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Ted Kaptchuk - The Web That Has No Weaver: Understanding Chinese Medicine

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Ted Kaptchuk The Web That Has No Weaver: Understanding Chinese Medicine
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The Web That Has No Weaveris a classic and comprehensive volume that discusses the theory and practice of Chinese medicine. Kaptchuks book is an invaluable resource in the field and an authoritative guide that helps readers understand both Western and Eastern healing practices. Here in the revised edition is further research into ancient Chinese practices as well as active involvement in cutting-edge scientific research.

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THE WEB THAT HAS NO WEAVER Understanding Chinese Medicine The Web That Has - photo 1

THE WEB
THAT HAS NO
WEAVER

Understanding Chinese Medicine

The Web That Has No Weaver opens the great door of understanding to the profoundness of Chinese medicine.

Peoples Daily, Beijing, China

The Web That Has No Weaver with its manifold merits is a successful introduction to Chinese medicine. We recommend it to our colleagues in China.

Chinese Journal of Integrated Traditional and Chinese
Medicine
, Beijing, China

Ted Kaptchuks book [has] something for practically everyone... Kaptchuk, himself an extraordinary combination of elements, is a thinker whose writing is more accessible than that of Joseph Needham or Manfred Porkert with no less scholarship. There is more here to think about, chew over, ponder or reflect upon than you are liable to find elsewhere.... This may sound like a rave review: it is.

Journal of Traditional Acupuncture

The Web That Has No Weaver is an encyclopedia of how to tell from the Eastern perspective what is wrong.

Larry Dossey, author of Space, Time, and Medicine

Valuable as a compendium of traditional Chinese medical doctrine.

Joseph Needham, author of Science and Civilization in China

The only approximation for authenticity is The Barefoot Doctors Manual, and this will take readers much further.

The Kirkus Reviews

Kaptchuk has become a lyricist for the art of healing. And the more he tells us about traditional Chinese medicine, the more clearly we see the link between philosophy, art, and the physicians craft.

Houston Chronicle

Ted Kaptchuks book was inspirational in the development of my acupuncture practice and gave me a deep understanding of traditional Chinese medicine. This new edition is essential reading for all those who wish to learn about and practice acupuncture. Dr. Kaptchuks understanding of traditional Chinese medicine and the way he is able to capture and express concepts within the text make learning about acupuncture a wonderful and inspiring experience.

Dr. George T. Lewith, Honorary Senior Research Fellow,
Honorary Consultant Physician, School of Medicine,
Respiratory, Cell & Molecular Biology Research Division,
University of Southampton

This revised version of an essential classic on Traditional Chinese Medicine is a gift for all who share an interest in deep understanding of healing. Ted Kaptchuk is a unique figure in complementary medicine. His combination of scholarship, wisdom, and compassion provides a remarkable window into one of the greatest of all healing traditions.

Michael Lerner, President, Commonweal, a California
Nonprofit Corporation, author of Choices in Healing:
Integrating the Best of Conventional and Complementary
Approaches to Cancer

Ted Kaptchuk is without question one of the most innovative thinkers in the area of Traditional Chinese Medicine. This new edition is a brilliant synthesis of traditional and scientific knowledge. It is compulsory reading for anyone with a serious interest in this area.

Professor Edzard Ernst, M.D., Ph.D., Director, Department
of Complementary Medicine, School of Postgraduate
Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Exeter

In the 20th century, modern China rescued its traditional medicine from oblivion at the cost of removing its soul; in the 21st century, Dr. Kaptchuk has put the ancient discussion of soul back into Chinese medicine. This new edition integrates the seemingly opposing paradigms of ancient Chinese medicine and modern biomedicine and interprets the classical Chinese views on spirit in relation to the medical and existential aspirations of modern humankind.

