메뉴 건너뛰기




Volumn 38, Issue 3, 2000, Pages 271-319

On the history of disease-concepts: The case of pleurisy

Author keywords

[No Author keywords available]

Indexed keywords

ARTICLE; HISTORY; HUMAN; PATHOLOGY; PHILOSOPHY; PLEURISY;

EID: 0043186115     PISSN: 00732753     EISSN: None     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1177/007327530003800302     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (72)

References (280)
  • 2
    • 0003952056 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ed. by T. J. Trenn and R. K. Merton, Chicago
    • L. Fleck, Entstehung und Entwicklung einer wissenschaftlichen Tatsache: Einführung in die Lehre vom Denkstil und Denkkollektiv (Basel, 1935); Genesis and development of a scientific fact (transl. by F. Bradley and T. J. Trenn, ed. by T. J. Trenn and R. K. Merton, Chicago, 1979).
    • (1979) Genesis and Development of a Scientific Fact
    • Bradley, F.1    Trenn, T.J.2
  • 4
    • 0003883418 scopus 로고
    • Paris
    • G. Canguilhem, Le normal et le pathologique (Paris, 1966); The normal and the pathological (transl. by C. R. Fawcett and R. S. Cohen, Dordrecht, 1978; New York, 1991). On the enduring relevance of Canguilhem's work see M. Nicolson, "The social and the cognitive: Resources for the sociology of scientific knowledge", Studies in history and philosophy of science, xx (1991), 347-69.
    • (1966) Le Normal et Le Pathologique
    • Canguilhem, G.1
  • 5
    • 0003530823 scopus 로고
    • Dordrecht, New York
    • G. Canguilhem, Le normal et le pathologique (Paris, 1966); The normal and the pathological (transl. by C. R. Fawcett and R. S. Cohen, Dordrecht, 1978; New York, 1991). On the enduring relevance of Canguilhem's work see M. Nicolson, "The social and the cognitive: Resources for the sociology of scientific knowledge", Studies in history and philosophy of science, xx (1991), 347-69.
    • (1978) The Normal and the Pathological
    • Fawcett, C.R.1    Cohen, R.S.2
  • 6
    • 84928836034 scopus 로고
    • The social and the cognitive: Resources for the sociology of scientific knowledge
    • G. Canguilhem, Le normal et le pathologique (Paris, 1966); The normal and the pathological (transl. by C. R. Fawcett and R. S. Cohen, Dordrecht, 1978; New York, 1991). On the enduring relevance of Canguilhem's work see M. Nicolson, "The social and the cognitive: Resources for the sociology of scientific knowledge", Studies in history and philosophy of science, xx (1991), 347-69.
    • (1991) Studies in History and Philosophy of Science , vol.20 , pp. 347-369
    • Nicolson, M.1
  • 7
    • 0018229870 scopus 로고
    • Chlorosis and chronic disease in nineteenth-century Britain: The social construction of somatic illness in a capitalist society
    • K. Figlio, "Chlorosis and chronic disease in nineteenth-century Britain: The social construction of somatic illness in a capitalist society", Social history, iii (1978), 167-97 (cf. below, at ref. 53); P. Wright and A. Treacher (eds), The problem of medical knowledge: Examining the social construction of medicine (Edinburgh, 1982).
    • (1978) Social History , vol.3 , pp. 167-197
    • Figlio, K.1
  • 9
    • 0003931293 scopus 로고
    • Oxford
    • For instance M. Pelling, Cholera, fever and English medicine 1825-1865 (Oxford, 1978); S. Jarcho, The concept of heart failure: From Avicenna to Albertini (Cambridge, Mass., 1980); W. F. Bynum and V. Nutton (eds), Theories of fever from Antiquity to the Enlightenment (Medical history Supplement no. 1, London, 1981); R. C. Maulitz, Morbid appearances: The anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century (Cambridge, 1987); W. D. Smith, "Pleuritis in the Hippocratic Corpus and after", Proceedings of the Sixth International Hippocratic Colloquium, Quebec, September 1987 (Quebec City, 1989); M. Nicolson and C. McLaughlin, "Social constructionism and medical sociology: A study of the vascular theories of multiple sclerosis", Sociology of health and illness, x (1988), 234-61.
    • (1978) Cholera, Fever and English Medicine 1825-1865
    • Pelling, M.1
  • 10
    • 0003509487 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge, Mass
    • For instance M. Pelling, Cholera, fever and English medicine 1825-1865 (Oxford, 1978); S. Jarcho, The concept of heart failure: From Avicenna to Albertini (Cambridge, Mass., 1980); W. F. Bynum and V. Nutton (eds), Theories of fever from Antiquity to the Enlightenment (Medical history Supplement no. 1, London, 1981); R. C. Maulitz, Morbid appearances: The anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century (Cambridge, 1987); W. D. Smith, "Pleuritis in the Hippocratic Corpus and after", Proceedings of the Sixth International Hippocratic Colloquium, Quebec, September 1987 (Quebec City, 1989); M. Nicolson and C. McLaughlin, "Social constructionism and medical sociology: A study of the vascular theories of multiple sclerosis", Sociology of health and illness, x (1988), 234-61.
    • (1980) The Concept of Heart Failure: From Avicenna to Albertini
    • Jarcho, S.1
  • 11
    • 0005397319 scopus 로고
    • London
    • For instance M. Pelling, Cholera, fever and English medicine 1825-1865 (Oxford, 1978); S. Jarcho, The concept of heart failure: From Avicenna to Albertini (Cambridge, Mass., 1980); W. F. Bynum and V. Nutton (eds), Theories of fever from Antiquity to the Enlightenment (Medical history Supplement no. 1, London, 1981); R. C. Maulitz, Morbid appearances: The anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century (Cambridge, 1987); W. D. Smith, "Pleuritis in the Hippocratic Corpus and after", Proceedings of the Sixth International Hippocratic Colloquium, Quebec, September 1987 (Quebec City, 1989); M. Nicolson and C. McLaughlin, "Social constructionism and medical sociology: A study of the vascular theories of multiple sclerosis", Sociology of health and illness, x (1988), 234-61.
    • (1981) Theories of Fever from Antiquity to the Enlightenment Medical History
    • Bynum, W.F.1    Nutton, V.2
  • 12
    • 0041378884 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge
    • For instance M. Pelling, Cholera, fever and English medicine 1825-1865 (Oxford, 1978); S. Jarcho, The concept of heart failure: From Avicenna to Albertini (Cambridge, Mass., 1980); W. F. Bynum and V. Nutton (eds), Theories of fever from Antiquity to the Enlightenment (Medical history Supplement no. 1, London, 1981); R. C. Maulitz, Morbid appearances: The anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century (Cambridge, 1987); W. D. Smith, "Pleuritis in the Hippocratic Corpus and after", Proceedings of the Sixth International Hippocratic Colloquium, Quebec, September 1987 (Quebec City, 1989); M. Nicolson and C. McLaughlin, "Social constructionism and medical sociology: A study of the vascular theories of multiple sclerosis", Sociology of health and illness, x (1988), 234-61.
    • (1987) Morbid Appearances: The Anatomy of Pathology in the Early Nineteenth Century
    • Maulitz, R.C.1
  • 13
    • 0042881828 scopus 로고
    • Pleuritis in the Hippocratic Corpus and after
    • Quebec City
    • For instance M. Pelling, Cholera, fever and English medicine 1825-1865 (Oxford, 1978); S. Jarcho, The concept of heart failure: From Avicenna to Albertini (Cambridge, Mass., 1980); W. F. Bynum and V. Nutton (eds), Theories of fever from Antiquity to the Enlightenment (Medical history Supplement no. 1, London, 1981); R. C. Maulitz, Morbid appearances: The anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century (Cambridge, 1987); W. D. Smith, "Pleuritis in the Hippocratic Corpus and after", Proceedings of the Sixth International Hippocratic Colloquium, Quebec, September 1987 (Quebec City, 1989); M. Nicolson and C. McLaughlin, "Social constructionism and medical sociology: A study of the vascular theories of multiple sclerosis", Sociology of health and illness, x (1988), 234-61.
    • (1989) Proceedings of the Sixth International Hippocratic Colloquium, Quebec, September 1987
    • Smith, W.D.1
  • 14
    • 84995059470 scopus 로고
    • Social constructionism and medical sociology: A study of the vascular theories of multiple sclerosis
    • For instance M. Pelling, Cholera, fever and English medicine 1825-1865 (Oxford, 1978); S. Jarcho, The concept of heart failure: From Avicenna to Albertini (Cambridge, Mass., 1980); W. F. Bynum and V. Nutton (eds), Theories of fever from Antiquity to the Enlightenment (Medical history Supplement no. 1, London, 1981); R. C. Maulitz, Morbid appearances: The anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century (Cambridge, 1987); W. D. Smith, "Pleuritis in the Hippocratic Corpus and after", Proceedings of the Sixth International Hippocratic Colloquium, Quebec, September 1987 (Quebec City, 1989); M. Nicolson and C. McLaughlin, "Social constructionism and medical sociology: A study of the vascular theories of multiple sclerosis", Sociology of health and illness, x (1988), 234-61.
    • (1988) Sociology of Health and Illness , vol.10 , pp. 234-261
    • Nicolson, M.1    McLaughlin, C.2
  • 15
    • 0038747390 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 2 vols, London, particularly the essays by M. Pelling, L. G. Wilson, R. C. Olby, T. M. Brown, M. Worboys, D. Cantor and R. Porter (chaps. 16, 19-21, 24-25, 27). (The Companion encyclopedia, it should be remarked, is exceptional amongst recent textbooks in the attention it devotes to this theme.)
    • For a helpful conspectus and a guide to recent literature see W. F. Bynum and R. Porter (eds), Companion encyclopedia of the history of medicine (2 vols, London, 1993), Part III (vol. i), particularly the essays by M. Pelling, L. G. Wilson, R. C. Olby, T. M. Brown, M. Worboys, D. Cantor and R. Porter (chaps. 16, 19-21, 24-25, 27). (The Companion encyclopedia, it should be remarked, is exceptional amongst recent textbooks in the attention it devotes to this theme.) See also R. C. Maulitz, "In the clinic: Framing disease at the Paris hospital", Annals of science, xlvii (1990). 127-37; essays of C. Lawrence and S. Peitzman, cited in refs 15, 18 below; and J. Duffin, To see with a better eye: A life of R. T. H. Laennec (Princeton, N.J., 1998).
    • (1993) Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine , vol.1
    • Bynum, W.F.1    Porter, R.2
  • 16
    • 0025574155 scopus 로고
    • In the clinic: Framing disease at the Paris hospital
    • essays of C. Lawrence and S. Peitzman, cited in refs 15, 18 below
    • For a helpful conspectus and a guide to recent literature see W. F. Bynum and R. Porter (eds), Companion encyclopedia of the history of medicine (2 vols, London, 1993), Part III (vol. i), particularly the essays by M. Pelling, L. G. Wilson, R. C. Olby, T. M. Brown, M. Worboys, D. Cantor and R. Porter (chaps. 16, 19-21, 24-25, 27). (The Companion encyclopedia, it should be remarked, is exceptional amongst recent textbooks in the attention it devotes to this theme.) See also R. C. Maulitz, "In the clinic: Framing disease at the Paris hospital", Annals of science, xlvii (1990). 127-37; essays of C. Lawrence and S. Peitzman, cited in refs 15, 18 below; and J. Duffin, To see with a better eye: A life of R. T. H. Laennec (Princeton, N.J., 1998).
    • (1990) Annals of Science , vol.47 , pp. 127-137
    • Maulitz, R.C.1
  • 17
    • 0003407240 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Princeton, N.J
    • For a helpful conspectus and a guide to recent literature see W. F. Bynum and R. Porter (eds), Companion encyclopedia of the history of medicine (2 vols, London, 1993), Part III (vol. i), particularly the essays by M. Pelling, L. G. Wilson, R. C. Olby, T. M. Brown, M. Worboys, D. Cantor and R. Porter (chaps. 16, 19-21, 24-25, 27). (The Companion encyclopedia, it should be remarked, is exceptional amongst recent textbooks in the attention it devotes to this theme.) See also R. C. Maulitz, "In the clinic: Framing disease at the Paris hospital", Annals of science, xlvii (1990). 127-37; essays of C. Lawrence and S. Peitzman, cited in refs 15, 18 below; and J. Duffin, To see with a better eye: A life of R. T. H. Laennec (Princeton, N.J., 1998).
    • (1998) To See with a Better Eye: A Life of R. T. H. Laennec
    • Duffin, J.1
  • 18
    • 0021179455 scopus 로고
    • The diseases called chlorosis
    • On what "chlorosis" meant in relation to twentieth-century categories see I. Loudon, "The diseases called chlorosis", Psychological medicine, xliv (1984), 27-36.
    • (1984) Psychological Medicine , vol.44 , pp. 27-36
    • Loudon, I.1
  • 21
    • 85013282066 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The corollary was that in Fleck's view. "Spirochaeta pallida should … be defined by syphilis rather than the other way around" (ibid., 18).
