Maantjes van hippocrates biography

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460 BCDiedc. Asclepius

Namesakes

A drawing of a Hippocratic traction device.

Ancient

  • Hippocratic bench — a device which uses tension to aid in setting bones
  • Hippocratic face — the change produced in the countenance by death, or long sickness, excessive evacuations, excessive hunger, and the like
  • Hippocratic fingers — a deformity of the fingers and fingernails
  • Hypocras — a drink whose invention is attributed to Hippocrates
  • Hippocratic succussion — the internal splashing noise of hydropneumothorax or pyopneumothorax

Modern

  • Hippocratic Museum
  • The Hippocrates Project — A program of the New York University Medical Centre to enhance education through use of technology
  • Project Hippocrates — "HIgh PerfOrmance Computing for Robot-AssisTEd Surgery"
  • Digital Hippocrates — "a collection of Ancient Medical texts"
  • Digital Hippocrates System — an anonymous, on-line, medical reference source directed at educating adolescents
  • Hippocrates Project — A tissue engineering project

Maantjes van Hippocrates

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1.

Legend likewise places him in the family line of the hero Hercules.

The Hippocratic school or the Koan school, however, was more successful for its general diagnoses and passive treatments. Maantjes van Hippocrates
De door Hippocrates gevonden methode is gebaseerd op de zogenoemde uitgebreide stelling van Pythagoras (zie de pagina "Boek VI", Elementen van Euclides):

Propositie VI-31
In rechthoekige driehoeken is [de oppervlakte van] een figuur, beschreven op de den rechten hoek onderspannende zijde, gelijk aan [de som van de oppervlaktes van] de op de den rechten hoek omvattende zijden op gelijke wijze beschreven gelijkvormige figuren.

Voor de gelijkvormige figuren worden dan halve cirkels gebruikt.

The Hippocratic bench, which preceded the torture device rack, and other devices were used to this end.

As was mentioned, one of the strengths of Hippocratic medicine was in its prognosis. Hippocratic therapy was focused on simply easing this natural process. Inleiding
Eén van de oud-Griekse wiskundige problemen staat bekend onder de naam Kwadratuur van de cirkel; dat is het construeren (met passer en liniaal) van een vierkant waarvan de oppervlakte gelijk is aan die van een gegeven cirkel (het construeren wordt in dit verband wel kwadreren genoemd).
We weten sinds 1882 (Ferdinand von Lindemann, 1852-1939) dat dit probleem onoplosbaar is (zie ook de pagina "Over de trisectie van een hoek").

Hippocrates van Chios (470-410 vChr, Griekenland) vond een methode om de oppervlakte van bijzondere kromlijnige figuren, namelijk maantjes, te kwadreren.

  Definitie
Een maantje is een figuur die wordt begrensd door twee cirkelbogen.

2.

maantjes van hippocrates biography

Theodorus II.
128. His teachings were largely taken as too great to be improved upon. It is largely responsible for Hippocrates's renown. Heraclides
4. He is often referred to as " The Father of Medicine" for his lasting contributions to the field as the founder of the Hippocratic school of medicine which revolutionized medicine in ancient Greece, separating the field from the other disciplines (notably theurgy and philosophy) and making a profession of practicing medicine.

When the four humours, blood, black bile, yellow bile and phlegm, were unbalanced (dyscrasia, meaning "bad mixture"), a person became sick and would remain that way until the balance was somehow restored. He also began to categorize illnesses as acute, chronic, endemic and epidemic. PDF
Een PDF-bestand waarin uitvoerig wordt ingegaan op construeerbare maantjes is beschikbaar via deze website (artikel: Kwadreerbare maantjes).
Klik hier om dat bestand te downloaden (17 pagina's A4; grootte: 251Kb).



[p: pytha/maantjes.htm] laatste wijziging op: 13-01-2008

HIPPOCRATES

 

     Medical historians generally look to Hippocrates as the founder of medicine as a rational science.  It was Hippocrates who finally freed medicine fromthe shackles of magic, superstition, and the supernatural.
     Hippocrates collected data and conducted experiments to show that disease was a natural process; that the signs and symptoms of a disease were caused by the natural reactions of the body to the disease process; and that the chief role of the physician was to aid the natural resistance of the body to overcome the metabolic imbalance and restore health and harmony to the organism. 
     Hippocrates was born on the island of Cos, off the southwest coast of Asia Minor, or present-day Turkey, around 460 B.C.  His father was a physician-priest in the Asclepion at Cos, and his family could trace its lineage back to the legendary Asclepius.  Hippocrates lived a very long life and died at a ripe old age in the town of Larissa in Thessaly.

