Term 2 – 3 Logbooks: 2nd June – 23rd July Monday 2nd June Warm Up: Cowboys and Indians (Already completed) Activity: Individual Acting out with different commedia masks Individual acting out with different commedia masks: In this activity we were required to choose a mask from commedia theatre that ‘spoke to us’‚ and with this mask we must act out the character we believe the mask portrays and communicate it through the questions the teacher asks us. I personally found it hard to let the
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Mental Illness: Treatment in the Middle Ages Alyssa Berck Block 4 English 12 Berck 1 Alyssa Berck Mrs. Atkins English 12 2 November 2009 Mental Illness: Treatment in the Middle Ages Throughout time‚ the causes‚ effects‚ and treatment of mental illnesses has been debated and treated in numerous‚ sometimes odd‚ ways‚ but no treatments varied as widely as those in the Middle Ages. During The Middle Ages the lack of the technologies‚ sanitary procedures‚ and knowledge
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Part I—Beginnings John Snow was born in in York‚ England‚ one of children of a working-class family. Th ey lived in a poor neighborhood near the River Ouse‚ which would sometimes overfl ow‚ fl ooding the family home. Snow obtained a scholarship to a local school to learn to read and write and‚ with some extra money his parents managed to provide‚ to learn arithmetic. Snow’s wealthy and well-connected uncle‚ Charles Empson‚ arranged an apprenticeship for his nephew with a surgeon-apothecary
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When we think of Ancient Medical practices‚ we may imagine gruesome and even torturous events; however‚ it cannot be more far from the truth. With a rational and systematic approach when treating and diagnosing patients‚ Ancient Greek medicine played a significant role in influencing modern day practice. Furthermore‚ influential figures such as Hippocrates and Anaximander developed theories and concepts vital in explaining and diagnosing illnesses. Although there are various theories and practices
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In this paper I am going to discuss the differences between the Humoral concept of disease‚ the anatomical theory of disease‚ the germ theory of disease and the differences between each theory. I am also going to look at the historical significance of these theories and how they apply to health and wellness in today’s health care. The humoral theory comes from an ancient Greek theory that states that the human body is composed of four basic humors. The Humoral theory is derived from the word
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The greeks may have laid the basis for a lot of things in the common era‚ but one thing they did differently was their medicine. They first believed that disease was caused by demons and that Asclepius could cure diseases(quatr). So the doctors thought that they could cure patients through sacrifice and prayer(quatr). They would model the diseased body parts so they could be offered to Asclepius. However‚ by the 5th century B.C.E. doctors started trying a more material approach‚ they started using
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O‚ that this too too solid flesh would melt Thaw and resolve itself into a dew! Or that the Everlasting had not fix’d His canon ’gainst self-slaughter! O God! God! How weary‚ stale‚ flat and unprofitable‚ Seem to me all the uses of this world! (1.2.5) From the play’s beginnings‚ Hamlet is distressed. Here‚ his desire for his "flesh" to "melt" and dissolve into "dew" registers his anguish over his father’s death and his mother’s remarriage to his uncle. Clearly‚ Hamlet’s thoughts here are
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F. Lauren Williams April 4‚ 2013 Problems with Monocausal Explanations of Disease The discovery of germs has been a long process in history and still ongoing today. John Waller‚ author of The Discovery of the Germ: Twenty Years That Transformed the Way We Think about Disease‚ has stated as his thesis in this book‚ “…between 1880 and 1900…medicine underwent perhaps its greatest ever transformation. In just 20 years‚ the central role of germs in producing illness was for the first time decisively
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Parasites and Humans: Why Can’t We All Just Get Along? Introduction The definition of a parasite is: “an organism that lives on or in an organism of another species‚ known as the host‚ from the body of which it obtains nutriment.” (Dictionary.com‚2012) There are several kinds of parasitic relationships in the world. Mutualism is one of them. This occurs when each member of the association benefits the other. Can humans and parasites have a mutualistic relationship in medicine?
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Why were doctors still reading Galen in 1400? Galen was a Greek physician who revived the wok of Hippocrates and other Greek doctors. Galen died in the Roman era but his work was still read in the medieval times. Regression in medicine was caused by many factors including war and religion which meant that doctors had to use cures and theories that had already been discovered such as Galen’s theory of the 4 humours and opposites. Due to lack of progress in the past 1000 year’s doctors continued to
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