Tools and the organism : technology and the body in ancient Greek and Roman medicine /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Webster, Colin (Classicist), author.
Imprint:Chicago : The University of Chicago Press, 2023.
©2023
Description:xvi, 320 pages : illustrations (black and white) ; 24 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/13447507
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Varying Form of Title:Technology and the body in ancient Greek and Roman medicine
ISBN:9780226828770
0226828778
9780226828787
Provenance:Copy 1. Binding : Includes dust jacket; black paper over boards with gold-colored printed lettering along the spine.
Notes:Includes bibliographical references (pages 283-311) and index.
Summary:"Medicine is itself a type of technology, involving therapeutic tools and substances, and so one way to write the history of medicine is as the application of different technologies to the human body. In Tools and the Organism, Colin Webster argues that, over the course of antiquity, notions shifted about what type of object a body is, what substances constitute its essential nature, and how its parts interact. By following these changes and taking the question of technology into the heart of Greek and Roman medicine, Webster reveals how the body was first conceptualized as an "organism"-a functional object whose inner parts were tools [organa] that each completed certain vital tasks. Webster's approach provides both an overarching survey of the ways that technologies impacted notions of corporeality and corporeal behaviors and, at the same time, stays attentive to the specific material details of ancient tools and how they informed assumptions about somatic structures, substances, and inner processes. For example, by turning to developments in water-delivery technologies and pneumatic tools, we see how these changing material realities altered theories of the vascular system and respiration across Classical antiquity. Tools and the Organism makes the compelling case for why telling the history of ancient Greco-Roman medical theories, from the Hippocratics to Galen, should pay close attention to the question of technology. Selling points: Tour de force survey of ancient medicine First book to demonstrate how the body got its "organs" and what this has to do with ancient technologies For anyone interested in ancient culture, science, medicine, and technology"--
Standard no.:10.7208/chicago/9780226828787.001.0001

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Call Number: R138.W43 2023
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