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Medicine and the Law Under the Roman Empire

9780192898616
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Description
What happens when we juxtapose medicine and law in the ancient Roman world? This innovative collection of scholarly research shows how both fields were shaped by the particular needs and desires of their practitioners and users. It approaches the study of these fields through three avenues. First, it argues that the literatures produced by elite practitioners, like Galen or Ulpian, were not merely utilitarian, but were pieces of aesthetically inflected literature and thus carriedall of the disparate baggage linked to any form of literature in the Roman context. Second, it suggests that while one element of that literary luggage was the socio-political competition that these texts facilitated, high stakes agonism also uniquely marked the quotidian practice of both medicine andlaw, resulting in both fields coming to function as forms of popular public entertainment. Finally, it shows how the effects of rhetoric and the deeply rhetorical education of the elite made themselves constantly apparent in both the literature on and the practice of medicine and law. Through case studies in both fields and on each of these topics, together with contextualizing essays, Medicine and the Law Under the Roman Empire suggests that the blanket results of all this were profound. The introduction to the volume argues that medicine was not contrived merely to ensure healing of the infirm by doctors, and law did not single-mindedly aim to regulate society in a consistent, orderly, and binding fashion. Instead, both fields, in the full range of theirmanifestations, were nested in a complex matrix of social, political, and intellectual crosscurrents, all of which served to shape the very substances of these fields themselves. This poses forward-looking questions:: What things might ancient Roman medicine and law have been meant or geared to accomplish in theirworld? And how might the very substance of Roman medicine and law have been crafted with an eye to fulfilling those peculiarly ancient needs and desires? This book suggests that both fields, in their ancient manifestations, differed fundamentally from their modern counterparts, and must be approached with this fact firmly in mind.
Product Details
OUP Oxford
102458
9780192898616
9780192898616

Data sheet

Publication date
2023
Issue number
1
Cover
hard cover
Pages count
368
Dimensions (mm)
153 x 234
Weight (g)
678
  • Acknowledgements; List of Contributors; Abbreviations and Cited Editions of the Galenic Corpus Used in the Volume; Introduction: Setting Medicine and the Law Apart, Together; I: Selling the Subject-Matter: When Science, Competition, and Entertainment Commingle; Introduction: Competition in the Roman Empire-Structure, Characteristics, and New Arenas; Law as Competitive Performance: Performative Aspects of the Legal Process in Roman Imperial Courts; Medicine as Competitive Performance: Eristic and Erudition-Galen on Erasistratus and the Arteries; Response: Does the Performance Undercut the Substance?; II: Over-Shooting the Subject-Matter: When Pragmatism and Expertise Collide; Introduction: What Makes the Specialized Expert, and his Expertise?; Juristic Literature and the Law: Competition and Cooperation; Medical Literature and Medicine: Going Beyond the Practical; Response: Expert or Intellectual? Other Views on Legal and Medical Expertise; III: Positioning the Subject-Matter: When Rhetoric and Science Converge; Introduction: The Ubiquity of Rhetoric; Rhetoric in Legal Writing: The Ethos and the Pathos of Roman Jurists; Rhetoric in Medical Writing: Artistic Prose?; Response: Experts of Rhetoric and the Rhetoric of Expertise; Conclusion: How does Philosophy Compare?; Index;
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