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Nan Jing: The Classic of Difficult Issues PDF

649 Pages·2016·71.08 MB·English
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The Chinese Medical Classics Nan Jing The Classic of Difficult Issues With commentaries by Chinese and Japanese authors from the Third through the Twentieth century The Complete Chinese Text with an Annotated Translation by Paul U. Unschuld University of California Press Nan Jing The Chinese Medical Classics Nan Jing The Classic of Difficult Issues With commentaries by Chinese and Japanese authors from the Third through the Twentieth century The Complete Chinese Text with an Annotated Translation by Paul U. Unschuld University of California Press University of California Press, one of the most distinguished university presses in the United States, enriches lives around the world by advancing scholarship in the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. Its activities are supported by the UC Press Foundation and by philanthropic contributions from individuals and institutions. For more information, visit www.ucpress.edu. University of California Press Oakland, California © 2016 by The Regents of the University of California Library of Congress Control Number: 2016939466 Manufactured in the United States of America 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 CONTENTS Part I. Prolegomena / 1 Introductory Remarks / 1 Historical Significance of the Nan jing / 6 The Contents of the Nan jing / 10 The Origin of the Nan jing / 21 The Reception of the Nan jing in Later Centuries / 27 Part II Text, Translation, Commentaries, and Notes / 47 Preliminary Note / 47 Chapter One The Movement in the Vessels and Its Diagnostic Significance / 49 The First Difficult Issue / 49 The Second Difficult Issue / 63 The Third Difficult Issue / 71 The Fourth Difficult Issue / 80 The Fifth Difficult Issue / 91 The Sixth Difficult Issue / 96 The Seventh Difficult Issue / 100 The Eighth Difficult Issue / 107 The Ninth Difficult Issue / 115 The Tenth Difficult Issue / 121 The Eleventh Difficult Issue / 130 vi Contents The Twelfth Difficult Issue / 135 The Thirteenth Difficult Issue / 141 The Fourteenth Difficult Issue / 151 The Fifteenth Difficult Issue / 168 The Sixteenth Difficult Issue / 184 The Seventeenth Difficult Issue / 200 The Eighteenth Difficult Issue / 205 The Nineteenth Difficult Issue / 218 The Twentieth Difficult Issue / 226 The Twenty-First Difficult Issue / 230 The Twenty-Second Difficult Issue / 235 Chapter Two The Conduits and the Network vessels / 240 The Twenty-Third Difficult Issue / 240 The Twenty-Fourth Difficult Issue / 253 The Twenty-Fifth Difficult Issue / 262 The Twenty-Sixth Difficult Issue / 268 The Twenty-Seventh Difficult Issue / 272 The Twenty-Eighth Difficult Issue / 276 The Twenty-Ninth Difficult Issue / 281 Chapter Three The Long-Term Depots and the Short-Term Repositories / 286 The Thirtieth Difficult Issue / 286 The Thirty-First Difficult Issue / 291 The Thirty-Second Difficult Issue / 300 The Thirty-Third Difficult Issue / 302 The Thirty-Fourth Difficult Issue / 307 The Thirty-Fifth Difficult Issue / 313 The Thirty-Sixth Difficult Issue / 320 The Thirty-Seventh Difficult Issue / 324 The Thirty-Eighth Difficult Issue / 331 The Thirty-Ninth Difficult Issue / 335 The Fortieth Difficult Issue / 339 The Forty-First Difficult Issue / 345 The Forty-Second Difficult Issue / 349 Contents vii The Forty-Third Difficult Issue / 357 The Forty-Fourth Difficult Issue / 359 The Forty-Fifth Difficult Issue / 363 The Forty-Sixth Difficult Issue / 370 The Forty-Seventh Difficult Issue / 374 Chapter Four On Diseases / 377 The Forty-Eighth Difficult Issue / 377 The Forty-Ninth Difficult Issue / 383 The Fiftieth Difficult Issue / 398 The Fifty-First Difficult Issue / 403 The Fifty-Second Difficult Issue / 406 The Fifty-Third Difficult Issue / 408 The Fifty-Fourth Difficult Issue / 414 The Fifty-Fifth Difficult Issue / 417 The Fifty-Sixth Difficult Issue / 420 The Fifty-Seventh Difficult Issue / 429 The Fifty-Eighth Difficult