Towards a science of touch, part I

This paper is about a pre-modern 'science of touch' - Chinese pulse diagnostics - which was the aspect of Chinese medicine most admired by physicians in early modern Europe. The paper first provides some historical information on Chinese pulse diagnostics in Europe and then details how it...

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Main Author: Hsu, E
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Carfax Publishing 2000
Subjects:
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author Hsu, E
author_facet Hsu, E
author_sort Hsu, E
collection OXFORD
description This paper is about a pre-modern 'science of touch' - Chinese pulse diagnostics - which was the aspect of Chinese medicine most admired by physicians in early modern Europe. The paper first provides some historical information on Chinese pulse diagnostics in Europe and then details how it was presented to an 18th-century readership. At last, it points out that Chinese physicians had developed an elaborate system for distinguishing between various experiences of touch. From an outsider's viewpoint, one could say that they already had an idea of calibration and made measurements in respect of a calibrated condition. Since they put their fingertips on the wrist of their patients and actively palpated it, one can say that their 'science of touch' was developed in respect of 'active touch'. This in contrast to the 'science of touch' developed by psychophysicists of the modern West, who have been interested primarily in 'passive touch'.
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spelling oxford-uuid:1314f225-3edb-4dcb-b6e4-0a96bc2ecb102022-03-26T10:11:51ZTowards a science of touch, part IJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:1314f225-3edb-4dcb-b6e4-0a96bc2ecb10AnthropologyMedical anthropologyChinese studiesHistory of medicineEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetCarfax Publishing2000Hsu, EThis paper is about a pre-modern 'science of touch' - Chinese pulse diagnostics - which was the aspect of Chinese medicine most admired by physicians in early modern Europe. The paper first provides some historical information on Chinese pulse diagnostics in Europe and then details how it was presented to an 18th-century readership. At last, it points out that Chinese physicians had developed an elaborate system for distinguishing between various experiences of touch. From an outsider's viewpoint, one could say that they already had an idea of calibration and made measurements in respect of a calibrated condition. Since they put their fingertips on the wrist of their patients and actively palpated it, one can say that their 'science of touch' was developed in respect of 'active touch'. This in contrast to the 'science of touch' developed by psychophysicists of the modern West, who have been interested primarily in 'passive touch'.
spellingShingle Anthropology
Medical anthropology
Chinese studies
History of medicine
Hsu, E
Towards a science of touch, part I
title Towards a science of touch, part I
title_full Towards a science of touch, part I
title_fullStr Towards a science of touch, part I
title_full_unstemmed Towards a science of touch, part I
title_short Towards a science of touch, part I
title_sort towards a science of touch part i
topic Anthropology
Medical anthropology
Chinese studies
History of medicine
work_keys_str_mv AT hsue towardsascienceoftouchparti