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Glossary›Neidan

Glossary

Neidan

Neidan (內丹) is Daoist internal alchemy—a system of esoteric practices for refining vital energies within the body to achieve longevity, spiritual transformation, and union with the Dao.

What is Neidan?

Neidan (內丹), or internal alchemy, refers to a body of cultivation practices concerned with the refinement and transformation of the body’s internal energies. Neidan is an array of esoteric doctrines and physical, mental, and spiritual practices that Taoist initiates use in hopes to prolong life and create an immortal spiritual body that would survive after death. The term combines nèi (內), meaning “inner,” with dān (丹), meaning “cinnabar”—a mineral of great cultural and historical significance, central to early schools of metallurgical alchemy in China.

In neidan practice, Taoists claim the human body becomes a cauldron in which the Three Treasures of Jing (“Essence”), Qi (“Breath”) and Shen (“Spirit”) are ‘cultivated’ for the purpose of improving physical, emotional and mental health, and ultimately returning to the primordial unity of the Tao. Unlike waidan (外丹), or external alchemy, which involved compounding physical elixirs from minerals and metals, neidan works exclusively with the practitioner’s internal energetic system.

Origins & Lineage

Internal alchemy has a long history, with its roots in early Han Huang-Lao pursuits of immortality. Neidan developed, as far as we know, from the 8th century CE. The Cantong qi (The Kinship of the Three) is the earliest known book on theoretical alchemy in China; it was written by the alchemist Wei Boyang in 142 AD. This text influenced the formation of Neidan, whose earliest existing texts date from the first half of the 8th century.

Its origins can be traced to the Tang dynasty (618–907 CE), though it reached its peak during the Song (960–1279 CE) and Yuan (1271–1368 CE) dynasties. The shift from external to internal alchemy accelerated during the Tang dynasty as the dangers of Waidan were becoming clear.

Three major lineages formalized neidan doctrines from the Song-Yuan period onward. The Zhong-Lü tradition, associated with the semi-legendary immortals Zhongli Quan and Lü Dongbin, produced foundational texts including the Zhong Lü chuandao ji (Anthology of the Transmission of the Dao). The Wuzhen pian (‘Folios on Awakening to Reality/Perfection’) is a 1075 Taoist classic on Neidan-style internal alchemy. Its author Zhang Boduan (987?–1082) was a Song dynasty scholar of the Three teachings. In the 13th century, Zhang Boduan was placed at the origin of Nanzong, the Southern Lineage of Neidan, and his work became the main textual source of that lineage.

The Quanzhen School originated in the Shandong peninsula in 1170. One of its founders was master Wang Chongyang (1113–1170). With strong Taoist roots, the Quanzhen School specializes in the process of “alchemy within the body” or Neidan (internal alchemy). Quanzhen became the Northern Lineage (Beizong), emphasizing monastic discipline, celibacy, and meditation.

How It’s Practiced

In broad terms, Neidan practice draws on breath regulation, visualization and directed intent, systematic energetic refinement, and meditative absorption. Neidan practice is not a single technique. It is an integrated process involving the physical body, the mind, and what classical sources describe as the spirit.

Practitioners work with the dantian (丹田)—the “cinnabar field”—referring to specific regions of the body where vital Qi naturally accumulates and is cultivated. Breath regulation is foundational to Neidan work. Specific patterns of breathing support the internal movement, accumulation, and direction of Qi. Mental focus and directed intent (Yì 意) play a central role. Classical Neidan literature describes processes in which intention guides internal energetic movement through specific pathways and transformational stages.

The classical framework describes sequential refinement: refining jing (essence) into qi, qi into shen (spirit), and shen into emptiness (xu 虛). These are not metaphors. They describe discrete, progressive stages of internal transformation that the practitioner works through systematically.

The specific methods are traditionally transmitted directly from teacher to student. The practice should be performed under the close supervision of a master, who provides the “oral instructions” (koujue) necessary to understand the processes one undergoes within oneself.

Neidan Today

Neidan remains practiced within traditional Daoist lineages in China and has spread to the West through lineage holders and teachers. Wang Liping (b. 1949), a major figure in internal alchemy in China today as well as the leader of several practice organizations in the West. Contemporary Quanzhen monasteries continue to transmit neidan methods, while various teachers offer training programs combining traditional techniques with modern pedagogy.

In the West, neidan is encountered through workshops, intensive training programs, and direct apprenticeships with qualified teachers. It is often taught alongside qigong and neigong (internal skill) practices, though distinctions between these terms vary by lineage. Neidan is not a separate practice. It is what genuine Neigong becomes over years of correct sustained practice. The standing postures, the seated stillness, the channel work—all of this is Neidan cultivation when practiced with sufficient depth and correct understanding.

Because Neidan is traditionally transmitted within structured cultivation systems, finding a knowledgeable teacher is not incidental to the practice. Much of the classical literature on Neidan is encoded, allusive, and deliberately obscured. Transmission has traditionally been direct—from teacher to student, in person, within a living lineage. That tradition reflects practical wisdom: the practices are exacting, sequential, and require real-time correction and guidance that written or recorded instruction simply cannot provide.

Common Misconceptions

Neidan is not simply meditation. Meditative practice is a component of Neidan, but the tradition encompasses far more than meditation alone—including physical preparation, breath cultivation, Qi refinement, and progressive alchemical stages. Neidan presented purely as a meditative practice is an incomplete picture.

Neidan is not exclusively Taoist. It is an established fact that Taoists were very important in the development of Chinese alchemy and hold it in very high regard, but it is also essential to acknowledge that Confucianists, Buddhist monks, and Chinese scholars in general contributed to the practices and written content of alchemy. One of the most influential figures in the history of neidan is Zhang Boduan, a Song dynasty Confucianist official, Buddhist master, and Taoist-inspired alchemist. His teaching led to the development of all other existing traditions, of which some are more Buddhist than Taoist.

It is not “self-cultivation” in the modern wellness sense. While neidan does involve self-development, it operates within a specific cosmological framework with precise technical aims that differ significantly from contemporary self-help or personal growth paradigms. The goal is not psychological integration but energetic transformation leading to spiritual transcendence.

You cannot learn it effectively from books alone. The tradition’s encoded symbolic language and technical precision require direct transmission and supervised practice.

How to Begin

Those interested in neidan should first establish foundational practices in qigong or seated meditation to develop basic body awareness and breath regulation. Study the philosophical foundations—particularly the Daode jing (Tao Te Ching) and Yijing (I Ching)—to understand the cosmological framework.

For textual study, Fabrizio Pregadio’s Taoist Internal Alchemy: An Anthology of Neidan Texts provides scholarly translations of sixteen major works with contextual commentary. The Wuzhen pian (available in multiple English translations) remains one of the most accessible classical texts for serious students.

Seek teachers with verifiable lineage transmission and training in traditional Daoist cultivation. Be cautious of teachers who promise rapid results or who separate neidan from its broader philosophical and practical context. Approaching advanced Neidan without adequate preparation is at best inefficient, and at worst genuinely risky. A qualified teacher will reveal appropriate practices when a student demonstrates readiness—and for clear reasons, will not before.

Most legitimate teachers will initially assess whether students have sufficient physical preparation, energetic sensitivity, and theoretical understanding before transmitting core practices. This preliminary period may involve years of foundational work.

You do not need to be a Daoist to practice Neidan. What is necessary is a working understanding of the underlying theory and cosmological framework—the concepts and vocabulary without which the practices cannot be correctly understood or transmitted.

Related terms

qigongdaoismnei gongjing qi shendantianwu wei
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