Study of the past
Mar 21st, 2021, 3:32 pm
Hippocrates and Medical Education by Manfred Horstmanshoff, Cornelis van Tilburg (Studies in Ancient Medicine, 35)
Requirements: .PDF reader, 5 mb
Overview: It seemed appropriate to assess ancient medical education and its decisive role in the last twenty-four centuries in a full-length volume. In the Call for Papers the following topics had been suggested: philosophy (theory and practice, empiricism, experiments, theoretical concepts); practice (schools, sects, the formation of the curriculum, theory and practice, the formation of the canon, literacy and orality, status of masters and pupils, anatomy, handbooks, catechism—questions and answers, access to training and education); tradition (the role of tradition in medical education, the role of commentaries).

This book is an excellent source of information, from surveys of medical training and education programs, to specific analysis of certain treatises. While most helpful to a scholar of ancient medicine, the later chapters dealing with Hippocratic reception may find a wider audience in scholars of the history of medicine in general.
Genre: Non-Fiction > History

Image

Download Instructions:
http://2bay.org/e3e6cd3c78b023492a52bfe ... 5118a9b4b9
https://rapidgator.net/file/f3d5dba7ea0 ... n.pdf.html

Trouble downloading? Read This.
Mar 21st, 2021, 3:32 pm

"You don't have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them." - Ray Bradbury