About: Zou huo ru mo

An Entity of Type: Thing, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

Zou huo ru mo (Chinese: 走火入魔; pinyin: zǒuhuǒrùmó) or qigong deviation (Chinese: 氣功偏差; pinyin: qìgōngpiānchā; lit. 'qigong deviation/error' or Chinese: 气功出偏), is a Chinese-culture concept traditionally used to indicate that something has gone wrong in spiritual or martial arts training. The qigong community uses this term to describe a physiological or psychological disorder believed to result during or after qigong practice, due to "improper practice" of qigong and other self-cultivation techniques. The concept was highlighted in the social and political context of mass popularization of qigong in China. The Buddhist or Taoist community also uses this term when referring to people who practice esoteric techniques or meditation without the proper guidance of a teacher.

Property Value
dbo:abstract
  • Zou huo ru mo ((zh)) est un concept de culture chinoise traditionnellement utilisé pour indiquer que quelque chose a mal tourné dans un pratique spirituelle ou d'arts martiaux La communauté du Qi gong utilise ce terme pour décrire un trouble physiologique ou psychologique dont on pense qu'il se produit pendant ou après la pratique du Qi Gong, en raison d'une « mauvaise pratique » du Qi gong et d'autres techniques. Le concept a été mis en évidence dans le contexte social et politique de la (en) et de la popularisation massive du Qi gong en Chine. (fr)
  • Zou huo ru mo (Chinese: 走火入魔; pinyin: zǒuhuǒrùmó) or qigong deviation (Chinese: 氣功偏差; pinyin: qìgōngpiānchā; lit. 'qigong deviation/error' or Chinese: 气功出偏), is a Chinese-culture concept traditionally used to indicate that something has gone wrong in spiritual or martial arts training. The qigong community uses this term to describe a physiological or psychological disorder believed to result during or after qigong practice, due to "improper practice" of qigong and other self-cultivation techniques. The concept was highlighted in the social and political context of mass popularization of qigong in China. The Buddhist or Taoist community also uses this term when referring to people who practice esoteric techniques or meditation without the proper guidance of a teacher. (en)
  • 偏差(へんさ)とは気功を行うことによって生じる身体不調、精神的不安定などの副作用のこと。 気のコントロールがうまくいかなくなっている状態であるとされる。正しい指導者について気功を行うことが一番の防止方法である。 (ja)
  • 走火入魔(英文:kundalini syndrome、kundalini psychosis、qigong psychosis)指在进行气功练习时,因意外情况造成的轻度精神病症状。严重者可发展至器质性神经系统疾病。 * 在氣功修鍊中,會因個人體質跟心理狀態的不同有許多奇特的現象產生,因為有了偏差(泛指心理跟生理上的)而造成氣血運行不順,引發血管或心臟疾病,神經叢收縮,進而產生幻象或幻聽的現象。 * 在練習氣功期間,必須要呼吸自然,不要在專注肌肉緊繃或「氣感」在那裡期間,不知不覺下閉了呼吸,人便會休克,傷了腦部。 * 最重要的是,此時氣功已經在自己的意志下呼吸,而不是出於自然了(已經自我催眠),如果當時由於一些外來引導,胡思亂想,或自我潛意識作用,有可能引起呼吸困難,或做出不能自己控制的潛藏心裡的動作,等傷害自己的後果。 (zh)
dbo:wikiPageID
  • 33575336 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength
  • 14658 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
  • 1115956853 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbp:c
  • 走火入魔 (en)
dbp:date
  • February 2018 (en)
dbp:p
  • zǒuhuǒrùmó (en)
dbp:reason
  • This second term is different than the second term used in the intro originally. Copied this term to the intro and also requested clarification there. (en)
  • In 氣功偏差 and 气功出偏, the first two characters mean qigong, even though they look a little different because the first term is in traditional Chinese characters and the second term is in simplified Chinese characters. However, the second two characters in each term mean different things. So both of these terms might be correct and they might even have the same romanization, but references along with quotes for evidence are necessary to figure out which or both of these terms should be used here and in the Background section. See also the clarify reason in the Background section. (en)
dbp:text
  • qigong deviation , (en)
  • qìgōngpiānchā in Pinyin . (en)
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dcterms:subject
rdfs:comment
  • Zou huo ru mo ((zh)) est un concept de culture chinoise traditionnellement utilisé pour indiquer que quelque chose a mal tourné dans un pratique spirituelle ou d'arts martiaux La communauté du Qi gong utilise ce terme pour décrire un trouble physiologique ou psychologique dont on pense qu'il se produit pendant ou après la pratique du Qi Gong, en raison d'une « mauvaise pratique » du Qi gong et d'autres techniques. Le concept a été mis en évidence dans le contexte social et politique de la (en) et de la popularisation massive du Qi gong en Chine. (fr)
  • Zou huo ru mo (Chinese: 走火入魔; pinyin: zǒuhuǒrùmó) or qigong deviation (Chinese: 氣功偏差; pinyin: qìgōngpiānchā; lit. 'qigong deviation/error' or Chinese: 气功出偏), is a Chinese-culture concept traditionally used to indicate that something has gone wrong in spiritual or martial arts training. The qigong community uses this term to describe a physiological or psychological disorder believed to result during or after qigong practice, due to "improper practice" of qigong and other self-cultivation techniques. The concept was highlighted in the social and political context of mass popularization of qigong in China. The Buddhist or Taoist community also uses this term when referring to people who practice esoteric techniques or meditation without the proper guidance of a teacher. (en)
  • 偏差(へんさ)とは気功を行うことによって生じる身体不調、精神的不安定などの副作用のこと。 気のコントロールがうまくいかなくなっている状態であるとされる。正しい指導者について気功を行うことが一番の防止方法である。 (ja)
  • 走火入魔(英文:kundalini syndrome、kundalini psychosis、qigong psychosis)指在进行气功练习时,因意外情况造成的轻度精神病症状。严重者可发展至器质性神经系统疾病。 * 在氣功修鍊中,會因個人體質跟心理狀態的不同有許多奇特的現象產生,因為有了偏差(泛指心理跟生理上的)而造成氣血運行不順,引發血管或心臟疾病,神經叢收縮,進而產生幻象或幻聽的現象。 * 在練習氣功期間,必須要呼吸自然,不要在專注肌肉緊繃或「氣感」在那裡期間,不知不覺下閉了呼吸,人便會休克,傷了腦部。 * 最重要的是,此時氣功已經在自己的意志下呼吸,而不是出於自然了(已經自我催眠),如果當時由於一些外來引導,胡思亂想,或自我潛意識作用,有可能引起呼吸困難,或做出不能自己控制的潛藏心裡的動作,等傷害自己的後果。 (zh)
rdfs:label
  • Zou huo ru mo (fr)
  • 偏差 (気功) (ja)
  • Zou huo ru mo (en)
  • 走火入魔 (zh)
owl:sameAs
prov:wasDerivedFrom
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of
is foaf:primaryTopic of
Powered by OpenLink Virtuoso    This material is Open Knowledge     W3C Semantic Web Technology     This material is Open Knowledge    Valid XHTML + RDFa
This content was extracted from Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License