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| What is Acupuncture? / Where Does Acupuncture Come From? |
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Acupuncture is part of a broad system of Traditional Chinese Medical Arts, which also includes Chinese Herbal Medicine, Tui Na (Chinese Massage), Physical Culture (including Tai Chi and Qi Gong), Meditation, Chinese Dietary Therapy and Feng Shui (geomancy). These healing systems all have their roots in Ancient China and over 2000 years of Chinese civilization.
The best archaeological evidence to date shows the recognition of 11 of
the 12 main meridians goes back at least as far as early Han Dynasty
(2200 to 2300 years ago). This evidence also shows the identification
of meridians predates the identification of specific acupuncture
points. A lot of Westerners translate 'Qi' as energy. This is viewed
by most sinologists (scholars of Chinese culture) as a poor
translation. It is perhaps more accurate to translate Qi as everything
that circulates in the body. It can be as immaterial as spirit, energy
and nerve impulse and as material as blood, lymph and other body
fluids.
In the West, it is often assumed that acupuncture involved only the use of needles at specific points. In fact, there is no word in Chinese that means 'acupuncture'.
This is also a poor translation. The Chinese word, 'zhenjiu',
translates as something like 'fire and needles'. This refers to the
equal therapeutic value of needles and moxibustion. Moxibustion refers
to the burning of the herb, mugwort on and above acupuncture points. A more accurate term to describe this therapy is 'acupuncture and moxibustion' or 'acumoxa'.
There are twelve main meridians that traverse the surface of the body
and connect internally with organs, glands and other internal
anatomical and physiological systems. In English translations, most of
the meridians bear the name of the internal organ to which they
primarily connect. So there is, for example, a Kidney meridian, a
Stomach meridian, and so on. There are many other meridian systems
beyond the 12 main meridians (including the extraordinary vessels, the
tendinomuscular meridians and the divergent channels).
We thank the PEI Acupuncture Association for providing this article.
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