2 - Galen
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 December 2009
Summary
INTRODUCTION
Galen was, in the words of a number of Renaissance title-pages, the ‘Prince of Physicians, second only to Hippocrates’. For those who founded and followed the Latin medical tradition of the West, what was the relationship between the Father of Medicine and the great Galen, physician to emperors? What did medieval and Renaissance man find in Galen as he found medical wisdom in Hippocrates? The answer in brief is that he found rationality and learning in a richer measure and partly of a new kind. Galen was a potent image of the Learned and Rational Doctor who had a Good Story to tell to his patients.
We can best demonstrate this by following Galen's life. Galen wrote voluminously and often very personally, quite unlike the impersonal historia-like reports, case-histories and aphorisms of the Hippocratic writings. It was partly a question of time and place: Galen was born in about ad 129, some five hundred years after the earlier of the Hippocratic works had been written. His home town was Pergamon, an important Hellenistic city, but the political centre of his world was imperial Rome where, he decided, his medical career was to be. Galen was the son of a prosperous architect called Nikon and as a young man had received an extensive education in philosophy. He seems to have had a particular interest in problems of proof, or demonstration. But Galen's father, guided by a dream (we might call it non-medical prognostication) sent his sixteen-year-old son to learn medicine.
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- Medicine before ScienceThe Business of Medicine from the Middle Ages to the Enlightenment, pp. 34 - 56Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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