What is medicine? : Western and Eastern approaches to healing
Record details
- ISBN: 9780520257658
- ISBN: 0520257650
- ISBN: 9780520257665
- ISBN: 0520257669
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Physical Description:
print
xiv, 236 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm - Publisher: Berkeley : University of California Press, ©2009.
Content descriptions
Bibliography, etc. Note: | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Formatted Contents Note: | 1. Life = Body Plus X -- 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. 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. Yellow Thearch's Body Image -- 14. Birth of Chinese Medicine -- 15. Division of the Elite -- 16. 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. Beginning of Medicine in Greece -- 24. 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. 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. 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. Wheel of Progress Turns No More -- 41. Constancy and Discontinuity of Structures -- 42. Arabian Interlude -- 43. Tang Era: Cultural Diversity, Conceptual Vacuum -- 44. Changes in the Song Era -- 45. Authority of Distant Antiquity -- 46. Zhang Ji's Belated Honors -- 47. Chinese Pharmacology -- 48. Diagnosis Game -- 49. Physician as the Pharmacist's Employee -- 50. Relighting the Torch of European Antiquity -- 51. Primacy of the Practical -- 52. Variety of Therapeutics -- 53. Which Model Image for a New Medicine? -- 54. Real Heritage of Antiquity -- 55. Galenism as Trade in Antiques -- 56. Integration and Reductionism in the Song Dynasty -- 57. 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. Discovery of New Worlds -- 64. Paracelsus: A Tumultuous Mind with an Overview -- 65. Durable and Fragile Cage Bars -- 66. Most Beautiful Antiques and the Most Modern Images in One Room -- 67. Harvey and the Magna Carta -- 68. 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. Transit Visa and a Promise -- 83. Scorn, Mockery, and Invectives for Chinese Medicine -- 84. Traditional Medicine in the PRC: Faith in Science -- 85. 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. Loss of the Center -- 96. Contented Customers in a Supermarket of Possibilities -- 97. More Things Change -- 98. One World, or Tinkering with Building Blocks -- 99. Vision of Unity over All Diversity. |
Language Note: | Translated from the German. |
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Medicine Philosophy History Medicine, Oriental Philosophy History Philosophy, Medical Cross-Cultural Comparison Medicine, East Asian Traditional |
Available copies
- 1 of 1 copy available at Kirtland Community College.
Holds
- 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kirtland Community College Library | R 723 .U57 2009 | 30775305503493 | General Collection | Available | - |
Electronic resources
What Is Medicine? : Western and Eastern Approaches to Healing
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Summary
What Is Medicine? : Western and Eastern Approaches to Healing
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.