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Healing with Poisons: Index

Healing with Poisons
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. Acknowledgments
  6. Chronology of Dynasties
  7. Introduction
  8. Part I. Malleable Medicines
  9. Chapter 1. The Paradox of Du
  10. Chapter 2. Transforming Poisons
  11. Part II. Knowledge, Authority, and Practice
  12. Chapter 3. Fighting Poison with Poison
  13. Chapter 4. Medicines in Circulation
  14. Chapter 5. Medicines in Practice
  15. Part III. Enhancing the Body
  16. Chapter 6. Alluring Stimulant
  17. Chapter 7. Dying to Live
  18. Conclusion
  19. Glossary of Chinese Characters
  20. Notes
  21. Bibliography
  22. Index

INDEX

abdominal bloating, 116, 206n55

abscesses, 48, 119, 122, 135

aconite: access to, 200n21; antidotes for, 42; cezi, 47, 50, 95–96; in Chinese pharmacy today, 47–48, 173; cost of, 49, 193n48; effects on the body, 39, 206n46; in Greek pharmacy, 8; heating power of, 49; jin, 47, 192n39; in Han sources, 48–50; as lord of the hundred drugs, 8, 36, 47, 184n22; magical power of, 48, 193n44; mubiezi, 50; as name of demon, 65; names for, 47, 95–96; Obringer’s study, 7, 191n65; as political metaphor, 38; processing of, 47, 50–52, 57; source locations of, 96; as Tang local tribute, 91; tianxiong, 47, 48fig., 49, 50, 95–96, 107; toxicity of, 47; use in formulas, 48–49, 72, 107, 114–15, 119, 121, 136, 191n65; use in murders, 39, 49–50, 86; varieties of, 36, 47, 48fig., 50, 95; wuhui, 47, 48, 49, 50, 95–96, 107, 193n43; wutou, 47, 48fig., 50, 86, 95–96. See also fuzi

active ingredient, 57

acupuncture, 6, 83, 98, 108

acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), 173

agitation (dong), 165

Ai, Emperor of Eastern Jin, 153

alchemy: in antiquity, 150, 212n16; cost of, 151, 154, 157–58, 212n18; Daoism and, 13–14, 31, 51, 148, 213n33; during the Era of Division, 51, 213n33, 214n57; in Europe, 14; jars and utensils for, 155, 158, 159fig.; and medicine, 149, 164–65, 167; minerals used in, 5, 148, 151, 154–55, 156; outer (waidan) and inner (neidan), 148, 166, 212n5; perception of du in, 148–49, 152–53, 156–57, 159–61; preparation of elixirs, 154–55; scholarship on, 148; Sun Simiao and, 110, 111, 119, 167, 216n89; in Tang, 157–59; Tao Hongjing and, 31, 154–57, 166, 167, 213n37, 214n46; texts on, 151, 156, 158–59, 213n29, 213nn37–38, 214n57; and transcendence, 5–6, 36, 149–50, 166, 208n14. See also elixirs; transcendence

alcohol (jiu): as du-possessing drug, 37; in gu poison, 71; immoderate consumption of, 133–34; laced with zhen feathers, 37, 159; use in activating drugs, 119, 133–34, 136, 139; use in drug preparation, 44, 45, 50, 161; use in making counterfeit drugs, 54; use in monasteries, 102

amethyst, 135, 138, 142, 156

An Lushan, 132

An Lushan Rebellion, 9, 103, 170, 199n2

ancient Greece, 7–8, 25, 41, 190n61

angelica (danggui), 54, 89, 114

animal-derived drugs, 33fig., 34, 36–37, 87, 89–91, 93, 135; bezoar, bovine, 36, 45, 89, 91, 119, 201n38; musk, 89; zhen bird feathers, 36–37, 86, 144, 191n71. See also snakes

anmo (therapeutic exercise), 65, 67, 83

antidotes, 3, 37, 42, 45, 161, 184n20

aphrodisiacs, 137

Arcane Essentials from the Imperial Library (Waitai miyao fang; Wang Tao), 123–24, 137, 170, 186n46, 210n60

arisaema (huzhang), 119

aristolochia (mutong), 174, 216n14

Arnold, David, 7

arsenic: in chemotherapy, 173; compounds of, 35; pishuang (refined arsenic), 50, 194n56, 216n13; poisoning, 137, 210n48; tonic and aphrodisiac effects, 137; trioxide, 173, 194n56, 216n13; use in alchemy, 148; use in medicine, 35. See also arsenolite; orpiment; realgar

arsenolite (yushi), 134, 137, 138, 142–43, 210n41, 210n47

artemisia (qinghao), 173

asarum, 54, 114; from Huayin, 53, 194n70

asbestos (buhui mu), 158, 160

Assorted Collection of Formulas from the Four Seas (Sihai leiju fang), 108

Ayurvedic healing, 7

badou (bean from Ba/croton), 36, 41, 42, 47, 72, 119

Bai Juyi, 171

Baopuzi neipian (Inner Chapters of the Master Who Embraces the Unhewn; Ge Hong), 151–53, 162–63

barbarian powder (hufen), 45, 192n23

bat droppings, 33fig., 34

Beiji qianjin yaofang. See Essential Formulas Worth a Thousand in Gold for Emergencies

bencao, meaning and translation of, 25. See also materia medica

Bencao jing jizhu. See Collected Annotations on the Classic of Materia Medica

bezoar, bovine (niuhuang), 36, 45, 89, 91, 119; counterfeits of, 201n38

Bian Que, 112

biomedicine: contrasted with Chinese medicine, 4, 40, 172; incorporating classical Chinese pharmacological knowledge, 173

black magic, 73, 197n58, 198n67

blister beetles, 89, 91

boa gallbladder (ranshe dan), 89–91

body: cultivation of, 153, 157, 166; and drug effectiveness, 45–46; effects of elixirs on, 162, 163–67, 169, 215n85; effects of minerals on, 138–39; in functional model of disease, 79; political associations of, 43; purification of, 165; in religious and medical traditions, 13–15; in shijie, 162–64, 167; transformation of, 14, 27, 151, 162, 169, 208n14; viscera, 189n45, 215n84; vitality of, 5, 49, 67, 127, 136

Book of Documents (Shangshu), 87, 215n83

Book of Odes (Shijing), 46, 187n7, 192n34

Buddhism: alcohol consumption, 102; dissemination of medical knowledge, 202n61; grottos, 98, 202n61; healing techniques, 30, 68, 111, 205n25; influence on medical ethics, 111, 121; and material culture, 14; prohibitions, 102; scriptures, 12, 98, 100, 102; transmission from India, 184n14, 190n60; wards of recuperation in monasteries, 200n14. See also Buddhist monks; Dunhuang

Buddhist monks, 101, 107, 120, 131, 140, 142, 208n16, 210n61

cancer, 173, 174

cannabis (mafen), 37, 191n9; U.S. marijuana use, 174

Cao Xi, Formulas That Disperse Cold-Food Powder (Jie Hanshi San fang), 141

cats: cat demon, 72, 73–75, 76–78; domestic and wild, 75; li, 74; magic, 75

centipedes: gu and, 70, 72, 73; with red heads and legs, 54, 195n75

Chao Yuanfang, 65–67, 70–72, 74, 199n80. See also On the Origins and Symptoms of All Illnesses

chemotherapy, 173

Chen Cangqi, Supplement to Materia Medica (Bencao shiyi), 72–73

Chen Yanzhi, Formulas of the Lesser Grade (Xiaopin fang), 108–9, 112, 138–39, 142, 210n49, 210n60

