930 Geschichte des Altertums bis ca. 499, Archäologie
Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (97)
- Part of Periodical (15)
- Book (9)
- Part of a Book (5)
- Other (5)
- Preprint (1)
Language
- German (105)
- Multiple languages (14)
- English (11)
- French (1)
- Italien (1)
Keywords
- Antike (85)
- Archäologie (24)
- Kunstgeschichte <Fach> (14)
- Kunstgeschichte (11)
- Eisenguss (10)
- Rezeption (10)
- Numismatik (9)
- Corpus Nummorum (8)
- Münze (7)
- Münzen (6)
- Antikenrezeption (4)
- Hippocrates (4)
- Aristoteles (3)
- Homer (3)
- Wissenschaftsgeschichte <Fach> (3)
- Byzantion (2)
- Ethik (2)
- Hippokrates (2)
- Ikonographie (2)
- Lebensstil (2)
- Renaissance (2)
- 1905-1981) (1)
- Albert (Architekt (1)
- Altertumswissenschaft (1)
- Amazonas (1)
- Andreas (Künstler) (1)
- Archiv (1)
- Arzt (1)
- Asklepios (1)
- Augusta Traiana (1)
- Ayahuasca (1)
- Beger (1)
- Benito (1)
- Berlin / Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften (1)
- Berlin / Stadtschloss (1)
- Berlin / Wilhelmstrasse (1)
- Bildwissenschaft (1)
- Bisanthe (1)
- Bizye (1)
- Christentum (1)
- Cicero (1)
- Datenbank (1)
- Demenz (1)
- Demokrit (1)
- Depression (1)
- Deultum (1)
- Dikaia (1)
- Epikureer (1)
- Evolution (1)
- Faschismus (1)
- Geisteswissenschaften (1)
- Gesundheitspolitik (1)
- Gesundheitsvorsorge (1)
- Gesundheitswesen (1)
- Gewebe (1)
- Gießen <Urformen> (1)
- Handschriftenkunde (1)
- Heiler (1)
- Ideenlehre (1)
- Keramik (1)
- Kosmos (1)
- Krankheitsbegriff (1)
- Kulturlandschaft (1)
- Laokoon (1)
- Laokoongruppe (1)
- Lorenz (Bibliothekar) (1)
- Malerei (1)
- Maroneia (1)
- Marsyas (1)
- Medizin (1)
- Medizingeschichte <Fach> (1)
- Mommsen (1)
- Mussolini (1)
- Nachruf (1)
- Nervensystem (1)
- Neurotransmitter (1)
- Papiermuseum (1)
- Perinthos (1)
- Phaidros (1)
- Philologie (1)
- Platon (1)
- Potsdam / Schloss Sanssouci (1)
- Psychotherapie (1)
- Regeneration (1)
- Sarkophag (1)
- Schinkel, Karl Friedrich (1)
- Schlosspark (1)
- Schlüter (1)
- Schweigger, August Friedrich (1)
- Seidenstraße (1)
- Selymbria (1)
- Siemiradzki, Henryk von (1)
- Sokrates (1)
- Sozialgeschichte (1)
- Speer (1)
- Staat (1)
- Staat / Entstehung (1)
- Technische Innovation (1)
- Theodor ; Römische Geschichte (1)
- Topographie (1)
- Traianopolis (1)
- Turfan (1)
- Umwelt (1)
- Verhalten (1)
- Virchow, Rudolf (1)
- Warburg, Aby Moritz (1)
- Ägypten (1)
- Ägypten (Altertum) (1)
- Ägyptologie (1)
Has Fulltext
- yes (132) (remove)
Institute
- Akademienvorhaben Census of Antique Works of Art and Architecture Known in the Renaissance (110)
- Veröffentlichungen der Vorgängerakademien (9)
- Akademienvorhaben Griechisches Münzwerk (8)
- Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften (5)
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe Zukunft der Medizin: "Gesundheit für alle" (5)
- Veröffentlichungen von Akademiemitgliedern (2)
- Akademienvorhaben Altägyptisches Wörterbuch (1)
Das Alte Ägypten repräsentiert historisch einen der wenigen Fälle ursprünglicher Staatsentstehung. Anders als in anderen Kulturen, in denen lange kleinräumig-stadtstaatliche Formen dominierten, entstand hier schon sehr früh, am Ende des 4. Jahrtausends v.Chr. ein ausgedehnter Territorialstaat. Die archäologische Forschung der letzten Jahrzehnte hat einen reichen Schatz neuer Daten zur Staatsentstehung in Ägypten erbracht. Insbesondere wird ein langer historischer Vorlauf der Entstehung komplexer kultureller, sozialer, ökonomischer und politischer Strukturen bis in das frühe 4. Jahrtausend erkennbar. Hier kann nicht nur im regionalen Maßstab die Herausbildung stadtstaatlicher Strukturen beobachtet werden; auch im überregionalen Maßstab haben weiträumige Kommunikations- und Interaktionsnetzwerke (von der Levante nach Süden bis zum 2. Nilkatarakt) bestanden, die entscheidende strukturelle und funktionelle Aspekte des Territorialstaats der dynastischen Zeit vorwegnahmen. Dadurch wird die Entstehung der politischen Form dieses Staates in einem größeren strukturgeschichtlichen Kontext verankert; gleichzeitig wird die neue Frage nach den Entwicklungen und Transformationen der sozialen, ökonomischen und kulturellen Strukturen unter den neuen politischen Rahmenbedingungen des etablierten Staates aufgeworfen.
