MEDICINE AND PHILOSOPHY IN CLASSICAL ANTIQUITY

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Heart, brain, blood, pneuma 135

and carrying around for those who contracted the disease due to their phys-

ical constitution, bleeding for those who contracted it by eating meat or

due to dipsomania.^37 Our source of information is the above-mentioned

Caelius Aurelianus (Chronic Affections 1. 4. 131 – 2 ), who remarks that these

measures are far from adequate. On the other hand, Caelius Aurelianus is a

sufficiently uncongenial informant for us to assume that Diocles provided

more than just some vague indications. But in this respect the sources leave

us in the dark.

The examples given show how each of the authors mentioned arrives at a

different explanation of epilepsy, based on ana prioriview on the physical

aspects of cognitive processes, and how in their opinion the empirically

perceptible symptoms of the disease can be fitted into this explanation.

There is no empirical verification of such presuppositions in the modern

sense of the word, apart from a rather haphazard use of empirical facts (yet

not discovered in any targeted way), employed in the author’s own defence

or in his criticism of rival views. Much has been written about the reasons

for this scientific attitude; in this respect it should be noted that systematic

attempts at falsifying theories by gathering counter-examples in empirical

reality were the exception rather than the rule in antiquity.^38 The pivotal

role of the heart, both with respect to its position and with respect to its

function, was a self-evident and undeniable fact; the same applies to the

vital role of the blood. For this reason the encephalocentric view on the

location of the mind needed quite some scientific and rhetorical force to

secure its position in the debate.

(^37) Fr. 99 vdE.
(^38) The first thinker to appear to be aware of such a principle is Aristotle (see, for instance,Gen. an.
760 b 27 ff.), yet he does not apply this in any way consistently either (see Lloyd ( 1979 ) 200 – 25 ).

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