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3.
Stereotact Funct Neurosurg ; 93(1): 42-9, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25662330

ABSTRACT

The correct explanation of the term 'stereotaxy' is linguistically not self-evident because the Greek term stereon means not spatial but 'hard' or 'solid'. The aim of our study was to clarify the term stereotaxy historically and linguistically. We carried out our study by reviewing the neurosurgical and ancient Greek literature. The term stereotaxy is composed of two ancient Greek words: stereon and taxis. Stereon was used in particular as a technical term for geometrical solids in Greek mathematics. This term can be traced back to Platon and Euclid in the 4th and 3rd century BC, respectively. Only in this sense of the word does stereon in stereotaxy actually mean 'spatial' or '3-dimensional'. Taxis is derived from the verb tattein(τάττειν) with the meaning 'to position'. The terms 'stereotaxis' and 'stereotaxic apparatus' were introduced by Clarke and Horsley in 1908 to denote a method for the precise positioning of electrodes into the deep cerebellar nuclei of apes. The target in space was defined by 3 distances in relation to 3 orthogonal planes. Although this concept corresponded exactly to x-, y- and z-coordinates in a cartesian coordinate system, Clarke never used the concept of coordinates. The intuitive explanation of the term stereotaxy as spatial positioning is correct, but linguistically more complex than would be expected.


Subject(s)
Philology, Classical , Stereotaxic Techniques , Terminology as Topic , Animals , Cephalometry , England , Greece , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, Ancient , Humans , Mathematics/history , Neurosurgery/history , Neurosurgical Procedures/instrumentation , Neurosurgical Procedures/methods , Philology, Classical/history , Russia , Stereotaxic Techniques/instrumentation
4.
Luzif Amor ; 27(53): 7-19, 2014.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24988804

ABSTRACT

In 1863 Theodor Gomperz came to England to propose to Helen Taylor Mill, step-daughter of J. S. Mill. For several months he delayed the proposal while studying transcripts of the Philodemus papyri in the Bodleian Library. There a threatening note, supposedly left on his desk, triggered an attack of paranoia. My study of this incident, initially a mere footnote, expanded into an examination of the obscure causes of this attack. The philosophical question of the nature of desire and the researcher's passion to reconstruct a fragmented classical text are related to Gomperz's unfocussed relationship with both Mill and his step-daughter, and his ensuing confusion between reality and fantasy. The incident is considered paradigmatic of the perils of scholarly research, when the desire to possess knowledge becomes entangled with transferential relationships.


Subject(s)
Correspondence as Topic/history , Famous Persons , Freudian Theory , Love , Paranoid Disorders/history , Philology, Classical/history , Philosophy/history , Pleasure-Pain Principle , Psychoanalysis/history , Research/history , Translating , Austria , England , Germany , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male
5.
Psychiatriki ; 22(1): 17-23, 2011.
Article in Greek | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21688521

ABSTRACT

Iliad and Odyssey are two major literary sources on various phenomena related to human experience and knowledge. In the Odyssey we find references to the nepenthes, a mythical substance which can change the mood, causing sorrow and anger to be forgotten. We can not identify it with any of the well known substances that have these properties, such as opium from the opium poppy, the Egyptian kyfi or cannabis in the Scythians. Ancient Greeks used various anxiolytic, hypnotic and narcotic substances, but phenomena of addiction or withdrawal are not clearly described, with the exception of wine. Wine was used to lighten peoples minds and hearts, as well as a vehicle for drugs. Many ancient sources describe the negative effects of wine abuse. The study of ancient texts, from Homer's epics to Christian literature, allows a fundamental insight into the influence of psychotropic substances and alcohol on the human psyche.


Subject(s)
Anti-Anxiety Agents/history , Hypnotics and Sedatives/history , Medicine in Literature , Mythology , Narcotics/history , Philology, Classical/history , Wine/history , Greece, Ancient , History, Ancient , Humans , Organic Chemicals/history
6.
Ambix ; 56(1): 5-22, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19831256

ABSTRACT

The name of the chemical solution (divine water) or (sulfur water) is characterised by semantic ambiguity: the term theion means both "divine" and "sulfur," and Greek alchemists frequently play on this polysemy. This article analyses the use of this and similar expressions in the writings of pseudo-Democritus from both a technical and a philological point of view. A fragment preserved by the alchemists Moses and Synesius shows that pseudo-Democritus knows two different kinds of this "water," the second of which recalls a recipe found in the chemical Leiden Papyrus, and that the composition of the substance determines the form of its name.


