Home › Forum Online Discussion › Philosophy › Chinese Medicine Demystified (Part I): A Case of Mistaken Identity
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October 1, 2010 at 4:05 pm #35470
http://thehealthyskeptic.org/chinese-medicine-demystified-part-i-a-case-of-mistaken-identity
Im sure youre at least somewhat familiar with Chinese medicine and acupuncture by now. Its received a lot of media coverage over the last decade, and insurance companies are now covering it in many states. But even though an increasing number of people are using acupuncture to address their health problems, most still dont understand how Chinese medicine works.
Weve been told that Chinese medicine involves mysterious energy called qi circulating through invisible meridians in the body. When the flow of qi through our meridians becomes blocked, illness results. The purpose of acupuncture and other Chinese medical therapies (like herbal medicine and qi gong) is to promote the proper flow of qi through the meridians, thus restoring health. Sound familiar?
If youve ever been to an acupuncturist in the west, Im sure youve received some version of this explanation. After all, this is what they teach in acupuncture school. I know this because Im in my final semester of studying Chinese medicine, and this is the explanation in our textbooks.
Understandably, these fundamental concepts of Chinese medicine have been difficult for western patients and doctors to accept. If you sit a doctor down who has had ten years of post-graduate medical training and tell him that an unidentified energy called qi flowing through imaginary meridians is the key to health and disease, hes going to look at you like youre crazy. And I dont blame him.
What if I told you that nearly everything weve been taught in the West about how Chinese medicine works isnt accurate? What if I told you that Chinese medicine isnt a woo-woo, esoteric energy medicine at all, but instead a functional, flesh and bones medicine based on the same basic physiology as western medicine? And what if I told you I could explain the mechanisms of Chinese medicine in simple, familiar terms that any eight year-old could understand and even the most skeptical, conservative doctor couldnt argue with?
Heres the thing. The energy meridian model that has become the default explanation of Chinese medicine US is not only out of sync with our modern, scientific understanding of the body its also completely inconsistent with classical Chinese medical theory. In other words, weve made up our own western version of Chinese medicine that has little to do with how it was understood and practiced since it began more than 3,000 years ago in China.
This gross mischaracterization has kept Chinese medicine on the fringes of conventional medical care since the 1930s and 1940s. Most doctors and patients have simply been unable to accept the explanation theyve been offered for how acupuncture works. The result is that acupuncture has come to be seen as either a mystical, psychic medicine or a foofy, relaxing spa-type treatment.
And thats a big shame. Because Chinese medicine is in fact a complete system of medicine that has successfully treated many common health conditions for more than 2,500 years. Chinese medicine was passed through the ages in an unbroken lineage of some of the best minds of China. It was used by emperors and the royal courts to help them live into their 90s and stay fertile into their 80s at a time when the average life expectancy in the west was 30 years.
The Chinese were performing detailed human dissections where they carefully measured the blood vessels and weighed the internal organs at a time when western physicians thought the body was made up of humors. These dissections helped Chinese physicians to discover the phenomenon of continuous blood circulation 2,000 years before it was discovered in the west. The discovery of blood circulation is still considered the single most important event in the history of medicine.
Chinese medicine has been around for a very, very long time. The first evidence of the type of medicine that led to the Chinese Medicine in use today dates back to about 6,000 BC, which was during the neolithic (new stone age) period. Stone tools from this period have been found that were specially shaped for making small incisions in the skin, which was the early form of acupuncture. Thats 8,000 years of uninterrupted use. To put this in perspective, western medicine as weve come to recognize it today wasnt even invented until the 1350s (the middle ages), which makes it less than 700 years old. Ah hem.
Let me ask you this. Do you think Chinese medicine would have survived for more than 3,000 years and spread to every corner of the globe if it wasnt a powerful, complete system of medicine?
The reason Chinese medicine isnt more popular in the west is that its completely misunderstood even by the people who practice it. And as long as acupuncturists continue to promote the energy meridian model as the explanation for how Chinese works, its destined to remain a fringe alternative modality.
In the next article Im going to give you an explanation for how Chinese medicine works that is not only historically accurate, but also consistent with the principles of anatomy and physiology as we understand them today. Im also going to tell you how this blatant mis-characterization of Chinese medicine in the west came about.
October 1, 2010 at 11:28 pm #35471October 2, 2010 at 10:50 pm #35473You might want to reference Deke Kendall’s book as that series seems to be based on his book, which is not accepted as some new insight on Chinese Medicine. I might add it has a narrow view of the range of Acupuncture, primarily treating pain.
I would also add that 6,000 years ago is the pre-historic period in China, there is no evidence of any Chinese medicine at that time, the first historic period begins around 1,600 BC, Shang, the only evidence of medicine is Curse of the Ancestors and methods of appeasing Ancestors was the treatment.
The earliest texts we have are from the Wa Wang Dui tombs, Warring periods time and it is very primitive, if you have records or any historic evidence please pass it on.
Regards,
bagua
October 3, 2010 at 9:20 am #35475I mainly was posting just to share an opinion and get the wisdom of the forum on the subject. I am not a big medical history buff. That academia battles I will leave to you.
October 3, 2010 at 10:46 am #35477Hello
The article seems to be wery wrong indeed.
Qi is wery well understood in the chinese society.
Acupuncture or chinese medicine without chi going in the meridians, that seems to me to be some form of reductionism, when you explain something with only one acceptable model and not see the whole pictute.
SD
October 3, 2010 at 11:22 am #35479Alchemy, especially Healing Tao formulas are based on channels, energy centers, Jing/Qi/Shen etc. that article and viewpoint basically says these do not exist, therefore the alchemy and what it does, does not exist as well.
This view does not lead to any battles, most give it little attention as it is a very narrow view that acupuncture is only about arteries and veins and is an attempt to work in the western science model.
October 3, 2010 at 4:02 pm #35481Thanks for the feed back. That was my feeling as well. I was mainly taking about historical battles in general.
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