Issue / 433 The Fifty-Ninth Difficult Issue / 444 The Sixtieth Difficult Issue / 448 The Sixty-First Difficult Issue / 454 Chapter Five Transportation Holes / 459 The Sixty-Second Difficult Issue / 459 The Sixty-Third Difficult Issue / 464 The Sixty-Fourth Difficult Issue / 467 The Sixty-Fifth Difficult Issue / 471 The Sixty-Sixth Difficult Issue / 473 The Sixty-Seventh Difficult Issue / 482 The Sixty-Eighth Difficult Issue / 487 viii Contents Chapter Six Needling Patterns / 492 The Sixty-Ninth Difficult Issue / 492 The Seventieth Difficult Issue / 497 The Seventy-First Difficult Issue / 502 The Seventy-Second Difficult Issue / 505 The Seventy-Third Difficult Issue / 510 The Seventy-Fourth Difficult Issue / 514 The Seventy-Fifth Difficult Issue / 521 The Seventy-Sixth Difficult Issue / 529 The Seventy-Seventh Difficult Issue / 532 The Seventy-Eighth Difficult Issue / 536 The Seventy-Ninth Difficult Issue / 541 The Eightieth Difficult Issue / 545 The Eighty-First Difficult Issue / 547 Appendices / 551 Appendix A Survey of Commentated Nan jing Editions by Chinese Authors from the Third through Twentieth Century / 553 Appendix B Chinese Twentieth-Century Essays on the Nan jing / 563 Appendix C Commentated Nan jing Editions by Japanese Authors in the Takeda and Fujikawa Libraries, as well as Lost Titles of Past Centuries / 567 Appendix D Zhang Zhixian’s Graphs Depicting the Eighty-One Difficult Issues (1510) / 573 Glossary of Technical Terms in the Nan Jing / 595 Index to Prolegomena, Commentaries, and Notes / 619 Comparative Studies of Health Systems and Medical Care / 639 PART I. PROLEGOMENA Introductory Remarks The Nan jing (cid:19731)(cid:13251) is an ancient Chinese medical classic; it was compiled, proba- bly, at some time during the first or second century CE. For the past eight or nine centuries, the Nan jing has been overshadowed by the reputation and authority of the “original” classic, the Huang Di nei jing (cid:21747)(cid:5197)(cid:1973)(cid:13251) (“The Yellow Thearch’s Inner Classic”) with its two largely different segments, the Huang Di nei jing Su wen (or Su wen (cid:13136)(cid:2943)) and the Huang Di nei jing Ling shu (or Ling shu (cid:19832)(cid:8270)). The present edition of the Nan jing combines a translation of its textus receptus and of selected commentaries by twenty Chinese and Japanese authors of the past seventeen cen- turies with an interpretation by this author. One of its goals is to demonstrate that the Nan jing should once again (as was the case until early the second millennium) be regarded as a significant and innovative work that marks the apex, and also the conclusion, of the developmental phase of the conceptual system known as the medicine of systematic correspondence. The contents of the Nei jing texts, in contrast, should be appreciated as a collec- tion of extremely valuable transitory stages in this developmental phase—valuable because they reflect various historical steps as well as a wide range of diverging (and even contradictory) theoretical arguments.1 These arguments characterize the genesis of a system of therapeutic ideas and practices which has a formative period that can be traced from its first extant documented sources (the so-called Ma wang dui texts of about the late third century BCE) to the heterogeneous contents of the 1 For further details on the heterogeneous nature of the Huang Di nei jing texts, and a preliminary analysis of historical developments reflected in these texts, see Paul U. Un- schuld, Huang Di Nei Jing Su Wen: Nature, Knowledge, Imagery in an Ancient Chinese Medical Text. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2006 (second printing). 1

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This newly revised and updated edition of Paul U. Unschuld’s original 1986 groundbreaking translation reflects the latest philological, methodological, and sinological standards of the past thirty years. TheNan Jingwas compiled in China during the first century C.E., marking both an apex and a con
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