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Qi

In traditional Chinese culture and the East Asian cultural sphere, qi, also ki or chi[1] in Wade–Giles romanization (/ˈ/ CHEE ), is believed to be a vital force forming part of any living entity. Literally meaning "vapor", "air", or "breath",[2] the word qi is often translated as "vital energy", "vital force", "material energy", or simply as "energy".[3] Qi is the central underlying principle in Chinese traditional medicine and in Chinese martial arts. The practice of cultivating and balancing qi is called qigong.

Qi (Ch'i)
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese
Simplified Chinese
Burmese name
Burmeseအသက်
IPA/ă.t̪ɛʔ/
Vietnamese name
Vietnamese alphabetkhí
Hán-Nôm
Thai name
Thaiลมปราณ
RTGSlompran
Korean name
Hangul
Hanja
Mongolian name
Mongolian Cyrillicхийг
Mongolian scriptᠬᠡᠢ ᠶᠢ
Transcriptions
SASM/GNCkhiig
Japanese name
Kyūjitai
Shinjitai
Transcriptions
Romanizationki
Malay name
Malaychi (چي)
Indonesian name
Indonesianchi
Filipino name
Tagaloggi
Lao name
Laoຊີວິດ
Khmer name
Khmerឈី
Tetum name
Tetumqi

Believers in qi describe it as a vital force, the flow of which must be unimpeded for health. Qi is a pseudoscientific, unverified concept,[4][5] and is unrelated to the concept of energy used in science[6][7][8] (vital energy itself being an abandoned scientific notion).[9] The historian of medicine in China Paul U. Unschuld adds that there "is no evidence of a concept of 'energy' – either in the strictly physical sense or even in the more colloquial sense – anywhere in Chinese medical theory."[10][clarification needed]

Linguistic aspects

The cultural keyword is analyzable in terms of Chinese and Sino-Xenic pronunciations. Possible etymologies include the logographs , , and with various meanings ranging from "vapor" to "anger", and the English loanword qi or ch'i.

Pronunciation and etymology

The logograph is read with two Chinese pronunciations, the usual "air; vital energy" and the rare archaic "to present food" (later disambiguated with ).

Pronunciations of in modern varieties of Chinese with standardized IPA equivalents include: Standard Chinese /t͡ɕʰi˥˩/, Wu Chinese qi /t͡ɕʰi˧˦/, Southern Min khì /kʰi˨˩/, Eastern Min /kʰɛi˨˩˧/, Standard Cantonese hei3 /hei̯˧/, and Hakka Chinese hi /hi˥/.

Pronunciations of in Sino-Xenic borrowings include: Japanese ki, Korean gi, and Vietnamese khí.

Reconstructions of the Middle Chinese pronunciation of standardized to IPA transcription include: /kʰe̯iH/ (Bernard Karlgren), /kʰĭəiH/ (Wang Li), /kʰiəiH/ (Li Rong), /kʰɨjH/ (Edwin Pulleyblank), and /kʰɨiH/ (Zhengzhang Shangfang).

Reconstructions of the Old Chinese pronunciation of standardized to IPA transcription include: /*kʰɯds/ (Zhengzhang Shangfang) and /*C.qʰəp-s/ (William H. Baxter and Laurent Sagart).

The etymology of interconnects with Kharia kʰis "anger", Sora kissa "move with great effort", Khmer kʰɛs "strive after; endeavor", and Gyalrongic kʰɐs "anger".[11]

Characters

In the East Asian languages, has three logographs:

In addition, is an uncommon character especially used in writing Daoist talismans. Historically, the word was generally written as until the Han dynasty (206 BCE–220 CE), when it was replaced by the graph clarified with "rice" indicating "steam (rising from rice as it cooks.)"

This primary logograph , the earliest written character for qì, consisted of three wavy horizontal lines seen in Shang dynasty (c. 1600–1046 BCE) oracle bone script, Zhou dynasty (1046–256 BCE) bronzeware script and large seal script, and Qin dynasty (221–206 BCE) small seal script. These oracle, bronze, and seal scripts logographs were used in ancient times as a phonetic loan character to write "plead for; beg; ask" which did not have an early character.

The vast majority of Chinese characters are classified as radical-phonetic characters. Such characters combine a semantically suggestive "radical characters" with a phonetic element approximating ancient pronunciation. For example, the widely known word dào "the Dao; the way" graphically combines the "walk" radical with a shǒu "head" phonetic. Although the modern dào and shǒu pronunciations are dissimilar, the Old Chinese *lˤuʔ-s and *l̥uʔ-s were alike. The regular script character is unusual because is both the "air radical" and the phonetic, with "rice" semantically indicating "steam; vapor".

This "air/gas radical" was only used in a few native Chinese characters like yīnyūn 氤氲 "thick mist/smoke", but was also used to create new scientific characters for gaseous chemical elements. Some examples are based on pronunciations in European languages: (with a phonetic) "fluorine" and nǎi (with a nǎi phonetic) "neon". Others are based on semantics: qīng (with a jīng phonetic, abbreviating qīng "light-weight") "hydrogen (the lightest element)" and (with a phonetic, abbreviating "green") "(greenish-yellow) chlorine".

is the phonetic element in a few characters such as kài "hate" with the "heart-mind radical" or , "set fire to weeds" with the "fire radical" , and "to present food" with the "food radical" .

The first Chinese dictionary of characters, the Shuowen Jiezi(121 CE) notes that the primary is a pictographic character depicting 雲气 "cloudy vapors", and that the full combines "rice" with the phonetic qi , meaning 饋客芻米 "present provisions to guests" (later disambiguated as ).

Meanings

Qi is a polysemous word. The unabridged Chinese-Chinese character dictionary Hanyu Da Cidian defines it as "present food or provisions" for the pronunciation but also lists 23 meanings for the pronunciation.[12] The modern ABC Chinese-English Comprehensive Dictionary, which enters "grain; animal feed; make a present of food", and a entry with seven translation equivalents for the noun, two for bound morphemes, and three equivalents for the verb.

n. ① air; gas ② smell ③ spirit; vigor; morale ④ vital/material energy (in Ch[inese] metaphysics) ⑤ tone; atmosphere; attitude ⑥ anger ⑦ breath; respiration b.f. ① weather 天氣 tiānqì ② [linguistics] aspiration 送氣 sòngqì v. ① anger ② get angry ③ bully; insult.[13]

English borrowing

Qi was an early Chinese loanword in English. It was romanized as k'i in Church Romanization in the early-19th century, as ch'i in Wade–Giles in the mid-19th century (sometimes misspelled chi omitting the apostrophe), and as qi in Pinyin in the mid-20th century. The Oxford English Dictionary entry for qi gives the pronunciation as /i/, the etymology from Chinese "air; breath", and a definition of "The physical life-force postulated by certain Chinese philosophers; the material principle." It also gives eight usage examples, with the first recorded example of k'í in 1850 (The Chinese Repository),[note 1] of ch'i in 1917 (The Encyclopaedia Sinica),[note 2] and qi in 1971 (Felix Mann's Acupuncture)[note 3]

The word qi is very frequently used in word games—such as Scrabble—due to containing a letter Q without a letter U.[14]

Concept

References to concepts analogous to qi are found in many Asian belief systems. Philosophical conceptions of qi from the earliest records of Chinese philosophy (5th century BCE) correspond to Western notions of humours and to the ancient Hindu yogic concept of prana. An early form of qi comes from the writings of the Chinese philosopher Mencius (4th century BCE).

