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Digging for Philosophical Roots

Samuel Vaisrub, MD
JAMA. 1979;241(4):400. doi:10.1001/jama.1979.03290300042031.
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In the "Dig at Cnidus" (The New Yorker, July 17, 1978, pp 33-69), Katherine Bouton omits no details in her comprehensive account of the history of this town—comprehensive, that is, except for the major role that it played in the history of medicine. There is no mention of the great School of Cnidus, which vied with that of Cos—the island is referred to twice without a word about Hippocrates—for dominance in the practice and philosophy of medicine. Such ignoration (or is it ignorance?) is not a unique phenomenon. A visitor to Salerno, Italy, would be hard put to find someone who knows anything about the first European school of medicine, which flourished there during the early Middle Ages. Nor is it confined to the laity. Despite a seeming resurgence of interest in the history of medicine and in the humanities in medical schools, a general air of dilettantism prevails. Much

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