Chinese medicine: changing landscape of, 169–70; classical, 184n24; Era of Division, 9, 10; globalization of, 172; Han dynasty, 10; as holistic, 4; periodization of, 9; reinvention of, in the twentieth century, 11, 40, 172, 173–74; Song dynasty, 11, 103–4; Sui and Tang, 9–11

Chinese modernity, 184n27

chong. See vermin; worms

Chu Cheng, 46

Chunyu Yi, 134–35

cinnabar: in Chinese pharmacy today, 173; as material of great demand, 156; and mercury, 160; as one of five minerals, during Han, 134; as tribute drug, 89; use in alchemy, 150, 151, 154, 155, 160; use in medicine, 5, 160; varieties of, during Tang, 158, 159fig.

cinnamon (gui), 48, 121, 193n50, 207n78

Classic of Changes (Yijing): and divination, 194n58; “Gnawing and Chewing,” 23; on gu, 69–70, 197n40; mentions of du, 22–23, 187n18

Classic of Transcendents, 162–63

clay, 134, 138, 142, 209n28

climate change, 68

clove swellings (dingzhong), 118–19

cocklebur (cang’er), 118–19

cold damage (shanghan) disorders, 108, 193n45, 196n34; caused by incorrect administration of Five-Stone Powder, 141; treatments for, 49, 100, 135, 136

Cold-Food Powder (Hanshi San), 128, 132, 135, 136, 140, 141, 143. See also Five-Stone Powder

Collected Annotations on the Classic of Materia Medica (Bencao jing jizhu; Tao Hongjing): on arsenolite, 137, 138; authorship and historical background, 30–32; cinnabar and mercury in, 160; commentaries of Tao Hongjing, 32–34, 33fig., 93, 98, 186n46, 189n56; conventions of, followed in Newly Revised Materia Medica, 93; on counterfeit drugs, 54; demonic etiology in, 196n16; on difficulty of obtaining ingredients, 156; on dosage control, 41; drug combinations based on seven dispositions, 44–45; on drug effectiveness related to individual traits, 46; drug grouping by natural category, 34–35, 190n60; on drug preparation, 31, 47, 53; drug specialists in, 54; “enlarged book,” 34; on inappropriate drugs for decoctions, 45; list of antidotes, 42, 45; need for revision cited in Tang, 81, 93; potent drugs in, 35–37; as reorganization of Divine Farmer’s Classic, 31–32, 34; seventh-century manuscript fragment, 32–34, 33fig.; sources for, 192n18; specialization of pharmaceutical activity, 53–55, 57–58; specification of du status, 30, 32–34, 33fig., 35–36, 189n46, 189n53, 190n61; Tao’s preface to, 31–32, 53. See also Divine Farmer’s Classic; Tao Hongjing

Collected Efficacious Formulas, 108, 109, 204n17

commentary writing: conventions, 12–13, 32, 93, 98, 123; Tang, 93, 98, 100; by Tao Hongjing, 32–34, 33fig., 186n46, 189n56

compound medicines, 41, 67, 174, 214n46. See also drug combination

Comprehensive Institutions (Tongdian), 88, 90map

Confucian ideology, 129, 133, 190n60

contagious disorders: caused by demons, 62, 63, 64, 68; through dead bodies, 63, 64; in On the Origins and Symptoms, 66–67, 68–69; varieties of, 196n34

cooling therapies, 29, 49, 116, 140–41, 166, 193n49, 210n47

cosmology, 23, 28, 38, 129, 148, 190n60

counterfeit drugs, 36, 54, 91, 201n38

creams, 83, 199n7

croton (badou), 36, 41, 42, 47, 72, 119

dan. See elixirs

Dao, 23, 38, 151, 207n74. See also Daoism

Daohong (Buddhist monk), 208n16, 210n61; Formulas for Dispersing the Powder by Duo Treatment (Jiesan duizhi fang), 142

Daoism: and alchemy, 13–14, 31, 51, 148, 213n33; cosmology, 38, 190n60; and demonic sources of illness, 62, 64–65, 68; healing techniques, 30, 64–65, 68; ideas of nonaction, 130; life cultivation, 94, 202n51, 205n25; and pharmacology, 13–14, 31, 167, 169; ritual, 51, 65, 68, 190n60; Shangqing (Highest Clarity) sect, 157; Sun Simiao and, 109–10, 111; Taiqing (Great Clarity) sect, 213n33; Tao Hongjing and, 31, 154, 157; Tianshi Dao (Way of the Celestial Masters), 64. See also alchemy

Daowu, Emperor of Northern Wei, 132, 153, 208n18

daoyin (guiding and pulling), 66

decoctions: inappropriate drugs for, 45; for alleviating bodily disturbance, 142; Spleen-Warming, 121; use of, specified in Tang ordinance, 84, 85

deficiency (xu) and repleteness (shi), 46, 192n29

Deleuze, Gilles, and Félix Guattari, “drug assemblage,” 57, 195n83

delusion (huo), sickness of, 69, 71

Demon Statutes of Nüqing (Nüqing guilü), 196n15

demonic infestation (guizhu): in Divine Farmer’s Classic, 63; and epidemics, 64–65, 68–69; formulas for, 67–68; meaning of the term, 63; modern scholars’ approaches to, 195n7; in On the Origins and Symptoms, 66–67; origins of, 64; symptoms of, 63–64, 66–67

demons: cat demon, 72, 73–75, 76–78; as cause of illness, 61–62, 64–65, 79; in Daoism, 64–65, 68; qi of, 66–67, 199n80. See also demonic infestation

Deng Yue, 162

Derrida, Jacques, 184n16

Dezong, Emperor of Tang, 97

diarrhea: from arsenic poisoning, 210n48; cold, 121; from gu poison, 72; hot, 115, 119, 121; from ingesting elixirs, 164, 165, 166, 167; as malfunction of the Spleen, 207n77; treatment for, 131

Dioscorides, De Materia Medica, 8, 25

divination, 26, 51, 53, 69–70, 110, 194n58, 197n40, 204n4

Divine Farmer’s Classic of Materia Medica (Shennong bencao jing): alternative names of drugs in, 95; authorship and historical background, 26–27; bencao in title of, 25; changes in Tang manuscripts, 100; cited in Essential Formulas, 112, 113; classification of drugs in, 28–29, 37, 43, 159, 188–89n44; and Collected Annotations, 31–32, 33fig., 34–35; commentaries to, 31–32, 189n46; on demonic infestation, 63; Divine Farmer, 25–26; on dosage control, 41, 161; drugs for different categories of disorders, 62–63; on drying herbs, 47; du status in, 30, 189n46; on gu poison, 63, 69; on methods of delivering drugs, 45; mineral drugs in, 134, 135; preface, 27–28, 30, 41, 62–63, 189n46; preservation of content, 188n40, 189–90n57; principle of opposites, 49; properties of drugs in, 29–30; seven dispositions in, 43–44; on uses of cocklebur, 118. See also Collected Annotations on the Classic of Materia Medica

dizziness, 39, 47, 49, 165, 206n46

dormant heat (fure), 127–28

dosage control, 39, 41–42, 45, 48, 56, 114–15, 141, 144; of elixirs, 161, 163

dragon illness (jiaolong bing), 116–17, 206n55

dragon’s bone (longgu), 45, 192n22

drug abuse, 175

drug classification: in Collected Annotations, 34–37, 190n60; in Divine Farmer’s Classic, 28–29, 37, 43, 188–89n44; lords, ministers, and assistants, 43; in Newly Revised Materia Medica, 93

drug combination, 42–46; with dosage control, 41; formulas of Sun Simiao, 105, 113, 114–15, 119, 121–22; lords, ministers, and assistants, 43; performed by Palace Drug Service in Tang, 84; seven dispositions and, 43–45; in Xu Zhicai’s Drug Correspondences from Lord Thunder, 55. See also compound medicines

