 |
|
 |
|
Forgotten Traditions of Ancient Chinese
Medicine
A Chinese View from the Eighteenth Century |
|
Hsu Ta-ch'un, Translated by Paul Unschuld
|
|
It is easy and enjoyable reading and will serve as a frequent
referral source and provide excellent teaching material to the field.
-- Cristina S. de la Torre, M.D.
American
Academy of
Medical
Acupuncture Review
Apart from its valuable contents, the book is also esthetically
pleasing because of its attractive and clear typeface and the juxtaposition
of Hsu's Chinese text and Unschuld's translation on facing pages.
--
Prof. Emeritus Ilza Veith,
Bulletin
of the History of Medicine
Dr. Unschuld's translation of the I hsu Yuan Liu Lun of 1757 written
by Hsu Ta-chun is a text for scholars, for students of Chinese language
and culture, and for clinicians who seek to advance their clinical
skill by understanding Chinese medical thought. But most importantly,
it is a text for anyone who has ever been inspired by the ideal
of a scholar-physician. It is our first chance, and perhaps our
last, to let a superior practitioner speak for himself.
The author, Hsu Ta-chun, was a scholar
and medical doctor who wrote in the eighteenth century immediately
prior to the introduction of Western science and medicine to China.
He influenced the history of medicine because the medicine he championed
was pristine in method and logic. In any period, or any culture,
Hsu would have been a remarkable thinker.
A literate, broadly skilled scholar, he practiced medicine as an
expression of personal and social responsibility. He could both
recognize others for their accomplishments and express a calculated
and literate anger for those who had corrupted the art of medicine.
|
 |
He was a conservative who understood the practical necessities
of patient care, a literati capable of both compassion and indignation.
In the extensive prologue by Dr. Unschuld, we learn that while Chinese
medicine did differ from Western medicine, offering a holistic view
of disease and the human who suffers, Hsu Ta-chun and his eighteenth-
century European contemporaries would not have regarded one another
as strangers. Using examples from Hsu Ta-chun's 100 essays, Dr.
Unschuld shows us how an expert Asian clinician considered and solved
the mysteries of clinical practice.
This is a rare text that is of value for historians, philologists,
and philosophers, while of direct import to clinicians. By speaking
his opinions clearly and reporting on an art with which he was deeply
intimate, Hsu Ta-chun has bequeathed a richly detailed vision of
Chinese medicine at its height.
Publication Date: 1983
Paperback; 236 pages; 6 x 9; $16.95
Appendices; Index
ISBN 0-912111-00-3
Order from our distributor
Redwing Book Company
44 Linden St. Brookline MA 02445
Toll Free: 800 873 3946
Canada: 888 873 3947
Other: 617 738 1235
Fax: 738-4620
P.O. Box 1037
202 Bendix Drive
Taos, New Mexico 87571
505 758 7758
|
 |