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Lecture: "Hermann Boerhaave and Enlightenment Medicine" by Harold J. Cook (UCLA Programs in Medical Classics, 24 February 2004)



Tuesday, 24 February 2004, 6:00 p.m.

Hermann Boerhaave and Enlightenment Medicine: Steering Clear of Ultimate Questions.
Harold J. Cook, Ph.D.
Professor and Director, The Wellcome Centre for the History of Medicine at University 
College London

Introduction by Dora B. Weiner, Ph.D.
Professor of the Medical Humanities and of History, UCLA

Hal Cook has for some years been working on the history of medicine and natural 
history during the Dutch Golden Age, rounding off his story with a fresh look 
at the famous medical and botanical (and chemical) professor of Leiden, Herman 
Boerhaave. Boerhaave became the most famous medical professor of early 
18th-century Europe. Yet there have been quite different views about his 
contributions, even among his students: was he a materialist, a mechanist, an 
iatrochemist, a vitalist, a Hippocratic, a Calvinist? This presentation takes 
another look at Boerhaave’s teachings, not in light of what came after, but 
in light of the controversies of his own world, so that we can see afresh the 
intellectual and clinical problems facing him, and how he dealt with them or 
finessed them.

The February program is co-sponsored by the UCLA Department of History 
[http://www.history.ucla.edu]


This program will begin at 6:00 pm in the UCLA Faculty Center, followed by wine & 
soft drinks, conversation, and an opportunity to examine some of the books 
discussed that evening as well as related material from the Biomedical Library’s 
History & Special Collections Division. There is no charge for the lecture and 
reception.

An optional dinner with the speakers, at $22.00 per person, will take place in the 
Faculty Center about 7:30 pm. A reservation is required for dinner; please call 
the History & Special Collections Division of the Louise Darling Biomedical Library 
at (310) 825-6940 to make a reservation. 

An abridged form of an related, classic text will be distributed by snailmail to 
those persons who request it in advance. To request this text (not that this is 
a _related_ text; please note that the _lecture itself_ is _not_ taped or transcribed) 
or more information, please send Teresa Johnson [tgj@library.ucla.edu] an e-mail, 
including your name and address, with the words “Medical Classics Program: February 
2004 Lecture” in the subject line; or call the History & Special Collections Division 
at (310) 825-6940.

# # #

UCLA Programs in Medical Classics is a series of presentations designed to enhance 
an appreciation of the links among famous medical writings, clinical practice, basic 
research, and humanistic scholarship. Six times a year these meetings bring together 
a convivial group of individuals of scholarly tastes—both from the community and from 
UCLA faculty, students, and staff—for a lecture and an opportunity to discuss and 
examine texts and topics that embody the history of advances in medicine, as well 
as the relations of medicine to broader cultural settings.
http://www.library.ucla.edu/biomed/his/medicalclassics.html


Printable PDF version of February 2004 announcement:
http://www.library.ucla.edu/biomed/his/medclass-feb2004.pdf

___________________________________
Russell A. Johnson 
rjohnson@library.ucla.edu

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