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The Yellow Court Scripture, Volume 2
Paperback

The Yellow Court Scripture, Volume 2

$76.99
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This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.

The Huangting jing (Yellow Court Scripture), a central classic of Daoist meditation translated earlier in this series, did not grow or remain in a cultural vacuum. This book seeks to elucidate its greater context, presenting discussions and translations of four major and six minor works that can be described as precursors or successors of the text dating from the Eastern Han to the late Tang dynasties. Taken together, these texts illustrate the vibrant cultural role of the Huangting jing in the middle period, showing its growth as part of early Daoist meditation circles and demonstrating its later development into more medical and exorcistic contexts. The book with its original translations makes a major contribution to the study of Daoist cultivation and Chinese intellectual history.

The Huangting jing ??? (Yellow Court Scripture) is a text in multiple formats, most importantly an outer and an inner version, the Waijing and the Neijing, both written in seven-character verses and revealed by central cosmic deities. As outlined in my earlier book on the subject (Kohn 2023), recent research tends to favor the understanding that the Waijing is older, linked with the Celestial Masters and dated to the late Eastern Han dynasty. The Neijing, on the other hand, goes back to the late 3rd century and is linked with Wei Huacun ??? (251-334), the libationer of the Celestial Masters who turned revealing deity of Highest Clarity. Through her, the text made its way into the Highest Clarity school although, as Isabelle Robinet points out, it never attained full canonical status on par with the high celestial scriptures (1993, 58).

Knowing this and realizing that the work with its unique presentation of organ palaces, body gods, and internal cultivation methods did not grow or remain in a vacuum, the question arises what cultural background it arose from and what impact it had upon Chinese culture later, specifically in the medieval period, that is, the question of precursors and successors. This book hopes to answer this question, presenting discussions and translations of four major and six minor works that relate in various ways to the Huangting jing.

Key precursors, then, equally dating from the late Eastern Han, are the Lingbao wufuxu ????? (Explanation of the Five Talismans of Numinous Treasure, DZ 388, SV 232-33), notably passagesthat describe deities, heavens, and cultivation practices associated with the five phases; and the Laozi zhongjing ???? (Central Scripture of Laozi, DZ 1168, SV 92-94) with its presentation of gods found both in the greater universe and within the human body.

Main successors are the Huangting zhongjing jing ????? (Central Lights Scripture of the Yellow Court, DZ 1401, SV 350), a composite work of the Sui or early Tang that reformulates and expands the basic Huangting jing teachings; and the Huangting neijing wuzang liufu buxietu ??????????? (Illustrated Outline of the Tonification and Dispersal [of the Qi] of the Five Organs and Six Viscera According to the Inner Lights of the Yellow Court,DZ 432, SV 348-49), dated to 848, which links Huangting jing cosmology and practices with the medical understanding and healing technologies of the time.

In its wake, in turn, are six further works, dating from the late Tang and Five Dynasties periods, that reprint or summarize the outline of the organs as found in the Buxietu, present theoretical discussions of the nature of qi, and link Huangting jing culture with popular methods of protection and exorcism. The last two among them, moreover, contain first indications of internal alchemy, the dominant form of Daoist meditation since the Song dynasty. Its practitioners adopted and integrated the body vision and internal activation expressed in the Huangting jing, giving rise to many further commentaries and interpretations, notably two in the Song, three in the Ming, and at least eight in the Qing.

Overall, the text and its related works expand and modify key features of Han religious culture, which are integrated in the Huangting jing: the heavens, deities, and activation of the five phases as well as the multiplicity of gods found both in the greater universe and within the human body. All have in common that they subscribe to the core vision of the body as a microcosm with close correspondences in the outside world.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Three Pines Press
Country
United States
Date
31 October 2024
Pages
260
ISBN
9781931483773

This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.

The Huangting jing (Yellow Court Scripture), a central classic of Daoist meditation translated earlier in this series, did not grow or remain in a cultural vacuum. This book seeks to elucidate its greater context, presenting discussions and translations of four major and six minor works that can be described as precursors or successors of the text dating from the Eastern Han to the late Tang dynasties. Taken together, these texts illustrate the vibrant cultural role of the Huangting jing in the middle period, showing its growth as part of early Daoist meditation circles and demonstrating its later development into more medical and exorcistic contexts. The book with its original translations makes a major contribution to the study of Daoist cultivation and Chinese intellectual history.

The Huangting jing ??? (Yellow Court Scripture) is a text in multiple formats, most importantly an outer and an inner version, the Waijing and the Neijing, both written in seven-character verses and revealed by central cosmic deities. As outlined in my earlier book on the subject (Kohn 2023), recent research tends to favor the understanding that the Waijing is older, linked with the Celestial Masters and dated to the late Eastern Han dynasty. The Neijing, on the other hand, goes back to the late 3rd century and is linked with Wei Huacun ??? (251-334), the libationer of the Celestial Masters who turned revealing deity of Highest Clarity. Through her, the text made its way into the Highest Clarity school although, as Isabelle Robinet points out, it never attained full canonical status on par with the high celestial scriptures (1993, 58).

Knowing this and realizing that the work with its unique presentation of organ palaces, body gods, and internal cultivation methods did not grow or remain in a vacuum, the question arises what cultural background it arose from and what impact it had upon Chinese culture later, specifically in the medieval period, that is, the question of precursors and successors. This book hopes to answer this question, presenting discussions and translations of four major and six minor works that relate in various ways to the Huangting jing.

Key precursors, then, equally dating from the late Eastern Han, are the Lingbao wufuxu ????? (Explanation of the Five Talismans of Numinous Treasure, DZ 388, SV 232-33), notably passagesthat describe deities, heavens, and cultivation practices associated with the five phases; and the Laozi zhongjing ???? (Central Scripture of Laozi, DZ 1168, SV 92-94) with its presentation of gods found both in the greater universe and within the human body.

Main successors are the Huangting zhongjing jing ????? (Central Lights Scripture of the Yellow Court, DZ 1401, SV 350), a composite work of the Sui or early Tang that reformulates and expands the basic Huangting jing teachings; and the Huangting neijing wuzang liufu buxietu ??????????? (Illustrated Outline of the Tonification and Dispersal [of the Qi] of the Five Organs and Six Viscera According to the Inner Lights of the Yellow Court,DZ 432, SV 348-49), dated to 848, which links Huangting jing cosmology and practices with the medical understanding and healing technologies of the time.

In its wake, in turn, are six further works, dating from the late Tang and Five Dynasties periods, that reprint or summarize the outline of the organs as found in the Buxietu, present theoretical discussions of the nature of qi, and link Huangting jing culture with popular methods of protection and exorcism. The last two among them, moreover, contain first indications of internal alchemy, the dominant form of Daoist meditation since the Song dynasty. Its practitioners adopted and integrated the body vision and internal activation expressed in the Huangting jing, giving rise to many further commentaries and interpretations, notably two in the Song, three in the Ming, and at least eight in the Qing.

Overall, the text and its related works expand and modify key features of Han religious culture, which are integrated in the Huangting jing: the heavens, deities, and activation of the five phases as well as the multiplicity of gods found both in the greater universe and within the human body. All have in common that they subscribe to the core vision of the body as a microcosm with close correspondences in the outside world.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Three Pines Press
Country
United States
Date
31 October 2024
Pages
260
ISBN
9781931483773