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Good Formulas

Empirical Evidence in Mid-Imperial Chinese Medical Texts
  • Ruth Yun-Ju Chen
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2023
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About this book

How early print culture reshaped strategies for presenting medical knowledge

How early print culture reshaped strategies for presenting medical knowledge

Why and how did the strategy of documenting medical practices through personal experience rise to prominence in China? This question is at the heart of Good Formulas, the first book-length study of the use of empirical evidence in Chinese medicine between the ninth and thirteenth centuries. The rise of this new approach to substantiating knowledge, which had appeared only sporadically in earlier medical literature, provides a window into transformations in the construction of textual authority in mid-imperial China.

Focusing on medical genres and working extensively with notebooks (biji), Ruth Yun-Ju Chen shows that employing empirical evidence became prominent in conjunction with a publishing boom that enabled wider availability of medical texts and treatises. To convince a more socioculturally diverse readership to believe their claims and to win intertextual debates with contemporaneous authors, many Song medical authors turned to empirical methodology. Revealing a correlation between publishing cultures and changes in persuasion strategies in medical genres, Good Formulas offers new insights into the histories of medicine, knowledge production, and publishing in China. It also provides rich examples for scholars interested in the development of empirical evidence in the premodern world.

Author / Editor information

Chen Ruth Yun-Ju :

Ruth Yun-Ju Chen is an assistant research fellow at the Institute of History and Philology, Academia Sinica. This is her first book.

Ruth Yun-Ju Chen is assistant research fellow at the Institute of History and Philology, Academia Sinica.

Reviews

"Chen examines a variety of sources, in particular formularies: collections of medicinal formulas (fangshu) and works on materia medica (bencao). In these texts, written by public officers and physicians, Chen finds a new way of evaluating knowledge based on an author's experience. . . Chen's valuable contribution provides new documentation and opens up new perspectives for this field of research."

"Chen is the first scholar to illuminate the new epistemic culture in middle-period China replete with new virtues that valued witnessing and historicity."—Marta Hanson, author of Speaking of Epidemics in Chinese Medicine: Disease and the Geographic Imagination in Late Imperial China

"Very original in conception. No previous study has looked at the medical tradition from the perspective of verification exhaustively."—Miranda Brown, author of The Art of Medicine in Early China: The Ancient and Medieval Origins of a Modern Archive


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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
June 6, 2023
eBook ISBN:
9780295751405
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
236
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