溫病研究院 · 1642

We Have Seen This Before

Chinese medicine has navigated plague for two thousand years. This is not theory. It is the accumulated clinical record of a civilization that had to keep treating epidemic disease before microscopes, ICUs, or virology had names.

明末

The Crisis of 1642

The Ming dynasty was collapsing. Famine, war, displacement, and epidemic disease moved through the country together. Physicians reached for the gold standard: Shang Han, the Cold Damage doctrine that had guided treatment for fifteen centuries. Patients kept dying.

Wu Youke looked closer. This epidemic did not behave like ordinary wind, cold, dampness, or seasonal heat. It entered through breath. It clustered in households. It moved as if it possessed its own nature. It did not ask permission from the old categories.

In the Wen Yi Lun (温疫论, Treatise on Pestilence), written in 1642, he proposed the category of Li Qi (疠气): a specific pestilential agent entering through the mouth and nose. He was marginalized by the establishment. He was correct.

疠气,非风非寒,乃天地间别有一种异气。
所中

What He Got Right

Enters through nose and mouth

Respiratory and aerosol transmission

Pathogen-specific, not weather-dependent

Viruses are discrete biological entities

Cluster transmission in households

Person-to-person spread

Does not follow ordinary seasonal disease

Viral behavior can ignore classical seasonal patterns

Different Li Qi target different organs

Pathogen-organ tropism

He was working without a microscope. The major observations were there anyway: entry route, specificity, household spread, organ targeting, and the failure of weather-based doctrine to explain epidemic behavior.

三代

The Wen Bing School

1642

Wu Youke

吴又可 · 1582-1652

Named Li Qi and wrote Wen Yi Lun, breaking from Cold Damage orthodoxy.

1746

Ye Tianshi

叶天士 · 1667-1746

Developed Wei, Qi, Ying, Xue as a clinical staging system for Warm Disease.

1836

Wu Jutong

吴鞠通 · 1758-1836

Systematized the school in Wen Bing Tiao Bian, still taught today.

Three physicians. A century and a half of refinement. A complete clinical system for epidemic febrile disease.

验案

The Track Record

Bubonic plague records across multiple dynasties refined epidemic formulas under pressure.
Smallpox prevention included early variolation techniques in China by the 10th century.
Cholera epidemics in the Qing dynasty forced precise attention to damp, heat, fluids, and collapse.
The 1918 influenza pandemic in China generated documented Chinese medical treatment protocols.
SARS 2003 brought formulas such as Da Yuan Yin and Yin Qiao San back into public clinical discussion.
COVID-19 2020 made Lian Hua Qing Wen one of the most prescribed formulas in China.

This is not tradition preserved in amber. It is a living clinical tradition stress-tested against real epidemics.

今用

Why Andes Virus, Why Now

Andes Virus fits Wu Youke's original description of Li Qi disease with disturbing precision: respiratory entry, cluster transmission, a hidden incubation period, then sudden catastrophic progression. The Mo Yuan phase is no metaphor here; it names the clinical problem modern medicine usually calls the incubation window.

Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome does not kill like a slow cough. It kills through vascular collapse, capillary leak, pulmonary flooding, and shock. That is exactly why Wen Bing's progression through Wei, Qi, Ying, and Xue remains clinically useful.

Weston's framing is simple: this is not a new problem for this system of medicine. The system was designed for exactly this.

1642
1746
1836
1918
2003
2020
2026