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What is the first article in Huangdi Neijing (I)
The first chapter of Huangdi Neijing: ancient naive theory, the first chapter is about the nature of human body.

Human nature is naive. The internal organs themselves have also reached a very harmonious state and pattern.

Chinese medicine uses five elements to express this harmonious pattern. The human body itself has the ability to produce grams. For example, if the kidney is full, you can grow wood. Liver yang rushing up can help the heart fire, wood can make a fire, and fire can make soil. This is the five elements, which are in harmony and balance.

The human body is the most self-sufficient and the most accurate in human organizational structure, and there is nothing smarter than it. It can achieve something by itself in a inaction way.

Extended data:

1, the age of writing

Huangdi Neijing, also known as Neijing, is one of the earliest ancient books in China and the first of the four classics of traditional medicine in China. According to legend, it was made by the Yellow Emperor, hence its name. However, it is generally believed that this book was finally formed in the Western Han Dynasty, and the author was not a single person, but was created by Huang Lao, a doctor in China.

As pointed out in "Huai Nan Zi Xiu Wu Xun", the title of "Yellow Emperor" is intended to trace back to the source and worship the original to illustrate the early birth of China medical culture. It's not a moment's talk, nor is it a single hand.

2. Content

Huangdi Neijing is divided into Su Wen and Ling Shu.

Su Wen focuses on viscera, meridians, etiology, pathogenesis, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment principles and acupuncture.

Lingshu is an inseparable companion of Su Wen, and its contents are basically the same. In addition to discussing the function, etiology and pathogenesis of viscera, it also focuses on meridians and acupoints, acupuncture, acupuncture methods and treatment principles.

Baidu encyclopedia-Huangdi Neijing