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KMID : 0894320080100010041
Dongguk Journal of the Institute of Oriental Medicine
2008 Volume.10 No. 1 p.41 ~ p.61
A Study on the ¡¯ Zhe Zhong Pai¡¯(ï¹õû÷ï) of the Traditional Medicine of Japan
Park Hyun-Kuk

Kim Ki-Wook
Abstract
The outline and characteristics of the important doctors of the ¡¯Zhe Zhong Pai¡¯(ï¹õû÷ï) are as follows. Part 1. In the late Edo(Ë°ûÂ) period The ¡¯Zhe Zhong Pai¡¯, which tried to take the theory and clinical treatment of the ¡¯Hou Shi Pai (ý­á¦÷ï)¡¯ and the ¡¯Gu Fang Pai(ͯ۰÷ï)¡¯ and get their strong points to make treatments perfect, appeared. Their point was ¡¯The main part is the art of the ancients, The latter prescriptions are to be used¡¯(ì¤Í¯ÛöêÓñ«, ý­á¦Û°êÓéÄ) and the "Shang Han Lun(ß¿ùÎÖå)" was revered for its treatments but in actual use it was not kept at that. As mentioned above The ¡¯Zhe Zhong Pai¡¯ viewed treatments as the base, which was the view of most doctors in the Edo period. However, the reason the ¡¯Zhe Zhong Pai¡¯ is not valued as much as the ¡¯Gu Fang Pai¡¯ by medical history books in Japan is because the ¡¯Zhe Zhong Pai¡¯ does not have the substantiation or uniqueness of the ¡¯Gu Fang Pai¡¯, and also because the view of ¡¯gather as well as store up¡¯(ÌÂâ¥?õë) was the same as the ¡¯Kao Zheng Pai¡¯. Moreover, the ¡¯compromise¡¯(ï¹õû) point of view was from taking in both Chinese and western medical knowledge systems(ùÓÕµï¹õû). Generally the pioneer of the ¡¯Zhe Zhong Pai¡¯ is seen as Mochizuki Rokumon(ØÐêÅÖãÚ¦) and after that was Fukui Futei(ÜØïÌù£ïÍ), Wadato Kaku(ûúï£ÔÔά), Yamada Seichin(ߣï£ïáòÒ) and Taki Motohiro(ÒýѺêªÊÛ). Part 2. The lives of Wada Tokaku(ûúï£ÔÔά), Nakagame Kinkei(ñéãêÐÖÍ¢), Nei Teng Xi Zhe(Ò®ÔöýñôÉ), the important doctors of the ¡¯Zhe Zhong Pai¡¯, are as follows. First Wada Tokaku(ûúï£ÔÔά, 1743-1803) was born when the ¡¯Hou Shi Pai¡¯ was already declining and the ¡¯Gu Fang Pai¡¯ was flourishing and learned medicine from a ¡¯Hou Shi Pai¡¯ doctor, Hu Tian Xu Shan(ûÂï£éïߣ) and a ¡¯Gu Fang Pai¡¯ doctor, Yoshimasu Todo(ÑÎìÌÔÔÔ×). He was not hindered by ¡¯the old ways(ͯ۰)¡¯ and did not lean towards ¡¯the new ways(ý­á¦Û°)¡¯ and formed a way of compromise that ¡¯looked at hardness and softness as the same¡¯(˧êõßÓؤ) by setting ¡¯the cure of the disease¡¯ as the base, and said that to cure diseases ¡¯the old way¡¯ must be used, but ¡¯the new way¡¯ was necessary to supplement its shortcomings. His works include "Dao Shui Suo Yan(Óôâ©?åë)", "Jiao Chiang Fang Yi Je(õ¯?