Chapter 4 Galen on Hands and the Teleology of Work
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Eijk, P. van der (2020). Galen on Soul, Mixture and Pneuma. In: B. Inwood and J. Warren. Body and Soul in Hellenistic Philosophy. Cambridge, pp. 62–88.
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Rocca, J. (2018). Galen and Middle Platonism: The Case of the Demiurge. In: H. Tarrant, D. Layne, D. Baltzly and F. Renaud, eds., Brill’s Companion to the Reception of Plato in Antiquity. Leiden, pp. 206–222.
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Rosen, R.M. (2016). Towards a Hippocratic Anthropology: On Ancient Medicine and the Origins of Humans. In: L. Dean-Jones and R.M. Rosen, eds., Ancient Concepts of the Hippocratic. Leiden, pp. 242–257.
Schiefsky, M. (2007). Galen’s Teleology and Functional Explanation. In: D. Sedley, ed., Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 33. Oxford, pp. 369–400.
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Tieleman, T. (2009). Galen and the Stoics, or: the Art of Not Naming. In: C. Gill, T. Whitmarsh and J. Wilkins, eds., Galen and the World of Knowledge. Cambridge, pp. 282–299.
Whishaw, I.Q. and Karl, J.M. (2019). The Evolution of the Hand as a Tool in Feeding Behavior: The Multiple Motor Channel Theory of Hand Use. In: V. Bels and I. Whishaw, eds., Feeding in Vertebrates. Evolution, Morphology, Behavior, Biomechanics. Springer, pp. 159–186.
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