The Many Colors of Excrement: Galen and the History of Chinese Phlegm

This article suggests that the little-known Yuan dynasty treatise On the Art of Nourishing Life (1338), which is notable for extending Chinese phlegm theory in unprecedented ways, was pivotal for this transformation. Noting a strong resemblance of the innovations of this treatise with Galenic medical theories, this article argues that they were inspired by an encounter with the Galenic medical tradition. It submits that these novel ideas radically altered preexisting Chinese understandings of the body's materiality and the nature of disease, and calls for closer attention to the transcultural movements of theories and concepts in the historiography of Chinese and global medicine.PMID:38588245 | DOI:10.1353/bhm.2023.a905729
Source: Bulletin of the History of Medicine - Category: History of Medicine Authors: Source Type: research