Giovanni Maciocia, Honorary Lecturer, Nanjing College of
Traditional Chinese Medicine and author of The Foundations of
Chinese Medicine

THE WEB
THAT HAS NO
WEAVER

Understanding Chinese Medicine

TED J. KAPTCHUK

2nd Edition

McGraw-Hill

New York Chicago San Francisco Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City
Milan New Delhi San Juan Seoul Singapore Sydney Toronto

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Kaptchuk Ted J 1947 The - photo 2

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Kaptchuk, Ted J., 1947.

The web that has no weaver: understanding Chinese medicine / Ted J. Kaptchuk. 2nd ed.

p. cm.

Includes index.

ISBN 0-8092-2840-8

1. Medicine, Chinese. 2. Medicine, ChinesePhilosophy.

I. Title.

R601.K36 2000

610'.951dc21

9853193

CIP

Dedicated to the memory of Ted Gold, my grandparents,
and relatives who died for the Sanctification of the Name

Copyright 2000 by Ted J. Kaptchuk. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. Except as permitted under the United States Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

19 20 21 22 23 24 25 D0C/D0C 1 9 8 7 6 5 4

ISBN 0-8092-2840-8

Cover design by Monica Baziuk

McGraw-Hill books are available at special quantity discounts to use as premiums and sales promotions, or for use in corporate training programs. For more information, please write to the Director of Special Sales, Professional Publishing, McGraw-Hill, Two Penn Plaza, New York, NY 10121-2298. Or contact your local bookstore.

This book is printed on acid-free paper.

CONTENTS

APPENDIXES

M ichael Steinlauf, my oldest friend, who took a series of garbled lectures and made them intelligible. Without Michaels literary help this manuscript might just as well have stayed in Chinese. Harvey Blume, my oldest comrade, whose poetic and philosophic illuminations are scattered throughout this book. His imprint is especially evident in the remarks on Hegel and Aristotle. Dan Bensky, my classmate in Macao, who shared my studies and contributed invaluable ideas, writing, and criticism to this manuscript. Steve J. Bennett, freelance scholar and writer, who helped to clarify the ideas and prose of this manuscript. Margaret Caudill, my constant medical mentor and collaborator, who provided criticism and stability. Gretchen Salisbury, for being my editor, and for the enormous work she did to get this book into shape. Randy Barolet, my teaching colleague, who helped with the writing. Liz Coffin, June Nusser, and Kendra Crossen for patient editing and rewriting. Barbara Huntley, who, by her design, transformed an unconventional manuscript into a book. Satya Ambrose for the illustrations. Natalia Muina for editorial assistance, and the Jing that helped me to get through the writing of this volume. Francesca Loporto for criticism and the gift of Spirit. Kiiko Matsumoto for scholarly archeology in pre-Tang-dynasty texts. Andy Gamble, Maria Tadd, and Jon Koritz for help with idea development. Paul and Andy Epstein for help with writing. Paul Parker and Mark Epstein for criticism and writing. Noah Weinberg for help in getting down to basics and lighting fires. Jonathan Lieff for spiritual and medical advice. Wendy Pomerantz for editorial assistance. Fred Klarer and Ken DeWoskin for translation suggestions. Nancy Trichter for being my literary agent and a source of constant encouragement. Cody for being Cody. Lieb Scheiner, E. V. Walter, and Steven Klarer for research assistance. Marsha Woolf, Joyce Singer, Savitri Clark, Paul Shulman, Richard Michael Zucker, Walter Torda, Chou Man-Xing, Sekyo Nam, Martha Katz, Liu YunHua, Giovanni Maciocia, Ellen Pearlman, Janet Generalli, and Susan Zimelis for support. The friends, acupuncturists, medical doctors, therapists, healers, and students who attended my lectures in the States, Europe, and Australia and asked the many questions that helped to focus this volume. My teachers of the traditional medicine of China, who gave so unselfishly, especially Yu Jin-niang, Xie Zhang-cai, Ling Ling-xian, Chen Yi-qing, and Hong Yuan-bain. My patients, who taught me so much, especially that the effort of writing this volume was more than literary or scholarly. My adoptive godmother, Lam Pui-yin, whose pureness kept me going physically and spiritually during hard times in medical school. My parents and sister, whose love is always with me.

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