Bian Que’s Twelve Channels?

Q2 Arts and Humanities
Jianmin Li, Dolly Yang
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The name Bian Que, like that of the Yellow Emperor (Huangdi), has reverberated through the development of Chinese medicine since the time of the Warring States. The discovery of a human figurine showing channels and strategic points, together with a number of medical texts, during the excavation of the Laoguanshan Han tomb in Chengdu, Sichuan, in 2012–13 has reignited controversies about whether it is correct to speak of a specific Bian Que school, or whether, as this paper argues, these texts were written by the Han physicians who used Bian Que as a mouthpiece to record their own medical expositions. The paper begins by examining the main characteristics of the Laoguanshan human figurine and discusses what this excavated artifact reveals about the early history of Chinese medicine. It questions the existence of the so-called Bian Que school and, obliquely, the suggested relationships between the school and the figurine and between the school and medical texts found in the same tomb. The paper shows how diverse the disjointed knowledge of medicine was and that the idea of a “school” does not accurately reflect what was happening in the transmission of medical knowledge during the Warring States, Qin, and Han periods (475 BCE–220 CE).
扁鹊十二道?
自战国时代以来,扁鹊的名字就像黄帝的名字一样,一直回荡在中国医学的发展史上。2012-13 年在四川成都老官山汉墓的发掘中,发现了一个显示经络和穴位的人俑,以及一些医学文献,这再次引发了争议,即是否应该谈论一个特定的扁鹊学派,或者正如本文所论证的,这些文献是否是由汉代医生撰写的,他们以扁鹊为传声筒,记录自己的医学论述。本文首先研究了老官山人俑的主要特征,并讨论了这件出土文物对中国早期医学史的启示。论文质疑所谓扁鹊学派的存在,并间接质疑扁鹊学派与人俑之间的关系,以及扁鹊学派与同一墓葬中发现的医学文献之间的关系。论文显示了当时医学知识的多样性,以及 "学派 "这一概念并不能准确反映战国、秦、汉时期(公元前 475 年至公元前 220 年)医学知识的传承情况。
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来源期刊
Asian Medicine
Asian Medicine Arts and Humanities-Arts and Humanities (all)
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
期刊介绍: Asian Medicine -Tradition and Modernity is a multidisciplinary journal aimed at researchers and practitioners of Asian Medicine in Asia as well as in Western countries. It makes available in one single publication academic essays that explore the historical, anthropological, sociological and philological dimensions of Asian medicine as well as practice reports from clinicians based in Asia and in Western countries. With the recent upsurge of interest in non-Western alternative approaches to health care, Asian Medicine - Tradition and Modernity will be of relevance to those studying the modifications and adaptations of traditional medical systems on their journey to non-Asian settings.
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