Zeno (or Zenon, Koinē Greek: Ζήνων; 3rd and 2nd centuries BC) was a Greek physician. He was one of the most eminent of the followers of Herophilus, whom Galen calls "no ordinary man," and who is said by Diogenes Laërtius to have been better able to think than to write. He lived probably at the end of the 3rd and beginning of the 2nd centuries BC, as he was a contemporary of Apollonius Empiricus, with whom he carried on a controversy concerning the meaning of certain marks (Koinē Greek: χαρακτῆρες) that are found at the end of some of the chapters of the third book of the Epidemics of Hippocrates. He gave particular attention to the materia medica, and is perhaps the physician whose medical formulae are quoted by Galen, in which case he must have been a native of Laodicea. He is mentioned i
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- Zeno (physician) (en)
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| - Zenó (en llatí Zenon, en grec Ζήνων) fou un metge grec seguidor d'Heròfil de Calcedònia. Va viure al final del segle III aC i començament del segle II aC, contemporani d'Apol·loni Empíric amb el que va mantenir una controvèrsia sobre alguns aspectes (χαρακτῆρες) del llibre Epidèmies d'Hipòcrates. (ca)
- Zeno (or Zenon, Koinē Greek: Ζήνων; 3rd and 2nd centuries BC) was a Greek physician. He was one of the most eminent of the followers of Herophilus, whom Galen calls "no ordinary man," and who is said by Diogenes Laërtius to have been better able to think than to write. He lived probably at the end of the 3rd and beginning of the 2nd centuries BC, as he was a contemporary of Apollonius Empiricus, with whom he carried on a controversy concerning the meaning of certain marks (Koinē Greek: χαρακτῆρες) that are found at the end of some of the chapters of the third book of the Epidemics of Hippocrates. He gave particular attention to the materia medica, and is perhaps the physician whose medical formulae are quoted by Galen, in which case he must have been a native of Laodicea. He is mentioned i (en)
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| - Zenó (en llatí Zenon, en grec Ζήνων) fou un metge grec seguidor d'Heròfil de Calcedònia. Va viure al final del segle III aC i començament del segle II aC, contemporani d'Apol·loni Empíric amb el que va mantenir una controvèrsia sobre alguns aspectes (χαρακτῆρες) del llibre Epidèmies d'Hipòcrates. Va donar atenció especial a la matèria mèdica i probablement és el metge les fórmules del qual són citades per Galè a De Antidotus (vol. XIV, pp. 163, 171), i si així és, seria nadiu de Laodicea. L'esmenten a més de Galè, Erotià, Celi Aurelià i segurament Plini, Alexandre d'Afrodísies i Ruf Efesi. Galè el qualifica d'home no ordinari, i Diògenes Laerci diu que pensava millor que no pas escrivia. (ca)
- Zeno (or Zenon, Koinē Greek: Ζήνων; 3rd and 2nd centuries BC) was a Greek physician. He was one of the most eminent of the followers of Herophilus, whom Galen calls "no ordinary man," and who is said by Diogenes Laërtius to have been better able to think than to write. He lived probably at the end of the 3rd and beginning of the 2nd centuries BC, as he was a contemporary of Apollonius Empiricus, with whom he carried on a controversy concerning the meaning of certain marks (Koinē Greek: χαρακτῆρες) that are found at the end of some of the chapters of the third book of the Epidemics of Hippocrates. He gave particular attention to the materia medica, and is perhaps the physician whose medical formulae are quoted by Galen, in which case he must have been a native of Laodicea. He is mentioned in several other passages by Galen, and also by Erotianus; perhaps also by Pliny, Caelius Aurelianus, Alexander of Aphrodisias, and Rufus of Ephesus, but this is uncertain. (en)
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