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Haixia Ni: Complete Collection of Human Canon & Celestial Canon

Here’s the concise version under 800 characters: This collection features classic lectures by TCM master Haixia Ni (1954–2012), former Dean of Han-Tang College of TCM (USA). It includes two core series: Human Canon and Celestial Canon. Human Canon breaks down the five major TCM classics, building a complete clinical and theoretical system from basics to complex cases. Celestial Canon integrates the I Ching, numerology, and feng shui, explaining TCM philosophy and life laws. Ni’s plain, humorous style makes obscure classics accessible to all. A must-watch for TCM enthusiasts and practitioners.

Haixia Ni: Complete Collection of Human Canon & Celestial Canon

NR N/A
Yi Zhongtian: Analysis of the Three Kingdoms

CCTV-10 Lecture Room series: Pin San Guo (品三国; Analysis of the Three Kingdoms). "Yi Zhongtian's Analysis of the Three Kingdoms" is a CCTV-10 historical broadcast program and one of the "Hundred Forums" series. The main speaker, Yi Zhongtian, restored the real Cao Cao, defended Zhou Yu's false accusations, spoke up about Zhuge Liang, and re-evaluated Sima Yi. When talking about the world, there are only three points of gossip. Discuss the merits and demerits carefully, and summarize the gains and losses of successes and failures. Professor Yi Zhongtian of Xiamen University will use stories to tell characters, characters to tell history, history to tell culture, and culture to tell human nature. Discuss the major events of the Three Kingdoms and carefully analyze the success and failure of the heroes. Professor Yi Zhongtian will explain it from a civilian perspective.

Yi Zhongtian: Analysis of the Three Kingdoms

9.0 N/A
The Rise of the Great Powers

The Rise of the Great Powers is a 12-part Chinese documentary television series produced by CCTV. It was first broadcast on CCTV-2 from 13 to 24 November 2006. It discusses the rise of nine great powers: Portugal, Spain, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Japan, Russia, and the United States. The documentary "endorses the idea that China should study the experiences of nations and empires it once condemned as aggressors bent on exploitation" and analyses the reasons why the nine nations rose to become great powers, from the Portuguese Empire to American hegemony. The series was produced by an "elite team of Chinese historians" who also briefed the Politburo on the subject." In the West the airing of Rise of the Great Powers has been seen as a sign that China is becoming increasingly open to discussing its growing international power and influence—referred to by the Chinese government as "China's peaceful rise."

The Rise of the Great Powers

6.6 N/A