MEDICINE AND PHILOSOPHY IN CLASSICAL ANTIQUITY

(Ron) #1
76 Hippocratic Corpus and Diocles of Carystus

in Diocles’ argument can be compared with the polemical remarks we find

in such Hippocratic treatises asOn RegimenandOn Ancient Medicine

(section 3 ). Finally, some remarks will be made about what I believe the

fragment tells us (and what it does not tell us) about Diocles’ own practice

in dietetics and medical science as a whole (section 4 ).

2 interpretation of fragment 176

The fragment is preserved by Galen in the introductory chapter of his

voluminous dietetic workOn the Powers of Foodstuffs(De alimentorum

facultatibus,De alim. facult.). Having stated the importance of this subject,

Galen says that it has generated great disagreement among medical writers,

and that it is therefore necessary to judge which of these writers are right

and which are wrong. The Greek text runs as follows:^11

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(^11) The text is reproduced from the edition by G. Helmreich (CMGv4, 2 ), with one exception: at
the end of section 1 , I emend
instead of the MSS readings 2 
and'

. See on
this van der Eijk ( 1993 c). Surprisingly, Jaeger seems not to have used Helmreich’s edition, and his
discussion of some textual problems ( 1938 a, 25 – 6 and 37 ) should therefore be read with caution.
[The translation printed here is the one printed in van der Eijk ( 2001 a) 283 – 5 .]

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