Chapter 139: Flickering Success
In a blink of an eye, the old man took something like a gust of wind and put it in front of Wang Da Hammer, staring at Wang Da Hammer expectantly, hoping to see the ancient medical techniques written by Wang Da Hammer immediately.
Everyone in this world has their own weaknesses, and this Sun Simiao's weakness is probably that he is a good doctor and becomes an idiot, so when it comes to things related to medicine, he is more interested than anything else.
"Write, write!"
Seeing that Wang Dazhui was slow to move his pen, Sun Simiao urged.
"I said Old Man Sun, how can you write a little benefactor like this? Can't you just be quiet and let people think about it and then write it? Master Xuankong, the great monk on the side, spoke for Wang Dazhu.
Old man Sun was obedient like a child at this time, smiled wryly, and sat down on the side.
Wang Dazhui's strategy was a temporary idea, so he didn't know what he should write for a while, so as to really interest the great doctor and trick him down the mountain.
There is difficulty in finding a system.
After all, we are systematic people.
Wang Dazhui immediately contacted his own system in his consciousness: "Lord of the system, Lord of the system, help the rivers and lakes!" ”
[System: Say it!] What's the deal with this system? 】
"Isn't this completing the task you said, I want to use the medical book that Old Man Sun is interested in as bait, I don't know if you have a suitable one?"
[System: This is no problem, you wait a while, I'll search.] 】
Wang Dazhui had to wait, and after a while.
[System: I found it, I have a few copies here, do you want to choose one?] 】
"Okay, tell me what's there?" Wang Dazhui didn't expect the system to search for several copies so quickly.
[System: "The Yellow Emperor's Neijing", "Jin Kui Yaolu", "Shennong's Materia Medica", "Treatise on Typhoid Fever and Miscellaneous Diseases", "Compendium of Materia Medica", "Yizong Jinjian". 】
Wang Dazhui said with a wry smile: "System god, can you help me introduce it a little, I'm easy to choose, isn't it?" ”
[System: Of course, no problem, this system is willing to provide intimate services for the host. 】
Wang Dazhui thought that it would be good to be so intimate all the time.
[System: "The Yellow Emperor's Neijing" is a comprehensive medical book, which established the "Yin and Yang Five Elements Theory", "Pulse Theory", "Tibetan Elephant Theory", "Meridian Theory", "Etiology Theory", "Pathogenesis Theory", "Symptoms", "Diagnosis Method", "Treatise" and "Health Maintenance", "Luck" and other theories in traditional Chinese medicine.
From a holistic point of view, medicine presents a natural, biological, psychological, and social "holistic medical model". Its basic material comes from the long-term observation of life phenomena by the ancient Chinese, a large number of clinical practices, and simple anatomical knowledge.
"The Book of Difficulty", formerly known as "The Yellow Emperor's Eighty-one Difficult Classics", also known as "Eighty-one Difficulties", is the earliest existing classic work of traditional Chinese medicine. There have always been different opinions about the author of the "Book of Difficulties" and the age of its writing, and it is generally believed that it was written no later than the Eastern Han Dynasty, and the content may have a certain relationship with the Qin Yue people (Bian Que). The word "difficult" in the "Book of Difficulties" has the meaning of "asking difficult" or "difficult". The book has a total of 81 difficulties, using the method of questions and answers, to discuss and discuss some theoretical issues of traditional Chinese medicine, including pulse diagnosis, meridians, viscera, yin and yang, etiology, pathogenesis, camp and health, acupoints, acupuncture, disease syndrome and other aspects.
The Treatise on Typhoid Fever and Miscellaneous Diseases systematically analyzes the causes, symptoms, stages of development and treatment methods of typhoid fever, creatively establishes the principle of syndrome differentiation and treatment of typhoid fever by the "Six Classics Classification", and lays a theoretical foundation for theory, law, prescription and medicine.
"Shennong's Materia Medica", also known as "Materia Medica" or "Benjing", one of the four classics of traditional Chinese medicine, as the earliest existing works of traditional Chinese medicine, originated from Shennong's, passed down by word of mouth from generation to generation, assembled and sorted out into a book in the Eastern Han Dynasty, the book is not a time, the author is not a person, many medical scientists in the Qin and Han dynasties collected, summarized, and sorted out the monographs of the experience and achievements of pharmacology at that time.