    • , vol.18
  • 22
    • 85013335040 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 14, my emphasis
    • Ibid., 14, my emphasis.
  • 25
    • 0042657315 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Asthma attacked? Tactics for the reconstruction of a disease concept
    • Wright and Treacher (eds), ref. 4
    • J. Gabbay, "Asthma attacked? Tactics for the reconstruction of a disease concept", in Wright and Treacher (eds), The problem of medical knowledge (ref. 4), 23-48.
    • The Problem of Medical Knowledge , pp. 23-48
    • Gabbay, J.1
  • 26
    • 0011180725 scopus 로고
    • 'Definite and material': Coronary thrombosis and cardiologists in the 1920s
    • C. Rosenberg and J. Golden (eds), New Brunswick, N.J
    • C. Lawrence, "'Definite and material': Coronary thrombosis and cardiologists in the 1920s", in C. Rosenberg and J. Golden (eds), Framing disease: Studies in cultural history (New Brunswick, N.J., 1992), 50-82.
    • (1992) Framing Disease: Studies in Cultural History , pp. 50-82
    • Lawrence, C.1
  • 27
    • 0041879645 scopus 로고
    • quoted by Lawrence
    • See the remarks of Paul White in 1931, quoted by Lawrence. "'Definite and material'", 67.
    • (1931) Definite and Material , pp. 67
    • White, P.1
  • 28
    • 0041378883 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • At least, so far as this has been traced - for the loose end left by Lawrence's study is the question as to how "consensus" over the ECG was reached (ibid., 12).
    • Definite and Material , pp. 12
  • 29
    • 0041403443 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • From Bright's disease to end-state renal disease
    • Rosenberg and Golden (eds), ref. 15
    • S. J. Peitzman, "From Bright's disease to end-state renal disease", in Rosenberg and Golden (eds), Framing disease (ref. 15), 3-19.
    • Framing Disease , pp. 3-19
    • Peitzman, S.J.1
  • 31
    • 0006318810 scopus 로고
    • Transforming plague: The laboratory and the identity of infectious disease
    • A. Cunningham and P. Williams (eds), Cambridge
    • The most notable exception is A. Cunningham, "Transforming plague: The laboratory and the identity of infectious disease", in A. Cunningham and P. Williams (eds), The laboratory revolution in medicine (Cambridge, 1992), 209-44.
    • (1992) The Laboratory Revolution in Medicine , pp. 209-244
    • Cunningham, A.1
  • 32
    • 0003648066 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Paris
    • C. Quétel, Le Mal de Naples (Paris, 1986); History of syphilis (transl. by J. Braddock and B. Pike, Cambridge, 1990). "Syphilis as a cultural phenomenon" is the title of the introduction (pp. 1-8).
    • (1986) Le Mal de Naples
    • Quétel, C.1
  • 33
    • 85013238901 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge
    • C. Quétel, Le Mal de Naples (Paris, 1986); History of syphilis (transl. by J. Braddock and B. Pike, Cambridge, 1990). "Syphilis as a cultural phenomenon" is the title of the introduction (pp. 1-8).
    • (1990)
    • Braddock, J.1    Pike, B.2
  • 34
    • 85013310314 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • C. Quétel, Le Mal de Naples (Paris, 1986); History of syphilis (transl. by J. Braddock and B. Pike, Cambridge, 1990). "Syphilis as a cultural phenomenon" is the title of the introduction (pp. 1-8).
    • Syphilis as a Cultural Phenomenon , pp. 1-8
  • 36
    • 85013352152 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Oxford English dictionary - For characteristically
    • This from the Oxford English dictionary - for characteristically. Le Mal de Naples does not mention the meaning of the term.
    • Le Mal de Naples
  • 37
    • 4243952960 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Thus syphilis came to be recognised as syphilis, gonorrhoea as gonorrhoea
    • ref. 21
    • "Thus syphilis came to be recognised as syphilis, gonorrhoea as gonorrhoea" (Quétel, Le Mal de Naples (ref. 21), 111). Cf. and contrast Fleck, Genesis and development of a scientific fact (ref. 1), 7-8.
    • Le Mal de Naples , pp. 111
    • Quétel1
  • 38
    • 0003952056 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 1
    • "Thus syphilis came to be recognised as syphilis, gonorrhoea as gonorrhoea" (Quétel, Le Mal de Naples (ref. 21), 111). Cf. and contrast Fleck, Genesis and development of a scientific fact (ref. 1), 7-8.
    • Genesis and Development of a Scientific Fact , pp. 7-8
    • Fleck1
  • 39
    • 0003648066 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 21
    • The point is touched upon just once and in passing: Quétel, Le Mal de Naples (ref. 21), 97.
    • Le Mal de Naples , pp. 97
    • Quétel1
  • 40
    • 0003952056 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 1
    • Fleck, Genesis and development of a scientific fact (ref. 1), 41. See also, for instance, pp. 15-16 ("The discovery of the causative agent, Spirochaeta pallida, was the result of steady, logical work by civil servants"), 22, 69-70. For a general formulation see p. 123: "the true creator of a new idea is not the individual but the collective."
    • Genesis and Development of a Scientific Fact , pp. 41
    • Fleck1
  • 41
    • 0041879609 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Fleck, Genesis and development of a scientific fact (ref. 1), 41. See also, for instance, pp. 15-16 ("The discovery of the causative agent, Spirochaeta pallida, was the result of steady, logical work by civil servants"), 22, 69-70. For a general formulation see p. 123: "the true creator of a new idea is not the individual but the collective."
    • Spirochaeta Pallida , vol.22 , pp. 69-70
  • 43
    • 85013329935 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 99
    • Ibid., 99.
  • 44
    • 85013286742 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • These mechanisms involved a spectrum of communication-media, from what Fleck called "journal science", through "vademecum science" and "textbook science", to "popular science": see ibid., 111-25. At one extreme, "journal science", which is precisely the "vanguard" of science (p. 123), is "provisional, uncertain, and personally colored" (p. 119); at the opposite extreme, "popular science" entails "valuation" (p. 113), "simplicity" and "vividness" (p. 115). The key intermediate category was "vademecum science" (pp. 119-24), which represents the "collective, generally valid" aspect of research science (p. 120), and "requires a critical synopsis in an organized system" (p. 118, Fleck's emphasis); on this see refs 31, 34 below.
  • 45
    • 85013347938 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 112
    • Ibid., 112.
  • 46
    • 85013347939 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Ibid., 122-3. Here I am simplifying Fleck's picture, for at this point he was in fact discussing "vademecum science" rather than "popular science". However this simplification is not inappropriate, for three reasons. In the first place, Fleck argued that popular science has a "general epistemological significance", since its qualities of "certainty, simplicity, vividness" are precisely the goals of "the expert" as well (pp. 114-15) - whence the fact that "the conviction that there is no development of thought", which as we see below is characteristic of popular science, is "a conviction that also influences the expert" (p. 116). Secondly, vademecum science and popular science as Fleck depicted these have many features in common: for instance, vademecum science resembles popular science in seeking to constitute a "closed system" (p. 119); in involving "exoteric" as well as "esoteric" knowledge (p. 123); and in constructing a mythical, individualized history (pp. 122-3; cf. p. 116, as quoted immediately below). Third, Fleck described vademecum science as developing out of "journal science" through processes of communication, including the stabilizing of nomenclature (pp. 120-3); and he had already insisted that "Every communication and, indeed, all nomenclature tends to make any item of knowledge more collective and popular" (p. 114, Fleck's emphasis). See also ref. 34 below.
  • 47
    • 85013251870 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Ibid., 116 (here referring to "popular science" itself).
  • 48
    • 85013258380 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • On the same page Fleck reproduced a potted history of syphilis (from Gottstein's book of 1929) and commented: "From descriptions such as this, the conviction emerges that there is no development of thought."
  • 49
    • 85013280723 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Ibid., 120-1. Strictly speaking, this anecdote concerning retrospective diagnosis was presented not as an aspect of "popular science" but rather within Fleck's account of "vademecum science", and not as a characteristic of such science but rather for a specific technical reason (i.e., as an illustration of the collective, "impersonal", origin of collectively-accepted concepts). But my appropriation of Fleck's brief discussion of retrospective diagnosis is, I submit, consistent with the claims he had already made about the apprehension of "syphilis" in "popular science" (p. 116). See also ref. 31 above.
  • 50
    • 85013352136 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 82-83, 165
    • Ibid., 82-83, 165.
  • 51
    • 85013352137 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 140; cf. p. 111 (ref. 24 above)
    • Ibid., 140; cf. p. 111 (ref. 24 above).
  • 52
    • 85013334794 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • For a rare exception whose very brevity confirms the rule, see ibid., 5-6
    • For a rare exception whose very brevity confirms the rule, see ibid., 5-6.
  • 53
    • 85013279376 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Above, at ref. 20
    • Above, at ref. 20.
  • 54
    • 0003495191 scopus 로고
    • London
    • For example, the main reference work on the history of science cites Fleck's work three times, in each case as a major conceptual resource, whereas the comparable (and substantially longer) reference work on the history of medicine refers to Fleck only once, and even then as what amounts to an addendum on the history of Fleck's own field, immunology. See respectively R. C. Olby, G. N. Cantor, J. R. R. Christie and M. J. S. Hodge (eds), Companion to the history of modern science (London, 1990), 64, 91, 164, and Bynum and Porter (eds), Companion encyclopedia of the history of medicine (ref. 6), 203. Even Cunningham's fine essay "Transforming plague" (ref. 20 above), the central historiographic point of which is entirely consonant with Fleck's approach, does not cite Fleck. Fleck was first noticed in English by T. S. Kuhn, The structure of scientific revolutions (Chicago, 1962), pp. vi-vii; the 1979 English translation was produced at the behest of historians and sociologists of science, notably R. Merton.
    • (1990) Companion to the History of Modern Science , pp. 64
    • Olby, R.C.1    Cantor, G.N.2    Christie, J.R.R.3    Hodge, M.J.S.4
  • 55
    • 0038747390 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 6
    • For example, the main reference work on the history of science cites Fleck's work three times, in each case as a major conceptual resource, whereas the comparable (and substantially longer) reference work on the history of medicine refers to Fleck only once, and even then as what amounts to an addendum on the history of Fleck's own field, immunology. See respectively R. C. Olby, G. N. Cantor, J. R. R. Christie and M. J. S. Hodge (eds), Companion to the history of modern science (London, 1990), 64, 91, 164, and Bynum and Porter (eds), Companion encyclopedia of the history of medicine (ref. 6), 203. Even Cunningham's fine essay "Transforming plague" (ref. 20 above), the central historiographic point of which is entirely consonant with Fleck's approach, does not cite Fleck. Fleck was first noticed in English by T. S. Kuhn, The structure of scientific revolutions (Chicago, 1962), pp. vi-vii; the 1979 English translation was produced at the behest of historians and sociologists of science, notably R. Merton.
    • Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine , pp. 203
    • Bynum1    Porter2
  • 56
    • 0003945869 scopus 로고
    • Chicago
    • For example, the main reference work on the history of science cites Fleck's work three times, in each case as a major conceptual resource, whereas the comparable (and substantially longer) reference work on the history of medicine refers to Fleck only once, and even then as what amounts to an addendum on the history of Fleck's own field, immunology. See respectively R. C. Olby, G. N. Cantor, J. R. R. Christie and M. J. S. Hodge (eds), Companion to the history of modern science (London, 1990), 64, 91, 164, and Bynum and Porter (eds), Companion encyclopedia of the history of medicine (ref. 6), 203. Even Cunningham's fine essay "Transforming plague" (ref. 20 above), the central historiographic point of which is entirely consonant with Fleck's approach, does not cite Fleck. Fleck was first noticed in English by T. S. Kuhn, The structure of scientific revolutions (Chicago, 1962), pp. vi-vii; the 1979 English translation was produced at the behest of historians and sociologists of science, notably R. Merton.
    • (1962) The Structure of Scientific Revolutions , pp. vi-vii
    • Kuhn, T.S.1
  • 57
    • 0008435929 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The historiography of medicine
    • Bynum and Porter (eds), ref. 6
    • See for instance G. Brieger, "The historiography of medicine", in Bynum and Porter (eds), Companion encyclopedia of the history of medicine (ref. 6), i, 24-44, p. 31.
    • Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine , vol.1 , pp. 24-44
    • Brieger, G.1
  • 58
    • 0004253126 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 2, Preface, my emphasis
    • Temkin, The Falling Sickness (ref. 2), Preface, p. vii, my emphasis.
    • The Falling Sickness , pp. vii
    • Temkin1
  • 59
    • 0002639887 scopus 로고
    • German original transl. by Dr and Mrs M. Pinner, New York
    • R. Koch, The aetiology of tuberculosis (German original 1882; transl. by Dr and Mrs M. Pinner, New York, 1932), 44. Tuberculosis was originally "consumption" or "phthisis" (touched upon in refs 110 and 194 below); Koch's redefinition of the disease transformed its meaning in complex ways, precisely in line with what Fleck was to write about syphilis (above, at ref. 13).
