Qi
Attempts to describe qi in English-language literature have inevitably been thin, focussing primarily on the ways in which it speaks to perceived mind-body dualism in Anglophone culture. The following discussion touches upon the broad diversity of epistemes in which qi has been entangled, and a f...
Main Author: | Stanley-Baker, Michael |
---|---|
Other Authors: | School of Humanities |
Format: | Conference Paper |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2024
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10356/179420 https://www.academia.edu/39695488/Qi_in_Critical_Terms_for_Religious_Studies https://www.polyu.edu.hk/tc/events/2019/6/critical-terms-for-chinese-religious-studies/ |
Similar Items
-
A medieval Daoist drug geography: the Jinye Shendan Jing as a novel view on the circulation of medical knowledge in Asia
by: Stanley-Baker, Michael, et al.
Published: (2023) -
Les démoniaques dans l'art: Charcot and the “hysterical saints”
by: Léo Coutinho, et al.
Published: (2022-11-01) -
Madness, medicine, and religious identity in the nineteenth-century Atlantic world
by: Lee, M
Published: (2019) -
Did Father Cicero suffer from rheumatism?
by: Francisco Airton Castro Rocha -
Domestic animals as symbols and attributes in Christian iconography: some examples from Croatian sacral art
by: A. Škrobonja, et al.
Published: (2001-04-01)