 

     When Hippocrates began to practicemedicine, the established school of medicine was the Cnidian school.  But this school's approach to medicine had several serious flaws, whichwere already becoming apparent and starting to cause a general dissatisfaction with the art of medicine. 
     The Cnidian school considered the body to be merely a collection of isolated parts, and saw diseases manifesting in a particular organ or body part as affecting that part only, which alone was treated.  Their system of diagnosis was also faulty, relying exclusively on the subjective symptoms related by the patient, while totally ignoring the objective signs of the disease. 
     Hippocrates radically disagreed with the Cnidian school, countering that the human body functioned as one unified organism, or physis, and must be treated, in health and disease, as one coherent, integrated whole.  In diagnosis, not only the patient's subjective symptoms, but the objective signs of the disease must also be considered to arrive at an accurate assessment of what was going on. 
     As his main unifying theory for the holistic understanding of the human organism and how it functions in health and disease, Hippocrates used the concept of the Four Humors.  Although the groundwork of humoral physiology and pathology had already been laid by his predecessors, Hippocrates finally brought the thory of the Four Humors into its classical form.
     Health is a harmonious balance of the Four Humors.  Disease results from their disharmony and imbalance.  The physician's job is to restore health by correcting the imbalance and restoring harmony to the humors.  To quote Hippocrates:
     "The body of man has in itself blood, phlegm, yellow bile, and black bile; these make up the nature of the body, and through these he feels pain or enjoys health.  Now, he enjoys the most perfect health when these elements are duly proportioned to one another in respect to compounding, power and bulk, and when they are perfectly mingled.  Pain is felt when one of these elements is in defect or excess, or is isolated in the body without being compounded with all the others."
                                          - The Nature of Man
     Hippocrates took his band of renegade physicians with him to the island of Cos.  There, they set about to revolutionize the art of medicine and put its theory and practice on a truer, sounder footing.

 

     Physiology and pathology in Hippocratic medicine was based on the Four Humors.  A united confluence and sympathy between all four humors working together was necessary for good health.  Pneuma - the Breath or Vital Force, and the Innate Heat, which were suffused into the blood from the lungs via the heart, gave the blood the power to sustain life. 
     Hippocrates saw pepsis, or an orderly, balanced, harmonious digestion and metabolism of the Four Humors as being essential to all good health.  In disorders of pepsis Hippocrates saw the origin of most disease. 
     Hippocrates' anatomical knowledge was rather scant, but this is compensated for by his profound insights into human physiology and the soundness of his reasoning.  But even so, his surgical techniques for dislocations of the hip and jaw were unsurpassed until the nineteenth century.
     In therapeutics, Hippocrates saw the physician as the servant and facilitator of Nature.  All medical treatment was aimed at enabling the natural resistance of the organism to prevail and overcome the disease, to bring about recovery.
     In the treatments he prescribed, Hippocrates was very sensible, pragmatic and flexible in his approach, favoring conservatism and moderation over radical or extreme measures.  Bloodletting, which was much abused at other times in medicine's history, was used only rarely by Hippocrates, and even then, only applied conservatively.
     Hippocrates placed great emphasis on strengthening and building up the body's inherent resistance to disease.  For this, he prescribed diet, gymnastics, exercise, massage, hydrotherapy and sea bathing. 
     Hippocrates was a great believer in dietary measures in the treatment of disease.  He prescribed a very slender, light diet during the crisis stage of an acute illness, and a liquid diet during the treatment of fevers and wounds. 
     Hippocratic medicine was constitutionally based, so its approach to diagnosis and treatment was quite flexible.  As a holistic healing system, Hippocratic medicine treated the patient, and not just the disease.
     Hippocrates was the first physician to systematically classify diseases based on points of similarity and contrast between them.  He virtually originated the disciplines of etiology and pathology.  By systematically classifying diseases, Hippocrates placed their diagnosis and treatment on a sounder footing.

 

     The Hippocratic Corpus is a collection of over 60 works.  Although all of them are attributed to Hippocrates, the Corpus is of a heterogenous character, and many, if not most, of its works may actually have been written by his students. 
     Still, we can be fairly certain that Hippocrates actually did author many books in the Corpus, including many original, groundbreaking works.  These include:
     Airs, Waters and Places - the first major work on medical meteorology, climatology, geography and anthropology.
     Aphorisms - a collection of wise, pithy sayings giving advice on practical matters of diet, prognosis and therapeutics.
     Ancient Medicine - a defense of the empirical study of medicine against one biased by preliminary axioms and assumptions.  Also deals with the Four Humors. 

 

     Hippocrates was the personification of the ideal physician - wise, caring, compassionate and honest.  He is most remembered today for his famous Oath, which set high ethical standards for the practice of medicine.  His exemplary life has been a constant and enduring source of inspiration for doctors and healers down through the ages.

 

Acknowledgements:
On The Hippocratic Revolution:
The Traditional Healer's Handbook by Hakim G.

M. Chishti
Copyright 1988 by Healing Arts Press - Rochester, Vermont
pp. Thedorus
512. He went at least as far as Thessaly, Thrace, and the Sea of Marmara. Whenever possible it was very kind to the patient: sterile and gentle. The Corpus is not necessarily of Hippocrates's own hand, and there are many doubts as the the authenticity of the collection, the Oath included.

He is seen as very practical, and Francis Adams (translator) describes him as "strictly the physician of experience and common sense".