HIPPOCRATES

hĭpŏkˈrətēz, c.460–c.370 b.c., Greek physician, recognized as the father of medicine. He is believed to have been born on the island of Cos, to have studied under his father, a physician, to have traveled for some time, perhaps studying in Athens, and to have then returned to practice, teach, and write at Cos. The Hippocratic or Coan school that formed around him was of enormous importance in separating medicine from superstition and philosophic speculation, placing it on a strictly scientific plane based on objective observation and critical deductive reasoning.

Although Hippocrates followed the current belief that disease resulted from an imbalance of the four bodily humors, he maintained that the disturbance was influenced by outside forces and that the humors were glandular secretions. He believed that the goal of medicine should be to build the patient's strength through appropriate diet and hygienic measures, resorting to more drastic treatment only when the symptoms showed this to be necessary. This was in contrast to the contemporary Cnidian school, which stressed detailed diagnosis and classification of diseases to the point of ignoring the patient. Hippocrates probably had an inkling of Mendelian and genomic factors in heredity, because he noted not only many of the signs of disease but also that symptoms could appear throughout a family or a community, or even over successive generations.

Of the large collection of writings that derived from the Coan school, only a few are generally ascribed to Hippocrates himself, although his influence is felt throughout. Of these, The Aphorisms, summing up his observations and deductions, and Airs, Waters, and Places, which recognized a link between environment and disease, are considered the most important. The collection has appeared in a number of translations, notably that of Littré.

While the Hippocratic oath cannot be directly credited to him either, it undoubtedly represents his ideals and principles. The oath, which still governs the ethical conduct of physicians today, is often recited at the graduation ceremonies of medical schools. Among other things the oath details codes of patients's right to privacy, asks the physician to pledge to lead an honorable personal and professional life, and requires that he or she prescribe treatments only for curative purposes.

See studies by W. Smith (1979) and W. Heidel (1981).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Hippocrates  - 3311 results

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diseases- as if we did not find Hippocrates in his book On the ,Nature of Alan...attempts to elucidate the words of `Hippocrates. ? As far as Galen himself is concerned...not consider Vl?I a genuine work of Hippocrates, a fact that should come as no surprise...
...Morb. 3 Berlin, 1980 . ----- Hippocrates: Loeb vol. 5, Aff., Morb. 1...Cambridge, Mass., 1988 . ----- Hippocrates: Loeb vol. 6, Morb. 3, Int...Nosology, in CIH VI , 237-53. ----- Hippocrates: Loeb vol. 7, Loc., Gland., Carn...
...programme included such questions as Who was Hippocrates?, Which are the "genuine works" written...of the works it contained really were by Hippocrates, and its image of Hippocrates was largely based on a set of letters composed...
...lectual tradition descending from Hippocrates into the nineteenth century and, thanks...Hippocratic Oath without knowing who Hippocrates was. In ancient Greece and Rome, throughout...place in a tradition descending from Hippocrates, it was to employ the therapies recommended...
...touch, taste, he wrote, and reason. Hippocrates is not famous because he made a new...it. We know pitifully little about Hippocrates himself, mostly from a few references...dialogues of his contemporary Plato. Hippocrates was born on the island of Cos, on the...
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journal articles on: Hippocrates  - 437 results

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...Medicine: Doctors Doing Harm since Hippocrates. by Jeffrey P. Brosco , Sheldon Watts...Medicine: Doctors Doing Harm Since Hippocrates. By David Wootton (Oxford: Oxford...based on therapeutic effectiveness. Hippocrates may have been able to set bones and...
Reinventing Hippocrates by Christopher Lawrence David Cantor (ed.), Reinventing Hippocrates, The History of Medicine in Context, Aldershot...book: study the different uses to which Hippocrates has been put in different historical contexts...
The Creation of the English Hippocrates by Peter Anstey On surveying the...physician of his age, the English Hippocrates, flanked by Inigo Jones and John...Thomas Sydenham as the English Hippocrates. How then is a reputation created...
On the Elements According to Hippocrates / Commentary on Hippocrates Epidemics Vi Fragments; Commentary of an Anonymous Author on Hippocrates Epidemics Vi Fragments by Vivian Nutton Galen, On the elements according to Hippocrates, Corpus medicorum...
Why Not Give Hippocrates a Place at the Table? by Patrick...value, and if so, why not allow Hippocrates (c430 BC - c377 BC) a place at the...place in contemporary bioethics where Hippocrates may be friend rather than foe. Before...
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magazine articles on: Hippocrates  - 215 results

