MEDICINE AND PHILOSOPHY IN CLASSICAL ANTIQUITY

(Ron) #1
To help, or to do no harm 115

 

(‘get healthy’) andH  
(‘be released from’) are the


only terms that really indicate a full restoration of health;^49 and of the vari-

ous translations available for these words (e.g. ‘therapy’, ‘treatment’, ‘cure’,

‘care’, ‘attention’, etc.), ‘healing’ is very often not the appropriate rendering.

Accordingly, recommendations of particular modes of treatment are often

expressed in terms such as 

(‘it is profitable’),

! 
(‘it


is suitable’),"

(‘it is appropriate’) andM !=
(‘it is fitting’).


As such, these terms and expressions provide a good illustration of the

way in which the principle ‘to help, or to do no harm’ is interpreted in prac-

tice. We can see this principle at work particularly in the actual treatment

advocated by the authors of the nosological works (On Diseases 1 , 2 , 3 ,On

Internal Affections). In these works symptomatology, causal explanation and

therapy of diseases are fairly consistently adopted as distinctive categories –

and as such they resemble the apparently even more systematic discussion

of diseases and their treatment as offered by Diocles in the workAffec-

tion, Cause, Treatmentmentioned above. Reading through the therapeutic

sections of these works, three points are particularly striking. The first is

that on several occasions inOn Internal AffectionsandOn Diseases 2 and

3 a course of treatment is recommended in the full awareness of the lethal

nature of the disease.^50 One of the reasons for doctors such as the author

ofOn Internal Affectionsto adopt this attitude is clearly that they realise

that it is very difficult to establish whether a particular case is hopeless or

not, indeed that a certain mode of treatment may, by provoking a certain

physical reaction, provide clarification on this,^51 or alternatively that by

postponing treatment for too long, the disease may further exacerbate and

become definitely incurable (though not necessarily fatal).^52 On the other

hand, there are cases in which the doctor is advised to wait and see how

the disease develops before deciding whether to treat it or not,^53 or to infer

from certain symptoms whether the disease is curable or not.^54 Yet there are

also several cases where the patient’s chances of survival are considered to be

negligibly small, but where treatment is nevertheless recommended.^55 The

purpose of treatment in such cases is not always stated, but it may be, as

(^49) An interesting collocation of the terms  -
0 " 
0  +and

is found in
Int. Aff. 26 ( 7. 234 L.).
(^50) On degrees of ‘mortality’ see von Staden ( 1990 ) 79 – 80. The idea that Hippocratic doctors did not
engage, or were reluctant to engage, in treatment of hopeless cases – though not without some
textual support, e.g.On the Art of Medicine 8 ,On Diseases 2. 48 – has been shown to be untenable
in its generalising claims by Wittern ( 1979 ) and von Staden ( 1990 ). For a more recent discussion of
this issue see also Prioreschi ( 1992 ).
(^51) Int. Aff. 27 ( 7. 238 L.); 41 ( 7. 270 L.). (^52) Int. Aff. 26 ( 7. 236 L.); 47 ( 7. 284 L.).
(^53) E.g.On Diseases 3. 2 ( 7. 120 L.). (^54) Int. Aff. 22 ( 7. 220 L.).
(^55) E.g.On Diseases 2. 57 ( 7. 88 – 90 L.); 3. 1 ( 7. 118 L.); 3. 5 ( 7. 122 L.); 3. 6 ( 7. 124 L.); 3. 10 ( 7. 130 L.); 3. 11
( 7. 132 L.); 3. 14 ( 7. 134 – 6 L.);Int. Aff. 6 ( 7. 182 L.); 29 ( 7. 244 L.).

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