Hippocrates — "The sacred disease (epilepsy) is no more divine or sacred than any other disease…"
The sacred disease (epilepsy) is no more divine or sacred than any other disease, but has a natural cause.
The sacred disease (epilepsy) is no more divine or sacred than any other disease, but has a natural cause.
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"A wise man should consider that health is the greatest of human blessings, and learn how by his own thought to derive benefit from his illnesses."
"The most important thing in life is health."
"The diet is the foundation of health."
"The best thing is to prevent disease."
"The greatest wealth is health."
A revolutionary statement demystifying epilepsy and promoting a naturalistic view of disease.
Date: c. 400 BCE (from 'On the Sacred Disease')
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Epilepsy was called the 'sacred disease' because ancient Greeks believed its dramatic symptoms—convulsions, unconsciousness, strange vocalizations—were caused by gods or divine forces. Hippocrates rejects this entirely: epilepsy follows natural laws just as any other illness does. Every disease has a physical origin traceable through observation. Physicians should seek bodily causes, not spiritual explanations, and medicine should operate through reason and evidence rather than prayer or ritual.
Hippocrates wrote a treatise specifically titled 'On the Sacred Disease' challenging priest-healers who treated epilepsy through purification rites and incantations. As a physician who believed illness arose from imbalances in the body's four humors—blood, phlegm, yellow bile, black bile—he staked his career on natural causation. Rejecting divine attribution wasn't merely philosophy; it redefined the physician's role away from religious intermediary toward empirical observer and healer.
In ancient Greece around 400 BCE, healing was largely controlled by priests at temples of Asclepius, where the sick underwent ritual incubation, prayer, and sacrifice. Epilepsy's convulsions and altered consciousness convinced most people that gods were physically seizing the body. Challenging this meant confronting religious authority and widespread fear. Hippocrates was writing amid the rise of Greek natural philosophy, where thinkers first sought rational explanations for phenomena previously attributed to divine will.
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