Û°ëòú°)" and "Yi Xue Sho(ì¢ùÊàã)". Second. Nakagame Kinkei(ñéãêÐÖÍ¢, 1744-1833) was famous for leaving Yoshimasu Todo(ÑÎìÌÔÔÔ×) and changing to the ¡¯Zhe Zhong Pai¡¯, and in his early years used qing fen(ÌîÝÏ) to cure geisha(ÐõÒ³) of syphilis. His argument was "the "Shang Han Lun" must be revered but needs to be adapted", "Zhong Jing can be made into a follower but I cannot become his follower", "the later medical texts such as "Ru Men Shi Qin(êãÚ¦ÞÀöÑ)" should only be used for its prescriptions and not its theories". His works include "Shang Han Lun Yue Yan(ß¿ùÎÖåå³åë)". Third, Nei Teng Xi Zhe(Ò®ÔöýñôÉ, 1701-1735) learned medicine from Qing Shui Xian Sheng(ôèâ©à»ßæ) and went out to Edo. In his book "Yi Jing Jie Huo Lun(ì¢Ìèú°ûãÖå)" he tells of how he went from ¡¯learning¡¯(ùÊ) to ¡¯skepticism¡¯(ûã) and how skepticism made him learn in ¡¯the six skepticisms¡¯(ë»ûã). In the latter years Xi Zhe(ýñôÉ) combines the "Shen Nong Ben Cao Jing(ãêÒÜÜâõ®Ìè)", the main text for herbal medicine, "Ming Tang Jing(Ù¥ÓÑÌè)" of accupuncture, basic theory texts "Huang Dui Nei Jing(üÕð¨Ò®Ìè)" and "Nan Jing(ÑñÌè)" with the "Shang Han Za Bing Lun", a book that the ¡¯Gu Fang Pai¡¯ saw as opposing to the rest, and became ¡¯an expert of five scriptures¡¯(çéÌèìéλ). Part 3. Asada Showhaku(ô¼ï£ðóÛ×, 1815-1894) started medicine at Zhong Cun Zhong Zong(ñéõ½ñéðò) and learned ¡¯the old way¡¯(ͯ۰) from Yoshimasu Todo and got experience through Ouan Yue(ô¹êÆ) and Fu Jing(ÜØïÌ) and received teachings in texts, history and Wang Yangmin¡¯s principles(åÕÙ¥ùÊ) fmm famous teachers. Showhaku(ðòÛ×) meets a medical official of the makufu(حݤ), Ben Kang Zong Yuan(Üâˬðóê­), and receives help from the 3 great doctors of the Edo period, Taki Motokato(ÒýѺêªÌ±), Xiao Dao Xue Gu(á³ÓöùÊͯ) and Xi Duo Cun Kao(ýìÒýõ½??) and further develops his arts. At 47 he diagnoses the general Jia Mao(Ê«Ùò) with ¡¯heart failure from beriberi¡¯(ÊÅѨû¬ãý) and becomes a Zheng Shi(ó£÷Ï), at 51 he cures a minister from France and received a present from Napoleon, at 65 he becomes the court physician and saves Ming Gong(Ù¥Ïà) Jia Ren Qn Wang(Ê©ìÒöÑèÝ, later the ÓÞïáô¸üÕ) from bodily convulsions and becomes ¡¯the vassal of merit who saved the national polity(ÏÐô÷)¡¯ At the 7th year of the Meiji(Ù¥ö½) he becomes the 2nd owner of Wen Zhi She(è®ò±Þä) and takes part in the ¡¯kampo continuation movement¡¯. In his latter years he saw 14000 patients a year, so we can estimate the qualjty and quantity of his clinical skills. Showhaku(ðóÛ×) wrote over 80 books including the "Ju Chuang Shu Ying(й?ßöç¯)", "Wu Wu Yao Shi Fang Han(Ú¨è¦å·ãøÛ°ùÞ)", "Shang Han Biang Shu(ß¿ùÎÜ©âú)", "Jing Qi Shen Lun(ïñѨãêÖå)", "Hunag Guo Ming Yi Chuan(üÕÏÐÙ£ì¢îî)" and the "Xian Jhe Yi Hua(à»ôÉì¢ü¥)". Especially in the "Ju Chuang Shu Ying(й?ßöç¯) he says "the old theories are the main, and the new prescriptions are to be used"(ì¤Í¯ÛöêÓñ«, ý­á¦Û°êÓéÄ), stating the ¡¯Zhe Zhong Pai¡¯ way of thinking, In the first volume of "Shang Han Biang Shu(ß¿ùÎÜ©âú)" and "Za Bing Lun Shi(íÚÜ»ÖåãÛ)", ¡¯Zong Ping¡¯(õÅøÄ), He discerns the parts that are not Zhang Zhong Jing¡¯s writings and emphasizes his theories and practical uses.
KEYWORD
The traditional medicine of Japan(Huang Han Medicine üÕùÓì¢ùÊ), ¡¯Hou Shi Pai(ý­á¦÷ï)¡¯, ¡¯Gu Fang Pai(ͯ۰÷ï)¡¯, ¡¯Zhe Zhong Pai(ï¹õû÷ï)¡¯
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