theory of Epidemics 114. The Evolution of the Etiology of Seasonal Qi, Pestilent Qi and Other Qi 115. The Impracticality of Ancient Prescriptions for Curing New Diseases, the Theory of the Fire and Heat Mechanism, and the Theory of Attacking the Pathogenic Qi 116. The Theory of Internal Injury and Yin Syndrome Theory 117. The Theory of Epidemic Febrile Disease Put Forward by Ye Tianshi and Others Chapter 14 Smallpox Remedies and Variolation in Ancient China A. Outbreaks of Smallpox and TCM Treatment in Ancient China 118. Textual Research on Outbreaks of Smallpox in China 119. Smallpox Treated by Chinese Medicine (1) Origins of the Theories and Treatments for Smallpox: A Summary (2) Comparatively Mature Treatments for Smallpox (3) Curative Efficacy B. The Invention of Variolation and Its Promotion by Emperor Kangxi 120. The Origins of Variolation (1) Ideas of Prevention and Initial Therapies (2) Legends of Variolation’s Origin (3) A Literature Review of Variolation Therapy (4) Stories on Variolation’s Origin (5) Research into the Beginnings of Variolation in the Regions South of the Yangtze River in the Middle and Late Ming Dynasty 121. Views on the Popularization of Variolation by Emperor Kangxi C. The Theory, Technology and Success of Variolation 122. The Theory and Technique of Variolation (1) Foetal Toxin and the Theory of Variolation Being Used to Discharge Foetal Toxin (2) The Variolation Method and Its Improvement (3) Efficacy and Safeguarding Measures During Variolation (a) Selecting the Seedlings (b) Seedlings, Their Storage and Management (c) The Timing of the Variolation (d) Suitable and Unsuitable Constitutions for Variolation (4) Observation and Recuperation with Herbal Medicines After Variolation 123. The Success Rate of Variolation Chapter 15 Science, Technology and Medicine: Ancient Occupational Disease, Its Prevention and Treatment A. The Development of Science and Technology and the Progress Made by Medicine During Ancient Times 124. Time Medicine, Biological Rhythm and the Theory of the Midnight-Midday Ebb and Flow 125. Simple Systems Theory and Experimental Thought in Traditional Chinese Medicine 126. The Identification, Processing and Refining of Medicines 127. Other Effects of Scientific and Technological Progress on Medicine B. The Prevention and Treatment of Ancient Occupational Diseases 128. Occupational Poisoning and Damage 129. Occupational Diseases Chapter 16 The Culture of Reproduction and Medical Science A. Pregnancy and Delivery 130. Conception and the Pursuit of a Boy 131. Antenatal Training and Eugenics 132. Delivery and Midwifery 133. Spontaneous Abortion and Aborticides B. The Culture of Child-Rearing and Science of Medicine 134. Premature Infant Death and Baby Care 135. The Theory of Congenital Foetal Toxin and Diagnosis Through Pediatric Finger Veins Chapter 17 Sexual Culture in Medicine A. Ancient Sexology 136. Sexology in Books and Paintings 137. The Growth of Knowledge of the Sexual Organs and Sexual Skills 138. The Initial Theory of Sexology and the Method of Storing Essence and Promoting Qi 139. “Picking and Fighting” and the Inner Alchemy of Chinese Sexology B. Sexual Perversions and Disease 140. “Lovesickness” and Various Sexual Perversions 141. Diseases of the Sexual Organs and Functional Disorders 142. A Study of Venereal Disease in Ancient China Chapter 18 Medical Science, the Culture of Food and Other Things A. The Culture of Food and Medical Science 143. Fine Foods in Health and Nutrition 144. Medicated Foods Based on the Homology of Medicine and Food B. Cases in Literature, Art, the Physical and Medical Sciences 145. The Relationship Between Music, Poetry and Medical Science 146. Kongfu and Medical Science Chapter 19 A Glance at Altar Medicine A. Sacrificing to the Three Sovereigns, the Specialty of Supplication and Divination Prescriptions 147. Sacrifices to the Three Sovereigns and the Deification of Famous Doctors 148. Supplication as a Specialty 149. Holy Water, Bringing Down the Gods and Divination Prescriptions B. Gu Insect Witchcraft, Physiognomy and Taisu Pulse Necromancy 150. Gu Insect Witchcraft 151. The Taisu Pulse and Art of Physiognomy Chapter 20 The Mentality and Behaviour of Physicians and Patients in the Tradition A. The Cultural Psychology