Drug Correspondences (Yaodui), 192n18

drug processing: aconite, 47–52; as aspect of drug materiality, 56–57; drying herbs, 47; paozhi, 46–47; raw and cooked drugs, 46; terms for, 46, 192n31; Treatise on Drug Processing, 50–52, 54, 194n57

drug substitution, 54, 96–97, 100–101, 104, 137, 142–43, 156, 174, 203n75

drugs: counterfeit, 54, 91, 201n38; delivery methods, 45; harvesting of, 52, 53–54, 55–56, 87–89; identification of, 190n62; lay knowledge of, 96–97; locations of origin, 87–91, 90map, 156; markets, 54–55, 88, 156; meanings of the English word, 174, 216–17n15; names of, 95–96; plant-based drugs, 36; prices of, 36, 49, 52, 156, 157–58, 193n48; properties of, 29–30; sellers of, 52, 53–55, 85–86; smuggling, 55, 156. See also animal-derived drugs; elixirs; herbs; medicines; minerals

du: ancient pronunciation of, 187n16; as benchmark for classifying medicines, 4, 20, 28–29, 37, 188–89n44; changing meaning of, 20–23, 37, 187n16; concept of, in alchemy, 148–49, 152–53, 156–57, 159–61; connection to herbs, 22; drugs without, 28, 29; in Explaining Characters, 20–21; fiery poison (huodu), 163; as food poisoning, 23; as “govern,” 23, 187n18; paradox of, 20, 37, 156–57, 164, 166, 175–76; as potency, 6–7, 20, 28, 37, 93, 148–49, 152, 168–69; specification of status of drugs with regard to, 30, 32, 33fig., 34, 35–36, 189n46, 189n53, 190n61; as thickness, 20–21, 22, 37, 187n5; translation of, 15; used of speech, 19, 25, 37, 188n28; used to describe the power of virtue, 23; written graphs, 21, 22fig., 187n6. See also poisons

Duan Yi, 52

Dugu Tuo, 73–74, 75–76

Dunhuang: manuscripts copied elsewhere, 102; manuscripts of Newly Revised Materia Medica, 93–94, 98–101, 99fig.; medical manuscripts from, 10, 12, 98; pothi manuscripts, 98–102, 99fig.; practice of medicine in, 101–2, 104

dunjia (evading stems), 194n58

duyao (potent drugs), 19; ancient meanings of, 23–24. See also du

dysosma (guijiu), 91, 97, 136

east-flowing water (dongliu shui), 51, 155

efficacy: as artifact of copying, 116, 122, 206n51; confirmed by bodily sensations, 49, 115, 164–65, 206n46, 215n85; confirmed by personal experience, 11, 13, 105, 115, 117–20, 169; confirmed by self-healing, 117–19; confirmed by word of mouth, 116–17; without discernible reason, 105, 120–21; and jingyan, 106; in medical cases of Essential Formulas, 116–20, 123; of remedies inappropriate for nobles, 122; in titles of texts, 108

elixirs: in antiquity, 150; bodily effects of, 162, 163–66, 169, 215n85; cinnabar and mercury in, 160–61; colors of, 156, 166, 214n46; compounding of, 51, 154–55, 158, 159fig., 214n46; for curing illness, 164–65; dangers of, 148, 152–53, 159–60, 161–62, 212n8; dosage, 161, 163, 165; with du, 152–53, 156–57, 163–64, 166, 215n80; effects on qi, 151–52; in Ge Hong’s Inner Chapters, 151–53, 162–63; ingested by emperors, 153; misgivings about taking, 164, 215n80; poisoning by, 147–48, 163, 166, 171, 214n47; Reverted Elixir in Nine Cycles, 154–56; in Tang, 157–62; testing on criminals, 153; for transcendence, 147–48, 156–57, 161–64, 166–67, 169, 208n14, 215n80; use of term, 149; and virtuous conduct, 153

emperor, medicines for, 83–85, 88–91, 90fig., 132, 148, 150, 153–54, 208n18, 214n46

epidemics, 62, 64–65, 68, 79, 196n34

Era of Division: accounts of potent drugs, 20, 37–38; alchemy, 51, 212n16, 213n33, 214n57; cats in, 75; Five-Stone Powder in, 130, 131, 133, 137, 141; gu in, 70; healers in, 209n39, 210n61; hereditary medicine in, 9, 55, 83, 107–8, 170; Treatise on Drug Processing, 50, 54; as unorthodox, 202n48. See also Collected Annotations on the Classic of Materia Medica

Erya (Approaching Correctness), 95, 96

Essential Formulas Worth a Thousand in Gold for Emergencies (Beiji qianjin yaofang; Sun Simiao): accounts of epidemics, 68; audience of, 113–14; complex and single-ingredient formulas in, 113, 114, 205n37; criteria for inclusion of formulas, 115; editions of, 205n29; efficacious remedies in, 13, 106–7, 114–19, 120–22; on Five-Stone Powder, 139, 143–44; formulas to treat demonic disorders, 67; formulas to treat gu poisoning, 72; incorporation of medical cases, 106, 109, 116–21, 122–23; organization and content, 111, 114; preface, 110, 111–12, 113, 205n30; private transmission of, 113; and relationship between text and experience, 122–24; reliance on classical sources, 112–13, 205n35; self-healing narratives, 117–19; sources of formulas, 115, 206n47; theoretical framework, 112–13; title of, 112; use of du-possessing substances, 67, 68, 119

