How many volumes are there in Huangdi Neijing?

Huangdi Neijing is referred to as Neijing for short, and the original book 18 volumes, of which 9 volumes are called Su Wen; The other nine volumes have no titles. They were called nine volumes or needle sutras in the Han and Jin Dynasties, and were called Lingshu after the Tang Dynasty. They were not written by one person at a time, but mainly formed from the Warring States to the Eastern Han Dynasty. Each part is 865,438+0 and * * 65,438+062 respectively. Su Wen mainly discusses the law of natural change, man and nature. The core content of Lingshu is the theory of zang-fu organs and meridians. Among the eleven classic physicians recorded in Hanshu Yiwenzhi, Huangdi Neijing is the only one, and the reason remains to be verified. Among them, Huangdi Waijing was lost. Judging from the seven classics recorded in Hanshu Yiwenzhi, Huangdi Neijing and Huangdi Neijing coexisted at that time. There were different biographies in the Han, Wei, Six Dynasties, Sui and Tang Dynasties, which were quoted by Zhang Zhongjing, Wang Shuhe, Sun Simiao and Wang Tao in their respective works. There are mainly: (1) Qi Liang Annotation (6th century AD), which is the earliest annotation, but its sixth volume was lost at that time, with only eight volumes actually. This note. Bing Wang annotated Su Wen based on Yolanda's notes, and supplemented the lost seventh volume, including seven "great papers" claimed from his teacher's secret collection. To Jiayou and Zhiping in the Northern Song Dynasty (1057 ~ 1067), he set up a collating medical book bureau, and Lin Bu and others took notes in Bing Wang. Also known as Jiu Juan, Zhen Jing, Jiu Ling and Jiu Xu. After the Han and Wei Dynasties, due to long-term replication and dissemination, many versions with different names appeared. The ancient lost articles quoted by Tang and Bing Wang are basically consistent with the lost articles in Lingshu, indicating that it is a * * *. There is no book to prove it today. By the early Southern Song Dynasty, various versions of Lingshu and Zhen Jing had been lost. In the twenty-five years of Shaoxing (1 155), eighty-one articles in nine volumes of Family Collection of Songshi were re-collated, expanded to twenty-four volumes, and added sound interpretation and engraving. So far, it has been published.