Guest guest Posted September 29, 2002 Report Share Posted September 29, 2002 > " 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? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 29, 2002 Report Share Posted September 29, 2002 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 > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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