David Faulkner

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This skepticism wasn’t unique to Thucydides but was part of an intellectual movement in fifth-century Athens that is sometimes referred to as the Greek Enlightenment. For example, his contemporary Hippocrates broke with the view that angry gods were responsible for disease outbreaks and instead argued that physicians should observe a patient’s symptoms, diagnose what is wrong with them and take an appropriate course of action.
Pathogenesis: A History of the World in Eight Plagues
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