Let me see here,are the symptoms of “hair loss, chronic low back pain,subjective feeling of fearfulness,quality of eyesight” considered to be related to what they call “kidney qi deficiency”?
yes, also knee and ankle pain
Again,it seems as if we are encountering the same problem.To determine “kidney qi deficiency”,you would need to be able to measure qi (assume for a while,that it exists).“Measurement” based on pulse diagnosis has no physiological relevance that I know of (scientific proof).Like hair analysis for example,no proof.
The probability in encountering all the signs comprising the standard Chinese medical diagnosis of Kidney Qi deficiency is surely a low percentage when compared to the population at large, and a point scale based on the diagnosis would therefore be useful in a Saturday afternoon experiment comparing DPEA levels among Kidney Qi deficient and Non-kidney Qi deficient individuals.
What about the symptoms then? Point a finger if I´m wrong but hair loss can be associated with nutritional deficiency/diet,thyroid disorder,genetic factors,and other hormonal factors.
Ya, genetic diseases are typically categorized in Chinese medicine as being due to weak Kidney Qi, or inherited Kidney qi from the parents. Regarding nutritional deficiency, this is also related to Kidney qi deficiency. This is because in order to survive in this world you need Qi from food, but when you don’t get it, in order to survive, the body draws on it’s one-way-bank account of Kidney qi. That is why is it a bad idea to work long hours with out food, just surviving on cigarettes or drugs.
This behaviour depletes Kidney qi. That is why, from the perspective of Chinese medicine, the crack and herion addicts look like hell due to depletion of their Kidney qi.
Just like hair does not grow grey in old age because of “weakening kidneys”,it does not leave you because of them (no knowledge of endocrinology during the hot days of TCM).
we are not talking about kidneys, but rather “Kidneys.” in other words, the Chinese concept of the energetic Kidney does not directly correspond in everyway to the physiological kidney. And anyway, we have a Kidney qi tonic to reverse premature greying.
Correlations between emotional states and internal organs was a driving force in this discussion.Alleged links between “kidneys- fear” is what I might call “biblical biology” (there seem to be correlations between it,the Bible and knowledge of the time,and TCM)
or what others might call cross-cultural observation-based insight.
Heart used to be the center of the mind and so on. Again,you just need to show that kidney issues have nothing to do with fear.
My point is that Kidney qi deficiency may present with fealings of irrational fear, and conversely an excess of fearful experiences may result in Kidney qi deficiency. For example, a very common presentation for a victim of child abuse is chronic insomnia and nightmares. This is a case of trauma leading to an energetic disconnection between the Kidneys and Heart.
Eyesight seems to be another unrelated thing too. Lower back pain seems to me,the only legitimate symptom to associate with kidneys (by nephrolites etc.).However,even in such a case,it needs to be shown carefully that the pain would be due to them and not because of numerous other reasons.
Bad eyesight from childhood points to a genetic weakness, AKA weak Kidney qi. Regarding the back pain, that is why I said that medical background would need to be taken into account. In this way low back pain due to traumatic injury, for example, could be ruled out.
In any case, with regard to all your exeptions to the Kidney qi deficiency cardinal signs, these are within the paradigm of Chinese medical theory and diagnosis of Kidney Qi deficiency. You can’t remove Chinese medical theory from an experiment designed to test it.
"How many biomedical remedies or surgical maneuvors have been used over the years without understanding the action and consequences (to the grave detriment of many lives)? "
I do not know.How many?
Every lobotomy for starters. I will see if I can pull up some prescription-drug related death statistics for you out of my Phamarcology notebook.