|
Pages |
BATES, Don.
Scholarly ways of knowing : an introduction
|
1-22 |
|
25-40 |
DEAN-JONES, Lesley.
Autopsia, historia and what women know : the authority of women in Hippocratic gynaecology
|
41-59 |
|
60-83 |
CONRAD, Lawrence I.
Scholarship and social context : a medical case from the eleventh-century Near East
|
84-100 |
WALLIS, Faith.
The experience of the book : manuscripts, texts, and the role of epistemology in early medieval medicine
|
101-126 |
|
127-150 |
WEAR, Andrew.
Epistemology and learned medicine in early modern England
|
151-173 |
|
177-204 |
|
205-234 |
BRAY, Francesca.
A deathly disorder : understanding women's health in late imperial China
|
235-250 |
|
251-276 |
TRAWICK, Margaret.
Writing the body and ruling the land : Western reflections on Chinese and Indian medicine
|
279-296 |
ZIMMERMANN, Francis.
The scholar, the wise man, and universals : three aspects of Ayurvedic medicine
|
297-319 |
COHEN, Lawrence.
The epistemological carnival : meditations on disciplinary intentionality and Ayurveda
|
320-343 |
|
347-354 |
|
355-360 |