How Did Ancient Greece's Influence On Modern Medicine?

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Ancient Greece’s Influence on Modern Medicine Greece, birthplace to many of the world’s greatest philosophers, inventors, and scientists, has influenced civilization throughout time. Of these abundant influences none holds more weight than those on the field of medicine. Ancient Greece, known as the birthplace of medicine, has greatly influenced modern medicine through countless ways. These ways range from medical ethics that keep medicine unbiased and uncorrupt, information on the human body that has broadened the fields of medicine immensely, and treatments and practices that have made the world of modern medicine a safer place for patients. Ethics, the study of whether something is right or wrong, is of great importance in the field of …show more content…

One of the most prominent philosophers responsible for this knowledge is Alcmaeon of Croton. Alcmaeon was the first known philosopher to attribute the brain to being the seat of human intelligence, and that similar to Hippocrates, physicians should base their findings off of “empirical evidence” and not “divine intervention” ( Celesia 409 ). This radical concept, for his time, has become such an important milestone in history, because through the continuos study of the human mind we now have fields such as neurology and psychology. Through these fields modern physicians have been able to discover countless ways to treat and learn about the human bodies ' nervous system; These include horrible diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease, amnesia, and dementia. Another benefit along with being able to study these diseases and disorders is that before they were understood many people with neurological disorders were seen as insane, broken, or even possessed, and because of this would not be given treatment for their serious conditions. Alcmaeon not only introduced the world to his revolutionary ideas on the human mind, but also to the world of anatomy. Through his studies with the human body he also is the first accredited with the use of dissecting animals for the purpose of discovering the connection our senses had to the brain ( …show more content…

Even in our day and age physicians still employ the treatments and methods that were developed by the ancient Greeks over two-thousand years ago. The most prominent treatments that are used today would be those in the field of traumatology, a branch of surgery that deals with serious wounds caused by accidents or violence. Hippocrates, the forefather of this field, began the development of this medical branch when he had decided to document his methods and medical discoveries into “approximately 60 “Hippocratic” treaties” (Pikoulis 426). These treaties, known today as Hippocratic corpus, are documents containing various detailed information about the human body, and various ways developed to treat the injuries encountered by physicians of the classical era. Within the Hippocratic Corpus the most heavily studied was On Head Wounds which was the first document linking “giddiness and loss of consciousness to brain damage...[and]injury to the left temple region causes spasms on the right side of the body and vice versa” (Pikoulis 426). This section has held great importance to modern, because injuries to the head, and more importantly the brain, are nearly impossible to detect and most lethal is left untreated. Even someone who has received what they think was a light hit to their head, could die hours later from unseen intracranial

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