George
Soulie de Morant went to China at the turn of
the century, where he remained for almost two
decades, gaining entrance to the highest circles
of the Chinese society. Although his life? work
was acupuncture, his literary output was voluminous
and covered every aspect of Chinese culture. He
was a man of great talent, and became the only
European recognized as a Chinese doctor by the
Chinese themselves.
Returning
to France in 1917, Soulie de Morant spent the
next 40 years actively promoting acupuncture among
medical professionals. Just before his death in
1955, he completed l?cuponcture Chinoise, the
work which led the first successful European acculturation
of acupuncture. l?cuponcture Chinoise he laid
the foundation for the modern practice of acupuncture
in Europe, introducing many of the ideas and expressions
by which it is known today.
The
text is massive, containing nearly 900 densely
but readably organized oversize pages. Volume
One describes the energetics of acupuncture; Volume
Two, the application of those energetics; Volume
Three, their relation to physiology. Volume Four
summarizes the meridians and points, organizing
information around the classical concepts of energy
circulation, so that the reader perceives a clinical
range much greater than that found in more recent
English-language texts. Volume Five, a detailed
treatment repertoire, is still the largest of
its kind in a Western language. The information
has been meticulously compiled from works that
are universally recognized as the epitome of Chinese
clinical experience: the Zhen Jiu Da Cheng, the
Zhen Jiu Yi Xue, theYi Xue Ru Men, and the Zhen
Jiu Yi Zi. Illnesses are presented as energetic
categories, and as organ, function, and body area
groups. Within each of these categories conditions
are precisely defined and finely differentiated.
This
level of practical detail has been achieved only
in specialized sections of technical works, but
never at this scale. The book is universally recognized
not only as a unique and historic achievement
but also as one of the best, most detailed, and
most practical of clinical texts.
Soulie
de Morant was the first and finest advocate of
seeking and treating the root of illness in the
disruption of an individual? harmony with nature.
He was the first to argue that there was no need
to emphasize the incompatibilities between Chinese
and Western medicines, and the first to propose
hundreds of practical correlations with science.
In many ways, he anticipated modern Western and
Eastern needs by showing biomedicine how to expand
its clinical gaze to include the qualities and
relationships discovered by Chinese physicians.
Chinese Acupuncture conveys the ideals of the
Chinese medical arts to Western doctors and acupuncturists.
It captured the imagination of an entire generation
of physicians and continues to inspire those who
write or practice today.