Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Classical Chinese medicine

Classical Chinese medicine is notably different from traditional Chinese medicine . CCM represents the medicine and its evolution over the past two millennia. It is distinct from, yet shares history and much information with Traditional Chinese Medicine . Classical Chinese medicine refers to Chinese medicine that takes seriously its ancient roots, using classical texts and the skills that emerge from studying them, as the basis for medical practice. It is distinct from TCM insofar that TCM represents efforts to replant Chinese medicine in the soil of Western medicine.

Chinese medicine has been practiced for well over two thousand years and its effectiveness has been experienced by millions of people. Throughout time it has evolved and changed, but its fundamental roots have always remained the same. As Western influences threatened the validity of Chinese medicine, a movement began to develop to selectively thin out any aspect of the medicine that might not be acceptable to the Western scientific tradition. TCM is an outgrowth of this movement and as a result, many of the classical traditions were put aside.

Classical Chinese medicine takes into account this entire history. A classical education compares the new developments and "Westernized" models of Chinese medicine with the classical form of the medicine and searches for the roots in both, seeking what the founders of Chinese medicine sought. In studying this, it has been found that classical Chinese medicine became canonized and collated to a definitive degree during the Han dynasty . Therefore, classical Chinese medicine remains focused upon these early fundamental establishments. Later developments can be understood through this lens. TCM therefore can be understood by classically trained practitioners, but a TCM education does not provide an understanding of the classical tradition.

Recently however, there has been a resurgence in the interest in learning and practicing CCM. To learn CCM traditionally one had to be part of a family lineage of the medicine. This family lineage protected its knowledge and practice to ensure the prosperity of future generations. Recently, however, there has been a resurgence in interest in CCM in China, Europe and United States. CCM can be learned in more contemporary ways

Classical texts



The foundation of classical Chinese medicine as a contemporary clinical science is the reading, analyzing and clinical use of classical texts. What is considered classical is up for debate, but the list certainly includes:

Shang Han Lun/ Jinkui Yaolue - The Treatise on Cold Damage/ Essentials of the Golden Cabinet, written in the Han dynasty by Zhang Zhong Jing

Huangdi Neijing - The Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine

The Huangdi Neijing is composed of the Suwen and the Lingshu
The Shennong Ben Cao Jing

also included are:

-- The Pulse Classic
-- The Classic of Difficulties, attributed to Bian Que of the Warring States Period, but most likely a Han Dynasty text
"the Jia Yi Jing" -- the Yellow Emperor's Systematic Classic of Acupuncture and Moxibustion; compiled by Huang-fu Mi , also published by Blue Poppy Press Inc.
- The Classic of the Central Viscera, written by Hua Tuo

Related links


* at National College of Natural Medicine
*, growing international community around CCM
*, blog of a student of Classical Chinese Medicine at National College of Natural Medicine
*

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