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      Chinese Medicine: A Cognitive and Epistemological Review*

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          Abstract

          In spite of the common belief that Chinese natural philosophy and medicine have a unique frame of reference completely foreign to the West, this article argues that they in fact have significant cognitive and epistemic similarities with certain esoteric health beliefs of pre-Christian Europe. From the standpoint of Cognitive Science, Chinese Medicine appears as a proto-scientific system of health observances and practices based on a symptomological classification of disease using two elementary dynamical-processes pattern categorization schemas: a hierarchical and combinatorial inhibiting–activating model (Yin-Yang), and a non-hierarchical and associative five-parameter semantic network (5-Elements/Agents). The concept-map of the five-parameter model amounts to a pentagram, a commonly found geomantic and spell casting sigil in a number of pre-Christian health and safety beliefs in Europe, to include the Pythagorean cult of Hygieia, and the Old Religion of Northern Europe. This non-hierarchical pattern-recognition archetype/prototype was hypothetically added to the pre-existing hierarchical one to form a hybrid nosology that can accommodate for a change in disease perceptions. The selection of five parameters rather than another number might be due to a numerological association between the integer five, the golden ratio, the geometry of the pentagram and the belief in health and wholeness arising from cosmic or divine harmony. In any case, this body of purely empirical knowledge is nowadays widely flourishing in the US and in Europe as an alternative to Western Medicine and with the claim of being a unique, independent and comprehensive medical system, when in reality it is structurally—and perhaps historically—related to the health and safety beliefs of pre-Christian Europe; and without the prospect for an epistemological rupture, it will remain built upon rudimentary cognitive modalities, ancient metaphysics, and a symptomological view of disease.

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          A thousand plateaus: Capitalism and schizophrenia

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            A Tutorial on Learning with Bayesian Networks

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              Understanding biological complexity: lessons from the past.

              Advances in molecular biology now permit complex biological systems to be tracked at an exquisite level of detail. The information flow is so great, however, that using intuition alone to draw connections is unrealistic. Thus, the need to integrate mathematical biology with experimental biology is greater than ever. To achieve this integration, obstacles that have traditionally prevented effective communication between theoreticians and experimentalists must be overcome, so that experimentalists learn the language of mathematics and dynamical modeling and theorists learn the language of biology. Fifty years ago Alan Hodgkin and Andrew Huxley published their quantitative model of the nerve action potential; in the same year, Alan Turing published his work on pattern formation in activator-inhibitor systems. These classic studies illustrate two ends of the spectrum in mathematical biology: the detailed model approach and the minimal model approach. When combined, they are highly synergistic in analyzing the mechanisms underlying the behavior of complex biological systems. Their effective integration will be essential for unraveling the physical basis of the mysteries of life.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Evid Based Complement Alternat Med
                ecam
                Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine : eCAM
                Oxford University Press
                1741-427X
                1741-4288
                September 2007
                11 April 2007
                : 4
                : 3
                : 293-298
                Affiliations
                Medicus Research LLC, Northridge, CA and Southern California University of Health Sciences, Whittier, CA, USA
                Author notes
                For reprints and all correspondence: Ben Kavoussi, 2033 Euclid Street, #7, Santa Monica, CA 90405, USA; E-mail: kavoussi@ 123456ucla.edu

                *This article is the first in a series of comparative essays on Chinese Medicine from the epistemological, theoretical and practical standpoints.

                Article
                10.1093/ecam/nem005
                1978236
                17965759
                f69c6bf9-38fa-45a9-a969-0e8efea8be6e
                © 2007 The Author(s).

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 3 October 2006
                : 11 January 2007
                Categories
                Lecture Series

                Complementary & Alternative medicine
                5-elements theory – empirical medicine – proto-science – sacred geometry – semantic networks – traditional chinese medicine

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