Skip to main content Start main content

RCCHC「科技、社会与文化」讲座系列 - A Rose is a Rose by Any Other Name: Digital Tools for Solving Polynymy in the History of Chinese Medicine and Beyond

STS Talk series_Prof Michael Stanley-Baker_31 Mar_banner
  • 日期

    2026年3月31日

  • 主办单位

    中国历史与文化研究中心、中国历史及文化学系

  • 时间

    16:30 - 18:00

  • 地点

    线上讲座 (Zoom)  

讲者

Prof. Michael Stanley-Baker

查询

罗嘉敏 小姐 34008979 rcchc@polyu.edu.hk

备注

此讲座将会以英语进行

摘要

(只提供英语版本) Chinese medicine has a long tradition of thinking about the relationship between the places where drugs originate and this relationship to their efficacy, but it is troubled by the varied naming culture that emerges in multiple communities. New digital tools allow us to trace long chains of connections—from ancient Chinese documents and historical geography, through modern botany and biochemistry, as well as across different regional languages. These, in turn, invite new applications in conservation and medical agriculture, and the discovery of novel uses for these ancient drugs in their new environs. This paper introduces tools and solutions that can interconnect the early history of Chinese medicine, with its complex present and technological future.

讲者

Prof. Michael Stanley-Baker

Prof. Michael Stanley-Baker

Associate Professor
History and the Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine
Nanyang Technological University Singapore

(只提供英语版本) Michael Stanley-Baker is an Associate Professor in History and the Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine at Nanyang Technological University Singapore.  An historian of Chinese Medicine and Religion, he also has a clinical degree in Chinese medicine. He uses traditional philology and modern Digital Humanities approaches to research the intersections of Chinese medicine with different knowledge cultures, whether religion, botany, local communities, or modern bioinformatics. His editorial projects include: - the Routledge Handbook of Chinese Medicine, -Routledge Handbook of Chinese Medicine (Manchester University Press) -the Routledge Handbook of Chinese Medicine (Palgrave) among others.  His monograph, Routledge Handbook of Chinese Medicine, situates practices within technical communities to sketch out the dynamics of medico-religious practice in the Six Dynasties period (220-589).  His Digital Humanities project, Polyglotasianmedicine.com, includes digital maps of early Chinese pharmacopoeii, full-text historical archives and links traditional medicine with modern science. He serves as President of the International Association for the Study of Asian Medicine (IASTAM), and as the co-chair of the Healing Arts at the MIT Centre for Comparative Global Humanities. Most recently he consulted for the WHO at the Second Global Summit on Traditional Medicine on historical representation and on data management and governance.  

您的浏览器不是最新版本。如果继续浏览本网站,部分页面未必能够正常运作。

建议您更新至最新版本或选用其他浏览器。您可以按此连结查看其他相容的浏览器。