940 Geschichte Europas
Refine
Document Type
- Part of a Book (13) (remove)
Language
- German (13)
Keywords
- Russland (4)
- Sowjetunion (3)
- Systemtransformation (3)
- Antike (2)
- Christentum (2)
- Föderalismus (2)
- Osteuropa (2)
- Religion (2)
- Russia (2)
- Sport (2)
- transition (2)
- Araber (1)
- Aristoteles (1)
- Arzt (1)
- Augustinus (1)
- Bibel (1)
- Byzanz (1)
- Chirurgie (1)
- Cold War (1)
- Confederations (1)
- Eastern Europe (1)
- Eastern Europe ; sport (1)
- Engels (1)
- Eurasismus (1)
- Ewa (1)
- Federalism (1)
- Frau (1)
- Friedrich / Gesamtausgabe (1)
- Fukuyama, Francis (1)
- Gemeinschaft (1)
- Gemeinwohl (1)
- Gesundheitspolitik (1)
- Gesundheitsvorsorge (1)
- Hippocrates (1)
- Hippokrates (1)
- Hygiene (1)
- Imperialismus (1)
- Intersexuality (1)
- Intersexualität (1)
- Jesus Christus (1)
- Judentum (1)
- Karl / Gesamtausgabe (1)
- Krankenhaus (1)
- Krankenversicherung (1)
- Kulturkontakt (1)
- Kłobukowska (1)
- Laienmedizin (1)
- Lebensmittel (1)
- Leviathan (1)
- Litauen (1)
- Lithuania (1)
- Maimonides, Moses (1)
- Marx (1)
- Media (1)
- Narodniki (1)
- Ost-West-Konflikt (1)
- Panslawismus (1)
- Poland (1)
- Polen (1)
- Presse (1)
- Rabbiner (1)
- Rationalisierung (1)
- Ritual (1)
- Russia ; Soviet Union ; Slavophilism ; Panslavism ; Populism ; Eurasianism (1)
- Seele (1)
- Seelsorge (1)
- Slawophile (1)
- Soviet Union (1)
- Soviet Union ; Russian Federation ; transition ; federalism (1)
- Sowjetföderalismus (1)
- Staatenbund (1)
- Talmud (1)
- Theodosius (1)
- Thora (1)
- Versorgung (1)
- Wissenschaftsgeschichte (1)
- Women (1)
- Wunder (1)
- Zivilgesellschaft (1)
- imperialism (1)
- transcultural communication (1)
Has Fulltext
- yes (13) (remove)
Concepts of Man – Concepts of Health: A Glimpse of Their Relationship in Antiquity With Relevance to Our Day and Age. Referring to ancient miraculous healing narratives, this article argues that concepts of health are inextricably intertwined with concepts of man. However, the relatively autonomous idea of medical treatments based on scientific reasoning is not an invention of modern secularization. It already existed in antiquity – even among people of faith. Gods and other religious authorities were regarded as mediating factors; they were not held responsible for diseases or cures. Examples from Christian and pagan traditions show that the interplay between ideas of man and concepts of health were extremely complex and diverse. Obviously, this was true already in antiquity – but it is even more evident in the present. Dualistic confrontations (e. g., pre-modern versus modern times, pre-scientific healing vs. academic medicine) are of little help to achieve universal health care and global health.
Health in Judaism: An Intercultural Discourse on Lack of Understanding and Misunderstanding in the Past and Present. Hardly any other religion pays as much attention to physical health as Judaism. Beginning with the Torah, the contrast between „healthy“ and „sick“ is already conceptualized and associated with the will of God and his plan of creation. In addition to the stereotype that Jews are sicker than their fellow human beings, there is an early claim that their state of health is better than that of other peoples. The religious writings of Judaism contain a large number of regulations that show how much the Greco- Roman doctrine of dietetics has been internalized, expanded and adapted to one’s own spiritual needs. There is broad consensus among today’s rabbis that health care, as described above all in the Talmud, was time-related and therefore should be based on today’s standards and findings while remaining in compliance with religious laws.
Byzantine Medicine as a Concept of Late Ancient Christian Healing Art. The great success of Greco-Roman medicine – in its main stream a brilliant combination of humoral pathology and dietetics canonized by Galen of Pergamon in the 2nd century CE – is probably the most surprising phenomenon of conceptual longevity in the history of Western culture and civilization. Its decline begins as late as in the early 17th century, when William Harvey describes the circulation of blood on the basis of the new experimental method, initiating not only the collapse of Galen’s theory of blood circulation, but also of humoral physiology and pathology in general. Only then, i. e., more than 1500 years after Galen and 2000 years after Hippocrates, new theoretical concepts of medicine appear on the horizon, gradually replacing medical thinking of antiquity. However, the evolution of Greco-Roman medicine was not a straightforward process; it was strongly influenced by changes in language and dramatic institutional and political changes after the separation of the Roman Empire at the end of the 4th century. Byzantine medicine in the East encompasses the common medical practices of the empire from about 400 to 1453 AD, compiling and standardizing medical knowledge and wisdom (iatrosophia) into new Greek textbooks.
Taming the European Leviathan: Health as Politics. A Research Project. This article outlines the research project „Taming the European Leviathan: The Legacy of Post-War Medicine and the Common Good“. It is funded by a Synergy Grant of the European Research Council and unites European researchers comparing health policies (from drug research to prevention) in West- and East-European countries, e.g., Bulgaria, Germany, France, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and the United Kingdom. The common goal is to provide a different perspective on post-war Europe, a perspective that emphasizes commonalities rather than differences.
Der Beitrag beschäftigt sich mit dem pfadabhängigen Scheitern der Transformation in Russland. Im Zentrum steht die Frage nach der Interdependenz von politischem und ökonomischem System. Die These lautet, dass das politische System Russlands die Wirtschaftsentwicklung behindert, da es angesichts seines chronischen Legitimitätsdefizits nicht in der Lage ist, stabile Rahmenbedingungen hervorzubringen.
Der Beitrag zeigt auf, wie historische Langzeitfaktoren (politische Kultur, Wirtschaftsmentalität, imperiales Erbe u.a.) institutionell vermittelt werden, auf diese Weise in der Gegenwart ihre Wirksamkeit entfalteten und so die politische Transformation hin zu einem demokratischen Rechtsstaat in der Russländischen Föderation pfadabhängig scheitern ließen.
Sonderweg und "Eigenart"
(2009)
Der Beitrag stellt handbuchartig die wichtigsten Strömungen innerhalb der russischen Intelligencija seit dem zweiten Drittel des 19. Jahrhunderts dar, die dem linearen universalen Fortschrittsbegriff der Aufklärung eine multilineare Konzeption der Weltgeschichte entgegenhielten. In dieser – romantischen – Perspektive ist Russland ein andersartiger, aber gleichwertiger Kulturraum, dessen Unterschiede zum Westen nicht negativ als Ausdruck von Rückständigkeit gedeutet werden, sondern als seine positiv konnotierte samobytnost’ ("Eigenart").