Essential Synopsis of the Golden Cabinet (Jingui yaolüe), 135, 136, 143

etiology: in Daoism, 64–65; demonic sources of illness, 61–62, 63–64; illnesses caused by gu, 62, 69–70; ontological and functional models, 79, 199n80. See also On the Origins and Symptoms of All Illnesses

experimenta texts, 123

fa (to shoot an arrow/activate), 138, 139

Fan Ka-wai, 10, 198n76, 202n47

Fan Wang, Formulary of Fan, 31, 189n49

Fang Boyu, 127, 138, 139

fangshi, 53, 57, 64, 147, 150, 194n67, 213n33

fangshu (formula books). See formula books

fangshu (methods and arts), 26

feces, 113, 122

five exhaustions and seven injuries, 143, 211n65

five pungent vegetables (wuxin), 102, 203n78

five-phase system, 29, 112, 134, 135, 138

Five-Stone Powder (Wushi San): activation, 138–39; and bodily emanation of heat, 137–39; compared to opium, 128, 145, 211n74; compared with elixirs, 166, 167, 208n14; composition, 134, 135–36, 138, 142–43; Daohong’s duo treatment, 142; debates of physicians and scholars, 128, 140–44, 145; and eccentric behavior, 130, 132, 133–34, 136; medicinal uses and benefits, 131, 143, 211n67; names for, 128, 140, 143; negative effects, 128, 131–32, 134–35, 144–46; origin stories, 129, 136; precursors, 134–37; proper administration, 136, 138–39, 140–41, 145–46, 208n18; Sun Simiao’s formula, 142–43; used for enhancing life and illuminating the mind, 129, 131, 143

flavor, 29, 33fig., 84, 102

food poisoning, 23, 70, 107

foods: as category of drugs, 35, 36, 93; du possessing, 37; overconsumption, 42; poisoning from, 23, 70, 107, 187n16; preparation of in Rites of Zhou, 23, 82; as remedies, 113, 116–17; as tribute items, 88. See also vegetables

foot qi, 92, 117, 119, 195n7, 201n41

formula books (fangshu): dissemination of, 97; efficacy phrases in, 116, 122, 206n51; of the Era of Division, 107–8, 116; formulas to counter poisons, 184n20; of Ge Hong, 63–64, 152; genre of, 13, 106, 123–24; Han period, 27, 107; in medical education, 108–9; of Sui and Tang, 108–9; of Sun Simiao, 111; for use in emergencies, 112, 113, 152, 205n37. See also Arcane Essentials from the Imperial Library; Essential Formulas Worth a Thousand in Gold for Emergencies; Formulas of the Lesser Grade

Formulas for Emergencies to Keep at Hand (Zhouhou beiji fang; Ge Hong), 63–64, 152

Formulas for Widespread Aid (Guangji fang), 97

Formulas for Widespread Benefit (Guangli fang), 97

Formulas in the Jade Case (Yuhan fang; Ge Hong), 152

Formulas of the Lesser Grade (Xiaopin fang; Chen Yanzhi), 108–9, 112, 138–39, 142, 210n49, 210n60

fruits, 24, 34, 93, 98, 150

fu (an invasive plant), 21, 187n7

funerals and mourning, 64, 130, 133, 134

fuzi (attached offspring), 4, 36, 47, 49, 95–96, 190n64; as “lord of the hundred drugs,” 8, 36, 184n22; as name of demon, 65. See also aconite

Gan Zizhen, 118, 120, 206n62, 207n64

Gaozong, Emperor of Tang, 81, 92, 110

Gates Office (Mensi), 84, 85, 200n15

Ge Hong: on alcohol and Five-Stone Powder, 133–34; death of, 162; Formulas for Emergencies to Keep at Hand, 63–64, 152; Formulas in the Jade Case, 152; Inner Chapters of the Master Who Embraces the Unhewn, 151–53, 162–63; medical texts, 107, 152; writings on alchemy, 150–51, 166–67, 213n39

gelsemium (gouwen/yege), 36, 44, 86, 94–95, 143, 203n75

Gibbs, Frederick, 8

ginger, 45, 114, 121, 142, 193n50, 207n78

ginseng (renshen), 45, 89, 114, 121, 142, 207n78; Korean, 194n69; from Shangdang, 53, 194n69

gold, 150, 151, 214n57, 215n68

government-commissioned texts, 13, 62, 65, 81–82, 92, 94, 97, 103–4, 111, 216n14

Granny Rong of Qizhou, 118, 207n64

grasses, 21, 22, 25, 94

grave-quelling writs (zhenmu wen), 64

Great Powder (Dasan), 128. See also Five-Stone Powder

great wind (dafeng), 117, 136, 206n58

gu: associated with delusion, 69, 71; associated with seductive power of women, 69–70, 71, 197n40; associated with worms and animals, 70, 71–72, 74–75; cat-demon, 72, 73–75, 77–78; flying, 71, 72; illnesses caused by, 62, 71–72, 119; linked to witchcraft, 73–78, 79–80; meaning of term, 69–70, 71; political responses to, 62, 73, 76–77, 79–80; remedies for, 72–73, 89, 119; southern linkage, 77; and transformation, 70, 71, 74–75; wild-path, 72, 198n67; in Zuo Commentary, 69–70

Gu Yanwu, 172

gui (demon). See demonic infestation; demons

hallucinogens, 36, 37, 42, 174, 191n9

Han Kang, 52, 53

Han Yu, 171, 211n64

He Xun, 133

He Yan: execution of, 130, 208n7; and Five-Stone Powder, 129, 136; and Mysterious Learning, 129–30; negative portrayal of, 131, 136; notoriety for sexual indulgence, 136, 137

heart, 48, 136, 140, 163, 164; demonic illness in, 61, 66, 74; as organ in Chinese medicine, 29, 43, 209n28

henbane (langdang zi), 36, 42

herbs: contrasted with minerals, 138, 151; cultivation of, in the capitals, 86–87; as drug classification, 93, 190n60; drying of, 47; du-possessing, 22, 36, 44, 89, 94, 97, 118, 119, 136, 172, 196n15, 203n75; in Five-Stone Powder, 136, 142; grasses, 21, 22, 25, 94; knowledge of, in the Han, 22; in the imperial collection, 89; as natural remedies, 40; paired with minerals, 142; tonics, 89; transplantation of, 87, 203n73. See also aconite

hereditary medicine, 9, 30, 83, 107–8, 120, 140, 170

Hinrichs, TJ, 103 homeopathy, 198–99n77

hot and cold maladies, 49, 62, 193n49

hou (thickness), 20–21, 22, 29, 37, 187n5

Hua Tuo, 112

Huan, Emperor of Han, 52

Huangdi neijing. See Yellow Emperor’s Inner Classic

Huangfu Mi, 131–33, 136, 140–41, 142, 146, 209n20

huangjing (yellow essence/polygonatum), 94–95, 202n51

Huiyi (Buddhist monk), 131, 140, 210n59

Huiyuan (Buddhist monk), 208n16

hunting, use of poisons in, 21, 27, 187n9

Huo Xian, 39

illnesses: contagious, 63–64, 68–69, 196n34; dragon illness, 116–17, 206n55; foot qi, 92, 117, 119, 195n7, 201n41; gu-induced, 71–72, 119; hereditary, 64; malignant stroke, 66–67; ontological and functional models of, 79, 199n80; wind-induced, 49, 107, 117, 119, 120, 132, 136, 165, 206n58. See also cold damage disorders; contagious disorders; demonic infestation; epidemics; etiology

immortality, 13–14, 83; use of poisons to achieve, 5fig., 5–6; as xian, 149–50. See also elixirs; longevity; transcendence

Imperial Medical Office (Taiyi Shu): departments of, 65, 68, 83; drug collection through tribute system, 87; education in, 86–87, 92, 108; establishment of, 103; medicinal garden, 86–87; personnel, 65, 85, 200n14; in producing Newly Revised Materia Medica, 92

incantation, 14, 25, 30, 65, 68, 70, 78, 83, 107, 111

India, 7, 75, 99, 184n14, 190n60

ingesting water (fushui), 111, 205n25

Instructions on Elixirs (Danjue), 156, 213n45

Instructions on the Scripture of the Divine Elixirs of the Nine Tripods of the Yellow Emperor (Huangdi jiuding shendan jingjue), 159–61, 162

