The teacher who taught the most thorough theory of febrile diseases is introduced as follows:
Hu Xishu and Liu Duzhou should be the best.
Mr. Hu is a master of clinical diagnosis of traditional Chinese medicine. He has never published a work in his life (it seems he only has one article). He is modest, rigorous and open-minded. The current books are all written by his disciples. Now the bookstore has a recording of the old man's lectures on febrile diseases when he was still alive, which can be used as a reference to accompany the book.
Mr. Liu is also a master and the teacher of Hao Wanshan. He is quick-thinking and has a very in-depth study of the theory of traditional Chinese medicine. He has many books, but some of his early books are no longer available.
Extended information
The original book of "Treatise on Febrile Diseases" was compiled and compiled by Wang Shuhe of the Western Jin Dynasty. During the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period, it was already in a critical state of single transmission and survival. This book has been in the Secret Collection of the National Bookstore of the Northern Song Dynasty. During the Jiayou period (1056-1063), the Northern Song Dynasty Medical Bookstore Xian Suiming was established. In 1065, the imperial court ordered the Imperial Academy to engrave the book and publish it as the final edition of "Treatise on Febrile Diseases", which ended the situation of more than 800 years of divergent manuscripts and confusing articles from the late Han Dynasty to the Song Dynasty.
In the fourth year of the Jin Dynasty (1144), the 14th year of Shaoxing in the Southern Song Dynasty, Cheng Wuji's "Annotations on Febrile Diseases" was published with detailed annotations. It gradually replaced the white version of "Brother's Notice on Febrile Diseases", which was not published in the Southern Song Dynasty. Carve again. By the Yuan Dynasty, the white version of "Treatise on Febrile Diseases" was no longer available in the public, except for a few bibliophiles who occasionally had copies of it.
In the twenty-seventh year of Wanli in the Ming Dynasty (1599), Zhao Kaimei, a bibliophile in Changshu, Jiangsu, accidentally obtained ten volumes of the Northern Song Dynasty's "Treatise on Febrile Diseases" and asked an outstanding engraver to include the book in the "Zhongjing Quanshu". The original engraving of the Northern Song Dynasty was soon lost, and only Zhao Kaimei's edition still survives today. Zhao Kaimei's version is very realistic to the Song version, and later generations honored Zhao Kaimei's version as "Song version of Treatise on Febrile Diseases". There are currently five copies of Zhao Kaimei's edition. "Treatise on Febrile Diseases" also has wide influence abroad.