1,722,300 research outputs found
Drug Terms in DaoBudMed6D
Dataset for Stanley-Baker, Michael, and William Eng Keat Chong. "Visualising Knowledge Distribution in Early Chinese texts." Paper presented at the 2019 Pacific Neighborhood Consortium Annual Conference and Joint Meetings (PNC), IEEE, Singapore, 2019
Chinese Drug Term List, 2grams and higher.
List of traditional Chinese drug terms with two or more characters, for use in context discovery of materia medica in historical and modern sources. Contributions to this list were kindly made by Mikkael Ikkivesi, Chen Ming 陳明, who provided extensive term lists, and Catherine Despeux, who allowed me to use the index from Médecine, religion et société dans la Chine médiévale
Mapping Drugs in Han Dynasty Excavated Texts
Correlation of the drug names appearing in four Han Dynasty excavated text with the Historical GIS data for those drugs, as geo-located in the fifth-cenutry 本草經集注.
These data forms the back bone for maps published in the article "Mapping the Bencao" in Asian Medicine, 2023
as well as for the interactive Tableau map, titled "Mapping Drugs in Han Dynasty Excavated Texts"
https://public.tableau.com/app/profile/dr.michael.stanley.baker/viz/MappingDrugsinHanDynastyExcavatedTexts/Terrai
Comprehensive Index to the Daoist Canon
The most comprehensive index of the Kanripo Daoist texts available. This includes dates, attributions, DZ 道藏 numbers, Daozang jiyao 道藏集要 parallel editions, as well as a total index of all the subsections within all the scriptures divided according to the original structure of the Zhengtong DZ 正統道藏. Compiled into a single file.
All the *.txt files for the Kanripo Daoist texts can be downloaded from GitHub created by Chris Wittern as part of the Kanseki Repository 漢籍リポジト
MEDICAL HUMANITIES LEARNING OUTCOMES / OBJECTIVES: Institutions and Consulted Sources
List of Sources and Institutions consulted for background research during development of Medical Humanities Learning Outcomes. This list is referred to in the paper "Using the Humanities to teach Medicine"
This version updates the lis
葛仙翁肘後備急方 Fulltext Database
DocuXML Database of 葛仙翁肘後備急方, compiled from the Kanripo 正統道藏 edition, here: http://www.kanripo.org/text/KR5g0115/
The Kanripo files were first marked up in MARKUS for drug terms, disease names and related vocabulary by Chang Chao-jan and Wu Ruei-Ming, and uploaded in 2018. These markups were then revised by Xu Duoduo 許多多 and Stanley-Baker, and compiled into the DocuSky database. These can be found here:
https://doi.org/10.21979/N9/BHWDZ
Clarke Hudson's Complete Index of Daoist Texts
Title Index to multiple collections of Daoist texts, including the following:
莊林續道藏,
中華道藏,
中國道觀志叢刊,
正統道藏,
道教五派丹法精選,
道教文獻,
藏外道書,
三洞拾遺(206種),
廣成儀制,
道藏輯要 角集 (1),
道藏精華,
道藏精華錄,
敦煌道藏,
道書一貫,
道書十二种,
道書全集
Qi
Paper from Conference Proceedings.
Attempts to describe qi in English-language literature have inevitably been thin, focussing primarily on the ways in which it speaks to perceived mind-body dualism in Anglophone culture. The following discussion touches upon the broad diversity of epistemes in which qi has been entangled, and a few ways in which it has acted as a touch-stone for comparing Chinese culture with Western modernity. It then considers three different ways for approaching qi as a topic-rather than attempting to define qi itself as a critical term, or attempting to define it, I experiment with three different modes of reading about and thinking with qi. Beginning with palaeography, I introduce an uncommon narrative about qi and fire. I then discuss genealogical/period-based approach versus one of epistemological comparison. Finally, the paper takes a departure from textual based studies to consider an informal discussion of the constraints of individualist notions of subject formation, and how qi plays an important role in informing intersubjectivity, mourning rites and social continuity. The paper then concludes by suggesting two terms as useful for thinking about qi: coherence, and consubstantiality
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