Ancient Greek Medicine: Hippocrates

The Theory of the Four Humours

Hippocrates was a Greek Philosopher and mathematician. He developed a number of ideas about the way in which the body worked. These ideas were extremely important in the switch from supernatural to natural forms of medicine. Hippocrates’ arguments were based upon principles of science. This was a change in the way that people viewed health. His ideas were based upon periods of observation of patients and a series of ideas that were known as the theory of the Four Humours: originally developed by Aristotle.

The diagram below briefly illustrates the theory of the Four Humours.

How does it work?

The body needs a balance of the 4 bodily fluids or humours. Any in-balance of these will lead to illness or disease. The different humours are connected to the four different seasons: and problems with each humour can be associated with each corresponding humour. Each of the seasons in turn is connected to a natural element: again these influence the balance of the humours.

How does a Doctor use this?

If you have a Cold you have lots of Phlegm in your system. Using Clinical Observation along with the theory of the Four Humours the process of identifying the ailment and dealing with it would be as follows:

Patient feels ill

Patient visits doctor

Doctor makes diagnosis (establishes the symptoms)

Doctor then makes a prognosis (decides what is likely to happen next)

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Patient is then observed for a period of time. Doctor can ascertain whether or not diagnosis and prognosis were correct.

Treatment is given based on the results of the observations.

A Doctors guide to Ancient Greek Hippocratic medical practices:

  1. Disease is caused by imbalances of the elements.
  2. Treatment should be based on observation, not instant reactions.
  3. Concentrate on the patient, not the disease.
  4. Let the disease run it’s natural cause. Only apply remedies once you are SURE of what is happening.

Hippocratic medicine: a Change or ...

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