Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Primordial Sea

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

> " Blaise T. Ryan " <blaiseryan

> Dear Ed,

> The 6 element theory is interesting. Where does it come from. Is it

> written about in any classics? What is the pinyin for " Primordial Sea " ?

> " Yuan Hai " maybe?

> Blaise

 

Blaise, Sounds good. But what is the chinese pinyin for the 'primordial soup'? I

would be interested to know that.What you wrote below is great. The close

connection

between Kidneys, Pc and SJ is very much a part of my research and work.

I have recently had a paper accepted for publication called, " Perceiving the

Heart

(Xin) in Meridian Theory " . It looks closely at what the Heart is and how the

deeper

Heart relates to the meridians. Eventually I may end up posting that paper to my

web

site.

That quote below is also great. Life does depend on the function of SJ/Pc as the

carriers and protectors of the magic of the primordial soup. That quote points

that

out. - Ed

 

> The Pericardium's original name was Tan Zhong, and later Xin Bao <the

> heart wrapper> was chosen as the generally accepted name.

> Functionally the xinbao is the expression of the heart. Since the

> heart itself is no-thing, the unspeakable, the void, it in itself is

> transcendent of all, and no pathogen can touch it without causing

> physical death (and even then, is the heart really dead or

> injured?). The xinbao carries out the heart's commands, it allows

> for the exiting and entering of shenming <spirit-mind's brightness>

> through the qiao <orfice or portal> of the xinbao.

>

> A quote (I'm not sure which classic it's from, probably the Neijing):

>

> " Mingmen below rides astride the kidney's right and there is a thread

> connecting and convoluting to the urinary bladder, above it becomes

> xinbao. And the imperial fire can then connect to yuan qi <original

> qi>. Illness, life and death depend on it. "

>

> This sounds like a hint to the relationship between sanjiao <triple

> burner> and xinbao, don't you think?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

HI. There's much information about 6 th element in another group called

" nourish destiny " . It's related with what some call " five element

acupuncture " ,and as far I know, there are some books from J. R. Worsley

about it.

Roberta

-

Ed Lambert <moonlava

<Chinese Traditional Medicine >

Saturday, September 28, 2002 8:21 PM

Re: [Chinese Traditional Medicine] " Primordial Sea "

 

 

> > " Blaise T. Ryan " <blaiseryan

> > Dear Ed,

> > The 6 element theory is interesting. Where does it come from. Is it

> > written about in any classics? What is the pinyin for " Primordial Sea " ?

> > " Yuan Hai " maybe?

> > Blaise

>

> Blaise, Sounds good. But what is the chinese pinyin for the 'primordial

soup'? I

> would be interested to know that.What you wrote below is great. The close

connection

> between Kidneys, Pc and SJ is very much a part of my research and work.

> I have recently had a paper accepted for publication called, " Perceiving

the Heart

> (Xin) in Meridian Theory " . It looks closely at what the Heart is and how

the deeper

> Heart relates to the meridians. Eventually I may end up posting that paper

to my web

> site.

> That quote below is also great. Life does depend on the function of SJ/Pc

as the

> carriers and protectors of the magic of the primordial soup. That quote

points that

> out. - Ed

>

> > The Pericardium's original name was Tan Zhong, and later Xin Bao <the

> > heart wrapper> was chosen as the generally accepted name.

> > Functionally the xinbao is the expression of the heart. Since the

> > heart itself is no-thing, the unspeakable, the void, it in itself is

> > transcendent of all, and no pathogen can touch it without causing

> > physical death (and even then, is the heart really dead or

> > injured?). The xinbao carries out the heart's commands, it allows

> > for the exiting and entering of shenming <spirit-mind's brightness>

> > through the qiao <orfice or portal> of the xinbao.

> >

> > A quote (I'm not sure which classic it's from, probably the Neijing):

> >

> > " Mingmen below rides astride the kidney's right and there is a thread

> > connecting and convoluting to the urinary bladder, above it becomes

> > xinbao. And the imperial fire can then connect to yuan qi <original

> > qi>. Illness, life and death depend on it. "

> >

> > This sounds like a hint to the relationship between sanjiao <triple

> > burner> and xinbao, don't you think?

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Post message: Chinese Traditional Medicine

> Subscribe: Chinese Traditional Medicine-

> Un: Chinese Traditional Medicine-

> List owner: Chinese Traditional Medicine-owner

>

> Shortcut URL to this page:

> /community/Chinese Traditional Medicine

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...