Within the framework of Chinese thought, no notion may attain such a degree of abstraction from empirical data as to correspond perfectly to one of our modern universal concepts. Nevertheless, the term qi comes as close as possible to constituting a generic designation equivalent to our word "energy". When Chinese thinkers are unwilling or unable to fix the quality of an energetic phenomenon, the character qi () inevitably flows from their brushes.

— Manfred Porkert[15][page needed]

The ancient Chinese described qi as "life force". They believed it permeated everything and linked their surroundings together. Qi was also linked to the flow of energy around and through the body, forming a cohesive functioning unit. By understanding the rhythm and flow of qi, they believed they could guide exercises and treatments to provide stability and longevity.

Although the concept has been important within many Chinese philosophies, over the centuries the descriptions of qi have varied and have sometimes been in conflict. Until China came into contact with Western scientific and philosophical ideas, the Chinese had not categorized all things in terms of matter and energy. Qi and li (: "pattern") were 'fundamental' categories similar to matter and energy.

Fairly early on[when?], some Chinese thinkers began to believe that there were different fractions of qi—the coarsest and heaviest fractions formed solids, lighter fractions formed liquids, and the most ethereal fractions were the "lifebreath" that animated living beings.[16] Yuanqi is a notion of innate or prenatal qi which is distinguished from acquired qi that a person may develop over their lifetime.

Philosophical roots

The earliest texts that speak of qi give some indications of how the concept developed. In the Analects of Confucius, qi could mean "breath".[17] Combining it with the Chinese word for blood (making 血氣, xueqi, blood and breath), the concept could be used to account for motivational characteristics:

The [morally] noble man guards himself against three things. When he is young, his xueqi has not yet stabilized, so he guards himself against sexual passion. When he reaches his prime, his xueqi is not easily subdued, so he guards himself against combativeness. When he reaches old age, his xueqi is already depleted, so he guards himself against acquisitiveness.

— Confucius, Analects, 16:7

The philosopher Mozi used the word qi to refer to noxious vapors that would eventually arise from a corpse were it not buried at a sufficient depth. He reported that early civilized humans learned how to live in houses to protect their qi from the moisture that troubled them when they lived in caves. He also associated maintaining one's qi with providing oneself with adequate nutrition. In regard to another kind of qi, he recorded how some people performed a kind of prognostication by observing qi (clouds) in the sky.[18]

Mencius described a kind of qi that might be characterized as an individual's vital energies. This qi was necessary to activity and it could be controlled by a well-integrated willpower. When properly nurtured, this qi was said to be capable of extending beyond the human body to reach throughout the universe. It could also be augmented by means of careful exercise of one's moral capacities. On the other hand, the qi of an individual could be degraded by adverse external forces that succeed in operating on that individual.[19][page needed]

Living things were not the only things believed to have qi. Zhuangzi indicated that wind is the qi of the Earth. Moreover, cosmic yin and yang "are the greatest of qi". He described qi as "issuing forth" and creating profound effects. He also said "Human beings are born [because of] the accumulation of qi. When it accumulates there is life. When it dissipates there is death... There is one qi that connects and pervades everything in the world."[20]

The Guanzi essay Neiye (Inward Training) is the oldest received writing on the subject of the cultivation of vapor [qi] and meditation techniques. The essay was probably composed at the Jixia Academy in Qi in the late fourth century B.C.[21]

Xun Zi, another Confucian scholar of the Jixia Academy, followed in later years. At 9:69/127[citation needed], Xun Zi says, "Fire and water have qi but do not have life. Grasses and trees have life but do not have perceptivity. Fowl and beasts have perceptivity but do not have yi (sense of right and wrong, duty, justice). Men have qi, life, perceptivity, and yi." Chinese people at such an early time had no concept of radiant energy, but they were aware that one can be heated by a campfire from a distance away from the fire. They accounted for this phenomenon by claiming "qi" radiated from fire. At 18:62/122[citation needed], he also uses "qi" to refer to the vital forces of the body that decline with advanced age.

Among the animals, the gibbon and the crane were considered experts at inhaling the qi. The Confucian scholar Dong Zhongshu (ca. 150 BC) wrote in Luxuriant Dew of the Spring and Autumn Annals:[22] "The gibbon resembles a macaque, but he is larger, and his color is black. His forearms being long, he lives eight hundred years, because he is expert in controlling his breathing." ("猿似猴。大而黑。長前臂。所以壽八百。好引氣也。")

Later, the syncretic text assembled under the direction of Liu An, the Huai Nan Zi, or "Masters of Huainan", has a passage that presages most of what is given greater detail by the Neo-Confucians:

Heaven (seen here as the ultimate source of all being) falls (duo , i.e., descends into proto-immanence) as the formless. Fleeting, fluttering, penetrating, amorphous it is, and so it is called the Supreme Luminary. The dao begins in the Void Brightening. The Void Brightening produces the universe (yuzhou). The universe produces qi. Qi has bounds. The clear, yang [qi] was ethereal and so formed heaven. The heavy, turbid [qi] was congealed and impeded and so formed earth. The conjunction of the clear, yang [qi] was fluid and easy. The conjunction of the heavy, turbid [qi] was strained and difficult. So heaven was formed first and earth was made fast later. The pervading essence (xijing) of heaven and earth becomes yin and yang. The concentrated (zhuan) essences of yin and yang become the four seasons. The dispersed (san) essences of the four seasons become the myriad creatures. The hot qi of yang in accumulating produces fire. The essence (jing) of the fire-qi becomes the sun. The cold qi of yin in accumulating produces water. The essence of the water-qi becomes the moon. The essences produced by coitus (yin) of the sun and moon become the stars and celestial markpoints (chen, planets).

