Tuesday 5 March 2013

Natural Law

I have spoken before briefly on the idea of a "Natural" state of being; that all matter in the universe has a natural course and place to which it is drawn. I thought I would expand further upon this scientific philosophy  as it is quite crucial to understanding the mindset of the scholars of the period.
To begin I will talk about "Natural Law" (ius naturale), these are laws that are not written down but were considered "a given". These laws were considered common to all nations, and were upheld by the "instinct of nature" (Etymologies, V.iv). 

A selection of some of the laws considered natural are as follows; the union of man and woman, a child's inheritance and education, "the common possession of everything", our right to a "single freedom", the right to acquire whatever is taken from the earth, sky or sea.  These are very telling statements, we get some idea of how "natural" isn't really natural at all; in reality these philosophers were imposing an order of their own creation upon the world. 

While the so called "sexy times" between a man and a woman is biologically natural enough the rest of these statements are societal constructs; because we are the dominant and superior species created by a god (who looks suspiciously like us apparently) we have the natural right to claim what we like from the earth, sky and sea. The "single freedom" clearly did not refer to freedom from slavery, as this was fairly rampant all over the place, so I am not quite sure what that means - if I was to hazard a guess I would say this "single freedom" is most probably our ability to decide our fate (speaking from a Catholic perspective of course) we alone are all blessed with the ability to discern the true nature of things and therefore free to choose the right courses of action. 

It is important to remember this construct of a "natural order" to things; I have used the concept of natural laws here because they highlight more readily how the scholars and philosophers of the time would super-impose order to otherwise arbitrary systems; freedom is a human construct so there is nothing natural about it, and this "right to acquire" is arrogant in the extreme -but its not like we got over that is it, "manifest destiny" anyone? 

All in all, the very human desire to make the world an understandable place with ordered and recognizable systems may have lead to some incorrect assumptions, but without it? Hell - I doubt we would have gotten this far.

Just remember that it is "natural" and right to educate a child - so paying for education is incorrect! (This moral message is brought to you by "The Ancients"!). 

Next up: Time and its calculation.




Friday 1 March 2013

Medieval Remedies

Enchiridion of Erasmus (A Handbook)
The medieval treatment plan for diseases falls into three categories; pharmaceutics (pharmacia) which was called medication by Latin speakers (medicamen), surgery (chirurgia) which was also called "work of the hands" in Latin (manuun operatio) and finally, regimen (diaeta) also called rule (regula) which, none surprisingly, is the observance of a regulated life.
All treatment during the middle ages operated under the four humors; and was applied via the use of opposites or similarities. As mentioned previously, symmetry and order were the loves of the time; the idea that the human body could be easily broken down into a balancing act was an alluring one;

"By means of opposites, as cold is applied to hot, or moist to dry - just as in human pride cannot be cured unless it is cured by humility" (Isidore, Etymologies IV.ix.5)

This statement is revealing, likening health and medication to human emotions and desires; If you can "cure" a man of his pride with such an opposite, then surely you can cure a physical ailment through a similar application of opposites. The idea that every thing can be rationalised and broken down into an ordered and structured world view permeates scholarly writings and the medieval period in general; each emotion has an opposite, each humor has an opposite, each symptom has an opposite all in perfect harmony when in its "natural state" - unless something comes along and upsets the balance, whereupon illness of the mind (such as the aforementioned pride), the spirit or the body can occur.

Even the term antidote (antidotum) which is Greek in origin, means "derived from the opposite" in Latin.

However, the second treatment plan was via similarities, with such obvious applications like applying a round bandage to a round wound - or shockingly applying an oblong bandage to an oblong wound - the upshot of this is merely that one should know what you are trying to heal, you cannot heal different limbs and wounds in the same way, but similar is suited to similar.

A couple of examples of the types of medical texts that were in used in the curing of disease; first there were prognostic (prognosticon) treatises that focused upon the predicting the progression of diseases; to quote, "a physician should recognise the past, know the present, and foresee the future" (Etymologies, IV x.2). Second, were texts called dinamidia which described the properties and powers of herbs - what they are best used for etc. 

Shall we move onto some of instruments that were used in the healing of such an unfortunate individual to have his humors unbalanced? The first of note is the "cupping glass" (guva) which was also called a gourd (cucuribita) and ventosa (wind-like) for its hissing noise it makes when the air is heated within it. Basically this bad boy was used to draw up a humor to the surface - usually blood - via heated air in a glass jar placed onto a wound, this created a vacuum seal and the hot air in the glass brought the necessary humor to the surface.


Next on the list is the good, old fashioned Mortar (pila) and Pestle (pilum); still used today but mostly in cooking shows, these were used to crush and grind up grains and herbs so that drugs could be made. Nothing particularly invasive about that so I will finish with the lancet (phlebotomum), or more commonly know as these days as the scalpel, used to cut you up in new and exciting ways such as helping remove limbs that have gone gangrenous, carving out tumors or generally just trying to remove you of an excess of humor by cutting in strategic places.

Medicine was not counted among the "seven liberal arts", not because it was a lesser art, but because it was believed that one must know all of seven arts before you can enter into medicine; a physician must know grammar so that he can understand and explain what he reads, he must know rhetoric so that he might be capable of summing up the case for his treatments, he must especially know logic so that through the proper application of reason he might deduce the cause of an illness.
The Quadrivium is equally important; a physician must know arithmetic so that he might be able to count hours and track the development of disease, he must know geometry so that his knowledge of areas and places will allow him to instruct as to the best way a patient might look after themselves at home, music must be known to him so that he might use it to soothe the ill, and through astronomy a physician can track the seasons and stars - for as they change so does their impact upon the body.

For this reason, Medicine was called the "Second Philosophy" - for philosophy cures the human soul, whereas medicine cures the body.

Next Time: Laws and Time.