Introduction – Reflections on Concepts of Health in Their Context. Contrary to what is often believed, health is not simply an objective condition that is easily determined and measured by strict medical criteria in clinical or scientific settings. It is a multifaceted phenomenon whose perception and understanding is influenced profoundly by people’s personal experience, cultural background and social environment. Correspondingly, there is great variety in concepts and definitions of health, both today and in a historical perspective. This collection of studies examines a number of such contextual factors that influence concepts, values and practices related to health, both present and past. It also makes a number of recommendations relevant to medical professionals, politicians, patients and other healthcare stakeholders as to how healthcare systems can be improved and enriched. It advocates a holistic approach to the understanding of health and disease, which involves embracing historical and philosophical concepts in medical reasoning, learning from health practices originated in other parts of the world and establishing interdisciplinary ways of thinking in biomedical research and clinical care.
Vernunft als Therapie und Krankheit: Medizinische Denkfiguren in der Geschichte der Philosophie
(2021)
Reason as Therapy and Illness: Medical Figures of Thought in the History of Philosophy. This paper tackles the question how philosophers have used medical metaphors, analogies or aspects of medical theories in their works. It discusses the idea of ancient Greek philosophy as a medicine of the soul, as well as the Christian surgery of the text-body and finally, how madness became a central problem for the philosophical conception of reason.
Health, Lifestyle and Responsibility: Historical Roots and Current Perspectives. The question to what extent health and disease are matters of individual and collective human responsibility was first raised and systematically discussed in ancient Greek medicine and philosophy in the 5th and 4th century BCE. This chapter discusses the consequences of these discussions for the definition of the aims and methods of the medical art, in particular the preservation and enhancement of health and the prevention of disease through lifestyle-related prophylactic and therapeutic measures. It also considers some of the implications of these ancient discussions for today’s theory and practice of preventative and lifestyle-related medicine.
The Art of Medicine and Philosophy: On the Genesis of a Basic Relationship in European Thought. Referring to the examples of Hippocrates and Socrates, in this essay, we establish the thesis that philosophy and medicine in Greek philosophy are to be regarded as strongly interdependent. In their view, interpretations of health and disease are intertwined with various contexts or settings such as living conditions, environment and climate, which has implications for the therapy of patients as an art of healing. The relevance and philosophical perspectives of this epoch for modern medicine and public health on a globalized planet are highlighted.
The Amazon Basin: A Forgotten Cultural Landscape and Its Medicine. While the Amazon region’s ecological importance remains uncontested, its role as a cultural hotspot is largely unknown to most people. Yet, recent archeological findings revise the image of a lush but inhospitable landscape whose farm produce could not sustain advanced civilization. The indigenous people today are only a tiny remainder of a far bigger population that developed impressive agricultural and forest engineering skills – until it was wiped out by diseases brought in from Europe. In fact, modern medicine benefits greatly from biological knowledge of indigenous Amazonians even today. This resource could prove to be much more valuable than any short-term profit realized by slash-and-burn farming or the extraction of raw materials. Therefore, it is all the more important to protect this endangered region. Scientific research will not only help to rescue indigenous biomedical knowledge, it will also give back respect and dignity to socalled savages and their cultural achievements.
Die Münzprägung von Bizye
(1981)