    • (1882) The Aetiology of Tuberculosis , pp. 44
    • Koch, R.1
  • 60
    • 0003700012 scopus 로고
    • Paris
    • M. Foucault, Naissance de la clinique (Paris, 1963); Birth of the clinic: An archaeology of medical perception (transl. by A. M. Sheridan Smith, London, 1973).
    • (1963) Naissance de la Clinique
    • Foucault, M.1
  • 65
    • 84976936094 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Mutatis mutandis, the same is true of N. Jewson's classic study, "Medical knowledge and the patronage system in eighteenth-century England", Sociology, viii (1974), 369-85.
    • Mutatis Mutandis
    • Jewson, N.1
  • 66
    • 84976936094 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Medical knowledge and the patronage system in eighteenth-century England
    • Mutatis mutandis, the same is true of N. Jewson's classic study, "Medical knowledge and the patronage system in eighteenth-century England", Sociology, viii (1974), 369-85.
    • (1974) Sociology , vol.8 , pp. 369-385
  • 69
    • 85013263840 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., pp. xvi-xvii
    • Ibid., pp. xvi-xvii.
  • 70
    • 85013346116 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 196, p. xii; my emphases
    • Ibid., 196, p. xii; my emphases.
  • 71
    • 4243933034 scopus 로고
    • revised edn, London
    • Thus for all that Foucault consistently distanced himself from structuralism, his archaeological oeuvre is open to precisely the kind of critique that P. de Man levelled at structuralism in various of his works; see for instance Blindness and insight: Essays in the rhetoric of contemporary criticism (first edn, 1971; revised edn, London, 1983); Allegories of reading: Figural language in Rousseau, Nietzsche, Rilke and Proust (New Haven, 1979); and The resistance to theory (ed. by W. Godzich, Minneapolis, 1986). See further the penetrating discussion of Foucault in S. Burke, The death and return of the author: Criticism and subjectivity in Barthes, Foucault and Derrida (Edinburgh, 1992; 2nd edn, 1998).
    • (1971) Blindness and
    • De Man, P.1
  • 72
    • 0004023594 scopus 로고
    • New Haven
    • Thus for all that Foucault consistently distanced himself from structuralism, his archaeological oeuvre is open to precisely the kind of critique that P. de Man levelled at structuralism in various of his works; see for instance Blindness and insight: Essays in the rhetoric of contemporary criticism (first edn, 1971; revised edn, London, 1983); Allegories of reading: Figural language in Rousseau, Nietzsche, Rilke and Proust (New Haven, 1979); and The resistance to theory (ed. by W. Godzich, Minneapolis, 1986). See further the penetrating discussion of Foucault in S. Burke, The death and return of the author: Criticism and subjectivity in Barthes, Foucault and Derrida (Edinburgh, 1992; 2nd edn, 1998).
    • (1979) Allegories of Reading: Figural Language in Rousseau, Nietzsche, Rilke and Proust
  • 73
    • 0004111031 scopus 로고
    • Minneapolis
    • Thus for all that Foucault consistently distanced himself from structuralism, his archaeological oeuvre is open to precisely the kind of critique that P. de Man levelled at structuralism in various of his works; see for instance Blindness and insight: Essays in the rhetoric of contemporary criticism (first edn, 1971; revised edn, London, 1983); Allegories of reading: Figural language in Rousseau, Nietzsche, Rilke and Proust (New Haven, 1979); and The resistance to theory (ed. by W. Godzich, Minneapolis, 1986). See further the penetrating discussion of Foucault in S. Burke, The death and return of the author: Criticism and subjectivity in Barthes, Foucault and Derrida (Edinburgh, 1992; 2nd edn, 1998).
    • (1986) The Resistance to Theory
    • Godzich, W.1
  • 74
    • 0042380882 scopus 로고
    • Edinburgh, 2nd edn
    • Thus for all that Foucault consistently distanced himself from structuralism, his archaeological oeuvre is open to precisely the kind of critique that P. de Man levelled at structuralism in various of his works; see for instance Blindness and insight: Essays in the rhetoric of contemporary criticism (first edn, 1971; revised edn, London, 1983); Allegories of reading: Figural language in Rousseau, Nietzsche, Rilke and Proust (New Haven, 1979); and The resistance to theory (ed. by W. Godzich, Minneapolis, 1986). See further the penetrating discussion of Foucault in S. Burke, The death and return of the author: Criticism and subjectivity in Barthes, Foucault and Derrida (Edinburgh, 1992; 2nd edn, 1998).
    • (1992) The Death and Return of the Author: Criticism and Subjectivity in Barthes, Foucault and Derrida
    • Burke, S.1
  • 77
    • 85013310272 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 175
    • Ibid., 175.
  • 78
    • 85013346052 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 193
    • Ibid., 193.
  • 79
    • 85007386640 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See respectively pp. 178 nn. 32, 34; 181; 185; 174 n. 21; and many subsequent citations (Black's medical dictionary).
    • Black's Medical Dictionary , pp. 178
  • 81
    • 85013251819 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • See for instance ibid., 179: "Constructing the illness … was the other face of discovering adolescence."
  • 82
    • 85013316747 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Notably at ibid., 177-8, invoking Laslett's argument that the age of menarche declined in the nineteenth century.
  • 86
    • 0010999614 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Framing disease: Illness, society, and history
    • Charles E. Rosenberg, "Framing disease: Illness, society, and history", ibid., pp. xiii-xxvi, at pp. xiv-xv.
    • Framing Disease , pp. xiii-xxvi
    • Rosenberg, C.E.1
  • 87
    • 0003868036 scopus 로고
    • Baltimore
    • Cf. above, at ref. 42. On the shifting meanings of "cholera" and on the problems attending retrospective diagnosis of "tuberculosis", see M. Grmek, Diseases in the ancient Greek world (transl. by M. Muellner and L. Muellner, Baltimore, 1989), 7, 183-4. The latter work, it should be observed in passing, has an ambiguous significance in relation to my theme. On the one hand, it rests entirely upon retrospective diagnosis and pays little attention to ancient disease-concepts - thereby participating in the naturalist-realist tradition. On the other hand, Grmek stresses throughout (for instance, in the passages just cited) that modern concepts of disease are incommensurate with ancient ones - this in harmony with the historicalist-conceptualist approach.
    • (1989) Diseases in the Ancient Greek World , vol.7 , pp. 183-184
    • Grmek, M.1    Muellner, M.2    Muellner, L.3
  • 88
    • 0006813697 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 64
    • See further Rosenberg, "Framing disease" (ref. 64). p. xvi, where this anti-relativist position was reiterated. Here the argument became rather more complicated, for Rosenberg rightly argued that "the process of disease definition" merited attention, thereby seemingly abandoning the framing metaphor. See also ref. 68 below.
    • Framing Disease , pp. xvi
    • Rosenberg1
  • 89
    • 44949131226 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The illusion of medical certainty: Silicosis and the politics of industrial disability, 1930-1960
    • Rosenberg and Golden (eds), ref. 63
    • For instance an essay on silicosis, bearing the promising title "The illusion of medical certainty", nevertheless began by asserting - with no intended irony - that "Silicosis is a chronic lung disease caused by the inhalation of silica dust". G. Markowitz and D. Rosner, "The illusion of medical certainty: Silicosis and the politics of industrial disability, 1930-1960", in Rosenberg and Golden (eds), Framing disease (ref. 63), 185-205.
    • Framing Disease , pp. 185-205
    • Markowitz, G.1    Rosner, D.2
  • 90
    • 0006813697 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 63, 4, and cf. ref. 66 above
    • Similarly, when introducing Peirzman's essay Rosenberg summarized its argument by saying that "the evolving framework of pathological assumptions describing and explaining 'Bright's disease' has been gradually integrated and reintegrated into a series of differently focused explanatory frameworks for the same clinical pictures" (my emphasis), and remarked that "It is precisely this process of definition and redefinition that demands scholarly attention". Here the initial assumption of clinical constancy, associated again with the metaphor of framing-and-pictures, was immediately (and commendably) undermined by the notion of "definition and redefinition". See Rosenberg and Golden (eds), Framing disease (ref. 63), 4, and cf. ref. 66 above.
    • Framing Disease
    • Rosenberg1    Golden2
  • 91
    • 0003744432 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • London, chap. 2
    • Until recently an analogous situation obtained within the sociology of medicine, the scope of which was traditionally restricted by giving a particular twist to the supposed distinction between "illness" and "disease". "Illnesses", it was said, were the subjective experiences of patients; they fell within the realm of "culture", and were therefore seen as forming a proper theme for sociological inquiry. "Diseases", in contrast, were conceived as real pathological processes, taken to coincide with their (supposed) medical definitions; they were regarded as inhabiting the realm of "nature", and therefore as lying beyond the bounds of sociological investigation. For this point, and for a cogent argument against this framework of assumptions, see P. Atkinson, Medical talk and medical work: The liturgy of the clinic (London, 1995), chap. 2. The burden of Atkinson's argument is that just as diseases are the constructs of medicine, so the supposed objectivity of those diseases was the construct of traditional medical sociology itself. Like Rosenberg, Atkinson has deliberately avoided the term "construction"; but significantly, he replaces it not by "framing" but instead by "production" (ibid., 45); and unlike Rosenberg, he refers to Fleck (pp. 143, 147). Similar points had already been made, from a rather different perspective (concerned with the sociology of illness rather than the sociology of knowledge), by R. Dingwall, Aspects of illness (London, 1976). chap. 2. As for the "illness"/"disease" distinction, both words are so elastic that it can be made in many different ways, or avoided altogether, according to one's rhetorical purposes: see A. L. Caplan, H. T. Engelhardt, Jr. and J. M. McCartney (eds), Concepts of health and illness: Interdisciplinary perspectives (Reading, Mass., 1981), and C. Currer and M. Stacey (eds), Concepts of health and illness and disease: A comparative perspective (Leamington Spa, 1986).
    • (1995) Medical Talk and Medical Work: The Liturgy of the Clinic
    • Atkinson, P.1
  • 92
    • 0003744432 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Until recently an analogous situation obtained within the sociology of medicine, the scope of which was traditionally restricted by giving a particular twist to the supposed distinction between "illness" and "disease". "Illnesses", it was said, were the subjective experiences of patients; they fell within the realm of "culture", and were therefore seen as forming a proper theme for sociological inquiry. "Diseases", in contrast, were conceived as real pathological processes, taken to coincide with their (supposed) medical definitions; they were regarded as inhabiting the realm of "nature", and therefore as lying beyond the bounds of sociological investigation. For this point, and for a cogent argument against this framework of assumptions, see P. Atkinson, Medical talk and medical work: The liturgy of the clinic (London, 1995), chap. 2. The burden of Atkinson's argument is that just as diseases are the constructs of medicine, so the supposed objectivity of those diseases was the construct of traditional medical sociology itself. Like Rosenberg, Atkinson has deliberately avoided the term "construction"; but significantly, he replaces it not by "framing" but instead by "production" (ibid., 45); and unlike Rosenberg, he refers to Fleck (pp. 143, 147). Similar points had already been made, from a rather different perspective (concerned with the sociology of illness rather than the sociology of knowledge), by R. Dingwall, Aspects of illness (London, 1976). chap. 2. As for the "illness"/"disease" distinction, both words are so elastic that it can be made in many different ways, or avoided altogether, according to one's rhetorical purposes: see A. L. Caplan, H. T. Engelhardt, Jr. and J. M. McCartney (eds), Concepts of health and illness: Interdisciplinary perspectives (Reading, Mass., 1981), and C. Currer and M. Stacey (eds), Concepts of health and illness and disease: A comparative perspective (Leamington Spa, 1986).
    • Medical Talk and Medical Work: The Liturgy of the Clinic , pp. 45
  • 93
    • 0003601530 scopus 로고
    • London, chap. 2
    • Until recently an analogous situation obtained within the sociology of medicine, the scope of which was traditionally restricted by giving a particular twist to the supposed distinction between "illness" and "disease". "Illnesses", it was said, were the subjective experiences of patients; they fell within the realm of "culture", and were therefore seen as forming a proper theme for sociological inquiry. "Diseases", in contrast, were conceived as real pathological processes, taken to coincide with their (supposed) medical definitions; they were regarded as inhabiting the realm of "nature", and therefore as lying beyond the bounds of sociological investigation. For this point, and for a cogent argument against this framework of assumptions, see P. Atkinson, Medical talk and medical work: The liturgy of the clinic (London, 1995), chap. 2. The burden of Atkinson's argument is that just as diseases are the constructs of medicine, so the supposed objectivity of those diseases was the construct of traditional medical sociology itself. Like Rosenberg, Atkinson has deliberately avoided the term "construction"; but significantly, he replaces it not by "framing" but instead by "production" (ibid., 45); and unlike Rosenberg, he refers to Fleck (pp. 143, 147). Similar points had already been made, from a rather different perspective (concerned with the sociology of illness rather than the sociology of knowledge), by R. Dingwall, Aspects of illness (London, 1976). chap. 2. As for the "illness"/"disease" distinction, both words are so elastic that it can be made in many different ways, or avoided altogether, according to one's rhetorical purposes: see A. L. Caplan, H. T. Engelhardt, Jr. and J. M. McCartney (eds), Concepts of health and illness: Interdisciplinary perspectives (Reading, Mass., 1981), and C. Currer and M. Stacey (eds), Concepts of health and illness and disease: A comparative perspective (Leamington Spa, 1986).
