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Chinese medicine and alchemy in this book

First of all, let me state that I put these two topics together forcibly, and they have nothing to do with each other. I talked about Chinese medicine out of my feelings, and I talked about the alchemy in this book to make this text relevant to this book.

Let’s talk about Chinese medicine first.

The topic of traditional Chinese medicine is becoming more and more popular, and I just saw a clear-cut debate on the news. I really want to share my own opinions, but my accounts on major websites are basically dead, so I can only chat a few words here.

A few years ago, the camp that denied traditional Chinese medicine had the upper hand. In the past two years, the trend has reversed, and everyone knows the reasons.

To be blunt, my views on Chinese medicine will definitely make most people feel weird. If you don’t believe me, just read on.

When the camp that denies traditional Chinese medicine prevails, I stand on the side that affirms traditional Chinese medicine. When the camp that supports traditional Chinese medicine prevails, I stand on the side that denies traditional Chinese medicine. It’s not that I deliberately sing the opposite for the sake of being new and different, but that I am opposed to these two.

I don’t agree with Fang’s views.

I am a very skeptical person, whether it is science or metaphysics, because I feel that human beings are too small to be mentioned compared to the universe, and are far from being able to penetrate into the mysteries of heaven and earth, so I am skeptical of the unknown.

I have a deep sense of awe. I focus on karma and retribution in this book, and reincarnation is also for this reason. I cannot say that I firmly believe in its existence, but I doubt that it may exist. My principle is to give various viewpoints in my heart.

They all retain at least some position and do not completely insist on or completely deny anything, even if it seems to be extremely correct or extremely absurd.

Based on this mentality, I think the origin of traditional Chinese medicine is mysterious. Its theories seem to be far beyond the cognitive level of humans at that time. For example, the human body is regarded as a self-sufficient world, and yin and yang are reconciled to cure diseases, such as the meridian theory.

Stimulating acupuncture points does have strange effects, but meridians are not as visible as blood vessels. How did the ancients discover them? (Ancient India also had a similar theory)

Looking at the complicated meridian diagram of the human body, I really can’t believe that this is the crystallization of the wisdom of the ancients.

From the teachings of extraterrestrial civilizations? From the demise of ancient civilizations? Or are we "robots" created by higher civilizations, and the meridian diagram is just a design drawing? I do not reject Darwin's theory of evolution, but at the same time I do not deny all kinds of

Strange talk, after all, there are still many important links in the theory of evolution that cannot be self-consistent.

Then my views on Chinese medicine are relatively clear. I believe in ancient Chinese medicine, but not in current Chinese medicine.

In the long development process of traditional Chinese medicine, it is inevitable that many self-righteous quacks and ill-intentioned people will appear. Either for profit, for being new, or even simply because of stupidity, they continue to add all kinds of dross to traditional Chinese medicine, and the theoretical doctrines become more and more complex.

Traditional Chinese medicine is becoming more and more complex, and there are more and more harmful and unhelpful prescriptions, so that traditional Chinese medicine is gradually changing its flavor.

It is difficult to determine how much influence this addition has had on traditional Chinese medicine, because many of them may have been regarded as classics, and no one has the ability to strip them all out.

This is the reason why I support Chinese medicine in the wave of denial of Chinese medicine, and deny Chinese medicine in the wave of support. In addition, there is another reason, and the reason is as follows.

I believe that learning Chinese medicine requires a certain degree of talent. The main methods of diagnosis, including sight, smell, palpation, and questioning, are all subjective. There is no precise numerical standard. It depends on the doctor's own understanding and judgment.

, is it Yin deficiency, Yang deficiency, imbalance or external evil? Different doctors may make completely opposite diagnoses. Although medical skills can be improved by accumulating experience and studying hard, it is still very different from the study of Western medicine.

Yes, Western medicine has clear standards, and diagnosis is more based on test data. If you have the talent for learning, you can become a good Western medicine doctor, but only the talent for learning is obviously not enough for Chinese medicine. It is like mathematics and Chinese.

The difference is the understanding of the highest state of Chinese. To learn mathematics well depends on IQ, and to learn Chinese well you must have some language talent. (I will not talk about the integration of Chinese and Western medicine, which is further away from ancient Chinese medicine, but I admit that it is advanced.

At least it has positive significance in reducing misdiagnosis.)

At present, I don’t support praising Chinese medicine too highly because of the above reasons. I don’t think good Chinese medicine doctors can be trained on a large scale. Then there will be too many quacks, and quacks can kill people.

Okay, now let’s talk about the alchemy in the book.

In fact, I haven’t put too much effort into describing techniques such as alchemy, talisman making, and weapon refining. Writing about these things is undoubtedly very pleasing. The bizarre formulas, exciting refining scenes, and all kinds of strange and rare materials are all very interesting.

I know many people like to read plots that are easy to make a splash, but in the framework I constructed, these skills are just trivial. Spending too much time writing about these things would be digressing from the topic. For this book, it is watering down, so for this book

The descriptions of these skills are all to the point. In fact, if you cheer more and support me more, I will have the confidence to write more, making the content of this book richer and the plot more detailed and full. So I blame you, um.

, it’s all your fault!

I haven’t posted a comment here yet, and I haven’t given it a score. You’ve gone too far. It’s already over 5 million words. If you don’t comment, you still have to give it a score.

Hehe, it’s just a joke. As long as you are reading this book, you are supporting me. At the same time, I hope that the brothers and sisters who have not rated it can help me and rate it with just a few clicks to attract more people to read this book. Then I will

I have more enthusiasm for coding.

Those views about traditional Chinese medicine are just my random speculations and completely fantasy ideas. Whether you agree or disagree, just laugh it off. Don’t take me seriously. My little knowledge is not even civil science. It is at most metaphysics.

