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Huang Qi allusions

Huang Qi's allusions are as follows:

Allusions:

Huang refers to the ancestor of the Chinese nation, Huangdi, and Qi is his courtier, Qi Bo. In ancient times, the Yellow Emperor led his tribe to unify the whole country, from which Chinese civilization originated. Qi Bo, the minister of the Yellow Emperor, has a good medical skill.

According to legend, Huangdi often sat down with courtiers such as Qi Bo and Lei Gong to discuss medical problems, answer questions about medical skills, medical principles and clinical treatment, and clarify them, many of which were recorded in Huangdi Neijing, the cornerstone of Chinese medicine theory.

Later generations called Chinese medicine "Huang Qi" out of respect for the Yellow Emperor and Qi Bo, so that people later studied medicine and said that they were learning "Huang Qi"; For people with superb medical skills, it is called "being good at Huang Qi".

Explanation:

At present, in many literary and artistic works, the word "Huang Qi" is often used when referring to ancient medicine. Some people think that this is blindly Chinese herbal medicine, and even say that this is the abbreviation of traditional Chinese medicine astragalus and rhubarb. Actually, this is a misunderstanding. Although Huang Qi is indeed related to medicine, it actually refers to an ancient medical masterpiece, Neijing, and its author.

The Content and Evolution of Huang Qi s Neijing;

Content:

Neijing consists of eighteen volumes, which are divided into two parts: Su Wen and Ling Shu. Based on the overall concept of human structure, functional relationship and the relationship between man and nature, it uses the theory of Yin-Yang and Five Elements and the relationship between zang-fu organs and meridians to explain human physiology and pathology, and expounds the methods of diagnosis, treatment, prevention and health preservation.

It is a systematic, comprehensive and scientific basic work in ancient China, which has a great influence on the formation and development of Chinese medicine in later generations. Especially before the publication of Compendium of Materia Medica by Li Shizhen in Ming Dynasty, doctors regarded it as a must-read, and they could not practice medicine without reading it.

Evolution:

Therefore, the ancients respected Neijing as the ancestor of medical books. Its authors, Huangdi and Zeebe, are also considered as the father of doctors. It is for this reason that qi (abundant) and yellow (earth) have become synonymous with "traditional Chinese medicine".

So that when people studied medicine later, they all said that they were learning "Huang Qi"; People with superb medical skills are said to be good at "Huang Qi". Only after the late Qing Dynasty and the early Republic of China, with the popularization of western medicine, Chinese medicine began to take a back seat, and the word "Huang Qi" rarely appeared in people's daily life except in ancient books. ?