    • (1976) Aspects of Illness
    • Dingwall, R.1
  • 94
    • 0003595820 scopus 로고
    • Reading, Mass
    • Until recently an analogous situation obtained within the sociology of medicine, the scope of which was traditionally restricted by giving a particular twist to the supposed distinction between "illness" and "disease". "Illnesses", it was said, were the subjective experiences of patients; they fell within the realm of "culture", and were therefore seen as forming a proper theme for sociological inquiry. "Diseases", in contrast, were conceived as real pathological processes, taken to coincide with their (supposed) medical definitions; they were regarded as inhabiting the realm of "nature", and therefore as lying beyond the bounds of sociological investigation. For this point, and for a cogent argument against this framework of assumptions, see P. Atkinson, Medical talk and medical work: The liturgy of the clinic (London, 1995), chap. 2. The burden of Atkinson's argument is that just as diseases are the constructs of medicine, so the supposed objectivity of those diseases was the construct of traditional medical sociology itself. Like Rosenberg, Atkinson has deliberately avoided the term "construction"; but significantly, he replaces it not by "framing" but instead by "production" (ibid., 45); and unlike Rosenberg, he refers to Fleck (pp. 143, 147). Similar points had already been made, from a rather different perspective (concerned with the sociology of illness rather than the sociology of knowledge), by R. Dingwall, Aspects of illness (London, 1976). chap. 2. As for the "illness"/"disease" distinction, both words are so elastic that it can be made in many different ways, or avoided altogether, according to one's rhetorical purposes: see A. L. Caplan, H. T. Engelhardt, Jr. and J. M. McCartney (eds), Concepts of health and illness: Interdisciplinary perspectives (Reading, Mass., 1981), and C. Currer and M. Stacey (eds), Concepts of health and illness and disease: A comparative perspective (Leamington Spa, 1986).
    • (1981) Concepts of Health and Illness: Interdisciplinary Perspectives
    • Caplan, A.L.1    Engelhardt, H.T.2    McCartney, J.M.3
  • 95
    • 0041378850 scopus 로고
    • Leamington Spa
    • Until recently an analogous situation obtained within the sociology of medicine, the scope of which was traditionally restricted by giving a particular twist to the supposed distinction between "illness" and "disease". "Illnesses", it was said, were the subjective experiences of patients; they fell within the realm of "culture", and were therefore seen as forming a proper theme for sociological inquiry. "Diseases", in contrast, were conceived as real pathological processes, taken to coincide with their (supposed) medical definitions; they were regarded as inhabiting the realm of "nature", and therefore as lying beyond the bounds of sociological investigation. For this point, and for a cogent argument against this framework of assumptions, see P. Atkinson, Medical talk and medical work: The liturgy of the clinic (London, 1995), chap. 2. The burden of Atkinson's argument is that just as diseases are the constructs of medicine, so the supposed objectivity of those diseases was the construct of traditional medical sociology itself. Like Rosenberg, Atkinson has deliberately avoided the term "construction"; but significantly, he replaces it not by "framing" but instead by "production" (ibid., 45); and unlike Rosenberg, he refers to Fleck (pp. 143, 147). Similar points had already been made, from a rather different perspective (concerned with the sociology of illness rather than the sociology of knowledge), by R. Dingwall, Aspects of illness (London, 1976). chap. 2. As for the "illness"/"disease" distinction, both words are so elastic that it can be made in many different ways, or avoided altogether, according to one's rhetorical purposes: see A. L. Caplan, H. T. Engelhardt, Jr. and J. M. McCartney (eds), Concepts of health and illness: Interdisciplinary perspectives (Reading, Mass., 1981), and C. Currer and M. Stacey (eds), Concepts of health and illness and disease: A comparative perspective (Leamington Spa, 1986).
    • (1986) Concepts of Health and Illness and Disease: A Comparative Perspective
    • Currer, C.1    Stacey, M.2
  • 96
    • 84965954976 scopus 로고
    • History of science and its sociological reconstructions
    • S. Shapin, "History of science and its sociological reconstructions", History of science, xx (1982), 157-211, p. 157.
    • (1982) History of Science , vol.20 , pp. 157-211
    • Shapin, S.1
  • 97
    • 0041879614 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 5. I thank Professor Smith for e-mailing me a copy of this paper and of his translations from the ancient texts, and for helpfully discussing my various queries
    • Smith, "Pleuritis (ref. 5). I thank Professor Smith for e-mailing me a copy of this paper and of his translations from the ancient texts, and for helpfully discussing my various queries.
    • Pleuritis
    • Smith1
  • 99
    • 0041879614 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • quoted here from typescript
    • Smith, "Pleuritis", quoted here from typescript.
    • Pleuritis
    • Smith1
  • 100
    • 55449122244 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • below, at ref. 121
    • Particularly the Aphorisms (below, at ref. 121).
    • Aphorisms
  • 102
    • 84963796335 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Internal suppurations: 26 and in Places in man: 14
    • This was the thrust of the discussions of pleuritis in Diseases I (the work known to Galen as Internal suppurations): 26 and in Places in man: 14. See respectively the Loeb edn, Hippocrates, v (transl. by P. Potter, London, 1988), 98-183, pp. 166-71, and Smith, "Pleuritis" (ref. 5), Appendix.
    • Diseases I
  • 103
    • 0042380866 scopus 로고
    • transl. by P. Potter, London
    • This was the thrust of the discussions of pleuritis in Diseases I (the work known to Galen as Internal suppurations): 26 and in Places in man: 14. See respectively the Loeb edn, Hippocrates, v (transl. by P. Potter, London, 1988), 98-183, pp. 166-71, and Smith, "Pleuritis" (ref. 5), Appendix.
    • (1988) Hippocrates , vol.5 , pp. 98-183
    • Loeb1
  • 104
    • 0041879614 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 5, Appendix
    • This was the thrust of the discussions of pleuritis in Diseases I (the work known to Galen as Internal suppurations): 26 and in Places in man: 14. See respectively the Loeb edn, Hippocrates, v (transl. by P. Potter, London, 1988), 98-183, pp. 166-71, and Smith, "Pleuritis" (ref. 5), Appendix.
    • Pleuritis
    • Smith1
  • 105
    • 85013286728 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • which however was one of the texts that did define pleuritis, as next discussed
    • This aspect also appeared in Affections: 7, which however was one of the texts that did define pleuritis, as next discussed.
    • Affections , vol.7
  • 106
    • 85013311068 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Affections: 7. See Loeb edn, Hippocrates, v, 6-91, pp. 15-16.
    • Affections , vol.7
    • Loeb1
  • 107
    • 0041879611 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Affections: 7. See Loeb edn, Hippocrates, v, 6-91, pp. 15-16.
    • Hippocrates , vol.5 , pp. 6-91
  • 108
    • 84963796335 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Diseases II: 44-46. See Loeb edn, Hippocrates, v, 191-333, pp. 262-7.
    • Diseases II , pp. 44-46
  • 109
    • 85013281934 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Diseases II: 44-46. See Loeb edn, Hippocrates, v, 191-333, pp. 262-7.
    • Hippocrates , vol.5 , pp. 191-333
  • 110
    • 85013258354 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Diseases III: 16. See Loeb edn, Hippocrates, vi (transl. by P. Potter, London, 1988), 6-63, pp. 38-57.
    • Diseases III , vol.16
    • Loeb1
  • 111
    • 0041378855 scopus 로고
    • London
    • Diseases III: 16. See Loeb edn, Hippocrates, vi (transl. by P. Potter, London, 1988), 6-63, pp. 38-57.
    • (1988) Hippocrates , vol.6 , pp. 6-63
    • Potter, P.1
  • 112
    • 0004326079 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 38-39; Smith's translation, in the appendix to his "Pleuritis" (ref. 5).
    • Hippocrates , pp. 38-39
  • 113
    • 0041879614 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 5
    • Ibid., 38-39; Smith's translation, in the appendix to his "Pleuritis" (ref. 5).
    • Pleuritis
  • 114
    • 0041879622 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Index of symptoms and diseases
    • Loeb edition, Hippocrates, vi, "Index of symptoms and diseases", 336.
    • Hippocrates , vol.6 , pp. 336
    • Loeb1
  • 115
    • 0004326079 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • translator's note
    • Ibid., translator's note, 334.
    • Hippocrates , pp. 334
  • 116
    • 85013282154 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Diseases I and Places in man, as cited in ref. 76 above; Aphorisms, quoted below, at ref. 121.
  • 117
    • 0025574824 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 5
    • See below, at ref. 123; Smith, "Pleuritis" (ref. 5), 3-4; and D. Jacquart, "Theory, everyday practice, and three 15th-century physicians", Osiris, 2nd ser., vi (1990), 140-60, p. 154.
    • Pleuritis , pp. 3-4
    • Smith1
  • 118
    • 0025574824 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Theory, everyday practice, and three 15th-century physicians
    • See below, at ref. 123; Smith, "Pleuritis" (ref. 5), 3-4; and D. Jacquart, "Theory, everyday practice, and three 15th-century physicians", Osiris, 2nd ser., vi (1990), 140-60, p. 154.
    • (1990) Osiris, 2nd Ser. , vol.6 , pp. 140-160
    • Jacquart, D.1
  • 119
    • 85013334406 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Below, at ref. 87
    • Below, at ref. 87.
  • 120
    • 0041879614 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • who characterizes Diseases III as discussing "a single disease with various manifestations"
    • Here my reading differs from that of Smith, "Pleuritis", who characterizes Diseases III as discussing "a single disease with various manifestations".
    • Pleuritis
    • Smith1
  • 121
    • 84963796335 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Diseases II: 44-46 (Loeb edn, Hippocrates, v, 264-7): cf. above, at ref. 85.
    • Diseases II , pp. 44-46
  • 122
    • 0041378845 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • cf. above, at ref. 85
    • Diseases II: 44-46 (Loeb edn, Hippocrates, v, 264-7): cf. above, at ref. 85.
    • Hippocrates , vol.5 , pp. 264-267
    • Loeb1
  • 123
    • 85013266280 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • In one text only, namely Places in man: 14, pleuritis was given an internal anatomical location, specifically in the lung. This work was also unique in conceiving pleuritis as the one-sided version of peripneumony: "When both sides are painful and the affections of both sides are similar, that is peripneumony; the other is pleuritis" (Smith's translation, "Pleuritis" (ref. 5), Appendix). Although many of the Hippocratic texts discussed pleuritis and peripneumony in sequence and offered overlapping therapies for them, they usually defined them in quite different ways. In particular, pleuritis was always defined with reference to pain in the side, as we have seen; but the defining symptoms of peripneumony were fever, cough and expectoration, with pain being mentioned only erratically. In short, the entire thrust of the discussion of pleuritis and peripneumony in Places in man was well outside the Hippocratic mainstream. (Accounts of peripneumony appeared in Affections: 9, Diseases I: 27, and Diseases II: 47, all in Loeb edn, Hippocrates, v; see pp. 17, 171, 267-9.)
  • 124
    • 85013308736 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Traditionally, Praxagoras is regarded as the teacher of Herophilus. With respect to the localization of pleuritis, Diodes may well have preceded Erasistratus, though this is not to say that he was Erasistratus's teacher. The possible roles of Praxagoras and (especially) Diocles in the story of pleuritis are discussed by Smith, "Pleuritis" (ref. 5); here, however, as a convenient simplification, I shall depict the anatomical tradition as stemming from Herophilus and Erasistratus, setting aside Praxagoras and Diocles. (The views of Diocles and Praxagoras on peripneumony are quoted in ref. 92 below.)
  • 125
    • 85013242403 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • I. E. Drabkin ed. and transl
    • Caelius Aurelianus, Acute diseases, II.xiii-xxiv, in I. E. Drabkin (ed. and transl.), Caelius Aurelianus: On acute diseases and On chronic diseases (Chicago, 1950), 181-227, chap. 16 (pp. 189-93). In fact, my claim that the dogmatics "defined" pleuritis in anatomical terms is a projection backwards from stage (iii) of ancient medicine (see below, particularly the discussion of Aretaeus at ref. 115); strictly speaking, it is possible that the dogmatics defined pleuritis in symptomatic terms and added an anatomical seat (or rather, seats). But for convenience I am eliding this particular subtlety.
    • Acute Diseases , vol.2 , pp. xiii-xxiv
    • Aurelianus, C.1
  • 126
    • 0041879605 scopus 로고
    • Chicago, chap. 16
    • Caelius Aurelianus, Acute diseases, II.xiii-xxiv, in I. E. Drabkin (ed. and transl.), Caelius Aurelianus: On acute diseases and On chronic diseases (Chicago, 1950), 181-227, chap. 16 (pp. 189-93). In fact, my claim that the dogmatics "defined" pleuritis in anatomical terms is a projection backwards from stage (iii) of ancient medicine (see below, particularly the discussion of Aretaeus at ref. 115); strictly speaking, it is possible that the dogmatics defined pleuritis in symptomatic terms and added an anatomical seat (or rather, seats). But for convenience I am eliding this particular subtlety.
