Medieval Monkish Medicine: Scientific Before Science was a Thing

From Cambridge University Libraries: a 15th-century medical manuscript describing a diagnostic method: colors of urine along with their associated ailments. Via Smithsonian Magazine, used w/o permission.

Looks like word is getting around, among historians at any rate, that the "Dark Ages" weren't an abyss of superstition and ignorance.

I see that as good news, and recommend reading the rest of Meg Leja's Smithsonian Magazine article.

I've highlighted parts of this excerpt, and talked (briefly, for me) about the medical angle of post-Roman Europe under Respecting Ancient Authorities: Above and Beyond the Call of Reason....

More at A Catholic Citizen in America.

(The Medieval roots of modern medicine: excerpt from a Smithsonian Magazine article, how I see monastic medicine and the Renaissance.)

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