Hippocrates in a World of Pagans and Christians

Hippocrates in a World of Pagans and Christians
Author: Owsei Temkin
Publisher: JHU Press
Total Pages: 346
Release: 1995-03
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780801851292

In compromise, the Church accepted Hippocratic medicine with the proviso that the Christian physician shun all pagan or heretical interpretations of naturalism--he must not, for example, believenature to be divine, the soul a mere function of the brain, or himself the true savior of the sick.

Hippocrates in a World of Pagans and Christians

Hippocrates in a World of Pagans and Christians
Author: Owsei Temkin
Publisher: JHU Press
Total Pages: 344
Release: 1991
Genre: Medical
ISBN:

Temkin shows how the perennial appeal of Hippocratic practice helped establish the relationship between scientific medicine and monotheistic religion.

Pagans and Christians

Pagans and Christians
Author: Robin Lane Fox
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Total Pages: 808
Release: 1988
Genre: History
ISBN:

The author recreates the world from the second to the fourth century A.D., when the gods of Olympus lost their dominion, and Christianity, with the conversion of Constantine, triumphed in the Mediterranean world.

The Intellectual World of Late Antique Christianity

The Intellectual World of Late Antique Christianity
Author: Lewis Ayres
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 1232
Release: 2023-09-30
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1108871917

This book is for scholars and students of the ideas, literatures, and cultures of early Christianity and late antiquity, ancient philosophers, and historians of theology. It offers new perspectives on early Christian modes of knowing and ordering knowledge in relation to changing discourses, institutions, and material culture of late antiquity.

Minds Behind the Brain

Minds Behind the Brain
Author: Stanley Finger
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 379
Release: 2000
Genre: Health & Fitness
ISBN: 0195181824

Illustrated with over a hundred halftones and drawings, this volume presents a series of profiles that trace the evolution of our knowledge about the brain. Beginning with the ancient Egyptian study of the marrow of the skull, it takes us on a journey from the classical world of Hippocrates to modern researchers such as Sperry.

Dreams in Late Antiquity

Dreams in Late Antiquity
Author: Patricia Cox Miller
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2020-07-21
Genre: History
ISBN: 0691215855

Dream interpretation was a prominent feature of the intellectual and imaginative world of late antiquity, for martyrs and magicians, philosophers and theologians, polytheists and monotheists alike. Finding it difficult to account for the prevalence of dream-divination, modern scholarship has often condemned it as a cultural weakness, a mass lapse into mere superstition. In this book, Patricia Cox Miller draws on pagan, Jewish, and Christian sources and modern semiotic theory to demonstrate the integral importance of dreams in late-antique thought and life. She argues that Graeco-Roman dream literature functioned as a language of signs that formed a personal and cultural pattern of imagination and gave tangible substance to ideas such as time, cosmic history, and the self. Miller first discusses late-antique theories of dreaming, with emphasis on theological, philosophical, and hermeneutical methods of deciphering dreams as well as the practical uses of dreams, especially in magic and the cult of Asclepius. She then considers the cases of six Graeco-Roman dreamers: Hermas, Perpetua, Aelius Aristides, Jerome, Gregory of Nyssa, and Gregory of Nazianus. Her detailed readings illuminate the ways in which dreams provided solutions to ethical and religious problems, allowed for the reconfiguration of gender and identity, provided occasions for the articulation of ethical ideas, and altogether served as a means of making sense and order of the world.

Was Greek Thought Religious?

Was Greek Thought Religious?
Author: L. Ruprecht
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2002-06-28
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0312299192

The Greeks are on trial. They have been for generations, if not millennia, from Rome in the First century, to Romanticism in the Nineteenth. We debate the place of the Greeks in the university curriculum, in New World culture - we even debate the place of the Greeks in the European Union. This book notices the lingering and half-hidden presence of the Greeks in some strange places - everywhere from the U.S. Supreme Court to the Modern Olympic Games - and in doing so makes an important new contribution to a very old debate.

The Basics of Bioethics

The Basics of Bioethics
Author: Robert M. Veatch
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 279
Release: 2016-05-23
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1315510030

The third edition of The Basics of Bioethics continues to provide a balanced and systematic ethical framework to help students analyze a wide range of controversial topics in medicine, and consider ethical systems from various religious and secular traditions. The Basics of Bioethics covers the “Principalist” approach and identifies principles that are believed to make behavior morally right or wrong. It showcases alternative ethical approaches to health care decision making by presenting Hippocratic ethics as only one among many alternative ethical approaches to health care decision-making. The Basics of Bioethics offers case studies, diagrams, and other learning aids for an accessible presentation. Plus, it contains an all-encompassing ethics chart that shows the major questions in ethics and all of the major answers to these questions.

Disease and the Modern World: 1500 to the Present Day

Disease and the Modern World: 1500 to the Present Day
Author: Mark Harrison
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 281
Release: 2013-05-02
Genre: History
ISBN: 0745638015

‘Mark Harrison's book illuminates the threats posed by infectious diseases since 1500. He places these diseases within an international perspective, and demonstrates the relationship between European expansion and changing epidemiological patterns. The book is a significant introduction to a fascinating subject.’ Gerald N. Grob, Rutgers State University In this lively and accessible book, Mark Harrison charts the history of disease from the birth of the modern world around 1500 through to the present day. He explores how the rise of modern nation-states was closely linked to the threat posed by disease, and particularly infectious, epidemic diseases. He examines the ways in which disease and its treatment and prevention, changed over the centuries, under the impact of the Renaissance and the Enlightenment, and with the advent of scientific medicine. For the first time, the author integrates the history of disease in the West with a broader analysis of the rise of the modern world, as it was transformed by commerce, slavery, and colonial rule. Disease played a vital role in this process, easing European domination in some areas, limiting it in others. Harrison goes on to show how a new environment was produced in which poverty and education rather than geography became the main factors in the distribution of disease. Assuming no prior knowledge of the history of disease, Disease and the Modern World provides an invaluable introduction to one of the richest and most important areas of history. It will be essential reading for all undergraduates and postgraduates taking courses in the history of disease and medicine, and for anyone interested in how disease has shaped, and has been shaped by, the modern world.