Unschuld | What is Medicine? - Western and Eastern Approaches  to Healing | Buch | 978-0-520-25766-5 | www.sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 256 Seiten, Trade Paperback, Format (B × H): 151 mm x 231 mm, Gewicht: 353 g

Unschuld

What is Medicine? - Western and Eastern Approaches to Healing


1. Auflage 2009
ISBN: 978-0-520-25766-5
Verlag: University of California Press

Buch, Englisch, 256 Seiten, Trade Paperback, Format (B × H): 151 mm x 231 mm, Gewicht: 353 g

ISBN: 978-0-520-25766-5
Verlag: University of California Press


What Is Medicine? Western and Eastern Approaches to Healing is the first comparative history of two millennia of Western and Chinese medicine from their beginnings in the centuries BCE through present advances in sciences like molecular biology and in Western adaptations of traditional Chinese medicine. In his revolutionary interpretation of the basic forces that undergird shifts in medical theory, Paul U. Unschuld relates the history of medicine in both Europe and China to changes in politics, economics, and other contextual factors. Drawing on his own extended research of Chinese primary sources as well as his and others' scholarship in European medical history, Unschuld argues against any claims of “truth” in former and current, Eastern and Western models of physiology and pathology. What Is Medicine? makes an eloquent and timely contribution to discussions on health care policies while illuminating the nature of cognitive dynamics in medicine, and it stimulates fresh debate on the essence and interpretation of reality in medicine's attempts to manage the human organism.

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Weitere Infos & Material


Preface

1 Life = Body Plus X 1
2 Medicine, or Novelty Appeal

3 Why Laws of Nature?

4 Longing for Order

5 Ethics and Legality

6 Why Here? Why Now?

7 Thales’ Trite Observation

8 Polis, Law, and Self-determination

9 The Individual and the Whole

10 Nonmedical Healing

11 Mawangdui: Early Healing in China

12 Humans Are Biologically Identical across Cultures.
So Why Not Medicine?

13 The Yellow Thearch’s Body Image

14 The Birth of Chinese Medicine

15 The Division of the Elite

16 A View to the Visible, and Opinions on the Invisible

17 State Concept and Body Image

18 Farewell to Demons and Spirits

19 New Pathogens, and Morality

20 Medicine without Pharmaceutics

21 Pharmaceutics without Medicine

22 Puzzling Parallels

23 The Beginning of Medicine in Greece

24 The End of Monarchy

25 Troublemakers and Ostracism

26 I See Something You Don’t See

27 Powers of Self-healing: Self-evident?

28 Confucians’ Fear of Chaos

29 Medicine: Expression of the General State of Mind

30 Dynamic Ideas and Faded Model Images

31 The Hour of the Dissectors

32 Manifold Experiences of the World

33 Greek Medicine and Roman Incomprehension

34 Illness as Stasis

35 Head and Limbs

36 The Rediscovery of Wholeness

37 To Move the Body to a Statement

38 Galen of Pergamon: Collector in All Worlds

39 Europe’s Ancient Pharmacology

40 The Wheel of Progress Turns No More

41 Constancy and Discontinuity of Structures

42 Arabian Interlude

43 The Tang Era: Cultural Diversity, Conceptual Vacuum

44 Changes in the Song Era

45 The Authority of Distant Antiquity

46 Zhang Ji’s Belated Honors

47 Chinese Pharmacology

48 The Diagnosis Game

49 The Physician as the Pharmacist’s Employee

50 Relighting the Torch of European Antiquity

51 The Primacy of the Practical

52 The Variety of Therapeutics

53 Which Model Image for a New Medicine?

54 The Real Heritage of Antiquity

55 Galenism as Trade in Antiques

UC-Unschuld-1pps.indd 10 3/17/29 12:50:21 PM
56 Integration and Reductionism in the Song Dynasty

57 The New Freedom to Expand Knowledge

58 Healing the State, Healing the Organism

59 Trapped in the Cage of Tradition

60 Xu Dachun, Giovanni Morgagni, and Intra-abdominal Abscesses

61 Acupuncturists, Barbers, and Masseurs

62 No Scientific Revolution in Medicine

63 The Discovery of New Worlds

64 Paracelsus: A Tumultuous Mind with an Overview

65 Durable and Fragile Cage Bars

66 The Most Beautiful Antiques and the Most Modern Images
in One Room

67 Harvey and the Magna Carta

68 A Cartesian Case for Circulation

69 Long Live the Periphery!

70 Out of the Waiting Shelter, into the Jail Cell

71 Sensations that Pull into the Lower Parts of the Body

72 Homeopathy Is Not Medicine

73 “God with Us” on the Belt Buckle

74 Medicine Independent of Theology

75 Virchow: The Man of Death as the Interpreter of Life

76 Robert Koch: Pure Science?

77 Wash Your Hands, Keep the Germs Away

78 AIDS: The Disease that Fits

79 China in the Nineteenth Century: A New Cage Opens Up

80 Two Basic Ideas of Medicine

81 Value-free Biology and Cultural Interpretation

82 A Transit Visa and a Promise

83 Scorn, Mockery, and Invectives for Chinese Medicine

84 Traditional Medicine in the PRC: Faith in Science

85 The Arabs of the Twentieth Century, or Crowding in the Playpen

86 When the Light Comes from Behind

87 In the Beginning Was the Word

88 Out of Touch with Nature

89 Theology without Theos

90 Everything Will Be Fine

91 Left Alone in the Computer Tomograph

92 Healing and the Energy Crisis

93 TCM: Western Fears, Chinese Set Pieces

94 Harmony, Not War

95 The Loss of the Center

96 Contented Customers in a Supermarket of Possibilities

97 The More Things Change

98 One World, or Tinkering with Building Blocks

99 A Vision of Unity over All Diversity

Afterword

Notes

Index


Paul U. Unschuld is Professor and Director of the Horst-Goertz Institute for the Theory, History, and Ethics of Chinese Life Sciences, Charité Medical University-Berlin. He is the author of numerous works on European medical history and Chinese medical history including Medicine in China: A History of Pharmaceutics and Huang Di Nei Jing Wen: Nature, Knowledge, Imagery in and Ancient Chinese Medical Text, both from UC Press. Karen Reimers, MD is a graduate of McGill University and the Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich.



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