Iwamoto Atsushi, 101, 189n56, 202n49

Jade Chapters (Yupian), 21, 22fig. Ji Han, 131

Ji Zixun, 52

Jin Shao, 136, 209n39

jingfang (classical formulas), 27, 107

Jingming (virtuous nun), 119

jingyan (experience), 106, 204nn3–4

Jingzhi (Buddhist monk), 120

Jīvaka, 184n14

Johns, Claire, “efficacy phrases,” 116, 122, 206n51

kalinite (fanshi), 135, 137, 138, 155, 210n47

Khottal rhino horn (guduo xi), 198n76

Kidneys, 29, 137, 209n28, 211n65

Kong Zhiyue, 93

Kyōu Shōku Collection, fragment of Newly Revised Materia Medica, 201n46

Laozi, 23, 38, 207n74

lay practices, 96–97. See also local medical practices

lead, 148, 158, 161

legal codes, 9, 11, 58, 80, 82, 84–86, 199–200n11, 201n40

Lei Xiao, 50

Li Bai, 158

Li Baozhen, 147–48

Li Shaojun, 150

Li Shouli, 158

Li Ziyu, 61

life cultivation: in Divine Farmer’s Classic, 28–29; by Ge Hong, 151, 153; by ingesting huangjing, 94, 202n51; by ingesting stalactite, 144, 171; by medicines in imperial collection, 89; by Sun Simiao, 110, 111, 204n20. See also longevity; vitality

Liu Bang, 19

Liu Ling, 133

Liu Yuxi, 3, 170

Liu Zongyuan, 171

Liver, 29, 43, 174, 209n28

local medical practices, 12, 82, 101–2, 104, 169. See also lay practices

local tribute (tugong), 88, 200–201n30

longevity: drugs for, 4–5, 28–29, 188–89n44; and immortality, 149, 150; by ingesting water, 205n25; Sun Simiao’s cultivation of, 110, 204n20. See also life cultivation

Lord Thunder (Leigong), 26; Drug Correspondences from Lord Thunder, 55–56; Treatise on Drug Processing from Lord Thunder, 50–52, 54, 194n57

Lu Xun, 130

Lungs, 29, 43, 142, 165, 209n28

Lunheng (Discourses Weighed in the Balance; Wang Chong), “Speaking of Poison,” 25

Luofu, Mount, 151, 162

magical arts: black magic, 73–75, 197n58, 198n67; of fangshi, 26, 52–53, 57, 213n33

malaria, 89, 173

male genital disorders, 49

malignant stroke (zhong’e), 66–67

managing drugs: in Collected Annotations, 53–54; by fangshi, 53, 57; Five-Stone Powder, 128, 138–39, 140–41, 146, 166, 167. See also dosage control; drug combination; drug processing

manuscript culture, 12, 97, 104, 203n84

Maoshan, 31, 154, 155, 157, 213n35

marijuana, 174. See also cannabis

materia medica (bencao): commentary conventions of, 12–13, 32, 93, 98, 100, 123, 186n46; du-based classification of drugs, 28–29, 159; European, 25; extant texts, 189–90n57; genre of, 12–13, 27; government-commissioned, 13, 81–82, 92; grouping of drugs, 34–35, 93, 190n60; with illustrations, 48fig.; importance in formulas, 108–9, 111; in medical education, 92, 108; preservation of lost texts in later commentaries, 34, 189–90n57; specialists awaiting edicts, 26; specification of preferred locations for drugs, 87; term for, 25. See also Collected Annotations on the Classic of Materia Medica; Divine Farmer’s Classic of Materia Medica; Newly Revised Materia Medica; Supplement to Materia Medica

Materia Medica of Wu Pu (Wu Pu bencao), 189n53

materiality: of drugs, 6, 12, 29–30, 57, 139, 169, 175; of elixirs, 151, 167; study of, 6

Mawangdui: formulas including aconite, 48, 49, 50; medical manuscripts, 10, 26, 107

measurement systems, 41–42, 161, 215n71, 215n78

medical bureaucracy: described in Rites of Zhou, 23, 82, 134; Han period, 82–83; Sui and Tang, 83–84, 103, 120

medical cases (yi’an): of Chunyu Yi, 134–35; in early modern period, 206n57; in Essential Formulas, 106, 109, 116–21, 122–23; European observatio, 123; evolution of, 204n6

medical education, 84, 86–87, 92, 98, 101, 108, 114

medical emergencies: antidotes for, 42; Chen Yanzhi’s formulas for, 108; Ge Hong’s formulas for, 63–64, 152, 211n2; Sun Simiao’s formulas for, 67, 112, 113, 120–21, 122, 123–24, 205n37

medical writings: attention to efficacy, 106–7; dissemination of, 97; from Dunhuang and Turfan, 10, 12, 98; of the Era of Division, 9; genres of, 12–13; Han dynasty, 25–27; influence of political thought, 43, 93–94; from Han tombs, 26–27, 48–49; medieval Europe, 185n40, 206n51; by physicians in the fifth and sixth centuries, 55–56, 57–58; and printing technology in Song, 12, 103–4; of scholar-officials, 92, 123–24, 170–72; system of correspondence in, 79. See also formula books; materia medica

medicinal garden (yaoyuan), 86–87, 102–3

medicine and politics: in avoiding political burdens, 52, 132–33; engagement of scholar-officials, 170–72; engagement of the state, 11, 68–69, 93–94, 103–4; in philosophical texts, 38. See also state role in medicine

medicines: bodily effects of, 138–39, 164–65; compound, 41, 67, 174; definition of, 6–7, 175; materiality of, 6, 12, 29–30, 57, 139; negligence in preparation of, 85; range of, 3–4; tasting of, for the emperor, 83, 84, 85, 103; transformations of, 6–7, 39–40, 56–57; as tribute items, 87–91. See also animal-derived drugs; drugs; herbs; minerals

medieval period, definition of, 9, 184–85n27

mercury (shuiyin): and cinnabar, 160; as medicine, 35, 173, 214n63; preparation of, 158, 160–61; as tribute drug, 89, 91; use in alchemy, 148, 155, 160, 166. See also cinnabar

