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How did Medicine develop in the Ancient World

19 bytes removed, 03:11, 19 February 2016
Greece
==Greece==
Most of our knowledge of ancient Greek medicine derives from Hippocrates and his work developed between 470-370 BC. While some of his work, such as the famous ‘’’’Corpus’’’’"Corpus, " were likely influenced by earlier Mesopotamian and Egyptian medicine, one clear contribution, whether it was Hippocrates or one of his associates, is the establishment of medicine as a distinct area that began to be more separate from religion.<ref>For information on the contributions of Hippocrates, see: Kosak, Jennifer Clarke. 2004. ''Heroic Measures: Hippocratic Medicine in the Making of Euripidean Tragedy''. Studies in Ancient Medicine, v. 30. Leiden ; Boston: Brill.</ref> Although we had seen hints of this in Mesopotamia and Egypt, we know by this time it began to be truly studied for its own benefit rather than as part of religious beliefs, although philosophy and unsubstantiated ideas continued to be very influential, such as Humorism (i.e., belief that four fluids in the body control health).
==Summay==

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