Monday 17 May 2021

A regimen for the well; A Regimen for Health, Hippocrates

 Why you might read A Regimen for Health


A Regimen for Health fills the gap of what a healthy person should be doing to stay well. It takes Hippocrates philosophy and spreads it into preventative medicine.

In my Self Education project, it fills exactly that gap. As well as giving further insight into what Hippocrates saw as the health person. 


Content of A Regimen for Health

This book details what should be done on a daily and seasonal basis to stay in good health. Hippocrates starts with the seasons. He states that in the winter little water should be taken and the food dry. The transition between season should be done gently. The change between dry and wet in winter and summer respectively.
He then moves on to differences in the state of one's body makes. Giving different recommendations for young and old and fat and thin. As well as hard and soft. 
His recommendations stay entirely around types of food and drink. He also includes the frequency of meals. Finally, he details how to lose and gain weight. As well as what type of exercise should be done.

Reflections on A Regimen for Health

Today we have our own ideas around what is health. Both to do what is healthy to eat and drink as well as what exercise. So it should not be surprising that Hippocrates had his own ideas of what would keep people well. He covers a fair bit of ground given the length of this text. The interesting thing is that he does not really stop and explain his reasoning. This is a little against his normal tendencies. 

What others have to say about A Regimen for Health

"Disease is not an entity, but a fluctuating condition of the patient’s body, a battle between the substance of disease and the natural self-healing tendency of the body." From Excellence Reporter

"He considered that the habits and environment in which a person was, influenced the illnesses that he contracted." From Life persona

Comparisons with other texts


This is the antithesis of Hippocrates work Regimen in Acute Diseases. Yet it covers a lot of the same ground. With directions about eating and drinking being the centre of both works. 

It also relates to The Science of Medicine. It is a continuation of the idea that everything can be discovered in its best form. In this case, it is the same ideas applied to how to stay healthy.

Conclusion

This short work covers what to eat and when for the best health. It expands into more specifics like if you are thin or fat. We have looked at how it is a continuation of the idea of Medicine as a science. As well as how it complements and contrasts the Regimen in Acute Diseases. But in all, it is just what it says a Regimen for Health.

Have you read A Regimen for Health? If so what did you think of it? 

 
Want to read A Regimen for Health but haven't? Please leave me a comment and let me know why you want to read it.


Hopefully, this post inspires you to take the time to look into it on your own journey of Self Education.

Get a copy of A Regimen for Health.


Monday 10 May 2021

A basic overview; The Nature of Man, Hippocrates

 Why you might read the Nature of Man


This text is put together for a more general audience. As such it does not expect any prior knowledge. This makes it rather informative as to what Hippocrates expected people to know. This is of course in regards to the subject of Medicine.

In my Self Education Project, it serves to inform my understanding of the texts around it. As well as add to my understanding of bloodletting.

Content of the Nature of Man


This short book is the transcript of a speech given at a debate. It starts by refuting the idea that man is made of one element. Whether it be Earth, Fire, Air or Water. Or if it is Yellow Bile, Black Bile, Phlegm or Blood. Instead, Hippocrates proposes that man is made of all four of Yellow Bile, Black Bile, Phlegm and Blood. He continues on to say that each of the four has its season of the greatest amount in the body. For example, winter brings an increase in Phlegm and so on through the seasons. Having made his point he moves on to the placement of blood vessels in the body. He details six and for each of the six gives the place where they should be cut for bloodletting. He finishes with some general information about when to change the regime. He contrasts this with when to make only small changes. He also details the difference between an epidemic and the outbreak of many sicknesses. 

Reflections on the Nature of Man


This text contains the most detailed instructions for bloodletting that we have seen. Yet we still do not have any idea what sort of illness this should be used for. It is clear that Hippocrates must think this is common knowledge. He has yet to explain it in the scientific way he has laid out everything else.

While what he thinks the body is made of is outdated now. It is inline with understanding at the time. Also, the idea that man is all of those things is a step forward in understanding both the physical nature of man. As well as the nature of cures and sickness.