— Huai-nan-zi, 3:1a/19

Role in traditional Chinese medicine

The Huangdi Neijing ("The Yellow Emperor's Classic of Medicine", circa 2nd century BCE) is historically credited with first establishing the pathways, called meridians, through which qi allegedly circulates in the human body.[23][page needed][24]

In traditional Chinese medicine, symptoms of various illnesses are believed to be either the product of disrupted, blocked, and unbalanced qi movement through meridians or deficiencies and imbalances of qi in the Zang Fu organs.[24] Traditional Chinese medicine often seeks to relieve these imbalances by adjusting the circulation of qi using a variety of techniques including herbology, food therapy, physical training regimens (qigong, t'ai chi ch'uan, and other martial arts training),[25][page needed] moxibustion, tui na, or acupuncture.[24]: 78 The cultivation of Heavenly and Earthly qi allow for the maintenance of psychological actions[26]

The nomenclature of Qi in the human body is different depending on its sources, roles, and locations.[27] For sources there is a difference between so-called "Primordial Qi" (acquired at birth from one's parents) and Qi acquired throughout one's life.[27] Or again Chinese medicine differentiates between Qi acquired from the air we breathe (so called "Clean Air") and Qi acquired from food and drinks (so-called "Grain Qi"). Looking at roles Qi is divided into "Defensive Qi" and "Nutritive Qi".[27] Defensive Qi's role is to defend the body against invasions while Nutritive Qi's role is to provide sustenance for the body. To protect against said invasions, medicines have four types of qi; cold, hot, warm, and cool.[28] Cold qi medicines are used to treat invasions hot in nature, while hot qi medicines are used to treat invasions cold in nature.[28] looking at locations, Qi is also named after the Zang-Fu organ or the Meridian in which it resides:[27] "Liver Qi", "Spleen Qi", etc. Lastly, prolonged exposure to the three evil qi (wind, cold, and wetness) can result in the penetration of evil qi through surface body parts, eventually reaching Zang-Fu organs.[29]

A qi field (chu-chong) refers to the cultivation of an energy field by a group, typically for healing or other benevolent purposes. A qi field is believed to be produced by visualization and affirmation. They are an important component of Wisdom Healing Qigong (Zhineng Qigong), founded by Grandmaster Ming Pang.[30][31][32][page needed]

Scientific view

The existence of Qi has not been proven scientifically.[4] A 1997 consensus statement on acupuncture by the United States National Institutes of Health noted that concepts such as qi "are difficult to reconcile with contemporary biomedical information".[33]

Practices involving qi

Feng shui

The traditional Chinese art of geomancy, the placement and arrangement of space called feng shui, is based on calculating the balance of qi, interactions between the five elements, yin and yang, and other factors. The retention or dissipation of qi is believed to affect the health, wealth, energy level, luck, and many other aspects of the occupants. Attributes of each item in a space affect the flow of qi by slowing it down, redirecting it or accelerating it. This is said to influence the energy level of the occupants. Positive qi flows in curved lines, whereas negative qi travels in straight lines.[34] In order for qi to be nourishing and positive, it must continue to flow not too quickly or too slowly.[34] In addition, qi should not be blocked abruptly, because it would become stagnant and turn destructive.[34]

One use for a luopan is to detect the flow of qi.[35] The quality of qi may rise and fall over time. Feng shui with a compass might be considered a form of divination that assesses the quality of the local environment.

There are three kinds of qi, known as heaven qi (tian qi 天气), Earth qi (di qi 地气), and human qi (ren qi 人气).[34] Heaven qi is composed of natural forces including the sun and rain. Earth qi is affected by heaven qi. For example, too much sun would lead to drought, and a lack of sun would cause plants to die off. Human qi is affected by earth qi, because the environment has effects on human beings. Feng shui is the balancing of heaven, Earth, and human qi.

Reiki

Reiki is a form of alternative medicine called energy healing. Reiki practitioners use a technique called palm healing or hands-on healing through which a "universal energy" is said to be transferred through the palms of the practitioner to the patient in order to encourage emotional or physical healing. Reiki is a pseudoscience,[36] and is used as an illustrative example of pseudoscience in scholarly texts and academic journal articles. It is based on qi ("chi"), which practitioners say is a universal life force, although there is no empirical evidence that such a life force exists.[4][37] Clinical research has not shown reiki to be effective as a treatment for any medical condition.[4] There has been no proof of the effectiveness of reiki therapy compared to the placebo effect. An overview of reiki investigations found that studies reporting positive effects had methodological flaws. The American Cancer Society stated that reiki should not replace conventional cancer treatment,[38] a sentiment echoed by Cancer Research UK[39] and the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health.[40] Developed in Japan in 1922 by Mikao Usui,[36] it has been adapted into varying cultural traditions across the world.

According to its believers, Reiki healing occurs by laying hands over or on an individual’s area of pain and controlling the universal Qi flow of the nearby space, sending into the area of malaise and purifying it.[41] There is no regulation of the practicing of Reiki in the United States and generally no central world organization that has authority over it.[42][43]

Qigong

Qìgōng (气功 or 氣功) involves coordinated breathing, movement, and awareness. It is traditionally viewed as a practice to cultivate and balance qi. With roots in traditional Chinese medicine, philosophy and martial arts, qigong is now practiced worldwide for exercise, healing, meditation, and training for martial arts. Typically a qigong practice involves rhythmic breathing, slow and stylized movement, a mindful state, and visualization of guiding qi.[44][page needed][45][46][page needed]

Martial arts

Qi is a didactic concept in many Chinese, Vietnamese, Korean and Japanese martial arts. Martial qigong is a feature of both internal and external training systems in China[47][page needed] and other East Asian cultures.[48][page needed] The most notable of the qi-focused "internal" force (jin) martial arts are Baguazhang, Xing Yi Quan, T'ai Chi Ch'uan, Southern Praying Mantis, Snake Kung Fu, Southern Dragon Kung Fu, Aikido, Kendo, Hapkido, Aikijujutsu, Luohan Quan, and Liu He Ba Fa.

Demonstrations of qi or ki are popular in some martial arts and may include the unraisable body, the unbendable arm, and other feats of power. These feats can be explained using biomechanics and physics.[49]

Acupuncture and moxibustion

Acupuncture is a part of traditional Chinese medicine that involves insertion of needles or the application of pinching/gripping into/onto superficial structures of the body (skin, subcutaneous tissue, muscles) at acupuncture points to balance the flow of qi. This is often accompanied by moxibustion, a treatment that involves burning mugwort on or near the skin at an acupuncture point.

Taoist sexual practices

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Quoting Confucius that the Taiji or "Great Extreme is the primordial substance (k'í) which, moving along, divided and made two k'í; that which in itself has motion is the Yang, and that which had rest .‥ is the Yin."
  2. ^ The essence of the ethical principle Li "is absolutely pure and good, but seeing that it is inseparable from the material element Ch'i.‥ it is from Man's birth to a greater or less extent impeded and tainted."
  3. ^ "To the ancients the cornerstone of the theory of acupuncture, the concept whereby they explained its effects and action, was Qi, the energy of life."

