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Neurological Concepts in Ancient Greek Medicine Thomas M. Walshe III (MD, Assistant Professor of Neurology Chief, General Neurology Division, MD, Assistant Professor of Neurology Chief, General Neurology Division, Harvard Medical School, and Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA)

Neurological Concepts in Ancient Greek Medicine By Thomas M. Walshe III (MD, Assistant Professor of Neurology Chief, General Neurology Division, MD, Assistant Professor of Neurology Chief, General Neurology Division, Harvard Medical School, and Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA)

Summary

Neurological Concepts in Ancient Greek Medicine is a collection of essays exploring neurological ideas between the Homer and Hellenistic eras. These essays focus on providing historic, intellectual, and cultural context to ancient Greek medical practice and emphasizing the interest in the brain in such early historical periods.

Neurological Concepts in Ancient Greek Medicine Summary

Neurological Concepts in Ancient Greek Medicine by Thomas M. Walshe III (MD, Assistant Professor of Neurology Chief, General Neurology Division, MD, Assistant Professor of Neurology Chief, General Neurology Division, Harvard Medical School, and Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA)

Neurological history claims its earliest origins in the 17th century with Thomas Willis's publication of Anatomy of the Brain, coming fully into fruition as a field in the late 1850s as medical technology and advancements allowed for in depth study of the brain. However, many of the foundations in neurology can find the seed of their beginning to a time much earlier than that, to ancient Greece in fact. Neurological Concepts in Ancient Greek Medicine is a collection of essays exploring neurological ideas between the Archaic and Hellenistic eras. These essays also provide historic, intellectual, and cultural context to ancient Greek medical practice and emphasizing the interest in the brain of the early physicians. This book describes source material that is over 2,500 years old and reveals the observational skills of ancient physicians. It provides complete translations of two historic Hippocratic texts: On the Sacred Diseases and On the Wounds of the Head. The book also discusses the Hippocratic Oath and the modern applications of its meaning. Dr. Walshe connects this ancient history, usually buried in medical histories, and shows the ancient Greek notions that are the precursors of our understanding of the brain and nervous system.

Neurological Concepts in Ancient Greek Medicine Reviews

This fascinating work of learning does much to illuminate these complex dilemmas that so mystified the ancient Greek scholars and physicians...the profusion of references to this era will be invaluable to scholars. As Walshe says in his preface, his book is not the story of neurology in Greek Medicine, rather a description of Greek ideas that pertain to our own ideas of neurology. * John M. S. Pearce, Brain *
This volume does an excellent job of elucidating the ancient components of this saga by describing the first steps in developing our understanding of brain function by ancient Greeks. * Current Aging Science Vol. 9 Issue No. 1, Marios Kyriazis *

About Thomas M. Walshe III (MD, Assistant Professor of Neurology Chief, General Neurology Division, MD, Assistant Professor of Neurology Chief, General Neurology Division, Harvard Medical School, and Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA)

Dr. Walshe has been practicing Neurology for almost 40 years. He went to medical school at the University of Virginia and was a medical resident at Baylor in Houston. He studied neurology taught by Raymond Adams and C Miller Fisher and completed his residency in their program. He has been at the Brigham and Women's Hospital full time since 2005. In 1993 he began to learn Greek. He was able to spend a year sabbatical studying Greek at Berkeley. The essays are an ongoing project that has developed over several years.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Martin A. Samuels Preface Chapter 1: Neurologic Concepts in the Homeric Epics Chapter 2: Hippocrates and the Corpus Hippocraticum Chapter 3: A Neurology Text Before there was Neurology Chapter 4: On the Sacred Disease Chapter 5: Surgical Texts and Diagnosis Guides Chapter 6: Wounds of the Head Chapter 7: Hippocratic Medicine and Neurologic Conditions Chapter 8: Ancient Greek Ideas of Cognition Chapter 9: The Separation of the Nerves from Other Fibers Chapter 10: The Hellenistic Pursuit of Neuroanatomy Chapter 11: The Hippocratic Oath and a Modern Digression

Additional information

NPB9780190218560
9780190218560
0190218568
Neurological Concepts in Ancient Greek Medicine by Thomas M. Walshe III (MD, Assistant Professor of Neurology Chief, General Neurology Division, MD, Assistant Professor of Neurology Chief, General Neurology Division, Harvard Medical School, and Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2016-02-18
224
N/A
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