Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/1722
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dc.contributor.authorAlbury, William Randallen
dc.date.accessioned2009-05-22T16:14:00Z-
dc.date.issued2005-
dc.identifier.citationHealth and History, 7(1), p. 2-16en
dc.identifier.issn1839-3314en
dc.identifier.issn1442-1771en
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/1722-
dc.description.abstractFrom the time of the Hippocratic writers until the Middle of thetwentieth century, the history of medicine was a part of medicine itself; it was the business of physicians. But as medicine changed over this long period, so too did the role of the history of medicine.For the authors of the Hippocratic texts—for Celsus, Galen and otherwriters of antiquity—the history of medicine or, more precisely, the history of medical doctrines, was a matter to be considered and argued by an author as he worked out and justified his own position. This approach was similar to Aristotle’s philosophical method of quoting from, criticising and correcting his predecessors. It was, for Aristotle as for the earliest historians of medical doctrine, a way of establishing the truest or most plausible view. The focus that Medieval and Renaissance medical scholars placed on authoritative texts, which now included authoritative texts from Arabic as well as Graeco–Roman sources, perpetuated the ancient role of the history of medicine within medicine itself throughout this period, although in a somewhat different form.In the 250 years between the establishment of modern anatomicalstudies (most notably by Vesalius in the 1540s)2 and the definitive linkage of clinical observation with pathological anatomy (most notably by French medical reformers of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic era), the proliferation of new theoretical constructs and experimental techniques eroded the authority that canonical texts had previously enjoyed as models or paradigms of medicine as a system.en
dc.languageenen
dc.publisherAustralian and New Zealand Society of the History of Medicineen
dc.relation.ispartofHealth and Historyen
dc.titleBroadening the Vision of the History of Medicineen
dc.typeJournal Articleen
dc.subject.keywordsHistory and Philosophy of Medicineen
local.contributor.firstnameWilliam Randallen
local.subject.for2008220205 History and Philosophy of Medicineen
local.subject.seo780199 Non-Oriented Research Non-oriented Research Otheren
local.profile.schoolSchool of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciencesen
local.profile.emailwalbury2@une.edu.auen
local.output.categoryC1en
local.record.placeauen
local.record.institutionUniversity of New Englanden
local.identifier.epublicationsrecordpes:2185en
local.publisher.placeAustraliaen
local.format.startpage2en
local.format.endpage16en
local.peerreviewedYesen
local.identifier.volume7en
local.identifier.issue1en
local.contributor.lastnameAlburyen
dc.identifier.staffune-id:walbury2en
local.profile.roleauthoren
local.identifier.unepublicationidune:1781en
dc.identifier.academiclevelAcademicen
local.title.maintitleBroadening the Vision of the History of Medicineen
local.output.categorydescriptionC1 Refereed Article in a Scholarly Journalen
local.relation.urlhttp://www.historycooperative.org/journals/hah/7.1/albury.pdfen
local.search.authorAlbury, William Randallen
local.uneassociationUnknownen
local.year.published2005en
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