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E-raamat: Galen and the World of Knowledge

Edited by (University of Exeter), Edited by (University of Oxford), Edited by (University of Exeter)
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"This volume of new essays is based on a conference with the same title held at the University of Exeter in 2005. All those speaking on that occasion have written chapters in this volume, along with Riccardo Chiaradonna whose chapter has been specially prepared for the volume. The aim of this volume, like the conference on which it is based, is to contribute to the upsurge of new research on Galen by focusing on a topic that bridges the interests of specialists in ancient medical history and Classicists and philosophers more generally. The conference also represents the convergence of two current focuses of research in the Department of Classics and Ancient History at Exeter, on ancient medicine especially Galen and on Hellenistic and Imperial Greek culture more generally"--Provided by publisher.

Galen is the most important medical writer in Graeco-Roman antiquity, and also extremely valuable for understanding Graeco-Roman thought and society in the second century AD. This volume of new essays locates him firmly in the intellectual life of his period, and thus aims to make better sense of the medical and philosophical 'world of knowledge' that he tries to create. How did Galen present himself as a reader and an author in comparison with other intellectuals of his day? Above all, how did he fashion himself as a medical practitioner, and how does that self-fashioning relate to the performance culture of second-century Rome? Did he see medicine as taking over some of the traditional roles of philosophy? These and other questions are freshly addressed by leading international experts on Galen and the intellectual life of the period, in a stimulating collection that combines learning with accessibility.

Places Galen more firmly in the intellectual life of his period of the second century AD.

Arvustused

'[ This] will no doubt become an indispensable item in the bibliography of those working on second-century literature, medicine, philosophy and, more generally, culture.' The British Journal for the History of Science

Muu info

This study places Galen more firmly in the intellectual life of his period of the second century AD.
Notes on contributors vii
Note on conventions ix
Preface xvii
Introduction 1(18)
Galen's library
19(16)
Vivian Nutton
Conventions of prefatory self-presentation in Galen's On the Order of My Own Books
35(24)
Jason Konig
Demiurge and Emperor in Galen's world of knowledge
59(26)
Rebecca Flemming
Shock and awe: the performance dimension of Galen's anatomy demonstrations
85(30)
Maud W. Gleason
Galen's un-Hippocratic case-histories
115(17)
G. E. R. Lloyd
Staging the past, staging oneself: Galen on Hellenistic exegetical traditions
132(25)
Heinrich von Staden
Galen and Hippocratic medicine: language and practice
157(18)
Daniela Manetti
Galen's Bios and Methodos: from ways of life to path of knowledge
175(15)
Veronique Boudon-Millot
Does Galen have a medical programme for intellectuals and the faculties of the intellect?
190(16)
Jacques Jouanna
Galen on the limitations of knowledge
206(37)
R. J. Hankinson
Galen and Middle Platonism
243(18)
Riccardo Chiaradonna
`Aristotle! What a thing for you to say!' Galen's engagement with Aristotle and Aristotelians
261(21)
Philip J. van der Eijk
Galen and the Stoics, or: the art of not naming
282(18)
Teun Tieleman
Bibliography 300(23)
Index 323
Christopher Gill is Professor of Ancient Thought at the University of Exeter. His books include Personality in Greek Epic, Tragedy, and Philosophy: The Self in Dialogue (1996), which was awarded the Runciman prize in 1997; The Structured Self in Hellenistic and Roman Thought (2006); and a number of edited volumes of essays. He is currently working on Naturalistic Psychology in Galen and Stoicism (2010). Tim Whitmarsh is E. P. Warren Praelector in Classics at Corpus Christi and Lecturer in Greek Language and Literature at the University of Oxford. He has published widely on the Greek literature of the Roman period, including Greek Literature and the Roman Empire: The Politics of Imitation (2001) and The Second Sophistic (2005). He also edited Ordering Knowledge in the Roman Empire (with Jason Konig, 2007) and The Cambridge Companion to the Greek and Roman Novel (2008). John Wilkins is Professor of Greek Culture at the University of Exeter. Recent publications include The Boastful Chef (2000); Athenaeus and His World (edited with D. Braund, 2000); Food in the Ancient World (with Shaun Hill, 2006); and a number of articles and essays on food and medicine. He has also led a Wellcome Research Project on Galen's Simple Medicines.