    • (1950) Caelius Aurelianus: On Acute Diseases and On Chronic Diseases , pp. 181-227
  • 127
    • 85013334398 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • On peripneumony cf. ref. 88 above
    • On peripneumony cf. ref. 88 above.
  • 128
    • 0003541478 scopus 로고
    • quoted in H. von Staden, Cambridge, T.215
    • "In the case of people suffering from peripneumonia, Diocles says the veins of the lung are affected, while Erasistratus says the arteries are affected, and Praxagoras the parts of the lung which are joined to the spine. But Herophilus says the whole lung is affected. If the patients [also] suffer from fever, he says, it causes pleurisy." Caelius Aurelianus, quoted in H. von Staden, Herophilus: The art of medicine in early Alexandria (Cambridge, 1989), 378 (T.215). Cf. Caelius Aurelianus, Acute diseases, ed. by Drabkin (ref. 90), II.xxviii (p. 231).
    • (1989) Herophilus: The Art of Medicine in Early Alexandria , pp. 378
    • Aurelianus, C.1
  • 129
    • 85013334399 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ed. by Drabkin ref. 90
    • "In the case of people suffering from peripneumonia, Diocles says the veins of the lung are affected, while Erasistratus says the arteries are affected, and Praxagoras the parts of the lung which are joined to the spine. But Herophilus says the whole lung is affected. If the patients [also] suffer from fever, he says, it causes pleurisy." Caelius Aurelianus, quoted in H. von Staden, Herophilus: The art of medicine in early Alexandria (Cambridge, 1989), 378 (T.215). Cf. Caelius Aurelianus, Acute diseases, ed. by Drabkin (ref. 90), II.xxviii (p. 231).
    • Acute Diseases , vol.2 , pp. xxviii
    • Aurelianus, C.1
  • 130
    • 0042380852 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • This emerges from a passage from Galen's De locis affectis, as discussed by Smith in "Pleuritis" (ref. 5).
    • De Locis Affectis
    • Galen1
  • 131
    • 0041879614 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 5
    • This emerges from a passage from Galen's De locis affectis, as discussed by Smith in "Pleuritis" (ref. 5).
    • Pleuritis
    • Smith1
  • 132
    • 85013242424 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ed. by Drabkin (ref. 90), [91] and II.xvi [96-98] (pp. 185, 189-91)
    • Caelius Aurelianus, Acute diseases, ed. by Drabkin (ref. 90), II.xiv [91] and II.xvi [96-98] (pp. 185, 189-91).
    • Acute Diseases , vol.2 , pp. xiv
    • Aurelianus, C.1
  • 133
    • 85013251818 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • With a interesting qualification: that those who placed pleuritis in the membrane, or some of them, apparently believed that "some patients find it impossible to lie on the side affected, while others, on the contrary, rest more easily on that side": ibid., II.xvi [98] (p. 191). To complicate the matter, the justifying argument does not match the claim itself, as Drabkin observes in an editorial footnote. This very issue would be revived by Morgagni: see below, at ref. 176.
  • 134
    • 85013308760 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., II.xvi [96] (p. 189)
    • Ibid., II.xvi [96] (p. 189).
  • 135
    • 85013310205 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Ibid., II.xvi [98] (p. 191). Also of interest is the passage which records the views of Soranus/Caelius himself, for here there emerged an additional dimension of this symptom, one which I have not encountered in any other text: "when they turn on the opposite side they experience pain and actually feel the inflamed organs hanging and being drawn down by their own weight": ibid., II.xiv [91] (p. 185), emphasis added.
  • 136
    • 33750172102 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ed. by Drabkin; at ref. 73 on
    • Caelius Aurelianus, Acute diseases, ed. by Drabkin; at ref. 73 on p. 284.
    • Acute Diseases , pp. 284
    • Aurelianus, C.1
  • 137
    • 85013295595 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Cited below, from ref. 120 onwards
    • Cited below, from ref. 120 onwards.
  • 138
    • 84925860588 scopus 로고
    • On the causes.and symptoms of acute diseases
    • F. Adams ed. and transl. London
    • Aretaeus, On the causes.and symptoms of acute diseases, in F. Adams (ed. and transl.), The extant works of Aretaeus, the Cappadocian (London, 1856).
    • (1856) The Extant Works of Aretaeus, the Cappadocian
    • Aretaeus1
  • 140
    • 85013279126 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • In the case of cardiac disease Soranus/Caelius was anti-localist (ibid., II.xxxiv, 257-61, p. 259); with respect to hydrophobia, he adopted an intermediate position (III.xiv, 371-5, pp. 374-5).
  • 141
    • 85013279125 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., II.xvi [100] (p. 193)
    • Ibid., II.xvi [100] (p. 193).
  • 142
    • 85013352107 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • It should be mentioned, however, that Soranus's (Caelius's) citations of Hippocrates were somewhat haphazard and erratic: see ibid., Drabkin's note 1, p. 62 and note 10, p. 353.
  • 143
    • 85013329933 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., II.xix [113-24] (203-15)
    • Ibid., II.xix [113-24] (203-15).
  • 144
  • 146
    • 0041378837 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Stimulusus ac pulsuosus et igneus
    • ed. by Drabkin (ref. 90)
    • "Stimulusus ac pulsuosus et igneus": Caelius Aurelianus, Acute diseases, ed. by Drabkin (ref. 90), II.xiv [91], 184.
    • Acute Diseases , vol.2 , pp. xiv
    • Aurelianus, C.1
  • 148
    • 0042881792 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ed. by Adams (ref. 100)
    • The tricky issue concerns the term 'nygmatodes', used by Galen to characterize the pains of pleuritis. Aretaeus also used this word in connection with pleuritis, but he did so not in his generic description of the disease but rather as a sign that it had progressed to empyema: see Aretaeus, Acute diseases, ed. by Adams (ref. 100), I.x, 17 (Greek), 257 (English). Thus for Aretaeus, pains of the "nygmatodes" type were in fact characteristic not of pleuritis, but of empyema. And it would appear that Soranus had done something similar; for in Caelius Aurelianus's Latin rendition, he wrote that the transition from pleuritis to empyema is associated with "pungent pains" (dotore pungenti), as distinct from the pain of pleuritis itself, which in this particular context he described not as "pungent" but merely as "acute" (dolor acutus): see Caelius Aurelianus, Acute diseases, ed. by Drabkin (ref. 90), II.xvii [101-2] (p. 194). If (as later usages indeed imply) the Latin pungens was equivalent to the Greek nygmatodes, then the account of Soranus/Caelius differs from that of Galen much as that of Aretaeus does.
    • Acute Diseases , vol.1 , Issue.10 , pp. 17
    • Aretaeus1
  • 149
    • 85013279348 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ed. by Drabkin (ref. 90), [101-2] (p. 194)
    • The tricky issue concerns the term 'nygmatodes', used by Galen to characterize the pains of pleuritis. Aretaeus also used this word in connection with pleuritis, but he did so not in his generic description of the disease but rather as a sign that it had progressed to empyema: see Aretaeus, Acute diseases, ed. by Adams (ref. 100), I.x, 17 (Greek), 257 (English). Thus for Aretaeus, pains of the "nygmatodes" type were in fact characteristic not of pleuritis, but of empyema. And it would appear that Soranus had done something similar; for in Caelius Aurelianus's Latin rendition, he wrote that the transition from pleuritis to empyema is associated with "pungent pains" (dotore pungenti), as distinct from the pain of pleuritis itself, which in this particular context he described not as "pungent" but merely as "acute" (dolor acutus): see Caelius Aurelianus, Acute diseases, ed. by Drabkin (ref. 90), II.xvii [101-2] (p. 194). If (as later usages indeed imply) the Latin pungens was equivalent to the Greek nygmatodes, then the account of Soranus/Caelius differs from that of Galen much as that of Aretaeus does.
    • Acute Diseases , vol.2 , pp. xvii
    • Aurelianus, C.1
  • 150
    • 85013279349 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See above, at ref. 86
    • See above, at ref. 86.
  • 151
    • 85013329931 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • On Archigenes see further below, at ref. 128
    • On Archigenes see further below, at ref. 128.
  • 152
    • 85013281903 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • This is Wesley Smith's interpretation. The matter is complicated by the relation between the "pricking" quality of the pain and the progression of pleuritis to empyema: see ref. 110 above.
  • 153
    • 85013310227 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ed. by Drabkin (ref. 90), 98-100 pp. 191-3
    • Immediately after announcing the conclusion that "it is the hypezocos membrana which is the seat of this disease", Soranus/Caelius added: "And this membrane is the source of severe pains (dolorem vehementem), for it is fibrous and attached to the side." This came within a passage framed as a summary of the views of those who place pleuritis in the "hypezocos membrana", which indicates that Soranus/Caelius was here paraphrasing Erasistratus et al. See Caelius Aurelianus, Acute diseases, ed. by Drabkin (ref. 90), II.xvi [98-100] (pp. 191-3).
    • Acute Diseases , vol.2 , pp. xvi
    • Aurelianus, C.1
  • 154
    • 85013280695 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ed. by Adams (ref. 100), 16, 255-6; word-order modified slightly
    • Aretaeus, Acute diseases, I.x, ed. by Adams (ref. 100), 16, 255-6; word-order modified slightly.
    • Acute Diseases , vol.1 , pp. x
    • Aretaeus1
  • 155
    • 85013251828 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • This with the phrase "all these symptoms", in the third sentence
    • This with the phrase "all these symptoms", in the third sentence.
  • 156
    • 33750187135 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • (ref. 43), 137
    • Foucault, Birth of the clinic (ref. 43), 137; A. Cunningham, "Getting the game right: Some plain words on the identity and invention of science", Studies in history and philosophy of science, xix (1988), 365-89, pp. 373-5.
    • Birth of the Clinic
    • Foucault1
  • 157
    • 33750187135 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Getting the game right: Some plain words on the identity and invention of science
    • Foucault, Birth of the clinic (ref. 43), 137; A. Cunningham, "Getting the game right: Some plain words on the identity and invention of science", Studies in history and philosophy of science, xix (1988), 365-89, pp. 373-5.
    • (1988) Studies in History and Philosophy of Science , vol.19 , pp. 365-389
    • Cunningham, A.1
  • 158
    • 0003422445 scopus 로고
    • German original transl. from the 7th German edition by J. Macquarrie and E. Robinson, Oxford, section 7, p. 52, and below, at ref. 122
    • Cf. M. Heidegger, Being and time (German original 1928; transl. from the 7th German edition by J. Macquarrie and E. Robinson, Oxford, 1962), section 7, p. 52, and below, at ref. 122.
    • (1928) Being and Time
    • Heidegger, M.1
  • 159
    • 0004162316 scopus 로고
    • Ithaca, N.Y
    • See W. D. Smith, The Hippocratic tradition (Ithaca, N.Y., 1979). For a different reading see J. Longrigg, Greek rational medicine: Philosophy and medicine from Alcmaeon to the Alexandrians (London, 1993).
    • (1979) The Hippocratic Tradition
    • Smith, W.D.1
  • 161
    • 85013295647 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • cf. also xv
    • Aphorisms, V.viii (cf. also xv), in Loeb edn, Hippocrates, iv (transl. by W. H. S. Jones, London, 1931), 98-221, p. 159; Galen, Commentary on Hippocrates' Aphorisms (17B 399 K.), as cited and translated by Smith, "Pleuritis" (ref. 5).
    • Aphorisms , vol.5 , pp. viii
  • 162
    • 0042380844 scopus 로고
    • transl. by W. H. S. Jones, London
    • Aphorisms, V.viii (cf. also xv), in Loeb edn, Hippocrates, iv (transl. by W. H. S. Jones, London, 1931), 98-221, p. 159; Galen, Commentary on Hippocrates' Aphorisms (17B 399 K.), as cited and translated by Smith, "Pleuritis" (ref. 5).
    • (1931) Hippocrates , vol.4 , pp. 98-221
    • Loeb1
  • 163
    • 0042380822 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 17B 399 K
    • Aphorisms, V.viii (cf. also xv), in Loeb edn, Hippocrates, iv (transl. by W. H. S. Jones, London, 1931), 98-221, p. 159; Galen, Commentary on Hippocrates' Aphorisms (17B 399 K.), as cited and translated by Smith, "Pleuritis" (ref. 5).
    • Commentary on Hippocrates' Aphorisms
    • Galen1
  • 164
    • 0041879614 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 5
    • Aphorisms, V.viii (cf. also xv), in Loeb edn, Hippocrates, iv (transl. by W. H. S. Jones, London, 1931), 98-221, p. 159; Galen, Commentary on Hippocrates' Aphorisms (17B 399 K.), as cited and translated by Smith, "Pleuritis" (ref. 5).
