Page 21 - K2-M1 - History FB
P. 21

instead of arrows. This initial accident was

               thus refined into the art of acupuncture.”


               Quote from http://www.drmanik.com/chap1.htm























               A  dialogue  betwee  Huang  Di,  the  Yellow
               Emperor, and his physician Qi Bo, regarding
               Chinese Medical Arts, form the basis of the

               Nei  Jing  (The  Yellow  Emperor’s  Classic  of
               Internal Medicine), the earliest book written

               on Chinese Medicine, compiled around 305-
               204 BCE.


               It consists of 2 parts, one of which, the Ling

               Shu  part,  describes  the  meridians,  the
               function of the acupuncture points, needling





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