As with so much, the medicine of the Tang dynasty left its European counterpart in the shade. It boasted its own 'national health service’, and left behind the teachings of the incomparable Sun Simiao If no further evidence was available of the sophistication of China in the Tang era, then a look at Chinese medicine would be sufficient. At the Western end of the Eurasian continent the Roman empire had vanished, and there was nowhere new to claim the status of the cultural and political centre of the world. In fact, for a few centuries, this centre happened to be the capital of the Tang empire, and Chinese medicine under the Tang was far ahead of its European counterpart. The organisational context of health and healing was structured to a degree that had no precedence in Chinese history and found no parallel elsewhere. An Imperial Medical Office had been inherited from previous dynasties: it was immediately restructured and staffed with directors and deputy directors, chief and assistant medical directors, pharmacists and curators of medicinal herb gardens and further personnel. Within the first two decades after consolidating its rule, the Tang administration set up one central and several provincial medical colleges with professors, lecturers, clinical practitioners and pharmacists to train students in one or all of the four departments of medicine, acupuncture, physical therapy and exorcism. Physicians were given positions in governmental medical service only after passing qualifying examinations. They were remunerated in accordance with the number of cures they had effected during the past year. In 723 Emperor Xuanzong personally composed a general formulary of prescriptions recommended to him by one of his imperial pharmacists and sent it to all the provincial medical schools. An Arabic traveller, who visited China in 851, noted with surprise that prescriptions from the emperor’s formulary were publicised on notice boards at crossroads to enhance the welfare of the population. The government took care to protect the general populace from potentially harmful medical practice. The Tang legal code was the first in China to include laws concerned with harmful and heterodox medical practices. For example, to treat patients for money without adhering to standard procedures was defined as fraud combined with theft and had to be tried in accordance with the legal statutes on theft. If such therapies resulted in the death of a patient, the healer was to be banished for two and a half years. In case a physician purposely failed to practice according to the standards, he was to be tried in accordance with the statutes on premeditated homicide. Even if no harm resulted, he was to be sentenced to sixty strokes with a heavy cane. In fact, physicians practising during the Tang era had access to a wealth of pharmaceutical and medical texts, their contents ranging from purely pragmatic advice to highly sophisticated theoretical considerations. Concise descriptions of the position, morphology, and functions of the organs of the human body stood side by side in libraries with books enabling readers to calculate the daily, seasonal and annual climatic conditions of cycles of sixty years and to understand and predict their effects on health. Several Tang authors wrote large collections of prescriptions, continuing a literary tradition documented since the 2nd century BC. The two most outstanding works to be named here were those by Sun Simiao (581-682?) and Wang Tao (c.670-755). The latter was a librarian who copied more than six thousand formulas, categorised in 1,104 sections, from sixty-five older works and published them under the title Wciitai miyao. Twenty-four sections, for example, were devoted to ophthalmology. They reflect the Indian origin of much Chinese knowledge on ailments of the eye and, in particular, of cataract surgery. Sun Simiao was the most eminent physician and author not only of the Tang dynasty, but of the entire first millennium AD. He was a broadly educated intellectual and physician; his world view integrated notions of all three of the major currents competing at his time – Confucianism, Daoism and Buddhism. Sun Simiao gained fame during his lifetime as a clinician (he was summoned to the imperial court at least once) and as author of the Prescriptions Worth Thousands in Gold (Qianjinfang) and its sequel. In contrast to developments in the 12th century, physicians relied on prescriptions and single substances to treat their patients’ illnesses. The theories of systematic correspondences, characteristic of the acupuncture tradition, had not been extended to cover pharmacology yet. Sun Simiao rose to the pantheon of Chinese popular Buddhism in about the 13th century. He was revered as paramount Medicine God. He gained this extraordinary position in Chinese collective memory not only because he was an outstanding clinician and writer, but also for his ethical concerns. Sun Simiao was the first Chinese author known to compose an elaborate medical ethical code. Even though based on Buddhist and Confucian values, his deontology is comparable to the Hippocratic Oath. It initiated a debate on the task of medicine, its professional obligations, social position and moral justification that continued until the arrival of Western medicine in the 19th century. Despite or – more likely – because of its long- lasting affluence and political stability, the Tang dynasty did not add any significantly new ideas to the interpretation of illness, health and healing. Medical thought reflects human anxieties; changes in medical thought always occur in the context of new existential fears or of fundamentally changed social circumstances. Nevertheless, medicine was a most fascinating ingredient of Tang civilisation and it left a rich legacy to subsequent centuries. SECTION 3: QUESTIONS 28-40 Questions 28-30Choose the appropriate letters A-D and write them in boxes 28-30 on your answer sheet. 28In the first paragraph, the writer draws particular attention to Athe lack of medical knowledge in China prior to the Tang era. Bthe Western interest in Chinese medicine during the Tang era. Cthe systematic approach taken to medical issues during the Tang era. Dthe rivalry between Chinese and Western cultures during the Tang era. 29During the Tang era, a government doctor’s annual salary depended upon Athe effectiveness of his treatment. Bthe extent of his medical experience. Cthe number of people he had successfully trained. Dthe breadth of his medical expertise. 30Which of the following contravened the law during the Tang era? Aa qualified doctor’s refusal to practise Bthe use of unorthodox medical practices Cpatient dying under medical treatment Dthe receipt of money for medical treatment Questions 31-37Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 3? In boxes 31-37 on your answer sheet write
31 _________________ Academic staff sometimes taught a range of medical subjects during the Tang era. 32 _________________N The medical knowledge available during the Tang era only benefited the wealthy. 33 _________________ Tang citizens were encouraged to lead a healthy lifestyle. 34 _________________ Doctors who behaved in a fraudulent manner were treated in the same way as ordinary criminals during the Tang era. 35 _________________ Medical reference books published during the Tang era covered practical and academic issues. 36 _________________ Waitai miyao contained medical data from the Tang era. 37 _________________ Chinese medical authors are known to have influenced Indian writing. Questions 38-40Complete the sentences below with words taken from Reading Passage 3. Use NO MORE THAN THREE WORDSfor each answer. Write your answers in boxes 38-40 on your answer sheet. The first known medical writing in China dates back to the 38 _________________. During the Tang era, doctors depended most on 39 _________________ and single substances to treat their patients. 40 _________________ is famous for producing a set of medical rules for Chinese physicians. |
|
來(lái)自: 新用戶(hù)5354KZYV > 《雅思閱讀真題》