Darrera modificació: 2012-05-08 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
Bullough, Vern L., Universities, Medicine and Science in the Medieval West, Aldershot, Ashgate Variorum (Variorum Collected Studies Series, CS781), 2004, 314 pp.
- Resum
- The papers collected here first of all reflect Vern Bullough's concern to examine how knowledge was transmitted from one generation to the next and the impact this had on new developments in medicine and science. Universities, Medicine and Science in the Medieval West brings together the author's pioneering studies on the medical universities of the medieval Latin world, their foundation and their influence on scientific thought, and those on the professionalization of medicine, respectively the focus of the first and second sections in the volume, along with three previously unpublished essays. The third part looks at developments in medical practice outside the university, and at topics such as nursing and medical care, medieval views of women, and female longevity and diet; it also includes the author's much-cited study on the age of menarche.
Conté:
I: The study of medicine and the medieval university
II: The development of the medical university at Montpellier to the end of the 14th century
III: The medieval medical university at Paris
IV: Medieval Bologna and the development of medical education
V: Medical study at mediaeval Oxford
VI: The mediaeval medical school at Cambridge
VII: Science vs. humanities: a conflict in the 15th century Italian universities?
VIII: Science and the university in the 15th century
IX: The emergence of medicine as a profession
X: Achievement, professionalization, and the university
XI: Medieval medicine and the search for status
XII: Population and the study and practice of medieval medicine
XIII: Training of non university-educated medical practitioners in the later middle ages
XIV: The development of the medical guilds at Paris
XV: Medieval nursing
XVI: A note on medical care in medieval English hospitals
XVI: Female longevity and diet in the middle ages (with Cameron Campbell)
XVII: Medieval medical and scientific views of women
XVIII: Sexology and the medievalist
XIX: Age at menarche: a misunderstanding
XX: The term 'doctor'
XXI: A 15th-century prescription
XXII: Duke Humphrey and his medical collections
XXIII: The teaching of surgery at the University of Montpellier in the 13th century
XXIV: Medical practice in the middle ages, or who treated whom
- Matèries
- Història de la ciència
Història de la medicina Universitats i ensenyament Sexualitat Educació Montpeller
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