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The angry liver, the anxious heart and the melancholy spleen

The phenomenology of perceptions in chinese culture

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Abstract

The purpose of this article is to advance a different approach to the phenomenology of the “lived-body.” To understand the role of the body in generating culture, traditional constraints influencing bodily perceptions are considered. The alternative is found in the phenomenological method of bodily perceptions. Numerous examples from traditional Chinese medicine, based on research in China, illustrate a wealth of symptoms, sensations, and their relation to the world of emotions. These examples provide arguments for collapsing the strict distinction between somatic changes and emotions as based in the dichotomized view of mind and body, subject and object. The analysis also includes the semantic dimensions of these bodily processes.

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Ots, T. The angry liver, the anxious heart and the melancholy spleen. Cult Med Psych 14, 21–58 (1990). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00046703

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