"Sola Schola Et
Sanitate: Human Capital as the Root Cause and Priority for International Development?".
Galen (C 200-129 BC) wrote on medicine, philosophy and gymnastic exercises in a major work on health (De
Sanitate Tuenda).
Su primer patrono fue Girolamo Verallo, bajo su proteccion publica su primera obra titulada De animi et corporis
sanitate tienda libellus (1553).
Quarum unum contineat ea que pertinent ad vivum inquantum est vivum; et hec continetur in libro quem scribit De morte et vita, in quo etiam determinat De respiratione et expiratione, per que in quibusdam vita conservatur, et De iuventute et senectute, per que diversificatur status vite; similiter autem et in libro qui inscribitur De causis longitudinis et brevitatis vite et in libro quem fecit De
sanitate et egritudine, que etiam pertinent ad dispositionem vite, et in libro quem etiam dicitur fecisse De nutrimento et nutribili; qui duo libri apud nos nondum habentur.
(51.) "[0]ur ancestral god Asklepios who ordered not a few to have odes written as well as to compose comical mimes and certain songs" for making men healthy; Galenus, De
Sanitate tuenda 1.
Early modern England inherited a variety of skill discourses: skill and the body can be seen as the confluence of numerous, often incompatible, issues that are derived from classical antiquity and the Christian tradition--for example, the Greek admiration for athleticism and the masculine body; the Roman warrior and gladiatorial tradition; the Augustinian suspicion of the flesh and hostility towards brutal sport; the humanist attitude towards the body and the role of physical exercise in education; medical discourses such as Galen's De
Sanitate Tuenda, and prescriptive treatises such as conduct books and oratorical manuals.
(2009) Sola schola et
sanitate: human capital as the root cause and priority for international development?
[5.] Bright T, Hygieina, id est De
Sanitate tuenda, Medicins pars prima, London, 1581, 8vo; dedicated to Lord Burghley.
Dans le seul fonds ancien de la Faculte de Medecine de Montpellier, il est possible de denombrer entre 1530 et 1592 quatre-vingt trois ouvrages touchant au corps et aux techniques du corps (physiognomonie, anatomie, exercitatio, gymnastica,
sanitate, sante ...).
(25) The network formed by Linacre, Fox, Lupset, and Claymond is further attested by the presentation to Fox, Linacre's patient at the time, of a copy of Linacre's Latin translation of Galen's De
sanitate tuenda (Paris, 1517).