Galen /oss/taxonomy/term/1563/all en The Physician is Only Nature’s Assistant /oss/article/medical-student-contributors/physician-only-natures-assistant <p>Although warm foods are not likely to cause the production of yellow bile and hot winds are unlikely to be the cause of your digestive issues, Greek physician Galen of Pergamum contributed significantly to our understanding of the human body and left a lasting mark on the practice of medicine. He played a strong role in establishing the experimental method in the medical field.</p> Fri, 26 Jan 2024 18:20:02 +0000 Daniela Padres 9817 at /oss A Different Twist on the “Dose Makes the Poison” /oss/article/critical-thinking-health-and-nutrition-history/different-twist-dose-makes-poison <p>Mithridates VI ruled the ancient Asian kingdom of Pontus in the first century. The king was terrified of being poisoned—not an unreasonable worry, given that assassins at the time were adept at using plant and animal toxins to dispatch enemies. But Mithridates was determined not to be done in by poison hemlock, henbane, snake venom or any other such poison. He had an idea: Why not try to protect himself by taking small amounts of poisons to develop a tolerance to larger doses? Today we know that it is possible to develop immunity to substances; after all, that’s how allergy shots work.</p> Wed, 08 Mar 2023 16:00:38 +0000 Joe Schwarcz PhD 9428 at /oss