What others have to say about the Nature of Man

 Health is a harmonious balance of the Four Humors.  Disease results from their disharmony and imbalance.  The physician's job is to restore health by correcting the imbalance and restoring harmony to the humors. From Greek Medicine 

Comparisons with other texts


Regime of Acute Diseases is also vague on the use of bloodletting. There we see it as a side note in some of the treatments. While in this work it is detailed a little more as to where to cut but not when to cut.

This is the first time Hippocrates has seriously gone into the four humors. But his analysis and exposition follow his scientific mindset. He sets down this idea in The Science of Medicine.

Conclusion

While this book is back to basics. It still provides us with unique information around how Hippocrates saw the four humors. He also gives quite a bit of detail on the circulatory system. He finishes the book with a discussion on treating Epidemics verses treating an outbreak of different diseases. We have looked at how others have characterised his view of the humors. As well as how we are slowly getting a better picture of bloodletting.

Have you read The Nature of Man? If so what did you think of it? 

 
Want to read The Nature of Man but haven't? Please leave me a comment and let me know why you want to read it.


Hopefully, this post inspires you to take the time to look into it on your own journey of Self Education.

Get a copy of The Nature of Man.

Monday 3 May 2021

More biblical plays and a morality play; Everyman and Medieval Miracle Plays(11-16), Various Unknown

 Why you might read the Miracle Plays


The Miracle plays are a snapshot of how Medieval England saw the stories of the Bible.  I am just reading a collection of them rather than each version. This makes them great to compare how Christianity was understood across time, even if they are not directly about doctrine. The Everyman Play expands this to include how Medieval England saw salvation and the death of the Christian.

For my Self Education project, they fill this role. They allow for a greater understanding of the way in which faith was a part of everyday life in medieval England. This will be important when I get to read more of the church fathers. As a narrative, they show a stage in the development of the play in the English speaking world.


Stories of the Miracle Plays(11-16)

The Crucifixion
This play covers the soldiers at the crucifixion. Their dialogue as they nail Christ to the cross and lift the cross into its position is most of the content of the play. There is the occasional interlude of Christ speaking, though it is to God not to the soldiers. 

The Harrowing of Hell
This starts with a group introducing themselves in hell. This includes people like Adam and David. Then Satan skites that Jesus is coming to hell. When Jesus arrives however he opens the gates and rescues those we have been introduced to. 
The next scene is in heaven. We are introduced to those who have never been to hell like Elijah and the thief on the cross.
The final scene is back in hell as Satan reestablishes control and welcomes new sinners.

The Resurrection
The play starts with a devout centurion telling Pilate and the head priests that Jesus will rise from the dead. Pilate and company then decide to have the tomb guarded. They send 4 soldiers to guard the tomb. But they fall asleep. Some women of Jesus' followers come to see the body but it is gone. An angel appears to them and tells them he has risen and is gone. 
The soldiers see the empty tomb and decide to tel pilate and the head priests that he rose. The priests pay them to say they were overwhelmed by force and the body stolen.

The Judgement
The play starts with God laying out human creation and fall, as well as redemption through Christ. The angels then go out with trumpets to start the judgement and raise the dead. the devils prepare for more people. Christ sits in judgment and separates the good from the bad. The play paraphrases Christ's comments. These comments are around when I was in need you feed me, clothed me etc. For the Good, he sends them on to eternal bliss and for the Bad, he sends them to hell. 

Everyman
The everyman play starts with Death visiting Everyman. He tells him he has come to his time of reckoning. He laments this and turns to his friends but they desert him. He tries again with his family but they also desert him. He tries his goods but they cannot be taken with him. He turns to good deeds but she is sick. she calls knowledge to him and he takes Everyman to confession. After confession, Good deeds is well and companies him the rest of the way. Knowledge then calls in Beauty, Strength, Discretion and his Five senses to join them. They proceed to the priest for the Lord's supper (communion). Then Everyman comes to his death and Beauty, Strength, Discretion and his five senses all fail him and leave. As does Knowledge and he is left with Good Deeds. He is taken to Jesus in heaven for his accounting.

