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  1. Superlative Achievement and Comparative Neglect: Alexandrian Medical Science and Modern Historical Research.James Longrigg - 1981 - History of Science 19 (3):155-200.
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  • Anatomy in Alexandria in the Third Century B.C.James Longrigg - 1988 - British Journal for the History of Science 21 (4):455-488.
    The most striking advances in the knowledge of human anatomy and physiology that the world had ever known—or was to know until the seventeenth century A.D.—took place in Hellenistic Alexandria. The city was founded in 331 B.C. by Alexander the Great. After the tatter's death in 323 B.C. and the subsequent dissolution of his empire, it became the capital of one of his generals, Ptolemy, son of Lagus, who established the Ptolemaic dynasty there. The first Ptolemy, subsequently named Soter , (...)
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  • Galen Explains the Elephant.R. J. Hankinson - 1988 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 14:135-157.
    Q: What did the elephant say to the naked man?A: It looks O.K., but can you breathe through it?Let me begin by justifying that joke for those of you didn’t find it funny. The relationship between the morphology of the physical organs and their activities has long been a vexed issue in the philosophy of biology: the question of whether structure determines function is of course of contemporary importance in evolutionary theory. That there was a relationship between structure and function (...)
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  • Galen Explains the Elephant.R. J. Hankinson - 1988 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 18 (sup1):135-157.
    Q: What did the elephant say to the naked man?A: It looks O.K., but can you breathe through it?Let me begin by justifying that joke for those of you didn’t find it funny. The relationship between the morphology of the physical organs and their activities has long been a vexed issue in the philosophy of biology: the question of whether structure determines function is of course of contemporary importance in evolutionary theory. That there was a relationship between structure and function (...)
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  • The experimental foundations of Galen's teleology.Christopher E. Cosans - 1998 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 29 (1):63-80.
    This article outlines in details specific experiments that Galen performed. It explores how his methodology for experimentation was a sophisticated response to the rationalist-empirist debate as it occurred in ancient medicine. -/- .
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