Millions of people worldwide practice t'ai chi, the most popular form of
which was codified beginning in the 1960s by Cheng Man Ch'ing. In this
scholarly yet practical book, Professor Cheng shows precisely how the
postures and moves of t'ai chi work, with examples from anatomy and
physics, both internally as energetic principles and externally on
opponents. He clarifies the spheres, triangles, and centripetal and
centrifugal forces within physical exchanges such as push-hands.
Contrasting Western and Chinese techniques of healing, he also explores
the relationships of organs to one another in pathology and the
necessary dynamics of treatment. Professor Cheng explains how the
practitioner may serve as his or her own doctor and, likewise, as the
physician or trainer of an attacker. The martial arts, he says, are not
a special case of unusual power, simply an aspect of adapting natural
and cosmic law to circumstance. This edition of the classic text
contains 13 major essays; oral secrets from Cheng's teacher Yang
Cheng'fu; a Q&A with commentary on martial arts classics; the author's
application and functions of each of the 37 postures of the short form,
with the original photographs of him as a young man; two prefaces; and
much more.