Harriet Beinfield
More books by Harriet Beinfield…
“For Americans, psychology—the study of how people think, feel, and behave—captures immense interest. In contrast, the gaze of Chinese culture is averted away from the individual and instead directed toward social groups (the family, collective, and state), so psychology in China is quite underdeveloped, and its medicine has focused primarily upon physical symptoms. But because Chinese medical theory assumes human process unfolds as a consequence of the tension and unity between interacting systems, mental phenomena are not considered to be altogether separate or distinct from physical events.”
― Between Heaven and Earth: A Guide to Chinese Medicine
― Between Heaven and Earth: A Guide to Chinese Medicine
“The dense Yin Organs of the Liver, Heart, Spleen, Lung, and Kidney store the essential and potential energy derived from substances; the hollow Yang Organs of the Gallbladder, Small Intestine, Stomach, Large Intestine, and Bladder process the substances of the external environment.”
― Between Heaven and Earth: A Guide to Chinese Medicine
― Between Heaven and Earth: A Guide to Chinese Medicine
“Strictly speaking, what one life sees no other can. Every individual, whether person, nation, or epoch, is an organ, for which there can be no substitute, constructed for the apprehension of truth.…”
― Between Heaven and Earth: A Guide to Chinese Medicine
― Between Heaven and Earth: A Guide to Chinese Medicine
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