All Thinkers

Hippocrates

Hippocrates (c. 460-370 BCE) was an ancient Greek physician, born on the island of Cos. He is one of the most important figures in the history of medicine, often called the father of medicine, though this title should be understood carefully: he was not the first person to practise healing but the founder of a tradition that understood medicine as a rational discipline based on careful observation rather than on supernatural explanations. Very little is known about his actual life. What we have is the Hippocratic Corpus, a collection of about sixty medical texts that were associated with his school, though they were probably written by many different authors over several generations. These texts cover anatomy, clinical observation, surgery, diet, and medical ethics. They represent the first systematic attempt to study disease through observation and reason, and to develop a set of ethical principles that should govern the relationship between physician and patient. The Hippocratic Oath, though its exact origin is debated, became the foundation of medical ethics across the Western world and beyond.

Origin
Cos, Ancient Greece
Lifespan
c. 460-370 BCE
Era
Ancient
Subjects
Medicine Ancient Philosophy Medical Ethics Clinical Observation History Of Science
Why They Matter

Hippocrates matters because he established two principles that are still foundational to medicine and to scientific thinking more broadly. The first is that disease has natural causes that can be investigated through observation and reason, not supernatural ones that require religious or magical responses. This seems obvious now but was a radical departure in the ancient world, where illness was commonly understood as punishment from the gods or the result of spiritual pollution. The second is that the physician has ethical obligations to the patient that go beyond simply being skilled: obligations of care, honesty, and doing no harm. These two principles, the naturalistic approach to disease and the ethical framework for medical practice, have shaped medicine for two and a half thousand years. Understanding their origin and their ongoing importance is essential for anyone thinking seriously about health, science, and the responsibilities that come with medical knowledge and power.

Key Ideas
1
Disease has natural causes
The most fundamental idea in the Hippocratic tradition is that diseases have natural causes that can be investigated by observation and reason. Before this, illness was widely understood as punishment from the gods, the result of spiritual contamination, or the work of evil spirits. The Hippocratic physicians argued instead that the body operates according to natural principles, that disease is a disruption of these principles, and that understanding what caused the disruption is the first step towards healing it. This naturalistic approach to disease was a philosophical revolution that made medicine a rational discipline rather than a religious or magical one.
2
Careful observation of the patient
The Hippocratic physicians were insistent that the physician must observe the patient carefully and systematically: their colour, their breathing, their temperature, their posture, the nature of any pain, what makes it better or worse. Good medicine begins with attentive looking and listening, not with the application of a predetermined theory. The Hippocratic case records are among the earliest examples of systematic clinical observation in the world, recording the symptoms and progress of individual patients in precise detail. This emphasis on careful, unprejudiced observation of actual patients is one of the foundations of modern clinical medicine.
3
First, do no harm
The principle primum non nocere, first do no harm, though these exact Latin words do not appear in the ancient texts, captures one of the most important ethical ideas in the Hippocratic tradition. The physician has power over the patient, who is vulnerable and trusting. This power must be exercised with care. Sometimes the best course of action is to do nothing: to allow the body to heal itself rather than intervening with treatments that may cause more damage than the disease. The principle challenges the assumption that doing something is always better than doing nothing and insists that the physician's first obligation is to the patient's wellbeing, not to demonstrating their own skill or knowledge.
Key Quotations
"Life is short, the art long, opportunity fleeting, experience treacherous, judgment difficult."
— Aphorisms, Section I
This is the most famous statement in the Hippocratic tradition and one of the most quoted in the history of medicine. It captures the essential difficulty of the physician's task: medicine is a vast and never-fully-mastered discipline, clinical opportunities are brief and must be seized, accumulated experience can mislead as much as guide, and the judgment required in each individual case is genuinely hard. It is both a call to humility and a call to commitment: the difficulty of medicine does not excuse the physician from working as hard and as carefully as possible.
"It is far more important to know what person the disease has than what disease the person has."
— Attributed to Hippocrates
This statement captures the Hippocratic emphasis on treating the whole patient rather than only the disease. Every patient is different: their constitution, their habits, their environment, their temperament all affect how they experience and respond to illness. A treatment that works for one person may not work for another with the same disease. The physician who knows their patient well, who understands them as a whole person rather than as an instance of a category, is better placed to help them than one who knows only the textbook description of the disease.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Health Literacy When introducing why medicine looks for natural causes of disease
How to introduce
Ask: when people in the ancient world got sick, what did they often think had caused it? After discussion, introduce Hippocrates's radical idea: disease is not caused by the gods or by supernatural forces but by natural conditions that can be investigated and understood. Ask: why was this idea important? What does it make possible that a supernatural explanation does not? Connect to contemporary health literacy: if we understand the natural causes of disease, we can try to prevent them and treat them. If we think illness is supernatural punishment, prevention and treatment look very different.
Scientific Thinking When discussing careful observation as the foundation of knowledge
How to introduce
Introduce the Hippocratic emphasis on careful, systematic observation of patients. Ask: what does it mean to observe carefully? What is the difference between looking and really seeing? Introduce the Hippocratic case records as early examples of systematic clinical documentation. Ask: why does recording observations matter? What can you learn from comparing many cases that you cannot learn from one? Connect to the Research Skills topic on systematic observation and evidence.
Further Reading

