-
Erasistratus (c. 304–250 BC), and
finally Praxagoras.
Galen (AD 129–216), a
famous Gr**** physician,
wrote of
Praxagoras as this
influential figure in Gr****...
- government's
expropriation of land and
wealth at the time. The play
begins with
Praxagora emerging from a
house on an
Athenian street before daybreak. She is wearing...
-
Praxagoras of
Athens was a
pagan historian in the
early 4th
century AD. He was born in
Athens and
wrote three historical works,
which are all lost: a history...
-
material that
sustains consciousness in a body.
According to
Diocles and
Praxagoras, the
psychic pneuma mediates between the
heart –
regarded as the seat...
- ****ociation with this
ideology has been debated.
During Constantine's lifetime,
Praxagoras of
Athens and Libanius,
pagan authors,
showered Constantine with praise...
- authors.
Aristotle described vertebrate anatomy based on
animal dissection.
Praxagoras identified the
difference between arteries and veins. Also in the 4th...
-
significant advances within the
framework of the
Hippocratic tradition.
Praxagoras theorized that
blood traveled through the veins,
while Herophilos and...
- the
heart was
dominant over the
brain for
listening and understanding.
Praxagoras of Cos was a
follower of Aristotle's
cardiocentric theory and was the...
- Pleistonicus, Gr****: Πλειστόνικος), was an
ancient Gr**** physician, a
pupil of
Praxagoras, who
therefore lived in the 4th and 3rd
centuries BC. He
appears to have...
- parties. The most
distinguished among this
school were
Diocles of Carystus,
Praxagoras of Cos, and Plistonicus. The
doctrines of this
school are
described by...