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Medicine in Plutarch's Moralia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 July 2016
Extract
The Moralia is an unfortunate term for the writings that have come down to us under the name of Plutarch of Chaeronea (ca. A.D. 50–120). They discuss rhetorical topics and general philosophical issues. A few are expressedly devoted to medical themes, for example, the tract entitled De sanitate tuenda praecepta (Mor. 122B–137E). But the medical material is sadly scattered throughout the extensive oeuvre, and it is difficult to gain a clear perspective.
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- Copyright © 1995 by Fordham University
References
1 Phillip De Lacy in The Encyclopedia of Philosophy, ed. Edwards, Paul (New York, 1967), 6:359–60.Google Scholar
2 Plutarch of Chaeronea, Moralia, trans. F. C. Babbitt, Loeb Classical Library.Google Scholar
3 For medicine as a liberal art, see Kudlien, F. in Journal of the History of Medicine 31 (1976): 448–59.Google Scholar
4 For Plutarch's medical friends, see Ziegler, Konrat in RE 21.1 (1951), col. 196, lines 3–8.Google Scholar
5 Wellman conjectured ‘Hρόφιλος before ‘Eρασίστρατος. See von Staden, Heinrich, trans. and ed., Herophilus: The Art of Medicine in Early Alexandria (Cambridge, 1989), Testimonium 248c.Google Scholar
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13 The Galenic passages on the formation of breast-milk from blood are listed by Phillip De Lacy in his edition of Galen's De Hippocratis et Platonis decretis (Berlin, 1984), 676 (to 446, lines 3–10).Google Scholar
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17 LSJ9 cites Plu. Lyc. 11.Google Scholar
18 A hapax in LSJ9. What were Plutarch's sources here?Google Scholar
19 Cf. Kulf, Eberhard, Untersuchungen zu Athenaios von Attaleia; Ein Beitrag zur antiken Diatetik (Diss. Gottingen, 1970), 118 to end.Google Scholar
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