The ‘Mystical’ TCM Triple Energizer

Its Elusive Location and Morphology Defined

by Dr Louis Gordon


Formats

Softcover
$60.95
Hardcover
$117.95
E-Book
$10.95
Softcover
$60.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 22/09/2016

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 786
ISBN : 9781524516925
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 786
ISBN : 9781524516932
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 786
ISBN : 9781524516918

About the Book

The mystery is solved! The actual location, composition, and morphology of the mysterious TCM triple energizer (San Jiao) organ will surprise you.

Numerous recent scientific research findings confirm ancient TCM philosophy was eons ahead of its time. This book discusses newly discovered organ systems (Primo Vascular System, the gut microbiome, the omnipresent neuromyofascial metasystem, endocrine function of fat) and how they affect the Triple Energizer.

This book elucidates the actual location, composition, and morphology of the Triple Energizer as expressed by modern scientific discovery, and evidence is presented to show how the Triple Energizer functions and why it has remained hidden all this time. Those who believe that the Triple Burner has a name but no form will be truly amazed as to its actual location and its actual form. Numerous other practical TCM concepts are discussed.

A blastocyst grown on a petri dish in 1977 resulted in the very first IVF baby, Louise Brown. Commenting on the Nan Ching, Yeh Lin described the blastocyst when he said, ‘It is the utensil that stores and transforms the essence, and it is the place to which the womb, which conceives the embryo, is tied. Thus, it is the origin of man’s life. Hence, it is called gate of life.’

Commenting on Nan Ching, Yü Shu said, ‘The spleen takes in the five tastes. It transforms them to produce the five influences . . . and to make flesh and skin grow.’ Since about 2005, researchers have been astonished to find scent receptors and the five known taste sensors throughout the body ‘smelling’ and ‘tasting’ things deep inside of us. These taste and odor receptors have been found in the kidneys, stomach, intestines, pancreas, lungs, brain, spine, bladder, sinuses, muscle tissue, and even the anus. Bitter taste receptors have been found in sperm. Researchers believe these receptors are distributed throughout the entire vascular system. As the Heart controls the blood vessels in TCM, it makes perfect sense that ‘the Heart masters the odors’, exactly as ancient TCM scholars state.


About the Author

From the age of 8, Louis Gordon was entertaining local kids with his chemical experiments, making luminous paints, rockets, smoke bombs, and Hydrogen balloons fitted with a fuse that exploded 300 m up, causing what resembled a sonic boom that shook windows and brought mothers racing outside to see what the explosion was. Louis graduated from USQ as a Biological Laboratory Technician, and later, while working in government chemistry and bacteriological laboratories in his early twenties, Louis expanded his education to include classical philosophical concepts associated with Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) into his scientific repertoire.

Western medical paradigm does not accept that traditional Chinese philosophy should be so deeply entrenched and instrumental in determining the optimal protocols associated with the truly holistic outcomes accompanying the practice of traditional Chinese medicine. The author finds it incongruous that Western medicine practitioners segregate medical conditions to specific locations of the body as if one portion of the body operates independently of all other body systems and organs.

Louis demonstrates that ancient Chinese philosophers were truly knowledgeable when it came to understanding exactly what makes the human body tick. Ancient Chinese philosophers discussed in eloquent detail what modern scientific researchers are only now uncovering thousands of years later. When Louis graduated as a Chinese Medicine Practitioner more than three decades ago, he was ridiculed for believing in the supposedly non-existent San Jiao organ. The World Health Organisation (WHO) now defines it as the Triple Energizer. After over three decades of scientific research and thanks to the ancient philosophical literary classic the Nan Ching, Louis marries ancient Chinese philosophy and modern western medical science and provides concrete proof of the physical existence of the Triple-Energizer Metasystem and defines its intricate location, morphology, and how it works.