Hiding in Plain Sight-Ancient Chinese Anatomy
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In: Anatomical record: Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology , Vol. 305, No. 5, 01.05.2022, p. 1201-1214.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Hiding in Plain Sight-Ancient Chinese Anatomy
AU - Shaw, Vivien
AU - Diogo, Rui
AU - Winder, Isabelle C.
PY - 2022/5/1
Y1 - 2022/5/1
N2 - AbstractFor thousands of years, scientists have studied human anatomy by dissecting bodies. Our knowledge of their findings is limited, however, both by the subsequent loss of many of the oldest texts, and by a tendency towards a Eurocentric perspective in medicine. As a discipline, anatomy tends to be much more familiar with ancient Greek texts than with those from India, China or Persia. Here we show that the Mawangdui medical texts, entombed in the Mawangdui burial site in Changsha, China 168BCE, are the oldest surviving anatomical atlas in the world. These medical texts both predate and inform the later acupuncture texts which have been the foundation for acupuncture practice in the subsequent two millennia. The skills necessary to interpret them are diverse, requiring the researcher firstly to read the original Chinese, and secondly to perform the anatomical investigations that allow a re-viewing of thestructures that the texts refer to. Acupuncture meridians are considered to be esoteric in nature, but these texts are clearly descriptions of the physical body. As such, they represent a previously hidden chapter in the history of anatomy, and a new perspective on acupuncture.
AB - AbstractFor thousands of years, scientists have studied human anatomy by dissecting bodies. Our knowledge of their findings is limited, however, both by the subsequent loss of many of the oldest texts, and by a tendency towards a Eurocentric perspective in medicine. As a discipline, anatomy tends to be much more familiar with ancient Greek texts than with those from India, China or Persia. Here we show that the Mawangdui medical texts, entombed in the Mawangdui burial site in Changsha, China 168BCE, are the oldest surviving anatomical atlas in the world. These medical texts both predate and inform the later acupuncture texts which have been the foundation for acupuncture practice in the subsequent two millennia. The skills necessary to interpret them are diverse, requiring the researcher firstly to read the original Chinese, and secondly to perform the anatomical investigations that allow a re-viewing of thestructures that the texts refer to. Acupuncture meridians are considered to be esoteric in nature, but these texts are clearly descriptions of the physical body. As such, they represent a previously hidden chapter in the history of anatomy, and a new perspective on acupuncture.
KW - Han era
KW - acupuncture
KW - anatomical atlas
KW - anatomy
KW - meridian
U2 - 10.1002/ar.24503
DO - 10.1002/ar.24503
M3 - Article
VL - 305
SP - 1201
EP - 1214
JO - Anatomical record: Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology
JF - Anatomical record: Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology
SN - 1932-8486
IS - 5
ER -