    • Pleuritis
  • 165
    • 0004274132 scopus 로고
    • Harmondsworth
    • Contrast the translation in G. E. R. Lloyd (ed.), Hippocratic writings (Harmondsworth, 1978/1983), 222: "If sufferers from pleurisy do not cough up material within fourteen days, the inflammation produces empyema." The
    • (1978) Hippocratic Writings , pp. 222
    • Lloyd, G.E.R.1
  • 166
    • 85013247001 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Although certain of the Hippocratic texts had speculated as to the internal events underlying pleuritis (see above, at ref. 76), they had not installed these posited internal events as definitive of the disease; rather, the disease was identified as its symptoms. Hence the fact that those symptoms were never turned into "signs"; nor indeed were they conceived as "symptoms" in our sense (cf. above, at ref. 118), for they lay on the same ontological level as the disease.
  • 167
    • 0042380813 scopus 로고
    • Regimen in acute diseases: 16
    • Loeb edn, transl. by W. H. S Jones, London
    • Hippocrates, Regimen in acute diseases: 16, in Loeb edn, Hippocrates, ii (transl. by W. H. S Jones, London, 1923), 75; Galen, Commentary on Regimen in acute diseases (15.488 K), as cited and translated by Smith, "Pleuritis" (ref. 5).
    • (1923) Hippocrates , vol.2 , pp. 75
    • Hippocrates1
  • 168
    • 0041378806 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 15.488 K
    • Hippocrates, Regimen in acute diseases: 16, in Loeb edn, Hippocrates, ii (transl. by W. H. S Jones, London, 1923), 75; Galen, Commentary on Regimen in acute diseases (15.488 K), as cited and translated by Smith, "Pleuritis" (ref. 5).
    • Commentary on Regimen in Acute Diseases
    • Galen1
  • 169
    • 0041879614 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 5
    • Hippocrates, Regimen in acute diseases: 16, in Loeb edn, Hippocrates, ii (transl. by W. H. S Jones, London, 1923), 75; Galen, Commentary on Regimen in acute diseases (15.488 K), as cited and translated by Smith, "Pleuritis" (ref. 5).
    • Pleuritis
    • Smith1
  • 170
    • 0041879614 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 5 discusses several of these passages
    • Smith, "Pleuritis" (ref. 5) discusses several of these passages.
    • Pleuritis
    • Smith1
  • 171
    • 85013263978 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • F. Blondel and A. Le Moine (eds)
    • Galen, De causis pulsuum, IV.viii, in F. Blondel and A. Le Moine (eds), Hippocratis Coi, et Claudii Galeni Pergameni archiatron opera (13 vols in 9, Paris, 1639-89), viii, 223-5; De praesagitatione ex pulsibus, IV, ibid., 298-9; De pulsibus ad tyrones, cap. xii, ibid., 8-9; Galeni Synopsis librorum suorum de pulsibus, ibid., 326.
    • De Causis Pulsuum , vol.4 , pp. viii
    • Galen1
  • 172
    • 0041378823 scopus 로고
    • 13 vols in 9, Paris
    • Galen, De causis pulsuum, IV.viii, in F. Blondel and A. Le Moine (eds), Hippocratis Coi, et Claudii Galeni Pergameni archiatron opera (13 vols in 9, Paris, 1639-89), viii, 223-5; De praesagitatione ex pulsibus, IV, ibid., 298-9; De pulsibus ad tyrones, cap. xii, ibid., 8-9; Galeni Synopsis librorum suorum de pulsibus, ibid., 326.
    • (1639) Hippocratis Coi, et Claudii Galeni Pergameni Archiatron Opera , vol.8 , pp. 223-225
  • 173
    • 0042881753 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ibid
    • Galen, De causis pulsuum, IV.viii, in F. Blondel and A. Le Moine (eds), Hippocratis Coi, et Claudii Galeni Pergameni archiatron opera (13 vols in 9, Paris, 1639-89), viii, 223-5; De praesagitatione ex pulsibus, IV, ibid., 298-9; De pulsibus ad tyrones, cap. xii, ibid., 8-9; Galeni Synopsis librorum suorum de pulsibus, ibid., 326.
    • De Praesagitatione Ex Pulsibus , vol.4 , pp. 298-299
  • 174
    • 84955286382 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • cap. xii, ibid
    • Galen, De causis pulsuum, IV.viii, in F. Blondel and A. Le Moine (eds), Hippocratis Coi, et Claudii Galeni Pergameni archiatron opera (13 vols in 9, Paris, 1639-89), viii, 223-5; De praesagitatione ex pulsibus, IV, ibid., 298-9; De pulsibus ad tyrones, cap. xii, ibid., 8-9; Galeni Synopsis librorum suorum de pulsibus, ibid., 326.
    • De Pulsibus Ad Tyrones , pp. 8-9
  • 175
    • 0042380840 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ibid
    • Galen, De causis pulsuum, IV.viii, in F. Blondel and A. Le Moine (eds), Hippocratis Coi, et Claudii Galeni Pergameni archiatron opera (13 vols in 9, Paris, 1639-89), viii, 223-5; De praesagitatione ex pulsibus, IV, ibid., 298-9; De pulsibus ad tyrones, cap. xii, ibid., 8-9; Galeni Synopsis librorum suorum de pulsibus, ibid., 326.
    • Galeni Synopsis Librorum Suorum de Pulsibus , pp. 326
  • 176
    • 85013347309 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • So we may infer from the fact that the Soranus/Caelius passage cited earlier (above, at ref. 90) made no mention of the pulse in connection with the dispute over the localization of pleuritis.
  • 177
    • 84907327294 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 92
    • See von Staden, Herophilus (ref. 92), 262-88. All observers credited Herophilus with the basic pulse-nomenclature, but none of them mentioned the "hard" pulse (or its opposite, the "soft" pulse) amongst the various terms he had developed.
    • Herophilus , pp. 262-288
    • Von Staden1
  • 178
    • 85013251812 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Blondel and Le Moine (eds)
    • It seems that the terms "hard" and "soft" pulse were introduced by Archigenes (see Galen, De pulsuum differentiis, III.vii, in Blondel and Le Moine (eds), Hippocratis et Galeni opera (ref. 125), viii, 77-79); but it is unclear whether Archigenes had applied these terms to the particular cases of pleurisy and peripneumony. On Galen's debts to Archigenes in respect of pulse-lore, see von Staden, Herophilus (ref. 92), 284 n. 156; on Archigenes and pleuritis see above, at ref. 112.
    • De Pulsuum Differentiis , vol.3 , pp. vii
    • Galen1
  • 179
    • 0042881748 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 125
    • It seems that the terms "hard" and "soft" pulse were introduced by Archigenes (see Galen, De pulsuum differentiis, III.vii, in Blondel and Le Moine (eds), Hippocratis et Galeni opera (ref. 125), viii, 77-79); but it is unclear whether Archigenes had applied these terms to the particular cases of pleurisy and peripneumony. On Galen's debts to Archigenes in respect of pulse-lore, see von Staden, Herophilus (ref. 92), 284 n. 156; on Archigenes and pleuritis see above, at ref. 112.
    • Hippocratis et Galeni Opera , vol.8 , pp. 77-79
  • 180
    • 0041879570 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 92, on Archigenes and pleuritis see above, at ref. 112
    • It seems that the terms "hard" and "soft" pulse were introduced by Archigenes (see Galen, De pulsuum differentiis, III.vii, in Blondel and Le Moine (eds), Hippocratis et Galeni opera (ref. 125), viii, 77-79); but it is unclear whether Archigenes had applied these terms to the particular cases of pleurisy and peripneumony. On Galen's debts to Archigenes in respect of pulse-lore, see von Staden, Herophilus (ref. 92), 284 n. 156; on Archigenes and pleuritis see above, at ref. 112.
    • Herophilus , vol.156 , pp. 284
    • Von Staden1
  • 181
    • 85013286563 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Blondel and Le Moine (eds)
    • Galen, De causis pulsuum, IV.xii. in Blondel and Le Moine (eds), Hippocratis et Galeni opera (ref. 125), viii, 227; De pulsibus ad Tyrones, cap. xii, in ibid., 10.
    • De Causis Pulsuum , vol.4 , pp. xii
    • Galen1
  • 182
    • 33750157493 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 125
    • Galen, De causis pulsuum, IV.xii. in Blondel and Le Moine (eds), Hippocratis et Galeni opera (ref. 125), viii, 227; De pulsibus ad Tyrones, cap. xii, in ibid., 10.
    • Hippocratis et Galeni Opera , vol.8 , pp. 227
  • 183
    • 84955286382 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • cap. xii, in ibid
    • Galen, De causis pulsuum, IV.xii. in Blondel and Le Moine (eds), Hippocratis et Galeni opera (ref. 125), viii, 227; De pulsibus ad Tyrones, cap. xii, in ibid., 10.
    • De Pulsibus Ad Tyrones , pp. 10
  • 185
    • 0041879595 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Galen, De causis pulsuum, IV.viii, in ibid., viii, 224.
    • De Causis Pulsuum , vol.8 , pp. 224
  • 186
    • 85013316716 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., viii, 223
    • Ibid., viii, 223.
  • 188
    • 0003938809 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • London
    • J. B. Saunders and C. D. O'Malley, Andreas Vesalius Bruxellensis, The Bloodletting Letter of 1539: An annotated translation and study of Vesalius's scientific development (New York, 1946), 15. See also A. Cunningham, The anatomical renaissance: The resurrection of the anatomical projects of the ancients (London, 1997), 101-2, 110-11. The issue had medieval precedents: see Jacquart, "Theory, everyday practice, and three 15th-century physicians" (ref. 84), 158.
    • (1997) The Anatomical Renaissance: The Resurrection of the Anatomical Projects of the Ancients , pp. 101-102
    • Cunningham, A.1
  • 189
    • 0042881747 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 84
    • J. B. Saunders and C. D. O'Malley, Andreas Vesalius Bruxellensis, The Bloodletting Letter of 1539: An annotated translation and study of Vesalius's scientific development (New York, 1946), 15. See also A. Cunningham, The anatomical renaissance: The resurrection of the anatomical projects of the ancients (London, 1997), 101-2, 110-11. The issue had medieval precedents: see Jacquart, "Theory, everyday practice, and three 15th-century physicians" (ref. 84), 158.
    • Theory, Everyday Practice, and Three 15th-century Physicians , pp. 158
    • Jacquart1
  • 190
    • 85013316709 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Saunders and O'Malley, The Bloodletting Letter (ref. 132), 74.
    • , vol.132 , pp. 74
    • O'Malley1
  • 191
    • 85013329862 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • cf. ref. 136 below
    • Ibid., 81-82; cf. ref. 136 below.
  • 192
    • 85013281906 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 70, reading "pleuritis" for "pleurisy throughout
    • Ibid., 70, reading "pleuritis" for "pleurisy throughout.
  • 193
    • 85013335285 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The membrane did enter Vesalius's discussion at a later point (ibid., 81-82), but not as the seat of the disease; rather, to demonstrate that dolor lateralis tends most often to occur where that membrane is "less firmly attached", that is, in the vicinity of the fifth to the eighth ribs. See further ref. 144 below.
  • 197
    • 85013330006 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • This in a later text, from 1546: see ref. 144 below
    • This in a later text, from 1546: see ref. 144 below.
  • 198
    • 0041879568 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 132
    • Immediately after the passage just quoted Vesalius remarked: "In addition the name pleurisy derived from the ribs - also called πλευραι, because they form the side - by no means indicates a primary position, since the ancient Latin writers called the disease dolor lateralis, not dolor costalis…" (Saunders and O'Malley, The Bloodletting Letter (ref. 132), 70; here I have modified the translation and punctuation for greater clarity).
    • The Bloodletting Letter , pp. 70
    • Saunders1    O'Malley2
  • 201
    • 85013244474 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Vesalius, De humani corporis fabrica, VI.ii. A few years later (1546), in the course of his Epistola rationem modumque propinandi radicis Chynae decocti (Letter on the China root), Vesalius returned in passing to the topic of pleurisy, mentioning two fatal cases, each of which he had examined post mortem. The first case (in which the patient was said to have died of "dolor lateralis") seems at first sight to embody a shift from Vesalius's views of 1539, for this showed inflammation of the membrana costas succingens on the left side. But the second case (described as "morbus lateralis") suggests that his conception was unchanged, for here the inflammation was not tied to that membrane, but rather "occupied the whole posterior part of the thorax" and followed the distribution of the unpaired vein. Combining the two cases, we may infer that Vesalius regarded the succingens membrane as just one possible seat of "dolor lateralis" or "morbus lateralis", a view which harmonized perfectly with what he had written in 1539. Nevertheless it is worth remarking that both these post-mortems showed inflammation, whereas in 1539 Vesalius had mentioned only an "affection"; it is not clear whether this represents a change in his views or whether it was merely a matter of verbal tactics. See Vesalius, Opera omnia anatomica et chururgica, ed. by H. Boerhaave and B. S. Albinus (2 vols, Leyden, 1725), ii, 664, and Morgagni, The seats and causes of diseases (ret. 169), 623.
