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Vis medicatrix naturae

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From this follows the medical approach that “nature is the best physician” or “nature is the healer of disease”. To do this Hippocrates considered a doctor's chief aim was to help this natural tendency of the body by observing its action, removing obstacles to its action, and thus allow an organism
167:. "All that I have done thus far in reviewing the various protective and stabilizing devices of the body is to present a modern interpretation of the natural vis medicatrix.". In this, Cannon stands in contrast to 179:
that he proposed to replace vitalistic ideas about the body. However, both the notions of homeostasis and milieu interieur are ones concerned with how the body's physiology regulates itself through multiple
77:, therefore, is not a malady but an effort of the body to overcome a disturbed equilibrium. It is this capacity of organisms to correct imbalances that distinguishes them from non-living matter. 257:
Hiroshi, H. (1998) "On Vis medicatrix naturae and Hippocratic Idea of Physis" Memoirs of School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Kanazawa University 22:45-54
43:. While the phrase is not actually attested in his corpus, it nevertheless sums up one of the guiding principles of Hippocratic medicine, which is that 261: 404: 303:
Neuberger, M. (1932) 'The doctrine of the healing power of nature throughout the course of time'. Homeopathy College New York.
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Cross, S. T. Albury, W. R. (1987) "Walter B. Cannon, L. J. Henderson, and the Organic Analogy" Osiris 3:165-192 page 175
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due to their selection as means to protect, heal, or restore the injured, infected or physiologically disrupted body.
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Nesse, R. M. Williams, G. C. (1994) 'Why We Get Sick: The New Science of Darwinian Medicine' Vintage Books New York
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Neuburger, M. (1944) "An Historical Survey of the Concept of Nature from a Medical Viewpoint" Isis 35 (1): 16–28
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Grube, C. M. A (1954) “Greek medicine and the Greek genius” Phonix 8 123-135
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to recover its own health. This underlies such Hippocratic practices as
277: 172: 141: 137: 129: 117:, in the 18th century considered fever as a healing force of nature. 110: 292: 128:, and in this form it came to underlie the philosophical framework of 346: 321: 259:
http://sciencelinks.jp/j-east/article/199907/000019990799A0162403.php
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is removed, and thus was taken to help the rebalancing of the body's
185: 125: 90: 86: 66: 44: 39:("Nature is the physician(s) of diseases"), a phrase attributed to 74: 70: 201: 29: 24:(literally "the healing power of nature", and also known as 73:, but rebalances itself to counteract them. The state of 65:
Hippocrates believed that an organism is not passive to
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Latin phrase affirming the body's self-healing nature
191: 105:continued to play a key role in medicine. In the 96: 396: 184:adjustment feedbacks rather than nonmechanistic 200:has identified many medical symptoms such as 287: 285: 151: 345: 282: 216:as evolved adaptations that function as 367: 365: 397: 47:left alone can often heal themselves ( 319: 362: 313: 240:Royal Commission on Animal Magnetism 109:, the physician and early scientist 113:had the idea of “inherent balsam”. 13: 14: 431: 192:Relation to evolutionary medicine 85:in which a perceived excess of a 405:Latin medical words and phrases 101:After Hippocrates, the idea of 376: 297: 270: 251: 97:Renaissance and modern history 60: 1: 245: 218:darwinian medicatrix naturae 7: 235:Medicus curat, natura sanat 223: 175:), and his earlier idea of 120:In the nineteenth-century, 10: 436: 124:came to be interpreted as 163:also has its origins in 322:"Nature's helping hand" 152:Relation to homeostasis 410:Ancient Greek medicine 182:mechanical equilibrium 171:(the father of modern 165:vis medicatrix naturae 122:vis medicatrix naturae 103:vis medicatrix naturae 21:Vis medicatrix naturae 320:Bynum, W. F. (2001). 198:evolutionary medicine 338:2001Natur.414...21B 37:Νόσων φύσεις ἰητροί 415:Natural philosophy 264:2008-06-10 at the 210:sickness behavior 107:early Renaissance 54:primum non nocere 32:rendering of the 427: 420:Biology theories 390: 380: 374: 369: 360: 359: 349: 347:10.1038/35102123 317: 311: 301: 295: 289: 280: 274: 268: 255: 230:Appeal to nature 214:morning sickness 177:milieu interieur 51:the Hippocratic 435: 434: 430: 429: 428: 426: 425: 424: 395: 394: 393: 381: 377: 370: 363: 318: 314: 302: 298: 290: 283: 275: 271: 266:Wayback Machine 256: 252: 248: 226: 196:More recently, 194: 154: 115:Thomas Sydenham 99: 63: 17: 12: 11: 5: 433: 423: 422: 417: 412: 407: 392: 391: 375: 361: 312: 296: 281: 269: 249: 247: 244: 243: 242: 237: 232: 225: 222: 193: 190: 169:Claude Bernard 153: 150: 98: 95: 62: 59: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 432: 421: 418: 416: 413: 411: 408: 406: 403: 402: 400: 389: 388:0-679-74674-9 385: 379: 373: 368: 366: 357: 353: 348: 343: 339: 335: 331: 327: 323: 316: 310: 306: 300: 294: 288: 286: 279: 273: 267: 263: 260: 254: 250: 241: 238: 236: 233: 231: 228: 227: 221: 219: 215: 211: 207: 203: 199: 189: 187: 183: 178: 174: 170: 166: 162: 159:'s notion of 158: 157:Walter Cannon 149: 147: 143: 139: 135: 131: 127: 123: 118: 116: 112: 108: 104: 94: 92: 88: 84: 83:blood letting 78: 76: 72: 68: 58: 56: 55: 50: 46: 42: 38: 35: 31: 27: 26:natura medica 23: 22: 378: 332:(6859): 21. 329: 325: 315: 299: 272: 253: 217: 206:inflammation 195: 164: 155: 134:chiropractic 121: 119: 102: 100: 79: 64: 52: 48: 36: 25: 20: 19: 18: 186:life forces 161:homeostasis 146:naturopathy 61:Hippocrates 41:Hippocrates 399:Categories 246:References 173:physiology 142:osteopathy 138:hydropathy 130:homeopathy 111:Paracelsus 45:organisms 28:) is the 356:11689921 309:10366814 262:Archived 224:See also 126:vitalism 67:injuries 334:Bibcode 75:illness 71:disease 386:  354:  326:Nature 307:  212:, and 87:humors 293:JSTOR 278:JSTOR 202:fever 91:humor 34:Greek 30:Latin 384:ISBN 352:PMID 305:OCLC 144:and 342:doi 330:414 69:or 57:). 49:cf. 401:: 364:^ 350:. 340:. 328:. 324:. 284:^ 208:, 204:, 188:. 148:. 140:, 136:, 132:, 93:. 358:. 344:: 336::

Index

Latin
Greek
Hippocrates
organisms
primum non nocere
injuries
disease
illness
blood letting
humors
humor
early Renaissance
Paracelsus
Thomas Sydenham
vitalism
homeopathy
chiropractic
hydropathy
osteopathy
naturopathy
Walter Cannon
homeostasis
Claude Bernard
physiology
milieu interieur
mechanical equilibrium
life forces
evolutionary medicine
fever
inflammation

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