In the 1990’s Cindy completed both a bachelors and masters degree through Lesley University’s Independent Research Options with Ted Kaptchuk serving as her professional advisor. Please join us in this rare opportunity to dive into and digest this rich material as Cindy breathes life into this historic text.Ĭindy Banker MA, Dipl. With a perspective gained though her original translations from this historic text combined with a lifetime of clinical experience as a Five Element Shiatsu Practitioner, Cindy will provide participants the opportunity to enhance clinical treatment strategies with a deeper understanding and renewed perspective. Intrigued by his complex reasoning, Cindy focused her research on this section of the Lei Jing, believing it is where Zhang expressed the culmination of his own thoughts. In this section, Zhang further explores the dynamics and pathology of emotional and spiritual health in the chapter titled “Qing Zhi Bing,” (Emotional and Mental Illness).Īlthough the Lei Jing was used as the template for the structure of future textbooks on Chinese Medicine some sections were omitted including the Hui Tong section. The second section of the Lei Jing begins with Chapter 29, Hui Tong 會 通 (Comprehensive Understanding) and sources quotations from where they were originally discussed in the first section but here they appear in an independent order. The initial section quotes Chinese Medicine’s original cannon the Nei Jing (compiled during the Han dynasty) and includes all of Wang Bing's original annotations. ![]() Originally published in 1624, “The Classic of Categories” The Lei Jing is divided into two sections. Modern clinicians and luminaries of Chinese Medicine site him for his mastery of his academic achievement Chinese herbal medicine the diagnostic paradigm of his ten questions and aspects of specific work in describing the Triple Warmer, Kidney pathology and rationale for treatment strategies. It is difficult to say what Zhang Jie Bin is most famous for. A time that allowed him to reference and build upon the primary texts from earlier scholars - a time before Chinese Medicine became altered by the introduction of Western Medicine. Overlooked by generations of academic and clinical scholars, Cindy will take us on a journey to explore the brilliance of Zhang Jie Bin’s work as it relates to emotional and spiritual health.Ī physician and scholar of the end of the Ming Dynasty, Zhang Jie Bin’s ideas came at a pivotal time in the evolution of Chinese Medicine.
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