    • De Humani Corporis Fabrica , vol.6 , pp. ii
    • Vesalius1
  • 202
    • 0041879585 scopus 로고
    • ed. by H. Boerhaave and B. S. Albinus 2 vols, Leyden
    • Vesalius, De humani corporis fabrica, VI.ii. A few years later (1546), in the course of his Epistola rationem modumque propinandi radicis Chynae decocti (Letter on the China root), Vesalius returned in passing to the topic of pleurisy, mentioning two fatal cases, each of which he had examined post mortem. The first case (in which the patient was said to have died of "dolor lateralis") seems at first sight to embody a shift from Vesalius's views of 1539, for this showed inflammation of the membrana costas succingens on the left side. But the second case (described as "morbus lateralis") suggests that his conception was unchanged, for here the inflammation was not tied to that membrane, but rather "occupied the whole posterior part of the thorax" and followed the distribution of the unpaired vein. Combining the two cases, we may infer that Vesalius regarded the succingens membrane as just one possible seat of "dolor lateralis" or "morbus lateralis", a view which harmonized perfectly with what he had written in 1539. Nevertheless it is worth remarking that both these post-mortems showed inflammation, whereas in 1539 Vesalius had mentioned only an "affection"; it is not clear whether this represents a change in his views or whether it was merely a matter of verbal tactics. See Vesalius, Opera omnia anatomica et chururgica, ed. by H. Boerhaave and B. S. Albinus (2 vols, Leyden, 1725), ii, 664, and Morgagni, The seats and causes of diseases (ret. 169), 623.
    • (1725) Opera Omnia Anatomica et Chururgica , vol.2 , pp. 664
    • Vesalius1
  • 203
    • 85013255844 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ret. 169
    • Vesalius, De humani corporis fabrica, VI.ii. A few years later (1546), in the course of his Epistola rationem modumque propinandi radicis Chynae decocti (Letter on the China root), Vesalius returned in passing to the topic of pleurisy, mentioning two fatal cases, each of which he had examined post mortem. The first case (in which the patient was said to have died of "dolor lateralis") seems at first sight to embody a shift from Vesalius's views of 1539, for this showed inflammation of the membrana costas succingens on the left side. But the second case (described as "morbus lateralis") suggests that his conception was unchanged, for here the inflammation was not tied to that membrane, but rather "occupied the whole posterior part of the thorax" and followed the distribution of the unpaired vein. Combining the two cases, we may infer that Vesalius regarded the succingens membrane as just one possible seat of "dolor lateralis" or "morbus lateralis", a view which harmonized perfectly with what he had written in 1539. Nevertheless it is worth remarking that both these post-mortems showed inflammation, whereas in 1539 Vesalius had mentioned only an "affection"; it is not clear whether this represents a change in his views or whether it was merely a matter of verbal tactics. See Vesalius, Opera omnia anatomica et chururgica, ed. by H. Boerhaave and B. S. Albinus (2 vols, Leyden, 1725), ii, 664, and Morgagni, The seats and causes of diseases (ret. 169), 623.
    • The Seats and Causes of Diseases , pp. 623
    • Morgagni1
  • 204
    • 0004006242 scopus 로고
    • Edinburgh
    • See G. Whitteridge (ed.), The anatomical lectures of William Harvey (Edinburgh, 1964), 236, 246. When William Harvey lectured on anatomy in 1616, taking Bauhin as his starting-point, he accepted this use of "pleura". (Incidentally, Bauhin also used "pleura" in a quite different way: as a designation for fibrous bands connecting the lungs to the chest wall. Harvey contested Bauhin's assumption that such fibrous bands were normal, but he did not dispute this further use of the term "pleura": see ibid., 275.)
    • (1964) The Anatomical Lectures of William Harvey , pp. 236
    • Whitteridge, G.1
  • 205
    • 0041378822 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See G. Whitteridge (ed.), The anatomical lectures of William Harvey (Edinburgh, 1964), 236, 246. When William Harvey lectured on anatomy in 1616, taking Bauhin as his starting-point, he accepted this use of "pleura". (Incidentally, Bauhin also used "pleura" in a quite different way: as a designation for fibrous bands connecting the lungs to the chest wall. Harvey contested Bauhin's assumption that such fibrous bands were normal, but he did not dispute this further use of the term "pleura": see ibid., 275.)
    • The Anatomical Lectures of William Harvey , pp. 275
  • 206
    • 85013279479 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 236; ret. 132
    • Ibid., 236; Cunningham, The anatomical renaissance (ret. 132), 103.
    • The Anatomical Renaissance , pp. 103
  • 211
    • 85013286035 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 60. Cf. also pp. 103, 104 ("scattered sentences", "snug sentences")
    • Ibid., 60. Cf. also pp. 103, 104 ("scattered sentences", "snug sentences").
  • 212
    • 85013330046 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 59
    • Ibid., 59.
  • 213
    • 85013320575 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 103, 60
    • Ibid., 103, 60.
  • 214
    • 85013236014 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 105
    • Ibid., 105.
  • 215
    • 0041879569 scopus 로고
    • The advancement of learning, I.V.5
    • Bacon, ed. by A. Johnston Oxford
    • See F. Bacon, The advancement of learning, I.v.5, in Bacon, The advancement of learning and New Atlantis, ed. by A. Johnston (Oxford, 1974), 34. On Baglivi's admiration for Bacon see J. Martin, "Sauvages' nosology" (cited in ref. 202 below), 115-18.
    • (1974) The Advancement of Learning and New Atlantis , pp. 34
    • Bacon, F.1
  • 216
    • 0042881736 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • cited in ref. 202 below
    • See F. Bacon, The advancement of learning, I.v.5, in Bacon, The advancement of learning and New Atlantis, ed. by A. Johnston (Oxford, 1974), 34. On Baglivi's admiration for Bacon see J. Martin, "Sauvages' nosology" (cited in ref. 202 below), 115-18.
    • Sauvages' Nosology , pp. 115-118
    • Martin, J.1
  • 217
    • 0041378788 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 147, Cf. also p. 22, where Baglivi offered his formal definition of the Medicina prima. 157. Ibid., 197
    • Baglivi, The practice of physic (ref. 147), 188. Cf. also p. 22, where Baglivi offered his formal definition of the Medicina prima. 157. Ibid., 197.
    • The Practice of Physic , pp. 188
    • Baglivi1
  • 218
    • 85013244525 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 22
    • Ibid., 22.
  • 219
    • 85013327463 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 197
    • Ibid., 197.
  • 220
    • 85013285303 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 60
    • Ibid., 60.
  • 221
    • 85013285310 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 60-61
    • Ibid., 60-61.
  • 222
    • 85013327472 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See above, at ref. 130
    • See above, at ref. 130.
  • 224
    • 85013301213 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • For instance, "A good respiration is a good omen, but a bad one is always to be dreaded…. But prognostics taken from the pulse are not so certain…"; and "Such pleuritical patients as were seized with a pain in the inner part of the ear, followed by an imposthume and pus, were all cured, pursuant to my repeated observations in the Italian Hospitals" (ibid., 61). Again, "After the cessation of the pain of inflamed parts (especially in the case of a pleurisy or the inflammation of membranous parts), if the fever still continues, or increases, being attended with a low, intermitting and frequent pulse, cold sweats, etc., 'tis a fatal omen…" (p. 63).
  • 225
    • 85013301220 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Baglivi recommended bleeding (without considering its site, and so without mentioning the controversy which had raged in Vesalius's day) and expectoration, and argued against purgatives and diaphoretics: ibid., 62, 64-65.
  • 226
    • 85013256019 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 62, 63, 65
    • Ibid., 62, 63, 65.
  • 227
    • 85013256297 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 22, quoted above, at ref. 158
    • Ibid., 22, quoted above, at ref. 158.
  • 228
    • 85013327461 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., 20-21, 114-16, 118, 126-7, 197
    • Ibid., 20-21, 114-16, 118, 126-7, 197.
  • 229
    • 0003465595 scopus 로고
    • Venice, On the seats and causes of diseases, investigated by anatomy transl. by B. Alexander, 3 vols. London
    • G. Morgagni, De sedibus et causis morborum per anatomen indagatis (Venice, 1761); On the seats and causes of diseases, investigated by anatomy (transl. by B. Alexander, 3 vols. London, 1769).
    • (1761) De Sedibus et Causis Morborum Per Anatomen Indagatis
    • Morgagni, G.1
  • 232
    • 85013255844 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 169
    • See G. A. Lindeboom, Herman Boerhaave: The man and his work (London, 1968), 274-5, and contrast Morgagni, On the seats and causes of diseases (ref. 169), 613.
    • On the Seats and Causes of Diseases , pp. 613
    • Morgagni1
  • 233
    • 85077012083 scopus 로고
    • Giovanni Battista Morgagni and eighteenth-century physical examination
    • C. Lawrence (ed.), London
    • True, we have two excellent, complementary recent discussions: M. Nicolson, "Giovanni Battista Morgagni and eighteenth-century physical examination", in C. Lawrence (ed.), Medical theory, surgical practice (London, 1992), 101-34, and A. Cunningham, "Pathology and the case-history in Morgagni's 'On the Seats and Causes of Diseases Investigated Through Anatomy' (1761)", MedGG, xi (1995), 37-61. But a great deal more remains to be learnt from the 2, 242 pages of On the seats and causes of diseases.
    • (1992) Medical Theory, Surgical Practice , pp. 101-134
    • Nicolson, M.1
  • 234
    • 0042881725 scopus 로고
    • Pathology and the case-history in Morgagni's 'On the Seats and Causes of Diseases Investigated Through Anatomy' (1761)
    • But a great deal more remains to be learnt from the 2, 242 pages of On the seats and causes of diseases
    • True, we have two excellent, complementary recent discussions: M. Nicolson, "Giovanni Battista Morgagni and eighteenth-century physical examination", in C. Lawrence (ed.), Medical theory, surgical practice (London, 1992), 101-34, and A. Cunningham, "Pathology and the case-history in Morgagni's 'On the Seats and Causes of Diseases Investigated Through Anatomy' (1761)", MedGG, xi (1995), 37-61. But a great deal more remains to be learnt from the 2, 242 pages of On the seats and causes of diseases.
    • (1995) MedGG , vol.11 , pp. 37-61
    • Cunningham, A.1
  • 236
  • 237
    • 0041378787 scopus 로고
    • Morgagni, Vicarius, and the difficulty of clinical diagnosis
    • L. G. Stevenson and
    • On Morgagni's logic see S. Jarcho, "Morgagni, Vicarius, and the difficulty of clinical diagnosis", in L. G. Stevenson and R. P Multhauf (eds), Medicine, science and culture: Historical essays in honor of Owsei Temkin (Baltimore, 1968), 87-95; on the anatomical and case-historical dimensions of Morgagni's enterprise see Cunningham, "Pathology and the case-history" (ref. 172).
    • (1968) Medicine, Science and Culture: Historical Essays in Honor of Owsei Temkin Baltimore , pp. 87-95
    • Jarcho, S.1
  • 238
    • 0041378785 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 172
    • On Morgagni's logic see S. Jarcho, "Morgagni, Vicarius, and the difficulty of clinical diagnosis", in L. G. Stevenson and R. P Multhauf (eds), Medicine, science and culture: Historical essays in honor of Owsei Temkin (Baltimore, 1968), 87-95; on the anatomical and case-historical dimensions of Morgagni's enterprise see Cunningham, "Pathology and the case-history" (ref. 172).
    • Pathology and the Case-history
    • Cunningham1
  • 239
    • 85013245196 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • By explaining the anomaly Morgagni was able to advance a hypothesis as to the source of the pain-in-lying-down (On the seats and causes of diseases, 555), a hypothesis which fed into his larger subsequent discussion (see for instance p. 558).
  • 240
    • 33750184129 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 94
    • Ibid., 569-70. Here Morgagni duly noticed that the anomaly he had observed was also of ancient record, in Caelius Aurelianus's Acute diseases (ref. 94).
    • Acute Diseases
    • Aurelianus, C.1
  • 241
    • 85013244805 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See above, at ref. 145
    • See above, at ref. 145.
  • 244
    • 0041378753 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • transl. anon., 18 vols, London, 1744-73, and ix (separate and extended treatments of peripneumony and pleurisy respectively)
    • In all probability, Morgagni had grossly exaggerated Baronius's contribution, and had suppressed the writings of many other authors, for in fact this conception went back to the sixteenth century and was well known in the early eighteenth century: see the citations under the entry for "pleuro-pneumonia" in the Oxford English dictionary. Nevertheless this licence on Morgagni's part was justified, for pleurisy and peripneumony were regarded as distinct diseases by Boerhaave, by van Swieten, and by all the leading nosologists, among them Sauvages, Linnaeus, Vogel and Cullen. See G. van Swieten, The commentaries upon the aphorisms of Dr. Herman Boerhaave concerning the knowledge and cure of the several diseases incident to human bodies (transl. anon., 18 vols, London, 1744-73), viii and ix (separate and extended treatments of peripneumony and pleurisy respectively); W. Cullen, Synopsis nosologicae methodicae (Edinburgh, 1769), 30, 33, 103, 105, 171, 260-1.