Miao people, 80

minerals: access to, 155–56, 157–58; associated with five colors, 134, 135, 209n28; detoxification of, 119, 160–61; as drug classification, 34, 93; du possessing, 35–36; for enhancing vitality and nourishing the body, 5, 117, 131, 144, 171; nature of, 138–39; paired with herbs, 142; as tribute drugs, 89; used in alchemy, 14, 31, 36, 148, 151, 154–55; used to cure illness, 135–36, 143, 164–65, 167, 173. See also arsenic; cinnabar; Five-Stone Powder; mercury; sulfur

miracle tales, 61, 204n4

monasteries: Buddhist, 101–2, 200n14; medieval European, 185n40

morality, cultivation of, 64, 150, 153

moxibustion, 111

mulberry trees, mantis eggshells on, 54, 194n74

murder, 36, 39, 49–50, 76, 85–86, 103, 132

mushrooms, 29, 150

musk (shexiang), 89

Naitō hypothesis, 11, 185n38

Nanyue kingdom, 135, 209n32

Nappi, Carla, 183n9

natural categories, 34–35, 38, 93, 190n60

nature, 40

Needham, Joseph, 148

Newly Revised Materia Medica (Xinxiu bencao): authors of, 92; compared with Nuremberg Pharmacopoeia, 201n40; compilation of, 81, 92, 94; criticism of lay practices, 96–97; dissemination of, 97–98; drug categorization, 93; endorsements and corrections of Tao Hongjing, 93, 94–96; extant copies and fragments, 93–94, 98–101, 201n46, 202n49; as government-commissioned, 13, 81–82, 92, 103; morphology and source locations of drugs, 94–95; organization and content, 92–93; preface, 93–94, 96, 98, 201n46; preserved in Song materia medica texts, 201n46; standardization of drug names, 95–96; substitution in local editions, 100–101, 203n75; Sun Simiao and, 110, 111; value of classical knowledge in, 95, 96. See also P. 3822

niuhuang (bezoar, bovine), 36, 45, 89, 91, 119; counterfeits of, 201n38

nourishing life (yangsheng), 29, 131, 144. See also life cultivation; longevity

Obringer, Frédéric, 7, 191n65

On the Origins and Symptoms of All Illnesses (Zhubing yuanhou lun; Chao Yuanfang), 62, 65–67, 68–69, 70–72, 74, 137, 199n80, 210n61

opioid medications, 175

opium: compared to Five-Stone Powder, 128, 145, 211n74; in Greek pharmacy, 8

Ordinances of the Tiansheng Era (Tiansheng ling), 84, 199–200n11

“Ordinances on Curing Illness” (Yiji ling), 84–85, 86, 92, 200n21

orpiment (cihuang), 7, 45, 119, 155, 183n13

overdoses, 42, 153, 161–62, 175

P. 3822, 98–102, 99fig.

pain: induced by elixirs, 163–65, 167, 169; induced by Five-Stone Powder, 128, 131, 132–33, 137, 139, 142; symptom of abnormal circulation of qi, 215n85; symptom of cat-demon attack, 74; symptom of demonic infestation, 61, 63, 66; treatments for, 48, 49, 91, 118, 175

Palace Drug Service (Shangyao Ju), 83–85, 92, 103, 110

palace maids, 85, 200n14

paozhi (roast and broil), 46–47, 192n31. See also drug processing

Paracelsus, 41

pastes, 45, 118–19, 121, 122, 131

patient voice, 117, 206n57

pediatrics, 83, 107, 115

Pei Xiu, 138

pepper of Sichuan (shujiao), 91, 114, 115, 193n50

perfected (zhenren), 109–10, 157

Persia, minerals from, 158

pharmaceutical techniques, 39–40, 46, 47, 50, 168. See also dosage control; drug combination; drug processing

pharmacology: for achieving longevity, 4–5; ancient Greek, 7–8, 41, 190n61; classification of drugs, 28–29, 34, 93, 190n60; compared to Western pharmacology, 7–8, 25, 57, 146, 174–75; and Daoism, 13–14, 31, 157, 161, 169, 190n60; Han dynasty, 25–27; Indian, 7, 184n14, 190n60; late imperial, 171–72; local practice of, 101–2; measurement of doses, 41–42, 161, 215n71; in the medieval period, 10–11; prominence of poisons, 4–6; specialization in, 10, 53–56, 57, 82. See also drugs; materia medica; medicines

Pharmacy in the Secretariat of the Heir Apparent (Yaozang Ju), 84, 92, 199n9

pharmakon, 7–8, 184n16

physicians: ancient, 69–70, 112, 205n35; court, 39, 119–20, 208n18; and drug suppliers, 53–54, 56; of the Han, 134–35; hereditary, 55, 107–8, 109, 170, 208n1; laws and regulations regarding, 85; and patient voice, 117, 206n57; who discuss Five-Stone Powder, 129, 131, 136, 139, 140, 143, 211n67; who treat lesions, 24, 134. See also Chao Yuanfang; hereditary medicine; Sun Simiao; Zhang Zhongjing

pinellia (banxia): in drug combinations, 44, 45; as medicine, 36, 119, 114–15; preparation of, 47

pishuang (refined arsenic), 50, 194n56, 216n13

poisons: absolute, 8; antidotes for, 3, 37, 42, 45, 161, 184n20; in European and Chinese pharmacy, 7–8; in food, 23; hallucinogens, 36, 37, 42, 174, 191n9; in India, 7; means of eliminating, in alchemy, 160–61; as medicines, 3, 4–6, 5fig., 39–40; regulation of, 85–86, 174, 200n21; sellers and buyers of, 86; as Tang tribute drugs, 89–91; two dimensions of use in classical Chinese medicine, 5fig.; use of term, 15; used as aphrodisiacs, 137; used against demons and vermin, 62, 78–79; used in deliberate killings, 36, 39, 49–50, 85–86, 103; used in hunting, 21, 187n9; used in political persuasion, 170, 172. See also du

Pomata, Gianna, 13, 123

potency: of elixirs, 148–49, 152–53; meaning of du, 6, 15, 20, 28, 37; of words, 25. See also du

pothi manuscripts, 98–102, 99fig.

Pregadio, Fabrizio, 148, 213n38

pregnancy and gynecological disorders, 114–15, 206n43

principle of opposites, 49, 113, 193n49

principle of resonance, 120

principle of similarity, 72–73, 198–99n77

printing technology, 11, 12, 97, 103–4

private transmission, 113–14

purging, 36, 67, 72, 79, 147, 165, 167, 198–99n77. See also vomiting

qi: and contagion, 63, 196n34; defensive (wei), 152; as degree of heat of drugs, 29–30; demonic, 66–67, 71, 199n80; drugs to enhance, 28, 29, 48, 134; of elixirs, 165; exhaustion of, 163; as explanation of gu, 71; foot qi, 92, 117, 119, 195n7, 201n41; in inner alchemy, 166; malignant, 135; of minerals, 138–39; in functional model of illness, 67, 79, 112, 199n80; nourishing (rong), 152; and nourishing the body, 24, 111; and pain, 215n85; potent qi (duqi), 159–60; “six qi,” 69; southern, 25; of Spleen, 207n77; and sudden turmoil (huoluan), 119

