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Wellsprings
greek-medicinefeatured in 4 works

The Healing Power of Nature

The body's own nature is the real healer; the physician's job is to assist it — and to do no harm.

This Hippocratic principle holds that the patient's own nature (physis) works to restore health, so the physician's task is to cooperate with that healing tendency — clearing obstacles, doing no harm — rather than override it. Rooted in the Hippocratic Corpus (5th–4th c. BCE) and crystallized in the 'Epidemics' maxim that 'nature is the physician of diseases,' the idea was later given its enduring Latin name 'vis medicatrix naturae' (the healing power of nature) by Renaissance and early-modern writers drawing on Galen. It remains a touchstone for patient, minimally interventionist medicine.

How it traveled

  1. Aphorismi
    Kos · -370
    doctrinal
  2. De alimento
    Kos · -370
    doctrinal
  3. In Hippocratis De victu acutorum
    Rome · 175
    doctrinal
  4. Thrasybulus sive utrum medicinae sit an gymnasticae hygieine
    Rome · 175
    doctrinal

Key passages(10)

In Hippocratis De natura hominis · Galen

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In Hippocratis De victu acutorum · Galen

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In Hippocratis De victu acutorum · Galen

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Thrasybulus sive utrum medicinae sit an gymnasticae hygieine · Galen

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Thrasybulus sive utrum medicinae sit an gymnasticae hygieine · Galen

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Aphorismi · Hippocrates

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Aphorismi · Hippocrates

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De alimento · Hippocrates

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De alimento · Hippocrates

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De prisca medicina [attributed] · Hippocrates

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