论古罗马的医学、内科医生和治疗师

M. Petrova
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文讨论了在古罗马(1 - 5世纪)对医学,医生和治疗师的态度问题。Plin坐。Nat。嘘。,集市。Ep。等)。这表明,罗马的医生职业并没有立即得到承认。原因如下:第一,罗马人不认为医学是一门艺术(科学);第二,那些与医学有关的人不是罗马人,最初没有公民权利。罗马医生的集体传记被重建;它是根据现存的关于安东尼乌斯·穆萨、塞克修斯·尼日尔、斯克里博尼乌斯·拉格斯、以弗所的鲁弗斯、盖伦、塞雷尼乌斯·萨蒙纽斯、西奥多乌斯·普里西亚努斯、阿达曼提乌斯、马塞勒斯·恩皮里库斯和其他人的证词编写的。考虑到他们的出身、姓名和昵称、职位、社会地位、职责和权利、专业活动特点、医学文本的主题和内容等信息。集体传记的一些规定如下:1)罗马医生和与医学有关的人最初具有奴隶地位;2)一般来说,他们要么在亚历山大接受教育,要么在特殊的医学院和寺庙医院接受教育,要么从著名的老师那里接受教育;(3)有些医生在皇帝的宫廷里,有很高的头衔、地位和特权;4)在大多数情况下,医生撰写的作品主要用希腊语,但也用阿拉伯语和拉丁语;5)医生的兴趣与自然哲学、医学本身(理论和实践)及其领域有关,例如生理学和药理学,以及生物学(植物学);6)除了医疗实践,医生的职业还包括教学、指导和分享经验;收集处方解药,发明药品;医生的职业生涯(尤其是在皇帝的宫廷里)并不总是成功的。他可能会被驱逐出境,被迫逃往国外,或者被谋杀。
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On Medicine, Physicians, and Healers in Ancient Rome
The paper discusses the issue of the attitude towards medicine, physicians, and healers in Ancient Rome (1st – 5th centuries) based on ancient texts (Juv. Sat., Plin. Nat. Hist., Mart. Ep., etc.). It is shown that the profession of physician in Rome did not immediately receive recognition. The reasons for this are revealed: first, Romans did not consider medicine an art (science), and second, those who were associated with medicine were not Romans by origin and did not initially have civil rights. The collective biography of the Roman physician is reconstructed; it is based on the surviving testimonies about Anthonius Musa, Sextius Niger, Scribonius Largus, Rufus of Ephesus, Galen, Serenius Sammonius, Theodorus Priscianus, Adamantius, Marcellus Empiricus, and others. Information about their origin, names and nicknames, positions, social status, duties and rights, features of professional activity, subject and content of their medical texts is taken into account. Some provisions of the collective biography are as follows: 1) Roman physicians and people associated with medicine initially had the status of a slave; 2) As a rule, they received education either in Alexandria, or in special medical schools and temples-hospitals, or from famous teachers; 3) Some physicians were at emperors’ courts, had high titles, positions and privileges; 4) For the most part, physicians authored works written mainly in Greek, but also in Arabic and Latin; 5) The interests of physicians were connected with natural philosophy, medicine itself (theoretical and practical) and its fields, for example, physiology and pharmacology, as well as biology (botany); 6) In addition to medical practice, physicians’ occupations included teaching, mentoring, and sharing experience; collecting prescriptions and antidotes, inventing medical drugs; 7) The career of a physician (especially at the court of an emperor) could not always be successful. He could be expelled, forced to flee to a foreign country, or murdered.
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16 weeks
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