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Acupuncture in ancient China: How important was it really?
被引:10
|作者:
Hanjo Lehmann
[1
]
机构:
[1] Deutsches Institut für TCM,Cranachstr. 1, D-12157 Berlin, Germany
关键词:
acupuncture;
acupuncture moxibustion science;
traditional Chinese medicine;
history of medicine;
D O I:
暂无
中图分类号:
R245 [针灸学、针灸疗法];
学科分类号:
100512 ;
摘要:
Although acupuncture theory is a fundamental part of the Huangdi Neijing, the clinical application of the needle therapy in ancient China was always a limited one. From early times there have been warnings that acupuncture might do harm. In books like Zhang Zhongjing’s Shanghanlun it plays only a marginal role. Among the 400 emperors in Chinese history, acupuncture was hardly ever applied. After Xu Dachun called acupuncture a "lost tradition" in 1757, the abolition of acupuncture and moxibustion from the Imperial Medical Academy in 1822 was a radical, but consequent act. When traditional Chinese medicine was revived after 1954, the "New Acupuncture" was completely different from what it had been in ancient China. The conclusion, however, is a positive one: The best time acupuncture ever had was not the Song dynasty or Yuan dynasty, but is now - and the future of acupuncture does not lie in old scripts, but in ourselves.
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页码:45 / 53
页数:9
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