Ancient Greek and Roman Medicine: Bodies, Physicians, and Patients
CLA 231/HLS 231/GHP 331/HIS 231
1254
1254
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This course looks at the formation of a techne ("art" or "science") of medicine in fifth-century BCE Greece and debates about the theory and practice of healthcare in Greco-Roman antiquity. We look at early Greek medicine in relationship to established medical traditions in Egypt and Mesopotamia; medical discourses of human nature, gender, race, and the body; debates about the ethics of medical research; the relationship of the body to the mind; and the nature of "Greek" medicine as it travels to Alexandria, Rome and Baghdad. Readings drawn from primary sources as well as contemporary texts in medical humanities and bioethics.
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Section L01
- Type: Lecture
- Section: L01
- Status: O
- Enrollment: 0
- Capacity: 100
- Class Number: 41187
- Schedule: TTh 11:00 AM-11:50 AM
Section P99
- Type: Precept
- Section: P99
- Status: O
- Enrollment: 0
- Capacity: 100
- Class Number: 42772