by Greg Bantick | Aug 7, 2012 | Traditional Medicine
Through observation of the world the early Chinese drew analogies between natural occurrences and processes in the body. They began to articulate a system of medicine based on these observations. The Huang Di Nei Jing – literally, Huang Di’s Internal Classic, is...
by Greg Bantick | Jun 21, 2012 | Traditional Medicine
A physician becomes perfect in the waves of change. Adherence to rigid principles will only create stagnation. Every wanderer on the path of medicine necessarily looks to the laws of nature expounded by the masters of old, but when the moment of action arrives, s/he...
by Greg Bantick | Jun 21, 2012 | Traditional Medicine
Medicine is a combination of fixed principles and their flexible usage that makes them come alive in the magic of the moment. The former transmits the truth of the ages, while the latter follows the subtle dynamics of time. Both of them need to be adhered to. Sun...
by Greg Bantick | Jun 21, 2012 | Traditional Medicine
Medicine is a combination of fixed principles and their flexible usage that makes them come alive in the magic of the moment. The former transmits the truth of the ages, while the latter follows the subtle dynamics of time. Both of them need to be adhered to. Sun...
by Greg Bantick | Jun 21, 2012 | Traditional Medicine
A physician becomes perfect in the waves of change. Adherence to rigid principles will only create stagnation. Every wanderer on the path of medicine necessarily looks to the laws of nature expounded by the masters of old, but when the moment of action arrives, s/he...
by Greg Bantick | Jun 21, 2012 | Traditional Medicine
“To embody the totality of the Way … is the way of the scholar. To use an aspect of the Way so that the world may escape the horrors of disease and wasteful early death … is the way of the physician.”Wu Cheng 吳城,13th century Chinese philosopher (trans....