The Death of Pilate
This Apocraphyal play covers Pilates death at the hands of a converted Tiberius Caesar. The Emperor is sick with leprosy and sends to Pilate for Jesus. He believes the prophet can heal him. His messenger arrives and Pilate sends him out looking for Jesus. He stumbles upon Veronica who tells him that Jesus is dead. He laments but she tells him that she might be able to heal the Emperor. She expects to do so using a covering that Jesus used. She is taken to the emperor and he is healed. The emperor declares Jesus his Lord. Veronica asks him to take vengeance on Pilate for Jesus death and he agrees. He sends executioners to retrieve Pilate. Once Pilate is in his presence he is rather slippery. But eventually, the Emperor gets his cloak, which was worn by Jesus. He sends him to the dungeon to await trial and death. Before this can happen Pilate kills himself. The emperor orders him buried but the body won't stay in the ground. He then has it cast into the river but the river starts killing people. So he has him taken to sea and cast into the depths. The devil then takes hold of the body and his soul into hell. 

Reflections on the Miracle Plays (11-16)

The Crucifixion
The soldiers in this play seem to spend a lot more time talking. Compared to how much they spend actually at the task of putting Jesus on the cross. The interplays in between them though keep it interesting. One of them even seems to think of himself more as an overseer. 

Jesus' few lines are again more indicative of what was known later than at the time. He speaks of saving the sins of the world. We don't hear about that biblically until after the resurrection. 

The Harrowing of Hell

This entire play is only hinted at in the bible. I found it interesting that the saints of the past were in hell. I had thought that this would have been within the time frame where purgatory was a doctrine of the church. Purgatory was the in-between place where the dead went before the judgement. Rather than straight to hell to be rescued by christ after his death. Purgatory is no longer a doctrine of the church. There was little in the bible that even hinted at it.

The Resurrection
The fact that it is a centurion at the start that warns them that Jesus will rise is interesting. In the bible, they are just aware of this fact without any particular warning. This telling is rather close to the account in the bible. But we do not see Jesus appearing to the women as we do in at least one of the gospels. 

The Judgement
The recap of the history that has led up to this point, allows this play to be stand-alone. Rather than relying on the audiences prior knowledge.

The actual judgment portion fit very well with scripture and is even paraphrasing it closely in places.

Everyman
The random reference to Jupiter in the middle of the play was a little surprising. To find a god's names from the Roman pantheon used to describe the Christian God was just strange.

It was interesting how his goods did not just desert him but also admitted that they had distracted him from God. While he was still living he loved them more than God. This is the only specifics of his sins that is gone into in the play. For the rest of the play, he just refers to his sins as a whole.

The Death of Pilate
At the very end of the play, three devils discuss the body and soul of Pilate. These are named Beelzebub, Satan and Lucifer. This is interesting because these are generally accepted as three different names of the same being. Rather than as three devils.

In the real world, Tiberius was never a follower of Jesus and instead was the predecessor to Caligula. Caligula was one of the persecuting emperors.

What others have to say about the Miracle Plays(11-16)

From Britannica about Everyman "this short play (about 900 lines) is more than an allegorical sermon because vivid characterization gives it dramatic energy"

From York Mystery plays about The judgement. "This was both an act of worship and ‘community theatre’ for the entertainment of locals and visitors alike, honouring God,"

Comparisons to other texts

Four of six of the plays are based around the Christian Bible. They carry in how close to the biblical account they come. One is almost exact while another is very much an interpolation of the text.

Everyman is rather different from all the other Miracle plays. For starters, it is a morality play rather than a biblical one. Also, it is a lot longer than the other plays. Everyman is more about how the Christian lives their life and comes to judgment. This contrasts with the biblical stories of the other plays.

Conclusion

The Medieval miracle plays take us on a journey through the Christian Bible. In doing so they often take liberties and interpolate extra content into the narrative. They have a tendency to be written with current knowledge in mind rather than thinking about what the characters would have known. This leads to some odd statements about Christ before he is even born from characters such as Moses.
The Everyman play is different both in its content and its length. It deals with more of how Christians should live and how they receive salvation through the sacraments.

Have you read The Miracle Plays? If so what did you think of it? 

 
Want to read The Miracle Plays but haven't? Please leave me a comment and let me know why you want to read it.


Hopefully, this post inspires you to take the time to look into it on your own journey of Self Education.

Get a copy of The Miracle Plays.

Monday 26 April 2021

Dreams as a diagnostic tool; Dreams, Hippocrates

 Why you might read Dreams?

