Medieval Medicine And Religion

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How was Medine Connected with Religion around Middle Ages

Rongke Zhang (Lily) G12

Introduction

Medicine has long been developed for the sake of human health. From the beginning of human history with languages, the myths and legends about medicine have been told from mouth to mouth all over the world among all races and districts. All kinds of medical practices evolved around the world, treating patients in distinctive ways. Meanwhile, in many places, medical science had a long history combined with theology until very modern time. This essay will illustrate how medical science was connected with religion through analysis of medieval medicine study and history in medieval times, and how the current events affected their relationship.

Main …show more content…

However, in ancient times, these two subjects were closely connected, an even bounded to each other.

Medicine is a kind of science. Avicenna, the father of medical science, defined medicine in his book, the Canon of Medicine, that “Medicine is the science by which we learn the various states of the body; in health, when not in health; the means by which health is likely to be lost; and, when lost, is likely to be restored. In other words, it is the art whereby health is concerned and the art by which it is restored after being lost.”

Religion, on the other hand, according to Geertz, C. (1993), “is a cultural system of behaviors and practices, mythologies, world views, sacred texts, holy places, ethics, and societal organisation that relate humanity to what an anthropologist has called ‘an order of existence.’”

Though seem to be unrelated, medicine and religion was linked tightly due to various reasons.

In remote antiquity, many people believed that sickness was brought by devils. To recover from these diseases, they eventually believed in gods. Medical science, originated from the era of witch doctors, was superstitious. People practiced medicine, and meanwhile they practiced witch crafts to put medicine to good use. Because of these witch doctors, early medical science was usually closely related to …show more content…

Many simply placed their hopes in the church and God to heal all their sicknesses. Ideas about the origin and cure of disease were not purely secular, but were also based on a world view in which factors such as destiny, sin, and astral influences played as great a part as any physical cause. The efficacy of cures was similarly bound in the beliefs of patient and doctor rather than empirical evidence, so that remedia physicalia (physical remedies) were often subordinate to spiritual intervention. From the fifth century to the sixth century, medical science was almost all held by priests and monks. Monasteries were the major places for treatment. Until the tenth century, medicine was always closely relate to religion. Even after the medieval ages, when many doctors and physicians had already realized that theology was not quite connected with pathology, Europeans still took Medicine as a sacred science, which only the clergy people could practice. It was in Renaissance when many medical scientists tried to overthrow the Galenus’ medical system at the risk of their lives, and succeeded in the end. Medical science finally became independent of

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