References

  1. ^ "Qi". Encyclopedia Britannica.
  2. ^ "Vapor": Cheng 2003, p. 615; "air": Cheng 2003, p. 615; "breath": Barrett 1991, p. 296, Lloyd, Zhao & Dong 2018, pp. 92, 138.
  3. ^ "Vital energy": Lloyd & Sivin 2002, p. 9, Cheng 2003, p. 615, Liu 2015, pp. 258, 267, 270, 349, 402, 474, Wang, Bao & Guan 2020; "vital force": Cheng 2003, p. 615, Liu 2015, pp. 205, 216, 422, 485; "material energy": Perkins 2013, p. 404; "energy": Lloyd, Zhao & Dong 2018, pp. 13, 138.
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  40. ^ . National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. Archived from the original on 11 April 2015. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  41. ^ Lilienfeld, Scott O.; Lynn, Steven Jay; Lohr, Jeffrey M. (2014). Science and Pseudoscience in Clinical Psychology. Guilford Press. p. 201. ISBN 9781462517893.
  42. ^ Elaine Stillerman (2014), Modalities for Massage and Bodywork, Elsevier Health Sciences, p. 295, ISBN 9780323260794, Currently there is no standard for certification in Reiki throughout the world.
  43. ^ Nina L. Paul (2011), "Reiki classes and certification", Reiki for Dummies, John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 9781118054741
  44. ^ Cohen, Kenneth S.; Dossey, Larry (1999). The Way of Qigong: The Art and Science of Chinese Energy Healin (1st ed.). New York: Ballantine Books. ISBN 978-0345421098.
  45. ^ Liang, Master Shou-Yu; Wu, Wen-Ching; Breiter-Wu, Denise (1997). Qigong Empowerment: A Guide to Medical, Taoist, Buddhist, and Wushu Energy Cultivation. East Providence, Rhode Island: Way of the Dragon Publishing. ISBN 978-1889659022.
  46. ^ Jwing-Ming, Yang (1998). Qigong for Health and Martial Arts: Exercises and Meditation (2nd ed.). Boston, Massachusetts: YMAA Publication Center. ISBN 978-1886969575.
  47. ^ Wile, Douglas (1996). Lost T'ai-chi Classics from the Late Ch'ing Dynasty. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 9780791426548.
  48. ^ Bishop, Mark (1989). Okinawan Karate: Teachers, Styles and Secret Techniques. London: A & C Black. ISBN 978-0713656664.
  49. ^ James, Daniel Arthur (27 June 2003). "Unraisable Body: The Physics of Martial Arts". Sports Medicine Australia. Retrieved 5 January 2017.

Works cited

  • Barrett, Timothy (1991). "Daoism". In Hook, Brian; Twitchett, Denis (eds.). The Cambridge Encyclopedia of China (2d ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 296–300. ISBN 052135594X.
  • Cheng, Chung-ying (2003). "Qi (Ch'i): Vital Force". In Cua, Antonio S. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Chinese Philosophy. New York: Routledge. pp. 615–617. ISBN 978-1-1353-6748-0.
  • Liu, Xiaogan (2015). Liu, Xiaogan (ed.). Dao Companion to Daoist Philosophy. Dordrecht: Springer. doi:10.1007/978-90-481-2927-0. ISBN 978-90-481-2926-3.
  • Lloyd, Geoffrey E. R.; Sivin, Nathan (2002). The Way and the Word: Science and Medicine in Early China and Greece. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-09297-0.
  • Lloyd, Geoffrey E. R.; Zhao, Jingyi Jenny; Dong, Qiaosheng (2018). Ancient Greece and China Compared. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781316091609. ISBN 978-1-107-08666-1.
  • Perkins, Dorothy (2013). Encyclopedia of China: The Essential Reference to China, Its History and Culture. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-57958-110-7.
  • Wang, Yueqing; Bao, Qinggang; Guan, Guoxing (2020). "Vital Energy (qi, 气)". History of Chinese Philosophy Through Its Key Terms. Translated by Xiang, Shuchen. Singapore: Springer/Nanjing University Press. pp. 177–190. doi:10.1007/978-981-15-2572-8_14. ISBN 978-981-15-2571-1. S2CID 216180284.

Further reading

  • Wright, Thomas; Eisenberg, David (1995). Encounters with Qi: Exploring Chinese medicine. New York: Norton hi. ISBN 978-0-393-31213-3. OCLC 32998368.
  • Powers, John. (1995). Introduction to Tibetan Buddhism. Ithaca, NY: Snow Lion Publications. p. 591. ISBN 978-1-55939-282-2.

External links

  • Article by Bing YeYoung "A Philosophical and Cultural Interpretation of Qi"
  • The Skeptics Dictionary
  • Qi Encyclopedia

