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A Cultural History of Medical Vitalism in Enlightenment Montpellier (Hardcover, New Ed)
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A Cultural History of Medical Vitalism in Enlightenment Montpellier (Hardcover, New Ed)
Series: The History of Medicine in Context
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One of the key themes of the Enlightenment was the search for
universal laws and truths that would help illuminate the workings
of the universe. It is in such attitudes that we trace the origins
of modern science and medicine. However, not all eighteenth century
scientists and physicians believed that such universal laws could
be found, particularly in relation to the differences between
living and inanimate matter. From the 1740s physicians working in
the University of Medicine of Montpellier began to contest
Descartes's dualist concept of the body-machine that was being
championed by leading Parisian medical 'mechanists'. In place of
the body-machine perspective that sought laws universally valid for
all phenomena, the vitalists postulated a distinction being living
and other matter, offering a holistic understanding of the
physical-moral relation in place of mind-body dualism. Their
medicine was not based on mathematics and the unity of the
sciences, but on observation of the individual patient and the
harmonious activities of the 'body-economy'. Vitalists believed
that Illness was a result of disharmony in this 'body-economy'
which could only be remedied on an individual level depending on
the patient's own 'natural' limitations. The limitations were
established by a myriad of factors such as sex, class, age,
temperament, region, and race, which negated the use of a single
universal treatment for a particular ailment. Ultimately Montpelier
medicine was eclipsed by that of Paris, a development linked to the
dynamics of the Enlightenment as a movement bent on cultural
centralisation, acquiring a reputation as a kind of anti-science of
the exotic and the mad. Given the long-standing Paris-centrism of
French cultural history, Montpellier vitalism has never been
accorded the attention it deserves by historians. This study
repairs that neglect.
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