Subject(s)
Alchemy , Balneology/history , Formularies as Topic/history , Sulfur Compounds/history , Water , Chemistry/history , Greece, Ancient , History, Ancient , Humans , Manuscripts as Topic/history , Philology, Classical
7.
J Homosex ; 49(3-4): 341-56, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16338899

ABSTRACT

Beginning in the latter part of the eighteenth century, German classical philology acquired a hegemonic status that made it the envy of scholars in other nations. Among the tasks embraced by this great endeavor was the study of what is known of same-sex behavior in ancient Greece. Remarkably, the German philologists chose to present their findings straightforwardly in modern German, accessible to every educated reader. The deposit of this inquiry is the basis of our contemporary knowledge of ancient Greek homosexuality. Moreover, by providing models of homosexual behavior that were more positive than those prevalent in Europe at the time, the research fostered the emergence of the German Gay Movement in 1897.


Subject(s)
Homosexuality/history , Philology, Classical/history , Female , Germany , Greek World/history , History, 18th Century , History, Ancient , Humans , Male
12.
Rev Etud Grec ; 110(1): 231-5, 1997.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17219710

ABSTRACT

The word "limophoros", a hapax legomenon appearing in Polybius' Histories, does not mean scurvy, but rather scabies. Polybius created the word to describe an illness he believed was derived from a nutritional deficit, but can really only be seen as an attempt to describe an illness the etiology of which he was wholly unfamiliar.


Subject(s)
Deficiency Diseases , Philology, Classical , Scabies , Scurvy , Skin Diseases , Deficiency Diseases/diagnosis , Deficiency Diseases/epidemiology , Deficiency Diseases/etiology , Deficiency Diseases/history , Diagnosis , Greek World/history , History , History, Ancient , Philology, Classical/history , Roman World/history , Scabies/diagnosis , Scabies/epidemiology , Scabies/etiology , Scabies/history , Scurvy/diagnosis , Scurvy/epidemiology , Scurvy/etiology , Scurvy/history , Skin Diseases/diagnosis , Skin Diseases/epidemiology , Skin Diseases/etiology , Skin Diseases/history , Terminology as Topic
16.
Rev Etud Grec ; 110(2): 362-80, 1997.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17228502

ABSTRACT

A passage taken from the Hippocratic Corpus states that at the beginning of pregnancy women say that they do not like the taste of wine. This passage should be added to evidence about wine drinking by women in Classical Greece. It shows that, contrary to previous opinion, women drank wine when they were in good health and corresponds with the notion that it was often prescribed by physicians in order to cure illness.


Subject(s)
Alcohol Drinking , Wine/history , Women , Alcohol Drinking/ethnology , Alcohol Drinking/history , Anthropology, Cultural , Female , Greek World/history , History, Ancient , Humans , Philology, Classical , Pregnancy , Wine/supply & distribution , Women/history
17.
Stud Cl Orient ; 45: 65-84, 1997.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17243324

ABSTRACT

Concerning a fragment by Empedocles on respiration.


Subject(s)
Respiration , Greek World/history , History, Ancient , Philology, Classical/history
18.
Emerita ; 64(1): 11-29, 1996.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17243318

ABSTRACT

Discusses the use in early Greek epic poetry of "etor", one of the three terms for "heart". This word serves frequently as a seat of emotion in individuals, especially of joy, anger and grief. It can also be involved in thought, particularly in emotional situations.


Subject(s)
Emotions , Heart , Mental Processes , Philology, Classical , Emotions/physiology , Greek World/history , History, Ancient , Mental Processes/physiology , Philology, Classical/history , Poetry as Topic/history , Terminology as Topic
20.
Parassitologia ; 37(2-3): 147-8, 1995 Dec.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8778657

ABSTRACT

The generic name Aedes Meigen, 1818 (Diptera, Culicidae) is derived from the latinisation of the ancient Greek word [symbol: see text] which means unpleasant, annoying, irritant. The correct latin pronunciation is "a-edes".


Subject(s)
Aedes , Animals , Entomology/history , Germany , History, 19th Century , Philology, Classical
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