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Paracelsus
(redirected from Paracelsan)

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Paracelsus

 orig. Philippus Aureolus Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim

(born Nov. 11 or Dec. 17, 1493, Einsiedeln, Switz.—died Sept. 24, 1541, Salzburg, Archbishopric of Salzburg) German-born Swiss physician and alchemist. He claimed to have received his doctoral degree at the University of Ferrara. He adopted the name “para-Celsus”—meaning “beyond Celsus” (the Roman authority on medicine)—and wandered throughout Europe and the Middle East, studying with alchemists. He valued the common sense of common people more than the dry teachings of Aristotle, Galen, and Avicenna and stressed nature's healing power. All were welcome at his lectures (which he gave in German, not Latin) at the University of Basel, but such broadmindedness scandalized the authorities, and eventually he was forced to flee the city. His written works include Great Surgery Book (1536). He anticipated by centuries the treatment of syphilis by mercury compounds, the realization that inhaled dust causes miners' silicosis, and homeopathy, and he was the first to connect goitre with minerals in drinking water.


Paracelsus
Philippus Aureolus , real name Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim. 1493--1541, Swiss physician and alchemist, who pioneered the use of specific treatment, based on observation and experience, to remedy particular diseases


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5) Routinely and persistently, uterine dysfunction--uterine or hysterical because of its origin in the womb--of all sorts and manifestations threatens the female subject, who may suffer from amenorrhea (cessation of menstruation) or plethoric conditions due to malign buildups of putrefied blood or female sperm, an Aristotelian invention that Galenic and Paracelsan medicine simply accommodate.
Both the Paracelsan treatments, which had become a competitor in the medical marketplace,(67) and the more traditional medicine as popularized for a general audience, emphasized herbs, oils and potions.
Even Spenser's seventeenth-century commentator, Kenelm Digby, saw Paracelsan elements in the structure of the Castle of Alma, as Schoenfeldt notes (56).
 
 
 
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