Galerie
Meine Galerie
Gesamtanzahl Bilder in allen Kategorien: 341
Zugriffe auf alle Bilder bislang: 833972
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Wang Shuhe
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Autor: admin
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Zugriffe: 3001
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Bewertung: Keine
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Beschreibung:
Wang Shuhe is known for two major contributions. He recovered the first major herbal formulary, the Shang Han Lun (ca. 220 A.D.), by Chang Chung Ching (Zhang Zhongjing) , putting together the fragmentary record and arranging it in logical order. He set down the knowledge of pulse diagnosis in the book Mai Ching. Both books remained medical classics and were revived and revised during the Song Dynasty. Both books have been translated to English. Wang was also known for his expertise in dietary therapies. He cautioned about impure foods, overeating, excessive drinking, and the hazards of fried foods.
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Wang Qingren
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Autor: admin
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Zugriffe: 2649
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Beschreibung:
Wang Qingren is famous in two areas of medicine. First, he promoted the importance of accurately understanding anatomy in order to diagnose and treat disease. Disection and surgery had been all but ignored since the time of Hua Tuo and traditional Chinese doctors had relied on a projected idea of the internal organs. Wang said that 'attempting healing without knowing the internal organs is is like a blind man walking in the dark.' He also strongly promoted the idea that many diseases were due to blood stasis and by activating blood circulation and clearing away the static blood, one could resolve even the very serious diseases. His blood vitalizing formulas are still used extensively.
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Tao Hongjing
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Autor: admin
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Zugriffe: 2854
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Beschreibung:
Tao Hongjing was a great scholar who devoted much of his efforts to studying herbs. His principal contribution to Chinese medicine was his recovery and rearrangement of the first formal herbal the Sheng Neng Pen-T'sao Ching [Shen Nong Bencao Jing; ca. 100 A.D.]. He collected the fragmentary records, arranged them together, and then doubled the number of herb entries (by adding another 365 herbs that were in use at the time. In addition, he divided the herbs into three classes: upper {which would promote longevity if taken a long time), middle (which could be used for treating diseases and promoting health), and lower (those which ought to be used for a short time to cure a disease or symptom). He also classified herbs according to basic sources, listing seven (e.g., herbs, animals, stones, vegetables, etc.).
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Sun Simiao
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Autor: admin
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Zugriffe: 5865
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Bewertung: Keine
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Kommentare: 0
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Beschreibung:
Sun Simiao was a child prodigy. He had mastered the Chinese classics by age 20 and then became a well-known medical practitioner. His ideas and collected prescriptions were recorded in the books Prescriptions Worth A Thousand Gold and Precious Formulas for Emergency. He helped develop nutritional medicine; for example, recommending seaweed to people living in the mountain regions who suffered from goiter, and recommending liver of ox and sheep for person suffering from night blindness. He was also a Taoist alchemist, seeking demon-dispelling remedies, including spells, herbal formulas, and toxic alchemical preparations.
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Qian Yi
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Autor: admin
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Zugriffe: 2796
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Bewertung: Keine
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Beschreibung:
Qian Yi; ca. 1032-1113 A.D. - Qian specialized in treatment of children and wrote the famous book Xiaoer Yaozheng Zhijue (Key to Therapeutics of Children's Diseases). This book presented the prescription Rehmannia Six Formula (Liuwei Dihuang Wan), which has become the most widely used yin-nourishing prescription, especially given to the elderly despite its origins as a pediatric formulation.
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Liu Wansu
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Autor: admin
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Zugriffe: 2810
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Bewertung: Keine
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Kommentare: 0
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Beschreibung:
Liu Wansu observed the high frequency of fever and inflammation in serious diseases and promoted the idea of using herbs of cooling nature to treat these conditions. This was a step in the opposite direction of many of his predecessors, who focused on using warming herbs. This work had much influence on the later concept of 'wen bing' or epidemic febrile diseases, which corresponded to (and preceeded) the Western concept of contageous disease. He also undertook a detailed study of the Nei Ching Su Wen [Nei Jing Su Wen], describing the etiology of disease in relation to the teachings of that famous text.
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Li Shizhen
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Autor: admin
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Zugriffe: 2717
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Bewertung: Keine
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Beschreibung:
Li Shizhen is considered to have been China's greatest naturalist. He was very interested in the proper classification of the components of nature. His major contribution to medicine was the forty year project of sifting through the vast array of herbal lore and writing down the information that was, in his view, a reliable reflection of reality. His book, the Pen T'sao Kang Mu (Bencao Gang Mu; 1596), has been used as a pharmacopoeia, but it was also treatise on botany, zoology, minerology and metallurgy. The book was reprinted frequently and five of the original edition still exist. A rough translation of the herb entries was published in English by two British doctors (Porter and Smith) who were working in China at the end of the 19th century, though extracts of it had been published in Europe since 1656. British researcher B.E. Reid spent 20 years translating an abridged version which was published in 1932.
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Gesamtanzahl Bilder in allen Kategorien: 341
Zugriffe auf alle Bilder bislang: 833972