MEDICINE AND PHILOSOPHY IN CLASSICAL ANTIQUITY
106 Hippocratic Corpus and Diocles of Carystus to the execution of these principles and clearly trying to emancipate itself from ...
To help, or to do no harm 107 On Treatmentsis provided by the Methodist writer Caelius Aurelianus, who is not a very sympathetic ...
108 Hippocratic Corpus and Diocles of Carystus Diocles, in the book in which he writes on affections, causes and treatments, app ...
To help, or to do no harm 109 A comparison between the two accounts shows that the therapeutic in- structions derived fromOn Tre ...
110 Hippocratic Corpus and Diocles of Carystus It is hazardous, with so little information of such questionable reliability, to ...
To help, or to do no harm 111 However, on this interpretation it is slightly strange to introduce a new paragraph at section 9 , ...
112 Hippocratic Corpus and Diocles of Carystus this division is nowhere stated explicitly in either the texts of the Hip- pocrat ...
To help, or to do no harm 113 distinguishes between treatment by drugs, venesection and clystering,^35 and elsewhere between reg ...
114 Hippocratic Corpus and Diocles of Carystus atrestoringthe health of a sick body,^43 but rather at bringing about the least h ...
To help, or to do no harm 115 (‘get healthy’) andH (‘be released from’) are the only terms that really indica ...
116 Hippocratic Corpus and Diocles of Carystus On Internal Affections 10 shows, in order to bring about the best condition or ‘m ...
To help, or to do no harm 117 ‘to die with’ (C ),^63 the patient – which reminds one of what is sometimes said abou ...
118 Hippocratic Corpus and Diocles of Carystus with regard to the claims of dietetics and indeed medicine as a whole in the four ...
chapter 4 The heart, the brain, the blood and the pneuma: Hippocrates, Diocles and Aristotle on the location of cognitive proces ...
120 Hippocratic Corpus and Diocles of Carystus is that in which they suspect the ruling part of the soul to be situated... Now w ...
Heart, brain, blood, pneuma 121 any particular place, but that the entire body is ill and therefore the entire body requires tre ...
122 Hippocratic Corpus and Diocles of Carystus Aurelianus is referring concerns the so-calledhegemonikon ̄ orregale. This term i ...
Heart, brain, blood, pneuma 123 natural philosophy, such as the so-called four primary qualities hot, cold, dry and wet. By cont ...
124 Hippocratic Corpus and Diocles of Carystus throughout classical antiquity (and remained so until the nineteenth cen- tury), ...
Heart, brain, blood, pneuma 125 taken by the fifth-century medical writer Alcmaeon of Croton (South Italy), who was thought to b ...
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