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. 2013 Aug 24;19(9):706–711. doi: 10.1007/s11655-013-1435-5

Differences in the origin of philosophy between Chinese medicine and western medicine: Exploration of the holistic advantages of Chinese medicine

Da-zhi Sun 1,2, Shao-dan Li 2, Yi Liu 2, Yin Zhang 2,, Rong Mei 2, Ming-hui Yang 2
PMCID: PMC7089096  PMID: 23975136

Abstract

To explore advantages of Chinese medicine (CM) by analyzing differences in the origin of philosophy for human health between CM and Western medicine (WM). Methodologically, a distinctive feature of CM is its systems theory, which is also the difference between CM and WM. Since the birth of CM, it has taken the human body as a whole from the key concepts of “qi, blood, yin-yang, viscera (Zang-Fu), and meridian and channel”, rather than a single cell or a particular organ. WM evolves from the Western philosophic way of thinking and merely uses natural sciences as the foundation. The development of WM is based on human structures, or anatomy, and therefore, research of WM is also based on the way of thinking of decomposing the whole human body into several independent parts, which is the impetus of promoting the development of WM. The core of CM includes the holistic view and the dialectical view. Chinese herbal medicines contain various components and treat a disease from multiple targets and links. Therefore, Chinese herbal medicines treat a diseased state by regulating and mobilizing the whole body rather than just regulating a single factor, since the diseased state is not only a problem in a local part of the body but a local reflection of imbalance of the whole body.

Keywords: Chinese medicine, Western medicine, philosophy differences, integration

Footnotes

Supported by China Postdoctoral Science Foundation Project (No. 20100480096)

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