Aug
30
2007

Michael Max
Sharon Weizenbaum who is one of the members of the group that is going to Nanjing this fall to study the classical formulas with Doctor Huang, has put together a nice little study guide to the major formulas that we will be studying over there.
You can find it here.
In addition to the nice little quiz format of the study guide, she has collected quite a few of the articles in English that touch on Huang Huang’s work. Some good reading there.
Aug
19
2007

Michael Max

Who knows why some computers just will not talk to each other. A few of you who are going on the Nanjing trip have had trouble with certain .pdf files going through the email.
Here they are:
Chinese Visa Application Form
Simple Guide to Studying Medicine in China
Aug
02
2007

Michael Max
If you are a reader of The Lantern, then you perhaps have already seen this interview with Dr. Huang. If you are not a reader of The Lantern, and you are the kind of practitioner that would rather read the Classics, than sift through modern research. If you are the kind of person that prefers to noodle through the thoughts and clinical experience of seasoned doctors, instead of following the latest on how MRI’s say acupuncture works. Then The Lantern is certainly worth your time and money!In the last issue, they published this interview which came from an afternoon discussion of medicine, and in particular, the origins of his book The Ten Major Formula Families. It is a good introduction, not only to his particular style of clinical reasoning, but also touches on the history of this method of treatment.Of course, if you would actually like to sit down with Dr Huang and discuss medicine, that is also a possibility. We have just a couple more spaces left in the fall trip to Nanjing.Come join us!