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65:
as applied to Galen sought to establish better texts of his writings, free from later accretions from Arabic-derived texts and texts of medieval Latin. This search for better texts was influential in the early 16th century. Historians use the term
123:"Learned medicine" in this sense was also an academic discipline. It was taught in European universities, and its faculty had the same status as those of theology and law. Learned medicine is typically contrasted with the
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period, when it experienced the tension between the texts derived from ancient Greek medicine, particularly by followers of the teachings attributed to
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conceded that in terms of symptoms it could not be identified as known to the ancients; but denied that novel diseases could exist.
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of the period, but it has been argued that the distinction is not rigorous. Its
Galenic teachings were challenged successively by
506:
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157:, in particular, advocated the line that it was a novel disease, not described in the traditional authorities.
96:, on which it was built, and instead it was based more on the diagnosis and treatment of particular diseases.
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92:). Its interests were less in the abstract reasoning of medieval medicine and in the tradition of
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423:
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342:
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Melancholy, Medicine and
Religion in Early Modern England: Reading 'The Anatomy of Melancholy'
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88:, a genre of Latin texts based on description of diseases and their treatment (
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and abstract thought on health and illness. The tradition from Galen valued
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and the establishment of scientific societies. The
Renaissance principle of
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Logic, Signs and Nature in the
Renaissance: The Case of Learned Medicine
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Natural
Particulars: Nature and the Disciplines in Renaissance Europe
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Around the year 1500 an issue for learned medicine was the nature of
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Health, Disease and
Society in Europe, 1500-1800: A Sourcebook
476:
History, Medicine, and the
Traditions of Renaissance Learning
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to define this textual activity, pursued for its own sake.
100:, covering diagnosis and therapies, was contrasted with
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Knowledge and
Practice in English Medicine, 1550-1680
249:
Stephen Pender; Nancy S. Struever (1 November 2012).
222:Don Bates; Donald George Bates (2 November 1995).
116:concepts, but from the 15th century the status of
479:. University of Michigan Press. pp. 30–1.
422:. Manchester University Press. pp. 38–9.
392:The Oxford Handbook of the History of Medicine
228:. Cambridge University Press. pp. 160–1.
225:Knowledge and the Scholarly Medical Traditions
416:Peter Elmer; Ole Peter Grell (9 March 2004).
201:. Cambridge University Press. pp. 84–7.
8:
252:Rhetoric and Medicine in Early Modern Europe
198:Medicine and Society in Early Modern Europe
449:. Cambridge University Press. p. 34.
368:. Cambridge University Press. p. 69.
282:. Cambridge University Press. p. 79.
33:is the European medical tradition in the
309:Western Medicine: An Illustrated History
255:. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 142.
395:. Oxford University Press. p. 79.
312:. Oxford University Press. p. 74.
187:
176:Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns
7:
77:Portrait of a Renaissance physician
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443:Andrew Wear (16 November 2000).
276:Mary Ann Lund (7 January 2010).
84:Learned medicine centred on the
389:Mark Jackson (25 August 2011).
27:Early modern European tradition
195:Mary Lindemann (1 July 2010).
51:Renaissance humanistic studies
1:
362:Ian Maclean (23 April 2007).
139:Learned medicine and syphilis
18:Early Modern learned medicine
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341:. MIT Press. p. 351.
120:in learned medicine rose.
45:vs. the newer theories of
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76:
155:Alessandro Benedetti
149:, now identified as
507:History of medicine
171:Medical Renaissance
104:, which dealt with
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47:natural philosophy
486:978-0-472-11602-7
456:978-0-521-55827-3
429:978-0-7190-6737-2
402:978-0-19-954649-7
375:978-0-521-03627-6
333:Anthony Grafton;
319:978-0-19-924813-1
289:978-0-521-19050-3
262:978-1-4094-7105-9
235:978-0-521-49975-0
208:978-0-521-42592-6
159:Niccolo Leoniceno
151:venereal syphilis
16:(Redirected from
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129:Paracelsianism
79:Leonhart Fuchs
49:spurred on by
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35:Early Modern
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55:Reformation
39:Hippocrates
112:less than
106:physiology
61:ad fontes
501:Category
473:(2007).
306:(2001).
165:See also
118:practica
114:theorica
110:practica
102:theorica
98:Practica
94:Avicenna
90:nosology
86:practica
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182:Notes
43:Galen
481:ISBN
451:ISBN
424:ISBN
397:ISBN
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343:ISBN
314:ISBN
284:ISBN
257:ISBN
230:ISBN
203:ISBN
131:and
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