The Origin and Growth of the Healing Art by Edward Berdoe

BOOK III.

_GREEK MEDICINE._ I. THE MEDICINE OF THE GREEKS BEFORE THE TIME OF HIPPOCRATES 147 Apollo, the God of Medicine.—Cheiron.—Æsculapius.—Artemis.—Dionysus. —Ammon.—Hermes.—Prometheus.—Melampus.—Medicine of Homer.—Temples of Æsculapius.—The Early Ionic Philosophers.—Empedocles.—School of Crotona.—The Pythagoreans.—Grecian Theory of Diseases.—School of Cos.—The Asclepiads.—The Aliptæ. II. THE MEDICINE OF HIPPOCRATES AND HIS PERIOD 172 Hippocrates first delivered Medicine from the Thraldom of Superstition.—Dissection of the Human Body and Rise of Anatomy.—Hippocrates, Father of Medicine and Surgery.—The Law.—Plato. III. POST-HIPPOCRATIC GREEK MEDICINE.—THE SCHOOLS OF MEDICINE 187 The Dogmatic School.—Praxagoras of Cos.-Aristotle.—The School of Alexandria.—Theophrastus the Botanist.—The great Anatomists, Erasistratus and Hierophilus, and the Schools they founded.—The Empiric School. IV. THE EARLIER ROMAN MEDICINE 205 Disease-goddesses.—School of the Methodists.—Rufus and Marinus.—Pliny.—Celsus. V. LATER ROMAN MEDICINE 227 The Eclectic and Pneumatic Sects.—Galen.—Neo-Platonism.—Oribasius and Ætius.—Influence of Christianity and the Rise of Hospitals.—Paulus Ægineta.—Ancient Surgical Instruments. VI. AMULETS AND CHARMS IN MEDICINE 247 Universality of the Amulet.—Scarabs.—Beads.—Savage Amulets.—Gnostic and Christian Amulets.—Herbs and Animals as Charms.—Knots.—Precious Stones.—Signatures.—Numbers.—Saliva. —Talismans.—Scripts.—Characts.—Sacred Names.—Stolen Goods.