Current location - Music Encyclopedia - Today in History - Brief introduction of su Wen
Brief introduction of su Wen
Su Wen in Huangdi Neijing, referred to as Su Wen for short, is one of the four classics of Chinese medicine. Su Wen and Ling Shu are both parts of Huangdi Neijing. Huangdi Neijing is the earliest and most important medical work of Chinese medicine, and it is the basis of the theoretical system of Chinese medicine.

"Vegetarian, this also; Questioner, the Yellow Emperor asked Zeebe. " Qi Bo and others are ancient medical scientists. Su Wen is a comprehensive medical document written by the Yellow Emperor and ancient medical experts in the form of questions and answers. Su Wen was not written by one person, but it was initially formed at least in the era of the Yellow Emperor. It was written in the middle and late Western Han Dynasty (9/kloc-0 BC/to the first 32 years).

Su Wen was originally nine volumes, but its ancient books have long been lost. Later, it was revised by Bing Wang in the Tang Dynasty and adapted into 24 volumes with 865,438+0 articles, and it was named "Su Wen in Huangdi Neijing". Later, Lin Bu collated it in Song Dynasty, and Sun Zhao collated it, calling it "Re-spreading Su Jingwen in Huang Zhu".

Su Wen discusses the relationship between intake, viscera, meridians, etiology and pathogenesis, treatment principles, drugs and health preservation and disease prevention with the view of harmony between man and nature, yin and yang theory, five elements theory and research on viscera and meridians as the main line. It combines medical principles, medical theories and prescriptions, and retains five colors, pulse conditions and meridians.

As one of the four classics of Chinese medicine, Su Wen has a lofty position in the heart of Chinese medicine for thousands of years, which is irreplaceable by all medical books in later generations. It is the source of Chinese medicine, the bridge that all medical students can't bypass and the road to success of Chinese medicine. There are no famous doctors in past dynasties who did not follow the purpose of Neijing and did not study it seriously. When Zhang Zhongjing wrote Treatise on Febrile Diseases and Sudden Death, he wrote Su Wen. Liu, Zhang, Zhang Jiejia and others are familiar with each other. Xu Ling's Biography of Cases thinks that this book "knows the source of the disease, and the treatment is ever-changing, which is beyond its scope"; Wang Mengying's "Wen Wen Jingwei" is a masterpiece of typhoid fever, which combines typhoid fever and articles on febrile diseases in later generations. All the masterpieces of traditional Chinese medicine are not written on the basis of Neijing.

Su Wen is recognized as the source of traditional Chinese medicine in the field of traditional Chinese medicine. Anyone who studies medicine must teach, some are taught by teachers, and some are taught by themselves. Anyone who teaches himself to become a generation of famous artists is proficient in Neijing. The study of Neijing originated from Huangdi and his ministers and doctors, such as Qi Bo and Lei Gong, so it was named Huangdi Neijing. Because of its high academic value, it is irreplaceable. Medical students will never improve their medical skills if they don't learn. Therefore, all the people who enter the door of TCM are Huang Qi's disciples. Therefore, I don't study Neijing, and I'm not Chinese medicine. What is Chinese medicine? This is also called.

Neijing pioneered the anatomy of traditional Chinese medicine, but later generations didn't know that there was no anatomy in traditional Chinese medicine, so anatomy began with Wang Qingren's Yi Lin Wu. In fact, Huangdi medicine (that is, the study of Neijing) is very simple, that is, simple diagnosis plus argument: diagnosis, anatomy; Re-diagnose, re-dissect, and then record the experimental data, so that when the same result is diagnosed in the future, it will be accurate. Later generations don't know, thinking that Huangdi's medicine is too advanced actually complicates simple problems. There are some so-called famous artists among them.

If you want to learn Chinese medicine, you must recite Chinese. Su Wen collects common diseases in one book, and clinical evidence must be based on Neijing. At this time, you can get it easily. Don't mess around without your purpose. Neijing is the experience of doctors before the pre-Qin period, but later generations don't read it, thinking that Neijing only talks about yin and yang and five elements, and there is no philosophy. In fact, the whole book is clinical experience, in fact, it is the most informative clinical experimental data of traditional Chinese medicine. If future generations can have this semi-rigorous attitude, Chinese medicine will surely flourish!

"Reading classics and doing clinical work" is the unanimous view of many old Chinese medicine practitioners. Scholars who look to the future, don't take the old road of predecessors' destruction, seriously study Su Wen and other classics, and be diligent in clinic, then celebrities can be expected and Chinese medicine can flourish!