Methodic school

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The Methodic school (Methodics, Methodists, or Methodici, Greek: Μεθοδικοί) was a branch of medical thought in ancient Greece and Rome. It arose in reaction to both the Empiric school and the Dogmatic school (sometimes referred to as the Rationalist school).[1] While the exact origins of the Methodic school are shrouded in some controversy, its doctrines are fairly well documented. Sextus Empiricus points to the school's common ground with Pyrrhonism, in that it “follow[s] the appearances and take[s] from these whatever seems expedient.”[2]

History

There is no clear consensus on who founded the Methodic school and when it was founded. It has been supposed that the Methodic school was founded by the students of Asclepiades.[3] In particular, Themison of Laodicea, Asclepiades' most distinguished student, is often credited with founding the Methodic school in the first century BC.[4] However, some historians claim that the Methodic school was founded by Asclepiades himself in 50 BC.[5] It has also been claimed that Methodism did not truly arise until the first century AD.[6] In any case, it is widely accepted that Methodism was a reaction to the Empiric and Rationalist (or Dogmatic) schools, bearing some similarities to both schools but fundamentally different.[7]

Doctrines

The Methodic school emphasized the treatment of diseases rather than the history of the individual patient. According to the Methodists, medicine is no more than a “knowledge of manifest generalities” (gnōsis phainomenōn koinotēnōn). In other words, medicine was no more than the awareness of general, recurring features that manifest in a tangible way. While Methodist views on medicine are slightly more complex than this, the above generalization was meant to apply to not only medicine, but to any art. Methodists conceive of medicine as a true art, in contrast to Empiricists or Dogmatists.[8]

They asserted that the knowledge of the cause of the disease bears no relation to the method of cure, and that it is sufficient to observe some general symptoms of illnesses. All a doctor really needs to know is the disease itself, and from that knowledge alone will he know the treatment. To claim that knowledge of the disease alone will provide knowledge of the treatment, the Methodists first claim that diseases are indicative of their own treatments. Just as how hunger leads a person naturally to food and how thirst leads a person naturally to water, so too does the disease naturally indicate the cure. As Sextus Empiricus points out, when a dog is pricked by a thorn, it naturally removes the foreign object ailing its body.[9]

The core theory was disruption of the normal circulation of 'atoms' through the body's 'pores' caused disease. To cure a disease it is sufficient to observe some general symptoms of illnesses; and that there are three kinds of diseases, one bound, another loose (fluens, a disorder attended with some discharge), and the third a mixture of these. Sometimes the excretions of sick people are too small or too large, or a particular excretion might be deficient or excessive. These kinds of illnesses are sometimes severe, sometimes chronic, sometimes increasing, sometimes stable, and sometimes abating. As soon as it is known to which of these diseases an illness belongs, if the body is bound, then it must be opened; if it is loose, then it must be restrained; if it is complicated, then the most urgent malady must be fought first. One type of treatment is required in acute, another in inveterate illnesses; another when diseases are increasing, another when stable, and another when decreasing. The observation of these things constitute the art of medicine, called method (Greek: Μέθοδος).

As the seeking after the causes of diseases seemed to Themison to rest on too uncertain a foundation, he thus wished to establish his system upon the analogies and indications common to many diseases (Greek: κοινότες), no matter that these analogies were as obscure as the causes of the Dogmatic school. Themison wrote several works which are now lost.

Differences from the Empiric and Dogmatic Schools

The Methodic school takes it to be that once a doctor has recognized the disease a patient has for what it is, the treatment that should follow is inherently obvious. It is not a matter of inference or observation, but of an immediate knowledge. To a Dogmatist, the symptoms a disease manifests are indicative of a hidden state that causes the disease. Only by knowing the hidden state can a doctor understand how to treat a patient. Like the Empiricists, the Methodists reject the notion of hidden states, claiming that there is no need to take a detour into inferences of hidden states. The symptoms manifested make it immediately obvious what needs to be done.[10]

On the other hand, Methodists also reject the Empiricist notion that the connection between a disease and its treatment is a matter of experience. Methodists hold that experience is not necessary to understand that a state of depletion implies a need for replenishment, that a state of restraint must be loosened. To a Methodist, treatments for diseases are immediately obvious; it is a matter of common sense, of reason. There is no need for justification by experience; to Methodists, there are no conceivable alternatives to their innate knowledge of proper treatments.[11]

Because Methodists do not take their knowledge of proper treatment as an issue of observation or experience, they are willing to concede that their knowledge is a matter of reason. On this point, the Methodists bear a similarity to Dogmatists, taking reason as a constructive approach to selecting the proper treatment for an ailment. However, Methodists do not support the Dogmatic concept of employing reason to find hidden causes that underlie the disease manifested. The causes of diseases can not be fantastic or obscure forces that would not occur in ordinary life.[12] The key difference between Methodist doctors and Empiricist or Dogmatic doctors is that a Methodist's knowledge is "firm and certain," and that it leaves no room for future revision. Rather than rely upon reason and experience, the Methodist does what is inherently obvious; there is no room for error.[13]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Barnes, Brunschwig, Burnyeat, Schofield 1982, p. 2.
  2. ^ Sextus Empiricus, Outlines of Pyrrhonism I.237, trans. Etheridge (Scepticism, Man, and God, Wesleyan University Press, 1964, p. 98).
  3. ^ Yapijakis, C: ‘’Hippocrates of Kos, the Father of Clinical Medicine, and Asclepiades of Bithynia, the Father of Molecular Medicine’’. International Institute of Anticaner Research, 2009.
  4. ^ Boylan, Michael: The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Galen http://www.iep.utm.edu/galen/
  5. ^ Garratt, Alfred Charles, Myths in Medicine and Old-Time Doctors. 1884.
  6. ^ Barnes, Brunschwig, Burnyeat, Schofield 1982, p. 2.
  7. ^ Barnes, Brunschwig, Burnyeat, Schofield 1982, p. 2.
  8. ^ Barnes, Brunschwig, Burnyeat, Schofield 1982, p. 3.
  9. ^ Barnes, Brunschwig, Burnyeat, Schofield 1982, p. 4,5.
  10. ^ Barnes, Brunschwig, Burnyeat, Schofield 1982, p. 6.
  11. ^ Barnes, Brunschwig, Burnyeat, Schofield 1982, p. 7.
  12. ^ Barnes, Brunschwig, Burnyeat, Schofield 1982, p. 7-8.
  13. ^ Barnes, Brunschwig, Burnyeat, Schofield 1982, p. 18-19.

References

  • William Smith, (1857), Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, pages 635-6
  • The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Galen
  • Pilar Pérez Cañizares, review in Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2005-03-15 of Manuela Tecusan, The Fragments of the Methodists. Methodism outside Soranus. Leiden, 2004. ISBN 90-04-12451-9.
  • Barnes, J.; Brunschwig, J.; Burnyeat, B.; Schofield, M., Science and Speculation, pages 1–20. Cambridge University Press, 1982.
  • Yapijakis, C: Hippocrates of Kos, the Father of Clinical Medicine, and Asclepiades of Bithynia, the Father of Molecular Medicine. In Vivo 23(4):507-14, 2009. http://iv.iiarjournals.org/content/23/4/507.full.pdf+html
  • Garratt, Alfred Charles, Myths in Medicine and Old-Time Doctors. 1884.

External links