For a short overview

Roy Porter's The Greatest Benefit to Mankind (1997, Norton) is the most readable history of medicine and gives an excellent account of the Hippocratic tradition. The Hippocratic Oath itself is freely available online in many versions and translations.

For the broader context

Sherwin Nuland's Doctors: The Biography of Medicine (1988, Knopf) profiles Hippocrates alongside later medical pioneers in an engaging narrative.

Key Ideas
1
Prognosis: knowing the course of disease
The Hippocratic physicians placed great importance on prognosis: the ability to predict how a disease would develop. They believed that a physician who could accurately describe what had already happened, what was happening now, and what would happen in the future would earn the patient's trust and be better placed to help them. Prognosis required systematic knowledge of how different diseases typically developed, which in turn required careful observation and record-keeping over many patients and many years. The emphasis on prognosis also reflected a realistic acceptance that not all diseases could be cured: sometimes the most the physician could do was tell the patient honestly what to expect.
2
The environment and health
The Hippocratic text Airs, Waters, Places is one of the earliest works of what we would now call environmental medicine or public health. It argues that the health of a population is shaped by the environment in which they live: the quality of the air, the water supply, the climate, and the geography. Physicians who understood the environment of a new place could predict what diseases its inhabitants were likely to suffer. This insight, that health is shaped by the conditions in which people live rather than only by the state of individual bodies, connects the Hippocratic tradition to later social medicine and to contemporary thinking about the social determinants of health.
3
The Hippocratic Oath and medical ethics
The Hippocratic Oath is the most famous document in the history of medical ethics. It commits the physician to use their knowledge for the benefit of patients, to avoid harm and injustice, to maintain confidentiality, and to refuse to use their knowledge to help kill or injure. The specific contents of the oath have been debated and revised across centuries and cultures, and different versions are used in medical schools today. But the principle underlying it, that the physician's knowledge creates ethical obligations that go beyond commercial or personal interest, remains foundational to how medicine understands itself. The oath was unusual in the ancient world: it was not a religious requirement but a voluntary ethical commitment.
Key Quotations
"Wherever the art of medicine is loved, there is also a love of humanity."
— Attributed to Hippocrates
This statement connects the technical craft of medicine to an ethical and human commitment. Medicine as a pure technical discipline, without genuine care for the people it serves, is insufficient. The physician who loves medicine but is indifferent to patients has missed something essential about what medicine is. Conversely, genuine care for the wellbeing of human beings will naturally lead to interest in the knowledge and skills that can help them. This connection between technical excellence and human concern is one of the foundational ideas of the Hippocratic tradition.
"Natural forces within us are the true healers of disease."
— Attributed to Hippocrates
The Hippocratic tradition recognised that the body has powerful natural capacities to heal itself. The physician's role is not always to intervene actively but sometimes to support the body's own healing processes by creating the right conditions: rest, good food, clean air, appropriate temperature. This principle of vis medicatrix naturae, the healing power of nature, is one of the most important in the Hippocratic tradition. It implies both a certain humility about the physician's power and a recognition that the body is not simply a passive object but an active participant in its own recovery.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Ethical Thinking When discussing the ethics of professional responsibility
How to introduce
Introduce the Hippocratic Oath and the principle of first, do no harm. Ask: why does a doctor's power over vulnerable patients create special ethical obligations? What would medicine look like without these obligations? Connect to broader questions of professional ethics: do other professions, lawyers, teachers, engineers, have similar obligations? Where do these obligations come from, and what happens when they conflict with the professional's own interests or with what the patient wants?
Research Skills When examining the development of systematic knowledge through observation
How to introduce
Connect to Ibn Sina's clinical method and to Ostrom's fieldwork: genuine knowledge about complex systems requires systematic observation over many cases, careful recording, and comparison across different situations. Introduce the Hippocratic case records as early examples of this method. Ask: what makes observation scientific rather than just anecdotal? What did the Hippocratic physicians do to move beyond individual impressions to something more reliable? Connect to contemporary evidence-based medicine.
Health Literacy When discussing environmental determinants of health
How to introduce
Introduce the Hippocratic text Airs, Waters, Places: the health of populations is shaped by their environment. Ask: can you think of modern examples of this? Air pollution and respiratory disease. Contaminated water and cholera or typhoid. Urban heat and heatstroke. Poor housing and respiratory illness. Stress and cardiovascular disease. The Hippocratic insight that health is shaped by the conditions in which people live is still one of the most important in public health. Ask: what environmental conditions most affect health in your community?
Further Reading

Hippocrates's Aphorisms and Airs, Waters, Places are the most accessible texts from the Corpus and are freely available in translation online. G.E.R. Lloyd's edited collection Hippocratic Writings (Penguin Classics) provides the best selection of key texts with helpful introductions. For the history of ideas: Owsei Temkin's Hippocrates in a World of Pagans and Christians (1991, Johns Hopkins) examines how the Hippocratic tradition was transmitted across different cultures.

