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Volume 2: The Road to Immortality is Endless Chapter 151: Skills are based on the Tao, all doctors have feelings

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    Combining his own experience of cultivating Taoism, Mo Fei spoke calmly and eloquently on the podium at the venue.  For him, this is just a small scene. With his current ability, he can handle it easily and more than enough.  China¡¯s cultural inheritance has a long history. Although it has been in danger of being cut off due to wars and gunpowder smoke, it has persisted one by one and continues. Traditional Chinese medicine is one of these splendid ancient cultural inheritances.  Chinese civilization is vast and profound. Although medicine, calligraphy, painting, music, architecture, sculpture, and even health care belong to different categories, they all contain common characteristics and embody an ever-present Chinese spirit.  traditional ideas.  For example, "the unity of nature and man" is a basic proposition in traditional Chinese philosophy. It is not only one of the basic concepts of traditional Chinese medicine, but also the motto of traditional Chinese painters.  Another example is that traditional Chinese medicine emphasizes the abstract essence, energy, and spirit, while traditional Chinese painting emphasizes the use of form to describe spirit and both form and spirit. Traditional Chinese medicine treats diseases by distinguishing deficiency and excess, and the basic treatment is to replenish deficiency and purge excess. However, the basic structure of traditional Chinese painting emphasizes seeking deficiency from excess and seeking deficiency from deficiency.  Seeking truth, phase comes from, comparison reveals.  It can be seen that although all kinds of ancient civilizations are diverse and colorful, there are inextricable similarities between different categories. Even if they appear to be very different on the surface, there are ancient humanistic thoughts that run through them.  In this article, Mo Fei discussed medicine based on Taoism and systematically expounded the main characteristics of ancient Chinese medicine.  Mo Feiyan: "Both Chinese and Western medicine have their own strengths. Traditional Chinese medicine talks about Qi and pulse, but when talking about Qi and pulse, the theory is too subtle and difficult for ordinary people to understand, so it is often lost in vain. Throughout the ancient Chinese medical works, it is inseparable from the heavenly stems and earthly branches,  The traditional culture of Qi, blood, yin and yang, the Five Elements and Bagua, and the unity of man and nature are consistent with Taoist philosophy. The first thing to study is Tao, and then the practice of medicine is based on Tao.  The basic characteristics of Western medicine are fundamentally different from the human-based practice of Western medicine. "Although these remarks have been occasionally mentioned by predecessors, they have never been as in-depth and detailed as what Mo Fei said.  It is very difficult to explain clearly the characteristics of traditional Chinese medicine that "follows the path to practice". It is not easy to explain clearly in general terms, and the theory of traditional Chinese medicine is inherently subtle, which makes it even more difficult to understand.  On this point, Mo Fei said with a smile: ¡°Let¡¯s take the topic of how meridians were discovered by the ancient Chinese to illustrate. The general view is that the meridians and acupuncture points were gradually formed by the working people of our country through long-term medical practice and continuous observation and summary.  I think it is a bit far-fetched and loses its origin. The Taoist ancestor Laozi believed that there are two main ways of thinking for people to understand the world, namely external seeking and internal seeking, which are philosophical rationality and sensibility, so why don¡¯t we think that the theory of meridians is possible.  It was discovered by the Taoist doctors in ancient times who practiced the unique inner alchemy method and looked back at the inner scene!" Mr. Zhang Zhongjing smiled and said: "The "Huangdi Neijing" is the earliest existing classic of traditional Chinese medicine.  There is a special discussion and research on meridians, qi and blood. Judging from the age of the book, Xiao Mo¡¯s view seems to be more likely than the official common understanding. When I give lectures to students, many people ask me, how many thousand.  How did the ancients discover the theory of meridians years ago? Nowadays, science and technology are so advanced, but there is no medical device that can embody the meridians of the human body. So how did the ancients form such a systematic and subtle theory? From this, for a long time?  This view is particularly weak in the medical practice.¡± All the Chinese medicine practitioners present laughed when they heard Mr. Zhang¡¯s words. In fact, they had also been questioned like this by students. After Mr. Zhang mentioned it,  It inexplicably made all the senior experts in traditional Chinese medicine laugh, and it was difficult not to laugh.  (To be continued)
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