were. His training and traveling was mainly in Greece Egypt and Libya. Hippocrates healed the king of Macedonia from tuberculosis. When the plague came Hippocrates was put to the test and his commitment for healing was also.
Hippocrates’ career height was during the Peloponnesian War. Hippocrates also taught and it is well remembered. The symbol from his teaching is the “The Tree of Hippocrates” this symbol encouraged many students. Hippocrates two sons Thessalus and Draco were apprenticed by their father in the practice of medicine. The Hippocratic corpus is a collection of about seventy works. The Hippocratic Corpus is the oldest complete medical books surviving. These medical books are not written all by Hippocrates. Some of these books were written by other people in the medical field, some were also written by people who didn’t even work in the field. These books date all the way back to C.E. 117–138. Doctors wrote written arguments to show the educated public. The educated public then discussed these medical problems with their doctors. The written arguments made up the Hippocratic Corpus. In the Hippocratic corpus it is all experimentation on disease firsthand experience was a big part. In the corpus the plant remedies are described by odor and taste. The corpus also explains basic laboratory …show more content…
experiments.
The Hippocratic corpus was most likely written between the sixth and fourth centuries BCE.
during Hippocrates career and pre-Socratic philosophers medical writings in Greece developed. The medical writers of Cos were believed to have written the treaties. One of the earliest written pieces of the corpus is on ancient medicine. The anonymous philosopher was familiar with ancient medicine and it is believed he was from the fifth century era. another one of the early works is on the sacred disease. This talks about the early observations of epilepsy. the sacred disease and ancient medicine both are written of the concept of divine origin of disease. Both pieces are polemical works. Another piece from the corpus is the four humors, it stated that there were four basic human personalities; melancholic, sanguine, phlegmatic, and choleric. The four humors are a central tenets of the corpus. The theory of the four humors was grounded on the empedoclean principle of the four elements earth, air, fire, and water. Four constituent elements or humors of man were identified as black bile, blood, yellow bile, and phlegm. All four of these had to be in correct proportion of one another. This fourfold pattern was forever adaptable to the the seasons, the winds, the elements, and even to the evangelists. This offered a holdall in which tastes temperaments and a surprising number of diseases could find loose accommodation. The theory was worthless but it remained the fundamental example of
european medicine for over two millennials. The doctrine of the four humors had a widespread and lasting impact on european medical thoughts. It had been greatly out of proportion to the medical value. The success of the theory of the four humors put a huge break in physiology research.