Dreams is a quick look into the idea that dreams are indicative of health. 

In my Self Education project, it serves to round out the corpus as well as being an interesting dive into early medical practices and what they thought was important.



The content of Dreams


Dreams details the meaning of dreams as it applies to health and illness. Hippocrates states that for religious readings go and see religious people. Most of the prescriptions are very similar to reduce food and increase exercise. This is only when the sign of the dreams is bad. It is not the first time we have seen food decreased. In this case, it is to be slowly increased over five days. This is the first time we have seen exercise prescribed.

Reflections on Dreams


It is interesting that Hippocrates does not see walking as exercise. Instead, he sees it as a thing to be done after the exercise has been done. He mainly prescribes running. He does differentiate between running around a track and heading out on a trail. He prescribes each at different times.

Most interesting is that Hippocrates thinks that dreams can diagnose health problems at all. He knows that they are the subconscious, though he calls it the soul. I guess it is an extrapolation on the dreams have spiritual significance idea. We now know that while dreams can tell us some things if they recur or themes recur. Mostly they are our subconscious processing things of the mind not diseases of the body.



What others have to say about Dreams

"Perhaps this was the first time a man came to realize that dreams do not have a divine source, and may come from human thoughts." From the sleep blog

Comparisons with other texts


Like Aphorisms, Dreams is a book of diagnostics. Aphorisms deals with almost every situation that is not dreams. Dreams fills in this gap.

The regimens we see in dreams are very different from what we see in Epidemics. In Epidemics, we are dealing with life-threatening illness'. By contrast, Dreams is almost preventative as there are no physical symptoms as yet.

Conclusion

Dreams is a book of Dream interpretations. Hippocrates links dreams with physical health and makes treatments based on them. Most of these treatments are similar when the dream is negative. This book compliments what is covered in Aphorisms but is not as robust.


Have you read Dreams? If so what did you think of it? 

 
Want to read Dreams but haven't? Please leave me a comment and let me know why you want to read it.


Hopefully, this post inspires you to take the time to look into it on your own journey of Self Education.

Get a copy of Dreams.

Monday 19 April 2021

Disease of the mind; The Sacred Disease, Hippocrates

 Why you might read The Sacred Disease?


The Sacred Disease is Hippocrates continuing to insist that medicine be a science. It carries on the trend previously set by works like Science in medicine. 

In my Self Education project, it serves to continue expanding my understanding of Hippocrates minds set toward medicine. As well as building on the foundations of his other works.

Content of the Sacred Disease


The sacred disease seems to be any disease acting on the brain. From Epileptic fits to strokes. From madness to sleepwalking. Hippocrates spends the book both describing these ailments and rebutting those who would call them Sacred. He describes them as standard diseases that have physical causes. Even if some of those causes have been since proven wrong. He calls those who treat them as sacred, charletons and faith healers. He tries to prove that the gods coming over someone would produce a blessing, not a curse. He points out that these so-called healers also use the basic principles of medicine to help the patient. 

Reflections on the Sacred Disease


Hippocrates idea of how air enters the body is a bit surprising. He thinks that air goes first to the brain, then to the stomach and then to the lungs. Of course, we know that now not to be true. His reasoning though is interesting. He thinks that air is cooling and so does not go to the lungs until it is warm. He has got the order of most important organs right though. His areas are those the body will priorities if we are short.

He also spends some time discussing the blood vessels and how they proceed through the body to the brain. He does not have a heart centric view like we do now. Instead says that one side comes from the liver and the other the spleen.

What others have to say about the Sacred Disease

"a Hippocratic inquiry into the so-called ‘sacred disease’ of epilepsy" From Portland State University

Comparisons with other Texts


Like Regimen in Acute Diseases Hippocrates does spend some time on how to treat the diseases of the mind. It is not his primary focus though, that is disputing Faith healers.

In some ways, it is a subset of what is discussed in the Science of Medicine. Both try to show the given diseases as having natural causes.


Conclusion

Hippocrates spends most of the book debating against those who would call these diseases sacred. That is from the gods. Once he is done with that he moves on to what he believes are the causes of these diseases. He closes with some discussion on how to treat them. This is an extension on his previous works and again shows us his focus on the science of medicine.

Have you read The Sacred Disease? If so what did you think of it? 

