Literature DB >> 27328527

The Trouble with Opium. Taste, Reason and Experience in Late Galenic Pharmacology with Special Regard to the University of Leiden (1575-1625).

Saskia Klerk.   

Abstract

In the seventeenth century, the discrepancy between the taste of some drugs and their effects on the body was used to criticize Galenic medicine. In this paper, I argue that such contradictions were brought to light by the sixteenth-century study of drug properties within the Galenic tradition itself. Investigating how the taste of a drug corresponded to the effects it had on the body became a core problem for maintaining a medical practice that was both rational and effective. I discuss four physicians, connected to the University of Leiden, who attempted to understand drug properties, including taste, within a Galenic framework. The sixteenth-century discussions about the relationship between the senses, reason and experience, will help us understand the seventeenth-century criticism of Galenic medicine and the importance of discussions about materia medica for ideas regarding the properties of matter proposed in this period.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 27328527     DOI: 10.1163/15733823-00194p01

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Early Sci Med        ISSN: 1383-7427            Impact factor:   0.756


  1 in total

1.  Naked in the Old and the New World: Differences and Analogies in Descriptions of European and American herbae nudae in the Sixteenth Century.

Authors:  Lucie Čermáková; Jana Černá
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2018-03       Impact factor: 1.326

  1 in total

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