What Is Hippocrates?

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Arguably one of the most prestigious names in medicine to date, Hippocrates is often referred to as the father of western medicine. The work that he did during his lifetime, particularly the founding of the Hippocratic School of Medicine, was revolutionary to the field, going as far as getting medicine recognized as its own distinct discipline, rather than continuing to allow people to view it as a sub-field of disciplines such as philosophy.

While not much is known about the early life of Hippocrates, historians have agreed that he was most likely born in the year 460 on the Greek island of Kos. According to Soranus, the first historian to write a biography about Hippocrates during the second century, Hippocrates most likely studied medicine under his father and grandfather, both of which were practitioners of some sort. It is said that he traveled often throughout his life, teaching and practicing medicine. Hippocrates is even referenced in two of Plato's dialogues in which Plato stated that Hippocrates felt a comprehensive understanding of the body was the only way to properly practice medicine. While it is not known for sure where he died, it is believed that he was either 83, 85, or 90 when he died and most likely passed away in Larissa. …show more content…

At the time, most healers directly associated medicine with philosophy. Because of this, superstition played a big role in the medical field, with both good and bad occurrences being attributed to the will of the gods. When Hippocrates proposed that this may not be the case at all, it split the Greek medical community in two. While his theory did prove to be correct in the sense that natural causes are often the reason for disease, a fair amount of the anatomy and physiology that Hippocrates referenced has been deemed incorrect by modern

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