CHINESE TRADITIONAL PRACTICES & TCM
The uniqueness of our approach is anchored in practical Chinese philosophy (Taoist conceptions of body and Chinese Traditional Medicine) and our personal experience of East Asian spiritual practices.
We are actually working in relation with two official centers of Qi Gong research in China (Beidahe and Shanghai Qi Gong Institute) and a new generation of Chinese experts in martial arts (Yuan Ling Ming - Wudang Shan; Liu shui bin - Qing Sheng Shan) and traditional medicine (Zhang Ming Yang, Emei Shan).
Our specific orientation in this field is the introduction of the practices and philosophy of Qigong (Ke Wen, 2010) and, more deeply, in the role of meditation in the healthy developement of a modern society as well as in Traditionnal Chinese Medecine (Ke Wen, 2012).
The uniqueness of our approach is anchored in practical Chinese philosophy (Taoist conceptions of body and Chinese Traditional Medicine) and our personal experience of East Asian spiritual practices.
We are actually working in relation with two official centers of Qi Gong research in China (Beidahe and Shanghai Qi Gong Institute) and a new generation of Chinese experts in martial arts (Yuan Ling Ming - Wudang Shan; Liu shui bin - Qing Sheng Shan) and traditional medicine (Zhang Ming Yang, Emei Shan).
Our specific orientation in this field is the introduction of the practices and philosophy of Qigong (Ke Wen, 2010) and, more deeply, in the role of meditation in the healthy developement of a modern society as well as in Traditionnal Chinese Medecine (Ke Wen, 2012).