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Myth and Meaning in Chinese Medicine

by Lonny Jarrett
All models of medicine are based on world views which reflect the underlying beliefs and assumptions about life inherent in the culture in which they are formulated. The ways of knowing in ancient China focused on understanding the movements of Dao as they are represented externally in the universe and internally in human beings. The acupuncture meridians and points reflect the way in which the Chinese saw the macrocosm of the universe as it is mapped onto the microcosm of the body. This map guides us to the relative balance of the functional relationships which maintain the integrity of the human body/mind/spirit. The Yijing may be considered a tool which guides our intuition to an understanding of the Dao’s implicit movement in the world. Similarly, a knowledge of the imagery of the acupuncture points gives us access to the ways in which the Dao is striving to express itself through each individual and the ways in which that effort is blocked, resulting in imbalance and ill health.
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| Stephen Birch: Keiraku Chiryo - Japanese Meridian Therapy 24-26 May 2013 Keiraku Chiryo or Meridian Therapy, is a movement to "return to the classics" through modern clinical practice. The movement started in Japan in the 1920s reaching maturity by the early 1940s. Spring and Autumn Institute Schleiz Thuringen, 07907 Germany tel: 0049 3663 42 09 832 fax: 0049 3663 42 09 833 email: info@spring-and-autumn.de web: www.spring-and-autumn.de |

