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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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———. 1980. <strong>The</strong> Sword and the Centuries: or, Old Sword Days and Old<br />

Sword Ways. 1901. Reprint, Rutland, VT: Charles E. Tuttle.<br />

Meyer, Joachim. 1570. Grundliche Beschreibung der Freyaen, Ritterlichen<br />

und Adelichen Kunst des Fechten. Strasbourg.<br />

Rapisardi, Giovanni. 1998 [1410]. Fiore de’ Liberi Flos Duellatorum: In<br />

armis, sine armis, equester et pedester. Padua, Italy: Gladitoria.<br />

Silver, George. 1599. Paradoxes of Defence. London: Edward Blount.<br />

Swetnam, Joseph. 1617. <strong>The</strong> Schoole of the Noble and Worthy Science of<br />

Defence. London.<br />

Turner, Craig, and Tony Soper. 1990. Methods and Practice of Elizabethan<br />

Swordplay. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.<br />

Medicine, Traditional Chinese<br />

Editorial note: Bracketed number codes in this entry refer to the list of<br />

ideograms that follows.<br />

Most scholars agree that the origin of Chinese civilization occurred in the<br />

Yellow River Valley of central China over 5,000 years ago. Stone antecedents<br />

to modern metal acupuncture needles have been dated to as much<br />

as 20,000 years old. In modern times, vestiges of Chinese culture persist<br />

throughout and beyond China. As is natural for all living things, these have<br />

mutated and adapted to foreign environments.<br />

Through cross-cultural comparison it is apparent that current Chinese<br />

culture retains a remarkable number of features from ancient times.<br />

Chinese culture has always maintained both a strong conservative function<br />

and a powerful evolutionary drive. This conservative function is responsible<br />

for the durability of ancient cultural traditions, and the innate<br />

cultural drive for progress has transformed these traditions into useful<br />

contemporary tools.<br />

Two Chinese disciplines that have received the attention of the non-<br />

Chinese world as well as the renewed attention of modern China are traditional<br />

Chinese medicine and martial arts. In the popular view—as<br />

demonstrated in film, literature, and even the advertisements of martial arts<br />

schools—martial arts and medicine are linked together. In fact, there is a<br />

profound convergence of medicine and martial arts in traditional Chinese<br />

culture. Both share a common cultural and philosophical foundation. Both<br />

are elite traditions. And both contribute to the common social goal of<br />

maintaining and restoring the health of the culture.<br />

Medicine<br />

Medicine, or more generally healing, is a feature of all societies. <strong>The</strong> healing<br />

arts are society’s intermediary between Nature and human beings. <strong>The</strong> way<br />

that a society views Nature will determine how it attempts to achieve health<br />

and balance. <strong>The</strong> most ancient records of Chinese medicine reveal that the<br />

Medicine, Traditional Chinese 327

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