MEDICINE AND PHILOSOPHY IN CLASSICAL ANTIQUITY

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28 Medicine and Philosophy in Classical Antiquity

questions; and moving on to the Imperial period, a particular mention

must be made of Alexander of Aphrodisias, the second-centurycephiloso-

pher and commentator on Aristotle’s works. Two works on medical topics

(Medical Problems,On Fevers) are attributed to Alexander, and even though

their authenticity is disputed, there is no question that Alexander had a

great interest in medical issues (from a non-clinical, physiological point of

view). And he is clearly taken seriously as an authority in these areas by his

slightly later contemporary Galen. Furthermore, the two most striking rep-

resentatives of early Hellenistic medicine, Herophilus and Erasistratus, are

both reported to have held close connections with the Peripatetic school.

This is most evident in the case of Erasistratus, whose ideas on mechanical

versus teleological explanation mark a continuation of views expressed by

Theoprastus and Strato and to some extent already by Aristotle himself.

Likewise, Herophilus’ famous, if enigmatic, aphorism that ‘the phenom-

ena should be stated first, even if they are not first’, can be connected with

Aristotelian philosophy.

Yet to suggest that Erasistratus and Herophilus were ‘Aristotelians’ would

do grave injustice to their highly original ideas and the innovative aspects

of their empirical research, such as Herophilus’ discovery of the nervous

system and Erasistratus’ dissections of the brain and the valves of the heart. It

also ignores their connections with developments in other sciences, notably

mechanics, and with other philosophical movements, such as Scepticism

(in particular regarding whether causes can be known) and Stoicism.

The Hellenistic period was also the time in which the medical ‘sects’

came into being: Empiricism, Dogmatism and Methodism. What separated

these groups was in essence philosophical issues to do with the nature of

medical knowledge, how it is arrived at and how it is justified. The precise

chronological sequence of the various stages in this debate is difficult to

reconstruct, but the theoretical issues that were raised had a major impact

on subsequent medical thinking, especially on the great medical systems of

late antiquity, namely Galen’s and Methodism.

Galen is one of those authors who have been rediscovered by classicists

and students of ancient philosophy alike, be it for his literary output,

his mode of self-presentation and use of rhetoric, the picture he sketches

of the intellectual, social and cultural milieus in which he works and of

the traditions in which he puts himself, and the philosophical aspects of

his thought – both his originality and his peculiar blends of Platonism,

Hippocratism and Aristotelianism. Galen’s work, voluminous in size as

well as in substance, represents a great synthesis of earlier thinking and at

the same time a systematicity of enormous intellectual power, breadth and
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