A Chinese doctor in eighteenth-century Naples and the practice of pulse diagnosis

<p>Diagnosing a patient on the basis of their pulse alone is an impressive demonstration of medical ability for which early modern Chinese doctors were famous. This article looks at the early history of Chinese medicine in Europe by examining the encounter between Xu Shizhi, who travelled to N...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Harrison, H
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2024
_version_ 1826315193490079744
author Harrison, H
author_facet Harrison, H
author_sort Harrison, H
collection OXFORD
description <p>Diagnosing a patient on the basis of their pulse alone is an impressive demonstration of medical ability for which early modern Chinese doctors were famous. This article looks at the early history of Chinese medicine in Europe by examining the encounter between Xu Shizhi, who travelled to Naples to study for the Catholic priesthood but became a sensation as a doctor, and Domenico Cirillo, a prominent physician who met him through a patient and became interested in Chinese medicine. Although Chinese pulse manuals had been translated into European languages, the sense of touch is impossible to convey in words, but when Xu met Cirillo, he was able to demonstrate how to feel the pulse. Cirillo then combined elements of Chinese medicine and new vitalist theories of the nervous system to produce a system of his own, published as the&nbsp;<em>Tractatus de pulsibus</em>, which he taught to his students and which became widespread across southern Italy. Recent work on the global circulation of medical ideas in the early modern period has focused on texts and pharmaceuticals, and on encounters in colonial spaces. Xu and Cirillo&rsquo;s story suggests the importance of personal interactions in conveying tacit knowledge as a key part of this circulation.</p>
first_indexed 2024-09-25T04:21:27Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:042efb2d-5742-413e-b4fa-8db5b2f6d85e
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-09T03:21:32Z
publishDate 2024
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:042efb2d-5742-413e-b4fa-8db5b2f6d85e2024-11-15T09:44:15ZA Chinese doctor in eighteenth-century Naples and the practice of pulse diagnosisJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:042efb2d-5742-413e-b4fa-8db5b2f6d85eEnglishSymplectic ElementsOxford University Press2024Harrison, H<p>Diagnosing a patient on the basis of their pulse alone is an impressive demonstration of medical ability for which early modern Chinese doctors were famous. This article looks at the early history of Chinese medicine in Europe by examining the encounter between Xu Shizhi, who travelled to Naples to study for the Catholic priesthood but became a sensation as a doctor, and Domenico Cirillo, a prominent physician who met him through a patient and became interested in Chinese medicine. Although Chinese pulse manuals had been translated into European languages, the sense of touch is impossible to convey in words, but when Xu met Cirillo, he was able to demonstrate how to feel the pulse. Cirillo then combined elements of Chinese medicine and new vitalist theories of the nervous system to produce a system of his own, published as the&nbsp;<em>Tractatus de pulsibus</em>, which he taught to his students and which became widespread across southern Italy. Recent work on the global circulation of medical ideas in the early modern period has focused on texts and pharmaceuticals, and on encounters in colonial spaces. Xu and Cirillo&rsquo;s story suggests the importance of personal interactions in conveying tacit knowledge as a key part of this circulation.</p>
spellingShingle Harrison, H
A Chinese doctor in eighteenth-century Naples and the practice of pulse diagnosis
title A Chinese doctor in eighteenth-century Naples and the practice of pulse diagnosis
title_full A Chinese doctor in eighteenth-century Naples and the practice of pulse diagnosis
title_fullStr A Chinese doctor in eighteenth-century Naples and the practice of pulse diagnosis
title_full_unstemmed A Chinese doctor in eighteenth-century Naples and the practice of pulse diagnosis
title_short A Chinese doctor in eighteenth-century Naples and the practice of pulse diagnosis
title_sort chinese doctor in eighteenth century naples and the practice of pulse diagnosis
work_keys_str_mv AT harrisonh achinesedoctorineighteenthcenturynaplesandthepracticeofpulsediagnosis
AT harrisonh chinesedoctorineighteenthcenturynaplesandthepracticeofpulsediagnosis