Philosophical thinking of Chinese Traditional Medicine

  • Dong J
  • Lu L
  • Le J
  • et al.
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Abstract

Traditional medicine is often an integration of ancient philosophy, clinical experiences, primitive knowledge of medicine, regional cultures and religious beliefs. Chinese Traditional Medicine (CTM) is the general appellation of all the traditional medicines of different ethnicities in China, which share great similarities of basic concept and philosophical basis, and conform to the development of empirical medicine, among which the medicine of Han ethnicity (Han medicine) is the most mature. The development of CTM is totally different from that of modern medicine, always revolving around the center of disease diagnosis and treatment, establishing the core theoretical system of Yin and Yang, Five Elements, Zang and Fu and Humoralism with the theoretical foundation of ancient Chinese philosophy, which represents the highest achievement of worldwide empirical medicine and philosophy form at that time. In general, the basic structure of CTM mainly consists of three parts as follows: the part that has already reached consensus with modern medicine, the part that is unconsciously ahead of modern medicine, and the part that needs to be reconsidered or abandoned.

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APA

Dong, J., Lu, L., Le, J., Yan, C., Zhang, H., & Li, L. (2018). Philosophical thinking of Chinese Traditional Medicine. Traditional Medicine and Modern Medicine, 01(01), 1–10. https://doi.org/10.1142/s2575900018100018

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