Learning Medieval Medicine: The Boundaries of University Teaching. Introduction
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O'Boyle, CorneliusEditorial
Universidad de Granada
Date
2000Referencia bibliográfica
O’Boyle, Cornelius. «Learning medieval medicine : the boundaries of university teaching. Introduction». Dynamis: Acta Hispanica ad Medicinae Scientiarumque Historiam Illustrandam, 2000, Vol. 20, p. 17-29, https://raco.cat/index.php/Dynamis/article/view/86627.
Abstract
Taken together, these essays reveal that university medicine, while
generated and sustained within specific institutional structures, manifested
itself in various forms well beyond the confines of the university. In
doing so, it dictated the nature of medical learning at all levels of
society. It determined where it could be taught (in local schools and
even in the home), to whom (by and large men, and not women), and
what sort of medical learning was appropriate (e.g. cosmetics for laywomen). University medicine thus penetrated all levels of society, yet it remained
firmly in the control of male university-educated physicians. Taken
together, these essays demonstrate that the boundaries of university
medicine were certainly flexible and invariably shifting; but they were
always the product of negotiation between the parties involved, most
notably the master and his student, and the physician and his patient.