Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 The man and his work
- 2 Galen and his contemporaries
- 3 Methodology
- 4 Logic
- 5 Language
- 6 Epistemology
- 7 Psychology
- 8 Philosophy of nature
- 9 Anatomy
- 10 Physiology
- 11 Therapeutics
- 12 Drugs and pharmacology
- 13 Commentary
- 14 The fortunes of Galen
- Appendix 1: A guide to the editions and abbreviations of the Galenic corpus
- Appendix 2: English titles and modern translations
- Bibliography
- Index
11 - Therapeutics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2008
- Frontmatter
- 1 The man and his work
- 2 Galen and his contemporaries
- 3 Methodology
- 4 Logic
- 5 Language
- 6 Epistemology
- 7 Psychology
- 8 Philosophy of nature
- 9 Anatomy
- 10 Physiology
- 11 Therapeutics
- 12 Drugs and pharmacology
- 13 Commentary
- 14 The fortunes of Galen
- Appendix 1: A guide to the editions and abbreviations of the Galenic corpus
- Appendix 2: English titles and modern translations
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
For all Galen's many faces – medical scientist, public dissector and demonstrator, psychologist and moral philosopher, logician, linguist, commentator, lexicographer and literary critic, pharmacologist, historian of thought and story-teller – we should not forget that he regarded himself primarily as an iatros, a healer of patients and a restorer and preserver of health. Indeed, the principal job (ergon) or aim (skopos) of the medical art, he repeatedly says, is the treatment of disease and the preservation of health; and it is his primary responsibility as a doctor to carry out that job in an indefinite number of particular cases. For while most other areas of Galen's activity are of a theoretical nature and aimed at attaining knowledge and understanding of universal truths, healing is by definition a practical activity concerned with individual patients constituting particular cases of illness.
Yet in spite of its fundamental importance, Galen's therapeutics has, as far as I am aware, never received anything remotely aspiring to a comprehensive scholarly treatment. The reason for this is not difficult to see. Therapeutics is, in a way, the summa of all of Galen's other activities: it both presupposes them and is their culmination.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Galen , pp. 283 - 303Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008
- 23
- Cited by