Key Ideas
1
The theory of the four humours
The Hippocratic physicians developed the theory of the four humours: blood, phlegm, yellow bile, and black bile. Health was understood as a balance of these four substances, and disease as an imbalance. Different temperaments, the sanguine, phlegmatic, choleric, and melancholic personalities, were explained by the dominance of different humours. This theory was wrong: these humours do not exist in the form the ancients described. But it was wrong in a productive way: it provided a systematic framework for understanding the variety of human bodies and conditions, it directed attention to the patient as a whole person rather than only to the diseased part, and it emphasised balance and the natural tendency of the body to restore health.
2
The physician as observer, not theorist
One of the most important methodological commitments of the Hippocratic tradition is the priority of observation over theory. The physician's primary obligation is to observe what actually happens to actual patients, not to deduce what should happen from philosophical theories. This empirical commitment was in tension with other Greek philosophical traditions that sought to derive medical knowledge from first principles of reason. The Hippocratic insistence on staying close to clinical observation anticipated the empirical orientation of modern science and was one of the most important intellectual contributions of the tradition.
3
Life is short, the art long
The first aphorism in the Hippocratic collection begins: Life is short, the art long, opportunity fleeting, experience treacherous, judgment difficult. This compressed statement captures something fundamental about the nature of medical knowledge and the challenge of clinical practice. Medicine is a discipline that can never be fully mastered: there is always more to learn than any one life allows. Every clinical encounter requires judgment under uncertainty: the physician must act even when the evidence is incomplete and the outcome unknown. Experience is treacherous because what has worked before does not always work again. These difficulties do not excuse the physician from doing their best but they do require intellectual humility.
Key Quotations
"The physician must be able to tell the antecedents, know the present, and foretell the future — must mediate these things, and have two special objects in view with regard to disease, namely, to do good or to do no harm."
— Epidemics, Book I
This passage brings together two of the most important Hippocratic commitments: the emphasis on prognosis, knowing past, present, and future, and the ethical principle of doing good and avoiding harm. The physician must bring both technical knowledge and ethical commitment to every encounter. The ability to understand the history and trajectory of a disease, combined with the commitment to use this knowledge in the patient's interest and to avoid causing unnecessary harm, defines the ideal of Hippocratic medicine.
"Into whatsoever houses I enter, I will enter to help the sick, and I will abstain from all intentional wrongdoing and harm, especially from abusing the bodies of man or woman, bond or free."
— Hippocratic Oath
This section of the Hippocratic Oath states the physician's ethical commitment in direct terms. The physician enters the patient's space, their house and their body, as a guest with a single purpose: to help. The explicit commitment to avoid harm to all patients, regardless of their social status, bond or free meaning slave or free citizen, is notable in an ancient context where slaves had few legal protections. The oath commits the physician to a standard of care that applies to all human beings regardless of their social position.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Critical Thinking When examining the limits of the four humours theory and what made it useful anyway
How to introduce
Introduce the four humours theory as a framework that was wrong but productive. Ask: how can a theory that is factually incorrect still be useful? The humours theory directed attention to the whole patient, to their constitution and environment, to the importance of balance, and to the natural healing capacity of the body. Many of these insights were valuable even though the underlying mechanism was wrong. Connect to Kuhn's paradigm analysis: the humours were a paradigm that organised medical knowledge, made some things visible and others invisible, and was eventually replaced by a better one.
Global Studies When examining how medical ethics applies across cultures
How to introduce
Introduce the Hippocratic Oath and ask: is this a universal ethical standard for medicine, or is it culturally specific to the ancient Greek tradition? Different medical traditions, Ayurvedic, Chinese, Islamic, African, have developed their own ethical frameworks for the healer's responsibilities. Ask: what do these different traditions share? Where do they differ? Is there a universal core of medical ethics that transcends cultural context, or are medical ethics always embedded in specific cultural and religious traditions? Connect to Sen's capabilities approach: healthcare access as a universal capability.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Hippocrates was a single person who wrote all the texts attributed to him.

