Empiricism [empirismus]

topical
11
Persistent link   https://www.medvik.cz/link/D019348
Definition

One of the principal schools of medical philosophy in ancient Greece and Rome. It developed in Alexandria between 270 and 220 B.C., the only one to have any success in reviving the essentials of the Hippocratic concept. The Empiricists declared that the search for ultimate causes of phenomena was vain, but they were active in endeavoring to discover immediate causes. The tripod of the Empirics was their own chance observations (experience), learning obtained from contemporaries and predecessors (experience of others), and, in the case of new diseases, the formation of conclusions from other diseases which they resembled (analogy). Empiricism enjoyed sporadic continuing popularity in later centuries up to the nineteenth. (From Castiglioni, A History of Medicine, 2d ed, p186; Dr. James H. Cassedy, NLM History of Medicine Division)

DUI
D019348 MeSH Browser
CUI
M0028801
History note
97
Public note
97

Allowable subheadings

HI
history 1

K Humanities
K01 Humanities 154
K01.752 Philosophy 1 538
K01.752.667 Philosophy, Medical 419
K01.752.667.400 Empiricism 11
K01.752.667.555 Germ Theory of Disease 3
K01.752.667.710 Holistic Health 421
K01.752.667.750 Humoralism 2
K01.752.667.875 Hygiene Hypothesis 8