Medieval Pharmacotherapy - Continuity and Change

Case Studies from Ibn Sīnā and Some of His Late Medieval Commentators

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The development of medical drug therapy in medieval times can be seen as an interplay between tradition and innovation. This book follows the changes in the therapy from the Arabic medicine of Ibn Sīnā (Avicenna) to Latin medical scholasticism, aiming to trace both the continuity and the development in the theory and practice of medieval drug therapy. In this delicate balance between change and continuity a crucial role was played by the scientific community through critical rejection or acceptance of new ideas. The drug choices were in most cases rational also from the point of view of contemporary medical theory. The method used in the book for studying these choices could promote the development of a novel methodology for historical ethnopharmacology.

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Chapter Six. Cough
Pages: 225–282
Appendix 1
Pages: 339–341
Appendix 2
Pages: 342–350
Appendix 3
Pages: 351–353
Appendix 4
Pages: 354–356
Appendix 5
Pages: 357–358
Appendix 6
Pages: 359–362
Appendix 7
Pages: 363–364
Appendix 8
Pages: 365–366
Appendix 9
Pages: 367–369
Appendix 10
Pages: 370–371
Appendix 14
Pages: 375–377
Appendix 15
Pages: 378–381
Appendix 16
Pages: 382–383
Appendix 17
Pages: 384–395
Appendix 18
Pages: 396–420
Appendix 19
Pages: 421–425
Appendix 20
Pages: 426–429
Appendix 21
Pages: 430–437
Appendix 22
Pages: 438–446
Appendix 23
Pages: 447–448
Appendix 24
Pages: 449–462
Appendix 25
Pages: 463–466
Appendix 26
Pages: 467–471
Appendix 27
Pages: 472–476
Appendix 28
Pages: 477–482
Appendix 29
Pages: 483–495
Appendix 30
Pages: 496–497
Appendix 31
Pages: 498–506
Appendix 32
Pages: 507–509
Appendix 33
Pages: 510–530
Appendix 34
Pages: 531–564
Appendix 35
Pages: 565–572
Appendix 36
Pages: 573–576
Appendix 37
Pages: 577–590
Appendix 38
Pages: 591–601
Appendix 40
Pages: 603–610
Appendix 41
Pages: 611–612
Helena Paavilainen, Ph.D. (2003) in History of Medicine, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, is Researcher in the Hadassah Medical School in Jerusalem. Her main research interests are ethnopharmacology and history of pharmacology, especially the Hebrew, Arabic and Latin traditions.
Readers with an interest in history (historians of medicine; historians of pharmacology; medievalists), cultural and cross-cultural studies (medical anthropologists; ethnopharmacologists) or medicine/pharmacology (medical and pharmacological researchers).
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