Article ID: CBB001552824

Gesundheit und Krankheit bei Philo von Alexandrien (2015)

unapi

Philo of Alexandria, Torah scholar and philosopher of religion, (c. 20 BC to 50 BCE) is the first Middle Platonic philosopher whom we know through his own works. His thinking was determined by the two antitheses of God and world, and virtue and vice. The Logos (divine reason) mediates between the transcendent God and the earthly world. His thoughts on health and illness and on the possibilities and limitations of medicine are testimony to his comprehensive philosophical education as well as to his belief in God as ruler of the world and of human life. He saw human health as the reward for self-control for which one was best prepared by the classical education programme. Self-control and physical exercise were therefore, in his view, possible guarantors of health, and a coach potentially more important than a physician. Illnesses, if they result from the loss of selfcontrol, may point to the necessity for penitence. Philo therefore saw virtuousness as the safest precondition for a healthy and cheerful life. That the life forces increase during youth and diminish in old age is part of destiny. Similarly, illness can be brought about by strokes of fate. If illness occurred in this or any other way, medicine was there to help and its success or failure depended on divine providence. Like Jesus Sirach, the Jewish scholar who taught around a hundred years earlier, Philo did not think it sinful to use medical help if one was ill, seeing that God himself had made natural remedies available. He compared the importance of physicians for their patients to that other professionals have in people's lives. Philo did not provide a compendium on the work of the physician, but he gave indications, on nutrition for instance, or on the use of laxatives and fragrances, or that complaints can be necessary stages of recovery. Philo also asked himself whether physicians were always obliged to tell patients the truth. The only case of illness he described in sufficient detail was one of leprosy, which he diagnosed in accordance with Leviticus 13:2. Philo saw physicians as helpers of God, who was the Lord of life and who would therefore decide on the fate of the healthy and sick. Faith in God, Philo thought, was vital if one was to cope with life's ups and downs. Only the wicked had to fear death, however, while the souls of the righteous returned to heaven after death.

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Authors & Contributors
Palmieri, Nicoletta
Hoz, María Paz de
Cerchiai Manodori Sagredo, Claudia
Laurent Bricault
Guichard, Luis Arturo
Passavanti, Sandro
Journals
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Medicina nei Secoli - Arte e Scienza
Journal of the History of Ideas
Hirundo: The McGill Journal of Classical Studies
Galenos: Rivista di Filologia dei Testi Medici Antichi
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
Publishers
Walter de Gruyter
Peter Lang
Nova Science Publishers
L'Erma di Bretschneider
Felice Le Monnier
Edizioni ETS
Concepts
Medicine
Disease and diseases
Roman Empire
Interdisciplinary approach to knowledge
Philosophy
Medicine and religion
People
Philo of Alexandria
Galen
Plato
Vagbhata
Spinoza, Baruch
Sextus Empiricus
Time Periods
Ancient
Medieval
Modern
Renaissance
19th century
17th century
Places
Greece
Alexandria (Egypt)
Rome (Italy)
Hellenistic world
Mediterranean region
Egypt
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