this, article, about, chinese, principle, british, comedy, panel, show, other, uses, disambiguation, traditional, chinese, culture, east, asian, cultural, sphere, also, wade, giles, romanization, chee, believed, vital, force, forming, part, living, entity, lit. This article is about the Chinese principle For the British comedy panel show see QI For other uses see Qi disambiguation In traditional Chinese culture and the East Asian cultural sphere qi also ki or chi 1 in Wade Giles romanization ˈ tʃ iː CHEE qi is believed to be a vital force forming part of any living entity Literally meaning vapor air or breath 2 the word qi is often translated as vital energy vital force material energy or simply as energy 3 Qi is the central underlying principle in Chinese traditional medicine and in Chinese martial arts The practice of cultivating and balancing qi is called qigong Qi Ch i Chinese nameTraditional Chinese氣Simplified Chinese气TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinqiGwoyeu RomatzyhchihWade Gilesch i4IPA tɕʰi WuRomanizationqiHakkaRomanizationhiYue CantoneseJyutpinghei3IPA he i Southern MinHokkien POJkhiEastern MinFuzhou BUCkeMiddle ChineseMiddle ChinesekhjiOld ChineseBaxter Sagart 2014 C qʰep sBurmese nameBurmeseအသက IPA ă t ɛʔ Vietnamese nameVietnamese alphabetkhiHan Nom氣Thai nameThailmpranRTGSlompranKorean nameHangul기Hanja氣TranscriptionsRevised RomanizationgiMcCune ReischauerkiMongolian nameMongolian CyrillichijgMongolian scriptᠬᠡᠢ ᠶᠢTranscriptionsSASM GNCkhiigJapanese nameKyujitai氣Shinjitai気TranscriptionsRomanizationkiMalay nameMalaychi چي Indonesian nameIndonesianchiFilipino nameTagaloggiLao nameLaoຊ ວ ດKhmer nameKhmerឈ Tetum nameTetumqiBelievers in qi describe it as a vital force the flow of which must be unimpeded for health Qi is a pseudoscientific unverified concept 4 5 and is unrelated to the concept of energy used in science 6 7 8 vital energy itself being an abandoned scientific notion 9 The historian of medicine in China Paul U Unschuld adds that there is no evidence of a concept of energy either in the strictly physical sense or even in the more colloquial sense anywhere in Chinese medical theory 10 clarification needed Contents 1 Linguistic aspects 1 1 Pronunciation and etymology 1 2 Characters 1 3 Meanings 1 4 English borrowing 2 Concept 3 Philosophical roots 4 Role in traditional Chinese medicine 5 Scientific view 6 Practices involving qi 6 1 Feng shui 6 2 Reiki 6 3 Qigong 6 4 Martial arts 6 5 Acupuncture and moxibustion 6 6 Taoist sexual practices 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Works cited 10 Further reading 11 External linksLinguistic aspects EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The cultural keyword qi is analyzable in terms of Chinese and Sino Xenic pronunciations Possible etymologies include the logographs 氣 气 and 気 with various meanings ranging from vapor to anger and the English loanword qi or ch i Pronunciation and etymology Edit The logograph 氣 is read with two Chinese pronunciations the usual qi 氣 air vital energy and the rare archaic xi 氣 to present food later disambiguated with 餼 Pronunciations of 氣 in modern varieties of Chinese with standardized IPA equivalents include Standard Chinese qi t ɕʰi Wu Chinese qi t ɕʰi Southern Min khi kʰi Eastern Min ke kʰɛi Standard Cantonese hei3 hei and Hakka Chinese hi hi Pronunciations of 氣 in Sino Xenic borrowings include Japanese ki Korean gi and Vietnamese khi Reconstructions of the Middle Chinese pronunciation of 氣 standardized to IPA transcription include kʰe iH Bernard Karlgren kʰĭeiH Wang Li kʰieiH Li Rong kʰɨjH Edwin Pulleyblank and kʰɨiH Zhengzhang Shangfang Reconstructions of the Old Chinese pronunciation of 氣 standardized to IPA transcription include kʰɯds Zhengzhang Shangfang and C qʰep s William H Baxter and Laurent Sagart The etymology of qi interconnects with Kharia kʰis anger Sora kissa move with great effort Khmer kʰɛs strive after endeavor and Gyalrongic kʰɐs anger 11 Characters Edit In the East Asian languages qi has three logographs 氣 is the traditional Chinese character Korean hanja and Japanese kyujitai old character form kanji 気 is the Japanese shinjitai new character form kanji 气 is the simplified Chinese character In addition qi 炁 is an uncommon character especially used in writing Daoist talismans Historically the word qi was generally written as 气 until the Han dynasty 206 BCE 220 CE when it was replaced by the 氣 graph clarified with mǐ 米 rice indicating steam rising from rice as it cooks This primary logograph 气 the earliest written character for qi consisted of three wavy horizontal lines seen in Shang dynasty c 1600 1046 BCE oracle bone script Zhou dynasty 1046 256 BCE bronzeware script and large seal script and Qin dynasty 221 206 BCE small seal script These oracle bronze and seal scripts logographs 气 were used in ancient times as a phonetic loan character to write qǐ 乞 plead for beg ask which did not have an early character The vast majority of Chinese characters are classified as radical phonetic characters Such characters combine a semantically suggestive radical characters with a phonetic element approximating ancient pronunciation For example the widely known word dao 道 the Dao the way graphically combines the walk radical 辶 with a shǒu 首 head phonetic Although the modern dao and shǒu pronunciations are dissimilar the Old Chinese lˤuʔ s 道 and l uʔ s 首 were alike The regular script character qi 氣 is unusual because qi 气 is both the air radical and the phonetic with mǐ 米 rice semantically indicating steam vapor This qi 气 air gas radical was only used in a few native Chinese characters like yinyun 氤氲 thick mist smoke but was also used to create new scientific characters for gaseous chemical elements Some examples are based on pronunciations in European languages fu 氟 with a fu 弗 phonetic fluorine and nǎi 氖 with a nǎi 乃 phonetic neon Others are based on semantics qing 氫 with a jing 巠 phonetic abbreviating qing 輕 light weight hydrogen the lightest element and lǜ 氯 with a lu 彔 phonetic abbreviating lǜ 綠 green greenish yellow chlorine Qi 氣 is the phonetic element in a few characters such as kai 愾 hate with the heart mind radical 忄 or 心 xi 熂 set fire to weeds with the fire radical 火 and xi 餼 to present food with the food radical 食 The first Chinese dictionary of characters the Shuowen Jiezi 121 CE notes that the primary qi 气 is a pictographic character depicting 雲气 cloudy vapors and that the full 氣 combines 米 rice with the phonetic qi 气 meaning 饋客芻米 present provisions to guests later disambiguated as xi 餼 Oracle bone script for qi Bronzeware script for qi Large seal script for qi Small seal script for qi simplified Chinese character 气 is based on it Traditional Chinese character 氣 qi also used in Korean hanja In Japanese kanji it was used until 1946 when it was simplified to 気 Meanings EditQi is a polysemous word The unabridged Chinese Chinese character dictionary Hanyu Da Cidian defines it as present food or provisions for the xi pronunciation but also lists 23 meanings for the qi pronunciation 12 The modern ABC Chinese English Comprehensive Dictionary which enters xi 餼 grain animal feed make a present of food and a qi 氣 entry with seven translation equivalents for the noun two for bound morphemes and three equivalents for the verb n air gas smell spirit vigor morale vital material energy in Ch inese metaphysics tone atmosphere attitude anger breath respiration b f weather 天氣 tianqi linguistics aspiration 送氣 songqi v anger get angry bully insult 13 English borrowing Edit Qi was an early Chinese loanword in English It was romanized as k i in Church Romanization in the early 19th century as ch i in Wade Giles in the mid 19th century sometimes misspelled chi omitting the apostrophe and as qi in Pinyin in the mid 20th century The Oxford English Dictionary entry for qi gives the pronunciation as tʃ i the etymology from Chinese qi air breath and a definition of The physical life force postulated by certain Chinese philosophers the material principle It also gives eight usage