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Methodists
Encyclopedia entry   Open access

Methodists

Marquis Berrey
Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Classics
Oxford University Press
08/22/2017
DOI: 10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.8165
url
https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.8165View
Open Access

Abstract

Methodists were a self-identified medical sect of the 1st century bce, Imperial period, and late antiquity who shared a common method of observation and causal inference about the practice of medicine. Methodists took their name from the “method” (Gk. methodos), an observable path or evidence-based medicine which the physician undertook to gain secure therapeutic knowledge. The path was supposed to reveal the general similarity between patients’ ostensibly differing conditions. Three similarities, or “commonalities,” as they were called, were possible: fluid, constricted, or a mixture of the two. Opponents pilloried Methodists for the loose logic of their methodological revolution and socially disruptive claims to teach medicine within six months. Primarily a Roman phenomenon, the popularity of Methodism seems to have been due to a ready supply of practitioners and its focus on certain, fast therapy. Methodists wrote chiefly on internal medicine, surgery, and medical history.
Methodism hospitals medicine medical schools Roman medicine

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