This contribution gives an overview of the few passages of Ancient Greek literature dealing with the causes of epidemics and contagions (i.e. in Hippocrates, Thucydides, Isocrates, ps-Aristotle’s Problems, Plutarch, and Galen). With the help of the distinction between an ontological and a physiological conception of what a disease is, I suggest that the latter was an obstacle to better understand the process through which epidemics spread. I nonetheless show that the ontological conception of these diseases was not entirely absent from Antiquity, as it is shown by Galen, who offers an etiological explanation of the origin of epidemics that combines both conceptions, the ontological and the physiological one
Galen was with no doubt a great authority in ancient medicine rivalled only with "the father of medi...
An account of the theme of plagues in Greek literature (Sophocles, Thucydides) and Roman literature ...
Epidemics: some history For the disorder first settled in the head, ran its course from thence throu...
This contribution gives an overview of the few passages of Ancient Greek literature dealing with the...
For the last 100 years, the modern concept of epidemics as contagious diseases caused by pathogenic ...
Abstract The article depicts causes, prevention and treatment of epidemics as seen by ancient Greek...
Through a reading of some significant passages a reconstruction is made of the main features of Gale...
This paper elucidates the relationship between Hippocrates and Galen concerning the classification o...
In the fifth and fourth centuries BCE, a number of “doctor-cosmologists” attempted to base the art o...
The article discusses the meaning of the term ‘epidemic’ in the literary sources of ancient Greece a...
The present article aims at showing the way Greek and Roman historians saw epidemics. and what role ...
The term epidemic (from the Greek epi [on] plus demos [people]), first used by Homer, took its medic...
SummaryHippocrates is traditionally considered the father of modern medicine, still influencing, 25 ...
Sophocles, one of the most noted playwrights of the ancient world, wrote the tragedy Oedipus Rex in ...
This paper analyses the cause of disease as perceived in Classical and Hellenistic Greece, and in pa...
Galen was with no doubt a great authority in ancient medicine rivalled only with "the father of medi...
An account of the theme of plagues in Greek literature (Sophocles, Thucydides) and Roman literature ...
Epidemics: some history For the disorder first settled in the head, ran its course from thence throu...
This contribution gives an overview of the few passages of Ancient Greek literature dealing with the...
For the last 100 years, the modern concept of epidemics as contagious diseases caused by pathogenic ...
Abstract The article depicts causes, prevention and treatment of epidemics as seen by ancient Greek...
Through a reading of some significant passages a reconstruction is made of the main features of Gale...
This paper elucidates the relationship between Hippocrates and Galen concerning the classification o...
In the fifth and fourth centuries BCE, a number of “doctor-cosmologists” attempted to base the art o...
The article discusses the meaning of the term ‘epidemic’ in the literary sources of ancient Greece a...
The present article aims at showing the way Greek and Roman historians saw epidemics. and what role ...
The term epidemic (from the Greek epi [on] plus demos [people]), first used by Homer, took its medic...
SummaryHippocrates is traditionally considered the father of modern medicine, still influencing, 25 ...
Sophocles, one of the most noted playwrights of the ancient world, wrote the tragedy Oedipus Rex in ...
This paper analyses the cause of disease as perceived in Classical and Hellenistic Greece, and in pa...
Galen was with no doubt a great authority in ancient medicine rivalled only with "the father of medi...
An account of the theme of plagues in Greek literature (Sophocles, Thucydides) and Roman literature ...
Epidemics: some history For the disorder first settled in the head, ran its course from thence throu...