examples with the first recorded example of k i in 1850 The Chinese Repository note 1 of ch i in 1917 The Encyclopaedia Sinica note 2 and qi in 1971 Felix Mann s Acupuncture note 3 The word qi is very frequently used in word games such as Scrabble due to containing a letter Q without a letter U 14 Concept EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message References to concepts analogous to qi are found in many Asian belief systems Philosophical conceptions of qi from the earliest records of Chinese philosophy 5th century BCE correspond to Western notions of humours and to the ancient Hindu yogic concept of prana An early form of qi comes from the writings of the Chinese philosopher Mencius 4th century BCE Within the framework of Chinese thought no notion may attain such a degree of abstraction from empirical data as to correspond perfectly to one of our modern universal concepts Nevertheless the term qi comes as close as possible to constituting a generic designation equivalent to our word energy When Chinese thinkers are unwilling or unable to fix the quality of an energetic phenomenon the character qi 氣 inevitably flows from their brushes Manfred Porkert 15 page needed The ancient Chinese described qi as life force They believed it permeated everything and linked their surroundings together Qi was also linked to the flow of energy around and through the body forming a cohesive functioning unit By understanding the rhythm and flow of qi they believed they could guide exercises and treatments to provide stability and longevity Although the concept has been important within many Chinese philosophies over the centuries the descriptions of qi have varied and have sometimes been in conflict Until China came into contact with Western scientific and philosophical ideas the Chinese had not categorized all things in terms of matter and energy Qi and li 理 pattern were fundamental categories similar to matter and energy Fairly early on when some Chinese thinkers began to believe that there were different fractions of qi the coarsest and heaviest fractions formed solids lighter fractions formed liquids and the most ethereal fractions were the lifebreath that animated living beings 16 Yuanqi is a notion of innate or prenatal qi which is distinguished from acquired qi that a person may develop over their lifetime Philosophical roots EditThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this section by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Qi news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The earliest texts that speak of qi give some indications of how the concept developed In the Analects of Confucius qi could mean breath 17 Combining it with the Chinese word for blood making 血氣 xue qi blood and breath the concept could be used to account for motivational characteristics The morally noble man guards himself against three things When he is young his xue qi has not yet stabilized so he guards himself against sexual passion When he reaches his prime his xue qi is not easily subdued so he guards himself against combativeness When he reaches old age his xue qi is already depleted so he guards himself against acquisitiveness Confucius Analects 16 7 The philosopher Mozi used the word qi to refer to noxious vapors that would eventually arise from a corpse were it not buried at a sufficient depth He reported that early civilized humans learned how to live in houses to protect their qi from the moisture that troubled them when they lived in caves He also associated maintaining one s qi with providing oneself with adequate nutrition In regard to another kind of qi he recorded how some people performed a kind of prognostication by observing qi clouds in the sky 18 Mencius described a kind of qi that might be characterized as an individual s vital energies This qi was necessary to activity and it could be controlled by a well integrated willpower When properly nurtured this qi was said to be capable of extending beyond the human body to reach throughout the universe It could also be augmented by means of careful exercise of one s moral capacities On the other hand the qi of an individual could be degraded by adverse external forces that succeed in operating on that individual 19 page needed Living things were not the only things believed to have qi Zhuangzi indicated that wind is the qi of the Earth Moreover cosmic yin and yang are the greatest of qi He described qi as issuing forth and creating profound effects He also said Human beings are born because of the accumulation of qi When it accumulates there is life When it dissipates there is death There is one qi that connects and pervades everything in the world 20 The Guanzi essay Neiye Inward Training is the oldest received writing on the subject of the cultivation of vapor qi and meditation techniques The essay was probably composed at the Jixia Academy in Qi in the late fourth century B C 21 Xun Zi another Confucian scholar of the Jixia Academy followed in later years At 9 69 127 citation needed Xun Zi says Fire and water have qi but do not have life Grasses and trees have life but do not have perceptivity Fowl and beasts have perceptivity but do not have yi sense of right and wrong duty justice Men have qi life perceptivity and yi Chinese people at such an early time had no concept of radiant energy but they were aware that one can be heated by a campfire from a distance away from the fire They accounted for this phenomenon by claiming qi radiated from fire At 18 62 122 citation needed he also uses qi to refer to the vital forces of the body that decline with advanced age Among the animals the gibbon and the crane were considered experts at inhaling the qi The Confucian scholar Dong Zhongshu ca 150 BC wrote in Luxuriant Dew of the Spring and Autumn Annals 22 The gibbon resembles a macaque but he is larger and his color is black His forearms being long he lives eight hundred years because he is expert in controlling his breathing 猿似猴 大而黑 長前臂 所以壽八百 好引氣也 Later the syncretic text assembled under the direction of Liu An the Huai Nan Zi or Masters of Huainan has a passage that presages most of what is given greater detail by the Neo Confucians Heaven seen here as the ultimate source of all being falls duo 墮 i e descends into proto immanence as the formless Fleeting fluttering penetrating amorphous it is and so it is called the Supreme Luminary The dao begins in the Void Brightening The Void Brightening produces the universe yu zhou The universe produces qi Qi has bounds The clear yang qi was ethereal and so formed heaven The heavy turbid qi was congealed and impeded and so formed earth The conjunction of the clear yang qi was fluid and easy The conjunction of the heavy turbid qi was strained and difficult So heaven was formed first and earth was made fast later The pervading essence xi jing of heaven and earth becomes yin and yang The concentrated zhuan essences of yin and yang become the four seasons The dispersed san essences of the four seasons become the myriad creatures The hot qi of yang in accumulating produces fire The essence jing of the fire qi becomes the sun The cold qi of yin in accumulating produces water The essence of the water qi becomes the moon The essences produced by coitus yin of the sun and moon become the stars and celestial markpoints chen planets Huai nan zi 3 1a 19Role in traditional Chinese medicine EditThe Huangdi Neijing The Yellow Emperor s Classic of Medicine circa 2nd century BCE is historically credited with first establishing the pathways called meridians through which qi allegedly circulates in the human body 23 page needed 24 In traditional Chinese medicine symptoms of various illnesses are believed to be either the product of disrupted blocked and unbalanced qi movement through meridians or deficiencies and imbalances of qi in the Zang Fu organs 24 Traditional Chinese medicine often seeks to relieve these imbalances by adjusting the circulation of qi using a variety of techniques including herbology food