They control the whole system of Yi-ology, and when they treat people, they also take the Book of Changes as the guiding ideology of treatment and substitute it into the framework of traditional Chinese medicine. Therefore, early Chinese medicine was based on Yi-ology, guided by Yin and Yang, and included the guiding ideology of Yi-ology from clinical diagnosis, prescription, prescription and meridian tropism. Yi Xue and Yin can be said to be the core theory of traditional Chinese medicine.
When it comes to the core theory, we have to mention Zhang Zhongjing of the Han Dynasty. In Treatise on Febrile Diseases, one * * earns 1 12 prescription, and the drugs used in it are drugs that people often use in their lives. The prescription is simple, but the curative effect is remarkable, and there are few valuable drugs. This is what we call "simple, convenient and cheap"
Because jujube can tonify the middle energizer, regulate the spleen and stomach, and ginger can perspire, stop vomiting and drive away cold, which is the biggest feature of these two drugs, and then see if these two drugs have toxic and side effects. I have never heard of anyone who is allergic to jujube ginger in my life for so many years, and the effect is outstanding and the curative effect is still very stable;
I read a report in Japan in the early days that the Japanese were very fond of the ancient culture of China, especially the subject of Chinese medicine, and began to study China deeply and apply it to clinic. Japanese people are pragmatic in this respect, and their research level and clinical application in some aspects of Chinese medicine are better than those in China, but there is still a gap in some aspects. In my own opinion, foreign culture is hard to be absorbed by our own nation, and its essence is hard to come by. Then say a few words.
In the Japanese research work Treatise on Febrile Diseases, a question was raised. You said that Zhang Zhongjing, as the head of traditional Chinese medicine in China, was called a medical sage, but why was he so lax in clinical application? Traditional Chinese medicine prescriptions pay attention to scientific attitude, and prescriptions pay attention to rational methods and prescriptions. What kind of medicine does it do? The following is very principled. Zhang Zhongjing lived up to his reputation, but when I studied the dose that day, I had great doubts. Grams can be converted, but there are several kinds of medicines such as ginger and jujube, and the Japanese are confused. Ginger slices include ginger, dried ginger and galangal. Where is it? Even regardless of the variety, how thick ginger slices do you want? Except jujube, there is no mention of varieties, not to mention dried jujube and fresh jujube. This can be found more than twice in different doses, and the Japanese are puzzled to see this.
After reading this report, I feel that it is really not easy to get coke from other people's homes. Why don't the Japanese understand this? In fact, look at the measurement mentioned in Zhang Zhongjing's Treatise on Febrile Diseases. There are slices, slices and pinches. Do you think these doses are accurate? Very accurate! Because Zhang Zhongjing's first application in the prescription was the traditional Yi-ology in China, that is, surgical mathematics, which was completely integrated into our Chinese medicine. Look at three slices of ginger. Take our cooking as an example, putting three slices of ginger is almost enough. Because this ginger has no toxic side effects, you can't go anywhere else. Zhang Zhongjing only wants this-three numbers, why three? If you want to understand this,
In innate gossip, there are three pairs of separation (dry represents heaven, Kun represents earth, Xun (xùn) represents wind, earthquake represents thunder, ridge represents water, separation represents fire, gen (gèn) represents mountain, and exchange represents ze), and the body, zang-fu organs and heart of the person who deviates from divination are the most corresponding. This correspondence was not decided by the ancients at will. The content here is not what I can explain to you in this article. Everything in the world belongs to gossip and can be expressed. In the eight diagrams, deviation from divination corresponds to the heart, and the congenital number of deviation belongs to three. Therefore, Zhang Zhongjing used three slices of ginger to warm people's hearts and inspire them. Therefore, with three tablets, the benefits of ginger can be immediately realized. Let me give you a simple example, in our theory of traditional Chinese medicine.
What is meridian tropism? We have the twelve meridians in our bodies, and our internal organs are hidden behind our backs, so you see, all kinds of traditional Chinese medicines we mentioned will refer to the meridian tropism, and some of them belong to the liver and kidney. Some drugs can belong to one viscera, and some can belong to two or even three viscera; The ancients thought that everything in the world was closely related, nothing happened, nothing happened.
Therefore, the number of ginger and jujube mentioned by Zhang Zhongjing in Treatise on Febrile Diseases is not for you to count grams, but for your meridian tropism. Of the seven dates, seven should be rooted, the root refers to the stomach, and the nature is warm and nourishing the stomach, so seven must be used; Therefore, the amount of jujube and ginger should be the operation of viscera, and the number of operations is the same;
Why did Zhang Jingyue in the Ming Dynasty say this sentence in "The Complete Book of the Pure Moon"-people who don't learn Yi-ology are not too much, so it is said that the top ten famous doctors in China all learn Yi-ology without exception, and they can master and apply it well in the framework of Yi-ology system, so as to give full play to the role of Chinese medicine! It is precisely the Japanese who only studied the China side of TCM, instead of studying China's Yi-ology and combining it, so no matter how they study and study, they can't understand it.