What to teach instead

The Hippocratic Corpus is a collection of about sixty texts that were associated with the school of Hippocrates on the island of Cos, but they were almost certainly written by many different authors over several generations. Some texts contradict each other, suggesting they come from different traditions within the broader Hippocratic movement. What we know about Hippocrates as an individual historical person is very limited. The importance of Hippocrates is less about the individual and more about the tradition he founded and symbolised: a rational, observation-based, ethically committed approach to medicine.

Common misconception

The Hippocratic Oath is a fixed text that all doctors swear unchanged.

What to teach instead

The original Hippocratic Oath contains commitments, including opposition to surgery and to teaching medicine to anyone who has not paid a fee, that modern medical schools do not retain. Most medical schools today use versions of the oath that have been substantially revised to reflect contemporary medicine and ethics. The principle of commitment to patient wellbeing and the avoidance of harm remains, but the specific content has changed considerably. The oath is best understood as a living tradition of medical ethics rather than as a fixed text.

Common misconception

Hippocratic medicine was essentially primitive and has nothing to teach modern medicine.

What to teach instead

The Hippocratic tradition's core commitments, careful clinical observation, treating the whole patient rather than only the disease, attending to the environment and lifestyle as determinants of health, and the ethical framework of the physician's obligations to the patient, remain foundational to modern medicine. The specific mechanisms proposed by the Hippocratic physicians were wrong, but the method and the ethics were genuinely pioneering. Modern movements in medicine, including patient-centred care and evidence-based medicine, can be seen as developments of Hippocratic principles.

Common misconception

The phrase first, do no harm means doctors should never take risky actions.

What to teach instead

The principle of doing no harm does not mean avoiding all risk: every medical intervention involves some risk, and not intervening also carries risks. The principle means that harm should never be caused carelessly, unnecessarily, or in the physician's interest rather than the patient's. It is a counsel of care and proportionality, not of passivity. A surgeon who declines a necessary operation because it is risky is not following the Hippocratic principle: they are abandoning the patient. The principle requires balancing the risks and benefits of action and inaction in each individual case.

Intellectual Connections
Influenced
Ibn Sina
Ibn Sina's Canon of Medicine built extensively on the Hippocratic and Galenic medical traditions, which had been preserved, translated, and extended by Islamic scholars. The Hippocratic emphasis on clinical observation, on the whole patient, and on the natural causes of disease runs through Ibn Sina's work. The Canon systematised and extended the Hippocratic tradition and transmitted it to medieval Europe, making Hippocrates one of the foundational figures of the medical tradition that shaped medicine in both the Islamic world and Europe.
Anticipates
Rudolf Virchow
Virchow's argument that medicine is a social science and that disease is shaped by social conditions extends and develops the Hippocratic insight in Airs, Waters, Places that health is shaped by the environment in which people live. Both thinkers insist that medicine cannot be separated from the broader conditions of life, and both draw political conclusions from this: if environment shapes health, then improving the environment is a medical intervention.
In Dialogue With
Thomas Kuhn
The four humours theory is one of the most instructive examples in the history of science of a paradigm: a framework that organises knowledge, directs research, makes some things visible and others invisible, and is eventually replaced. The transition from humoral medicine to cellular medicine was a paradigm shift in Kuhn's sense, involving not just new facts but a fundamental change in how the body and disease were understood.
Complements
Florence Nightingale
Nightingale extended the Hippocratic insight about the relationship between environment and health into systematic statistical analysis. Where the Hippocratic physicians observed that air, water, and place affected health, Nightingale proved it with data. Both traditions emphasise that the conditions in which patients are cared for matter as much as the medical treatment they receive.
In Dialogue With
Amartya Sen
Sen's capabilities approach treats health as a fundamental capability: the genuine ability to live a long and healthy life is one of the most basic things that a just society must provide for all its members. The Hippocratic tradition establishes the ethical foundation for this: the physician's commitment to the patient's wellbeing regardless of their social status anticipates the argument that health is a universal human entitlement rather than a commodity available only to those who can pay.
In Dialogue With
Paul Farmer
Farmer's argument that disease is primarily a social and political problem extends the Hippocratic tradition into a global justice framework. Both the Hippocratic tradition and Farmer insist that the physician's obligation is to the patient's wellbeing, and both attend to the conditions of life as determinants of health. Farmer adds the political economy of global inequality as the primary health determinant for the world's poorest people.
Further Reading

For the scholarly debate about the Corpus: Wesley Smith's The Hippocratic Tradition (1979, Cornell University Press) is the most thorough account of how the texts were compiled and interpreted across history.

For medical ethics

Robert Baker and Laurence McCullough's The Cambridge World History of Medical Ethics (2009, Cambridge University Press) places the Hippocratic Oath in the context of medical ethics across world cultures.

For the four humours

Galen's On the Natural Faculties, available in translation, shows how Hippocratic theory was developed by later ancient medicine.