Zhang Xichun

Zhang Xichun (simplified Chinese: 张锡纯; traditional Chinese: 張錫純; pinyin: Zhāng Xīchún; 1860 1933), courtesy name Shoufu (simplified Chinese: 寿甫; traditional Chinese: 壽甫; pinyin: Shòufǔ),[1][2] was a Chinese physician and medical scholar who pioneered the integration of Western and Eastern medicines. The founder of a medical college in Tianjin, Zhang penned many articles on various medical topics. After his death in 1933, a thirty-volume compilation of his papers was released.

Zhang Xichun
Born1860 (1860)
Died1933 (aged 7273)
Tianjin, China
NationalityChinese
OccupationPhysician and writer
Zhang Xichun
Chinese

Biography

Early life and career

Zhang Xichun was born in 1860, in Yanshan County, Hebei, China. Zhang was not linguistically inclined, unlike his father, and failed his imperial examinations in Chinese literature twice.[1] Thereafter he switched his sights to medicine; a topic his father had introduced him to together with Chinese philosophy,[3] spending more than a decade studying it[1] on his own.[4] In 1911, before the end of the Qing dynasty,[5] he joined the military as a doctor and was lauded for his work. Zhang became Dean of the Li Da Chinese Medicine Hospital in 1918.[1] From that point he became known for his incorporation of Western medicine into traditional Chinese medicine, and was successful in remedying illnesses not curable by Western drugs alone.[1] He also began publishing a series of essays on a wide range of medical issues titled, The Assimilation of Western Medicine to Chinese in Medicine.[6]

In 1926, he established the Tianjin Institute for Integrated Chinese and Western Medicine, which attracted "hundreds of students from across the country".[1] About two years afterwards, he formulated a treatment for febrile arthritis combining aspirin with a traditional Chinese medicine, gypsum fibrosum.[7] His cure for "obstinate vomiting", predominantly made of rhizoma pinelliae, was said to have "achieved very good results".[8]

Death

Zhang Xichun died of illness in 1933 at age 74. A collection of Zhang's medical papers, comprising some thirty volumes and titled, Medical Essays Esteeming the East and Respecting the West, was edited by Zhang's son and released in 1934.[1] After 1949, rights to the compilation, alongside a few other of Zhang's essays, were transferred to the Hebei Hygiene Association. Zhang's publications are now regarded as "an important modern classic of Chinese medicine".[1]

Views

Zhang saw philosophy as complementary and beneficial to medicine, contrary to the belief by many of his time that the former inhibits the latter's development. As he articulates in his essay Concerning The Relation of Philosophy and Medicine:

Many recent medical journal reports take the view that [traditional Chinese] philosophy holds back the progress of medicine, but their authors do not understand the use of philosophy, nor do they understand that philosophy is actually the basis of medicine [...] philosophy is the true source of medicine, or rather that medicine is the natural outcome of philosophy.[3]

He also believed that modern and traditional medicine shared a common set of principles and thought that Western medical knowledge could be proof for ancient Chinese beliefs, such as in the case of determining that the heart cannot function without the brain.[5] However, he was unhappy with the situation of his time that was Western teachings being seen as superior to Chinese ones. Wanting to end this "uncritical replacement", Zhang supported the Boxer Rebellion in 1900.[9]

Legacy

Zhang is considered as one of the "four masters of medicine" of China, the other three being Liu Weichu, Yang Ruhou, and Lu Jinsheng.[1] Hailed as "China's leading clinician",[4] "one of China's great scholar-physicians"[10] and "one of the leading reformers of Chinese medicine in the early twentieth century",[3] Zhang is notable for being one of the first physicians to intermix Chinese and Western medicine, and his work is credited with allowing doctors to realise that "the two medicines could work side by side".[1] In his 2014 work Acupuncture and Chinese Medicine, Charles Buck praises his "genuine altruistic impetus to improve Chinese medicine", describing Zhang as a "passionate integrationist" of medicine.[1]

gollark: It happens surprisingly often.
gollark: I need reds in vast quantities for my AP egg grabbing addiction.
gollark: ~~not if I can get the reds before you can get the magis~~
gollark: You don't take their beloved children, you take the bad ones they don't want.
gollark: This is a copy of it if anyone wants it.

See also

References

Citations

  1. Buck 2014, p. 310.
  2. IOS 1999, p. 265.
  3. "Chinese Philosophy and Chinese Medicine". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 28 April 2015. Retrieved 7 February 2016.
  4. Sivin 1991, p. 33.
  5. Lackner 2004, p. 650.
  6. Hsu 2001, p. 333.
  7. Li, Xue-Juan; Zhang, Hong-yu (2008). "Western healers in traditional Chinese medicine". EMBO Reports. 9 (2): 112–113. doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7401166. PMC 2246407. PMID 18246100.
  8. Chang 1992, p. 89.
  9. Andrews 2014, p. 133.
  10. Fruehauf 2011, p. 1.

Bibliography

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