Development History of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Philosophy
Ancient Period (Before 3000 BCE)
- The Three Sovereigns (Fuxi, Shennong, Huangdi)
- The emergence of TCM philosophy
Xia Dynasty Period (2070 BCE – 1600 BCE)
- Tribal civilization
- Founded by Yu the Great
- Introduction of the "Lian Shan Yi" system (one of the early divination systems)
Shang Dynasty Period (1600 BCE – 1046 BCE)
- Establishment of a dynasty system
- Clear national governance structure
- Use of oracle bones and divination for rituals
Western Zhou Dynasty Period (1046 BCE – 771 BCE)
- King Wu of Zhou established the Western Zhou dynasty
- Implementation of the feudal system
- King Wen of Zhou created the "Post-Heaven Eight Trigrams" system and the 64 hexagrams in the Zhou Yi (Book of Changes)
Spring and Autumn and Warring States Periods (770 BCE – 256 BCE)
- Spring and Autumn Period (770 BCE – 476 BCE): Decline of Zhou kings, emergence of regional lords, notable figures like Guan Zhong and Sun Wu (Sun Tzu).
- Warring States Period (475 BCE – 256 BCE): Seven powerful states, philosophical schools such as Confucianism (Confucius), Daoism (Laozi), and Mohism competing for influence.
Qin and Han Dynasties (221 BCE – 220 CE)
- Unification under the Qin and Han dynasties promoted medical development.
- Zhang Zhongjing authored the foundational medical text Treatise on Cold Damage Diseases (Shang Han Lun).
Sui and Tang Dynasties (581 CE – 907 CE)
- Establishment of state medical institutions, such as the Imperial Medical Office.
- Sun Simiao compiled Prescriptions Worth a Thousand Gold (Qianjin Yaofang) and Supplement to Prescriptions Worth a Thousand Gold (Qianjin Yifang).
Song and Yuan Dynasties (960 CE – 1368 CE)
- Development of acupuncture: publication of The Great Compendium of Acupuncture (Zhenjiu Dacheng), a classic acupuncture text.
- Emergence of distinct medical schools and theories.
Ming and Qing Dynasties (1368 CE – 1912 CE)
- Compilation of Compendium of Materia Medica (Bencao Gangmu) by Li Shizhen.
- Rise of the "Warm Disease School": Wu Jutong and Ye Tianshi advanced the theory of warm diseases and introduced the "Wei-Qi-Ying-Xue" diagnostic framework.
- Zhang Jingyue emphasized the "balance of yin and yang" and holistic treatments.
Modern Era (1912 CE – Present)
- Modern integration and innovation of traditional Chinese medicine.