Guest guest Posted March 7, 2010 Report Share Posted March 7, 2010 Herman, I've given this a little more thought and have searched through about 600 + classical / pre-modern texts. Tian ming (ÌìÃü) is found only in a few instances. For example, it appears in the Suwen as ³¤ÓÐÌìÃü(chang you tian ming). This exact same phrase also appears in the ben cao gang mu. You are correct that the NeiJing dictionary says that the definition here is ¡°natural lifespan/natural span of life/life span¡± not something about destiny. Reading through these examples makes your question about Unschuld¡¯s interpretation even more interesting. For example we have the following line from the ben cao gang mu: ¹ÇÕý½îÈᣬÆøѪÒÔÁ÷£¬ëíÀíÒÔÃÜ£¬¹ÇÆøÒÔ¾«£¬³¤ÓÐÌìÃü. I have a hard time imagining that this ¡®tian ming¡¯ here means anything more than long life. Can anyone envision something different? SuWen commentary says things such as ÈÙÎÀÖ®ÐС£²»Ê§Æä³£¡£¿ÉÒÔ³¤¾ÃÆäÌìÃü. This seems again simply long life. ** Does anyone (Herman?) have some specific Su wen commentary discussing ³¤ ÓÐÌìÃü (chang you tian ming). However, I would not even begin to suggest that ming (Ãü) or tian ming cannot have very profound and complicated meanings in Chinese history. Historically, ming is understood as " command, " " allotted lifespan, " " fate, " or " life. " It also is central to debates on the legitimacy of rulership and is the ¡°crucial variable in Daoist manuals for prolonging one's life.¡± Although many sinologists dislike the translation of ming as destiny, instead favoring mandate. Clearly philosophical texts use ming and very diverse ways. The interesting question to me are the differences between philosophical texts and medical texts. Philosophical texts generally are written for the elite. They contain very elaborate discussions; everything from morality to enlightenment. Medical texts have the main purpose of treating disease and saving lives, possibly written with the treatment of the more common folk. For example, SHL experts often talk about the formulas treating soldiers and common people, not the elite. Hence, one find little if any philosophical discussion. However, one can only wonder why medical texts in general did not contain these elaborate philosophical discussions. Clearly censorship cannot be claimed, otherwise philosophical texts, which give much more detail on such esoteric issues, would have also been censored. The most likely reason, that I can come up with, seems to be its major concern with just healing people and saving lives. Although there seems to be some debate on this list between the meanings of a couple words here and there, I do not think anyone can deny the absence of straightforward philosophical discourse in medical texts. In contrast, opening up any Daoist cannon of a similar time period is packed full of esoteric and spiritual passages. I think this has been one of Bob's main points all along. For example, one of the most well known daoists, Ma Dang-Yang (considered one of the seven immortals), was also an acupuncturist who wrote about the 12 miraculous points. If there was any Chinese medicine doctor out there that was going to talk about esoteric/spiritual type of medicine it would be him. However, when he discussed these 12 acupuncture points, the descriptions and indications for these points were all completely physical with no mention of any spiritual connotations. Clearly, there is a disconnect between the presentation of medicine and his presentation of daoism/philosophy. Obviously, if Ma Dang-Yang thought that acupuncture or herbs nourished destiny, or had anything to do with some spiritual/esoteric pursuits, I think he would have had no hesitation mentioning this. I talked to Charles Chace about this issue. The first thing of course he asked was where were the sources for these opinions? But after we got past the fact that much of this debate seems to rest on opinion we talked a bunch about daoism and its interrelationship with medicine. He brought up the interesting point when daoism discussed treating people with herbs and acupuncture that they were not thinking about nourishing their destiny (directly) but by making them as healthy as they could so that they could live long and hence acquire enlightenment or whatever pursuit they thought was important (by being as healthy as they could)- . But he also said when it comes to Daoist philosophy, cannons, and ideas the amount of debate and disagreement is a bigger mess than Chinese medicine. There's so many ideas and contradictions in thought that clearly there is no right answer. Also it should be noted that many daoist masters were against using acupuncture and herbs on themselves and considered this type of treatment for the layman or beginning taoist students. Clearly, daoism Confucianism etc. have some impact on the development of Chinese medicine. I guess the magical question is in what way, how much, and what aspects, if any, were purposely held out. Any Unschuld scholars out there want to chime in? This whole discussion is great, any excuse to dive into NeiJing and its commentaries is worthwhile to me... -Jason On Behalf Of aowenherman Friday, March 05, 2010 11:35 PM Re: Ming=destiny? Lonny, Jason, Eric, I wondered why Unschuld translates the two occurences of tian1ming4 in the Suwen as 'mandate of heaven' in his dictionary whereas the Chinese commentaries I have consulted explain it simply as meaning 'life' or 'natural life span' (context: end of Suwen 3 and 74), and looked it up in his introduction to the Suwen where I found some very interesting remarks on page 344. I thought of mentioning this as it is relevant for the ongoing discussion. Jason, I will (sooner or later) come back to your mail about the Neijing dictionary and the list of definitions for shen2 and ming4 therein. Man, you've got me studying! N. Herman Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 7, 2010 Report Share Posted March 7, 2010 I want to correct an error from my previous (below) e-mail. Actually, Tian ming (ÌìÃü) occurs in quite a few of these 600 texts (my search engine was not set up properly on my new computer). For example, the pi wei lun in its introduction quotes the su wen (... ³¤ÓÐÌìÃü)¡£ Bob, for example, translates this as ¡° ...long life decreed by heaven.¡±- this meaning (or at least his translation) is much different than the philosophical usage tian ming (mandate of heaven). -Jason On Behalf Of Sunday, March 07, 2010 10:30 AM RE: Re: Ming=destiny? & daoism Herman, I've given this a little more thought and have searched through about 600 + classical / pre-modern texts. Tian ming (ÌìÃü) is found only in a few instances. For example, it appears in the Suwen as ³¤ÓÐÌìÃü(chang you tian ming). This exact same phrase also appears in the ben cao gang mu. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 7, 2010 Report Share Posted March 7, 2010 Chinese: ½÷ºÍÎå棬¹ÇÕý½îÈᣬÆøѪÒÔÁ÷£¬ëíÀíÒÔÃÜ£¬ ÈçÊÇÔò¹ÇÆøÒÔ¾«£¬½÷µÀÈç·¨£¬ ³¤ÓÐÌìÃü¡£ Bob's translation: " With the five flavors kept balanced carefully, the bones are straight and the sinews are flexible, qi and blood flow [freely], and interstices are compact. Thus the bone qi is vigorous. Carefully following these instructions, [one] will enjoy a long life decreed by heaven. " -Jason On Behalf Of Sunday, March 07, 2010 6:57 PM RE: Re: Ming=destiny? & daoism I want to correct an error from my previous (below) e-mail. Actually, Tian ming (ÌìÃü) occurs in quite a few of these 600 texts (my search engine was not set up properly on my new computer). For example, the pi wei lun in its introduction quotes the su wen (... ³¤ÓÐÌìÃü)¡£ Bob, for example, translates this as ¡° ...long life decreed by heaven.¡±- this meaning (or at least his translation) is much different than the philosophical usage tian ming (mandate of heaven). -Jason Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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