HISTORICAL ROOTS
of
TRADITIONAL CHINESE MEDICINE
Present Day
Oriental Medicine is a term with many variations of a general meaning.
Among the majority of american practitioners it refers to a system of
medicine which originated approximately 4000 years ago in in far east
Asia. This area included what are now China, Korea, Japan, Tibet, and
Vietnam.
In the 20th
century Oriental Medicine serves almost two billion people in far east Asia,
the former Soviet Union and Europe. In the U.S. thirty-eight states have
scope of practice for NCCAOM National Commission for the Certification of
Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine or equivalent level practitioners. There
are approximately 10,000 NCCA national board certified acupuncturists in the
country. Since several states have licensure requirements and processes that
are independent of the NCCA exhaustive totals have not been compiled.
Research on
Oriental Medicine has been continual in China since the early 1950’s. After
the civil war was settled in 1948, the Communist Government of China
realized it could not afford to train, let alone equip, a sufficient number
of allopathic doctors to meet the needs of the country’s population. The
government evaluation of the traditional medicine showed that it had enough
effectiveness to warrant not only active use and perpetuation but
development. Today Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) is practiced in
allopathic hospitals, in traditional hospitals, in conjunction with
allopathic medicine, and hybrids of both forms of medicine have been
developed.
Foundation Principles
Although Oriental Medicine has a set of foundation principles it is not
uniform. There have been and are many schools of thought. Oriental Medicine
is a complete health care system capable of delivering both primary and
specialized care. It’s based on principles which began evolving
approximately between 2000BC and 4000BC and which continue to evolve. The
roots of Oriental Medicine are considered by most to be Buddhism, Taoism,
and Confucianism. Buddhism is a religion, Confucianism is social and
political philosophy, and Taoism is both a religion and a philosophy. These
are gross simplifications. Literally thousands of volumes have been written
on these subjects. But we are concerned here with giving you enough
information for useful understanding of your diagnosis.
Taoism is the
most influential root of Oriental Medicine. The Taoists main focus was on
the observable and natural laws of the universe and the implications for
human beings’ relationship to the universe. 2500 years (5000BC - 500BC)
allowed much time for observation, study and speculation by many people.
This activity yielded myriad principles. Below are five of the fundamental
principles and applications of them to health and healing.
-
THERE ARE NATURAL LAWS THAT GOVERN THE UNIVERSE.
You are part of the universe and therefore exist according to and subject
to those laws.
-
THE NATURAL ORDER OF THE UNIVERSE IS HARMONIUS AND ORGANIZED. If you live
according to it’s laws you will be harmonius.
-
THE UNIVERSE IS DYNAMIC; CHANGE IS A CONSTANT.
Lack of change is contrary to the universe and therefore causes illness.
-
ALL LIFE IS INTERCONNECTED
Always use a systems approach.
-
HUMANS ARE A PART OF THE UNIVERSE, NOT OUTSIDE OF IT. WE ARE INTIMATELY
CONNECTED TO THE ENVIRONMENT AND THUS THE UNIVERSE.
Your health is affected by your environment.
These principles
are the axioms about existence that form the foundation for Yin & Yang, The
Five Elements, and Qi (pronounced chee). And those concepts are the primary
engines of Oriental Medicine.
THEORY
|
Yin & Yang Pt 1
|
Yin & Yang Pt 2
|
5 Elements
Qi
Anatomy-Physiology
| Functions
of Qi |
Organ Functions
Shen: Spirit & Mind
|
Pathology Types
|
Healing
Hierarchy |