Skip to main content
Facilities Mobile homeCourses home
Detail

Ancient Greek and Roman Medicine: Bodies, Physicians, and Patients

CLA 231/HLS 231/GHP 331/HIS 231

1224
Info tab content
This course looks at the formation of a techne ("art" or "science") of medicine in fifth-century BCE Greece and debates about the theory and practice of healthcare in Greco-Roman antiquity. We look at early Greek medicine in relationship to established medical traditions in Egypt and Mesopotamia; medical discourses of human nature, gender, race, and the body; debates about the ethics of medical research; the relationship of the body to the mind; and the nature of "Greek" medicine as it travels to Alexandria, Rome and Baghdad. Readings drawn from primary sources as well as contemporary texts in medical humanities and bioethics.
Instructors tab content
Sections tab content

Section L01

Section P01

Section P02

Section P03

Section P04

Section P05