 
Want to read The Sacred Disease but haven't? Please leave me a comment and let me know why you want to read it.


Hopefully, this post inspires you to take the time to look into it on your own journey of Self Education.

Get a copy of The Sacred Disease.

Monday 12 April 2021

Pithy diagnostics; Aphorisms, Hippocrates

 Why you might read Aphorisms?


Aphorism isn't what you expect from the title. Instead, it is a series of diagnostic, treatment and prognosis statements. As such it has much to teach about illness and how it was treated in Ancient Greece. It may even be the most prescriptive text in the Corpus.

In my Self Education project, this hold pride of place in Hippocrates works. It is not the most well known by any stretch. Yet it covers the most ground about treatment and prognosis.

Content of Aphorisms


The book is broken into seven sections. These sections cover slightly different topics, from weather effects to age effects. Overall the book covers what symptoms mean in different illnesses. What symptoms mean death and which mean life. As well as how to treat given diseases with given symptoms. It gives specific instructions on how to proceed depending on symptoms. While it is presented as a series of Aphorisms the Aphorisms often flow together into a series of related comments.


Reflections on Aphorisms

Like I said in the content section, this book does not feel like a series of Aphorisms. Rather it is a much more useful medical text. It spends all its time explaining sicknesses and treatments. None of these Aphorisms are easily quotable as most require the context of those around them.


What others have to say about Aphorisms

"The Aphorisms are the most important works of the Hippocratic Corpus." From euphoriatric


Comparisons with other texts

Compared to the other works of the Hippocratic Corpus. This text is the most straight forward diagnostic we have seen. In Epidemics, we see diseases named with there seasons. As well as how individuals symptoms went. By comparison in this work, we have whole lists of what a symptom means for an illness. As well as how to treat given illnesses.

Proverbs in the Bible is another work of Aphorisms. Where proverbs can be quoted and used individually. These Aphorisms need each other for context.

Conclusion

This is an important diagnostic and treatment text and we should not get put off by the title. It is instead a treasure trove of medicine from the classical greek times. It is roughly grouped into sections of ideas. It covers diagnosis and treatment, as well as prognosis. These are covered in the general sense rather than in case studies.

Have you read Aphorisms? If so what did you think of it? 

 
Want to read Aphorisms but haven't? Please leave me a comment and let me know why you want to read it.


Hopefully, this post inspires you to take the time to look into it on your own journey of Self Education.

Get a copy of Aphorisms.

Monday 5 April 2021

More plays from the Bible; Everyman and Medieval Miracle Plays(6-10), Various Unknown

 Why might you read the Miracle Plays?


The Miracle plays are a snapshot of how Medieval England saw the stories of the Bible.  I am just reading a collection of them rather than each version. This makes them great to compare how Christianity was understood across time, even if they are not directly about doctrine. 

For my Self Education project, they fill this role. They allow for a greater understanding of the way in which faith was a part of everyday life in medieval England. This will be important when I get to read more of the church fathers. As a narrative, they show a stage in the development of the play in the English speaking world.


Stories of the Miracle plays 6-10

Abraham and Issac


The play starts with Abraham praying for Issac his young son. We then see Issac also praying. There is a short scene in heaven where God tells his angels he will test Abraham. the test is to see whether he loves God or his son more.

Angels are then sent to instruct Abraham to go to the mountain and sacrifice Issac. While he prays it isn't so he complies. He takes Issac with wood for the fire up to the mountain.

Issac finds out he is to be the sacrifice and starts pleading with his father for his life. Abraham tells him he has been instructed by God to sacrifice him. Issac accepts his fate. Abraham dithers over doing the deed but eventually swings for the kill. He is stopped by an angel and is relieved. Issac asks why he has stopped and Abraham explains.

They sacrifice the ram God has arranged and descend the mountain praising God.

The Annunciation

The play opens with a Paraphrase of Isaiah's prophecy of the messiah. It continues with Mary being told she will have a child. And her marvelling about not having been with a man. And that the child would be from the holy spirit.

She then tells Joseph she's pregnant and he knows its not his. He will not listen and storms out. He is told by an angel and comes back home to Mary. The play finishes with them on the road to Bethlehem.

