400
700
900
The Greatest Benefit To Mankind: A Medical History Of Humanity
Roy Porter

The Greatest Benefit To Mankind: A Medical History Of Humanity

a medical history of humanity from antiquity to the present

HarperCollins (Nov 17, 1997)
9780002151733
| Paperback
700 pages | English
Dewey 610.9

Genre

  • Medicine

Subject

  • Medicine - History
  • Social Medicine - History

Plot

Medicine advances ever faster, and with it not just a capacity to overcome sickness, but to transform the very nature of life. Starting in ancient antiquity, this text charts how this health revolution came about and how life for human beings in the West has ceased, in Hobbes' memorable phrase, to be "nasty, brutish and short." Porter plots the growth of medical specialisms - pharmacology, physiology, anatomy, neurology, bacteriology - and the institutions of medicine - the hospital and asylum - to show how medical advances have often created as many problems as they have solved. The book also shows how the ancient Egyptians treated incipient baldness with a mixture of hippopotamus, lion, crocodile, goose, snake and ibex fat; how a mystery epidemic devastated ancient Athens and brought to an end the domination of that great city; and how lemons did as much as Nelson to defeat Napolean.

Personal

Read
Index 6643
Added Date Jun 09, 2018 20:11:57
Modified Date Sep 21, 2018 18:22:55