Dài Yuánlǐ 戴原禮 (personal name 思恭 Sīgōng, Yuánlǐ 原禮 — went by his ; alternate orthographic form 元禮; 1324–1405, 明), early-Míng imperial physician of Pǔjiāng 浦江 (Zhèjiāng) and the principal disciple of 朱震亨 Zhū Zhènhēng. Served as Imperial Physician under Hóngwǔ (1368–1398); upon Jiànwén’s accession (1398), promoted to Director of the Imperial Medical Academy (院使). Hóngwǔ called him “the man of benevolence and righteousness” (仁義人); Zhū Guózhēn’s Yǒngchuáng xiǎopǐn calls him “the imperial dynasty’s sage physician”. Míng shǐ Fāngjì zhuàn records his career and the Jīnguì gōuxuán in detail. Editor and supplementer of 朱震亨 Zhū Zhènhēng’s Jīnguì gōuxuán 金匱鉤玄 (KR3e0062), in which his commentary appears as “Dài says” (戴云); the work’s six appended discussions on fire, qì, blood, dysentery, the Triple Burner, and elimination-conditions are also Dài’s. Through Dài, Zhū Zhènhēng’s Yīn-deficiency school transitioned into the early Míng imperial-medical-bureau, propagating the doctrine into late-imperial Chinese medical practice. Dài has no fewer than six recorded disciples in the imperial medical bureau, making him the principal YuánMíng transmitter of the Dānxī school.