[Hippocrates and the nineteenth-century French medicine]

Uisahak. 2003 Dec;12(2):167-78.
[Article in Korean]

Abstract

Hippocrates, the father of medicine, has been represented in many ways throughout the history of medicine. His influence on later medicine took different forms from one epoch to another. Hippocrates' medical doctrine was quite influential until Renaissance period, and with the arrival of modern medicine, the method or the spirit of Hippocrates had been valued more highly than his medical doctrine. Nineteenth century French medicine shows us how the influence of Hippocrates is still vivid even in the nineteenth century. Hippocrates, as the author of the Air, Water, Places, became the founder of environmental medicine with the flourishing of meteorological medicine. And in the hands of medical ideologies he also became a proclaimer of the ideology that stressed the correspondence between men, society and nature. Laennec represented Hippocrates as the true pioneer in Clinical Medicine to which he himself made a great contribution. These various images of Hippocrates show us the universal nature of his medicine.

Publication types

  • Biography
  • English Abstract
  • Historical Article

MeSH terms

  • France
  • History, 19th Century
  • History, Ancient
  • Medicine*
  • Philosophy, Medical / history*

Personal name as subject

  • None Hippocrates
  • Rene Hyacinthe Laennec