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bib6337 (22 / November / 2024)

Darrera modificació: 2018-09-20
Bases de dades: Sciència.cat

Siraisi, Nancy G., Medicine and the Italian Universities, 1250-1600, Leiden, E. J. Brill (Education and society in the Middle Ages and Renaissance, 12), 2001, x + 390 pp.

Resum
This volume collects essays published in the last 20 years. They deal with medicine in the university world of thirteenth to sixteenth century Italy, discussing both the internal academic milieu of teaching and learning and its relation to the lively urban social, economic, and cultural context in which medieval and Renaissance Italian university medicine grew up. Topics covered include the complex interaction of continuity and change in the transition from scholastic to humanistic medicine; humanist presentations of medical lives; the activities of physicians who moved among the worlds of academic learning, princely courts, and city life; the teaching of practical medicine; the relations of medical and surgical learning and practice; and the influence on medical writing of a variety of elements in the broader surrounding intellectual culture.

Table of Contents:
* Acknowledgements
* Introduction 1
* 1. The Medical Learning of Albertus Magnus 11
* 2. Siraisi (1994), "How to write a Latin book on ..." 37
* 3. Siraisi (2001), "Avicenna and the teaching of ..." 63
* 4. Two Models of Medical Culture, Pietro d'Abano and Taddeo Alderotti 79
* 5. Siraisi (1976), "The 'libri morales' in the ..." 100
* 6. The Music of Pulse 114
* 7. Siraisi (2001), "Medical Scholasticism and the ..." 140-156
* 8. The Physician's Task: Medical Reputations in Humanist Collective Biographies 157
* 9. Renaissance Critiques of Medicine, Physiology, and Anatomy 184
* 10. Renaissance Readers and Avicenna's Organization of Medical Knowledge 203
* 11. 'Remarkable' Disease, 'Remarkable' Cures, and Personal Experience in Renaissance Medical Texts 226
* 12. Vesalius and the Reading of Galen's Teleology 253
* 13. Vesalius and Human Diversity in De humani corporis fabrica 287
* 14. Giovanni Argenterio: Medical Innovation, Princely Patronage and Academic Controversy 328
* 15. Signs and Evidence: Autopsy and Sanctity in Late Sixteenth-Century Italy 356
* Index 381
Matèries
Història de la medicina
Universitats i ensenyament
Notes
Informació de l'editor
URL
http:/​/​books.google.com/​books?id=3c0Tn7PnVnYC​&lpg=P ...
What are the images?

The small images on the decorative ribbon correspond, from left to right, to the following documents: 1. James II orders the settlement of neighborhood disputes over an estate of the royal doctor Arnau de Vilanova in the city of Valencia. 1298 (ACA); 2. Contract between Guglielmo Neri de Santo Martino, a surgeon from Pisa, and the physician-surgeon from Majorca Pere Saflor, bachelor of medicine, to practise medicine and surgery under the latter’s direction, 1356 (ACM); 3. Valuation of the workshop of Guillem Metge, an apothecary from Barcelona, made by the apothecaries Miquel Tosell, Berenguer Duran and Vicenç Bonanat, for its sale to Llorenç Bassa, a fellow apothecary, 1364 (AHPB); 4. Peter III the Ceremonious regularizes the legal situation of Esteró, a Jewish female doctor from Vilafranca del Penedès, granting her an extraordinary license to practice medicine. 1384 (ACA); 5. Power of attorney of Margarida de Tornerons, a doctor in Prats de Molló and Vic, in order to recover the goods withheld from her by a third party in Vic, 1401 (ABEV); 6. Doctorate and teaching license of Narcís Solà, bachelor of medicine, issued by Bernat de Casaldòvol, doctor of medicine and chancellor of the Faculty of Medicine in Barcelona, 1526 (AHCB); and 7. Partnership between Joan Llunes and Joan Francesc Llunes, father and son, and Lluís Gual, the former’s son-in-law, surgeons of Caldes de Montbui, in order to practise the profession, 1579 (AHCB).