Classical and Hellenistic Greece were known to be a hub of scientific research. However, the potential for scientific discovery was limited by dominating religious beliefs. Advancements in the study of human anatomy were inhibited by religious taboos that prevented the practice of human dissection. These taboos took hold of Greek society, with a consequence of exile to anyone who violated them. The exception however, is in Hellenistic Alexandria under the rule of the Ptolemaic Kings, Soter and Philadelphus. This paper examines the factors under which the Greek scientist Herophilus was allowed to practice systematic human dissection, as well as the culture created by the Ptolemies that encouraged Herophilus’ scientific endeavors
© Mattioli 1885. Cultural changes, scientific progress, and new trends in medical education have mod...
“and should be based on the form of the human body.”1 The history of cadaver dissection (practical a...
For centuries, the human body was considered an inviolable treasure chest, as religious authorities ...
In a period of Ptolemaic Alexandria that has been referred to by modern scholars as a frontier envi...
This research essay attempts to apply modern ethical principles and standards to the vivisection and...
Alexandria was both an important city and a place of inspiration in the history of medicine since th...
Studying specific collections of great Byzantine authors as Oribasius from Pergamum, Theophilus Prot...
Herophilus of Chalcedon (c.330-250 BC) is famous as one of the leading figures in the development of...
The professionalism of the medical field developed in ancient Greece through the Hippocratic Corpus....
A REVIEW OF the history of ancient medicine reveals that most of the knowledge is concentrated in th...
This article reconstructs the practice of Greek hepatoscopy in the classical period and thereafter. ...
The ancient Greek’s understanding of medicine including anatomy was quite rudimentary to begin with....
Cultural changes, scientific progress, and new trends in medical education have modified the role of...
A major step in the evolution of Hellenistic Medicine and Surgery resulted from the victories of Ale...
peer reviewedThis paper proposes to reconstruct the means of acquisition and transmission of anatomi...
© Mattioli 1885. Cultural changes, scientific progress, and new trends in medical education have mod...
“and should be based on the form of the human body.”1 The history of cadaver dissection (practical a...
For centuries, the human body was considered an inviolable treasure chest, as religious authorities ...
In a period of Ptolemaic Alexandria that has been referred to by modern scholars as a frontier envi...
This research essay attempts to apply modern ethical principles and standards to the vivisection and...
Alexandria was both an important city and a place of inspiration in the history of medicine since th...
Studying specific collections of great Byzantine authors as Oribasius from Pergamum, Theophilus Prot...
Herophilus of Chalcedon (c.330-250 BC) is famous as one of the leading figures in the development of...
The professionalism of the medical field developed in ancient Greece through the Hippocratic Corpus....
A REVIEW OF the history of ancient medicine reveals that most of the knowledge is concentrated in th...
This article reconstructs the practice of Greek hepatoscopy in the classical period and thereafter. ...
The ancient Greek’s understanding of medicine including anatomy was quite rudimentary to begin with....
Cultural changes, scientific progress, and new trends in medical education have modified the role of...
A major step in the evolution of Hellenistic Medicine and Surgery resulted from the victories of Ale...
peer reviewedThis paper proposes to reconstruct the means of acquisition and transmission of anatomi...
© Mattioli 1885. Cultural changes, scientific progress, and new trends in medical education have mod...
“and should be based on the form of the human body.”1 The history of cadaver dissection (practical a...
For centuries, the human body was considered an inviolable treasure chest, as religious authorities ...