of Chinese Medicine 152. The Medical Expert’s Pursuit of Personality — “A Superior Physician Treats a Country” 153. “Medicine, It Is Mental”: The Physician’s Logic and Way of Thinking 154. “Using Medicine Is Like Deploying the Army” — The Behavioural Psychology of the Clinical Physician B. The Psychology of Behaviour During the Pursuit of Medical Help 155. “Seeking No Treatment Is Equal to Seeing an Averagely Skilled Physician” 156. The Patient Seeking Medical Help and Selecting a Physician Conclusion of Part Three Part Four The Cultural Process of Chinese Medicine in History and Its Crystallization Chapter 21 The Essential Stream of Chinese Medicine and Its Outcomes A. The Main Developments and Characteristics of Chinese Medicine Through the Ages 157. The Beginning of the Basic Theory of Traditional Chinese Medicine in the Pre-Qin Period 158. The Medical Classics and Classical Prescriptions as They Formed and Fell into Disuse Among the People 159. The Foundation of a System of Treatment According to Syndrome Differentiation in the Late Han Dynasty 160. How Chinese Medicine Bloomed During the Wars 161. Great Achievements Made During the Prosperous Sui and Tang 162. Chinese Medicine Takes on an Organizational Structure During the Northern and Southern Song Dynasties 163. Chinese Medicine in Contention During the Jin and Yuan Dynasties and Its Superstable Formation During the Ming and Qing B. Important Works and Famous Doctors from the History of Chinese Medicine 164. Three Shi Chinese Medicine and the Four Classics 165. The Works Extant in Chinese Medicine Worth Reading A. Works of Etiology and Pathology B. Diagnostic Works C. Works on Acupuncture and Moxibustion D. Works on Chinese Materia Medica E. Works on Prescriptions F. Comprehensive Medical Works G. Works of Annotation and Research on the Neijing and Nanjing H. Annotated Works on the Treatise on Febrile Diseases and the Synopsis of the Golden Chamber I. Works on Epidemic Febrile Diseases J. Works on a Special Subject or Special Topic K. Popular Medical Works and Medical Songs and Rhymes 166. Famous Doctors in Chinese Medical History A. Famous Doctors in the pre-Qin Period (before 221 BCE) B. Famous Doctors during the Qin (221–207 BCE), Han (206 BCE–220 CE) and Three Kingdoms (220–265 CE) Periods C. Famous Medical Workers During the Jin Dynasties (265–420) and the Northern and Southern Dynasties (420–589) D. Famous Doctors during the Sui (581–618), Tang (618–907) and Five Dynasties (907–960) E. Famous Chinese Medical Masters during the Song Dynasties (960–1127, –1279) F. Famous Doctors and Pharmacologists from the Jin (1115–1234) and Yuan (1271–1368) Dynasties G. Famous Physicians of Chinese Medicine During the Ming Dynasty (1368–1644) H. Famous Doctors of Chinese Medicine in the Qing Dynasty (1644–1911) I. Famous Doctors in the First Half of the 20th Century (the Late Qing Dynasty and Early Republican China) C. Eight Major Contributions and Mysteries Concerning Traditional Chinese Medicine 167. The Five Elements, Yin–Yang & Qi and Blood — A Basis for Theory 168. The Four Examinations and Eight Principles — Keys to Pattern Identification 169. The Toxicity-Relieving and Property-Enhancing Qualities of TCM 170. The Magic of Compound Prescriptions 171. The Undetectable Nature of the Acupuncture Meridians 172. The Endotherapy of Exogenous Disease Without an Operation 173. Variolation — A Way of Keeping Well 174. Turning to TCM When Western Medicine Fails Chapter 22 The Root of Life and the Future of Chinese Medicine A. The Essence of Chinese Medicine: A High-Quality Ecological Medicine 175. Chinese Medicine, Is It Scientific or Not? 176. Comments on the Transforming Modes of Biomedicine and Evidence-Based Medicine 177. The Ecological Medical Theory of Chinese Medicine B. The Vital Source of Chinese Medicine 178. The Cultural Soil of Chinese Medicine 179. Die-Hard Chinese Medical Practitioners Providing Effective Treatment, with Less Toxicity and Fewer Side Effects 180. Theoretical Advancement and Foresight: “Creativity” as the Motive Force Within TCM C. Puzzles and the Future 181. Puzzles: Turmoil and Swirls 182. Research Methodologies and Research into Methodologies 183. An Evergreen Life Conclusion of Part Four General Conclusions About the Author