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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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328 Medicine, Traditional Chinese<br />

fundamental Chinese worldview remains intact after five millennia. This<br />

worldview is the force that has shaped the development of Chinese medicine.<br />

Chinese medicine, like much of Chinese culture, is based upon the science<br />

of Daoism. Daoism (Taoism) is the cosmological basis of Chinese<br />

medicine. It is scientific in that it is based on observation, states regularities,<br />

and is both explanatory and predictive. Daoism provides functional<br />

descriptions of the relationships among phenomena. It recognizes the underlying<br />

compositional unity of all things (wan wu [1]), which have qualities<br />

and functions differentiated on a continuum, much as colors are differentiated<br />

on a spectrum. <strong>The</strong>re is no absolute differentiation between<br />

“this” and “that.” <strong>The</strong>se notions are defined on the basis of both sensed<br />

qualities and function. This view provides for a mutual, organic association<br />

among all entities, even among those that are in opposition.<br />

In both theory and application, the most important term in Daoism is<br />

qi [2]. Qi is both that which “glues” and that which is “glued.” Qi simultaneously<br />

fulfills the dual roles of constituting and directing the stuff (or<br />

essence) of the universe. All manifestations of qi are described relative to<br />

their unique admixture of the basic contrasting pair: yin [3] and yang [4].<br />

This pair is unitary. One could not exist without the other. <strong>The</strong> central<br />

theme of Daoism and thus Chinese medicine and the martial arts is that all<br />

things are conditions for the existence of all other things. <strong>The</strong>refore, there<br />

is no ultimate creation or destruction, only change. In Chinese, this is described<br />

as change-transformation without impoverishment [5].<br />

<strong>The</strong> Yijing (I Ching), or Book of Changes, states, “Unceasing life, call it<br />

‘change’” [6]. Life is a constant process of transformation, of which creation<br />

and extinction are secondary manifestations. Whereas these categories are<br />

value neutral—neither creation nor extinction is viewed as inherently good<br />

or evil—this process has a natural progression. It is this progressive order<br />

that is the focus of the Chinese physician’s attention. <strong>The</strong> physician views the<br />

normal state of a system as one in which transition is simultaneously unimpeded<br />

and well regulated. Disease is identified in a system that does not meet<br />

these conditions, resulting in either systemic or regional surpluses or deficits<br />

of qi. Simply stated, order (zheng [7]) is “good.” Disorder (luan [8]) is “bad.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> practice of Chinese medicine has two interrelated aspects. <strong>The</strong><br />

first is diagnosis. Zhenduan (diagnosis [9]) is the accurate perception of reality:<br />

recognition of the actual admixture of yin and yang. <strong>The</strong> second aspect,<br />

therapy (yi zhi [10], literally, “to heal, to put into order”), is the response<br />

to that diagnosis. <strong>The</strong>rapy is the manipulation of yin and yang. <strong>The</strong><br />

goal of this manipulation is to restore the life-promoting balance between<br />

these two vital forces. Both excess and deficiency result in a tendency toward<br />

extinction, which in turn is the cusp of creation.<br />

<strong>The</strong> doctor must decide if a situation deserves restoration. This in-

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