Hippocrates Collected Works I

Hippocrates Collected Works I
By Hippocrates
Edited by: W. H. S. Jones (trans.)

Cambridge Harvard University Press 1868


Digital Hippocrates Collection Table of Contents



PREFACE

GENERAL INTRODUCTION
   1. Greek Medicine and Hippocrates
   2. The Hippocratic Collection
   3. Means of Dating Hippocratic Works
   4. Plato's References to Hippocrates
   5. THE COMMENTATORS AND OTHER ANCIENT AUTHORITIES.
   Galen
   6. LIFE OF HIPPOCRATES.
   7. THE ASCLEPIADAE.
   8. THE DOCTRINE OF HUMOURS.
   9. CHIEF DISEASES MENTIONED IN THE HIPPOCRATIC COLLECTION.
   10. πολύς AND ὀλίγος IN THE PLURAL.
   11. THE IONIC DIALECT OF THE HIPPOCRATIC COLLECTION.
   12. MANUSCRIPTS.

ANCIENT MEDICINE
   INTRODUCTION
   ANCIENT MEDICINE
   APPENDIX

AIRS WATERS PLACES
   INTRODUCTION
   MSS. AND EDITIONS.
   AIRS WATERS PLACES

EPIDEMICS I AND III
   INTRODUCTION
   EPIDEMICS I
   EPIDEMICS III: THE CHARACTERS
   EPIDEMICS III
   SIXTEEN CASES

THE OATH
   Introduction
   OATH

PRECEPTS
   INTRODUCTION
   PRECEPTS

NUTRIMENT
   INTRODUCTION
   NUTRIMENT


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ANCIENT MEDICINE

INTRODUCTION

 [p. 4]

medicine thought little of the power of heat and cold in producing health or disease ; our author, however, rates them very low. Moreover, like the Pythagorean physician Alcmaeon, he holds that there is an indefinite number of "opposites," the harmony or crasis of which produces health. The historical Hippocrates is said to have reduced the number of the humours to four, although I can find no trace of this limitation to four in any treatise earlier than the one on the Nature of Man, which is not generally considered authentic.

It may be said that, were the external evidence stronger, the treatise would be accepted as an authentic work of Hippocrates.

Littré
i. pp. 294-310. Gomperz is inclined to support this view.
argues that the well-known passage in the Phaedrus,
270, C. D. Littré's discussion of the sentence τὸ τοίνυν περὶ φύς1εωσ2 σκόπει τί ποτε λέγει Ἱπποκράτης2 τε καὶ ὀρθὸς2 λόγος2, to show that it does not refer to any actual words of Hippocrates, is, of course, quite beside the mark. The sentence means "what H. and right reason mean by περὶ Φύς1εωσ2."
where "Hippocrates the Asclepiad" is mentioned as holding a theory that a knowledge of the human body is impossible without a knowledge of the universe--interpreted to mean an examination of the δύναμις2 (or δυνάμεις2) of a body according to its inter-relations with other things--refers to Chapter XX of the περὶ ἀρχαίης2 ἰητρικῆσ2, and not, as Galen maintains, to the treatise On the Nature of Man. Littré
pp. 314, 315.
also points out that a passage in our treatise
Chapter X.
is very similar to one in Regimen in Acute Diseases, the authenticity of which is undoubted.