RCCHC「科技、社會與文化」講座系列 - Situating Practice: How the study of Daoism and Medicine can Inform the History of Science in China
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日期
2026年3月30日
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主辦單位
中國歷史與文化研究中心、中國歷史及文化學系
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時間
16:30 - 18:30
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地點
線上講座 (Zoom)
講者
Prof. Michael Stanley-Baker
查詢
羅嘉敏 小姐 34008979 rcchc@polyu.edu.hk
備註
此講座將會以英語進行
摘要
(只提供英語版本) The old saying has it that the Dao and Medicine have the same origins 醫道同源. But did they really? And if they did, what were the processes which then separated the Dao from Medicine as different knowledge forms? This question involves clearing the cobwebs of legacy categories like ‘science’ and ‘religion’, or daojia 道家 and the later daojiao 道教, that have quietly shaped our imaginations, as well as neologisms like ‘Daoist medicine’ which attempt to do so anew.
Looking afresh at the ground of the Han dynasty, which saw the formation of both the classical medical tradition and the Daoist religion, we find a rich array of sources that touch upon key issues, whether imperial, folk, elite or communitarian works, extending to myths and poetry, legal cases and technical works. One of the unifying threads across these different discourses is a core concern with practice, whether cataloguing, correct transmission, authoritative use, statistical experimentation, or simply their glamour.
A focus on practices usefully resolves an established problem in the history of science in China. While it is broadly agreed that epistemology was not a topic of imperial Chinese science, it is hardly the case that early actors were not highly reflective about what they did and how they knew it. Shifting our gaze from Eurocentric questions of epistemology, and developing a richer vocabulary for the praxeology in the history of Chinese knowledge reveals a deep vein of critical reflection among earlier practitioners, that can help us come to better terms for how they organised knowledge.
講者
Prof. Michael Stanley-Baker
Associate Professor
History and the Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine
Nanyang Technological University Singapore(只提供英語版本) 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.