Qie Yin, 154

Qin Chengzu, 129, 131, 140, 210n59

Qin Shi Huang, 150

qiqing (seven dispositions), 43–45. See also drug combination

quartz (bai shiying), 138, 142, 155

quiet chamber (jingshi), 64

realgar (xionghuang): access to, 156, 157–58; discovered in tomb of Zhao Mo, 135; need to detoxify, 119; as one of five minerals, during Han, 134; use for eliminating vermin and demons, 72; use in alchemy, 154, 155

recluses and hermits, 31, 52, 53, 57, 110, 133, 154

Record from the Stone Wall of the Great Clarity (Taiqing shibi ji; Master Chuze), 164–65, 171, 215n85, 216n89

religion and medicine, 13–14, 30–31, 64–65, 111, 167. See also Buddhism; Daoism

Rites of Zhou (Zhouli), 23–24, 82, 134, 190n60

Ruan Ji, 133

sal ammoniac (naosha), 89, 91, 215n68

scallions (cong), 44, 100–101, 102, 142, 203n78

scholar-officials: in alchemy, 158; engagement in medicine, in late Tang, 9–10, 170–72; and formula books, 112, 123–24; in making Newly Revised Materia Medica, 92; personal experience of healing, 207n84; as shizu, 113; who discuss Five-Stone Powder, 128, 136, 140

sepulchral plaints (zhongsong), 64

Seven Worthies of the Bamboo Grove (Zhulin Qixian), 130, 133

sexual activity, 46, 69, 129

shamans, 25, 64, 73, 77, 78, 152

Shang Zhijun, 188n40

Shangqing (Highest Clarity), 157

Shennong (Divine Farmer), 25–26

Shennong bencao jing. See Divine Farmer’s Classic of Materia Medica

Shiji (Historical records), 19, 135

shijie (corpse deliverance), 162–64, 167

Shishuo xinyu (New account of the tales of the world), 129

shu (ripe), 23, 187n16

Shuanggudui, 27, 193n44

Shuowen jiezi (Explaining characters; Xu Shen): on du, 20–22; on gu and chong, 70, 197n41; on paozhi, 46; variants of du, 22fig.

side effects, 4, 8, 128, 146

silk, 26, 49, 193n48

Silk Road, 12, 89, 158. See also Dunhuang

silver, 88, 148, 214n57, 215n68

sinister way (zuodao), 73, 197n58

Sivin, Nathan, 148, 185n31

Six Ministries of the Tang (Tang liudian), 83, 84, 86

skin rashes, 117–18

snakes: antidotes for poison of, 37, 45; as demons, 63, 70, 75; etymology of du, 21, 22fig.; gallbladder of, 36, 89–91, 173; gu of, 71, 72, 73; horn of, 198n76; and metamorphosis, 162; poisoning by, 205n37; as treatment for gu poisoning, 72, 73

sorcery, 73, 76–77, 198n67. See also witchcraft

south, the: aristocrats of, 30, 83, 107, 109; Daoist movements in, 64, 157, 213n35; drugs from, 36, 42, 89–91, 95, 96, 97, 151; gu of, 70, 77, 80; medical and alchemical texts from, 30–31, 170; northern view of, 77; qi of, 25; shamanism and sorcery in, 25, 77, 80; substitute drugs in, 53, 54, 156. See also Ge Hong; Tao Hongjing

southeastern region: Daoist movement of Shangqing, 157, 163; drugs from, 96, 97; Ge Hong, 150; gu of, 70; medicine and alchemy in, 170; Tao Hongjing, 31, 94, 154, 155. See also Maoshan

southwestern region: Daoist movement of Tianshi Dao, 64; drugs from, 4, 36, 42, 88–89, 96; gu of, 80

soybeans, 44, 45

Spirit of Stones (Shishen), 135

Spleen, 29, 121, 165, 207n77, 209n28

stalactite (zhongru), 54, 121, 137, 138, 142, 144, 171

state role in medicine: fighting epidemics, 62, 68–69; formula books in medical education, 108–9; government-commissioned texts, 13, 65, 81–82, 92, 93–94, 103, 108; legal codes, 85–86; medical institutions, 82–85, 103; in medieval Europe, 185n40; Northern Song, 11, 103–4; Tang collection of drugs, 88–91. See also medicine and politics

Strickmann, Michel, 214n46

Su Jing, 81, 92, 170. See also Newly Revised Materia Medica

sudden turmoil (huoluan), 119

Sui dynasty: commission of medical texts, 65, 108; medical institutions, 68–69, 103; popularity of daoyin, 66; rise and fall of, 76–77; suppression of gu witchcraft, 62, 76. See also On the Origins and Symptoms of All Illnesses

sulfur (shi liuhuang): discovered in tomb of Zhao Mo, 135; Han Yu and, 171, 211n64; as potent medicine, 5, 35; use in alchemy, 148; use in Five-Stone Powder, 138, 142–43

Sun Jichang, 147–48

Sun Liang, 163

Sun Simiao: alchemical practice by, 110, 111, 119, 167, 185n31, 216n89; biography of, 110–11, 204n20; cases treated by, 117–21; connections to the court, 110–11, 113–14; criticism of court physicians, 119–20; deification of, 109–10; on Five-Stone Powder, 139, 142–44, 145, 211n67; on Jin Shao, 209n39; as King of Medicines, 11, 109–10; knowledge of Daoist and Buddhist teachings, 111; medical ethics of, 111, 121; on medicines, 3, 184n14; reliance on efficacy to select remedies, 115, 120–21, 122; remedies for demonic illnesses, 67–68; remedies for gu poisoning, 72; treatment of patients of different social origins, 121–22; on use of stalactite, 144. See also Essential Formulas Worth a Thousand in Gold for Emergencies

Sun Xing, 110, 204n20

Supplement to Formulas Worth a Thousand in Gold (Qianjin yifang; Sun Simiao), 111, 142, 209n38

Supplement to Materia Medica (Bencao shiyi; Chen Cangqi), 72–73

swellings: “clove swellings,” 118–19; drugs for, 36, 94; and etymology of du, 21; formulas for, 114, 119; sickness of red-swelling, 65; treated in Imperial Medical Office, 83

Systematic Materia Medica (Bencao gangmu; Li Shizhen), 4, 172

Taibai, Mount, 111

Tang Code (Tanglü), 77, 85; “Use of Poisons to Poison People,” 85–86

Tang dynasty: alchemy in, 157–58; commission of medical texts, 81–82, 92–94; dissemination of medical knowledge, 97–98; extolled in preface to Newly Revised Materia Medica, 93–94, 202nn47–48; imperial collection of drugs, 88–91; medical institutions, 83–85; rise and fall of, 9–10, 81, 103, 170, 199n2; scholar-officials’ engagement in medicine, 123–24, 170–71; suppression of gu witchcraft, 77. See also state role in medicine

Tang-Song transition, 11, 185n37

Tao Hongjing: account of, in Newly Revised Materia Medica, 93; on arsenolite, 137, 138; biography and family, 31, 154; on bodily effects of elixirs, 163–64; categorization of drugs, 34, 190n60; commentaries in Collected Annotations, 32, 33fig., 34, 186n46, 189n56; connections with court, 154; corrections of, in Newly Revised Materia Medica, 94–96; Daoist practice, 31, 94, 154, 157; Declarations of the Perfected, 163, 164, 167, 190n60; on demonic illness, 196n16; on dosage control, 41–42; on drug combination, 44–46; on drug processing, 47; on Five-Stone Powder, 141, 208n14; formula books ascribed to, 107–8; formulation of Shangqing sect, 157; and the number seven, 190n60; practice of alchemy, 154–57, 213n37, 214n46; preface to Collected Annotations, 31–32, 53; on specialization of pharmaceutical activity, 53–55. See also Collected Annotations on the Classic of Materia Medica

temporary death (zansi), 156–57, 161–62

Ten Thousand Things (Wanwu), 26–27, 193n44

text and practice, 105–7; in Collected Efficacious Formulas, 109; Song period, 207n84; in Sun Simiao’s Essential Formulas, 105, 109, 112–13, 120–21, 122–23, 205n37

