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GALEN (or GALENUS), See also: Chaucer and other writers of the See also: middle ages, the most celebrated of See also: ancient medical writers, was See also: born at Pergamus, in See also: Mysia, about A.D
.
130
.
His See also: father Nicon, from whom he received his early See also: education, is described as remarkable both for excellence of natural disposition and for See also: mental culture; his See also: mother, on the other See also: hand; appears to have been a second See also: Xanthippe
.
In 146 Galen began the study of See also: medicine, and in about his twentieth See also: year he See also: left Pergamus for See also: Smyrna, in See also: order to place himself under the instruction of the anatomist and physician See also: Pelops, and of the peripatetic philosopher Albinus
.
He subsequently visited other cities, and in 158 returned from Alexandria to Pergamus
.
A few years later he went for the first See also: time to See also: Rome
.
There he healed Eudemus, a celebrated peripatetic philosopher, and other persons of distinction; and ere long, by his learning and unparalleled success as a physician, earned for himself the titles of "Paradoxologus," the wonder-See also: speaker, and "Paradoxopoeus," the wonder-worker, thereby incurring the jealousy and envy of his See also: fellow-practitioners
.
Leaving Rome in x68, he repaired to his native city, whence he was soon sent for to See also: Aquileia, in See also: Venetia, by the emperors See also: Lucius Verus and See also: Marcus Aurelius
.
In 170 he returned to Rome with the latter, who, on departing thence to conduct the war on the Danube, having with difficulty been persuaded to dispense with his See also: personal attendance, appointed him medical See also: guardian of his son Commodus
.
In Rome Galen remained for some years, greatly extending his reputation as a physician, and writing some of his most important See also: treatises
.
It would appear that he eventually betook himself to Pergamus, after spending some time at the See also: island of See also: Lemnos, where he learned the method of preparing a certain popular medicine, the " terra lemnia " or " sigillata." Whether he ever revisited Rome is uncertain, as also are the time and place of his See also: death
.
According to Suidas, he died at the age of seventy, or in the year 200, in the reign of Septimius Severus
.
If, however, we are to See also: trust the testimony of Abul-faraj, his decease took place in See also: Sicily, when he was in his eightieth year
.
Galen was one of the most versatile and accomplished writers of his age
.
He composed, it is said, nearly 500 treatises on various subjects, including logic, See also: ethics and grammar
.
Of the published See also: works attributed to him, 83 are recognized as genuine, 19 are of doubtful authenticity, 45 are confessedly See also: spurious, 19 are fragments, and 15 are notes on the writings of See also: Hippocrates
.
Galen, who in his youth was carefully trained in the Stoic philosophy, was an unusually prolific writer on logic
.
Of the numerous commentaries and See also: original treatises, a See also: catalogue of which is given in his See also: work De propriis libris, one only has come down to us, the See also: treatise on Fallacies in dictione (Ilepl i&v Kara rip' Mw uodiiQµarwv)
.
Many points of logical theory, however, are discussed in his medical and scientific writings
.
His name is perhaps best known in the See also: history of logic in connexion with the See also: fourth syllogistic figure, the first distinct statement of which was ascribed to him by Averroes
.
There is no evidence from Galen's own works that he did make this addition to the doctrines of
syllogism, and the remarkable passage quoted by Minoides See also: Minas from a See also: Greek commentator on the Analytics, referring the fourth figure to Galen, clearly shows that the addition did not, as generally supposed, rest on a new principle, but was merely an amplification or alteration of the indirect moods of the first figure already noted by See also: Theophrastus and the earlier Peripatetics
.
In 1844 Minas published a work, avowedly from a MS. with the superscription Galenus, entitled PaXrlvou Eioa w'yi &aXEK?nIn
.
Of this work, which contains no See also: direct intimation of a fourth figure, and which in general exhibits an astonishing mixture of the Aristotelian and Stoic logic, Prantl speaks with the bitterest contempt
.
He shows demonstratively that it cannot be regarded as a writing of Galen's, and ascribes it to some one or other of the later Greek logicians
.
A full See also: summary of its contents will be found in the 1st vol. of the Geschichte der Logik (pp
.
591-610), and a See also: notice of the logical theories of the true Galen in the same work, PP
.
5.59-5n-
There have been numerous issues of the whole or parts of Galen's works, among the editors or illustrators of which may be mentioned Jo
.
Bapt
.
Opizo, N
.
Leonicenus, L
.
Fuchs, A
.
Lacuna, See also: Ant
.
Musa Brassavolus, Aug
.
Gadaldinus, See also: Conrad Gesner, Sylvius, Cornarius, Joannes Montanus, Joannes Caius, See also: Thomas Linacre,
See also: Theodore Goulston, Caspar Hoffman, Rene See also: Chartier, Haller and Kuhn
.
Of Latin See also: translations Choulant mentions one in the 15th and twenty-two in the following century
.
The Greek text was edited at Venice, in 1525, 5 vols. fol
.
; at See also: Basel, in 1538, 5 vols. fol
.
; at See also: Paris, with Latin version by Rene Chartier, in 1639, and in 1679, 13 vols. fol
.
; and at See also: Leipzig, in1821-1833, by C
.
G
.
Kuhn, considered to be the best, 20 vols
.
8vo
.
An epitome in See also: English of the works of Hippocrates and Galen, by J
.
R
.
Coxe, was published at See also: Philadelphia in 1846
.
A new edition of Galen's smaller works by J
.
See also: Marquardt, Iwan See also: Muller and G
.
Helmreich was published in three volumes at Leipzig in 1884-1909
.
Further details as to the See also: life and an account of the anatomical and medical knowledge of Galen will be found in the See also: historical articles under the headings of ANATOMY and MEDICINE
.
See also Rene Chartier's Life, in his edition of Galen's works; N
.
F
.
J
.
Eloy, Dictionnaire historique de la medecine, s.v
.
" Galien," torn. i
.
(1778); F
.
See also: Adams's " Commentary " in his Medical Works of Paulus
See also: Aegineta (See also: London and See also: Aberdeen, 1834) ; J
.
Kidd, " A Cursory Analysis of the Works of Galen, so far as they relate to Anatomy and Physiology," Trans
.
Provincial Med. and Surg
.
Assoc. vi., 1837, pp
.
299-336; C
.
V . Daremberg, Exposition See also: des connaissances de Galien sur l'anatomie, la physiologie et la pathologie du systeme nerveux (These pour le Doctorat en Medecine) (Paris, 1841) ; J
.
R
.
Gasquet, " The See also: Practical Medicine of Galen and his Tiine," The See also: British and See also: Foreign Medico-Chirurgical Rev., vol. xi., 1867, pp
.
472-4488; and Ilberg, " Die Schriften des See also: Claudius Galenos," Rheinisches Museum fur Philologie, 1889, 1892 and 1896
.
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