, Hehe. First of all, I would like to state that I put these two topics together forcibly, and they have nothing to do with each other. The reason for talking about Chinese medicine is based on my feelings, and the reason for talking about the alchemy in this book is to make this text relevant to this book.

Let’s talk about Chinese medicine first.

The topic of traditional Chinese medicine is becoming more and more popular, and I just saw a clear-cut debate on the news. I really want to share my own opinions, but my accounts on major websites are basically dead, so I can only chat a few words here.

A few years ago, the camp that denied traditional Chinese medicine had the upper hand. In the past two years, the trend has reversed, and everyone knows the reasons.

To be blunt, my views on Chinese medicine will definitely make most people feel weird. If you don’t believe me, just read on.

When the camp that denies traditional Chinese medicine prevails, I stand on the side that affirms traditional Chinese medicine. When the camp that supports traditional Chinese medicine prevails, I stand on the side that denies traditional Chinese medicine. It’s not that I deliberately sing the opposite for the sake of being new and different, but that I am opposed to these two.

I don’t agree with Fang’s views.

I am a very skeptical person, whether it is science or metaphysics, because I feel that human beings are too small to be mentioned compared to the universe, and are far from being able to penetrate into the mysteries of heaven and earth, so I am skeptical of the unknown.

I have a deep sense of awe. I focus on karma and retribution in this book, and reincarnation is also for this reason. I cannot say that I firmly believe in its existence, but I doubt that it may exist. My principle is to give various viewpoints in my heart.

They all retain at least some position and do not completely insist on or completely deny anything, even if it seems to be extremely correct or extremely absurd.

Based on this mentality, I think the origin of traditional Chinese medicine is mysterious. Its theories seem to be far beyond the cognitive level of humans at that time. For example, the human body is regarded as a self-sufficient world, and yin and yang are reconciled to cure diseases, such as the meridian theory.

Stimulating acupuncture points does have strange effects, but meridians are not as visible as blood vessels. How did the ancients discover them? (Ancient India also had a similar theory)

Looking at the complicated meridian diagram of the human body, I really can’t believe that this is the crystallization of the wisdom of the ancients.

From the teachings of extraterrestrial civilizations? From the demise of ancient civilizations? Or are we "robots" created by higher civilizations, and the meridian diagram is just a design drawing? I do not reject Darwin's theory of evolution, but at the same time I do not deny all kinds of

Strange talk, after all, there are still many important links in the theory of evolution that cannot be self-consistent.

Then my views on Chinese medicine are relatively clear. I believe in ancient Chinese medicine, but not in current Chinese medicine.

In the long development process of traditional Chinese medicine, it is inevitable that many self-righteous quacks and ill-intentioned people will appear. Either for profit, for being new, or even simply because of stupidity, they continue to add all kinds of dross to traditional Chinese medicine, and the theoretical doctrines become more and more complex.

Traditional Chinese medicine is becoming more and more complex, and there are more and more harmful and unhelpful prescriptions, so that traditional Chinese medicine is gradually changing its flavor.

It is difficult to determine how much influence this addition has had on traditional Chinese medicine, because many of them may have been regarded as classics, and no one has the ability to strip them all out.

This is the reason why I support Chinese medicine in the wave of denial of Chinese medicine, and deny Chinese medicine in the wave of support. In addition, there is another reason, and the reason is as follows.

I believe that learning Chinese medicine requires a certain degree of talent. The main methods of diagnosis, including sight, smell, palpation, and questioning, are all subjective. There is no precise numerical standard. It depends on the doctor's own understanding and judgment.

, is it Yin deficiency, Yang deficiency, imbalance or external evil? Different doctors may make completely opposite diagnoses. Although medical skills can be improved by accumulating experience and studying hard, it is still very different from the study of Western medicine.

Yes, Western medicine has clear standards, and diagnosis is more based on test data. If you have the talent for learning, you can become a good Western medicine doctor, but only the talent for learning is obviously not enough for Chinese medicine. It is like mathematics and Chinese.

The difference is the understanding of the highest state of Chinese. To learn mathematics well depends on IQ, and to learn Chinese well you must have some language talent. (I will not talk about the integration of Chinese and Western medicine, which is further away from ancient Chinese medicine, but I admit that it is advanced.

At least it has positive significance in reducing misdiagnosis.)

At present, I don’t support praising Chinese medicine too highly because of the above reasons. I don’t think good Chinese medicine doctors can be trained on a large scale. Then there will be too many quacks, and quacks can kill people.

Okay, now let’s talk about the alchemy in the book.

In fact, I haven’t put too much effort into describing techniques such as alchemy, talisman making, and weapon refining. Writing about these things is undoubtedly very pleasing. The bizarre formulas, exciting refining scenes, and all kinds of strange and rare materials are all very interesting.

I know many people like to read plots that are easy to make a splash, but in the framework I constructed, these skills are just trivial. Spending too much time writing about these things would be digressing from the topic. For this book, it is watering down, so for this book

The descriptions of these skills are all to the point. In fact, if you cheer more and support me more, I will have the confidence to write more, making the content of this book richer and the plot more detailed and full. So I blame you, um.

, it’s all your fault!

I haven’t posted a comment here yet, and I haven’t given it a score. You’ve gone too far. It’s already over 5 million words. If you don’t comment, you still have to give it a score.

Hehe, it’s just a joke. As long as you are reading this book, you are supporting me. At the same time, I hope that the brothers and sisters who have not rated it can help me and rate it with just a few clicks to attract more people to read this book. Then I will

I have more enthusiasm for coding.

Those views on traditional Chinese medicine are just my random speculations and completely fantasy ideas. Whether you agree or disagree, just laugh it off. Don’t take me seriously. My little knowledge is not even civil science. It is metaphysics at most.
Chapter completed!
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