Chinese Herbal Formulas: Treatment Principles and Composition Strategies
Traditionally the study of Chinese herbal formulas has involved memorizing hundreds of classic formulas, and recognizing and summarizing the relevant treatment rules and formula-making strategies in order to create appropriate formulas for treatment. This new book by Yifan Yang, author of "Chinese Herbal Medicines: Comparisons and Characteristics" (which pioneered the comparative method of single herb study), introduces a new approach to formula study.
This is the ultimate book revealing many many secrets and techniques of Illuminati Mind Control and a huge amount of unpublished information about what has really been going on for quite a while. If you have unanswered questions, look no further, what you seek may just happen to be inside. An incredible read, that requires a strong stomach as they spare no punches.
A common-sense proceed to achieving success in one’s hold up offers workable, step-by-step methods as well as certain cognisance techniques to assistance readers personalize goals, certitude creativity, comparison aged ideology as well as limitations, as well as renovate certain meditative in to certain action.
Added by: Maria | Karma: 3098.81 | Periodicals | 11 July 2008
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* Rewriting Darwin: The new non-genetic inheritance
The idea that children can inherit characteristics that their parents acquired during their lifetime is coming in from the cold
* The moonbots have landed
What will it take to persuade the moon to give up its secrets? Maybe a global space mission would do it, says Dana Mackenzie
* Can formula milk be made more like mum's?
Infant formula is a poor substitute for breast milk, but researchers want to add some of the missing ingredients that make a mother's milk so special
John Banville finally won the Man Booker prize in 2005 with this
beautifully crafted and brief novel (nearly a novella) about the
pleasures and sorrows associated with the play of language, memory and
secrecy. Although Banville is often considered a literary descendant of
Nabokov, with his love of rich mellifluous language and obscure
diction, he might be more comfrotably compared to other great Irish
writers such as James Joyce and Elizabeth Bowen, who also share
Banville's evident pleasure at (and grace with) the pliancy and luxury
of words. THE SEA might be an expected, yet disappointing choice for
winning Banville the Booker, given that its plot so closely apes the
structure of one of the most crowdpleasing of all narrative arcs of
highbrow fiction from the last forty years. Here yet again, a
disappointed elderly narrator looks back to the magical encounter in
childhood that forever fired the imagination but also implicated him
(or her) in guilt when it led inevitably to a terrible and deadly
error. Banville's is an odder variant of this formula -- which goes at
least as far back as L. P. Hartley's THE GO-BETWEEN, and was recently
repeated in Ian McEwan's much loved ATONEMENT -- in the fundamental
dislikeability of all his major characters, a Banville trademark. This
causes the stakes of the life-changing incident, and its effect upon
the narrator, to seem much less shattering than in Hartley's or
McEwan's novels; the repetition of the formula also makes this novel
seem much less fresh than in Banville's other works (which often are
similarly concerned with the encounters between cruelty and innocence).
But Banville is always worth reading if only for his grace with
language and with narrative construction: THE SEA is, as usual,
beautifully crafted in every formal sense.