It is the first systematic summary of Chinese traditional medicine. Most of the TCM theories and compatibility rules stipulated in it, as well as the principle of "harmony of seven feelings" proposed in it, have played a huge role in thousands of years of drug practice and are the source of the development of TCM pharmacological theory. Before Li Shizhen published the Compendium of Materia Medica, the book had always been regarded as the most authoritative medical book.
"Jin Kui Yaolu" is the miscellaneous part of the "Treatise on Typhoid Fever and Miscellaneous Diseases" written by Zhang Zhongjing, a famous medical scientist in the Eastern Han Dynasty in China, and it is also the earliest existing book on the diagnosis and treatment of miscellaneous diseases in China. The "Golden Kui" is the place where the ancient emperors' hadiths and records are stored, which means that the contents of the book are precious.
The book is divided into three volumes, the first, the middle and the second, with a total of 25 articles, containing more than 60 kinds of diseases and 262 prescriptions. The symptoms of the disease are mainly miscellaneous diseases in internal medicine, and also include surgical, gynecological diseases, emergency death, dietary contraindications, etc. It was praised as the "ancestor of Fangshu" by later generations.
Compendium of Materia Medica, Materia Medica, 52 volumes. Li Shizhen (Dongbi) of the Ming Dynasty wrote from the 31st year of Jiajing (1552) to the 6th year of Wanli (1578). This book adopts the style of "Outline with Outline", so it is named "Outline". It is based on the "Evidence Class Materia Medica" to make changes. The preface (Volumes 1 and 2) is equivalent to a general treatise, describing the essentials of Materia Medica and the theory of medicinal properties. Volume 1 "Materia Medica of the Past Dynasties" introduces 41 major materia medica before the Ming Dynasty. Before the Ming Dynasty, the collection of treatises on the smell of drugs yin and yang, the five flavors should be avoided, the yin and yang of specimens, the ups and downs, the laxatives, the quotation of scriptures, and various drug contraindications, etc., among which the Jin and Yuan dynasties were the majority. Volumes 3~4 are "Principal Drugs for All Diseases", which follows the old example of "General Drugs for All Diseases" in the "Syndrome Materia Medica", and lists the names and main effects of the main drugs based on the pathogen, which is equivalent to a clinical medication manual. Volumes 5~52 are monographs, with 1892 kinds of drugs and 1109 kinds of drawings. The general example is "not divided into three products, but each department; Things follow the analogy, and the eyes follow the outline. Among them, the department is the "outline" and the class is the "item", and it is divided into 16 parts (water, fire, earth, gold and stone, grass, grain, vegetables, fruits, wood, clothing, insects, scales, media, birds, beasts, and people) 60 categories. Each ministry is divided into "from micro to huge" and "from cheap to expensive", which is not only convenient for searching, but also reflects the idea of biological evolution and development. There are 60 groups under the department, and many organisms of the same family and genus are often arranged together in each category. Each drug is "labeled as a compendium and listed as the goal", that is, the following 8 items (i.e., "things") under the name of a drug. Among them, "release name" lists aliases and explains the meaning of naming; "Centralized explanation", introducing drug production, form, harvesting, etc.; "Identification" (or "right and wrong"), which is a collection of theories, distinguishes and corrects drug doubts; "Repair", describing the method of cannon burning; "Smell", "Indications", "Invention", expound the theory of medicinal properties, suggest the key points of medication, and each of the author's personal opinions; "Prescriptions", with the theme of disease, are attached to the relevant prescriptions.
"Yizong Jinjian" - (1742 AD) Qing Dynasty. Wu Qian (Liuji) et al., eds. Ninety volumes. It includes "Revised Commentary on Typhoid Fever", "Revised Commentary on the Essentials of Jinkui", "Deletion and Supplement of Famous Medical Prescriptions", "Four Diagnoses", "Luck", "Typhoid Fever", "Miscellaneous Diseases", "Gynecology", "Pediatric Medicine", "Acne Rash", "Pox", "Surgery", "Acupuncture", "Ophthalmology", "Orthopedics" and other mental tips. Each molecular order has a diagram to explain the theory, which is more concise and easy to learn. 】
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(End of chapter)