This first full-length study of the Arabic reception of Platos Timaeus considers the role of Galen of Pergamum (129-c. 216 CE) in shaping medieval perceptions of the text as transgressing disciplinary norms. It argues that Galen appealed to the entangled cosmological scheme of the dialogue, where different relations connect the body, soul, and cosmos, to expand the boundaries of medicine in his pursuit for epistemic authority - the right to define and explain natural reality. Aileen Das situates Galens work on disciplinary boundaries in the context of medicines ancient rivalry with philosophy, whose professionals were long seen as superior knowers of the cosmos vis-?-vis doctors. Her case studies show how Galen and four of the most important Christian, Muslim, and Jewish thinkers in the Arabic Middle Ages creatively interpreted key doctrines from the Timaeus to reimagine medicine and philosophy as well as their own intellectual identities.
Introduction. Platos Timaeus as universal text; 1. Galen and the medical Timaeus; 2. From the heavens to the body:: ?unayns ophthalmology; 3. Al-R?z?:: the Arab Galen and his Plato, new disciplinary ideals; 4. Laying down the law:: Avicenna and his medical project; 5. Uprooting the Timaeus:: Maimonides and the re-medicalization of Galenism; Conclusion. Medicine disciplined.
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