therapy physical training regimens qigong t ai chi ch uan and other martial arts training 25 page needed moxibustion tui na or acupuncture 24 78 The cultivation of Heavenly and Earthly qi allow for the maintenance of psychological actions 26 The nomenclature of Qi in the human body is different depending on its sources roles and locations 27 For sources there is a difference between so called Primordial Qi acquired at birth from one s parents and Qi acquired throughout one s life 27 Or again Chinese medicine differentiates between Qi acquired from the air we breathe so called Clean Air and Qi acquired from food and drinks so called Grain Qi Looking at roles Qi is divided into Defensive Qi and Nutritive Qi 27 Defensive Qi s role is to defend the body against invasions while Nutritive Qi s role is to provide sustenance for the body To protect against said invasions medicines have four types of qi cold hot warm and cool 28 Cold qi medicines are used to treat invasions hot in nature while hot qi medicines are used to treat invasions cold in nature 28 looking at locations Qi is also named after the Zang Fu organ or the Meridian in which it resides 27 Liver Qi Spleen Qi etc Lastly prolonged exposure to the three evil qi wind cold and wetness can result in the penetration of evil qi through surface body parts eventually reaching Zang Fu organs 29 Further information Traditional Chinese medicine and Acupuncture A qi field chu chong refers to the cultivation of an energy field by a group typically for healing or other benevolent purposes A qi field is believed to be produced by visualization and affirmation They are an important component of Wisdom Healing Qigong Zhineng Qigong founded by Grandmaster Ming Pang 30 31 32 page needed Scientific view EditThe existence of Qi has not been proven scientifically 4 A 1997 consensus statement on acupuncture by the United States National Institutes of Health noted that concepts such as qi are difficult to reconcile with contemporary biomedical information 33 Practices involving qi EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Feng shui Edit Main article Feng shui The traditional Chinese art of geomancy the placement and arrangement of space called feng shui is based on calculating the balance of qi interactions between the five elements yin and yang and other factors The retention or dissipation of qi is believed to affect the health wealth energy level luck and many other aspects of the occupants Attributes of each item in a space affect the flow of qi by slowing it down redirecting it or accelerating it This is said to influence the energy level of the occupants Positive qi flows in curved lines whereas negative qi travels in straight lines 34 In order for qi to be nourishing and positive it must continue to flow not too quickly or too slowly 34 In addition qi should not be blocked abruptly because it would become stagnant and turn destructive 34 One use for a luopan is to detect the flow of qi 35 The quality of qi may rise and fall over time Feng shui with a compass might be considered a form of divination that assesses the quality of the local environment There are three kinds of qi known as heaven qi tian qi 天气 Earth qi di qi 地气 and human qi ren qi 人气 34 Heaven qi is composed of natural forces including the sun and rain Earth qi is affected by heaven qi For example too much sun would lead to drought and a lack of sun would cause plants to die off Human qi is affected by earth qi because the environment has effects on human beings Feng shui is the balancing of heaven Earth and human qi Reiki Edit Main article Reiki Reiki is a form of alternative medicine called energy healing Reiki practitioners use a technique called palm healing or hands on healing through which a universal energy is said to be transferred through the palms of the practitioner to the patient in order to encourage emotional or physical healing Reiki is a pseudoscience 36 and is used as an illustrative example of pseudoscience in scholarly texts and academic journal articles It is based on qi chi which practitioners say is a universal life force although there is no empirical evidence that such a life force exists 4 37 Clinical research has not shown reiki to be effective as a treatment for any medical condition 4 There has been no proof of the effectiveness of reiki therapy compared to the placebo effect An overview of reiki investigations found that studies reporting positive effects had methodological flaws The American Cancer Society stated that reiki should not replace conventional cancer treatment 38 a sentiment echoed by Cancer Research UK 39 and the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health 40 Developed in Japan in 1922 by Mikao Usui 36 it has been adapted into varying cultural traditions across the world According to its believers Reiki healing occurs by laying hands over or on an individual s area of pain and controlling the universal Qi flow of the nearby space sending into the area of malaise and purifying it 41 There is no regulation of the practicing of Reiki in the United States and generally no central world organization that has authority over it 42 43 Qigong Edit Main article Qigong Qigōng 气功 or 氣功 involves coordinated breathing movement and awareness It is traditionally viewed as a practice to cultivate and balance qi With roots in traditional Chinese medicine philosophy and martial arts qigong is now practiced worldwide for exercise healing meditation and training for martial arts Typically a qigong practice involves rhythmic breathing slow and stylized movement a mindful state and visualization of guiding qi 44 page needed 45 46 page needed Martial arts Edit Main article Neijing Qi is a didactic concept in many Chinese Vietnamese Korean and Japanese martial arts Martial qigong is a feature of both internal and external training systems in China 47 page needed and other East Asian cultures 48 page needed The most notable of the qi focused internal force jin martial arts are Baguazhang Xing Yi Quan T ai Chi Ch uan Southern Praying Mantis Snake Kung Fu Southern Dragon Kung Fu Aikido Kendo Hapkido Aikijujutsu Luohan Quan and Liu He Ba Fa Demonstrations of qi or ki are popular in some martial arts and may include the unraisable body the unbendable arm and other feats of power These feats can be explained using biomechanics and physics 49 Acupuncture and moxibustion Edit Main articles Acupuncture and Moxibustion Acupuncture is a part of traditional Chinese medicine that involves insertion of needles or the application of pinching gripping into onto superficial structures of the body skin subcutaneous tissue muscles at acupuncture points to balance the flow of qi This is often accompanied by moxibustion a treatment that involves burning mugwort on or near the skin at an acupuncture point Taoist sexual practices Edit Main article Taoist sexual practicesSee also Edit China portalAether classical element Aṣẹ Yoruba Aura paranormal Chakra Dantian Esoteric healing Geist Livity spiritual concept Mana Orgone Prana Reiki Pneuma Soul Scientific skepticismNotes Edit Quoting Confucius that the Taiji or Great Extreme is the primordial substance k i which moving along divided and made two k i that which in itself has motion is the Yang and that which had rest is the Yin The essence of the ethical principle Li is absolutely pure and good but seeing that it is inseparable from the material element Ch i it is from Man s birth to a greater or less extent impeded and tainted To the ancients the cornerstone of the theory of acupuncture the concept whereby they explained its effects and action was Qi the energy of life References Edit Qi Encyclopedia Britannica Vapor Cheng 2003 p 615 air Cheng 2003 p 615 breath Barrett 1991 p 296 Lloyd Zhao amp Dong 2018 pp 92 138 Vital energy Lloyd amp Sivin 2002 p 9 Cheng 2003 p 615 Liu 2015 pp 258 267 270 349 402 474 Wang Bao amp Guan 2020 vital force Cheng 2003 p 615 Liu 2015 pp 205 216 422 485 material energy Perkins 2013 p 404 energy Lloyd Zhao amp Dong 