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The Uncertain Art: Hippocrates Redux. by Sherwin B. Nuland On...column back to the First Aphorism of Hippocrates. Readers with elephantine memories...have been what the followers of Hippocrates had in mind. The reward for taking...
Goodbye, Hippocrates! Yes, There Is Life Away from Medicine by Berkeley Rice rely youve wondered whether private practice is worth the hassles and...
...cooperate. The First Aphorism Attributed to Hippocrates, c. 400 B.C. It has long been accepted...of the body of writings credited to Hippocrates was in fact authored by others, in...rest by calling it The Genuine Works of Hippocrates. English translations of these central...
...type s. In the fifth century B.C. Hippocrates described four temperaments, which...However quaint this theory may seem, Hippocrates anticipated modern linkages of biochemistry...spikes frequently and ebbs slowly, Hippocrates melancholics, whom scientists now describe...
...the Greek philosopher-physician Hippocrates in the fifth century B.C. In On Airs, Waters, and Places, Hippocrates displayed an extraordinary awareness...2 In pinpointing these factors, Hippocrates identified forces that epidemiologists...
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newspaper articles on: Hippocrates  - 185 results

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...self-absorption." The original oath of Hippocrates is the earliest medical oath still influencing...after Christ, was largely responsible for making Hippocrates famous. Hippocrates practiced medicine on the Greek island of Cos...
...paraphrase the most famous resident of Kos, Hippocrates, Ars longa, vita brevis (The life...we visited. Kos Town, birthplace of Hippocrates in 460BC, was just 30 minutes away...Asklepieion, built to continue-the work of Hippocrates after his death. To the south is Thermae...
...of the "father of modern medicine" Hippocrates, it was easy to see why he stressed...plane tree said to have been planted by Hippocrates but which is, in reality, hundreds...putting into practice the teachings of Hippocrates. The highest level also gives superb...
...the roots of modern medicine. Hippocrates (460-377 B.C.) a Greek...conduct by the Hippocratic Oath. Hippocrates considered the body as a whole...sum of a collection of parts. Hippocrates believed that good health was...
...medieval castles, mosques and minarets. Hippocrates, the father of medicine, was born...entrance is the famous plane tree of Hippocrates, supposedly the oldest tree in Europe...10m in diameter. Legend has it that Hippocrates taught many of his pupils under the...
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encyclopedia articles on: Hippocrates  - 17 results

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HIPPOCRATES hipok r tez, c.460 c.370 b.c...critical deductive reasoning. Although Hippocrates followed the current belief that disease...the point of ignoring the patient. Hippocrates probably had an inkling of Mendelian...
...Sophocles , Euripides , Aristophanes , Phidias , Myron , Polykleitos , Heraclitus , Socrates , Plato , Aristotle , and Hippocrates . Although Athens succumbed in the Peloponnesian War (431 404 b.c.) and Sparta triumphed briefly before continued fighting...
SYDENHAM, THOMAS 1624 89, English physician, called "the English Hippocrates." He studied at Oxford and Montpellier, and practiced in London. His conceptions of the causes and treatments of epidemics...
...concerned with life or nature; distinguished from the axiom because its truth is not capable of scientific demonstration. Hippocrates was the first to use the term for his Aphorisms, briefly stated medical principles. Note his famous opening sentence...
...flourished, founding (c.580 b.c.) Acragas (the later Agrigento ). It attained its greatest prosperity under the tyrants Hippocrates and Gelon in the 5th cent. b.c. However, the city was sacked by Carthage in 405 b.c. and never fully recovered...
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