Making Medical Knowledge by Miriam Solomon

Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 26 (1):10-15 (2016)
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Abstract

Robin Downie has distinguished between two enduring cognitive and practical attitudes that have determined the way that doctors and societies thought about medicine. The Hippocratic tradition attached its faith to empirical observation and rational induction and deduction, while the Asklepian approach was holistic, intuitive and strongly spiritual. Hippocrates sought to generalize from individual observations, to generate rules and guidelines from pooled experience. Asklepian physicians believed that cure lay in understanding the personal experience of each patient, and in providing an ambience of healing centered on temples and sacred ground. Hippocratic medicine emphasized the empirical..

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