2018 pp 13 138 a b c d Lee M S Pittler M H Ernst E 1 June 2008 Effects of reiki in clinical practice a systematic review of randomised clinical trials International Journal of Clinical Practice 62 6 947 54 doi 10 1111 j 1742 1241 2008 01729 x ISSN 1742 1241 PMID 18410352 S2CID 25832830 Dunning Brian Skeptoid 411 Your Body s Alleged Energy Fields Skeptoid Retrieved 3 September 2016 Shermer Michael July 2005 Full of Holes the curious case of acupuncture Scientific American 293 2 30 Bibcode 2005SciAm 293b 30S doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0805 30 PMID 16053133 Stenger Victor J June 1998 Reality Check the energy fields of life Skeptical Briefs Committee for Skeptical Inquiry Archived from the original on 11 December 2007 Retrieved 25 December 2007 Despite complete scientific rejection the concept of a special biological fields within living things remains deeply engraved in human thinking It is now working its way into modern health care systems as non scientific alternative therapies become increasingly popular From acupuncture to homeopathy and therapeutic touch the claim is made that healing can be brought about by the proper adjustment of a person s or animal s bioenergetic fields Traditional Medicine and Pseudoscience in China A Report of the Second CSICOP Delegation Part 2 CSICOP Archived from the original on 4 October 2009 Retrieved 15 February 2009 Williams Elizabeth Ann 2003 A Cultural History of Medical Vitalism in Enlightenment Montpellier Ashgate p 4 ISBN 978 0 7546 0881 3 Unschuld Paul U 2018 Traditional Chinese medicine heritage and adaptation New York Columbia University Press p 125 ISBN 9780231175005 Schuessler Axel 2006 ABC Etymological Dictionary of Old Chinese Honolulu University of Hawaii Press p 423 ISBN 9780824829759 Retrieved 5 January 2017 Mair Victor H 2003 An Alphabetical Index to the Hanyu Da Cidian Honolulu Hawaii University of Hawai i Press p 2011 ISBN 978 0824828165 Defrancis John Yuqing Bai 1999 ABC Chinese English Dictionary Honolulu University of Hawai i Press p 465 ISBN 978 0824821548 Kwan Michael 2 June 2022 The Power of Qi A Scrabble Word That ll Center Your Game Retrieved 9 July 2022 Porkert Manfred 1974 The Theoretical Foundations of Chinese Medicine Systems of Correspondence 2nd ed Cambridge M I T Press ISBN 978 0262160582 Definitions and brief historical notes on such concepts can be found in Wei Zhengtong s Zhong Guo Zhexue Cidian Da Lin Publishing Company Taipei 1977 Legge James 2010 The Analects of Confucius Auckland Floating Press ISBN 978 1775417958 Watson Burton 2003 Mozi Basic Writings New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231130011 Lau D C 2003 Mencius Revised ed Hong Kong Chinese University Press ISBN 978 9622018518 Watson Burton 2013 The Complete Works of Zhuangzi New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231536509 Loewe Michael Shaughnessy Edward L 1999 The Cambridge History of Ancient China From the Origins of Civilization to 221 BC 1st ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press Press p 880 ISBN 9780521470308 Retrieved 11 March 2017 Guilk Robert van 2015 The Gibbon in China An Essay in Chinese Animal Lore E J Brill p 38 ISBN 978 7547507391 Veith Ilza 1949 Huang ti nei ching su wen The Yellow Emperor s Classic of Medicine reissued with a New Preface by Ken Rose Berkeley University of California Press 2002 ed Baltimore Williams and Williams ISBN 978 0520229365 a b c Lawson Wood Denis Lawson Wood Joyce 1983 Acupuncture Handbook Health Science Press pp 4 133 ISBN missing Wu Kung tsao 2006 1980 Wu Style Tai Chi Chuan 吳家太極拳 Wu Family T ai Chi Ch uan Chien ch uan T ai chi Ch uan Association ISBN 978 0978049904 李中梓 and 江潤祥 Huangdi Neijing A Synopsis with Commentaries 内經知要 譯詁 The Chinese University of Hong Kong Press 2010 pg 390 93 a b c d What is Qi in Chinese medicine The Journal of Chinese Medicine on Orient Mama 23 April 2018 Retrieved 29 April 2018 a b Yang Shou zhong 1998 The Divine Farmer s Materia Medica A Translation of the Shen Nong Ben Cao Jing pg xii Hong zhou Wu et al World Century Compendium To TCM Volume 1 Fundamentals Of Traditional Chinese Medicine World Century Publishing Corporation 2013 pg 22 Gu Mingtong 2011 Wisdom Healing Zhineng Qigong Cultivating Wisdom and Energy for Health Healing and Happiness Petaluma California pp 61 80 ISBN 978 0983504306 Gu Mingtong 2009 An Introduction to Wisdom Healing Qigong Petaluma California pp 30 46 47 ISBN missing Hin Ooi Kean 2010 Zhineng Qigong The Science Theory and Practice North Charleston South Carolina CreateSpace ISBN 9781453867600 The National Institutes of Health NIH Consensus Development Program Acupuncture Consensus nih gov Retrieved 5 January 2017 a b c d Henwood Belinda 1998 Feng shui how to create harmony and balance in your living and working environment Feng shui Vancouver Raincoast Books ISBN 1 55192 132 4 OCLC 37985099 Field Stephen L 12 February 1998 Qimancy Chinese Divination by Qi Professor Field s Fengshui Gate Archived from the original on 23 February 2017 Retrieved 7 November 2017 a b Novella Steven 19 October 2011 Reiki Science Based Medicine Archived from the original on 11 April 2015 Reiki Fraudulent Misrepresentation Science Based Medicine Reiki Fraudulent Misrepresentation Science Based Medicine accessdate 28 May 2016 Russell J Rovere A eds 2009 Reiki American Cancer Society Complete Guide to Complementary and Alternative Cancer Therapies 2nd ed American Cancer Society pp 243 45 ISBN 9780944235713 Reiki Cancer Research UK 30 August 2017 Archived from the original on 18 March 2015 Reiki What You Need To Know National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health Archived from the original on 11 April 2015 Retrieved 24 May 2019 Lilienfeld Scott O Lynn Steven Jay Lohr Jeffrey M 2014 Science and Pseudoscience in Clinical Psychology Guilford Press p 201 ISBN 9781462517893 Elaine Stillerman 2014 Modalities for Massage and Bodywork Elsevier Health Sciences p 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2003 Unraisable Body The Physics of Martial Arts Sports Medicine Australia Retrieved 5 January 2017 Works cited Edit Barrett Timothy 1991 Daoism In Hook Brian Twitchett Denis eds The Cambridge Encyclopedia of China 2d ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 296 300 ISBN 052135594X Cheng Chung ying 2003 Qi Ch i Vital Force In Cua Antonio S ed Encyclopedia of Chinese Philosophy New York Routledge pp 615 617 ISBN 978 1 1353 6748 0 Liu Xiaogan 2015 Liu Xiaogan ed Dao Companion to Daoist Philosophy Dordrecht Springer doi 10 1007 978 90 481 2927 0 ISBN 978 90 481 2926 3 Lloyd Geoffrey E R Sivin Nathan 2002 The Way and the Word Science and Medicine in Early China and Greece New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 09297 0 Lloyd Geoffrey E R Zhao Jingyi Jenny Dong Qiaosheng 2018 Ancient Greece and China Compared Cambridge Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781316091609 ISBN 978 1 107 08666 1 Perkins Dorothy 2013 Encyclopedia of China The Essential Reference to China Its History and Culture New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 57958 110 7 Wang Yueqing Bao Qinggang Guan Guoxing 2020 Vital Energy qi 气 History of Chinese Philosophy Through Its Key Terms Translated by Xiang Shuchen Singapore Springer Nanjing University Press pp 177 190 doi 10 1007 978 981 15 2572 8 14 ISBN 978 981 15 2571 1 S2CID 216180284 Further reading EditWright Thomas Eisenberg David 1995 Encounters with Qi Exploring Chinese medicine New York Norton hi ISBN 978 0 393 31213 3 OCLC 32998368 Powers John 1995 Introduction to Tibetan Buddhism Ithaca NY Snow Lion Publications p 591 ISBN 978 1 55939 282 2 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Qi Look up qi in Wiktionary the free dictionary Article by Bing YeYoung A Philosophical and Cultural Interpretation of Qi The Skeptics Dictionary Qi Encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Qi amp oldid 1152075247, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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