Tianshi Dao (Way of the Celestial Masters), 64

Tibetan empire, 100, 101

toads: gu of, 71, 73; venom of, 173

tonics: aconite, 48, 49; alchemical compounds, 214n46; arsenic, 137; Five-Stone Powder, 136, 143, 145; meaning of elixir, 149; for “nourishing life,” 29; stalactite, 144; in imperial collection of drugs, 89; in Rites of Zhou, 24

toxicity: of aconite, 47; of arsenic, 137, 210n48; in Chinese and Greek pharmacy, 7–8; derivation of the word, 187n9

toxicology, 7, 8, 173

transcendence (xian): arts of, in Han bibliography, 27; through corpse deliverance, 162–63; through elixirs, 147–48, 151, 156–57, 162–64, 166–67, 169, 208n14, 215n80; during Han, 150; through ingesting water, 205n25; through inner alchemy, 166, 212n5; through practices of Shangqing, 157; through purification of the body, 165; and temporary death, 156–57, 161–62; use of term, 149–50, 212n11

transformation: of the body, 4–5, 14, 27, 151, 162, 208n14; between cinnabar and mercury, 160; gu and, 70, 74–75; of medical knowledge in local communities, 98–102, 104; of medicines, 6, 15, 183n9; of poisons into medicines, 6–7, 39–40, 56–57, 174; three aspects of, 168–69; of yin and yang forces, 38. See also transcendence

Treatise on Cold Damage and Miscellaneous Disorders (Shanghan zabing lun), 12

Treatise on Drug Processing from Lord Thunder (Leigong paozhi lun), 50–52, 54, 194n57

tribute system: history of, 87; local tribute (tugong), 88, 200–201n30, 201n31; as means of drug collection, 82, 87–91, 90map, 93, 103; referred to in the Newly Revised Materia Medica, 94

triple jiao, 165, 215n84

Tu Youyou, 173

Turfan: manuscript fragment of Collected Annotations, 32–34, 33fig.; medical texts from, 10, 12

ulcers: and etymology of du, 21; drugs for, 97; induced by Five-Stone Powder, 128, 130, 131, 135, 139; symptom of swellings, 118, 119

vegetables: as category in materia medica texts, 34, 93, 98; five pungent vegetables, 102, 203n78; included in the manuscript of P. 3822, 100–102

verdigris, 151, 152

vermilion poisoning (dandu), 118

vermin: association with gu, 69, 70, 71–72, 73, 79; flying, 69, 70; purging of, 68, 72, 89, 165, 167; and the south, 77; and wind, 70, 197n41. See also worms

vinegar, 54, 118, 161

viscera: definition of, 189n45; five viscera, 134, 138, 209n28; six palace-viscera, 215n84

vitality: loss of, 49, 63, 67, 138; medicine for, 5, 114, 121, 127, 136, 137

vomiting: caused by arsenic poisoning, 210n48; caused by demons, 65; drugs that induce, 62, 67, 164–65, 167; from drug substitutes, 97; remedies for, 131, 166. See also purging

Wang Bi, 129

Wang Chong, 25, 188n28

Wang Shuhe, 112

Wang Tao, Arcane Essentials from the Imperial Library, 123–24, 137, 170, 186n46, 210n60

Wang Xizhi, 131

ward for the sick (huanfang), 85, 200n14

ward of recuperation (bingfang), 200n14

warming drugs, 29, 36, 49, 62, 101, 113, 136, 138–39, 193n50, 210n48

Wei Boyang, 215n80

weight systems, 41–42

Wen, Emperor of Sui, 73–74

Wenxuan, Emperor of Northern Qi, 153

Western medicine: colonial project of, 40; etiological models in, 79; pharmacology, 7–8, 57; poisons in, 7–8, 190n61; side effects in, 4, 8, 128, 146. See also biomedicine

wild-path witchcraft, 72, 198n67

wind-induced disorders, 49, 107, 117, 119, 120, 132, 136, 165, 206n58

witchcraft: cat-demon, 73–75; gu, 73–78; Sui-Tang suppression of, 76–77, 198n67. See also gu; sorcery

wolfsbane, 8. See also aconite

worms: as bodily effects of elixirs, 164; as category of drugs, 190n60; as cause of illness, 62, 216n86; and gu, 69, 70, 71; purging of, 68, 72, 89, 165, 167; and wind, 70, 197n41. See also vermin

writing medium: bamboo and wooden slips, 27, 32; manuscript culture, 12, 97, 104, 203n84; paper, 32, 98–100; pothi manuscript, 98–102, 99fig.; printing technology, 11, 12, 97, 103–4; silk, 26

Wu, Emperor of Han, 73, 150

Wu, Emperor of Liang, 154, 214n46

Wu, Emperor of Western Jin, 132–33 Wu, Empress of Tang, 75

Wuwei, medical formulas excavated from, 48–49, 50, 107

Xinxiu bencao. See Newly Revised Materia Medica

xionghuang. See realgar

Xu, Empress of Han, 39

Xu Ani, 74, 77–78

Xu family, 107–8, 115, 127, 208n1

Xu Sibo, 127, 208n1

Xu Zhicai, Drug Correspondences from Lord Thunder (Leigong yaodui), 55–56

Xuanxue (Mysterious Learning), 129–30 Xuanzong, Emperor of Tang, 97, 158

Yan, Master, 50

yang drugs, 25, 72, 161, 215n68

Yang Su, 74, 75–76, 77

Yang Xiu, 76, 198n68

yao (drug): character for, 22; duyao (potent drugs), 19, 23–25; range of meanings through history, 174, 216–17n15; term used for elixirs, 149

Yao Sengyuan, 109, 211n67

Yellow Emperor, 26, 50

Yellow Emperor’s Inner Classic (Huangdi neijing): association of organs with political offices, 43; canonical work of Chinese medicine, 9, 12; emphasis on preventive medicine, 29; functional model of illness, 67, 79; nourishing and defensive qi in, 152; quoted in Sun Simiao’s Essential Formulas, 112; use of duyao, 24, 188n25

yi du gong du (use poison to attack poison), 78–79, 198nn76–77

yin zhen zhi ke (drinking zhen to quench thirst), 37, 191n70

yin-yang framework: association of potency with yang, 25, 72; in explaining power of drugs, 94–95; mutual transformation, 38; in Sun Simiao’s Essential Formulas, 112; yang drugs, 72, 161, 215n68

Yu Jiaxi, 136

Yu Yan, 187n5

Yu Zhengxie, 211n74

Zhang Tingdong, 173

Zhang Yuanyou, 153–54

Zhang Zhongjing, 107, 108, 112

Zhao Mo, 135

zhen bird feathers (zhenniao mao), 36–37, 144, 191n71

zhen-bird poison (zhendu), 86, 159

Zheng Xuan, commentary to Rites of Zhou, 134, 190n60

Zheng Yin, 151, 212n18

Zhenglei bencao (Materia medica prepared for emergency), 48fig., 189n57, 194n57

Zhibin (Buddhist monk), 208n16

Zhou Ziliang, 214n47

Zhuangzi, 38, 207n74

Zhubing yuanhou lun. See On the Origins and Symptoms of All Illnesses

Zuozhuan (Zuo commentary), 69–70, 197n40

Annotate

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