Guest guest Posted September 25, 2003 Report Share Posted September 25, 2003 Ken, Jim, Alon and All, This seems like the perfect place to jump in. I wanted to address this issue since yesterday or the day before Alon brought the topic of " fundamentalism " . While Jim's thought of energy as an expression of work feels quite reasonable to my mind as a physiologist, it also begs the question of what qi and CM is in it's own paradigm. In response to Alon, first of all, I sense that fundamentalism is the insistence on interpreting all things rigidly from a single point of view. In religion it occurs from a rigid interpretation utilizing the liturgy of that religion. If you insist rigidly on using double blind studies and other Western science tools to prove or disprove the integrity of CM, then this, too, is fundamentalism. A more obvious example is when two artists make inappropriate demands of one another (I invoke Robert Newman's comments on appropriateness.) A painter demands that the musical composer write some music in vivid reds with highlights of teal and canary yellow. The musical composer agrees and says she will proceed if only the painter would kindly paint something in the key of C. While it's possible to have both Western science and Chinese medicine in one's mind at the same time, it should become obvious that they more appropriately " inform " and " inspire " one another rather than " test " one another. They can also be mutually supportive if one can seem them following parallel (yet different) pathways to the same goal. I can find thousands of papers at this moment on Medline in which Western scientists test CM herbal formulas for some Western diagnostic feature or for some pharmaceutical molecule of interest. In either case, how does this Western methodology support or refute anything about CM theory? To imagine that any of these articles or group of articles can support or refute CM theory is to my mind an act of fundamentalism of the highest order. These articles support and refute Western science. Music and painting may be parallel processes, but it's a bit challenging to make music with watercolors or oils ... tough to paint with the neck of your guitar. I believe Ken was making this point below in a far more carefully " ineffable " way as compared to my blunt, verbal stomping around. In gratitude for your careful consideration, Emmanuel Segmen - kenrose2008 Chinese Medicine Wednesday, September 24, 2003 9:35 PM Re: what is qi Jim, Clearly there are various aspects of normal physiology as well as pathological conditions that can be described to various degrees of clarity and usefulness using the words " energy " and " qi " . I think I've already noted that energy can certainly be understood as a kind of or aspect of qi. I'm not saying that there is no relationship between the two words and the concepts related to them. What I am saying is that qi is not energy. Qi does indeed do the things that you mention... ...among other things. And even though we may be able to speak about any and all of these things with the word energy, that does not suggest to me that what Chinese 2,000 years or more ago had in mind when they wrote or said the word " qi " is what you or I or other contemporary English speakers think of and mean when we write and say the word " energy. " There are other problems as well with the commonly encountered equivalence of qi and energy, having to do with the imprecision of the term " energy " in scientific vernacular. Ask a physicist what energy is and see what happens. In seeking ideal equivalents I always wonder what can be gained from the association of words in different languages that can or should be taken to mean " the same thing. " So what do we gain by equating qi and energy? Why work to sustain this equivalence when I believe it can and has been adequately demonstrated that no such equivalence actually exists? Just take a look at the evidence contained in A Brief History of Qi. In no way do I consider it to be an exhaustive treatment of the subject of what qi means and has meant throughout the past few thousand years. But I believe that the material in that book more or less demonstrates that qi is not energy and that to assert that it is forwards a long standing misunderstanding. Ken > > > Ken: > > If " qi " bears upward, downward, inward and outward, carrying blood and fluids with it isn't that an example of the capacity for work and, therefore, at least in part, can be defined as energy? > > > Jim Ramholz Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2003 Report Share Posted September 25, 2003 I can find thousands of papers at this moment on Medline in which Western scientists test CM herbal formulas for some Western diagnostic feature or for some pharmaceutical molecule of interest. In either case, how does this Western methodology support or refute anything about CM theory? >>>>You are assuming that one needs to use a certain let say " RTC " to test CM or gather evidence. I am not saying that, although clearly it has many advantages and can be adopted for example to evaluate multifactorial systems such as CM. I am saying however that fundamentalism is continuing a belief system without or regardless of evidence. I do believe in testing beyond personal feelings and experience. CM has never formed a formal testing ground and relied of empirical statements. I think that has many pit falls. I am sure for example that every soldier for many thousand of years was convinced (and their empirical daily experience confirmed) that when one drops a ball over a wall to hit an invading soldier the bigger the ball the faster it fell. However, only when Galileo came around this has changed, and even then it took a long time for people (and especially the church) to except the obvious. So for me fundamentalism is the belief that truth is already known (i.e., traditionalism), regardless of, or no clear evidence. Being insistent on methodology and evidence gathering is not fundamentalism. Alon Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2003 Report Share Posted September 25, 2003 Being insistent on methodology and evidence gathering is not fundamentalism. >>>> Then again, it is depending on how that insistence is insisted upon:-) And around and around it goes... Marco Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 26, 2003 Report Share Posted September 26, 2003 Marco, Alon, Emmanuel, Friends, Romans, Countryfolk, and Everyone Else, Jung said that the mere use of words is futile if you do not know what they mean. Yet beyond what they mean we find what they are intended to do. Using words to " call names " is not that interesting, when all is said and done, because it de-evolves pretty straight away into the condition that Marco has now described. But there is a reason to engage in these discussions...probably more than one. We need to cultivate and refine our capabilities at communicating about what we are thinking and doing with our patients and students. Humans tend to get good at what they practice. And what I suggest we practice is working towards a clarity of expression that relates known ideas with well defined terms...and thereby helps us identify those things that we know less well, with less certainty or with greater confusions or whatever. Ken Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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