["Infectious disease" theory during the Japanese Shogunate: an analysis of "Ichikawa Hashimoto-Hakuju-cho Dandoku-ron Ikken"].

Toyoko Kozai
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Abstract

Dandoku-ron (Treatise on Eliminating Poisons), written at the beginning of the 19th century by Hakuju Hashimoto, a doctor from Kai (Yamanashi Prefecture), is said to be the first book written by a Japanese author who "treated infectious diseases by means of modern concepts." Hashimoto acquired the ideas for his "infectious disease" theory through his own observations and experience. These ideas, suggesting that tangible poisons--not epidemics or congenital eczema--caused diseases such as smallpox, measles, syphilis, and scabies, were fresh and original at the time. The originality that Hashimoto demonstrated in Dandokuron sometimes conflicted, however, with the theories of the Ikeda group of the Igakkan (Tokugawa Shogunate medical school). This paper details information related to this conflict and explores the politicization caused by the "infectious disease" theory during the Japanese Shogunate.

[日本幕府时期的“传染病”理论:对“市川桥本-白州-赵丹德库-龙Ikken”的分析]。
19世纪初,山梨县医生桥本白州撰写的《杀毒论》被认为是“用现代观念治疗传染病”的日本作家的第一本著作。桥本通过自己的观察和经验获得了他的“传染病”理论的思想。这些想法表明,有形的毒药——而不是流行病或先天性湿疹——会导致天花、麻疹、梅毒和疥疮等疾病,在当时是新鲜而原始的。桥下彻在丹德馆展示的独创性有时会与德川幕府医学院池田组的理论发生冲突。本文详细介绍了这一冲突的相关信息,并探讨了日本幕府时期由“传染病”理论引起的政治化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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