    • The Commentaries Upon the Aphorisms of Dr. Herman Boerhaave Concerning the Knowledge and Cure of the Several Diseases Incident to Human Bodies , pp. viii
    • Van Swieten, G.1
  • 245
    • 0003739391 scopus 로고
    • Edinburgh
    • In all probability, Morgagni had grossly exaggerated Baronius's contribution, and had suppressed the writings of many other authors, for in fact this conception went back to the sixteenth century and was well known in the early eighteenth century: see the citations under the entry for "pleuro-pneumonia" in the Oxford English dictionary. Nevertheless this licence on Morgagni's part was justified, for pleurisy and peripneumony were regarded as distinct diseases by Boerhaave, by van Swieten, and by all the leading nosologists, among them Sauvages, Linnaeus, Vogel and Cullen. See G. van Swieten, The commentaries upon the aphorisms of Dr. Herman Boerhaave concerning the knowledge and cure of the several diseases incident to human bodies (transl. anon., 18 vols, London, 1744-73), viii and ix (separate and extended treatments of peripneumony and pleurisy respectively); W. Cullen, Synopsis nosologicae methodicae (Edinburgh, 1769), 30, 33, 103, 105, 171, 260-1.
    • (1769) Synopsis Nosologicae Methodicae , pp. 30
    • Cullen, W.1
  • 246
    • 0003607337 scopus 로고
    • first published 4th edn, Philadelphia
    • Garrison remarked: "It is said of him [Boerhaave] that he was the first to establish the site of pleurisy exclusively in the pleura…": F. H. Garrison, An introduction to the history of medicine (first published 1913; 4th edn, Philadelphia, 1929), 317. giving no reference. I have not identified the origin of this particular claim.
    • (1913) An Introduction to the History of Medicine , pp. 317
    • Garrison, F.H.1
  • 249
    • 79955328596 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • (ref. 181), ix, 1
    • (1) The pain-in-the-side was described as being intensified by inspiration (J. Duffin, personal communication); this had already been identified earlier (see van Swieten, Commentaries (ref. 181), ix, 1). The hard pulse had apparently been dropped as a diagnostic sign; I have not established when this took place. (3) Survivors of chronic pleurisy had retraction of one side of the chest; this was discovered by Laennec himself (Duffin, To see with a better eye (ref. 6), 161).
    • Commentaries
    • Van Swieten1
  • 250
    • 0003407240 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 6, 161
    • (1) The pain-in-the-side was described as being intensified by inspiration (J. Duffin, personal communication); this had already been identified earlier (see van Swieten, Commentaries (ref. 181), ix, 1). The hard pulse had apparently been dropped as a diagnostic sign; I have not established when this took place. (3) Survivors of chronic pleurisy had retraction of one side of the chest; this was discovered by Laennec himself (Duffin, To see with a better eye (ref. 6), 161).
    • To See with a Better Eye
    • Duffin1
  • 253
    • 85013249863 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Most of what follows rests specifically on Chomel's observations, of which Maulitz gives examples drawn from students' lecture-notes (ibid., 134-5), but the link between pleuritis and phthisis was apparently characteristic of the Paris school at this time (p. 133). The quotations in the next four references are from Chomel, in ibid., 134-5.
  • 254
    • 85013331460 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • "The stitch in one's side [that is] worsened by inspiration and by cough is characteristic of pleurisy."
  • 255
    • 85013330041 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • "Phthisical patients from time to time are subject to pleuritic stitches without effusions." See also the quotation in the next reference.
  • 256
    • 0003407240 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • (ref. 6), 205
    • "Certain cases of pleurisy are accompanied only by a pseudomembranous exudate, in which case there is neither dullness nor egophony." Conversely, Andral had already argued in the 1820s that (as Duffin puts it) "egophony could exist under false positive circumstances, when there was no effusion at all" (Duffin, To see with a better eye (ref. 6), 205).
    • To See with a Better Eye
    • Duffin1
  • 257
    • 85013291182 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • See the quotation in ref. 190 above, and also: "In chronic pleurisy we have often found tubercles in the chest of those who have succumbed."
  • 259
    • 85013255965 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • In the next letter of De sedibus (Letter 22), Morgagni discussed phthisis along with empyema; here he linked "pleuripneumony" (the concept which had now replaced both pleurisy and peripneumony) with empyema, and not with phthisis (On the seats and causes of diseases (ref. 169), 650, 655; cf. refs 110, 121 above). True, he suggested that some of Valsalva's "peripneumony" cases (which he had discussed in Letter 20) actually "related rather to consumption" (p. 645); but this was as near as he came to linking pleurisy or "pleuripneumony" with consumption. It should also be observed that De sedibus included only a few cases of phthisis, because both Valsalva and (even more so) Morgagni were "cautious" about dissecting the bodies of consumptives, evidently through fear of contagion (pp. 645, 661).
  • 262
    • 85013236011 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See above, at ref. 174
    • See above, at ref. 174.
  • 263
    • 0029433964 scopus 로고
    • The social construction of medical knowledge
    • particularly p. 374
    • Cf. L. Jordanova, "The social construction of medical knowledge", Social history of medicine, viii (1995), 361-81, particularly p. 374.
    • (1995) Social History of Medicine , vol.8 , pp. 361-381
    • Jordanova, L.1
  • 264
    • 10244261028 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge
    • See for instance R. Porter (ed.), Patients and practitioners: Lay perceptions of medicine in pre-industrial society (Cambridge, 1985); L. McC. Beier, Sufferers and healers: The experience of illness in the seventeenth century (London, 1987); R. Porter and D. Porter, In sickness and in health (London, 1989); D. Porter and R. Porter, Patient's progress: Doctors and doctoring in eighteenth-century England (Oxford, 1989).
    • (1985) Patients and Practitioners: Lay Perceptions of Medicine in Pre-industrial Society
    • Porter, R.1
  • 265
    • 0347935362 scopus 로고
    • London
    • See for instance R. Porter (ed.), Patients and practitioners: Lay perceptions of medicine in pre-industrial society (Cambridge, 1985); L. McC. Beier, Sufferers and healers: The experience of illness in the seventeenth century (London, 1987); R. Porter and D. Porter, In sickness and in health (London, 1989); D. Porter and R. Porter, Patient's progress: Doctors and doctoring in eighteenth-century England (Oxford, 1989).
    • (1987) Sufferers and Healers: The Experience of Illness in the Seventeenth Century
    • Beier, L.M.1
  • 266
    • 0004738398 scopus 로고
    • London
    • See for instance R. Porter (ed.), Patients and practitioners: Lay perceptions of medicine in pre-industrial society (Cambridge, 1985); L. McC. Beier, Sufferers and healers: The experience of illness in the seventeenth century (London, 1987); R. Porter and D. Porter, In sickness and in health (London, 1989); D. Porter and R. Porter, Patient's progress: Doctors and doctoring in eighteenth-century England (Oxford, 1989).
    • (1989) In Sickness and in Health
    • Porter, R.1    Porter, D.2
  • 267
    • 0003519123 scopus 로고
    • Oxford
    • See for instance R. Porter (ed.), Patients and practitioners: Lay perceptions of medicine in pre-industrial society (Cambridge, 1985); L. McC. Beier, Sufferers and healers: The experience of illness in the seventeenth century (London, 1987); R. Porter and D. Porter, In sickness and in health (London, 1989); D. Porter and R. Porter, Patient's progress: Doctors and doctoring in eighteenth-century England (Oxford, 1989).
    • (1989) Patient's Progress: Doctors and Doctoring in Eighteenth-century England
    • Porter, D.1    Porter, R.2
  • 268
    • 0023935969 scopus 로고
    • The metastatic theory of pathogenesis and the professional interests of the eighteenth-century physician
    • For a fine illustration of this point see M. Nicolson, "The metastatic theory of pathogenesis and the professional interests of the eighteenth-century physician", Medical history, xxxii (1988), 277-300.
    • (1988) Medical History , vol.32 , pp. 277-300
    • Nicolson, M.1
  • 270
    • 0041378782 scopus 로고
    • Sickness and the soul: Stahl, Hoffman and Sauvages on pathology
    • A. Cunningham and R. French (eds), Cambridge
    • For two very different accounts see R. French, "Sickness and the soul: Stahl, Hoffman and Sauvages on pathology", in A. Cunningham and R. French (eds), The medical enlightenment of the eighteenth century (Cambridge, 1990), 88-110, and J. Martin, "Sauvages' nosology: Medical enlightenment in Montpellier", ibid., 111-37. For the most recent word on Sauvages, see L. Brockliss and C. Jones, The medical world of early-modern France (Oxford, 1997), 427-9, p. 435 and passim.
    • (1990) The Medical Enlightenment of the Eighteenth Century , pp. 88-110
    • French, R.1
  • 271
    • 0042881736 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Sauvages' nosology: Medical enlightenment in Montpellier
    • Cambridge
    • For two very different accounts see R. French, "Sickness and the soul: Stahl, Hoffman and Sauvages on pathology", in A. Cunningham and R. French (eds), The medical enlightenment of the eighteenth century (Cambridge, 1990), 88-110, and J. Martin, "Sauvages' nosology: Medical enlightenment in Montpellier", ibid., 111-37. For the most recent word on Sauvages, see L. Brockliss and C. Jones, The medical world of early-modern France (Oxford, 1997), 427-9, p. 435 and passim.
    • The Medical Enlightenment of the Eighteenth Century , pp. 111-137
    • Martin, J.1
  • 272
    • 0039022333 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Oxford
    • For two very different accounts see R. French, "Sickness and the soul: Stahl, Hoffman and Sauvages on pathology", in A. Cunningham and R. French (eds), The medical enlightenment of the eighteenth century (Cambridge, 1990), 88-110, and J. Martin, "Sauvages' nosology: Medical enlightenment in Montpellier", ibid., 111-37. For the most recent word on Sauvages, see L. Brockliss and C. Jones, The medical world of early-modern France (Oxford, 1997), 427-9, p. 435 and passim.
    • (1997) The Medical World of Early-modern France , pp. 427-429
    • Brockliss, L.1    Jones, C.2
  • 273
    • 0042380799 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 202, who stresses the differences
    • This crucial issue has been raised by French, "Sickness and the soul" (ref. 202), who stresses the differences; but Martin, in "Sauvages' nosology" (ref. 202), can be read as emphasizing the continuities between the two.
    • Sickness and the Soul
    • French1
  • 274
    • 0042881736 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 202, can be read as emphasizing the continuities between the two
    • This crucial issue has been raised by French, "Sickness and the soul" (ref. 202), who stresses the differences; but Martin, in "Sauvages' nosology" (ref. 202), can be read as emphasizing the continuities between the two.
    • Sauvages' Nosology
    • Martin1
  • 276
    • 84965182354 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 43, chap. 1 and passim
    • Foucault, Birth of the clinic (ref. 43), chap. 1 and passim; R. Porter, "The eighteenth century" in L. I. Conrad et al., The Western medical tradition (Cambridge, 1995), 371-475, pp. 409-10. See also Maulitz, "In the clinic" (ref. 6), passim, and Duffin, To see with a better eye (ref. 6), 68-69, 251
    • Birth of the Clinic
    • Foucault1
  • 277
    • 0042881735 scopus 로고
    • The eighteenth century
    • L. I. Conrad et al., Cambridge
    • Foucault, Birth of the clinic (ref. 43), chap. 1 and passim; R. Porter, "The eighteenth century" in L. I. Conrad et al., The Western medical tradition (Cambridge, 1995), 371-475, pp. 409-10. See also Maulitz, "In the clinic" (ref. 6), passim, and Duffin, To see with a better eye (ref. 6), 68-69, 251
    • (1995) The Western Medical Tradition , pp. 371-475
    • Porter, R.1
  • 278
    • 0042380788 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • (ref. 6), passim
    • Foucault, Birth of the clinic (ref. 43), chap. 1 and passim; R. Porter, "The eighteenth century" in L. I. Conrad et al., The Western medical tradition (Cambridge, 1995), 371-475, pp. 409-10. See also Maulitz, "In the clinic" (ref. 6), passim, and Duffin, To see with a better eye (ref. 6), 68-69, 251
    • In the Clinic
    • Maulitz1
  • 279
    • 0003407240 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 6
    • Foucault, Birth of the clinic (ref. 43), chap. 1 and passim; R. Porter, "The eighteenth century" in L. I. Conrad et al., The Western medical tradition (Cambridge, 1995), 371-475, pp. 409-10. See also Maulitz, "In the clinic" (ref. 6), passim, and Duffin, To see with a better eye (ref. 6), 68-69, 251
    • To See with a Better Eye , pp. 68-69
    • Duffin1
  • 280
    • 85013256362 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Dr Shyamsunder Rao Chepur assures me (personal communication, 1998) that there are in the Ayurvedic tradition at least two standard diagnostic categories which correspond to, or overlap with, pleurisy: (1) Parshuka roga ("disease of the sides"); and (2) Utpullika (a "respiratory disorder" associated with "painful swelling in the right hypochondrium and intercostal space"). But I have yet to discover just how those categories developed historically within that tradition.


* 이 정보는 Elsevier사의 SCOPUS DB에서 KISTI가 분석하여 추출한 것입니다.