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Galen’s Epistemology. Experience, Reason and Method in Ancient Medicine
- 1.0562025 - FLÚ 2023 RIV GB eng B - Monography
Hankinson, R.J. (ed.) - Havrda, Matyáš (ed.)
Galen’s Epistemology. Experience, Reason and Method in Ancient Medicine.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022. 325 s. ISBN 978-1-316-51348-4
R&D Projects: GA ČR(CZ) GA20-16937S
Institutional support: RVO:67985955
Keywords : ancient medicine * method * empiricism * rationalism * dialectic * differentiated experience * scepticism * proof * perception * Archigenes * moral epistemology * Arabic reception
OECD category: Philosophy, History and Philosophy of science and technology
https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009072670
Determining what has gone wrong in a malfunctioning body and proposing an effective treatment requires expertise. Since antiquity, philosophers and doctors have wondered what sort of knowledge this expertise involves, and whether and how it can warrant its conclusions. Few people were as qualified to deal with these questions as Galen of Pergamum (129–ca. 216). A practising doctor with a keen interest in logic and natural science, he devoted much of his enormous literary output to the task of putting medicine on firm methodological grounds. At the same time he reflected on philosophical issues entailed by this project, such as the nature of experience, its relation to reason, the criteria of truth, and the methods of justification. This volume explores Galen’s contributions to (mainly scientific) epistemology, as they arise in the specific inquiries and polemics of his works, as well as their legacy in the Islamic world.
Permanent Link: https://hdl.handle.net/11104/0334518
Number of the records: 1