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Ancient Medicine and the body’s perception in Hippocrates (c. 460-370 BC)

Hélio Angotti Neto

Original title: A Medicina Antiga e a percepção do corpo em Hipócrates (c. 460-370 a. C.)

Published in Rhythms, expressions and representations of the body

Keywords: Galen, Hippocrates, History of Medicine, Human Body, Nature of Man.

Hippocratic medicine addresses the human body and its phenomena based on principles like the complexity and the balance of its components among themselves and its relations towards the nature. By means of logical formulations based on the composition of the human body by humors (blood, phlegm, yellow bile and dark bile) and, consequently, principles (heat, cold, dry and humid), the Hippocratic author seeks an explanation of phenomena such as epidemic diseases and nutritional disorders. Although the text is anachronistic, according to the current scientific perspective, there are epistemological principles obtained through contemplative science and empiricism that still have some value in relation to medical epistemology concerning human body comprehension.

Cultural Legacy and Professional Values in Method of Medicine Book I, by Galen (129-217)

Hélio Angotti-Neto

Original title: Legado cultural e valores profissionais no Livro I de Método da Medicina, de Galeno (129-217)

Published in Mirabilia Journal 31 (2020/2)  

Keywords: Galen, Hippocrates, History of Medicine, Medical Education, Medical Ethics.

This work translates excerpts from Book I of the work Method of Medicine, by the ancient doctor Galen. In its content, aspects related to the transmission of knowledge to the next generation of professionals and the necessary attention to the moral elements of the profession, which must permeate the practice and its transmission, are discussed.

Diseases of the soul in the writings of Gregory of Nyssa: A metaphor or a true analogy?

María Teresa GARGIULO

Original title: Enfermedades del alma en los escritos de Gregorio de Nisa ¿Una metáfora o una verdadera analogía?

Published in Intercultural Mediterranean

Keywords: Ancient Science, Ancient medicine, Galen, Gregory of Nyssa, Illness of the Soul.

Language:

The figure of Christ the doctor runs through the vast majority of apostolic and patristic writings. Christ presents himself as the healer of men's sins. Therefore, it should not surprise us that this medicinal metaphor was extended to a large part of moral and theological writings until the middle of the 13th century. Sin is presented, metaphorically, as a disease of the soul. Now, if we look at certain writings of the Cappadocian fathers, particularly those of Gregory of Nyssa, the medical metaphor in certain cases is replaced by a true analogy. Diseases of the soul are not only metaphorically predicated on moral dispositions and sin, but they are understood in themselves as an authentic participation of the soul in human illness. Galenic medicine seems to have had a direct impact on this new understanding of the illness of the soul.

Editorial: IV UNESC Seminar of Medical Humanities

Hélio ANGOTTI NETO

Original title: Editorial: IV Seminário UNESC de Humanidades Médicas

Published in

Keywords: Galen, Hippocrates, Philosophy.

This volume of Mirabilia/Medicinæ brings two articles about the Hippocratic legacy. The first one was presented in the IV UNESC Seminar of Medical Humanities, and the second article brings a broad perspective of the many links between Medicine and Classical Philosophy.

Medicin and Philosophy in Direct Dialectic Relation During the Classical and Late Antiquity

Sophia KARYMPALI-KYRIAZIS

Original title: Medicina e Filosofia em Relação Dialética Direta Durante a Antiguidade Clássica e Tardia

Published in

Keywords: Antiquity, Asclepius, Galen, Hippocrates, Medicine, Philosophy.

Medicine and Philosophy, in classical antiquity mainly, coexisted and joined hands as activities of the human intellect, with one exerting fruitful influence on the other in the course of time. The influence of philosophy on ancient medicine is generally accepted, as the theories of pre-Socratic philosophers from the 6th century BC for the interpretation of the world and human nature were the main inspiration for the formulation of the first medical texts. Natural philosophers from Ionia, such as Thales of Miletus, Anaximander, Anaximenes and Heraclitus, through their theories, laid the foundations towards future medical advances. Hippocrates of Kos, with his medical treatises in “Corpus Hippocraticum” was greatly influenced by the philosophical thought. Hippocrates is considered the “father of medicine” because he broadened the medical knowledge of his time and laid the foundations of medicine as science, releasing it from magic and superstitions. Plato and Aristotle refer to Hippocrates in their works and speak with respect about him acknowledging his enormous contribution to the healing of serious diseases. In the ancient world, Asclepius, who was considered a great healer of many serious diseases, was worshiped as the patron god of medicine. In his honor temples were erected and next to them great therapeutic centers, the well known “Asclepieia”, scattered in many cities of Ancient Greece and Asia Minor. In the 5th, 4th and 3rd century BC there are great medical schools that operate, founded by famous medico-philosophers of the time, such as the School of Kos, the Sicilian School, the Medical School of Cnidus, Cyrene, Rhodes, Alexandria, etc. In post-Hippocratic era, medico-philosophical Schools are formed, such as the School of Dogmatics, Empiricists, Methodics in Rome, Pneumatics, and Eclectics, all connected to the philosophical thought and tradition. Among the physicians of late antiquity stands out Galen, whose theories influenced Western medicine until the 17th century AD. In the Hellenistic period the major philosophical Schools of the Epicureans and the Stoics form a philosophical concept with physical health and psychological well-being as points of reference. Medicine was founded as a science in the period of classical antiquity, 5th to 4th century BC, and bequeathed its rich background to later centuries, so that today it has come to be regarded as a deeply humanistic and social science with strong philosophical roots and origins.

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