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The
philosophical origins of Chinese medicine have grown out
of the tenets of Daoism (also known as Taoism). Daoism
bases much of its thinking on observing the natural world
and manner in which it operates, so it is no surprise
to find that the Chinese medical system draws extensively
on natural metaphors.
The
direct meanings of yin and yang in Chinese are bright
and dark sides of an object. Chinese philosophy uses yin
and yang to represent a wider range of opposite properties
in the universe: cold and hot, slow and fast, still and
moving, masculine and feminine, lower and upper, etc.
In general, anything that is moving, ascending, bright,
progressing, hyperactive, including functional disease
of the body, pertains to yang. The characteristics of
stillness, descending, darkness, degeneration, hypo-activity,
including organic disease, pertain to yin.
The
function of yin and yang is guided by the law of unity
of the opposites. In other words, yin and yang are in
conflict but at the same time mutually dependent. The
nature of yin and yang is relative, with neither being
able to exist in isolation. Without "cold" there
would be no "hot"; without "moving"
there would be no "still"; without "dark",
there would be no "light". The most illustrative
example of yin-yang interdependence is the interrelationship
between substance and function. Only with ample substance
can the human body function in a healthy way; and only
when the functional processes are in good condition, can
the essential substances be appropriately refreshed.
The
opposites in all objects and phenomena are in constant
motion and change: The gain, growth and advance of the
one mean the loss, decline and retreat of the other. For
example, day is yang and night is yin, but morning is
understood as being yang within yang, afternoon is yin
within yang, evening before midnight is yin within yin
and the time after midnight is yang within yin. The seed
(Yin) grows into the plan (Yang), which itself dies back
to the earth (Yin). This takes place within the changes
of the seasons. Winter (Yin) transforms through the Spring
into Summer (Yang), which in turn transforms through Autumn
into Winter again. Because natural phenomena are balanced
in the constant flux of alternating yin and yang, the
change and transformation of yin-yang has been taken as
a universal law.
Traditional
Chinese medicine holds that human life is a physiological
process in constant motion and change. Under normal conditions,
the waxing and waning of yin and yang are kept within
certain bounds, reflecting a dynamic equilibrium of the
physiological processes. When the balance is broken, disease
occurs. Typical cases of disease-related imbalance include
excess of yin, excess of yang, deficiency of yin, and
deficiency of yang.
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