Towards a science of touch, part II

This paper concerns a pre-modern 'science of touch' - Chinese pulse diagnostics - and it discusses four different means by which Chinese physicians represented and described the tactile experience of sensing different pulses: (a) by use of similes, (b) with descriptive verbs and adjectives...

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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
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description This paper concerns a pre-modern 'science of touch' - Chinese pulse diagnostics - and it discusses four different means by which Chinese physicians represented and described the tactile experience of sensing different pulses: (a) by use of similes, (b) with descriptive verbs and adjectives, (c) by comparing one pulse to the other and contrasting the two from each other, and (d) by a visual representation of the tactile experience. The material for the article is taken from treatises in early modern Europe, which contain translations of works on Chinese pulse diagnostics, but the questions with which I approach this textual material relate to an 'anthropology of sensory experience'. It is argued that - unlike other modalities of perception - tactile perception arises from a mutual involvement of touching subject and touched object. While such melding between subject and object makes touch an excellent non-verbal means of communication, one would expect that it is difficult to assess in an objective way. Yet the article shows ingenious ways with which Chinese physicians tackled the problem.
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spelling oxford-uuid:c8e02b1f-e67a-40a1-b108-b37f18aa95842022-03-27T06:55:06ZTowards a science of touch, part IIJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:c8e02b1f-e67a-40a1-b108-b37f18aa9584Chinese studiesMedical anthropologyHistory of medicineAnthropologyEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetCarfax Publishing2000Hsu, EThis paper concerns a pre-modern 'science of touch' - Chinese pulse diagnostics - and it discusses four different means by which Chinese physicians represented and described the tactile experience of sensing different pulses: (a) by use of similes, (b) with descriptive verbs and adjectives, (c) by comparing one pulse to the other and contrasting the two from each other, and (d) by a visual representation of the tactile experience. The material for the article is taken from treatises in early modern Europe, which contain translations of works on Chinese pulse diagnostics, but the questions with which I approach this textual material relate to an 'anthropology of sensory experience'. It is argued that - unlike other modalities of perception - tactile perception arises from a mutual involvement of touching subject and touched object. While such melding between subject and object makes touch an excellent non-verbal means of communication, one would expect that it is difficult to assess in an objective way. Yet the article shows ingenious ways with which Chinese physicians tackled the problem.
spellingShingle Chinese studies
Medical anthropology
History of medicine
Anthropology
Hsu, E
Towards a science of touch, part II
title Towards a science of touch, part II
title_full Towards a science of touch, part II
title_fullStr Towards a science of touch, part II
title_full_unstemmed Towards a science of touch, part II
title_short Towards a science of touch, part II
title_sort towards a science of touch part ii
topic Chinese studies
Medical anthropology
History of medicine
Anthropology
work_keys_str_mv AT hsue towardsascienceoftouchpartii