The Second Shepherds' Pagent


This play starts with the shepherds lamenting there state in life and lack of warm clothes. They are then joined by a man who is known to them. While they sleep he steals a sheep. He returns before they wake and bids them farewell. 

They then find there is a sheep missing and go to confront him in his house. They find him with his bedridden wife and are told she just gave birth. They go to leave as they cannot find any sign of the sheep. As they go to leave they realise they haven't seen the baby and given it gifts so they return and try and do so. When they do they see their sheep instead of a baby.

The shepherds return to the fields for another night. They meet an angel who tells them of Jesus birth in Bethlehem. So they go and visit the child and glorify him on arrival.

Herod the Great

The play starts with a messenger singing the praises of Herod. Herod enters and is angry that the wise men have gone without telling him who the child is. The child who will be king. So he ascertains the child approximate age. He then sends out his knights to kill every male child under the age of 2. When they return he rewards them well.

The Woman taken in Adultery


At the beginning we see a scribe and a Pharisee discussing Jesus. They focus on how to trap him into hypocrisy. They do so by presenting him with a woman caught in adultery. If he says kill he is a hypocrite because he has been preaching mercy. If he sends her away they have him breaking the law of Moses. Instead, he asks the man without sin to throw the stones. The men each leave bemoaning their sins. The woman then asks Jesus about it and he says she is free to go. She magnifies God for his mercy. 

Reflections on the Miracle plays 6-10

Abraham and Issac

Issac being described as Abrahams young son for this play. In the Bible, he is not described as such and it is common to describe him as full-grown today.

The play also adds Issac knowing he is to be sacrificed and accepting that. Again this is an extrapolation from the biblical text.

It is interesting to see Abraham dithering so much about the sacrifice. It brings some humanity to the story.

The Annunciation

It finishes in a rather interesting place, with them on the road. I would have expected it would either not add that part or go all the way to the birth of Jesus.

The play tells the story more like Mary and Joseph are already married and living together. Rather than being engaged like the Bible story. 

The Second Shepherds' Pagent

This play spends most of its time in the arguments between the shepherds and the stolen sheep. The visiting angel and baby Jesus take second best. This is interesting because it is a large departure from just a scriptural tale.

The missing sheep bit doesn't really end. They find the sheep but there is no talk of taking it back or of punishing the thief.

Herod the Great


Herod would not have had knights but rather warriors. Seems a bit nitpicky but knights were a thing of the middle ages. I must remember though that in the middle ages the idea that the past was different from now had not yet occurred to the scholars much less the laity.

Also, the messenger in the start makes Herod out to be larger and more powerful than he really was. His renowned would not have gone out to Syria and Greece.

The Woman taken in Adultery

It is interesting that the scribe and Pharisee both call him Jesu. We would now call him Jesus. The Editor calls him Jesus in the notes and when named as speaking. 

The plotting of the Pharisee is seen explicitly in the play. By comparison, the bible text just says they wanted to test him.

What others have to say about the Miracle plays 6-10

About Abraham and Issac enotes says "This miracle play does not specify where Abraham lives, apart from his early statement that he understands his home to be a gift from God."

Comparisons to other texts


In the earlier Miracle Plays, we see many things said that would only be true post the early church. Things like praying to the saints or referencing Christ. This was done in plays based on the old testament. In these Miracle plays this is still happening, though it is a little less jarring.

Compared to the Bible these stories have all been embellished. This is not necessarily a bad thing. But we do see one play go off on a tangent and be more about the tangent than the bible story. 

Conclusion

These plays have covered both old and new testament stories. These have ranged from Abraham and Issac to Jesus' ministry.  We have looked at how there are odd references that are out of their time. This is especially true in the old testament stories. Finally, they have said fairly true to the Biblical accounts but have added details. In one case this goes a little astray but it comes back to the point eventually.

Have you read The Miracle Plays? If so what did you think of it? 

 
Want to read The Miracle Plays but haven't? Please leave me a comment and let me know why you want to read it.


Hopefully, this post inspires you to take the time to look into it on your own journey of Self Education.

Get a copy of The Miracle Plays.

No longer content to be just a science major

Beginnings This all started in 2014 when, in a fit of frustration at my lack of knowledge, understanding and general grasp of western cultu...