Concept of Mind and Brain in Traditional Chinese Medicine

In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), the functions of the brain are dispersed to five zang organs, and are maintained by comprehensive functional interactions among the five zang organs. Therefore, brain diseases are regarded as systematic diseases in TCM, and their treatments are aimed to normali...

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Main Author: Kaoru Sakatani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2007-04-01
Series:Data Science Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://datascience.codata.org/articles/410
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author Kaoru Sakatani
author_facet Kaoru Sakatani
author_sort Kaoru Sakatani
collection DOAJ
description In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), the functions of the brain are dispersed to five zang organs, and are maintained by comprehensive functional interactions among the five zang organs. Therefore, brain diseases are regarded as systematic diseases in TCM, and their treatments are aimed to normalize not only the activity of the organs, but also the balance of functional interaction. In addition, interestingly, the functional interaction between the five zang organs in TCM resembles a biological model based on chaos theory. These features of TCM derive from its theoretical basis in Yin-Yang and the five elements. In conclusion, TCM had co-opted the basic idea of a complex system for the diagnosis and treatment of human diseases thousands years ago. Research into TCM should not only evaluate the effects of herbal medicine or acupuncture, but should take into consideration the view of human beings in TCM.
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spelling doaj.art-472b6c91a8e64a89b19410f67d81d1cd2022-12-22T01:45:38ZengUbiquity PressData Science Journal1683-14702007-04-01610.2481/dsj.6.S220412Concept of Mind and Brain in Traditional Chinese MedicineKaoru Sakatani0Department of Neurological Surgery, Division of Optical Brain Engineering, Nihon University School of Medicine, Tokyo, JapanIn Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), the functions of the brain are dispersed to five zang organs, and are maintained by comprehensive functional interactions among the five zang organs. Therefore, brain diseases are regarded as systematic diseases in TCM, and their treatments are aimed to normalize not only the activity of the organs, but also the balance of functional interaction. In addition, interestingly, the functional interaction between the five zang organs in TCM resembles a biological model based on chaos theory. These features of TCM derive from its theoretical basis in Yin-Yang and the five elements. In conclusion, TCM had co-opted the basic idea of a complex system for the diagnosis and treatment of human diseases thousands years ago. Research into TCM should not only evaluate the effects of herbal medicine or acupuncture, but should take into consideration the view of human beings in TCM.http://datascience.codata.org/articles/410BrainComplex systemChaosFractalTraditional Chinese Medicine
spellingShingle Kaoru Sakatani
Concept of Mind and Brain in Traditional Chinese Medicine
Data Science Journal
Brain
Complex system
Chaos
Fractal
Traditional Chinese Medicine
title Concept of Mind and Brain in Traditional Chinese Medicine
title_full Concept of Mind and Brain in Traditional Chinese Medicine
title_fullStr Concept of Mind and Brain in Traditional Chinese Medicine
title_full_unstemmed Concept of Mind and Brain in Traditional Chinese Medicine
title_short Concept of Mind and Brain in Traditional Chinese Medicine
title_sort concept of mind and brain in traditional chinese medicine
topic Brain
Complex system
Chaos
Fractal
Traditional Chinese Medicine
url http://datascience.codata.org/articles/410
work_keys_str_mv AT kaorusakatani conceptofmindandbrainintraditionalchinesemedicine